Seconded.
We need to man up and use our balls to protest just like the French are doing; stop hiding behind our keyboards.
Let's go already. Invest in yellow flourecent vests while we're at it.
Yellow signifies the letter Q. Where ya been?
No shit, Sherlock. Pick whatever color you want. Point is: we need to get off our ass. Notice I said WE.
Sigh, I'm looking. Was posted on here the other day. Didn't download.
That one is gonna be a cow when she gets older. Trust me.
I believe it but what I don't like is the corporatization of marijuana. Been smoking over forty years; now only rarely. But I have had friends share their prescription pot with me. And something about it just ain't right.
Ya know, for some reason I was just reminded of that character in The Great Gatsby. Gatsby's business partner, Meyer Wolfsheim. You know, the guy who fixed the 1919 World Series. The one who says Gatsby's the kind of guy you would take home to meet your mother and your sister. Then later when Gatsby's dead and Nick Caraway calls him to invite him to Gatsby's funeral, Wolfsheim says, Let us learn to show our friendship for a man when he is alive and not after he is dead," p. 172.
Hmmm, methought, what was Fitzgerald saying?
So I dug a tad and found this:
"We don't know a lot about Meyer Wolfsheim – and we're not supposed to. Beyond the fact that he's a business associate and a friend of Gatsby's, all we know is that he's an inhabitant of New York's seedy underworld and a dead ringer for real-life Arnold Rothstein: the man who really did fix the 1919 World Series—one of Meyer Wolfsheim's impressive accomplishments (4.118-118)."
https://www.shmoop.com/great-gatsby/meyer-wolfsheim.html
Which lead me to this:
Arnold Rothstein's attorney, William Fallon, memorably described his client: "Arnold Rothstein is a man who waits in doorways..a mouse, waiting in the doorway for his cheese."
Rothstein was born in 1882 in New York. His involvement in the world of gambling began at an early age. He lost interest in school when he was 16 and decided to drop out. He worked as a traveling salesman for awhile and then decided to hang out in pool halls. At age 20, he went to work for himself booking bets on horse races, baseball games, elections and prize fights. He also made loans which carried extermely high interest rates.
Rothstein received his nickname, “The Big Bankroll,” because he always insisted on carrying a huge bankroll of $100 bills. He wanted to be able to immediately finance any deals he made. In 1909, he married an actress named Carolyn Greene. 1914 was the year that Rothstein moved into the business of bookmaking. He owned a discount house for wagering and this is where he made his fortune. Rothstein once stated that he was willing to bet on anything but the weather–the weather was the only thing he could not fix.
Rothstein’s role in the 1919 World Series scandal was behind the scenes as a financial backer. His name, reputation and wealth were used to help influence the ballplayers. Rothstein was approached by two separate groups who wanted him to provide the funds to pay off the eight White Sox players. He chose to work with Joseph “Sport” Sullivan because he had a proven reputation in the gambling circle. Most believe that Rothstein placed as much as $270,000 in bets on the Cincinnati Reds to win the world series that year.
When called to testify before the grand jury, Rothstein denied all involvement with the scandal. He shifted the blame to his former associate Abe Attell. Rothstein was eventually exonerated of any wrongdoing.
In September of 1921 Rothstein announced to the world that he was through with gambling. This was an attempt to regain the anonymity he had lost because of his ties to the Black Sox scandal. He ceased all direct ownership of his gambling houses. He did not, however, move away from the world of gambling altogether. Following this move, Rothstein became involved in drug dealing, bootlegging and labor racketeering.
Rothstein was shot in the abdomen and died on November 6, 1928, at the age of 46. He had never been convicted of breaking any law during his lifetime.
http://www.famous-trials.com/blacksox/956-bigbankroll
ROTHSTEIN
Kek, What a name.