Soca Warriors Online Discussion Forum
General => General Discussion => Topic started by: Dr. Rat on March 08, 2007, 01:45:09 PM
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All yuh mudda so & so.
Time to take some of the attention away for the ATO thread.
(Doh ban meh yet)
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:rotfl: :rotfl:
rat man.....u is rela threapy yes. :rotfl: :beermug: :beermug: :beermug:
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All yuh mudda so & so.
Time to take some of the attention away for the ATO thread.
(Doh ban meh yet)
Boy Rat yu is real pressure yes :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:
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it was nice knowing yuh
you have belly like ah calabash oui ;D
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yuh come to rhyme and yuh cyar rhyme so ah rub yuh down wid turpentine
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All yuh mudda so & so.
Time to take some of the attention away for the ATO thread.
(Doh ban meh yet)
De Rat ya have any good jokes for we?
I have one
"Women who know their place............
Barbara Walters of Television's 20/20 did a story on gender roles in Kabul, Afghanistan, several years before the Afghan conflict.
She noted that women customarily walked 5 paces behind their husbands.
She recently returned to Kabul and observed that women still walk behind their husbands.
From Ms. Walter's vantage point, despite the overthrow of the oppressive Taliban regime, the women now seem to walk even further back behind their husbands and are happy to maintain the old custom.
Ms. Walters approached one of the Afghani women and asked, "Why do you now seem happy with the old custom that you once tried so desperately to change?"
The woman looked Ms. Walters straight in the eyes, and without hesitation said, "Land mines." "
:devil: :devil:
-
All yuh mudda so & so.
Time to take some of the attention away for the ATO thread.
(Doh ban meh yet)
De Rat ya have any good jokes for we?
I have one
"Women who know their place............
Barbara Walters of Television's 20/20 did a story on gender roles in Kabul, Afghanistan, several years before the Afghan conflict.
She noted that women customarily walked 5 paces behind their husbands.
She recently returned to Kabul and observed that women still walk behind their husbands.
From Ms. Walter's vantage point, despite the overthrow of the oppressive Taliban regime, the women now seem to walk even further back behind their husbands and are happy to maintain the old custom.
Ms. Walters approached one of the Afghani women and asked, "Why do you now seem happy with the old custom that you once tried so desperately to change?"
The woman looked Ms. Walters straight in the eyes, and without hesitation said, "Land mines." "
:devil: :devil:
:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: