- Joined
 - Dec 4, 2017
 
- Posts
 - 7,631
 
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Most guys like it when I blow.
At that level, the sheet gets sucked into the ass.But Category 5? I mean, at that level doesn't it just knock it over?
A rare instance where taller dicks are at a disadvantage compared to shorter ones.But Category 5? I mean, at that level doesn't it just knock it over?
That would be worse than Sharknado!I think we have a new Sy-Fy channel movie concept. First there was Sharknado. Now there's Bee-i-cane.
Think of the drifts of dead stingless bees left after the storm... Shovelling carapace instead of snow or ash!That would be worse than Sharknado!
Think of the drifts of dead stingless bees left after the storm... Shovelling carapace instead of snow or ash!
That would be worse than Sharknado!
Did you know that the vast majority of industrial honey you consume comes from captive bees fed exclusively on white sugar?
I once got stung by a bee without the slightest provocation. I was calmly reading in the garden when a sudden, searing pain shot through my arm, as if someone had pressed a lit cigarette into my skin. I caught her writhing, still clinging, before I shook her off. I’ve held a grudge ever since.
Strange lyrics. Definitely not an American thing, because most American have no clue about history. Anyway, the Japanese wanted to fight everybody without any significant allies. The Germans at least had the Italians and the Romanians, although that didn't help much.Fun fact: in the NW Pacific, typhoons are generally named after trees, animals, flowers and so on to avoid naming them after people. It avoids those awkward dinner party conversations.
Meanwhile in Darwin, which was devastated by Cyclone Tracy in the 1970s, there was a famous bit of post-cyclone commentary on a (General Motors) Holden Torana:
Australian band Hoodoo Gurus took it further in the 80s with a song about an imaginary girlfriend named Tracy, who went off to vent her rage with a 'blow', singing as she went 'Tojo never made it to Darwin' (the Japanese bombed Darwin many times during WWII, but there was no land invasion).
The Japanese were taking advantage of the distractions of the Allies in Europe to try and shore up their position, particularly with China so vulnerable.Strange lyrics. Definitely not an American thing, because most American have no clue about history. Anyway, the Japanese wanted to fight everybody without any significant allies. The Germans at least had the Italians and the Romanians, although that didn't help much.
I wonder if invading China was a mistake, like the German invasion of the Soviet Union. The sheer size of the place is daunting.The Japanese were taking advantage of the distractions of the Allies in Europe to try and shore up their position, particularly with China so vulnerable.
Every pub band should have a good war history song in their repertoire, I reckon. The best known one in Australia would probably be 'Khe Sanh', by Cold Chisel, a Vietnam Veterans' song. Giving it a Vietnamese title and including lyrics that had it banned from radio ('and their legs were often open, but their minds were always closed, and their hearts were held in fast suburban chains') shouldn't have been a receipe for success, but there are generations of Australians who can be heard bellowing out every word when it's being played.
Country Joe and the Fish is the first one to come to mind. There were several others about getting drafted. That was such a big part of the psyche of the late 60's early 70's for every male of age. College was an easy deferment, And if your Daddy was connected, you got into the National Guard, which unlike now, was not deployed over seas.I'll have to think of an American band with a song specifically about Vietnam rarely than merely associated with it.
Goodnight Saigon- Billy Joel. Fucking brilliantI wonder if invading China was a mistake, like the German invasion of the Soviet Union. The sheer size of the place is daunting.
I've never heard that song before; I doubt most Americans have. I'll have to think of an American band with a song specifically about Vietnam rarely than merely associated with it.