humminbird
Veteran
don lemon is probably waiting on the aids vaccine 


I can't believe people think like this guy here. Wow! People always talk about how they don't understand how the Nazis carried out the things they did... That shyt is in A LOT of people.
And this guy here, thinking like this, this is not unique. Just read through this thread.
And before you say anything, I'm vaccinated. But the way you think is a shyt way of thinking. Totally divisive and counterproductive.
You got vaccinated. Shut the fukk up.
fukk you and your self righteousness.

i bet you have tetnus, TB, and smallpox vaccines already flowing through your blood due to schools and some workplaces requiring themthe point is we always had a CHOICE....the moment you give that up (especially to the ancestors of those who enslaved ours) its OVER....how are yall not gettin that?


Cant go to the supermarket? Cool, I'll get groceries delivered
Cant go to the ball game? I dont care about sports anyway
Cant go to work? Self employed
No restaurant service? I'll cook my own food with my delivered groceries and I'll order delivery from the restaurants.
I'm ready for war

Foreignerslook at the koon posters agreeing
see we have a forum full of little Don Lemons. you see why I say its ...
thekooni.com
Iast i checked there is no vaccine for AID's, but go on with your low-IQ comparison.
?
Why you fighting the vaccine that hard?!
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Who dafuq told you that bullshyt.![]()
9. She broke her promise to stay out of the kitchen.![]()
In 1915, an outbreak of typhoid fever at Manhattan’s Sloane Maternity Hospital struck 25 workers and killed two. The epidemic was traced to the hospital’s cook, whom the staff had nicknamed “Typhoid Mary.” Little did they know that it actually was Mallon, who had taken the assumed name of “Mary Brown.” The health department had lost track of Mallon after her release, during which time she cooked in hotels, restaurants and institutions. After her capture, Mallon was once again confined to North Brother Island.
10. Typhoid Mary spent 26 years in forced isolation.
After her second apprehension, Mallon spent the last 23 years of her life as a virtual prisoner in forced isolation, adding to the three years from her first stint on North Brother Island. Although hundreds, if not thousands, of asymptomatic carriers who had been identified walked the sidewalks of New York freely, Typhoid Mary alone lived in exile in large part due to the public opinion that turned firmly against her after her failure to stay out of the kitchen. She was fated to cook only for herself until her death on November 11, 1938.