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Showing posts from April, 2014

Columbia Gas Screwing Their Way to China???

This is a deserted well in Canada, found simply by doing a search... There are probably many still out there across the world... Now this does look like what  I had on my property a year or so ago... remember? Then some VP attorney of Columbia Gas wr0te and said the gas well equipment was being removed... OK, you may have wondered what happened and I've debated on writing anything more, but bright and early this morning, two young m,en from a brand new company--contracted by Columbia Gas, came on my property to check that well... Well, I could say enough is enough...but, this time, I am ROFL... Can you believe this company is supposedly a forefront runner for our energy future...and they are spending money trying to catch up with an inventory of equipment that they obviously still have no control of... You may recall that the property had a gas well when I moved in and it provided, in accordance with the legal agreement, gas for the home on the property and then the r...

The Medici Boy by John L'Heureux - Brilliant Novel Spotlighting Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi (Donatello) Out in Hardback Tomorrow!

Inside view of Battistero di San Giovanni  Church in Florence, Italy. Funeral  monument of the pope, then antipope , John XXIII (1410-1419), made by  Donatello and Michelozzo; Baptistry, Florence, Italy. (Photo credit: Wikipedia ) ~~~ Michelozzo I had failed with Father Saint Francis and in different way with Cenntino and Ghiberti and I was sick with desire for Alessandra, who alone did not hold me a failure. But I would not see her until Sunday and today was Wednesday and rejected and shamed, I was now about to meet the great Donato di Betto Bardi, called Donatello, orafo e scharpellatore, goldsmith and stone carver. He stood before a clay armature, looking from the comely wax head he was modeling tgo the model himself who sat in front of him on a little platform, anxious and uncomfortable. This was to be the head of Louis of Tolosa, the boy saint who gave up his kingdom to become a Franciscan mendicant. Donatello "We...

Debbie Doesn't Do It Anymore by Walter Mosley Way Fun But Mostly Serious Stuff!

Debbie Doesn't Do It Anymore Suicide sat next to me on the ride back from the beach. He was the same olive-skinned  gentleman who was in the periphery when I had my orgasm... ~~~    There were two high-def video cameramen working us: one moving from face to face while the other focused on our genitals... I was reclining on my backside, thighs spread wide open. The smell of flower- scented lubricant filled the air, and hot lights burned down on my sweat-slick black skin, Blubbery and pink-skinned Myron "Big Dick" Palmer was slamming his thing into me, saying, "Oh Baby. Yeah Baby. Daddy's coming home. He's almost there, almost there," Debbie Does't Do It Anymore         Debbie Does't Do It Anymore "More Passion! Linda Love, the director yelled. She was talking to me...Luckily for me Myron's thing against a sore spot deep inside. So when Linda called for more feeling I stopped thinking about the details of...

Read Mephistopheles 9:00 AM--Rhys! Dan O'Brien Provides Fun Satire!

English: Mephistopheles flying over  Wittenberg, in a lithograph  by Eugène Delacroix. Source Wikipedia ) Mephistopheles, also called Mephisto, familiar spirit of the Devil in late settings of the legend of  Faust . It is probable that the name Mephistopheles was invented for the historical Faust by the anonymous author of the first Faustbuch (1587). A latecomer in the infernal hierarchy, Mephistopheles never became an integral part of the tradition of magic and demonology that predated him by thousands of years. He is mentioned only in the magic manuals attributed to Faust. He belongs essentially to literature. In Doctor Faustus (1604), by the English dramatist Christopher Marlowe , Mephistopheles achieves tragic grandeur as a fallen angel, torn between satanic pride and dark despair. In the drama Faust (Part I, 1808; Part II, 1832), by J.W. von Goethe, he is cold-hearted, cynical, and witty—perhaps a more subtle but certainly a slighter creation...