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Do people still huff?

Nah, cops don't really give a shit about prostitution here. Also she would have got shot 27 times when she attacked them.

A woman has been jailed and banned from entering Woking after she punched a blind man and was caught in the middle of a sex act in the street.
She pleaded guilty outraging public decency after she was caught in the middle of a sex act that Judge Peter Ross said was ‘no doubt for money’. Prosecutor John Upton said she was spotted in Goldsworth Road, Woking, ‘being fingered by a man’ on July 29 this year. When being arrested she assaulted two police officers calling one of them a ‘P**i c**t’. Timothy Leete said that she was addicted to inhaling butane gas.


Welcome to England.

@mal3volent Equal to anything in the deep south you know of?
 
As a Turkish swine, paint huffing happens in any city where poor people reside; especially people who live on the street all year abuse it to cope with cold, hunger, fear and to detach from reality/ misery for a little while. It's not a problem which effects only one ethnicity.
 
What were you doing there?
I wanted to go there myself for erm.....yeah go figure.

Those Turkish swines will one day pay the price if God is fair.

I actually did the "I'm an American, I'm here to save you all through language" thing. I did Kurdistan, Turkey and Cambodia. If you know the area, I was living in Duhok pretty close to the smaller Mazi Mall and commuting with fellow teacher's everyday to Zakho to teach at the international school there. Yea, I have Turkish friends, don't get me wrong, but the way Kurds are treated in Istanbul is fucking sick. I got a 3 month paid vacation so I went to Istanbul and was gonna teach there and still collect my money from SABIS.

I was on drugs heavily through most of this period.

Does the term "Cardboard Mafia" mean anything to you?
 
Does the term "Cardboard Mafia" mean anything to you?

Sadly not, can you pm me some info?

I actually did the "I'm an American, I'm here to save you all through language" thing. I did Kurdistan, Turkey and Cambodia.

Cambodia is one place I really wanna see before I die, their music, food, culture & women are quite something special in my opinion.
 
When I lived in the States I heard about some kids who got caught after a five-week reign of, well, irritation, out in the suburbs -- they would quaff NyQuil and get high on spray paint and epoxy model aeroplane glue before a session of going around the neighbourhood and spray-painting garage doors and using Roundup to draw things in lawns that were visible from the street -- lots of curse words and non sequiturs, lots of anarchy symbols, the occasional Hakenkreuz and more than one Hammer & Sickle, quite a few cocks & balls, including one more than 10 metres long, and so-and-so Sucks Dick, this person is a Communist Buttfucker, then it looks like they ran out of inspiration and Roundup as I saw a big "FAR" and part of a T . . . I made a special trip to see this before the grass grew back and the doors were painted over.
 
I actually did the "I'm an American, I'm here to save you all through language" thing. I did Kurdistan, Turkey and Cambodia. If you know the area, I was living in Duhok pretty close to the smaller Mazi Mall and commuting with fellow teacher's everyday to Zakho to teach at the international school there. Yea, I have Turkish friends, don't get me wrong, but the way Kurds are treated in Istanbul is fucking sick. I got a 3 month paid vacation so I went to Istanbul and was gonna teach there and still collect my money from SABIS.

I was on drugs heavily through most of this period.

Does the term "Cardboard Mafia" mean anything to you?

Well, there is a tiny independent labour union in the US and Canada called the United Gristle, Spray-Paint, Cardboard & Flammable Liquids Workers (SITLI) . . . sort of in the political spectrum betwixt the Wobblies and the UE. They must adhere to the policy of industrial unionism because the members I knew included graphic designers and escorts . . . well, I guess especially the former could work with cardboard and spray paint in some cases, maybe the latter too?
 
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using Roundup to draw things in lawns that were visible from the street -- lots of curse words and non sequiturs, lots of anarchy symbols, the occasional Hakenkreuz and more than one Hammer & Sickle, quite a few cocks & balls, including one more than 10 metres long, and so-and-so Sucks Dick, this person is a Communist Buttfucker, then it looks like they ran out of inspiration and Roundup as I saw a big "FAR" and part of a T . . . I made a special trip to see this before the grass grew back and the doors were painted over.

Oh God I had to wipe a tear away from laughing on reading that.

This one got me so badly, fuck I nearly broke a rib laughing at this part "this person is a Communist Buttfucker"
 
I wonder what my neighbour that accused me of stealing his milk the other week is going think when he wakes upto find his beloved lawn now has a swastika made from huge cocks on his front garden, I'll add some anti-semetic message too for good measure.
 
Roundups great stuff when used properly.you know drawing penises on ppls lawns and stuff.killing weeds is just its side effect.
 
Oh God I had to wipe a tear away from laughing on reading that.

This one got me so badly, fuck I nearly broke a rib laughing at this part "this person is a Communist Buttfucker"

Capitalised too, like in Fear & Loathing: On The Campaign Trail '72 where the reporter is telling HST about the Savage Boohoo going by the name of Peter Sheridan taking his press ID on the Muskie campaign train in Florida, having 10 martinis before the train got moving, and getting up and abusing people . . . This was the campaign that HST said that his people were running like a gang of junkies trying to send a rocket to the moon to check out rumours that the craters are full of smack.

I looked in the Guardian Style Book to see if the capitalisation was standard and found little information, then again, my version was written in 1928 . . .


www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/bidens-staff-faces-renewed-accusations-of-mistreating-reporters/ar-AAB1FqL?ocid=spartanntp

From the book, in the March 1972 chapter:
Dr Hunter S Thompson
Fear & Loathing: On The Campaign Trail '72
pp 117 et seq

Copyright © 1973 Warner Brothers Publishing Division, New York

The ghost of Kennedy’s Past hangs so heavy on this dreary presidential campaign that even the most cynical journalistic veterans of the Jack & Bobby campaigns are beginning to resent it out loud. A few days ago in Jacksonville, creeping through the early morning traffic between the Hilton Hotel and the railroad depot, I was slumped in my seat feeling half-alive and staring morosely at the front page of the Jacksonville Times-Union when I caught a few flashs of a conversation from behind my right ear:

“. . . getting a little tired of this goddamn ersatz Kennedy campaign . . . now they have Rosey Grier singing ‘Let the Sun Shine In’ for us…. It seems like they’d be embarrassed …”

We were going down to the depot to get aboard the “Sunshine Special,” Ed Muskie’s chartered train that was about to chug off on a run from Jacksonville to Miami — the whole length of Florida — for a series of “whistle-stop” speeches in towns like Deland, Winterhaven, and Sebring.

One of Muskie’s Senate aids had told me, as we waited on a downtown street-corner for the candidate’s motorcade to catch up with the press bus, that “nobody has done one of these whistle- stop tours since Harry Truman in 1948.”

Was he kidding? I looked to be sure, but his face was dead serious.

“Well . . .” he said.

“Funny you’d say that . . . because I just heard some people on the bus talking about Bobby Kennedy’s campaign trains in Indiana and California in 1968.” I smiled pleasantly. “They even wrote a song about it: Don’t tell me you never heard ‘The Ruthless Cannonball’?”

The Muskie man shook his head, not looking at me — staring intently down the street as if he’d suddenly picked up the first distant vibrations from Big Ed’s black Cadillac bearing down on us. I looked, but the only vehicle in sight was a rusty pickup truck from “Larry’s Plumbing and Welding.” It was idling at the stoplight: The driver was wearing a yellow plastic hard hat and nipping at a can of Schlitz. He glanced curiously at the big red/white/blue draped Muskie bus, then roared past us when the light changed to green. On the rear window of the cab was a small American flag decal, and a strip on the rear bumper said “President Wallace. . . .”

The whistle-stops were uneventful until his noon arrival in Miami, where Yippie activist Jerry Rubin and another man heckled and interrupted him repeatedly. The Senator at one point tried to answer Rubin’s charges that he had once been a hawk on (Vietnam) war measures. He acknowledged that he had made a mistake, as did many other senators in those times, but Rubin did not let him finish. “Muskie ultimately wound up scolding Rubin and fellow heckler Peter Sheridan, who had boarded the train in West Palm Beach with press credentials apparently obtained from Rolling Stone’s Washington correspondent, Dr. Hunter S. Thompson.”

Miami Herald, 2/20/72

This incident has haunted me ever since it smacked me in the eyes one peaceful Sunday morning a few weeks ago as I sat on the balmy screened porch of the National Affairs Suite here in the Royal Biscayne Hotel. I was slicing up grapefruit and sipping a pot of coffee while perusing the political page of the Herald when I suddenly saw my name in the middle of a story on Ed Muskie’s “Sunshine Special” campaign train from Jacksonville to Miami.

Several quick phone calls confirmed that something ugly had happened on that train, and that I was being blamed for it. A New York reporter assigned to the Muskie camp warned me to “stay clear of this place . . . they’re really hot about it. They’ve pulled your pass for good.”

“Wonderful,” I said. “That’s one more bummer that I have an excuse to avoid: But what happened? Why do they blame me?”

“Jesus Christ!” he said. “That crazy sonofabitch got on the train wearing your press badge and went completely crazy. He drank about ten martinis before the train even got moving, then he started abusing people. He cornered some poor bastard from one of the Washington papers and called him a Greasy Faggot and a Communist Buttfucker . . . then he started pushing him around and saying he was going to throw him off the train at the next bridge . . . we couldn’t believe it was happening. He scared one of the network TV guys so bad that he locked himself in a water-closet for the rest of the trip.”

“Jesus, I hate to hear this,” I said. “But nobody really thought it was me, did they?”

“Hell, yes, they did,” he replied. “The only people on the train who even know what you look like were me and —–.” (He mentioned several reporters whose names need not be listed here.) “But everybody else just looked at that ID badge he was wearing and pretty soon the word was all the way back to Muskie’s car that some thug named Thompson from a thing called Rolling Stone was tearing the train apart. They were going to send Rosey Grier up to deal with you, but Dick Stewart [Muskie’s press secretary] said it wouldn’t look good to have a three hundred pound bodyguard beating up journalists on the campaign train.”

“That’s typical Muskie staff-thinking.” I said. “They’ve done everything else wrong; why balk at stomping a reporter?”

He laughed. “Actually,” he said. “the rumor was that you’d eaten a lot of LSD and gone wild — that you couldn’t control yourself.”

“What do you mean me?” I said. “I wasn’t even on that goddamn train. The Muskie people deliberately didn’t wake me up in West Palm Beach. They didn’t like my attitude from the day before. My friend from the University of Florida newspaper said he heard them talking about it down in the lobby when they were checking off the press list and waking up all the others.”

“Yeah, I heard some of that talk,” he said. “Somebody said you seemed very negative.”

“I was,” I said. “That was one of the most degrading political experiences I’ve ever been subjected to.” “That’s what the Muskie people said about your friend.” he replied. “Abusing reporters is one thing – – hell, we’re all used to that — but about halfway to Miami I saw him reach over the bar and grab a whole bottle of gin off the rack. Then he began wandering from car to car. drinking out of the bottle and getting after those poor goddamn girls. That’s when it really got bad.”

“What girls?” I said.

“The ones in those little red, white, and blue hotpants outfits,” he replied. “All those so-called ‘Muskie volunteers’ from Jacksonville Junior College, or whatever.. . .”

“You mean the barmaids? The ones with the straw boaters?”

“Yeah,” he said. “The cheerleaders. Well, they went all to goddamn pieces when your friend started manhandling them. Every time he’d come into a car the girls would run out the door at the other end. But every once in a while he’d catch one by an arm or a leg and start yelling stuff like ‘Now I gotcha, you little beauty! Come on over here and sit on poppa’s face!'”

“Jesus!” I said. “Why didn’t they just put him off the train?”

“How? You don’t stop a chartered Amtrak train on a main line just because of a drunken passenger. What if Muskie had ordered an emergency stop and we’d been rammed by a freight train? No presidential candidate would risk a thing like that.” I could see the headlines in every paper from Key West to Seattle:

Muskie Campaign Train Collision Kills 34;

Demo Candidate Blames “Crazy Journalist”

“Anyway,” he said. ‘we were running late for that big rally at the station in Miami — so the Muskie guys figured it was better to just endure the crazy sonofabitch. rather than cause a violent scene on a train full of bored reporters. Christ. The train was loathed with network TV crews, all of them bitching about how Muskie wasn’t doing anything worth putting on the air….” He laughed. “Hell, yes we all would have loved a big brawl on the train. Personally, I was bored stupid. I didn’t get a quote worth filing out of the whole trip.” He laughed again. “Actually, Muskie deserved that guy. He was a goddamn nightmare to be trapped on a train with, but at least he wasn’t dull. Nobody was dozing off like they did on Friday. Hell, there was no way to get away from that brute! All you could do was keep moving and hope he wouldn’t get hold of you.”

Both the Washington Star and Women’s Wear Daily reported essentially the same tale: A genuinely savage person had boarded the train in West Palm Beach, using a fraudulent press pass, then ran amok in the lounge car — getting in “several fist-fights” and finally “heckling the Senator unmercifully” when the train pulled into Miami and Muskie went out on the caboose platform to deliver what was supposed to have been the climactic speech of his triumphant whistle-stop tour.

It was at this point — according to press reports both published and otherwise — that my alleged friend, calling himself “Peter Sheridan,” cranked up his act to a level that caused Senator Muskie to “cut short his remarks.”

When the “Sunshine Special” pulled into the station at Miami, “Sheridan” reeled off the train and took a position on the tracks just below Muskie’s caboose platform, where he spent the next half hour causing the Senator a hellish amount of grief — along with Jerry Rubin, who also showed up at the station to ask Muskie what had caused him to change his mind about supporting the War in Vietnam. Rubin had been in Miami for several weeks, making frequent appearances on local TV to warn that “Ten Thousand naked hippies” would be among those attending the Democratic National Convention at Miami Beach in July. “We will march to the Convention Center,” he announced, “but there will be no violence — at least not by us.” To questions regarding his presence in Florida, Rubin said he “decided to move down here, because of the climate,” and that he was also registered to vote in Florida — as a Republican. Contrary to the rancid suspicions of the Muskie staff people, Sheridan didn’t even recognize Rubin and I hadn’t seen him since the Counter Inaugural Ball which ran opposite Nixon’s inauguration in 1969. When Rubin showed up at the train station that Saturday afternoon to hassle Muskie, the Senator from Maine was apparently the only person in the crowd (except Sheridan) who didn’t know who he was. His first response to Rubin’s heckling was, “Shut up, young man — I’m talking.”

“You’re not a damn bit different from Nixon,” Rubin shouted back . . .

. . . And it was at this point, according to compiled press reports and a first-hand account by Monte Chitty of the University of Florida Alligator, that Muskie seemed to lose his balance and fall back from the rail. . . .



* * *

Not much has been written about The Ibogaine Effect as a serious factor in the Presidential Campaign, but toward the end of the Wisconsin primary race — about a week before the vote — word leaked out that some of Muskie’s top advisors had called in a Brazilian doctor who was said to be treating the candidate with “some kind of strange drug” that nobody in the press corps had ever heard of.

It had been common knowledge for many weeks that Humphrey was using an exotic brand of speed known as Wallot . . . and it had long been whispered that Muskie was into something very heavy, but it was hard to take the talk seriously until I heard about the appearance of a mysterious Brazilian doctor. That was the key.

Big Ed discussed the marijuana question for the dope-smoking students in Madison, Wisconsin, moments before refusing to take a toke himself. Later in the campaign, however, it was

reported that Senator Muskie was a known user of a powerful drug called Ibogaine.

I immediately recognized The Ibogaine Effect — from Muskie’s tearful breakdown on the flatbed truck in New Hampshire, the delusions and altered thinking that characterized his campaign in Florida, and finally the condition of “total rage” that gripped him in Wisconsin.

There was no doubt about it: The Man from Maine had turned to massive doses of Ibogaine as a last resort. The only remaining question was “when did he start?” But nobody could answer this one, and I was not able to press the candidate himself for an answer because I was permanently barred from the Muskie campaign after that incident on the “Sunshine Special” in Florida . . . and that scene makes far more sense now than it did at the time. Muskie has always taken pride in his ability to deal with hecklers; he has frequently challenged them, calling them up to the stage in front of big crowds and then forcing the poor bastards to debate with him in a blaze of TV lights.

But there was none of that in Florida. When the Boohoo began grabbing at his legs and screaming for more gin, Big Ed went all to pieces . . . which gave rise to speculation. among reporters familiar with his campaign style in ’68 and ’70, that Muskie was not himself. It was noted, among other things, that he had developed a tendency to roll his eyes wildly during TV interviews, that his thought patterns had become strangely fragmented, and that not even his closest advisors could predict when he might suddenly spiral off into babbling rages, or neocomatose funks.

In restrospect, however, it is easy to see why Muskie fell apart on that caboose platform in the Miami train station. There he was — far gone in a bad Ibogaine frenzy — suddenly shoved out in a rainstorm to face a sullen crowd and some kind of snarling lunatic going for his legs while he tried to explain why he was “the only Democrat who can beat Nixon.”

It is entirely conceivable — given the known effects of Ibogaine — that Muskie’s brain was almost paralyzed by hallucinations at the time; that he looked out at that crowd and saw gila monsters instead of people, and that his mind snapped completely when he felt something large and apparently vicious clawing at his legs. We can only speculate on this, because those in a position to know have flatly refused to comment on rumors concerning the Senator’s disastrous experiments with Ibogaine. I tried to find the Brazilian doctor on election Bight in Milwaukee, but by the time the polls closed he was long gone. One of the hired bimbos in Milwaukee’s Holiday Inn headquarters said a man with fresh welts on his head had been dragged out the side door and put on a bus to Chicago, but we were never able to confirm this.

 
The "Cardboard Mafia" that I'm familiar with operates differently than your typical Labor Union in that, as opposed to having a "job" and being "compensated", said "unionists" are homeless Kurds who spend the day collecting cardboard for recycling as they are at what I would assume the very bottom of this theoretical hierarchy. I just watched Jack Whitehall's "travels with my father" and they were in Istanbul.

It was like the beating heart of all civilization according to the father, whereas I was being a junkie in a different region with a different exchange rate. For the record, the Taksi driver with my laptop can go to hell.
 
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