All Offtopic Forums

All Offtopic Forums (http://www.allofftopic.com/index.php)
-   Anything Goes (http://www.allofftopic.com/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   Important: The Chat Thread (http://www.allofftopic.com/showthread.php?t=405)

.GARY. 07-19-2010 05:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cez (Post 122307)
the bitches think he takes care of mental handlicap poeple when he hangs with shad :cheeky:

:roflmao:

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:11 PM

where the fuck is shad today anyway :think: he ussually posts at least once

.GARY. 07-19-2010 05:11 PM

I honestly havent been on GMFS forever like some guys, but its sad it has taken the route it has over the last year.

Greatwhite 07-19-2010 05:12 PM

he was textin me earlier :think: idk

Chadster08 07-19-2010 05:13 PM

The Chat Thread
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Greatwhite (Post 122313)
he was textin me earlier :think: idk

You rang lol

I think these will be my next tires.

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:13 PM

o there he is :wave:

Greatwhite 07-19-2010 05:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by .GARY. (Post 122312)
I honestly havent been on GMFS forever like some guys, but its sad it has taken the route it has over the last year.

i quit trying. i jsut get on there for shits and giggle now. place is a joke.

---------- Post added at 11:13 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:13 AM ----------

o hai shad

Chadster08 07-19-2010 05:14 PM

The Chat Thread
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cez (Post 122315)
o there he is :wave:

Sup broski.

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:14 PM

been scanning crap all morning? :rofl:

jschrock 07-19-2010 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greatwhite (Post 122308)
james...go peep holy crap thread and response

:lol: Funny shit

http://i616.photobucket.com/albums/t...ock85/bake.jpg

Chadster08 07-19-2010 05:16 PM

The Chat Thread
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cez (Post 122319)
been scanning crap all morning? :rofl:

Actually just finished the last one.

Greatwhite 07-19-2010 05:16 PM

james that funny

.GARY. 07-19-2010 05:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greatwhite (Post 122316)
i quit trying. i jsut get on there for shits and giggle now. place is a joke.

---------- Post added at 11:13 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:13 AM ----------

o hai shad

I would not call it a joke, but some of the new guys are just lame with idiotic responses,questions and comments anymore.


Whats up Chadler.

Chadster08 07-19-2010 05:17 PM

The Chat Thread
 
1 Attachment(s)
See this is what I just got done.

Greatwhite 07-19-2010 05:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by .GARY. (Post 122323)

Whats up Chadler.

def. not his IQ

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:18 PM

lolz. poor shad.


Quote:

An emergency medical technician accused of refusing to help a dying pregnant woman during his coffee break was fatally shot near a New York City nightclub, authorities said.

New York EMT Jason Green was shot in the face near the Greenhouse nightclub early Sunday morning in Manhattan's West Village. There have been no arrests, and police believe those accusations and the shooting were unrelated.

Green and fellow EMT Melisa Jackson were suspended for 30 days in December 2009 after allegedly refusing to interrupt their coffee break at a Brooklyn bakery to aid a pregnant woman who was suffering a heart attack.

As Green stood on line at the Brooklyn Au Bon Pain, 25-year-old Eutisha Rennix -- who was six months pregnant -- collapsed to the floor, in need of aid.

Green's partner reported the incident to their dispatcher but witnesses said the pair did not try to help the dying woman, whose prematurely born baby also died.

Green and Jackson were under criminal investigation for their handling of the incident, though they denied wrongdoing.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg called Rennix's death -- and Green's inaction -- an "unconscionable" outrage, MyFoxNY reported.

Chadster08 07-19-2010 05:18 PM

The Chat Thread
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by .GARY. (Post 122323)
I would not call it a joke, but some of the new guys are just lame with idiotic responses,questions and comments anymore.


Whats up Chadler.

Sup Gary

Greatwhite 07-19-2010 05:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chadster08 (Post 122324)
See this is what I just got done.

thats it. all you got done was snapping a pic of some fucking colored folders?

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:19 PM

:roflmao:



Quote:

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — People in the world's most populous Muslim nation have been facing Africa — not Mecca — while praying.

Indonesia's highest Islamic body acknowledged Monday it made a mistake when issuing an edict in March saying the holy city in Saudi Arabia was to the country's west. It has since asked followers to shift direction slightly northward during their daily prayers.

"After a thorough study with some cosmography and astronomy experts, we learned they've been facing southern Somalia and Kenya," said Ma'ruf Amin, a prominent cleric of the Indonesian Ulema Council, or MUI. "We've revised it now to the northwest."

He said Indonesians need not worry, however: The miscalculation did not affect God's ability to hear their prayers.

"God understands that humans make mistakes," he said. "Allah always hears their prayers."

Indonesia is a secular nation of 237 million people, 90 percent of whom are Muslim, most of them moderate. The influential Ulema Council often issues fatwas, or edicts, including several controversial rulings against smoking and yoga.

Many devote Muslims follow such decrees, because ignoring them is considered a sin

Chris 07-19-2010 05:19 PM

Hey mother fuckers! :happy:

Greatwhite 07-19-2010 05:20 PM

enrique!!! what it do!!!

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:20 PM

:wave:


chris missed out on that thread :nonobro:

Chris 07-19-2010 05:21 PM

wat thread

Chadster08 07-19-2010 05:22 PM

The Chat Thread
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris (Post 122330)
Hey mother fuckers! :happy:

Hi.

Cez★ 07-19-2010 05:23 PM

the thread ian from extreme made



lolz weirdos
Quote:

A Queens man being treated for depression at a group residence was blinded by a racist behemoth who gouged out his eyes, a lawsuit alleges.

Jason Wallace used his bare hands to rip out Latchman Ramnarine's eyes, the suit says.

Wallace pleaded not guilty to assault with intent to disfigure.

The hulking, 280-pound attacker repeatedly threatened to kill Ramnarine in the Queens Village apartment they shared under the supervision of the agency PSCH.

"Wallace became unstable and aggressive," said Ramnarine's lawyer, Michael Grossman. "He repeatedly threatened my client with words like 'I am going to kill you' and 'I'll break your bones because I hate Indian people.' "
---------- Post added at 11:23 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:22 AM ----------

GA ftl. letting pedos roam free
Quote:

Georgia was lauded four years ago by conservatives for passing one of the nation's toughest sex offender laws. But the state has had to significantly — and without fanfare — scale back its once-intense restrictions.

Georgia's old law was challenged by civil liberties groups even before it took effect. After losing court battle after court battle, state legislators were forced to make a change or a federal judge was going to throw out the entire law. Now that the restrictions have been eased, about 13,000 registered sex offenders — more than 70 percent of all Georgia sex offenders — can live and work wherever they want.

Previously, all registered sex offenders were banned from living within 1,000 feet of schools, parks and other places where children gather, essentially driving them either to desolate areas or out of state. At one point, a tent city of homeless sex offenders was discovered in the woods behind a suburban office park.

"Lessening those kinds of restrictions is dangerous — it could lead to more crime, more offenders," said Ernie Allen of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. "We know that sex offenders who prey upon children do well in prison because there aren't temptations there. These guys get into the community, they begin to fantasize as they encounter kids in the community, and they lead to new offenses."

Across the country, states are trying to figure out how far they can legally go to keep convicted sex offenders away from children. High-profile cases of registered sex offenders being accused of re-committing crimes only increases the legislative pressure.

Georgia's strict law ran into trouble because it cast too wide a net, targeting sex offenders that committed their crimes years before the tough law was passed in 2006.

Kelly Piercy, who was convicted of child pornography in 1999, was ousted from his Columbus home because he lived too close to a church. He spent three weeks searching before he and his wife found a beat-up trailer down a dusty dirt road in northeast Georgia. In April, he bought a two-bedroom home in a small east Georgia community surrounded by farmland.

"We didn't want to ever worry about being forced to move again," said Piercy, who leads the advocacy group Georgians for Reform, which presses for an overhaul of the state's sex offender laws. "Turns out I could have waited and bought anywhere."

Piercy believes sex offenders' living restrictions should be reviewed case-by-case.

"There are dangerous people in the world. Our concern is that this blanket removal is going to potentially leave some of the dangerous people now unmonitored and potentially place the community at risk," he said. "We've created bad legislation and now we're trying to fix it. And regrettably, we've somewhat complicated matters."

Indeed, Georgia's law even perplexes police.

"Our deputies are trying their best to enforce this law," said Tonia Welch, the training coordinator with the Georgia Sheriffs Association. "And with the way the changes have been, it has caused confusion. Every time they get situated, the laws change, and then they have to shift gears."

Gov. Sonny Perdue signed the changes into law in May, allowing the 13,000 or so registered sex offenders who committed their offense before June 4, 2003, to live wherever they choose. The date was picked because that's when the state's first sex offender overhaul took effect. Those restrictions were then strengthened three years later.

The tough restrictions still apply to about 5,000 or so sex offenders who committed their offenses after 2003, but they, too vary. For instance, sex offenders who committed their crimes between June 4, 2003, and June 30, 2006, can live within 1,000 feet of churches and swimming pools, but those who committed their crimes after July 1, 2006, cannot.

"The bottom line was that the hammer was about to fall on us, and I was deeply concerned that the entire statute was in jeopardy," said state Sen. Seth Harp, who helped push the latest revision.

The changes in the law also allow some offenders to petition to get off the registry, clear the way for disabled and elderly offenders to be exempt from residency requirements and no longer require sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords.

Iowa has also scaled back some of its restrictions under pressure from the law enforcement community. The 2006 law there banned sex offenders released from prison from living within 2,000 feet of schools and other places where children gathered, but lawmakers revamped it after lobbying from the Iowa County Attorneys' Association.

The new rules leave the 2,000-foot ban in place for the highest-level offenders, such as sexual crimes involving a child. It also set up 300-foot "no loiter" zones that ban all offenders from lingering around the facilities.

"It's better than what we had, but it still fosters a false sense of security," said Corwin Ritchie, the association's executive director. "It does target the predator-type who might be sitting within sight of a school, but we have so many sex offenses going on within people's homes, we forget those type of victims."

Many states are moving in the opposite direction. At least five in 2009 tightened residency restrictions for sex offenders, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. California and several other states are considering more changes this year.

"It's something that states are still struggling with," said Jill Levenson, a Lynn University professor who specializes in sex offender policies. "One side argues the laws aren't punitive, but the other side of the argument is that once people enter into a plea and agree to something, you can't come back years later and change it."


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:17 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.