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re: OT - Still following Making a Murderer - some hilarious screw ups
Posted on 3/12/19 at 3:20 pm to Jefferson Dawg
Posted on 3/12/19 at 3:20 pm to Jefferson Dawg
quote:
So passively watching a documentary and believing everything in it is "rational"?
I was simply saying that just about anything that could be presented (unseen in the doc that is supposedly damning) could probably be refuted based on waht was seen. I decided to google and the first article I came across had 14 pieces of "troubling evidence" that was left out of the documentary.
quote:
Leg irons and handcuffs were found in Avery's residence and in Dassey's
yet they had none of teresa's dna on them..
quote:
Avery and his girlfriend had a less than rosy relationship at times
irrelevant, wgas
quote:
The car key unearthed in Avery's residence had DNA from his sweat on it, the prosecutor says
nothing about that key shoudl matter since it was so clearly planted
quote:
Dassey's mother said Dassey helped Avery clean his garage floor
irrelvant, doesn't prove murder
quote:
Pornography was recovered in Avery's residence
less than irrelevant
quote:
The previous animal cruelty case involved a bonfire
doesn't prove anythign regarding the murder of teresa
quote:
Avery had drawn a torture chamber while in prison and was violent to other women
doesn't prove anythign regarding the murder of teresa
quote:
Avery once opened his door "just wearing a towel" when Halbach went to his property previously
less than irrelevant
quote:
Avery called Auto Trader to specifically request Halbach the day she died
circumstantial
quote:
Avery called Halbach's cell phone three times, twice using the Star-67 feature to hide his identity
proves nothing regarding murder. Thsi one and the one above could sipmly prove a crush on the girl
quote:
Avery gave a false name when he called Auto Trader
and?
quote:
The burnt bone fragments were mixed with steel tire belts
this may have some merit, but there wasn't a shortage of tires in the salvage yard. AGain...how does this prove steven's guilt?
quote:
Avery's blood was found in six places in the Halbach vehicle, and DNA from his sweat was found on a hood latch, the prosecutor says
I can't remember since it's been a while, but this is easily refuted in the documentary.
quote:
Avery's rifle matched the bullet with the Halbach DNA on it
AGain this can be refuted. They didn't find brain or skull on it, just "DNA" which coudl have been her chapstick that we know the cops have. That blurb also states:
quote:
This bullet was found months later by a Manitowoc law enforcement officer after others missed it during repeated searches.
how convenient.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 3:21 pm to Jefferson Dawg
What board is monty on?
Posted on 3/12/19 at 4:04 pm to deeprig9
Zellner exonerated Ryan Ferguson who was convicted based on Charlie Erickson's false confession. Unfortunately, Charlie is still in jail.
Brendan needs a lot more than getting Avery off but that would certainly help his cause.
Brendan needs a lot more than getting Avery off but that would certainly help his cause.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 4:10 pm to deeprig9
The test that found Halbach's DNA on the bullet was contaminated with DNA of the forensic examiner. That contaminated result was still admitted as evidence at trial.
Micro Trace labs, supposedly the gold standard forensic lab in the US, found that the bullet was coated with a waxy substance thought to be chap Stick. One of the items initially seized to harvest Halbach DNA was her Chap Stick.
Micro Trace labs, supposedly the gold standard forensic lab in the US, found that the bullet was coated with a waxy substance thought to be chap Stick. One of the items initially seized to harvest Halbach DNA was her Chap Stick.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 4:22 pm to deeprig9
Jury selection process - Steven Avery murder trial
Why weren't Avery's alibi witnesses called?
Why did Strang queer Avery's venue change in favor of Manitowoc county?
Why did S&B select an MTSO deputy juror and another juror who was the spouse of a Manitowoc County clerk?
Why did S&B fail to ever visit and interview Brendan?
Why didn't S&B call Bryan Dassey to impeach the testimony of Bobby Dassey? When Brian was interviewed by investigators he said that Bobby told him that Steven couldn't be the killer because Bobby said he saw Halbach drive away from the salvage yard.
Why did Buting sit on the Dassey hard drive for 7 weeks and never bother to look at it?
Why did S&B fail to object when Kratz closed with "reasonable doubt is for innocent people.?
Why did S&B fail to introduce the information that three piles of burned human bones were discovered on Manitowoc County property?
Why did S&B never demand the unedited flyover video?
Why did S&B fail to subpoena anyone's phone records?
Why did S&B never hire a blood spatter expert?
Why did Strang open with the statement that, "the police didn't kill her, obviously"?
Why is Dean Strang still unwilling to admit that Avery is innocent?
Why did S&B fail to report Ken Kratz for professional misconduct related to his false, prejudicial and inflammatory March, 2006 press conference?
Why did Dean Strang vouch for Ken Kratz's good character in spite of Kratz's unethical prosecutorial conduct and his history of sexual assault? When Ted Perry of Fox 6 News asked Dean Strang how he felt about sexual predator Kratz's forced resignation Strang replied, "I was really sad about it. Really sad about it. Ken is not a bad human being at the end of the day. He made mistakes."
Why weren't Avery's alibi witnesses called?
Why did Strang queer Avery's venue change in favor of Manitowoc county?
Why did S&B select an MTSO deputy juror and another juror who was the spouse of a Manitowoc County clerk?
Why did S&B fail to ever visit and interview Brendan?
Why didn't S&B call Bryan Dassey to impeach the testimony of Bobby Dassey? When Brian was interviewed by investigators he said that Bobby told him that Steven couldn't be the killer because Bobby said he saw Halbach drive away from the salvage yard.
Why did Buting sit on the Dassey hard drive for 7 weeks and never bother to look at it?
Why did S&B fail to object when Kratz closed with "reasonable doubt is for innocent people.?
Why did S&B fail to introduce the information that three piles of burned human bones were discovered on Manitowoc County property?
Why did S&B never demand the unedited flyover video?
Why did S&B fail to subpoena anyone's phone records?
Why did S&B never hire a blood spatter expert?
Why did Strang open with the statement that, "the police didn't kill her, obviously"?
Why is Dean Strang still unwilling to admit that Avery is innocent?
Why did S&B fail to report Ken Kratz for professional misconduct related to his false, prejudicial and inflammatory March, 2006 press conference?
Why did Dean Strang vouch for Ken Kratz's good character in spite of Kratz's unethical prosecutorial conduct and his history of sexual assault? When Ted Perry of Fox 6 News asked Dean Strang how he felt about sexual predator Kratz's forced resignation Strang replied, "I was really sad about it. Really sad about it. Ken is not a bad human being at the end of the day. He made mistakes."
Posted on 3/12/19 at 4:33 pm to WG_Dawg
quote:
I decided to google and the first article I came across had 14 pieces of "troubling evidence" that was left out of the documentary.
And so
Yet
But
Blah
blah
blah
Thanks for demonstrating how thoroughly invested into believing one side of this thing you truly are.
Because what you just did isn't the act of a curious person seeking out the truth. What you just did was half-assedly go through the formality of pretending to look at another side.....and then scoffing at everything it had to say as if that further validates the perspective from the documentary.
Very similar to how the Q-believers are so invested into what they believe and how there's an embarrassment and humiliation factor involved if they end up being wrong, so they cling to it being true for dear life. Eventually it no longer even becomes a matter of whether or not it's true. ONce they are fully consumed and invested, now it HAS to be true.
Again. Think of what you just did....
WIth the documentary, you spent 20 hours of your life being passively programmed to believe one side of this. Then you ventured out and spent 5 minutes scanning one completely random article on the other side.
20 hours vs 5 minutes.
Verdict: Brains are hackable. Filmmakers use wizardry to hack brains. You let yourself get programmed.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 4:35 pm to WG_Dawg
quote:
I don't see how a rational person could look at what was presented in MAM and say that according to the rules of our legal system that avery (and dassey) should have been convicted. Did he do it? Idk, maybe. Wouldn't shock me in the slightest if he did.
This is what I've said since I first watched S1, and nothing since then has really changed anything, if anything it's only made it more obvious.
He very well *may* be guilty... nothing about the legal process passes the "beyond a reasonable doubt" threshold.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 5:03 pm to fibonaccisquared
Oops, cops planted to Rav4 with a cop car battery.
Kathleen Zellner tweeted that she knows where the Crown Vic battery came from. That woman is having lots of fun wrecking shite.
The wrong sized battery was first discovered, and brought to Zellner's attention by Case Files Reviewer, one of the researchers at the Reddit sub Tick, Tock Manitowoc.
Kathleen Zellner tweeted that she knows where the Crown Vic battery came from. That woman is having lots of fun wrecking shite.
The wrong sized battery was first discovered, and brought to Zellner's attention by Case Files Reviewer, one of the researchers at the Reddit sub Tick, Tock Manitowoc.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 5:45 pm to Whiznot
quote:
Kathleen Zellner tweeted that she knows where the Crown Vic battery came from. That woman is having lots of fun wrecking shite.
Make sure to idolize her and be the megaphone she wants you to be. Criminal defense attorneys that take on high profile lucrative cases are known around the world as the most honest and non-manipulative people around.
Great instincts, POTGH!

Posted on 3/12/19 at 5:53 pm to Jefferson Dawg
Guyz, Johnny Cochran just tweeted that if the glove don’t fit, you must acquit. His corpse is having lots of fun wrecking shite!
Posted on 3/12/19 at 6:15 pm to Jefferson Dawg
Unbelievable that the OJ jury had never owned a pair of leather shoes that got wet.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 6:17 pm to Jefferson Dawg
Put on your Sunday school dress shoes and go dance in a puddle of water.
After they dry report back to me next Sunday and let me know how they fit.
After they dry report back to me next Sunday and let me know how they fit.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 8:30 pm to Jefferson Dawg
Zellner is rightfully celebrated. Kathleen has won vacated sentences for 20 people convicted of capital offenses. In none of those cases has the state elected to pursue new trials.
The secret to Zellner's success is that she only takes cases where the miscarriage of justice is exceedingly obvious. The Halbach murder case is just such a case.
The secret to Zellner's success is that she only takes cases where the miscarriage of justice is exceedingly obvious. The Halbach murder case is just such a case.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 8:34 pm to RhodeDawg
Give me gloves 2 sizes too large and I can mimic having trouble putting them on. The O.J. trial was torpedoed from the very top by DA Gil Garcetti.
Posted on 3/12/19 at 9:19 pm to Whiznot
I read through the battery thing.
You probably didn't read down far enough for another commentor to debunk alot of it.
Begin Quote-
I am the proverbial fence sitter and rarely comment unless its something I can provide, or a conversation I can contribute to. I see so much conversation about the battery—so I decided to have a conversation with my neighbor. He owns a chunk of the Interstate Battery corporation, and runs the franchise in two states. I have been to his warehouses, and he has a personal warehouse behind his house. This comes in handy when I need a battery last minute from anything from a mower, to my car, to my sump pump.
So I decided to have a conversation with him, and he showed me his batteries, as well as my own, which have come directly from his warehouse. They have no identifiers on them at all.
He supplies to businesses like car repair shops, car businesses, fleets for all sorts. They are delivered without any identifying marks and cannot be traced to him at all EXCEPT, when they get to their destination, the provider may place an identifying marker on them, whether it be a logo, or a barcode, or a serial number—but his batteries, which are the originating source, do not go out with any identification.
Just thought I would share my little interview with him, and I welcome any questions I can chat with him again—I know his family has owned the franchise in two states for at least 20 years—so he is definitely an excellent source of knowledge on this subject. (He doesn’t use reddit, nor would I doubt he has time to).
I asked him further questions after telling him the discussion and will copy and paste his answers (with his permission).
Direct quote: There has never been a recall. Yes, there are #s on a battery they would tell you a date, plant, shift. But those #s could be on thousands of batteries. And they can never be traced back to a dealer or a customer. Let's say a Honda battery that is in your car. I have 500 of them in stock that may have the same numbers on them. They could potentially be shipped anywhere in the world from my location. I have over 1200 customers—they will sale the battery to a end user. Those numbers are never recorded on any invoices ever!! So with that being said, No, the battery can't be tracked after it leaves me.
Further direct quote: Despite buying a battery today it could be a year old when you bought it depending on how popular the battery is. Just for instance, I got batteries in from a warehouse last week that had may 2017 date on them. These were brand new, and to track one down is impossible. Interstate battery of America sales 20 million batteries a year. Johnson controls who makes our batteries—they have 6 plants that make 100 million batteries. The plant closest to us is in Middletown, Delaware. They can make 150,000 batteries a week.
Furthermore, people always buy or are sold the wrong battery. Why? Money is the main reason. Let's say the have a BMW or a Mercedes or even some Chrysler products—a new popular battery that these manufacturers are using would cost you $250. People freak out. They need a battery and yet they only have $100, so they just buy something that fits. We also sell blemished batteries for $43.95. I have seen people install a Ford Escort battery in a Ferrari.
Lastly, I asked him: Do the dealers you sell them to put identifiers on them?
His response was: he’s never seen that.
(This surprised me.)
He said warranties are based off paperwork provided by the seller, only identifying the date of purchase.
Interestingly, in 20 or more years of owning the franchise he has never seen any dealer put any identifying markers.
He was saying how easy it is—where people will steal batteries often from places, due to lack of traceability. He said often, when a car is stolen, he will get a phone call to see about tracing it—and he said never can he and he has no way. It sounded like a touchy subject, meaning it’s a hole in the fabric of the business.
Question I just floated to him: How does your process work supplying government/police vehicles?
Answer: I supply the police, state police and military directly with the batteries. For example, I just supplied Arlington with the batteries that run the cemetery and internal flame. All police in the states where I supply Interstate batteries get them directly from me.
Link is to battery photo taken of a shelf at a large dealership from owner of Interstate. The numbers on the side identify at which factory they were made:
LINK
My friend said that he received 2000 with that code, as well as other franchises. The other numbers present are the manufacture date.
This dealership does not put any other ID on battery—warranty is a generic paper (this is a very large dealership.
I think the point is: Interstate themselves doesn’t put identifier,; but the end user business may— for example a car dealership or a fleet.
The Interstate battery from the start doesn’t send out batteries with identification. The end user business may—some probably do—put their own identifiers on.
I would imagine some of the end-user businesses do put their own identifiers. Definitely if they’re used by government, and maybe car dealerships? I saw a prior user say that Autozone does not put anything on their batteries.
End Quote
That said, it is still very odd that someone (Avery, Cops, someone else) took the time and effort to pop the hood and disconnect the battery. If you think Avery did it, why did he decide to disconnect the battery? If you think the cops did it, why would they disconnect the battery? If her old roommate or the retard's older brother did it, why disconnect the battery? It doesn't make sense in any of the theories.
So, I'm inclined to think she had the wrong battery in there to begin with. It's willfully ignorant to think she must have gone into a professional shop to change the battery. Why couldn't a redneck boyfriend or acquaintance swap it out for her at some point? That's not going to be on Carfax. They got it at Walmart at some point.
"But the battery doesn't fit!"
Yes it did, it just wasn't completely secured properly, and yes the terminals did fit. Not an exact fit, but that's why they have tightening screws on them.
As long as it is 12 volts, you can put that little fricker in your car.
I once left my lights on at the boat ramp. Got back, battery dead. Nobody to give me a jump. Took deep cycle marine battery out of my boat, flopped it into place, cranked up and drove home, with the added benefit of recharging it at the same time.
For people to say "you simply can't put a group 58 batter in a RAV4 designed for a group 35 battery" is ignorant. What Teresa got was an upgrade, quite frankly.
It sounds like I'm being snarky, but I'm being serious.
That said... if the lawyer bitch has true evidence of a serialized battery with a record that it was sold to the cops there, that's a bombshell. But she has only implied that, she hasn't actually said it. According to many sources, that's not something that is provable one way or another. And just because Crown Vics used the same type of battery, so did 100 other models of cars and trucks that have nothing to do with cops.
You probably didn't read down far enough for another commentor to debunk alot of it.
Begin Quote-
I am the proverbial fence sitter and rarely comment unless its something I can provide, or a conversation I can contribute to. I see so much conversation about the battery—so I decided to have a conversation with my neighbor. He owns a chunk of the Interstate Battery corporation, and runs the franchise in two states. I have been to his warehouses, and he has a personal warehouse behind his house. This comes in handy when I need a battery last minute from anything from a mower, to my car, to my sump pump.
So I decided to have a conversation with him, and he showed me his batteries, as well as my own, which have come directly from his warehouse. They have no identifiers on them at all.
He supplies to businesses like car repair shops, car businesses, fleets for all sorts. They are delivered without any identifying marks and cannot be traced to him at all EXCEPT, when they get to their destination, the provider may place an identifying marker on them, whether it be a logo, or a barcode, or a serial number—but his batteries, which are the originating source, do not go out with any identification.
Just thought I would share my little interview with him, and I welcome any questions I can chat with him again—I know his family has owned the franchise in two states for at least 20 years—so he is definitely an excellent source of knowledge on this subject. (He doesn’t use reddit, nor would I doubt he has time to).
I asked him further questions after telling him the discussion and will copy and paste his answers (with his permission).
Direct quote: There has never been a recall. Yes, there are #s on a battery they would tell you a date, plant, shift. But those #s could be on thousands of batteries. And they can never be traced back to a dealer or a customer. Let's say a Honda battery that is in your car. I have 500 of them in stock that may have the same numbers on them. They could potentially be shipped anywhere in the world from my location. I have over 1200 customers—they will sale the battery to a end user. Those numbers are never recorded on any invoices ever!! So with that being said, No, the battery can't be tracked after it leaves me.
Further direct quote: Despite buying a battery today it could be a year old when you bought it depending on how popular the battery is. Just for instance, I got batteries in from a warehouse last week that had may 2017 date on them. These were brand new, and to track one down is impossible. Interstate battery of America sales 20 million batteries a year. Johnson controls who makes our batteries—they have 6 plants that make 100 million batteries. The plant closest to us is in Middletown, Delaware. They can make 150,000 batteries a week.
Furthermore, people always buy or are sold the wrong battery. Why? Money is the main reason. Let's say the have a BMW or a Mercedes or even some Chrysler products—a new popular battery that these manufacturers are using would cost you $250. People freak out. They need a battery and yet they only have $100, so they just buy something that fits. We also sell blemished batteries for $43.95. I have seen people install a Ford Escort battery in a Ferrari.
Lastly, I asked him: Do the dealers you sell them to put identifiers on them?
His response was: he’s never seen that.
(This surprised me.)
He said warranties are based off paperwork provided by the seller, only identifying the date of purchase.
Interestingly, in 20 or more years of owning the franchise he has never seen any dealer put any identifying markers.
He was saying how easy it is—where people will steal batteries often from places, due to lack of traceability. He said often, when a car is stolen, he will get a phone call to see about tracing it—and he said never can he and he has no way. It sounded like a touchy subject, meaning it’s a hole in the fabric of the business.
Question I just floated to him: How does your process work supplying government/police vehicles?
Answer: I supply the police, state police and military directly with the batteries. For example, I just supplied Arlington with the batteries that run the cemetery and internal flame. All police in the states where I supply Interstate batteries get them directly from me.
Link is to battery photo taken of a shelf at a large dealership from owner of Interstate. The numbers on the side identify at which factory they were made:
LINK
My friend said that he received 2000 with that code, as well as other franchises. The other numbers present are the manufacture date.
This dealership does not put any other ID on battery—warranty is a generic paper (this is a very large dealership.
I think the point is: Interstate themselves doesn’t put identifier,; but the end user business may— for example a car dealership or a fleet.
The Interstate battery from the start doesn’t send out batteries with identification. The end user business may—some probably do—put their own identifiers on.
I would imagine some of the end-user businesses do put their own identifiers. Definitely if they’re used by government, and maybe car dealerships? I saw a prior user say that Autozone does not put anything on their batteries.
End Quote
That said, it is still very odd that someone (Avery, Cops, someone else) took the time and effort to pop the hood and disconnect the battery. If you think Avery did it, why did he decide to disconnect the battery? If you think the cops did it, why would they disconnect the battery? If her old roommate or the retard's older brother did it, why disconnect the battery? It doesn't make sense in any of the theories.
So, I'm inclined to think she had the wrong battery in there to begin with. It's willfully ignorant to think she must have gone into a professional shop to change the battery. Why couldn't a redneck boyfriend or acquaintance swap it out for her at some point? That's not going to be on Carfax. They got it at Walmart at some point.
"But the battery doesn't fit!"
Yes it did, it just wasn't completely secured properly, and yes the terminals did fit. Not an exact fit, but that's why they have tightening screws on them.
As long as it is 12 volts, you can put that little fricker in your car.
I once left my lights on at the boat ramp. Got back, battery dead. Nobody to give me a jump. Took deep cycle marine battery out of my boat, flopped it into place, cranked up and drove home, with the added benefit of recharging it at the same time.
For people to say "you simply can't put a group 58 batter in a RAV4 designed for a group 35 battery" is ignorant. What Teresa got was an upgrade, quite frankly.
It sounds like I'm being snarky, but I'm being serious.
That said... if the lawyer bitch has true evidence of a serialized battery with a record that it was sold to the cops there, that's a bombshell. But she has only implied that, she hasn't actually said it. According to many sources, that's not something that is provable one way or another. And just because Crown Vics used the same type of battery, so did 100 other models of cars and trucks that have nothing to do with cops.
Posted on 3/13/19 at 8:56 am to RhodeDawg
The creepiest part about this new docu-binge-sleuth phenomenon is how people start treating it like its a sport or something. They seem so far removed from the heinousness of the whole ordeal and the murder victim and it morphs in to some kind of couch-potato spectator sport.
Example: BigDaddyDawg updates the thread that A New Trial is Announced!!! with exclamation points and glee like UGA just got selected to the CFP, and then Whiznot starts booking couch time in frothing anticipation like Georgia fans would start booking hotels and planning trips to wherever the playoff game was. ANd then he raves about a defense attorney like she's the Heisman quarterback and he wants her autograph and would pay money to touch her hand.
And everyone's talking about charred bone fragments and torture chambers and cleaning semen and blood up with bleach not even realizing how de-sensitized they've become to such horror and degeneracy. They just want another episode. Need another episode. More shock! More degeneracy!!! Bathe my brain in something even uglier for ten hours! Do it! I need it!!!!
Long story short, cultural rot before your very eyes. We're doomed
Example: BigDaddyDawg updates the thread that A New Trial is Announced!!! with exclamation points and glee like UGA just got selected to the CFP, and then Whiznot starts booking couch time in frothing anticipation like Georgia fans would start booking hotels and planning trips to wherever the playoff game was. ANd then he raves about a defense attorney like she's the Heisman quarterback and he wants her autograph and would pay money to touch her hand.
And everyone's talking about charred bone fragments and torture chambers and cleaning semen and blood up with bleach not even realizing how de-sensitized they've become to such horror and degeneracy. They just want another episode. Need another episode. More shock! More degeneracy!!! Bathe my brain in something even uglier for ten hours! Do it! I need it!!!!
Long story short, cultural rot before your very eyes. We're doomed
Posted on 3/13/19 at 9:03 am to Jefferson Dawg
what are some non-cultural rot shows you'd recommend watching JD? I'm always looking for new stuff to check out.
Posted on 3/13/19 at 10:50 am to Jefferson Dawg
People need to see every example of corruption in our justice system exposed so that the cancer can be excised. Innocent men and women are behind bars while crooks and murderers roam free.
Steven Avery was knowingly framed twice by Manitowoc County and its sheriffs dept.
Avery's trial lawyers queered his venue change in favor of the county that was framing him for the second time.
Avery's trial attorneys placed a sheriff's deputy and the spouse of a county clerk on his jury. The planted jurors employed fear and intimidation to force a guilty verdict from a panel that was leaning toward acquittal.
An innocent mentally deficient child's life was destroyed as collateral damage to convict Avery and to stop a $36,000,000 civil suit.
Zellner is wrecking shite that deserves to be wrecked. The two lesbian filmmakers are also heroes.
Deal with it Jefferson Dawg.
Steven Avery was knowingly framed twice by Manitowoc County and its sheriffs dept.
Avery's trial lawyers queered his venue change in favor of the county that was framing him for the second time.
Avery's trial attorneys placed a sheriff's deputy and the spouse of a county clerk on his jury. The planted jurors employed fear and intimidation to force a guilty verdict from a panel that was leaning toward acquittal.
An innocent mentally deficient child's life was destroyed as collateral damage to convict Avery and to stop a $36,000,000 civil suit.
Zellner is wrecking shite that deserves to be wrecked. The two lesbian filmmakers are also heroes.
Deal with it Jefferson Dawg.
Posted on 3/13/19 at 12:59 pm to Whiznot
Whiznot, Do you think that the married lesbian directors or the lady defense attorney know about hybristophilia and just might be exploiting the phenomenon?
LINK......
I think you may have it pertty bad. Seek help.
LINK......
I think you may have it pertty bad. Seek help.
Posted on 3/13/19 at 1:33 pm to WG_Dawg
quote:
what are some non-cultural rot shows you'd recommend watching JD? I'm always looking for new stuff to check out.
Start with "The Bible" - LINK...........
-even if you're not Christian, you need to know the fundamentals of the story
-despite what your television and computer say, Christianity is still the majority religion in this country
-and your country was founded by Christians
-so, you need to know your history
-if you're not up for watching the whole thing, just watch Episode 9 to get ready for Good Friday and Easter, so that you can see what they did to my Lord
-but I know you won't so here are some other recomendations
Check out Werner Herzog, the greatest documentary film maker of all time. If something somewhere in each of his films doesn't stick with you for life, I will personally mail you $100 dollars.
A good intro to Herzog would be Grizzly Man, but I don't know where you can watch it.
Here's a couple free on youtube, you can watch on your Smart TV....
Encounters at the End of the World
-Antarctica
-and the people drawn there
Cave of Forgotten Dreams
-30,000 year old cave paintings
-the oldest painted by humans ever discovered
-only very recently discovered accidentally in France
All other documentaries will be let-downs after you watch Werner Herzog, but this one's really good..... " "Dale The Movie".
Watch all of these tonight, and then we can start Step 2
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