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Funny Pictures Part 2


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i lol'd pretty hard at "that is mahogany" without realizing it was a hunger games reference. i just thought the kid was channeling my grandfather.

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  On 11/21/2013 at 6:05 PM, baph said:

i lol'd pretty hard at "that is mahogany" without realizing it was a hunger games reference. i just thought the kid was channeling my grandfather.

 

Agh that's spoiled it now

gif-dog-toy-baby-939782.gif

  On 2/26/2015 at 9:39 AM, RupturedSouls said:

This drugs makes me feel like I'm on song!

  On 9/1/2014 at 5:50 PM, StephenG said:

I'm hardly a closed minded nun. Remember, I'm on a fucking IDM forum.... an IDM forum.. Think about that for a second before claiming people are closed minded nuns.

Magic is so real, check this shit out ...

 

 

  On 11/21/2013 at 8:14 PM, mokz said:

 

 

1278593831_kid-walks-through-spinning-ho

A member of the non sequitairiate.

  On 11/21/2013 at 6:33 PM, baph said:

3kP8gPF.gif

 

That's pretty fuckin cool.

A member of the non sequitairiate.

  On 11/21/2013 at 4:00 PM, joshuatx said:

^Those are pretty funny and/or cute.

 

That mile/kilometer one is infuriating to me. I remember my wife telling me about her brother had an elementary school teacher that hated him and all of the other smart and even remotely anti-authoriatarian kids in class. The teacher broke rules often particularly she used to make personal phone calls in class on her cellphone (which is against school regulations). Once, she missed an important call from the principal via the PA system because she was in the classroom's closet making a personal call. When he told the principal she was doing this over the PA, she was so irate at him for getting her in trouble that she tried getting him prescribed ADHD medication to make him more passive in her class. If his parents hadn't made an appeal to the school against the medication, there's a good chance the school would of started administering it.

 

It's a bit scary thinking how much power teachers can yield. The standard of their professionalism (and qualifications) vary so much in this country.

...

 

what? Do schools have the right to administer medicine in the states? If so, that is completely fucked up.

 

  On 1/19/2020 at 5:27 PM, Richie Sombrero said:

Nah, you're a wee child who can't wait for official release. Embarrassing. Shove your privilege. 

  On 9/2/2014 at 12:37 AM, Ivan Ooze said:

don't be a cockroach prolapsing nun bulkV

So he shaved a bunch of pubes off and glued them to his head? Might be an inspiration to us bald guys innit

 

  On 10/21/2015 at 9:51 AM, peace 7 said:

To keep it real and analog, I'm gonna start posting to WATMM by writing my posts in fountain pen on hemp paper, putting them in bottles, and throwing them into the ocean.

 

  On 11/5/2013 at 7:51 PM, Sean Ae said:

you have to watch those silent people, always trying to trick you with their silence

 

  On 11/21/2013 at 8:14 PM, mokz said:

1278593831_kid-walks-through-spinning-ho

 

An example of how kids and similarly drunks are incredibly lucky.

Rc0dj.gifRc0dj.gifRc0dj.gif

last.fm

the biggest illusion is yourself

  On 11/22/2013 at 2:27 AM, StephenG said:

 

  On 11/21/2013 at 4:00 PM, joshuatx said:

^Those are pretty funny and/or cute.

 

That mile/kilometer one is infuriating to me. I remember my wife telling me about her brother had an elementary school teacher that hated him and all of the other smart and even remotely anti-authoriatarian kids in class. The teacher broke rules often particularly she used to make personal phone calls in class on her cellphone (which is against school regulations). Once, she missed an important call from the principal via the PA system because she was in the classroom's closet making a personal call. When he told the principal she was doing this over the PA, she was so irate at him for getting her in trouble that she tried getting him prescribed ADHD medication to make him more passive in her class. If his parents hadn't made an appeal to the school against the medication, there's a good chance the school would of started administering it.

 

It's a bit scary thinking how much power teachers can yield. The standard of their professionalism (and qualifications) vary so much in this country.

...

 

what? Do schools have the right to administer medicine in the states? If so, that is completely fucked up.

 

I was wondering the same thing, asked my so who told me it´s bs. They can´t do that without the parents consent..

They just

 

  On 11/22/2013 at 9:55 AM, plstik said:

 

  On 11/22/2013 at 2:27 AM, StephenG said:

 

  On 11/21/2013 at 4:00 PM, joshuatx said:

^Those are pretty funny and/or cute.

 

That mile/kilometer one is infuriating to me. I remember my wife telling me about her brother had an elementary school teacher that hated him and all of the other smart and even remotely anti-authoriatarian kids in class. The teacher broke rules often particularly she used to make personal phone calls in class on her cellphone (which is against school regulations). Once, she missed an important call from the principal via the PA system because she was in the classroom's closet making a personal call. When he told the principal she was doing this over the PA, she was so irate at him for getting her in trouble that she tried getting him prescribed ADHD medication to make him more passive in her class. If his parents hadn't made an appeal to the school against the medication, there's a good chance the school would of started administering it.

 

It's a bit scary thinking how much power teachers can yield. The standard of their professionalism (and qualifications) vary so much in this country.

...

 

what? Do schools have the right to administer medicine in the states? If so, that is completely fucked up.

 

I was wondering the same thing, asked my so who told me it´s bs. They can´t do that without the parents consent..

 

 

Speaking of schools administering medicine, just happened to see they recently passed a federal law where schools are mandated to have epi-pens at hand in case of severe allergic reactions and can be administered without a prescription. Usually it was up to the parent to to supply the epi-pen to the school if their kid had severe allergies and only if it was their own prescription.

Rc0dj.gifRc0dj.gifRc0dj.gif

last.fm

the biggest illusion is yourself

  On 11/22/2013 at 10:03 AM, azatoth said:

They just

 

  On 11/22/2013 at 9:55 AM, plstik said:

 

  On 11/22/2013 at 2:27 AM, StephenG said:

 

  On 11/21/2013 at 4:00 PM, joshuatx said:

^Those are pretty funny and/or cute.

 

That mile/kilometer one is infuriating to me. I remember my wife telling me about her brother had an elementary school teacher that hated him and all of the other smart and even remotely anti-authoriatarian kids in class. The teacher broke rules often particularly she used to make personal phone calls in class on her cellphone (which is against school regulations). Once, she missed an important call from the principal via the PA system because she was in the classroom's closet making a personal call. When he told the principal she was doing this over the PA, she was so irate at him for getting her in trouble that she tried getting him prescribed ADHD medication to make him more passive in her class. If his parents hadn't made an appeal to the school against the medication, there's a good chance the school would of started administering it.

 

It's a bit scary thinking how much power teachers can yield. The standard of their professionalism (and qualifications) vary so much in this country.

...

 

what? Do schools have the right to administer medicine in the states? If so, that is completely fucked up.

 

I was wondering the same thing, asked my so who told me it´s bs. They can´t do that without the parents consent..

 

 

Speaking of schools administering medicine, just happened to see they recently passed a federal law where schools are mandated to have epi-pens at hand in case of severe allergic reactions and can be administered without a prescription. Usually it was up to the parent to to supply the epi-pen to the school if their kid had severe allergies and only if it was their own prescription.

 

Sorry, super overstatement on my part. Parents have to sign-off. But one overzealous teacher + ignorant parents = yikes. It seems school districts for the most part have become better about not over-prescribing ADD and ADHD meds, but 10 years ago it was a bigger problem.

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