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[#] Tue Oct 29 2019 12:23:29 EDT from IGnatius T Foobar

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It appears to be readily available in American grocery stores now.

[#] Thu Nov 26 2020 09:16:33 EST from zooer

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Wood Porn.

Apparently it is a thing. A rite of passage for boys (and girls) everywhere.

I remember finding it a few times but I didn't know most boys found wood porn.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRAfoxMuVn8

 



[#] Thu Nov 26 2020 10:41:09 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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Thu Nov 26 2020 09:16:33 EST from zooer

Wood Porn.

Apparently it is a thing. A rite of passage for boys (and girls) everywhere.

I remember finding it a few times but I didn't know most boys found wood porn.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRAfoxMuVn8

 



I dunno. I lived in Sacramento. It is pretty much a developed city - the closest thing to a woods was the levee, and it flooded every couple of years - and would have washed anything like this away. 

Not a thing. We just stole magazines from the 7-11. 

 



[#] Mon Nov 30 2020 14:58:12 EST from Ragnar Danneskjold

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Definitely found more than a few in the woods near the school....

[#] Tue Dec 01 2020 07:54:48 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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Where did you live? 

Mon Nov 30 2020 14:58:12 EST from Ragnar Danneskjold
Definitely found more than a few in the woods near the school....

 



[#] Sat Dec 26 2020 14:01:59 EST from IGnatius T Foobar

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Wood Porn.

Apparently it is a thing. A rite of passage for boys (and girls)
everywhere.

Finally getting around to following this link, and until now I thought you were talking about people carving pornographic wooden figures. Ok so it's talking about people stashing nudie mags in secret caches in the woods.

It's funny how the video talks about Playboy, which barely counts as porn anymore.

I never found anything in the woods, but I knew I could always count on Grandpa's stack of Hustler issues that he kept in his workshop, in that one drawer that was too small to hold any tools or supplies...

[#] Sun Dec 27 2020 16:48:20 EST from mo

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We used find all sorts of things in the woods near us in Kent 30 miles south of London (England) (no gps unfortunately). There was an old fort, whioch would have been part of the coastal defences for the Thames estuary (it was on high ground a couple of miles from the river , but would have had big guns aimed at passing shipping ... ), the local paperboy, or maybe new stand owner must have used the place as a dumping ground, aswell as xxx, there would be magazines on cars,  planes, all sorts of hobbies ... It was an overgrown place with woods all around, which now is actually nearly restored to its previuos working state as a barracks minus the big gun enplacements on top (a tourist attraction very soon ... )

 

 

Merry Christmas!!!



[#] Sun Dec 27 2020 16:53:20 EST from mo

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I'll be back before the New Year to buy you all a glass of whiskey btw.  Another thing worth going to the woods for and starting a fire with friends (whiskey only tatsed good when drunk with friends for sure).

Till then Goodnight and may your God go with you!
(as Dave Allen would say)



[#] Sun Dec 27 2020 18:54:13 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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Yeah - but you've got ruins of castles that are what... 1200 years old lying around? 

England is full of stone walls with mysterious walls that lead to overgrown woods where one might encounter a Faun or White Witch. 

Here - we have to settle for haunted Victorians and broken bits of blue glass in our woods. :) 

 

Sun Dec 27 2020 16:48:20 EST from mo

We used find all sorts of things in the woods near us in Kent 30 miles south of London (England)

 



[#] Sun Dec 27 2020 21:50:57 EST from mo

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And Injuns who have been leaving secret signs in the forests and mountains for tens of thousands of years.  (if you squint you can see the ruins of the Martian cities ... )

Sun Dec 27 2020 18:54:13 EST from ParanoidDelusions

Yeah - but you've got ruins of castles that are what... 1200 years old lying around? 

England is full of stone walls with mysterious walls that lead to overgrown woods where one might encounter a Faun or White Witch. 

Here - we have to settle for haunted Victorians and broken bits of blue glass in our woods. :) 

 

Sun Dec 27 2020 16:48:20 EST from mo

We used find all sorts of things in the woods near us in Kent 30 miles south of London (England)

 



 



[#] Mon Dec 28 2020 23:12:18 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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I live in Phoenix (and have already mentioned I'm a cited researcher for my observations about the D&M pyramid in Cydonia in "After the Martian Apocalypse," a fringe-science "Ancient-Alien Astronaut" book by Mac Tonnies.

But the prehistoric scribblings of strange beings wearing helmets with antennae standing in front of temporal vortexes is a different kind of post-apocalypse than the Europe of the post-Roman empire collapse into the middle-ages.

One is *our culture's* prehistory, the other is humanity's origin. ;) 

And I tend to dial that one back outside of groups I'm real comfortable with - as most people are not only not open to the ideas of Sitchin, Von Daniken and their ilk - they're resistant to them to the point of hostility.   


Sun Dec 27 2020 21:50:57 EST from mo

And Injuns who have been leaving secret signs in the forests and mountains for tens of thousands of years.  (if you squint you can see the ruins of the Martian cities ... )

 


[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 11:39:05 EST from mo

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Happy New Year!!!!!
Sorry i'm, competitively,  late :) - i'm just about to raise a coffee to you all here (wherever the heck this is :/ :) )

 

Actually i have no problem with such speculation as to the origins of humanity. The way i look at it is: if a mothership full of green people from a advanced form of life that could teach humankind to live in harmony with each other and our planet, landed on the Whitehouse lawn: i wouldn't even get the day off work to watch it on TV, and after 8 hours work i would still need to shower cook and relax before i even thought about the end of the world as we know it, and i'm sure the next day wouldn't be a public holiday either.

 

Mon Dec 28 2020 23:12:18 EST from ParanoidDelusions

I live in Phoenix (and have already mentioned I'm a cited researcher for my observations about the D&M pyramid in Cydonia in "After the Martian Apocalypse," a fringe-science "Ancient-Alien Astronaut" book by Mac Tonnies.

But the prehistoric scribblings of strange beings wearing helmets with antennae standing in front of temporal vortexes is a different kind of post-apocalypse than the Europe of the post-Roman empire collapse into the middle-ages.

One is *our culture's* prehistory, the other is humanity's origin. ;) 

And I tend to dial that one back outside of groups I'm real comfortable with - as most people are not only not open to the ideas of Sitchin, Von Daniken and their ilk - they're resistant to them to the point of hostility.   


Sun Dec 27 2020 21:50:57 EST from mo

And Injuns who have been leaving secret signs in the forests and mountains for tens of thousands of years.  (if you squint you can see the ruins of the Martian cities ... )

 


 



[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 11:41:18 EST from mo

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btw it's not the Olympics, i meant 'comparativly'.



[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 12:26:14 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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Yeah, but it isn't how you react that you have to worry about. It is the rest of society. 

Sun Jan 03 2021 11:39:05 EST from mo

Happy New Year!!!!!
Sorry i'm, competitively,  late :) - i'm just about to raise a coffee to you all here (wherever the heck this is :/ :) )

 

Actually i have no problem with such speculation as to the origins of humanity. The way i look at it is: if a mothership full of green people from a advanced form of life that could teach humankind to live in harmony with each other and our planet, landed on the Whitehouse lawn: i wouldn't even get the day off work to watch it on TV, and after 8 hours work i would still need to shower cook and relax before i even thought about the end of the world as we know it, and i'm sure the next day wouldn't be a public holiday either.

 

Mon Dec 28 2020 23:12:18 EST from ParanoidDelusions

I live in Phoenix (and have already mentioned I'm a cited researcher for my observations about the D&M pyramid in Cydonia in "After the Martian Apocalypse," a fringe-science "Ancient-Alien Astronaut" book by Mac Tonnies.

But the prehistoric scribblings of strange beings wearing helmets with antennae standing in front of temporal vortexes is a different kind of post-apocalypse than the Europe of the post-Roman empire collapse into the middle-ages.

One is *our culture's* prehistory, the other is humanity's origin. ;) 

And I tend to dial that one back outside of groups I'm real comfortable with - as most people are not only not open to the ideas of Sitchin, Von Daniken and their ilk - they're resistant to them to the point of hostility.   


Sun Dec 27 2020 21:50:57 EST from mo

And Injuns who have been leaving secret signs in the forests and mountains for tens of thousands of years.  (if you squint you can see the ruins of the Martian cities ... )

 


 



 



[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 15:59:22 EST from mo

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Oh i'm fine with the rest of society, it's nothing personal - everybody should be thinking of number one. I can only influence what i do myself. 

Btw interesting ideas about our 'culture'; but who's culture were you referring to? I'm sure the native tribes of the Americas would not think the collapse of the Roman empire to be the end of the world, or indeed any other part of the world just outside the influence of the Mediterranean.  (in fact you could make the Roman sphere of influence that would have felt a great change in Romes' demise,  just the Western part of Europe (Spain/France/Italy) - which is by no means the End of Civilization in the world.)



[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 16:05:48 EST from mo

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... oh yes: and Britannia of course. (we all seem to forget that we in the UK  were a central part/province of the Roman empire - it's easy to think like that living on an island ( or way up in the mountains ) ).



[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 19:55:55 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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Oh, at this point it is humanity's "culture", and there are only a handful of people who wouldn't be very much bothered by it. 

I realized a while ago - those living the furthest off the grid are the ones most likely to survive any kind of apocalypse - zombie, nuclear, celestial impact, super-volcano, peak oil... 


Another thing the bible got right. "The meek shall inherit the Earth." 


The trucks stop brining groceries to your local Acme or Giant Eagle or Albertsons or Safeway or whatever it is called in your neck of the woods - in a few weeks, you'll be boarded up in your house listening to gunshots all night long. 

The Amish guy who lives 30 miles away out in Lancaster Country is going to be mostly going on about his merry way. 

The guy with a bone through his nose and a Hitler Rice Bowl haircut - living in a jungle on the coast of South America won't even be bothered at all. 


Sun Jan 03 2021 15:59:22 EST from mo

Oh i'm fine with the rest of society, it's nothing personal - everybody should be thinking of number one. I can only influence what i do myself. 

Btw interesting ideas about our 'culture'; but who's culture were you referring to? I'm sure the native tribes of the Americas would not think the collapse of the Roman empire to be the end of the world, or indeed any other part of the world just outside the influence of the Mediterranean.  (in fact you could make the Roman sphere of influence that would have felt a great change in Romes' demise,  just the Western part of Europe (Spain/France/Italy) - which is by no means the End of Civilization in the world.)



 



[#] Sun Jan 03 2021 19:59:22 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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If you're here on a BBS talking to me about what "our culture" is... 

You're part of our culture. 

 



[#] Mon Jan 04 2021 17:00:14 EST from mo

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I really felt quite happy ready that: like i belonged, a kinda warm feeling, like when you and your best buddy meet and are both having the first supp of that beer ( no words needed - burp! ). I scrolled up to read the previous to last msg and now i think i'm not gonna get to sleep at night. lol ;)

"No man is an island..." If any of you shoot me, and steel my beer, you'll only be hurting yourselves in the long run.

When your conscience catches up with you, and you gotta spend more time and money on penance than my beer was worth - you'll regret it big time. And i'll come back and haunt you and keep you up at nights, and make your life a misery too. 

I feel better now.

Tbh though, i don't think there are too many people on our planet that would not be affected by the end of the world, maybe save a few tribes in the deepest part of the Amazon.

Sun Jan 03 2021 19:59:22 EST from ParanoidDelusions

If you're here on a BBS talking to me about what "our culture" is... 

You're part of our culture. 

 



 



[#] Mon Jan 04 2021 18:16:17 EST from ParanoidDelusions

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There aren't - you're right. We act like we live in the worst time in history - but we live in a time where a relatively poor kid in India can be heard globally with a post he makes on a cheap Android phone or at an Internet cafe. 

More people have more of a voice that reaches further than any time in society. 

Alas it turns out - that may be part of the problem. Maybe Loki was right. 

 

 

Mon Jan 04 2021 17:00:14 EST from mo

 

Tbh though, i don't think there are too many people on our planet that would not be affected by the end of the world, maybe save a few tribes in the deepest part of the Amazon.

 


 



 



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