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For Sal enjoy

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1For Sal enjoy Empty For Sal enjoy 7/30/2013, 4:27 pm

Guest


Guest

For Sal enjoy Th?id=H.4899944587135551&pid=1

Information on that life of privilege you envy...

http://www.yellowpages.com/pensacola-fl/army-recruiting

Hope this helps you on your way to obtaining all that you desire in life.

*****CHUCKLE*****

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QplWbNg57h4

Very Happy

2For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/30/2013, 4:38 pm

Sal

Sal

Damaged Eagle wrote:For Sal enjoy Th?id=H.4899944587135551&pid=1

Information on that life of privilege you envy...

http://www.yellowpages.com/pensacola-fl/army-recruiting

Hope this helps you on your way to obtaining all that you desire in life.

*****CHUCKLE*****

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QplWbNg57h4

Very Happy

I don't speak clodhopper, so I'm not sure what Spreading Eagle is getting at here.

Anybody?

3For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/30/2013, 5:02 pm

Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

Sal wrote:

I don't speak clodhopper, so I'm not sure what Spreading Eagle is getting at here.

Anybody?

I speak east tennessee hillbilly,  west carolina tarheel and panhandle cracker and I can speak it all with a lisp if required.  But I've never learned clodhopper.  
But I don't see the words "liberal" or "progressive" in it so my guess is it's someone impersonating damaged eagle who just doesn't have it down pat yet.

4For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/30/2013, 11:54 pm

Guest


Guest

For Sal enjoy Th?id=H.4671027104318254&pid=1

You boys look so hard to liberally seek out people that you progressively think are bigoted in some way that that enlightenment eludes your supposedly enlightened progressive liberal self when ya' all can't even recognize ya' all's own prejudice and discrimination.

That life of privilege that you envy is still waitin' for ya' Sal.

*****CHUCKLE*****

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2QbDlvgHw8

Very Happy



Last edited by Damaged Eagle on 7/31/2013, 12:06 am; edited 1 time in total

5For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 12:05 am

Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

If that picture is Merle Haggard, I have something to say to him.
I have smoked marijuana but not down at the courthouse because I didn't want to get busted. I don't care for white lightnin cause store bought liquor is better. And I didn't need to burn my draft card cause I got a college deferment. And I don't grow my hair long because I don't want to look like one of those hick televangelists from Oklahoma.
But mainly I like livin free too especially livin free from crackers like Haggard.

6For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 12:11 am

Guest


Guest

For Sal enjoy Th?id=H.4504837688133643&pid=1

Well it's a good thing that the picture ain't Merle's then ain't it?

*****CHUCKLE*****

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VO6bI-xrj8

Very Happy

7For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 12:12 am

TEOTWAWKI

TEOTWAWKI

They all look alike to Bob...

8For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 1:18 am

Guest


Guest

TEOTWAWKI wrote:They all look alike to Bob...

For Sal enjoy Th?id=H.4678311384121902&pid=1

Damn! I think that's what I just told them.

*****ROFLMAO*****

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNpLSaCirj8

Very Happy 

9For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 8:18 am

Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

If only Holly had rode the bus instead of Haggard.  We woulda still had Nelson to give us the outlaw music.  But if Holly had lived a normal lifespan that would probably have led to a whole new and lasting genre of music.  He was that talented and that creative and that prolific.  It's no telling how his style would have evolved.  We'll never know only because that hick Haggard won the coin toss.  But I have a feeling Holly might even have overwhelmed John Lennon with time and then an American flag would still have been flying high when the Brits invaded.
But no it was not to be.  Instead we got Haggard singing about okies. The Lord may work in mysterious ways. But he don't know shit about music.

10For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 8:24 am

Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

By the way, I don't need no clodhoppers to read that and bother me about trivial details. It's called creative license.
But I'll have to admit it probably is progressive and liberal. Enlightening too. lol

11For Sal enjoy Empty Re: For Sal enjoy 7/31/2013, 8:40 am

Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

And now for the counterpoint.  I've learned that,  at this age,  whenever you question the Lord's judgement,  it's best to make amends as quickly as possible.  I'm getting closer and closer to learning what it's like to be swimming in a lake of fire.  And I would like to have just a few more years before that happens.

If Mount Rushmore could sing, it would probably sound like Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson did Wednesday night at the sold-out State Theatre in Minneapolis: wise, weathered and wonderful after all these years.

If Hank Williams Sr. and Johnny Cash were still alive, it would have truly been the Mount Rushmore of country-music songwriters (although some might argue for Willie Nelson instead of Cash). No country songwriter has articulated the thoughts and plight of the common man more effectively than Haggard. No other writer has surpassed the deep, penetrating poetry of Kristofferson, whether he's singing about God, loneliness or a hangover.

In concert, Haggard's 75-year-old face looked like a road map of a hard life, and his voice sounded like he knows better now. At 76, Kristofferson has the demeanor of the Clint Eastwood of country, tall and tan, a big forehead and lantern jaw and a thin-eyed stare that cut like a Bowie knife.

For the first hour on Wednesday, these giants were indeed Rushmore-like -- all presence with no personality, just great song after great song. A couple of tunes sung by Haggard, his voice too soft or just off-microphone too often, then a couple tunes by Kristofferson, his voice -- which was never much to begin with -- sounding more assertive than his last two trips to the Twin Cities. Both were backed by Haggard's ace band, but, frankly, the performance felt too business-like. Missing was the nonstop witty banter of Haggard that made their collaboration last year at Mystic Lake Casino -- when Kristofferson was fighting a bad cold -- so memorable.

Then something Wednesday set off Haggard, always a contrarian with a sharp tongue. The band had started "That's the Way That Love Goes" and after the opening instrumental line, the boss shouted, "Hold it." "Most of the songs were written when we were in our 20s," he told the crowd. "And now we're in our 40s." The crowd laughed and the drummer got the message -- slow down the tempo. Then Haggard flawlessly crooned his sweet romance ballad as Kristofferson just watched and marveled at Merle being Merle.

For the final half of the 110-minute set, it was pretty much everything a fan could have hoped for. Haggard delved into social commentary with the still-relevant 1982 recession salve/salvo "Are the Good Times Really Over," which featured a rousing patriotic reprise followed by a standing ovation and Kristofferson whistling with two fingers in his mouth. The whistler responded with "The Pilgrim, Chapter 33," his portrait of a down-on-his-luck poet and dreamer. Before long, the outlaw brothers in black with over-the-collar silver hair teamed up on the engrossing "Pancho and Lefty," a tale of a Mexican bandit and his abetting buddy that was actually written by Townes Van Zandt.

These two great songwriters weren't afraid to cover the works of others. Haggard and the Strangers waltzed into the Western swing of Bob Wills' "Take Me Back to Tulsa" (complete with a silly ad lib by Hag about "she pulled up her petticoat and I pulled up to Tulsa"). Kristofferson threw his own curveball by breaking into Haggard's "Sing Me Back Home," which seemed to surprise Hag but he had the last word by ending the tune with his most expressive and best guitar solo of the night. The only real surprise from Kristofferson was his eschewing "Lovin' Her Was Easier," one of his best-known compositions.

The second half was full of highlights, including Kristofferson's hangover classic "Sunday Morning Comin' Down" with Haggard's bittersweet guitar coda and 1969's rollicking "Okie from Muskogee," which Haggard started twice and stopped to toy with the crowd before tearing into the sing-along anthem, complete with a silly new verse from Kristofferson.

Who knew that Mount Rushmore could smile and laugh?


For Sal enjoy Haggar10

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