On 10/17/13, 9:20 PM, True North wrote:
On Thursday, 17 October 2013 19:57:13 UTC-3, Charlemagne wrote:
On 10/17/2013 6:38 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 17 Oct 2013 16:55:11 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 10/17/13, 2:57 PM, wrote:
You're really not a liberal arts student...West Virginia, where I lived
for a while, had some significant anti-slavery activities, and Kentucky,
of course, was a slave state.
West Virginia was one of those border states you think were all solid
union. If you are talking about Kentucky, right across the river from
Cincinnati, that is virtually Ohio.
I recall a couple of traitorous Confederate flag episodes in SW Missouri
when I was in college, either in Joplin or Springfield, and a decade or
so later there were incidents involving that flag of disgrace in
Virginia. That's what, five decades or more ago?
There were plenty of confederate flags in southern Maryland in the
60s, 70 and 80s, including Calvert county. In the late 50s there was
even a network show glamorizing Major Mosby (The Gray Ghost)
They sold all sorts of "merch" around that , hats, flags, toy guns.
I think you are just in denial and suddenly coming up with outrage
about something that has been around for 150 years.
harry has been getting pretty desperate the last few days. Sexual
fantasies about children, making up stories (someone alert dick) about
other posters, ****ing nasty stories, and wishing death on just about
everyone again.... snerk...
Why do you constantly jab at Richard?
He has been more than charitable to you over the years...ask Hankie if you don't believe me.
Scotty is psychotic. Perhaps you are unfamiliar with its manifestations.
Simply, and from wiki: psychotic is a generic psychiatric term for a
mental state often described as involving a "loss of contact with
reality". People suffering from psychosis are described as psychotic.
Psychosis is the term given to the more severe forms of psychiatric
disorder, during which hallucinations and/or delusions, violence and
impaired insight may occur.
Scotty's postings over the years have included hundreds of examples of
psychotic thinking.
These include his "...delusional beliefs, some of which are paranoid in
nature. Put simply, delusions are false beliefs which a person holds on
to, without adequate evidence. It may be difficult to change the belief
even with evidence to the contrary. Common themes of delusions are
persecutory (person believes that others are out to harm him/her),
grandiose (person believing that he or she has special powers or skills)
etc. Depressed persons may have delusions consistent with their low mood
e.g., delusions that they have sinned, or have contracted serious
illness etc."