| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
|
|
#1
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring
wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. |
|
#2
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't bother me at all. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. |
|
#3
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't bother me at all. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! |
|
#4
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't bother me atall. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. |
|
#5
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 15:17:05 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't bother me atall. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. ....and in a wheelchair and blind and unable to tell directions....you could go on and on with those extremely few exceptions. Do you honestly think those cases account for the majority of abortions in this country. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! |
|
#6
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 3/14/2013 3:17 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't bother me atall. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. It's a myth... doesn't happen. When I was a kid we had to drive or take the bus 15 miles to Hartford to do our shopping, it can be done. Now we have a thousand stores between here and there... I can get condoms anywhere. |
|
#7
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 3/14/13 4:17 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 3/14/2013 3:17 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't botherme at all. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. It's a myth... doesn't happen. When I was a kid we had to drive or take the bus 15 miles to Hartford to do our shopping, it can be done. Now we have a thousand stores between here and there... I can get condoms anywhere. Your life experience isn't relevant or even typical. There are plenty of places where there is no public transportation or a variety of retail stores. Why would you need condoms? |
|
#8
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 3/14/2013 4:29 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 3/14/13 4:17 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote: On 3/14/2013 3:17 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't botherme at all. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. It's a myth... doesn't happen. When I was a kid we had to drive or take the bus 15 miles to Hartford to do our shopping, it can be done. Now we have a thousand stores between here and there... I can get condoms anywhere. Your life experience isn't relevant or even typical. There are plenty of places where there is no public transportation or a variety of retail stores. At least mine life experience isn't made up... Why would you need condoms? What the hell kind of question is that perv? |
|
#9
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 16:29:23 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 3/14/13 4:17 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote: On 3/14/2013 3:17 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't botherme at all. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. It's a myth... doesn't happen. When I was a kid we had to drive or take the bus 15 miles to Hartford to do our shopping, it can be done. Now we have a thousand stores between here and there... I can get condoms anywhere. Your life experience isn't relevant or even typical. There are plenty of places where there is no public transportation or a variety of retail stores. Why would you need condoms? Why do you need a variety of retail stores for birth control or morning-after pills? Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! |
|
#10
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 3/14/2013 4:29 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 3/14/13 4:17 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote: On 3/14/2013 3:17 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 3/14/13 3:14 PM, J Herring wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 13:24:52 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 3/14/13 1:07 PM, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 07:29:55 -0400, J Herring wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 19:53:13 -0400, Wayne B wrote: On Wed, 13 Mar 2013 17:40:32 -0400, J Herring wrote: I believe that's where you and our new Pope disagree. He probably equates abortions with the killing of a precious infant, whereas you seem to equate it with cutting down a weed in your yard. You know, weed inconvenient? Kill it. === No woman should be forced to bring an unwanted child ino the world. Think about that. There is always birth control and the morning after pill. Salmonbait There would be except that there's a pretty vocal minority on the right that would ban those things also. There are several listings of drug stores whose religious proprietors won't sell the morning after pill. When I was a kid in New Haven, we were allowed to work some jobs (with a work permit) after high school. I got a job two afternoons a week working at a drug store in an "iffy" section of town. This was a small, family owned store. I was the combination stock boy and soda fountain jerk. Well, the drug store did a land office business selling liquor, too, mostly cheap wine and whiskey, but it carried a reasonable variety. The booze was on display behind the soda fountain. Turned out that selling the booze was also part of my job. I was 15. That didn't botherme at all. I also sold condoms, which, as a raunchy teen-aged boy, I thought was a hoot. At the time, there was some questionable legality about selling birth control "devices" in Connecticut, or something like that. Anyway, that's my memory. I also walked about the neighborhood on deliveries, usually of prescriptions, but sometimes I delivered booze. I remember one afternoon I set out with a double brown bag of Four Roses whiskey, a quart of ginger ale, and a box of condoms. The guy who answered the door and I looked at each other and laughed. He was a regular customer who recently had acquired a lady friend. We never had any trouble with anyone in the neighborhood, poor as it was. The drug store was the only one for miles around, and I guess everyone knew if the pharmacist-owner was robbed, he'd just close down and open up a shop in a safer neighborhood. Life was simpler back in the day. You've had some marvelous experiences. I've found that when a store doesn't carry something I need, I go to another store. Salmonbait -- Hope you're having a spectacular day! Yeah, well, you're reasonably well off. If you are poor, carless, and public transportation is a real hassle, and the only drug store around is run by a religious zealot, you are S.O.L. It's a myth... doesn't happen. When I was a kid we had to drive or take the bus 15 miles to Hartford to do our shopping, it can be done. Now we have a thousand stores between here and there... I can get condoms anywhere. Your life experience isn't relevant or even typical. There are plenty of places where there is no public transportation or a variety of retail stores. Why would you need condoms? Why would you sell condoms? Were they filled with dope? |
| Reply |
|
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| 'Christian' Righties take one up the... | General | |||
| More Christian Values? | General | |||
| Cheap Christian Bernard Watches Armeline Watches - Christian BernardWatches Armeline Watch Cheapest | General | |||
| Cheap Christian Dior Watches La D De Dior Watches - Christian DiorWatches La D De Dior Watch Cheapest | General | |||
| OT Christian Conservatives | General | |||