I got a 2nd opinion. My wife says she can't even swallow the thought of a horse-sized duck.. much less fighting one.
You're killing me here man!!!!!!
I got a 2nd opinion. My wife says she can't even swallow the thought of a horse-sized duck.. much less fighting one.
I am trying to figure out if jazzfanz is just perverted or if or if all these wonderful innuendos are on purpose?
I am trying to figure out if jazzfanz is just perverted or if or if all these wonderful innuendos are on purpose?
I am trying to figure out if jazzfanz is just perverted or if or if all these wonderful innuendos are on purpose?
..You're killing me here man!!!!!!
Boy has this thread turned a weird corner...
Yeah, but if the life of just one horse-sized duck could be saved, wouldn't it be worth it?
Yeah, but if the life of just one horse-sized duck could be saved, wouldn't it be worth it?
https://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/the_kennedy_meth_4gGCkatf61gYCpkTZhg4FM
In 1962, at the Carlyle Hotel in New York, a man “peeled off his clothing and began prancing around his hotel suite.” His bodyguards were cautiously amused, until the man “left the suite and began roaming through the corridor of the Carlyle.”
The man in question was delusional, paranoid and suffering a “psychotic break” from the effects of an overdose of methamphetamine.
He was also the president of the United States.
Max Jacobson, a doctor who had invented a secret vitamin formula that gave people renewed energy and cured their pain, and was given the code name “Dr. Feelgood” by Kennedy’s Secret Service detail.
In “Dr. Feelgood” (Skyhorse Publishing), authors Richard A. Lertzman and William J. Birnes allege that Jacobson had an incredible effect on world events, influencing Kennedy’s election, the Cuban Missile Crisis, even Roger Maris’ 1961 home-run record.
Jacobson, born in 1900 and raised in Berlin, began experimenting with strange concoctions in the 1930s, when he would consult with Carl Jung, whose guidance “led him to first experiment with early psychotropic, or mood and mind-altering, drugs.”