SEE! Hobos get covered in the rains in California and all that toxic
nastiness they are coated in gets washing into the waters of the state
clay monroe
redgh...@comcast.net
> On Oct 29, 2018, at 12:57 PM, Mitch Haley via Mercedes
> wrote:
>
> Not state employees, but voters.
> They're
Ah, now I know how the homeless issue can be addressed. If a hotel caused
cancer, then the hobos can be labeled as carcinogens due to the drug use,
smoking, poor food and alcohol usages, living in constant contact to exhaust
fumes and urban air. Yeah, homeless folks be in violation of article
They are too fruity, flaked out, stoned, or otherwise impaired to
perceive the need.
Anyone who relies on goobermnt to warn them of dangers, WILL DIE.
(probably sooner than normal)
Meade Dillon via Mercedes wrote:
I recently stayed at a hotel in California, a rather new hotel belonging to
LOL
I too have been concerned about those "Known to cause cancer in the state of
California." As a warning sign they're pretty useless.
Reminds me of high school chemistry class where old Mr. Black would put
warnings on all the chemicals, the one with the most dire warnings was good old
H2O. He
Not state employees, but voters.
They're collectively proven to be either morons or easily stampeded sheep.
Proposition 65, officially known as the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic
Enforcement Act of 1986, was enacted as a ballot initiative in November 1986.
The proposition protects the state's d
The ultimate oxymoron:
"Intelligence from government"
On Mon, Oct 29, 2018 at 12:42 PM Meade Dillon via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> I recently stayed at a hotel in California, a rather new hotel belonging to
> a major chain. Very nice place. A un-helpful sign near the front doo
I recently stayed at a hotel in California, a rather new hotel belonging to
a major chain. Very nice place. A un-helpful sign near the front door
explained that this hotel is known by the state of CA to cause cancer.
Absurd signs like these convince me that state employees in CA must be
idiots.
That's known as reduction adabsurdum:
"n logic, reductio ad absurdum (Latin for "reduction to absurdity"), also
known as argumentum ad absurdum (Latin for "argument to absurdity") or the
appeal to extremes, is a form of argument that attempts either to disprove
a statement by showing it inevitabl