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Zer0megAlpha
Holy crap that was funny.
"Breast milk is suspicious."
I lmao after that.
This made my day.
spooky24when the chips are down you will all be begging on your knees for them to protect you.
Springer
reply to post by OtherSideOfTheCoin
Do you not realize the TSA made the original video and Josh and Co. merely overdubbed it with audio?
Are your blinders on so tight that you can't see the brilliance and value of exposing this propaganda exactly the way it's been done by DTOMedia?
Talk about "losing the plot".
sigh...
Notheycant
reply to post by ElectricUniverse
I've seen that commercial! You're absolutely right, the indoctrination process is just getting started. It's going to get worse and worse I think. I guess that means I'll have a ton of material to make fun of.
Springer
reply to post by OtherSideOfTheCoin
Do you not realize the TSA made the original video and Josh and Co. merely overdubbed it with audio?
Are your blinders on so tight that you can't see the brilliance and value of exposing this propaganda exactly the way it's been done by DTOMedia?
Talk about "losing the plot".
sigh...
He was renowned for his open, free-style and critical form of comedy which integrated politics, religion, sex, and vulgarity. His private life was marked by substance abuse and promiscuity as well as efforts to prevent his wife from working as a stripper. His 1964 conviction in an obscenity trial was followed by a posthumous pardon, the first in New York State history, by then-Governor George Pataki in 2003. He paved the way for future outspoken counterculture-era comedians, and his trial for obscenity, in which – after being forced into bankruptcy – he was eventually found not guilty, is seen as a landmark trial for freedom of speech in the US.[7][8][9][10]
During one of Lenny Bruce's performances in 1966, he said he was arrested for saying eight words, and says them in alphabetical order:
The seven dirty words (or "Filthy Words") are seven English-language words that American comedian George Carlin first listed in 1972 in his monologue "Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television".[1] The words are: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX