WHO Poll
Q: 2023/24 Hopes & aspirations for this season
a. As Champions of Europe there's no reason we shouldn't be pushing for a top 7 spot & a run in the Cups
24%
  
b. Last season was a trophy winning one and there's only one way to go after that, I expect a dull mid table bore fest of a season
17%
  
c. Buy some f***ing players or we're in a battle to stay up & that's as good as it gets
18%
  
d. Moyes out
38%
  
e. New season you say, woohoo time to get the new kit and wear it it to the pub for all the big games, the wags down there call me Mr West Ham
3%
  



Ronald_antly 1:46 Thu Apr 9
Ian R. Crane
Seriously ill in hospital. It's not looking good, apparently.

I'm sure you'll join me in thoughts and prayers for a positive outcome.

Replies - Newest Posts First (Show In Chronological Order)

Ronald_antly 4:20 Sun May 3
Re: Ian R. Crane
I think YouTube and Facebook have done the Reich thing.

Golden Oldie 3:28 Sun May 3
Re: Ian R. Crane
The only thing that makes me want to cry, is watching idiots like you celebrating your own slavery and trying to taunt others because they won't embrace their own quite like you would.

Lee Trundle 2:32 Sun May 3
Re: Ian R. Crane
I don't agree with it, Oldie.

It won't stop me laughing at you crying over it though.

Golden Oldie 2:29 Sun May 3
Re: Ian R. Crane
https://i.imgur.com/nOoDa1Y.jpg

Lee Trundle 10:33 Sun May 3
Re: Ian R. Crane
No thread about David Icke being chucked off SOCIAL MEDIA?

Shame, I was looking for a laugh.

Ronald_antly 2:09 Sun May 3
Re: Ian R. Crane
one iron 9:08 Sat May 2

Dan M 9:11 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Just caught up with this after a thorougly lovely day not being on WHO. AceeedT is obviously running out of establishment normality to sagely undermine as he's now having a pop at curries, while Ron is pompously quoting with a (sic) despite earlier telling us we were all being conned by the giant ham producers.

Good evening.

Bungo 4:55 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Ta.

Nurse Ratched 4:54 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
https://www.cookwithmanali.com/baingan-bharta/

Coffee 4:54 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
And coriander.

Coffee 4:53 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
I think bharta means mashed. It can be any vegetable - but typically potato - mashed with mustard oil and chillis. It's the strength of the mustard oil that does it.

Bungo 4:51 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Nurse Ratched 4:47 Sat May 2

It sounds good!

At one of the restaurants we go to, we sometimes ask them to surprise us with a random vegetable side dish. I think the folk in the kitchen enjoy this, as they get to make something not on the menu. We've had some fantastic things this way.

Will have to ask them if this is something they could knock up for us.

Golden Oldie 4:50 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Wait till all the curry enthusiasts discover the super secret invention of the fridge freezer, which would mean no more food tasting of vomit and diarrhea just to disinfect it and disguise the rotten meat contained before it comes out the subjects other end fully processed somewhat improved on before it started.

Nurse Ratched 4:47 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
It's effing lush, Bungo! It's not on many restaurant menus, though.

They roast aubergine over a flame to get a 'smokey' flavour in the flesh. Then they peel off the skin and mash the flesh. The flesh is sauteed with garlic, onion (sometimes not), and spices.


It's MUCH better than it sounds.

Bungo 4:44 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Nurse Ratched 4:42 Sat May 2

Nice! Tell me more about baingan bharta. I'm not familiar with that.

Golden Oldie 4:43 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
jooyoo

Are you saying that there are pills made available to make me as much of an unthinking retarded slave as you are?


Sign me up!

Nurse Ratched 4:42 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Chicken tikka ceylon, mushroom bhaji, baingan bharta, lime pickle.

That'll do me.

No starch; leaves room for more veg!

joyo 4:40 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Golden shower pissed stained Oldie you are the best example of a looney on this site, have you stopped taking the pills?

Golden Oldie 4:37 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
jooyoo

Te loonies have been out in the wild already and spent the majority of this thread offering nothing of any value to the discourse except snidery, mockery and insults with the sole aim of shutting up folk.

Whatever makes em happy

Golden Oldie 4:36 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Whilst not quite as authoritative or definitive than an anonymous entry by JjjaayBigBall271390 in a urban dictionary website


Here's an excerpt from Kevin R. Ryan's excellent article, Do we need another 9/11 conspiracy theory?

"The use of “conspiracy theory” to deter citizens from investigating historic events is paradoxical, to be sure. It suggests that those who commit criminal conspiracies can only be relatively powerless people who happen to live on the most strategically important lands, and conspiracies among rich, powerful people are impossible or absurd.

Basically, our entire legal system is based on the idea of conspiracy. Despite this fact we have been conditioned by the government and the media to blindly accept the official reports and to treat any questioning of those reports as “conspiracy theorizing.” That is, you are a conspiracy theorist if you don’t believe the government’s conspiracy theory.

This cultural phenomenon goes back to 1967. At that time, in response to questions about the Warren Commission Report (which President Ford helped create), the CIA issued a memorandum calling for mainstream media sources to begin countering “conspiracy theorists.”[13] In the 45 years before the CIA memo came out, the phrase “conspiracy theory” appeared in the Washington Post and New York Times only 50 times, or about once per year. In the 45 years after the CIA memo, the phrase appeared 2,630 times, or about once per week.
Before the CIA memo came out, the Washington Post and New York Times had never used the phrase “conspiracy theorist.” After the CIA memo came out, these two newspapers have used that phrase 1,118 times. Of course, in these uses the phrase is always delivered in a context in which “conspiracy theorists” were made to seem less intelligent and less rationale than people who uncritically accept official explanations for major events.

President George W. Bush and his colleagues often used the phrase conspiracy theory in attempts to deter questioning about their activities. When questioned by reporters about an emerging scandal in September 2000, Bush said the idea that his presidential campaign was flashing subliminal messages in advertisements was absurd, and he added that “conspiracy theories abound in America’s politics.”[14] When in 1994, Bush’s former company Harken Energy was linked to the fraudulent Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) through several investors, Bush’s spokeswoman, Karen Hughes, shut down the inquiry by telling the Associated Press — “We have no response to silly conspiracy theories.”

One small note, everything said in this thread has been backed up with more than sufficient evidence of the claims made (Micro-millimeter wave radiation, Big Pharma shutting down investigation into curative medicines electing instead to focus only on treatment) and detailed research providing examples for anyone to go off and conduct their own study into them, should they desire.

That they do not and instead simply try to taunt and mock, is more a self evident demonstration of their own insecurities and unwillingness to consider anything outside the scope of what they are told to think.

Here's a really easy to follow article about a recent drug that cures Hepatitis C, with pretty pictures (that are irrelevant to the article) to help offset the pain of reading a few simple words demonstrating that not all pharmaceutical companies are trying to solve issues as much as capitalise on them for as long as they can get away with, and they do get away with it, mainly because of the drones who consent to all this.
https://twentytwowords.com/big-pharma-doesnt-want-to-cure-your-disease-they-want-you-to-pay-for-medicine/

Bungo 4:35 Sat May 2
Re: Ian R. Crane
Coffee 4:26 Sat May 2

Excellent questions there.

1) I would hope that the clandestine organisation was of such size and power, that they could hook me up with a deal with some of my preferred local restaurants.

2) I would hope that I could vary my order each week depending on what I fancied at the time. I will start with a chicken dhansak, pilau rice, plain nan and a sag aloo side please.

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