Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.
We need a general tweet of the day thread
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No wonder I loved this show as a 10 year old! Holy titsWestlinnDuck said:Show that made a lot of money for some reason that remains a mystery to network TV today. Good times.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGgzwYmWr7w -
I'm pretty sure this is a parody account. I think that picture of the fair doctor looks just likeRoadTrip said:
The crazy is in her eyes tooTurdBomber said:
So basically just another worthless, useless POS Academic Virtue Signaling Fool.RaceBannon said:
Sorry, Mary, but you can't talk your way into or out of this predicament. You got suckered, then trapped by your own ignorance.
God how beautiful this is to witness.myone of those custom made sex dolls. It's all fake but sometimes even fake things can get people off and make them feel good and wanted.
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Was told last week that it’s very embarrassing when a candidate that you backs loses in a Texas house primary.RaceBannon said:
RIP
Nina Turner
Maya Wiley
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Bob C gets it
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Go figure. Lawyers who can't do basic math get phucked by their own choices then want to blame others. Sound familiar?
https://pjmedia.com/instapundit/
HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: WSJ: Law School Loses Luster As Debts Mount And Salaries Stagnate.
Recent graduates of the University of Miami School of Law who used federal loans borrowed a median of $163,000. Two years later, half were earning $59,000 or less. That’s the biggest gap between debt and earnings among the top 100 law schools as ranked by U.S. News & World Report, a Wall Street Journal analysis of federal data found.
Graduates from a host of other well-regarded law schools routinely leave with six-figure student loans, then fail to find high-paying jobs as lawyers, according to the Journal’s analysis of the latest federal data on earnings, for students who graduated in 2015 and 2016.
When Miami students asked for financial assistance, some graduates told the Journal, school officials often offered this solution: Take more loans.
“I had no work experience, life experience, anything like that before I signed on to this quarter-million-dollar loan,” said Dylan Boigris, a 2016 Miami Law graduate, who began his career making about $45,000 as a public defender. “I thought I would come out making much more than I did.” -
After Biden calls for Cuomo to step down over sex allegations, this.
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