sunglasses wrote:Well, people know who Luther Strange is. Plus his name is easy to spell.
Yeah but Alabama don't pay for strange.
sunglasses wrote:Well, people know who Luther Strange is. Plus his name is easy to spell.
Marcuse wrote:sunglasses wrote:Well, people know who Luther Strange is. Plus his name is easy to spell.
Yeah but Alabama don't pay for strange.
Zevran wrote:Magic can kill. Knives can kill. Even small children launched at great speeds can kill.
tinyrick wrote:Luther Strange sounds like it could be the name of a superhero or supervillian. Really it could fit either way.
Deathclaw_Puncher wrote:Marcuse wrote:sunglasses wrote:Well, people know who Luther Strange is. Plus his name is easy to spell.
Yeah but Alabama don't pay for strange.
And they don't know how to spell.
Trenton R. Garmon wrote:Your client as an entity has also carelessly and perhaps allowed general slander and libel to the reputation of my clients by seeking out, and/or reporting from those who did, individuals who falsely portray the reputation of Roy S. Moore in northeast Alabama, to include Etowah County.
Meaning your client has used terms in reports or carelessly which has falsely portraying our clients.
Thus, do note clearly, yet significant difference which your client's publication(s) have failed to distinguish.
While at Troy University he started on their college football team as the center. This team played both Miami and Nebraska being the only team in the country to play the national champions and the runner up national champions in the same year. Some experts consider the 2001 Miami Hurricanes [Avi's Note: the team he played against, not on] to be the greatest college football team in history.
He was born in Gadsden, Alabama, June 16, 1979 and is admitted to the Alabama State Bar and the United States Federal Court Middle District. [Avi's Note: the name of the latter court here is nonsense, and refers to no actual court]
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
Garmon: Sure, that’s a good question. Culturally speaking, obviously there’s differences—looked up Ali’s background there. Wow—that’s awesome that you’ve got such a diverse background. That’s really cool to read through that. But point is—
Ruhle: What does Ali’s “background have to do with dating a 14 year old?
Garmon: I’m not finished with the context of it. Point of this is—
Ruhle: Please answer. What does Ali Velshi’s background have to do with dating children, 14 year old girls?
Garmon: Sure. In other countries, there’s arrangement through parents, for what we would refer to as consensual marriage.
Ruhle: Ali’s from Canada.
Aquila89 wrote:Depends on the circumstances. My parents started dating when my mother was 14 and my father was 21. They dated for four years, then they got married, had four kids and over 30 years later they're still together.
A few days later, she says, she was in trigonometry class at Gadsden High when she was summoned to the principal’s office over the intercom in her classroom. She had a phone call.
“I said ‘Hello?’” Richardson recalls. “And the male on the other line said, ‘Gena, this is Roy Moore.’ I was like, ‘What?!’ He said, ‘What are you doing?’ I said, ‘I’m in trig class.’ ”
Richardson says Moore asked her out again on the call. A few days later, after he asked her out at Sears, she relented and agreed, feeling both nervous and flattered. They met that night at a movie theater in the mall after she got off work, a date that ended with Moore driving her to her car in a dark parking lot behind Sears and giving her what she called an unwanted, “forceful” kiss that left her scared.
“I never wanted to see him again,” says Richardson, who is now 58 and a community college teacher living in Birmingham.
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