Ebola?

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
since no less than half a dozen right wingers on this forum blamed obama for ebola in the united states, it is now time for those same losers to thank obama for eradicating ebola from our great nation.

pucker up, losers!

is there anything our great president can't do? greatest president of all time.
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
since no less than half a dozen right wingers on this forum blamed obama for ebola in the united states, it is now time for those same losers to thank obama for eradicating ebola from our great nation.

pucker up, losers!

is there anything our great president can't do? greatest president of all time.
Well we still have fluoride.
 

anzohaze

Well-Known Member
since no less than half a dozen right wingers on this forum blamed obama for ebola in the united states, it is now time for those same losers to thank obama for eradicating ebola from our great nation.

pucker up, losers!

is there anything our great president can't do? greatest president of all time.
Biggest hypocrite lying sob to ever be president. And your one of his followers... I'm sorry
 

heckler73

Well-Known Member
Interesting timing...

I was watching an old Alfred Hitchcock show last night (this morning?) about a woman who takes a powerful "narcotic" (read: psychedelic) and trips-out into a world where all the men have been wiped out and it's an Amazonian society of test-tube women.

What happened was a biologist named Dr. Perrigan created a virus which was supposed to target Brown Rats and wipe them out from existence, but (of course) the virus mutates and kills all the men on the planet, taking only ~1yr to do so, while leaving the women to fend for themselves. During her trip there is an interesting dialogue about the role of women in society as mere consumers in the first half of the 20th century. I need to find a clip of that, and if it doesn't exist, it needs to be posted to YouTube. There's some interesting history in television which isn't given enough credit for shaping society, and I believe this episode may have influenced the onset of the feminist movement.

Then she snaps out of the trip, but is convinced it was "real". Asking the observing doctor if he has a "book of scientists", she scans it and finds a Dr. Perrigan who is also a Biologist. She visits him, and finds out he's working on a viral scheme to kill all the Brown rats. She pleads with him to cease research, but he refuses.

CLICK goes the snap on her purse, out comes the gun and POW.
She thinks she's saved humanity from destruction, but only to find out from the arresting detective later on that her actions have spurred on Dr. Perrigan's son to continue his father's research...

and then it basically ends there. Hitchcock and cliffhangers, eh?


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0394029/?ref_=ttep_ep11
 

Pinworm

Well-Known Member
Interesting timing...

I was watching an old Alfred Hitchcock show last night (this morning?) about a woman who takes a powerful "narcotic" (read: psychedelic) and trips-out into a world where all the men have been wiped out and it's an Amazonian society of test-tube women.

What happened was a biologist named Dr. Perrigan created a virus which was supposed to target Brown Rats and wipe them out from existence, but (of course) the virus mutates and kills all the men on the planet, taking only ~1yr to do so, while leaving the women to fend for themselves. During her trip there is an interesting dialogue about the role of women in society as mere consumers in the first half of the 20th century. I need to find a clip of that, and if it doesn't exist, it needs to be posted to YouTube. There's some interesting history in television which isn't given enough credit for shaping society, and I believe this episode may have influenced the onset of the feminist movement.

Then she snaps out of the trip, but is convinced it was "real". Asking the observing doctor if he has a "book of scientists", she scans it and finds a Dr. Perrigan who is also a Biologist. She visits him, and finds out he's working on a viral scheme to kill all the Brown rats. She pleads with him to cease research, but he refuses.

CLICK goes the snap on her purse, out comes the gun and POW.
She thinks she's saved humanity from destruction, but only to find out from the arresting detective later on that her actions have spurred on Dr. Perrigan's son to continue his father's research...

and then it basically ends there. Hitchcock and cliffhangers, eh?


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0394029/?ref_=ttep_ep11
He's such a great writer. Way ahead of his time.
 

OddBall1st

Well-Known Member
since no less than half a dozen right wingers on this forum blamed obama for ebola in the united states, it is now time for those same losers to thank obama for eradicating ebola from our great nation.

pucker up, losers!

is there anything our great president can't do? greatest president of all time.

In order to eradicate, ... it would have to infiltrate,... so who let that happen ? Enough people shouted and he took that shit right back to where it came from,.... If that`s your Idea of the greatest President, wait till Hillary tries to defend herself against the statements she made last month being her showcase campaign message about having to reform campaign funding to answer for unaccountable funding. She`s setting up a PAC Fund right now in San Fran, then L.A. All the potential funders are reaping their offers from Hillary.....She has no principles and her hypocrisy has no bounds, it relies on the moment and concern.
All hail the next one....Buck be sure to bow faithfully.....
 

heckler73

Well-Known Member
He's such a great writer. Way ahead of his time.
I guess that's why his work still gets played 50 years later, eh? I have to say his writing for the TV-shows was far more philosophical and political than his movies. I think he toyed with every taboo.
 
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