RuneCrypt Forum: Flat Earth - RuneCrypt Forum

Jump to content

Toggle shoutbox

Kreotis Icon : (24 July 2010 - 07:02 PM) australia is a desert with 0% humidity so your logic is invalid
Vipey Icon : (24 July 2010 - 07:24 PM) 97 thief :D
Overdoziz Icon : (25 July 2010 - 02:01 AM) l mark uagy?
Kreotis Icon : (25 July 2010 - 04:53 AM) paraUgay? umad etc gt gud
Vipey Icon : (25 July 2010 - 06:07 AM) 98 thief hurrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Kev Icon : (25 July 2010 - 07:47 AM) Aw.. look at all the 102f's and 40cs.. i'm so sad
Kev Icon : (25 July 2010 - 07:48 AM) Let me go outside in the 115fs 45cs daily basis and get a tissue from my neighbors who are indian
Kev Icon : (25 July 2010 - 07:49 AM) and i have to deal with MEXICANS
laserdark Icon : (25 July 2010 - 11:22 AM) pc w ?
Tyranno Icon : (26 July 2010 - 12:10 AM) aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Vipey Icon : (26 July 2010 - 02:47 AM) w99 rogues den right now if you want to attend 99 thief
Vipey Icon : (26 July 2010 - 03:25 AM) too late
Weekend Icon : (26 July 2010 - 07:53 AM) G&A Updated, 80 thief. I know i'm not as good as mister burglar above me ^^ :D
Broli Icon : (26 July 2010 - 06:38 PM) Hello people, I am back from vacation, not that anyone would care anyways. :S
Annoyingfish Icon : (26 July 2010 - 09:14 PM) Have fun? :)
Weekend Icon : (26 July 2010 - 09:31 PM) i care <3
Broli Icon : (26 July 2010 - 09:58 PM) It was fun but tiring. I was also almost rushed to the hospital because I had a nosebleed that lasted more than 30 minutes and I lost a whole lot of blood.
Tyranno Icon : (27 July 2010 - 12:52 AM) sounds hardcore
Vipey Icon : (27 July 2010 - 02:12 AM) hi Broli
Broli Icon : (27 July 2010 - 02:22 AM) Hi. :)
Mikeob1 Icon : (27 July 2010 - 03:09 AM) Hello
Saeb Icon : (27 July 2010 - 08:35 AM) Aussie's election status: A debate between two Opposition Leaders. Nobody trusts one, nobody likes the other.
Annoyingfish Icon : (27 July 2010 - 03:02 PM) Who is who?
Annoyingfish Icon : (27 July 2010 - 07:09 PM) yes we r
leonheart550 Icon : (28 July 2010 - 05:04 AM) woo made my first mill today
Vipey Icon : (28 July 2010 - 06:27 AM) gartz
Saeb Icon : (29 July 2010 - 08:56 AM) Cow-driven or electric?
Saeb Icon : (29 July 2010 - 08:57 AM) @Abi, nobody likes Abbott, nobody trusts Gillard.
Saeb Icon : (29 July 2010 - 08:58 AM) srry I confuddled you with Abi, annoyingfish. yup, triple post D:
Kev Icon : (29 July 2010 - 09:02 PM) Your mother
Vipey Icon : (Yesterday, 12:24 AM) ur mum
Tyranno Icon : (Yesterday, 01:00 PM) a
Tyranno Icon : (Yesterday, 01:01 PM) 1a2a3a
Otter Icon : (Yesterday, 03:27 PM) Just got hit with a 1-year ban... lol
Tyranno Icon : (Yesterday, 03:38 PM) wat
Spikester04 Icon : (Yesterday, 04:20 PM) gf
Tyranno Icon : (Yesterday, 05:08 PM) 1a2a3a
Annoyingfish Icon : (Yesterday, 06:11 PM) lol, cricket
Bloodthir Icon : (Yesterday, 09:59 PM) oh my god herblore is so swell. so swell.
Tyranno Icon : (Today, 01:04 AM) 1a2a3a
Resize Shouts Area

Debate Board

Please remember that this board is monitored very closely.
Watch what you say, it may lead to consequences!
If you're unsure of the rules, read the pinned topic. Thanks!
RuneCrypt Staff
  • (3 Pages)
  • +
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

Flat Earth

#1 User is offline   Kalzilla Icon

  • Iron Dragon
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 3376
  • Joined: 22-June 05
  • Location:Michigan, USA
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:Applemilk1988
  • Combat Level:126
  • Status/World:Retired
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 11:11 AM

Quote

The Flat-out Truth:
Earth Orbits? Moon Landings?
A Fraud! Says This Prophet
</h1>
The idea of a spinning globe is only a conspiracy of error that Moses, Columbus, and FDR all fought...
Copyright 1980 Robert J. Schadewald
Reprinted from Science Digest, July 1980

"The facts are simple," says Charles K. Johnson, president of the International Flat Earth Research Society. "The earth is flat."

As you stand in his front yard, it is hard to argue the point. From among the Joshua trees, creosote bushes, and tumbleweeds surrounding his southern California hillside home, you have a spectacular view of the Mojave Desert. It looks as flat as a pool table. Nearly 20 miles to the west lies the small city of Lancaster; you can see right over it. Beyond Lancaster, 20 more miles as the cueball rolls, the Tehachepi Mountains rise up from the desert floor. Los Angeles is not far to the south.

Near Lancaster, you see the Rockwell International plant where the Space Shuttle was built. To the north, beyond the next hill, lies Edwards Air Force Base, where the Shuttle was tested. There, also, the Shuttle will land when it returns from orbiting the earth. (At least, that's NASA's story.)

IPB Image"You can't orbit a flat earth," says Mr. Johnson. "The Space Shuttle is a joke--and a very ludicrous joke."

His soft voice carries conviction, for Charles Johnson is on the level. He believes that the main purpose of the space program is to prop up a dying myth--the myth that the earth is a globe.

"Nobody knows anything about the true shape of the world," he contends. "The known, inhabited world is flat. Just as a guess, I'd say that the dome of heaven is about 4,000 miles away, and the stars are about as far as San Francisco is from Boston."

As shown in a map published by Johnson, the known world is as circular and as flat as a phonograph record. The North Pole is at the center. At the outer edge lies the southern ice, reputed to be a wall 150 feet high; no one has ever crossed it, and therefore what lies beyond is unknown.

The sun and moon, in the Johnson version, are only about 32 miles in diameter. They circle above the earth in the vicinity of the equator, and their apparent rising and setting are tricks of perspective, like railroad tracks that appear to meet in the distance. The moon shines by its own light and is not eclipsed by the earth. Rather, lunar eclipses are caused by an unseen dark body occasionally passing in front of the moon.

Johnson's beliefs are firmly grounded in the Bible. Many verses of the Old Testament imply that the earth is flat, but there's more to it than that. According to the New Testament, Jesus ascended up into heaven.

"The whole point of the Copernican theory is to get rid of Jesus by saying there is no up and no down," declares Johnson. "The spinning ball thing just makes the whole Bible a big joke."

Not the Bible but Johnson's own common sense allowed him to see through the globe myth while he was still in grade school. He contends that sensible people all over the world, not just Bible believers, realize that the earth really is flat.

"Wherever you find people with a great reservoir of common sense," he says, "they don't believe idiotic things such as the earth spinning around the sun. Reasonable, intelligent people have always recognized that the earth is flat."

He pauses for a sip of coffee, his eyes sparkling with animation. At 56, Charles Johnson is a bearded, distinguished-looking man who drinks coffee seemingly by the gallon. He chain-smokes, hand-rolling cigarettes so skillfully that they seem factory made. Unlike the stereotypical prophet, he has a wry sense of humor and a booming laugh. Fond of plays on words, he consistently pronounces Nicolaus Koppernigk's Latinized surname as "co-pernicious."

The Flat Earth Society's presidency descended upon Charles Johnson in accord with the last wishes of its founder, Samuel Shenton, an Englishman who died in 1971. The society, which will round out a quarter-century next year, is a spiritual inheritor of the Universal Zetetic Society, which flourished in England in the last century.



IPB Image

The cosmos of the Zetetics. Picture © 1992 by Robert Schadewald. Under Johnson's full-time presidency, the society's paid-up membership has grown from a few persons to a few hundred. Membership is open to anyone who is regarded as sincerely seeking the truth; prospective members must sign a statement agreeing never to defame the society. Part of the $10 annual dues pays for a subscription to the Flat Earth News, a marvelously outspoken four-page tabloid quarterly with an editorial style reminiscent of 19th-century rural journalism.

Johnson's office is barely controlled chaos. Books, papers, and files are everywhere; his desk is covered with correspondence. The flow of letters, still increasing, now runs around 2,000 a year, or a half-dozen every day. Some are properly addressed (Box 2533, Lancaster, CA 93534), but he receives any mail that reaches Lancaster with "flat-earth" on it. And such letters sometimes come from the far edges of the world (an expression which Johnson and his membership accept quite literally). Rummaging in a box on the floor, Johnson produces inquiries from Saudi Arabia, Iran, India.

"Everybody who writes gets an answer," he reports. "An application or whatever is called for. We serve our purpose in keeping it alive. Whosoever asks, receives." The "we" includes his wife, Marjory, who is a native of Australia. The Johnsons met by chance in 1959, when they both went into a San Francisco store to buy the same record, Acker Bilk's haunting "Stranger on the Shore." They discovered that they had more in common than their tastes in music. They're both vegetarians, for one thing, but the overriding interest is geography

"Marjory has always known that the earth is flat, too," says Charles Johnson. "As far as she knew, everybody in Australia knew it. She was rather shocked when she arrived here and found people speaking of Australia as being 'down under.' It really offended her. She would get in quite heated arguments with people who seemed to accuse her of coming from down under the world." Ultimately, Marjory Johnson swore in an affidavit that she had never hung by her feet in Australia.

As secretary of the Flat Earth Society, she assists in running it, and writes a regular column in the News. She has also helped her husband perform experiments to determine the earth's shape. If it is a sphere, the surface of a large body of water must be curved. The Johnsons have checked the surfaces of Lake Tahoe and the Salton Sea (a shallow salt lake in southern California near the Mexican border) without detecting any curvature.

Their home is a half-mile from the nearest neighbor. Friends drop by now and then, but their primary companions are a half-dozen dogs, several cats, a flock of chickens, and a myriad of sparrows roosting in a Joshua tree just outside the door. No electric-power line runs to the house, for which water must be carried up the hill. The physical isolation is the ultimate in privacy--but another kind of isolation proves to be less desirable.

"We're two witnesses against the whole world," observes Charles Johnson. "We've chosen that path, but it isolates us from everyone. We're not complaining; it has to be. But it does kind of get to you sometimes."

In spite of the loneliness and the frustrations, they press on. Charles Johnson claims that most of the people who shaped our modern world were flat-earthers, and some of them didn't have it easy, either.

You weren't aware that flat-earthers have played an important part in history? Well, conventional histories don't make that clear. But inasmuch as revisionist history is in vogue, Charles Johnson should be recognized as one of the leading practitioners.

"Moses was a flat-earther," he reveals. "The Flat Earth Society was founded in 1492 B.C., when Moses led the children of Israel out of Egypt and gave them the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai."

Conventional biblical chronology dates the Ten Commandments to 1491 B.C., but it may be imprecise. Perhaps Johnson prefers 1492 for the symmetry. It was, after all, in 1492 A.D. that another famous flat-earther made history.

Have you heard the story about Columbus's problems with his crew? As some tell it, the crew nearly mutinied because they regarded the earth as flat, and feared they might sail off its edge.

"It was exactly the reverse," explains Johnson. "There was a dispute out on the ship, but it was because Columbus was a flat-earther. The others believed the earth to be a ball, and they just knew that they were falling over the edge and couldn't get back. Columbus had to put them in irons and beat them until he convinced them they weren't going over any curve, and they could return. He finally calmed them down."

Johnson believes that the ball business--though it goes back to the Greek philosophers--really got rolling after the Protestant Reformation.

"It's the Church of England that's taught that the world is a ball," he argues. "George Washington, on the other hand, was a flat-earther. He broke with England to get away from those superstitions." If Johnson is right, the American Revolution failed. No prominent American politician is known to have publicly endorsed the flat-earth theory in the past two centuries. Nevertheless, Johnson contends that this nearly happened right after World War II, not for the U.S. alone, but for the entire world. Consider the United Nations:

IPB Image"Uncle Joe (Stalin), Churchill, and Roosevelt laid the master plan to bring in the New Age under the United Nations," Johnson discloses with confidence. "The world ruling power was to be right here in this country. After the war, the world would be declared flat and Roosevelt would be elected first president of the world. When the UN Charter was drafted in San Francisco, they took the flat-earth map as their symbol."

Why declare the world flat? Johnson responds that a prophesied condition for world government (Isaiah 60:20) is that the "sun shall no more go down." This could be fulfilled by admitting that sunrise and sunset are optical illusions. The UN did adopt for its official seal a world map identical with the one on Johnson's office wall. But Franklin Roosevelt died coincident with the UN's birth, and the other imminent events described by Johnson never came about.

What did happen, according to conventional historians, was that Russia and the U.S. began space programs. After the Russians sent up Sputnik in 1957, the space race was on in earnest. The high point came in 1969, when the U.S. landed men on the moon.

That, according to Johnson, is nonsense, because the moon landings were faked by Hollywood studios. He even names the man who wrote the scripts: the science-fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke. But he acknowledges that the moon landings were at least partly successful.

"Until then," he says, "almost no one seriously considered the world a ball. The landings converted a few of them, but many are coming back now and getting off of it."

Perhaps the Space Shuttle is intended to bolster the beliefs of these backsliders. Whatever its purpose, Johnson is convinced that it is not intended to actually fly. Because it was built and tested almost in his back yard, he knows many people who worked on it. What they've told him about some aspects of its construction only reinforces his convictions.

"They moved it across the field," he sneers, "and it almost fell apart. All those little side pieces are on with epoxy, and half fell off!"

The Shuttle had other problems besides heat resistant tiles that wouldn't stick. For instance, when the testers tried to mount it on a 747 for its first piggy-back test flight, it wouldn't fit.

"Can you imagine that?" chortles Johnson. "Millions of dollars they spent, and it wouldn't fit! They had to call in a handyman to drill some new holes to make the thing fit. Then they took it up in the air--and some more of it fell to pieces."

If the Shuttle ever does orbit on its own, it's supposed to return to Edwards Air Force Base. To Johnson, that's appropriate enough.

"Do you know what they're doing at Edwards right now?" he asks. "'Buck Rogers in the 25th Century' is made right where they claim they're going to land the Shuttle. Edwards is strictly a science-fiction base now.

"Buck is a much better science program, considerably more authentic. In fact, I recommend that the government get out of the space business and turn the whole thing over to ABC, CBS, and NBC. The tv networks do a far superior job. They could actually pay the government for rights, and it wouldn't cost the taxpayers a penny."

Flat Earth Society members are working actively to bring the Shuttle charade to an end. They hope to force the government to let the public in on what the power elite has known all along: the plane truth.

"When the United States declares the earth is flat," says Charles Johnson, "and we hope to be instrumental in making it do so, it will be the first nation in all recorded history to be known as a flat-earth nation.

"In the old days, people believed the earth was flat, because it's logical, but they didn't have a picture of the way it was, as we have today. Our concept of the world is new.

"Marjory and I are the avant garde. We're way ahead of the pack."





I think it's a bunch of bull eep.gif




Taken from this site: http://www.lhup.edu/...EK/fe-scidi.htm
0

#2 User is online   I am me and only me Icon

  • Feaster from the Stars
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 7018
  • Joined: 11-May 05
  • Location:Texas(booo)
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:Zimy0
  • Combat Level:108
  • Status/World:Retired
Reputation: 6
Saradomin Owl

Posted 05 October 2006 - 11:14 AM

Errr...ya....someone had something spilled in their coffee...
0

#3 User is offline   Catchowmein Icon

  • Dear Leader
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 2609
  • Joined: 14-June 05
  • Location:My location is irrelevant.
  • Gender:Male
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 12:15 PM

Lunatic Asylum for that one.... bluemellow.gif
Posted Image
Sig made by Fishermanim.
0

#4 User is offline   smitty355 Icon

  • Black Demon
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 966
  • Joined: 16-March 06
  • Location:Smitty's R us
  • Gender:Male
  • Status/World:Row's house
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 01:32 PM

^^ i agree with both not also that but mabey this guy was alwase drunk?
0

#5 User is offline   Electro Icon

  • Devout Catalyst
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Retired Content Developer
  • Posts: 7405
  • Joined: 30-June 05
  • Location:England
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:Electroguy1
  • Combat Level:102
  • Status/World:F2P/ 11
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 06:10 PM

Hahahaha. That image of the flat earth inside the dome is fantastic.

Even if this is 26 years old it still pretty funny to see how people can be so utterly ridiculous about their beliefs. Wish I hadnt read the whole thing....wasn't worth it.

Posted Image
" Fire Walk With Me"
Pacman Sig by Adman
[spoiler=Vid of the month]sIRxCUKB-1A[/spoiler]
0

#6 User is offline   Silver Icon

  • Wake up in the morning feeling like Winehouse.
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Retired Moderator
  • Posts: 6381
  • Joined: 08-July 04
  • Location:So You Take This Road To Like This Street, and Like Turn Left. Pretty Soon You'll See This House. Mine Is The One Next To It.
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:StreetlightX
  • Combat Level:20
  • Status/World:Ship Building / Sea World
Reputation: 4
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 07:09 PM

There is no absolute proof that he is wrong.

Although the 150 foot high ice wall is a bit absurd... he does have a slightly good arguement...


Posted Image
^I <3 OverdoZiZ^
"look ur gonna die, u just gotta deal wiv it soz"
If I want to manufacture biological weapons with my copy of iTunes, I will, fascists.
She said "Haven't you read Ska-Punk's dead..." || Being dead ain't so bad! Look at all the fun we still have!

Posted Image
0

#7 User is offline   Boiq Icon

  • Renegade Knight
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 697
  • Joined: 04-April 06
  • Location:Canada, Ontario
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:Boiq
  • Combat Level:70
  • Status/World:F2P
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 08:29 PM

Quite funny on a note.
He may be right, he may be wrong. People have been researching this for years, and yet still are today.
Personally I believe the earth is round, like the saying "The man who walked around the Earth"
It's just a fact that some people may never get over, "Is the earth flat? Will you fall off the edge?"
Posted Image
0

#8 User is offline   arrowslayer Icon

  • Rogue
  • PipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 395
  • Joined: 19-November 05
  • Gender:Male
  • Combat Level:90
  • Status/World:P2P
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 05 October 2006 - 08:42 PM

That is the most rediculous thing I have ever read, I don't care what some people say. rofl.gif
People who think they know everything annoy those who do.
I haven't lost my mind, I sold it on eBay! Trumpets own clarinets.
Posted Image ~Become A Runescape Master~ Runescapewrld
0

#9 User is offline   NukeInBottle Icon

  • Dark Wizard
  • PipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 197
  • Joined: 02-November 05
  • RS Name:KillMaster201
  • Combat Level:12
  • Status/World:retired
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 06 October 2006 - 12:55 AM

QUOTE -- As shown in a map published by Johnson, the known world is as circular and as flat as a phonograph record. The North Pole is at the center. At the outer edge lies the southern ice, reputed to be a wall 150 feet high; no one has ever crossed it, and therefore what lies beyond is unknown. --ENDQUOTE

LMAO a good old 150 mile high wall eh? Ho Ho Ho he tells me where that wall is and I mgiht actually consider this. And also when i stand outside in the daytime, and i look up, i see that the sky looks quite spherical from my view. I see the land stretching before me, and then i see the sky above it, and it gradually gets lighter and lighter until my eyes are 180 degrees angle from my neck. This change in lightness of the blue makes the world look quite spherical for me.

0

#10 User is offline   EmeraldWeapon Icon

  • Monk
  • PipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 153
  • Joined: 14-April 06
  • Location:Minnesota
  • RS Name:Qqii
  • Combat Level:6
  • Status/World:pleh
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 06 October 2006 - 01:28 AM

This theory could easily be disproven by a 7 year old. Abo----ely ridiculous. Funniest thing I have ever read.

They use the Bible as proof for a scientific analysis.

^^^
Prooves the theory is wrong in one sentence.
"For every omega-consistent recursive class K of formulae there are recursive class signs r such that neither v Gen r nor Neg(v Gen r) belongs to Flg(k) where v is a free variable of r" -Kurt Godel, 1931
0

#11 User is offline   Edlittle Icon

  • Edlittle
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 1712
  • Joined: 11-September 05
  • Location:Computer
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:edlittlepker
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 06 October 2006 - 02:05 AM

Someone put one too many marshmallows in his hot cocoa.
Posted Image
0

#12 User is offline   Zhou Icon

  • Pink Dragon
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 6713
  • Joined: 21-April 05
  • Location:East Side
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:Zhou9
  • Combat Level:101
  • Status/World:Retired
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 06 October 2006 - 02:40 AM

laugh.gif

I stopped reading it because it was useless.
Posted Image
0

#13 User is offline   hogwarts100 Icon

  • Greater Demon
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 834
  • Joined: 19-June 06
  • Location:Virginia Beach
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:hogwarts100
  • Combat Level:77
  • Status/World:Shanks/White Lotus/ F2P
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 08 October 2006 - 02:29 AM

i didn't even read the entire thing. didn't see a point. that sppech of his wouldn't have changed my view that the world is indeed round. this guy needs to do a little more research and get more than that picture of a "flat" earth to back up his facts. this is insane!
Posted Image
Posted Image
A pirate tis I. Crossing me is like crossing the blade on the end of my sword.
Ducky:pyro-pirates
"death is a choice or a punishment...sometimes neither sometimes both"
I AM "LOOSE CANNON" WILLIAMS CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE SHANKS!!!!!!
0

#14 User is offline   Kevinboos Icon

  • Socialist Pig
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Full Member
  • Posts: 2398
  • Joined: 25-August 06
  • Location:Florida
  • Gender:Male
  • Combat Level:126
Reputation: 9
Saradomin Owl

Posted 08 October 2006 - 03:52 AM

This is good facts, but mostly opinion.


If the Earth was "flat", wouldn't Venus be flat too? What about the sun? The Stars? Asteroids?

What this guy is saying is that the Earth is flat, peroid. No other explinations, just that view.

How in the world could this be flat? I don't see no invisible barriers, no edges, just land and more land.


I don't see why he says that it makes a fool out of the bible. Jesus CAN rise up into heaven. It's up, not upside-down twisty turvy, it's up.
"983 overall at 87 Combat 17 till I join P2P"
0

#15 User is offline   Yoyoyo888 Icon

  • Ivrigar the Necromancer
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Banned
  • Posts: 629
  • Joined: 10-April 06
  • Location:Oneida,ky
  • Gender:Male
  • RS Name:moto475
  • Combat Level:91
  • Status/World:P2P-28,79
Reputation: 0
Strange Fruit

Posted 08 October 2006 - 08:36 AM

he had too much to drinky-drinky i am thinking. lol. what a nub he is. tongue.gif
Posted Image
^ Sig by RAGANORK *the beast*
0

  • (3 Pages)
  • +
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users