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2
1.
Parsuny 1 year ago
#34 GOD NO!, NO! NO! PLEASE GOD NO!
       
3
2.
Zada 1 year ago
#2 selfish

#9 and did you parked legally?

Was the weather windy?
Have your karma just got you?
       
4
3.
Molly 1 year ago
Zada,
#2 haha, snip snip. or dip it in alchohol for hrs.
#9 i think he did it and blamed it on other.
       
3
4.
Zada 1 year ago
Molly,

Classic move to blame others when you don't know the circumstances. Maybe he parked it in the garage and found it on the street like that.
       
-8
5.
Harman 1 year ago
#22 It's a rock you found. Not built, found. You found a rock and then told everyone it's YOUR rock and they can't touch it......
       
8
6.
Ivan 1 year ago
#22 "Traditional owners" LOL meaning "we happened to live nearby"

#1 Anyone purchasing anything from this pack of child molesting groomers deserves what they get.
       
0
7.
Lucretia 1 year ago
Ivan, Yah, for 50,000 years you scut
       
8
8.
Philip 1 year ago
#1 This is a joke, right? ;D Right??? :(
       
14
9.
Pinckney 1 year ago
Philip,

No, it's an IQ test. If you buy the towel, you're really stupid - below 75 stupid.
       
10
10.
Trisha 1 year ago
#14
That dog has obviously seen things done with vegetables they can't forget... girl_devil
       
0
11.
Evelina 1 year ago
#22 - unless they are the lawful owners they shouldn’t expect people to abide by their request. It’d be like American Indians asking people not to climb Mt. Rainier.
       
-4
12.
Christy 1 year ago
Evelina,

No that you're wrong but how is lawful owner defined? By the people that wrote the laws? Because those people were overwhelmingly European colonists not the indigenous people who were there long before those colonists arrived...
       
2
13.
Mave 1 year ago
Christy,
Yeeeech…more professional victimhood. This weeks grievance is “European colonists” what’s it gonna be next week, straight, muscular White men?
music
       
-6
14.
Menaalmena 1 year ago
Mave,

How is that "professional victimhood", was the land not violently seized from the indigenous people. I mean I guess they could have moved in and tried to claim there were there first after Europeans got there...
       
5
15.
Gene 1 year ago
Menaalmena,

It’s called ‘conquest.’ It is a human trait. It has been around since vertebrates became bipedal. Your personal existence is a
result of this behaviour. You’re complaining into the wind. Grow…up!
       
-6
16.
Cyphorus 1 year ago
Gene,
If conquest should be perfectly acceptable then you have no problem with the war in Ukraine or the war in Israel or even as far back as WW2? It's simply human nature, accept it and move on... Yes people have been doing it for as long as there have been people doesn't make it a good thing nor should people try to pretend it didn't happen when it wasn't a war between flag waving nations
       
-4
17.
Lib 1 year ago
#2 I'd order a 2nd coke to dip her hair in. Nice and sticky for the rest of her trip
       
-5
18.
Philip 1 year ago
Lib, exactly what I was thinking!
       
-4
19.
Zada 1 year ago
Lib,

Fighting an a-hole like a true a-hole.
       
1
20.
Lib 1 year ago
#34 Who?
       
-2
21.
Natius 1 year ago
#9 mofos
       
7
22.
Audrey 1 year ago
Natius,
Looks like he parked on a turn corner and it got tagged while a careless person was making a right. Not a great spot . Also facing wrong direction. Need a little more back story here. But who really gives a f@#k. Why am i even commenting on this cr#p

#12 what on earth is that? Half a mil? Tank ?
       
3
23.
Zada 1 year ago
Natius,

Learn to park you vehicle.
       
3
24.
Muriel 1 year ago
#41 A ghetto redneck.
       
7
25.
Adelaide 1 year ago
#40 .... until they're not,
       
0
26.
Jody 1 year ago
#22 Ayers Rock NOT Uluru
       
2
27.
Miriam 1 year ago
#22 As of October 26th, 2019, tourists (and locals) can no longer climb Uluru /aka Ayers Rock). The ban was passed unanimously in November 2017, but with it officially coming into effect this month people have been flocking to climb the monolith. It’s a move we don’t support, and here is why we won’t be climbing Uluru on any of our tours.
Uluru is a sacred place for the Anangu people, the traditional owners of the monolith and the land it sits on. For years the Anangu have spoken out against climbing the rock and pleaded with tourists to stop ascending it.
Furthermore, Uluru is a sacred men’s site. It is of great significance to Anangu men and they have voted for its closure. There are many sites around the base of the site that carry similar cultural significance that visitors also do not visit. Anangu traditional law forbids climbing of the rock. They say that their law teaches them the correct way to behave, and they ask that visitors respect this.
       
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