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Sylvanus 6 month s ago
22 - Baby?! You right wing extremists! It’s a CLUMP OF CELLS!
       
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Polly 6 month s ago
Sylvanus, #22
It is common usage in English to refer to it as a baby, even in utero. Just ask your mother. But you do bring up an important question, when is it a baby? Dont say "at birth", my son's best friend was born at 28 weeks in an emergency c section because of a car accident. He is a good kid and no less of a person because he wasn't born at 40 weeks.
       
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Essie 6 month s ago
#13 There are no residents on the island, just a tiny scientific crew. To visit it you have to fly out from Halifax and return the same day.
       
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Maxine 6 month s ago
#3

Sheldon Cooper companion.
       
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Eudicy 6 month s ago
Every time I read about some woman not from nor any relation to any of these Sharia law countries where it's illegal for a woman to report being raped unless and only unless she has 4 adult male witnesses to back her up, I think she must be crazy stupid. If she does not have those witnesses, she goes to prison. Rape is legal. This has happened.
       
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Cilla 3 month s ago
#35 All you lemmings who voted for the Orange Hitler: take a hard look at that foto, because that's what you just voted for.

#42 *drown
       
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"In 1901, a portrait captured Adelaida Cuellar and her three young children—Isabel, Manuel, and Amos—on their modest farm in Kaufman County, Texas. Life on the farm was marked by hardship and long days of labor with little reward, but Adelaida’s resilience and unwavering spirit were already shaping a future far brighter than she could have foreseen. Amidst the daily struggles, her love for cooking stood out—a source of comfort and a quiet promise of what was to come.By 1926, that promise began to unfold. Adelaida set up a humble stand at the Kaufman County Fair, serving up her homemade chili and tamales. Fairgoers couldn't get enough. When the fair ended, demand continued, prompting her and her twelve children to open a small café. As word spread, the family’s efforts grew into something bigger. In 1940, five of her sons moved the café to Oak Lawn in Dallas, giving it a new name—*El Chico*. The timing was perfect, and the Tex-Mex dishes struck a chord with diners, setting the stage for a growing restaurant business.Over the decades, *El Chico* blossomed into a Tex-Mex institution, with locations not only across Texas but as far away as Australia and the UAE. Adelaida Cuellar passed away in 1969 at the age of 98, having lived to see her cooking legacy touch countless lives. Thanks to her recipes and the dedication of her family, *El Chico* became more than a restaurant—it became a symbol of determination, tradition, and the irresistible power of a well-cooked meal."

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