Looks like someone's a little excited…
Thank You, Lucy
In a Glacial Tube
Who Wants Cake?
Go Ahead. Give It a Tug…
Wait…What?
Save a Horse
Caption This
I Think I Know What He Wants
Get In There
I Touch Myself
Let's Give It a Shot!
Oh Yeah…
Hey Boy…
Starting Work, a 6. An Hour Into It, a 9.
Hey Daddy…
To Be Filed Under: Decline and Fall of the United States
No. No I Would Not.
Just Askin'
Monday After a Long Holiday Weekend
365 Days of UNF: Day 333
10 Unpleasant Alien Civilization Scenarios
I've been following this guy for years. Great food for thought in almost all his videos.
So Many Double Entendres…
So many long hoses filling holes…
The last time I can remember getting fully um…serviced…at a gas station was in the early 80s. Even then I think you had the option of pumping your own gas.
For Fellow Doggie Dads…
Don't We All…
Let us account for all we see by the facts we know. If there are things for which we cannot account, let us wait for light. To account for anything by supernatural agencies is, in fact to say that we do not know. Theology is not what we know about God, but what we do not know about Nature.
In order to increase our respect for the Bible, it became necessary for the priests to exalt and extol that book, and at the same time to decry and belittle the reasoning powers of man. The whole power of the pulpit has been used for hundreds of years to destroy the confidence of man in himself—to induce him to distrust his own powers of thought, to believe that he was wholly unable to decide any question for himself, and that all human virtue consists in faith and obedience. The church has said, 'Believe, and obey! If you reason, you will become an unbeliever, and unbelievers will be lost. If you disobey, you will do so through vain pride and curiosity, and will, like Adam and Eve, be thrust from Paradise forever!'
For my part, I care nothing for what the church says, except in so far as it accords with my reason; and the Bible is nothing to me, only in so far as it agrees with what I think or know."
~ Robert G. Ingersoll, Some Mistakes of Moses