So, you were a waiter and a tattletale?And by the way, when I served, the term was thrown around quite a bit, and everyone knew what it meant.
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So, you were a waiter and a tattletale?And by the way, when I served, the term was thrown around quite a bit, and everyone knew what it meant.
OK son. Google Crowds on DemandThat is a right wing lie you keep telling each other in order to pretend that your fuhrer and his lawlessness isn’t inciting protests.
It is fairly obvious that they are not partisan.OK big mouth look up Crowds on Demand
One of the many companies that provide your deranged "grassroots" protesters
Now ignore this information. Cuss. Tag my post "fake news"
Yeah right.It is fairly obvious that they are not partisan.
Now, produce evidence of the routine Trumpster claim about “paid protestors” having anything to do with this guy.
I did confirm the fact that the crowd that cheered Trump as he came down the esculator was paid. But that has been known for years.
I kept seeing that, but never saw how it originated. That is actually one of the more popular at least most referenced uses or meaning. Totally unfamiliar, it must have skipped West Tennessee, West Kentucky, as I had never heard it. Go figure.It can also mean that a certain meal option is being taken of the table (restaurant lingo). It would be used like, “hey waiters, 86 the lobster orders tonight. We’re out.
That’s what got converted into “86” meaning “kill it.”
Then you are being intellectually dishonest.I kept seeing that, but never saw how it originated. That is actually one of the more popular at least most referenced uses or meaning. Totally unfamiliar, it must have skipped West Tennessee, West Kentucky, as I had never heard it. Go figure.
That’s ok. We all learn new things every day.I kept seeing that, but never saw how it originated. That is actually one of the more popular at least most referenced uses or meaning. Totally unfamiliar, it must have skipped West Tennessee, West Kentucky, as I had never heard it. Go figure.
Didn't serve. Didn't need to.Army, you?
Yep, and it can be adapted or used covertly in other messages and still mean the same thing.It can also mean that a certain meal option is being taken of the table (restaurant lingo). It would be used like, “hey waiters, 86 the lobster orders tonight. We’re out.
That’s what got converted into “86” meaning “kill it.”
They would scurry on home then.Give those mostly peaceful protesters something to remember
And shower for the first time in God only knowsThey would scurry on home then.