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No, and neither will the mods, probably.okay, reported.Keep it up and I'm going to report you for trolling. You're a miserable waste of bandwidth.I'm a good teacher. I try to make it fun. Funner, anyway. US Govt isn't easy to make funner.Per usual, just trolling today, huh?Whats the world coming to....
A teacher going to a message board for information.
Nope.
I'm totally serious. You have the whole internet at your fingertips yet you ask for help to do your job. Unlike teachers of yesteryear who had to research things the hard way.
Fun for who?
Answer the fuken question.
Because I'm dying to know how this makes it fun for your students which are the only ones that matter.
I'm fine with that.
I asked you legit questions that you didnt want to answer.
If that an infraction so be it.
But I dont see how.
You, the flag is actually a British line of Succession. Start with Edmund of Langley, English Civil War, Scottish Succession in Blue, and 13th is George Washington Kennon. 13 generations (Sons). 13 years, (Sun Orbits) takes to you to the end of the Seven Years' War. There's Powhatan, Virginia Dare (My Bonnie lay over the ocean, Shakespeare Sonnets 40's and 50's), Pocahontas, Thomas Pepsi Rolfe, and Washington in there too. Add 2 stripes for 15, and you add Acadia and Hudson Bay up to Charles II (Hudson Bay Charter) Stuart.Why?Be careful with Betsy Ross. Her flag was deemed to be racist not too long ago.He liked the little tour, I told him the history of the Liberty bell and played the ringing for him. It called the people of Philadelphia to Independence Hall to hear the very first reading of the Declaration of Independence on July 8, 1776. Of course, I rammed a little of the Declaration down his throat too--good for kids, like Castor Oil.Wow! Thank you!Independence Hall, the Mint, Constitution Center, Franklin Institute, Betsy Ross's house, there's a brewery there with recipes from the 1700's, the Masonic Lodge, old Episcopal Church, Penn's Landing, New Sweden (doesn't seem to be a transfer treaty of New Sweden from Sweden to the Netherlands), Coaquannock. Library. British capture of Philadelphia. The President's House in Philadelphia. Congress Hall: Congress Hall - WikipediaI'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
I'm going to look up Betsy Ross's house.
Out in Western New York scrapple was a thing, too, but I admit I never tried it. The concept reminds me too much of Spam.Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine! Reading Terminal Station!
View attachment 358547
MMMM..... Scrapple, Homefries, and Eggs. Just need semi copious amounts of ketchup. Some prefer syrup, and some Apfelbutter.
Philadelphians know how to fix a door window crank.I'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
But they don't know how to fix a bell.Philadelphians know how to fix a door window crank.I'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
I'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
Yep. And shortly thereafter Rush and many of his listeners turned that into an opportunity to raise a few million bucks for charity, so I guess we owe that former QB asshole a thank you.Be careful with Betsy Ross. Her flag was deemed to be racist not too long ago.He liked the little tour, I told him the history of the Liberty bell and played the ringing for him. It called the people of Philadelphia to Independence Hall to hear the very first reading of the Declaration of Independence on July 8, 1776. Of course, I rammed a little of the Declaration down his throat too--good for kids, like Castor Oil.Wow! Thank you!Independence Hall, the Mint, Constitution Center, Franklin Institute, Betsy Ross's house, there's a brewery there with recipes from the 1700's, the Masonic Lodge, old Episcopal Church, Penn's Landing, New Sweden (doesn't seem to be a transfer treaty of New Sweden from Sweden to the Netherlands), Coaquannock. Library. British capture of Philadelphia. The President's House in Philadelphia. Congress Hall: Congress Hall - WikipediaI'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
I'm going to look up Betsy Ross's house.
Totally different flavor, tastes like a spicy meatloaf.Out in Western New York scrapple was a thing, too, but I admit I never tried it. The concept reminds me too much of Spam.Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine! Reading Terminal Station!
View attachment 358547
MMMM..... Scrapple, Homefries, and Eggs. Just need semi copious amounts of ketchup. Some prefer syrup, and some Apfelbutter.
The people who make those shoes are like slaves in sweatshops. And they may live better then they did before they started.He considers the American flag offensive? I know he kneels during the Anthem because racism, but I didn't know he finds the flag offensive. I think it rots they pulled the sneaker. But he is their poster boy, isn't he? I suppose that gives him perks.Why?Be careful with Betsy Ross. Her flag was deemed to be racist not too long ago.He liked the little tour, I told him the history of the Liberty bell and played the ringing for him. It called the people of Philadelphia to Independence Hall to hear the very first reading of the Declaration of Independence on July 8, 1776. Of course, I rammed a little of the Declaration down his throat too--good for kids, like Castor Oil.Wow! Thank you!Independence Hall, the Mint, Constitution Center, Franklin Institute, Betsy Ross's house, there's a brewery there with recipes from the 1700's, the Masonic Lodge, old Episcopal Church, Penn's Landing, New Sweden (doesn't seem to be a transfer treaty of New Sweden from Sweden to the Netherlands), Coaquannock. Library. British capture of Philadelphia. The President's House in Philadelphia. Congress Hall: Congress Hall - WikipediaI'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
I'm going to look up Betsy Ross's house.Nike Nixes ‘Betsy Ross Flag’ Sneaker After Colin Kaepernick Intervenes
Nike is yanking a U.S.A.-themed sneaker featuring an early American flag after NFL star-turned-activist Colin Kaepernick told the company it shouldn’t sell a shoe with a symbol that he and others consider offensive.www.wsj.com
Actually, the first Liberty Bell cracked the first time it was rung. They gave it to another foundry, who melted it down and built the Bell that called the people to hear the news for 90 years, from early 1750's to 1840's. Then, it too cracked. They did fine, imo.But they don't know how to fix a bell.Philadelphians know how to fix a door window crank.I'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
Actually, the first Liberty Bell cracked the first time it was rung. They gave it to another foundry, who melted it down and built the Bell that called the people to hear the news for 90 years, from early 1750's to 1840's. Then, it too cracked. ...But they don't know how to fix a bell.Philadelphians know how to fix a door window crank.I'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine! Reading Terminal Station!
View attachment 358547
MMMM..... Scrapple, Homefries, and Eggs. Just need semi copious amounts of ketchup. Some prefer syrup, and some Apfelbutter.
I think he's Philly hater, Cowboys' symbol and that. Rivalry. Scrapple tastes like... ein Bratwurst patty mit ein halb hart und halb weich kruste, wenn richtig gekocht, but spicer, and the texture of haggis inside.Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine! Reading Terminal Station!
View attachment 358547
MMMM..... Scrapple, Homefries, and Eggs. Just need semi copious amounts of ketchup. Some prefer syrup, and some Apfelbutter.
Lived here all my life and scrapple taste like HOT DOG SHIT
Oh, you were just making a joke.Actually, the first Liberty Bell cracked the first time it was rung. They gave it to another foundry, who melted it down and built the Bell that called the people to hear the news for 90 years, from early 1750's to 1840's. Then, it too cracked. ...But they don't know how to fix a bell.Philadelphians know how to fix a door window crank.I'm doing a class this afternoon on US govt/history and am trying a virtual tour of Philadelphia--Independence Hall, where the delegates might have stayed, what they ate, pics (and sound) of the Liberty Bell.... I don't know much--never been there.
Anything interesting anyone know about 1787 Philly that they want to share in the next hour?
Yeah, I went to elementary school too, thanks.