Penelope replied with this 6 years ago, 16 minutes later, 15 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,015,808
I would racemix with a black man so I can half beautiful African / Svensk children with nappy hair, wide noses, and green eyes like a mutated orc from Fallout
Fake anon !ZkUt8arUCU replied with this 6 years ago, 42 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,016,228
@previous (Kook !!rcSrAtaAC)
Yeah long story but whiskey dick happened so we basically laid in bed and talked about life instead of fucking and then that weekend also went sideways so I guess I need to stick with boring normal girls.
Fake anon !ZkUt8arUCU replied with this 6 years ago, 10 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,016,236
@1,016,233 (Kook !!rcSrAtaAC)
Idk, I keep running into jews everywhere. Almost like some kind of conspiracy. It is a little suspicious, isn't it? @previous (K)
Potato potato.
Fake anon !ZkUt8arUCU replied with this 6 years ago, 18 minutes later, 1 day after the original post[^][v]#1,016,251
@1,016,237 (K)
For our intensive purposes it's the same. @1,016,239 (terri !RwordOooFE)
Women: not even once™ @previous (Kook !!rcSrAtaAC)
No. I came down here and the only place that rented out to me happened to be a jewess. Then I worked for the gubmint briefly in an office with a lot of jews, then I started working for the jews directly, then now I'm somewhere else with a lot of jews. Even job interviews I've been on for jobs I didn't get were with people named like Hank Anglo-Saxon who end up somehow being jews. It's unreal.
Anonymous R joined in and replied with this 3 years ago, 3 years later, 3 years after the original post[^][v]#1,201,345
Although I am not a lawyer, I am an accredited criminal attorney from Ohio.
Miscegenation is a crime in most jurisdictions. It is an act of cruelty (such as having a child, having a friend, or being intimate).
You must prove that, according to law, the defendant was acting with a mental or sexual intention.
Most states provide no such protections. But several states now enforce the law as well. The state of Missouri does the same with its statute of limitations, which is 30 days for misdemeanors and 60 days for felonies. In the latter case, the state's statute of limitations runs indefinitely so it's unclear whether the alleged act can remain in effect.
And the other thing that you can do in a Florida court is to wait until you've been proven guilty of the crime, which means you've been out of jail in less than 24 hours, not 48 since you pulled the trigger.
It's unclear if there are any rules at all regarding when or where you can keep this procedure until you're convicted. You may find yourself in that situation for a few days in many states before going to trial, which may explain how it has been handled. But it also raises some practical questions:
Do you go to jail a lot?
Are you being punished badly?
And if so, what does it take to get out of jail?
If you are convicted of a crime, do you get to stay in
Fake anon !ZkUt8arUCU replied with this 3 years ago, 2 minutes later, 3 years after the original post[^][v]#1,201,348
@previous (S)
You literally posted nothing but badly mangled auto-generated botposts on a new UID. You do not get to shit up the love forum if you haven't put in the shifts at the posting mines to make this place fun.