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Full Potato Thread!!!
By Kooljack 2015-01-15 13:07:10
I wasn't stating hard emo evidence circumstanced information though , more of a 'lets talk' about a political person's latest ideology
Cerberus.Anjisnu
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By Cerberus.Anjisnu 2015-01-15 13:07:17
Potato Jesus was crisscut and and tossed in a skillet for your sins repent I say unto you or face the deep-fried tuberlations that await you!
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-01-15 13:07:23
KN, I think you need to make the text bigger, and more potato.
an OP sourcing a political talk show host, to see what people's comments are with said person's latest ideas is locked because. 'OP's fault'. And now we have this thread, wtfBBQmuffins how does that make sense? From the mod:
Aww, Kojo ruins all of the fun!
He locked our baked potato thread! Random P&R was made for *** like that, I don't know why it wasn't posted there. He, like Lordgrim, know full well about the Random PnR thread, however refuse to use it for, ya know, random politics and religion articles. Though, that would first require using actual articles, instead of made up ***. That's why it was nuked and Chanti's threads arent, if anyone was wondering, we nuke P&R threads with no substance so posting an OP of nothing but a few opinionated lines of text or nothing but a political video will get nuked, that belongs in Random P&R. Chanti at least cites articles and links to them.
As for Lordgrim, I'm not one to disrupt a presidential campaign.

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Bismarck.Ramyrez
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By Bismarck.Ramyrez 2015-01-15 13:09:23
Yes, sort of along the lines of, "you didn't have to be a jerk, but you were."
"Didn't have to" is sort of ambiguous wording.
I mean, you don't have to ride the roller coasters or play the games if you go to an amusement park.
But it's really not nearly as fun if you don't.
Valefor.Sehachan
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By Valefor.Sehachan 2015-01-15 13:10:00
Put a potato in yer mouths all of you!
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Bismarck.Ramyrez
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By Bismarck.Ramyrez 2015-01-15 13:10:16
DONT MAKE ME CALL THE POLICE
You mean the Potato Po-po?
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-01-15 13:10:21
Put a potato in yer mouths all of you! As long as it's not the one you licked.
By Kooljack 2015-01-15 13:10:22
so we can't have bill maher, or mark levin dedicated threads without linking their website or someting?
Cerberus.Anjisnu
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By Cerberus.Anjisnu 2015-01-15 13:11:32
Hmm gotta conjure up some apostles and such for Potato Jesus
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-01-15 13:11:34
so we can't have bill maher, or mark levin dedicated threads without linking their website or someting? You can make unsubstantiated claims all you want.
But you can't make unsubstantiated threads. At least provide a source for your ramblings in the first post.
Valefor.Sehachan
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By Valefor.Sehachan 2015-01-15 13:11:35
so we can't have bill maher, or mark levin dedicated threads without linking their website or someting? Talk to a mod, we don't care.
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By Kooljack 2015-01-15 13:12:47
was my op entirely opinionated from my own creative thinking?
I cited a person. a famous current person.
I cited business economic health between present and 6 years ago
all i ever wanted was discussion on two political media personnel's ideology
Cerberus.Anjisnu
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By Cerberus.Anjisnu 2015-01-15 13:13:30
so we can't have bill maher, or mark levin dedicated threads without linking their website or someting? Being a potato is not the same thing as posting potato related things potato or leave!
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Bismarck.Ramyrez
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By Bismarck.Ramyrez 2015-01-15 13:15:16
Hmm gotta conjure up some apostles and such for Potato Jesus
TATER TOTS
By Bloodrose 2015-01-15 13:15:29
Making a claim that someone said something, or happened to them without proof, is nothing short of name-dropping and/or possible grounds for libel/slander.
It isn't even about the "hard emo evidence", it's simply part of posturing a debate.
Had you posted and articulated as an idea, it would have been relevant, and thus open to discussion, where as a random "quote" without an article or any kind of background, deletes any kind of context available to begin an informed discussion of where an ideology like that would come from, and the possible reasons a person would say it.
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Bismarck.Ramyrez
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By Bismarck.Ramyrez 2015-01-15 13:16:31
Having fun at others expense isn't exactly a morally sound argument tho, is it? Man feels like a frat house in here.
Bonding through mutually reciprocated insults is a time-honored tradition.
Just because it's done in fraternities doesn't mean others can't do it too.
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By Bloodrose 2015-01-15 13:16:39
was my op entirely opinionated from my own creative thinking?
I cited a person. a famous current person.
I cited business economic health between present and 6 years ago Uh, no you didn't.
You made a claim that a person said something.
You made a claim that business economic health was one thing, when data shows otherwise, without any kind of proof. That is not citing anything.
That, is being potato.
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Bahamut.Nixak
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By Bahamut.Nixak 2015-01-15 13:17:10
I grew up in Shelley and potatoes are kind of a big thing there. There is even a town holiday for potatoes. Here is a link to the holiday. Spud Day
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Valefor.Sehachan
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By Valefor.Sehachan 2015-01-15 13:17:21
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By Kooljack 2015-01-15 13:17:47
It's more about the general concepts of which these people are grounded.
Valefor.Endoq
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By Valefor.Endoq 2015-01-15 13:18:07
Actually this potato has substance.
OP linked potato roots to religion and politics.
But if this potato has no roots in P&R, feel free to uproot potato and replant in a better grounded place...
Also, potato.
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Cerberus.Anjisnu
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By Cerberus.Anjisnu 2015-01-15 13:18:14
Hmm gotta conjure up some apostles and such for Potato Jesus
TATER TOTS Tater tots are just young potatoes who fell victim certain sects of russetism's unwanted sexual advances
By Bloodrose 2015-01-15 13:19:09
Actually this potato has substance.
OP linked potato roots to religion and politics.
But if this potato has no roots in P&R, feel free to uproot potato and replant in a better grounded place...
Also, potato. Eh, very true. I concede my point.
MAY ALL EMBRACE THE POTATO PRAYER!
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By Bloodrose 2015-01-15 13:21:14
It's more about the general concepts of which these people are grounded. So now you're backpedalling to exit stage left.
It's not necessarily a bad thing.
Anyways, when "citing" a person or data, it's best to actually link that information for a person to pore over and make come to a conclusion themselves, unless you want to replicate that concept in your own words.
In that case, it would have substance, and probably have been fine.
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-01-15 13:21:22
was my op entirely opinionated from my own creative thinking? Yes.
I cited a person. a famous current person. He isn't famous. He isn't even well known.
If an individual has to look up who that person is, that's generally a sign that they aren't well known.
I cited business economic health between present and 6 years ago No you didn't.
But since I'm feeling helpful today, I will show you the difference between a statement and a citation.
A statement is something that an individual (in this case, you) stated.
Here is an example: IRC §179 limitation is $500,000 and $2,000,000 for 2014.
This is a true statement. However, you have no idea what I am talking about, nor did I provide evidence that this is true. I know this is true because this is part of my line of work. However, you don't know it is true or false.
A citation is a statement backed by a primary source as evidence.
Using my example from above: IRC §179 limitation is $500,000 and $2,000,000 for 2014. or IRC §179 limitation is $500,000 and $2,000,000 for 2014. or IRC §179 limitation is $500,000 and $2,000,000 for 2014.
I have cited 3 different sources using the same statement.
That is the difference between a statement and citation. Statements are not allowed for P&R thread creation, cited sources are needed.
Cerberus.Anjisnu
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By Cerberus.Anjisnu 2015-01-15 13:22:14
Quit being a sandy potato. Endoq lordgrim this non believers ***!
By Kooljack 2015-01-15 13:22:15
You made a claim that business economic health was one thing, when data shows otherwise, without any kind of proof. That is not citing anything.
That, is being potato.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-01-14/gallup-ceo-blasts-us-leadership-economy-not-coming-back
"The U.S. now ranks not first, not second, not third, but 12th among developed nations in terms of business startup activity. Countries such as Hungary, Denmark, Finland, New Zealand, Sweden, Israel and Italy all have higher startup rates than America does.
We are behind in starting new firms per capita, and this is our single most serious economic problem. Yet it seems like a secret. You never see it mentioned in the media, nor hear from a politician that, for the first time in 35 years, American business deaths now outnumber business births.
The U.S. Census Bureau reports that the total number of new business startups and business closures per year -- the birth and death rates of American companies -- have crossed for the first time since the measurement began. I am referring to employer businesses, those with one or more employees, the real engines of economic growth. Four hundred thousand new businesses are being born annually nationwide, while 470,000 per year are dying."
Let's discuss the hottest topic of ffxiah:
Potatoes!
Who doesn't love a potato?!
Mashed? Baked? Fried? Uncooked?! WOW! So many conflicting ways to potato!
I happen to love any kind of potato, especially tater tots!
(But I find crinkle cut potato fries limp and offencive, they should burn, BUUUURRRN!)
My favorite animal is without a doubt; the potato.
I had this crazy mashed potato stuff once. It had corned beef and pickles in it. Sounds disgusting but it was sooooo goooood I went back for seconds, thirds, and fourths! I went full potato on this stuff!
I love baked potato threads! Don't we all?!
I can't remember the last time I had a baked potato ....
Potato plants are also in the nightshade family, and their berries that grow above ground are deadly, and that the potato it's self is the only part of the plant that will not kill you untill you are dead :|
Even that potato it's self can be deadly if it is a green potato.
(Going green isn't always good! Fight against the green agenda! ...oh wait) Horrific Tales of Potatoes That Caused Mass Sickness and Even Death
A greened potato indicates the presence of a toxin that can cause gastrointestinal distress, induce coma or even death within 24 hours of consumption

It was the second day of autumn term at a small boys’ school in South London in 1979. Without warning, 78 schoolboys and a handful of monitors simultaneously fell ill. Symptoms included vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain and, in severe cases, depression of the central nervous system. Several patients were comatose with episodes of convulsive twitching and violent fits of fever. In many patients, there were signs of peripheral circulatory collapse. Within five days of the initial outbreak, all patients recovered in full, though some hallucinated for several days, Mary McMillan and J.C. Thompson report in the Quarterly Journal of Medicine. But what could cause such a sudden and mysterious illness?
Turns out, a bag of potatoes left in storage from the previous summer term.
After careful analysis of the sequence of events, the onset of symptoms was pinpointed to about four to 14 hours after the boys had eaten boiled potatoes that had a high concentration of the toxin, solanine, a glycoalkaloid that was first isolated in 1820 in the berries of a European black nightshade. Nightshade is the term used to describe over 2,800 species of plants in the scientific family, Solanaceae. Eggplants, tomatoes, and some berries are common members of the nightshade family—many of them contain highly toxic alkaloids.
That said, the potato is the most common cause of solanine poisoning in humans. But how do you know when solanine is present in a potato? The tuber is turning green.
Though the green color that forms on the skin of a potato is actually chlorophyll, which isn’t toxic at all (it’s the plant’s response to light exposure), the presence of chlorophyll indicates concentrations of solanine. The nerve toxin is produced in the green part of the potato (the leaves, the stem, and any green spots on the skin). The reason it exists? It’s a part of the plant’s defense against insects, disease and other predators.
If you eat enough of the green stuff, it can cause vomiting, diarrhea, headaches, paralysis of the central nervous system (as evidenced by the incident above) but in some rare cases the poisoning can cause coma—even death. Studies have recorded illnesses caused by a range of 30 to 50 mg of solanine per 100 grams of potato, but symptoms vary depending on the ratio of body weight of the toxin and the individual’s tolerance of the alkaloid. The following cases recorded in various medical journals include examples of some of the most severe cases of solanine poisoning (many of which resulted in death):
1899: After eating cooked potatoes containing 0.24 mg of solanine per gram of potato, 56 German soldiers experienced solanine poisoning. Though all recovered, in a few cases, jaundice and partial paralysis were observed.
1918: In Glasgow, Scotland, 61 people from 18 separate households were affected at once by a bad batch of potatoes. The following day, a five-year-old boy died of strangulation of the bowel following extreme retching and vomiting. According to “An Investigation of Solanine Poisoning” by S. G. Willimott, PhD, B.Sc. published in 1933, the case was investigated by scientists, R. W. Harris and T. Cockburn, who concluded in their article, “Alleged Poisoning By Potatoes” (1918), that the poisoning was the result of eating potatoes which contained five or six times the amount of solanine found in normal potatoes. Willimott cites this particular occurrence as an example of the toxin’s prevalence: “A review of the literature reveals the fact that authentic cases of solanine poisoning are not so rare as authorities appear to believe.”
1922: In autumn of this year, a serious epidemic broke out in Germany which was traced to the abnormal content of solanine in the potato crop.
1925: Seven members of a family were poisoned by greened potatoes. Two of them died. According to reports, symptoms included vomiting, extreme exhaustion, but no convulsions like that of the schoolboys in London. Breathing was rapid and labored until consciousness was lost a few hours before death.
1948: A case of solanine poisoning involving the potato’s nightshade relative, the berry, was recorded in the article “A Fatal Case of Solanine Poisoning“ published in the British Medical Journal. On August 13 of that year, a 9-year-old girl with a bad habit of snacking on the berries that grew along the railroad tracks by her house was admitted to the hospital with symptoms of vomiting, abdominal pain, and distressed breathing. She died two days later. An autopsy found hemorrhages in the mucosa of stomach and middle section of her small intestine. The stomach contained about one pint of dark brown fluid.
1952: According to the British Medical Journal, solanine poisoning is most common during times of food shortage. In the face of starvation, there have been accounts of large groups eating older potatoes with a higher concentration of the toxin. In North Korea during the war years of 1952-1953, entire communities were forced to eat rotting potatoes. In one area alone, 382 people were affected, of whom 52 were hospitalized and 22 died. The most severe cases died of heart failure within 24 hours of potato consumption. Some of the less severe symptoms included irregular pulses, enlargement of the heart, and blueing lips and ears. Those who displayed these ailments died within 5 or 10 days. Authors John Emsley and Peter Fell explain their book Was It Something You Ate?: Food Intolerance: What Causes It and How to Avoid It: ”In the final stages there were sometimes a state of high excitability with shaking attacks and death was due to respiratory failure.”
1983: Sixty-one of 109 school children and staff in Alberta, Canada, fell ill within five minutes of eating baked potato. Forty-four percent of those affected noted a green tinge and a bitter taste in the potatoes.
Not to worry though, fatal cases of solanine poisoning are very rare these days. Most commercial varieties of potatoes are screened for solanine, but any potato will build up the toxin to dangerous levels if exposed to light or stored improperly. Often, the highest concentrations of solanine are in the peel, just below the surface and in the sprouted “eyes”—things that are typically removed in cooking preparation—though Warren would argue even boiling water in potato prep dissolves only a little of the alkaloid. Emsley and Fell continue:
Most people can easily cope with the solanine in the average portion of potato and show no symptoms of poisoning because the body can break it down and rapidly and excrete the products in the urine. But if the level of solanine is as high as 40 mg per 100 g of potato, symptoms include diarrhea…even coma.
The best way to prevent solanine poisoning is to store tubers in a cool, dark place and remove the skin before consumption. A general rule for avoiding illnesses like the ones described above? Green and sprouted? Throw it out.
Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/horrific-tales-of-potatoes-that-caused-mass-sickness-and-even-death-3162870/#ZJL3LS1J7m8lAgyT.99
Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv
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Some people ever go as far as worshiping potatoes o_O Potato Church
Probably an Uberwaldaen religion, the Potato Church is split between the Plain Potato Church and the Ancient and Orthodox Potato Church. Moist von Lipwig was raised in it.[1] Its only apparent tenet is that as long as you have a potato with you when you die, you will go on to somewhere better. The religion is first mentioned in The Truth, where it appeared to originate from Mr Tulip's memory of someone saying that they will be all right as long as they have a potato. There is an implication that they actually meant that as long as you have a potato you won't starve, and that this was misunderstood.
source: http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religions_of_the_Discworld#Potato_Church
Dan Quayle took potato to a whole new level when he went full "Potatoe"! Bush's choice of 41-year-old Indiana Senator J. Danforth Quayle as his running mate shocked the political establishment, which had expected the longtime diplomat to pick someone more seasoned. Quayle didn't help his case by refusing to release his academic records. He had plenty to be modest about: he had failed an undergraduate comprehensive exam at DePauw University; one of his former professors referred to him as "vapid"; and he was admitted to law school at the University of Indiana under an "equal opportunity" program for poor and minority students. Quayle earned one of the worst beatdowns in televised political history by comparing himself to John F. Kennedy in the 1988 Vice Presidential debate, prompting a scathingly dismissive "You're no Jack Kennedy" from opponent Lloyd Bentsen. In office, his constant verbal gaffes made him a political laughingstock. "We don't want to go back to tomorrow, we want to go forward." "I stand by all my misstatements." "Bobby Knight told me this, 'There is nothing that a good defense cannot beat a better offense.' In other words, a good offense wins." But it was the dreaded "potatoe" incident that did Quayle in. While visiting a school in Trenton, NJ, a student was asked to write the word 'potato' on the blackboard and Quayle urged him to add an 'e' to the end. The entire nation held its belly in laughter.
source: http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1834600_1834604_1834585,00.html (I wanted to talk about GMO potato and dictators as well but my time has run out and gotta go to work now :(
I'll edit this later for that part of full potato)
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