alpharx7
Post #6934
I think I might be better off going with Fiat <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="468" width="625" data="https://www.youtube.com/v/7lcc62nrl9Y"><param name="movie" value="https://www.youtube.com/v/7lcc62nrl9Y"><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="sameDomain"><param name="quality" value="best"><param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF"><param name="scale" value="noScale"><param name="salign" value="TL"><param name="FlashVars" value="playerMode=embedded" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent"/></object> only if you need the blue pill. |
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alpharx7
Post #6936
If I took the blue pill, my old fella would be harder than Chinese arithmetic, and unfortunately, I don't have any reinforced walls that need demolishing atm ram raiding, build up your retirement fund. and look at it on the bright side, if you get caught, free room and board for the rest of your life. |
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alpharx7
Post #6944
How was Santa? Like Slav and his golf, a bit sweaty around the balls, or didn't you get to sit on his lap. no sitting on Santa's lap, was prohibited, not by the big fellow himself, but by the nature of the photograph that the missus wanted. She's done one each year now, just her son and Santa, so the photograph had to 'match' that. personally I'd have been more than willing to slip the big fella a wet willy - in honour of all the hard work that he does. |
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wolfman101
Post #6958
I'm not really a big merc lover. But i do love this. The GT? It's just all... WRONG. EDIT: Oh, SLS? Yeah, it's ok-no SLR |
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wolfman101
Post #6959
One thing that bugs me about the GT is that I don't like it when manufacturers move backwards in terms of "extremeness". The SLS was far less extreme than the SLR (less powerful, less wild looking, less expensive) and now that they have announced that the GT is not a "middle" model as they originally suggested (back when it was called the the SLC), but a REPLACEMENT, they have stepped back again. |
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wolfman101
Post #6960
aaaand here's something you don't see everyday: inside the SLK with my mate Keaton! How much Euro V8 noise can you take... |
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alpharx7
Post #6965
go to Iraq / Syria and fight jihad they say, there will be virgins for everyone they say. guffaw. go die in a cave you brainwashed imbeciles. QUOTE Islamic State: Australian-initiated air strike kills up to 100 militant fighters in cave complex near Kirkuk
RAAF Super Hornets have been involved in airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Kirkuk, Iraq killing 100 fighters. © ABC News RAAF Super Hornets have been involved in airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Kirkuk, Iraq killing 100 fighters. An air strike initiated after Australian forces discovered a network of hidden caves and bunkers in Iraq has killed as many as 100 Islamic State fighters. The attack on a network of caves and tunnels near Kirkuk was carried out about a week ago after a RAAF Super Hornet crew spotted people moving along the side of a mountain and then disappearing. In the latest official briefing on the operation held at defence headquarters in Canberra, Vice Admiral David Johnston described how the Super Hornet's weapons systems operator observed an Islamic State militant moving to what was later discovered to be "a large well-established and hidden network of caves and bunkers that were concealed in a hillside". Investigations confirmed that the fighters were moving underground, and within 24 hours a coalition air strike was called in. Forty-four targets were hit, backed up by a large-scale ground offensive by Kurdish forces. The Kirkuk attack is just one of a number of successful missions flown by RAAF Super Hornets in the past few weeks. An Australian strike crew also took command of an operation against a factory in Mosul used to make improvised explosive devices. The factory was severely damaged. As well as offensive operations, Australian air crews have been involved in a continuing humanitarian mission around Mt Sinjar, along with weapons drops. Vice Admiral Johnston said the coalition was confident the "advance of ISIL across Iraq has slowed". "There is a momentum shift but it isn't consistent," he said. Iraqi forces have had some success in the north and south of the country, but the western approaches to Baghdad remain fairly fragile. Ramadi facing Islamic State offensive A significant Islamic State push is continuing around Ramadi, and hundreds of militant fighters have been seen entering the area. Australia's air strikes have also been instrumental in supporting Iraqi forces around the Baiji oil refinery, on the road north between Bagdad and Mosul. The refinery is one of Iraq's largest and has been hotly contested territory with a potential to produce 170,000 barrels of oil per day at a value of up to $24 million a day. More than 20 bombs were dropped from Australia's fighter jets in the operation, and seven targets were destroyed. Vice Admiral Johnston said that while the Islamic State assault had not been stopped, there was no doubt that the group's leadership had been successfully targeted on a number of occasions. Although he conceded Islamic State had the ability to regenerate its leadership he said: "Every time you lose a leader with experience, with knowledge of the area they are operating in, that's been intimately involved in planning and preparing for operations, it has an impact on forces". Asked if he could confirm that the Australian Islamic State leader Mohammad Ali Baryalei was one of those leaders who were killed, Vice Admiral Johnston said the ADF believed it was less than likely that he was dead. Late last month social media posts had suggested that the Australian Islamic State kingpin had been killed. "We have not seen any categorical evidence to suggest he was dead," Vice Admiral Johnston said. |
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