Not necessarily man, unless you believe everything the news wants you to believe.mr x wrote:Dave Mustaine has officially lost his fucking mind.![]()
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainmen ... -1.1137138" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Not necessarily man, unless you believe everything the news wants you to believe.mr x wrote:Dave Mustaine has officially lost his fucking mind.![]()
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainmen ... -1.1137138" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I stand by my original statement.Dirt Chicken wrote:Not necessarily man, unless you believe everything the news wants you to believe.mr x wrote:Dave Mustaine has officially lost his fucking mind.![]()
True dat!!jeffsmith wrote:He may be completely fucked in the head, but dude still puts on a wicked show. Though I stand by my statement that someone should slip a bottle of Jim Beam into his dressing room some night, it might help to shut him up a bit…
Cool! Where is that?Jimmy wrote:Pretty cool![]()
Don't have a clue. I came across the picture on another forum I visit.benwedge wrote:Cool! Where is that?Jimmy wrote:Pretty cool![]()
What are you talking about, the free market is working perfectly. It turns food into profit, just as advertised. Who needs affordable food anyways, soylent green is where its at.mr x wrote:This planet is fucked.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/busin ... 00011.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
yeh, how else is he supposed to air out those saggy man teets?CorneliusAlphonse wrote:putin does everything without a shirt.
PRAGUE—The Czech Republic banned liquor sales across the country, toughening restrictions imposed following a series of deaths caused by toxic bootleg alcohol sold as legitimate drinks to unsuspecting customers.
The ban on hard alcohol is the first in the country, which like many of its neighbors is known for fairly lax regulations on alcohol sales. Many local kiosks, selling fast-food meals, also offer whiskey, vodka or brandy in bottles or even in plastic shot cups. Alcohol drinking and legitimate home brewing of fruit liquors are common in the Czech Republic.
"It is a blanket ban on sales of distilled liquor with alcohol content of 20% and higher at all shops, restaurants, bars or any other establishments across the entire country," Health Ministry spokesman Vlastimil Srsen said on Friday.
The ban took effect shortly after 7 p.m. Friday—limiting the night's bar-goers to consuming beer or wine. Mr. Srsen said the ban would last indefinitely.
The ministry escalated its measures after methanol-laced legitimate bottles started appearing in regular liquor stores. The first known sales of poisonous alcohol were at outdoor markets and kiosks. There were 19 deaths from the tainted drinks as of Friday, and 27 people remained in critical condition, according to the Health Ministry.
"The situation got serious after fake liquor bottles laced with methanol began surfacing at standard stores or even catering establishments which represent a much wider distribution than earlier," Mr. Srsen said.
At least one illegal bottling facility, based in a residential basement garage in the Czech eastern city of Zlin, has been found and several individuals arrested, the Interior Ministry said on Friday. Some 5,000 liters of illegal alcohol, some containing toxic methanol, were found and impounded in the bottling facility, the authorities said.
Some of the illegal alcohol at the facility was in standard bottles with fake labels of legitimate distillers, with fake or stolen official alcohol tax stamps glued on their screw caps, Health Minister Leos Heger said earlier this week.
The Health Ministry on Friday had no information on any progress by law enforcement authorities in the search for illegal bootleg production sources. Police officials declined to comment on their continuing investigations.
Alcohol industry officials have warned that difficult economic times were shifting demand to kiosks and other establishments selling cheaper and illegal alcohol.
The Czech distillers' union, known as UVDL, has called on the government to ban alcohol sales at kiosks, reduce the volume of the largest retail package of distilled alcohol to three liters from six, and require all shops selling alcohol to use digital cash registers to enable proper sales monitoring for tax officials.
I like a comment half way down the page :sleepyjamie wrote:droppin bombs on beer
http://motherboard.vice.com/2012/9/20/u ... d-idea-too" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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