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Eric
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33 minutes ago, tous said:

Hard to go wrong with the god of fire, who was married to Aphrodite.

Fire and comely babes.

:599c64b15e0f8_thumbsup:

He was a lame, deformed, ugly cripple with nerve damage and skin cancer (probably related to arsenic in bronze but many smiths in the bronze ages had these issues from being poisoned by their work)

 

On a side note, I have a buddy that likes to say something along these lines:

"I have the body of a god!

 

 

 

...too bad it's Bacchus."

(The fat version where he's represented as the god of excessive wine and merriment)

Image result for fat bacchus statue

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Law enforcement officers many not have a legal duty to protect citizens, but that doesn’t mean law enforcement agencies are required to continue to employ those who don’t.

Now that Governor Ron DeSantis has dumped the grandstanding, incompetent Scott Israel, the new Broward County Sheriff, Gregory Tony, is continuing to remove those who sat back and allowed 17 people to dieduring the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School last year.

https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/broward-sheriff-fires-two-more-deputies-for-neglect-of-duty-during-parkland-shooting/

 

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Lawmakers seek to rescind Medals of Honor from soldiers at Wounded Knee massacre

Three House members are calling for Congress to posthumously rescind Medals of Honor awarded to 20 U.S. soldiers who participated in the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre, where an estimated 250 Native Americans -- mostly women and children -- were killed.

 

Medals of Honor were given to 20 soldiers from the U.S. 7th Calvary Regiment for their actions in the Dec. 29, 1890 massacre in South Dakota's Pine Ridge Indian Reservation near Wounded Knee Creek. The U.S. government was seeking to annex the Great Sioux Reservation, a breaking of the 1868 Treaty of Laramie, which stated the tribe would settle in the Black Hills in what was then the Dakota Territory.

On Wounded Knee's centenary in 1990, Congress apologized for the massacre but did not revoke the medals. In 1996, late GOP Sen. John McCain, then chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, said the massacre did not warrant taking away the medals..

 

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