Arkham Daycare

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not sure what I drank and or ate ..... but remind me not to do that again
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what passes for customer service these days,
ought to be considered a misdemeanor
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further proof that :
ALL TV NEWS & TALK RADIO ARE DANGEROUS THINGS and ought to be bannished from your life !!!!
The man convicted of setting fire to an Ohio mosque earlier this year is now blaming his crime on having watched Fox News and listened to conservative talk radio shows, which he claims convinced him that Muslims are all “terrorists.”
The 52-year-old man, Randolph Linn of Indiana, recently pleaded guilty to charges of setting fire to the Islamic Center of Greater Toledo, resulting in a 20-year reduced prison sentence. His sentencing is scheduled for April 2013.
As part of his defense, the Digital Journal reports that Linn told the court that he was “riled up” from watching Fox News and consuming “45 beers” over a span of seven hours before committing his crime.
When the judge asked whether Linn actually knew any Muslims, the defendant replied, “No, I only know what I hear on Fox news and what I hear on [conservative talk] radio.”
“Muslims are killing Americans and trying to blow stuff up,” Linn added. “Most Muslims are terrorists and don’t believe in Jesus Christ.”
Upon being arrested for the arson, Linn reportedly told officers, “ those Muslims… they would kill us if they got the chance.”

Remember kiddies ..... tis the season to count your blessings and remember to be a bit kinder and quicker to forgive

I haz a new computer chair and i got it at a thrift store for $5

dunno whar this video was shot nore care ......
but this is the reason I DECLARE OPEN SEASON ON THESE ANIMALS !!!
A mansion sealed in a time warp for more than a century to respect its eccentric
owner's dying wishes has been reopened as a museum, offering a glimpse into 19th
century bourgeois French life.
Curators say the Maison Mantin in Moulins, central France offers a unique freeze-frame of turn-of-the-century France in all its grandeur and strangeness.
What precisely lay behind the imposing 19th century mansion's locked doors and shuttered windows had been the subject of intrigue for decades.
Some believed that its wealthy, unconventional former owner, Louis Martin, had hidden a collection of human skeletons among its many rooms.
It was closed shortly after his death in 1905 and its contents left to attract dust, mold, woodworm and rats.
Mr Mantin made his fortune in land and property but died unmarried and childless aged just 54 – only eight years after the sumptuous home was completed. It had been built on the ruins of a 15th-century castle that had belonged to the aristocratic Bourbon family.
In his will, he bequeathed the house to the town, specifying that he wanted it to be made a museum a century after his death.
Although he left no orders to have it sealed, the mansion was left practically untouched all those years, its eerie calm even unbroken by the occupying German forces of the Second World War.
"It was very strange, the house became a sort of urban myth," said assistant curator Maud Leyoudec. "People didn't know what was in this house and had fantasies."