Afganistan Collapse

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
And you forgot incel according to you. Guy you are every bit as bad as the people you disdain. You"re 100% the cancel culture cultural computer warrior. Yipee.
I mentioned shit talking women,

Screen Shot 2021-08-24 at 6.32.41 PM.png

'Chauvanist' was the word I used, sorry if it confused you.

And no, I am not actively lying to get people to be unsafe and trick them into being in a cult.
 

DaFreak

Well-Known Member
I mentioned shit talking women,

View attachment 4971947

'Chauvanist' was the word I used, sorry if it confused you.

And no, I am not actively lying to get people to be unsafe and trick them into being in a cult.
Thank you, English isn't my first language, but chauvinist is not exactly a seldom used word. But you certainly seem to be proud of yourself for middle school knowledge. However, I do admit that Americans would find Japan culture chauvinist, but that is because they are a little shallow in their views. However, I was referring to a past post you made and not that one. Unless you actually don't understand what chauvinist means and you think it means Incel? Who knows, but again, congrats on your vocabulary. BTW Know how we say chauvinist in Japanese? ショーヴィニストWhich in roman letters is shovunisto.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Thank you, English isn't my first language, but chauvinist is not exactly a seldom used word. But you certainly seem to be proud of yourself for middle school knowledge. However, I do admit that Americans would find Japan culture chauvinist, but that is because they are a little shallow in their views.
Japanese people being shallow in their views would make sense that it would be a chauvinistic culture I guess.
 

Lucky Luke

Well-Known Member
Current Australia. Red is is some form of lock down. I live on that island at the bottom. The "marsial law" thing is an even smaller part of the red. Soldiers are often called in in Australia to help with all sorts of disasters- bushfires, floods etc. This is no different. They are being used to give manpower to an already stretched system. They are not police and dont have the powers of police. I'd be surprised if they are even carrying weapons.


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printer

Well-Known Member
Dozens of California students, parents stranded in Afghanistan after summer trip abroad
Dozens of California students and parents are stranded in Afghanistan after taking a summer trip to the country.

More than 20 students and 16 parents traveling from the Cajon Valley Union School District in El Cajon, Calif., visited Afghanistan on summer vacation. Now they are among thousands of people who are waiting to leave the country amid the chaotic U.S. withdrawal that caused political unrest across the nation, according to the LA Times.

Cajon Valley Superintendent David Miyashiro alerted school board members on Tuesday that he would be meeting with Rep. Darrell Issa (R) to discuss the situation, the Times noted.

Miyashiro told the news outlet that the families traveled to Afghanistan on special visas for U.S. military service and that the school district was able to provide government officials with information on the families as they work to locate them.

Mike Serban, who works with refugee families in the district and heads the Family and Children Engagement program, was the first person to hear about the students’ predicament. Serban reached out to Miyashiro last week and told him that multiple families had reached out to him concerned that their students would lose out on classroom instruction due to being in Afghanistan, according to the Times.

“Congressman Issa and his staff are working diligently to determine the facts on the ground, any bureaucratic barriers that can be removed, and the best ways to help those stranded leave Afghanistan and return home safely. We won’t stop until we have answers and action,” an Issa spokesperson informed Miyashiro in an email, the Times reported.

Cajon Valley School Board President Tamara Otero told the Times that the students and their families had plans to fly out of Afghanistan and had already purchased tickets.

“But, unfortunately, they were not able to get to the airport," Otero said.

“The biggest concern is that the Taliban closed the airport,” Otero added. “We are so worried about our students that are stuck there. We’ll do the best we can to get them out.”

Cajon Valley School Board member Jo Alegria said that the students had planned to return home before the start of the new school year, which commenced on Aug. 17, according to the Times.

"Honey, the school has a once in a lifetime trip organized to see Afghanistan before Taliban extremists take over it for good. The place is a war zone but we should be ok as Biden is not leaving until August 31. That gives us two weeks grace time before the shit hits the fan."

"It would be a culturally enriching experience for them, I think it would also give them a bad-ass reputation when the, 'What did you do this summer?' question comes up in class. Even us in front of the other parrents."
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
Cancel culture cultural computer combatant would have been better.
Last summer when all the confederate statues were being pulled down, one of my wife's friend's racist uncle was calling it cancel culture and it had to stop. I told him I understood where he was coming from. That if you were to remove all the monuments to white supremacy how would black folks know their place. It took him a few seconds, but he said that wasn't what he meant. (my wife kicked me under the table)
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Dozens of California students, parents stranded in Afghanistan after summer trip abroad
Dozens of California students and parents are stranded in Afghanistan after taking a summer trip to the country.

More than 20 students and 16 parents traveling from the Cajon Valley Union School District in El Cajon, Calif., visited Afghanistan on summer vacation. Now they are among thousands of people who are waiting to leave the country amid the chaotic U.S. withdrawal that caused political unrest across the nation, according to the LA Times.

Cajon Valley Superintendent David Miyashiro alerted school board members on Tuesday that he would be meeting with Rep. Darrell Issa (R) to discuss the situation, the Times noted.

Miyashiro told the news outlet that the families traveled to Afghanistan on special visas for U.S. military service and that the school district was able to provide government officials with information on the families as they work to locate them.

Mike Serban, who works with refugee families in the district and heads the Family and Children Engagement program, was the first person to hear about the students’ predicament. Serban reached out to Miyashiro last week and told him that multiple families had reached out to him concerned that their students would lose out on classroom instruction due to being in Afghanistan, according to the Times.

“Congressman Issa and his staff are working diligently to determine the facts on the ground, any bureaucratic barriers that can be removed, and the best ways to help those stranded leave Afghanistan and return home safely. We won’t stop until we have answers and action,” an Issa spokesperson informed Miyashiro in an email, the Times reported.

Cajon Valley School Board President Tamara Otero told the Times that the students and their families had plans to fly out of Afghanistan and had already purchased tickets.

“But, unfortunately, they were not able to get to the airport," Otero said.

“The biggest concern is that the Taliban closed the airport,” Otero added. “We are so worried about our students that are stuck there. We’ll do the best we can to get them out.”

Cajon Valley School Board member Jo Alegria said that the students had planned to return home before the start of the new school year, which commenced on Aug. 17, according to the Times.

"Honey, the school has a once in a lifetime trip organized to see Afghanistan before Taliban extremists take over it for good. The place is a war zone but we should be ok as Biden is not leaving until August 31. That gives us two weeks grace time before the shit hits the fan."

"It would be a culturally enriching experience for them, I think it would also give them a bad-ass reputation when the, 'What did you do this summer?' question comes up in class. Even us in front of the other parrents."
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Dozens of California students, parents stranded in Afghanistan after summer trip abroad
Dozens of California students and parents are stranded in Afghanistan after taking a summer trip to the country.

More than 20 students and 16 parents traveling from the Cajon Valley Union School District in El Cajon, Calif., visited Afghanistan on summer vacation. Now they are among thousands of people who are waiting to leave the country amid the chaotic U.S. withdrawal that caused political unrest across the nation, according to the LA Times.

Cajon Valley Superintendent David Miyashiro alerted school board members on Tuesday that he would be meeting with Rep. Darrell Issa (R) to discuss the situation, the Times noted.

Miyashiro told the news outlet that the families traveled to Afghanistan on special visas for U.S. military service and that the school district was able to provide government officials with information on the families as they work to locate them.

Mike Serban, who works with refugee families in the district and heads the Family and Children Engagement program, was the first person to hear about the students’ predicament. Serban reached out to Miyashiro last week and told him that multiple families had reached out to him concerned that their students would lose out on classroom instruction due to being in Afghanistan, according to the Times.

“Congressman Issa and his staff are working diligently to determine the facts on the ground, any bureaucratic barriers that can be removed, and the best ways to help those stranded leave Afghanistan and return home safely. We won’t stop until we have answers and action,” an Issa spokesperson informed Miyashiro in an email, the Times reported.

Cajon Valley School Board President Tamara Otero told the Times that the students and their families had plans to fly out of Afghanistan and had already purchased tickets.

“But, unfortunately, they were not able to get to the airport," Otero said.

“The biggest concern is that the Taliban closed the airport,” Otero added. “We are so worried about our students that are stuck there. We’ll do the best we can to get them out.”

Cajon Valley School Board member Jo Alegria said that the students had planned to return home before the start of the new school year, which commenced on Aug. 17, according to the Times.

"Honey, the school has a once in a lifetime trip organized to see Afghanistan before Taliban extremists take over it for good. The place is a war zone but we should be ok as Biden is not leaving until August 31. That gives us two weeks grace time before the shit hits the fan."

"It would be a culturally enriching experience for them, I think it would also give them a bad-ass reputation when the, 'What did you do this summer?' question comes up in class. Even us in front of the other parrents."
that's a summer trip, they're gonna remember for the rest of they're lives......
 
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