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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 19, 2013 1:29:04 GMT
I've been wondering if there is data or info on PD's and the life they live after you end the relationship.
What kind of life do they have. Do they suffer and live a miserable life? Do they find another host and suckle at the tit, thus sucking out the life of the new host. Do they live the life they deserve, in constant misery?
I think they may go from host to host, each time draining the life's blood and then moving on, leaving the carcasses in their path. Always claiming they always meet the worst people.
Cheers to misery
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Post by Elementum on Dec 19, 2013 2:15:35 GMT
My bet, once they bugger off, the poor bloke or female that was being targeted gets to breathe freely again without the dead weight.
And the parasites do what they do, leaving more carnage in their wake fundamentally miserable and hating their very existence. Sort of like mosquitoes, eventually somebody squishes them.
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Post by Eleanor Rigby on Dec 19, 2013 2:59:56 GMT
PD's are like the walking dead who infect everyone around them and leave a trail of dried up corpses who have reanimated after being infected by the PD. The PD just keeps munching away giving no care for the destruction they leave behind because they have no sense of remorse or responsibility, just like a zombie. Thankfully there IS a cure for the PD virus.
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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 19, 2013 3:08:59 GMT
@eleanor Rigby That's a great description.
So which zombie movie? I say 28 Days Later is a good visual of the PD.
they have no sense of remorse or responsibility 100000000000000.00% Spot on.
None whatsoever.
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Post by Eleanor Rigby on Dec 19, 2013 3:24:33 GMT
Well I was visualizing the actual "Walking Dead" tv show zombies but I think 28 days later is a good one too because they are really agressive bastards.
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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 19, 2013 4:09:51 GMT
yeah in 28 Days, you have no time to think and react, they get you.
"because they are really agressive bastards." <3 it.
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Post by Eleanor Rigby on Dec 19, 2013 4:14:49 GMT
LOL I know, I have a way with words sometimes lol. I think I'm just a little too blunt most of the time.
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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 19, 2013 4:20:44 GMT
Maybe good punishment for PD's as a whole would be to start above ground nuclear testing and put them at a safe enough distance where they see and feel the tests but survive.
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Post by Eleanor Rigby on Dec 19, 2013 4:29:08 GMT
Hmmm, do you think that would help? I'm thinking they would just turn that around on us and make themselves the victims and us the victimizers. You know it's always our fault that they are so damn miserable and make such horrible choices.
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Post by Elementum on Dec 19, 2013 8:54:42 GMT
Sick huh? Not my problem. Let them choke on their misery alone. Nothing sweeter than the action of doing nothing to make revenge a positive action.Unfortunately, I don't generally think in terms of revenge as that is a petty motivation. But sometimes? It's funny how things work out that way regardless. Karma on my side I guess. Not entirely though, doesn't hurt to be able to think like one. Really filthy shit by the way, but it does protect me from their bs. Loveliest part and beauty of the balance is removing 2 PD's at the same time. Occam's razor is elegant for that sort of thing. Win/ Win if you can take the pain. My metal? Is not in question.
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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 19, 2013 18:35:37 GMT
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Post by Eleanor Rigby on Dec 19, 2013 19:59:27 GMT
I admit I know very little about bombs but those test films have always creeped me out. The devastation is so extreme, did you see the one dummy still smoking? Those bombs are horrible. I can't imagine how much fallout and radiation those men were exposed to and it makes me wonder what kind of illnesses they suffered as a result. I also wonder what type of long-term effects those bombs have and how many other people were affected by them. Which illnesses and disorders exist now as a result of those bombs? Alzheimers? Aggressive cancers? Birth defects? I know those things contain nasty elements that can and do alter DNA so the effects can span generations. The devastation is much more widespread than we even realize much like the devastation a PD leaves behind.
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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 19, 2013 21:20:57 GMT
I actually am very interested in that time period, Through studies I have extensive knowledge of atomic testing and that whole time period. IDK why it interests me so much, but it does, and it does for allot of people. The world has actually been a decision away from nuclear war on a few occasions, with the closest being the Bay of Pigs.
If not for the Soviets getting the bomb, our country would have used them in the Korean war and probably more. In Korea, a few generals suggested using "battlefield nukes" That test you saw was to prepare for the nuclear battlefield. The US tested 331 above ground tests, before the atmospheric test ban in 1962.
During that time animals, buildings and people were used as experiments in the name of science. Besides soldiers, the people of Utah and surrounding areas called "downwinders" were exposed to a horrible life.
Ghastly business.
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Post by Eleanor Rigby on Dec 20, 2013 12:53:18 GMT
It's all very interesting and from a medical standpoint I am intrigued.
I know those in Utah were affected and I have heard of the "downwinders", in fact, I watched a documentary not so long ago about them and the horrible illnesses they have suffered.
Although it makes for interesting study I still feel horrible about what the human race does not only to it's own members but what it does to every other creature in the name of science and learning. I, for one, will be glad when I die to just escape the horrors of life.
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Post by CGisNuts on Dec 20, 2013 16:18:04 GMT
yeah, pretty horrible shit all around. Just imagine had Russia not gotten the bomb, unfortunately this country would have used it more than it did.
There was a great quote by a resident of St. George Utah, the major town/city affected by testing. "It's not Khrushchev's biombs I worry about, it's Eisenhower's bombs I worry about", meaning all the testing done.
St. George was the major place affected by the testing. All those poor people in Utah and elsewhere slowly dying and becoming sick, terrible.
But, it had to be done. We needed to understand the atom and these weapons.
I'd love to see a test. IDK why, I just do.
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