Re: Is it true Mikey has never had carnal knowledge of a Thai Rent Boy?






On 6/19/06 15:49, in article
1150746569.814800.323590@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "The Trumpet of the
Lord Ministry" <ttotlem@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:


Jeff wrote:
I am going to be the bigger man

Much, much bigger.
Re:
Making fun of a person's weight is low class , trolling and harasment
Jeff.

Is it as low-class as your insulting a man's wife and saying that she was
ugly?


You were wrong to make fun of people with mental health problems, and
you are wrong to make fun of people who struggle with weight issues.
Like many others I have struggled to keep my weight at a proper level.
I have a walking disability and my musicular dystrophy makes it
difficult to exercise and or walk. Jeff Helgesen do you teach your
trumpet students to make fun of overweight or mantal health people?

This cheap shot about my weight issues is just another low cless
trolling episode on your part , and it is trolling, hateful and
harassment:

You should know ... You're an expert at it.

Wage Peace


"ha·rass ( P ) Pronunciation Key (h-rs, hrs)
tr.v. ha·rassed, ha·rass·ing, ha·rass·es
To irritate or torment persistently.
To wear out; exhaust.
To impede and exhaust (an enemy) by repeated attacks or raids.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
[French harasser, possibly from Old French harer, to set a dog on, from
hare, interj. used to set a dog on, of Germanic origin.]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
ha·rasser n.
ha·rassment n.
Synonyms: harass, harry, hound, badger, pester, plague
These verbs mean to trouble persistently or incessantly. Harass and
harry imply systematic persecution by besieging with repeated
annoyances, threats, or demands: The landlord harassed tenants who were
behind in their rent. A rude customer had harried the storekeeper.
Hound suggests unrelenting pursuit to gain a desired end: Reporters
hounded the celebrity for an interview. To badger is to nag or tease
persistently: The child badgered his parents for a new bicycle. To
pester is to inflict a succession of petty annoyances: "How she would
have pursued and pestered me with questions and surmises" (Charlotte
Brontë). Plague refers to a problem likened to an epidemic disease:
"As I have no estate, I am plagued with no tenants or stewards"
(Henry Fielding).
Usage Note: Educated usage appears to be evenly divided on the
pronunciation of harass. In a recent survey 50 percent of the Usage
Panel preferred stressing the first syllable, while 50 percent
preferred stressing the second. Curiously, the Panelists' comments
appear to indicate that each side regards itself as an embattled
minority."


.



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