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How Will You Celebrate Earth Day??


The Gun Of Bavaria

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I'm also going to use DDT on my trees and dump some oil down the storm drain.

You beat me to it. I guess I'll put up an oil derrick in the front yard and get me some Flatbush crude. Or go club a seal to death. I think they have some in the Central Park Zoo.

seal-clubbed.jpeg

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As I type my daughters having a party in the back yard with about 30 of her colleagues - in just a few trips out to tend the fire pit so my house doesn't burn down - I've noticed 3 separate instances of males pissing in my junipers. I figure by the amount of emptys in the garbage cans - by the end of the night I'll have at least a 10 gallons donated. I've done my part early.

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Im going to start the day with my morning sh*t. Then get ready and go to church. Then Im going to work. After that go home change my oil on my car, dump the old oil in the sewer, drink a few beers throw my bottles out in the street then go to bed.

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Earth Day is Sunday. How do you plan on celebrating.

Personally, I plan on grilling some steaks right after I mow the lawn and fertilize. Then later in the evening I'm going to have a campfire.

...Thought about strip mining a National preserve. Is that bad??? LOL!

j/k

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CC1D59707A9C47F64A376E9036C680.jpg

Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania: The first image of Kilimanjaro above was taken prior to 1998, the second in 2005. The fabled snows of Kilimanjaro have steadily declined over the past century, and all of its glaciers could be gone by 2020, according to a recent story in National Geographic.

D531C1BC5126BF33855C2A6E4D35A4.jpg

Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska: A sign in Kenai Fjords National Park indicates where the Exit Glacier reached in 1978; about a half-mile away from where it has receded to today. A jaw-dropping spectacle for the thousands of tourists who flock to Alaska each year, many Alaska glaciers are rapidly receding.

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CC1D59707A9C47F64A376E9036C680.jpg

Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania: The first image of Kilimanjaro above was taken prior to 1998, the second in 2005. The fabled snows of Kilimanjaro have steadily declined over the past century, and all of its glaciers could be gone by 2020, according to a recent story in National Geographic.

D531C1BC5126BF33855C2A6E4D35A4.jpg

Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska: A sign in Kenai Fjords National Park indicates where the Exit Glacier reached in 1978; about a half-mile away from where it has receded to today. A jaw-dropping spectacle for the thousands of tourists who flock to Alaska each year, many Alaska glaciers are rapidly receding.

What would you like me to do about it?

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