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Toodoped: Fuck the ScottB & Button/Zipper Pants sites and fuck their paywalls. This forum gives you everything for free and so best wishes and good health to both JGeoff and TB!
Toodoped: Cheers and stay tuned for more free information.
Toodoped: Cant believe that some posters need to open three different threads so they can advertise their projects, and also talk to themselves with the help of different accounts. What is the world coming to?!
Toodoped: whoomp there it is! whoomp there it is! lol
Toodoped: a bird told me that the zipper pants site is slowly going down lol lol lol
Toodoped: The best fun for me is being the puppeteer of a complete idiot lol lol
Toodoped: ...and screw all paywalls and paying sites. They wont give you shit
Toodoped: Someone needs to unzip lots of zipper pants, so she or it can give birth to the Button Guys lol lol
Toodoped: I said I creep and I crawl and I creep and I crawl And I creep and I crawl creep creep lol
Toodoped: Lots of "amnesia"...some people are posting the same stuff over and over, and every time they are happy like small kids lol
Toodoped: a small reminder...screw all paywalls!
Toodoped: Anyone heard from @BigTuna? He is absent for quite some time...I hope is ok
Toodoped: Any idiot can face a crisis - it's day to day living that wears you out.
Toodoped: Thanks buddy! We should continue fighting against these lying paying sites and to protect everyone on this forum, especially the younger generation or posters.
Toodoped: these days lots of people that I know lost their families and everything they had because its legit and even youngsters can chip in
Toodoped: Same as the mob paying sites...ppl pay for "Disneyland" and wiki mob stuff, something which they can find it on their own with a simple google search
VanillaLimeCoke: Lousy school violence these days. Not even a 6th of the way through September and we've already had a psychotic violent school shooting.
Toodoped: Word. Few days ago, over here, they caught one teenager with a gun and more than 60 bullets, while going to school. I wonder what was his plan ?!
Toodoped: Damn....the retard slowly became a stalker and he's following me whenever I make a post so he can bump up his own $0,5 "projects" lol lol "IT" is finished and I love it lol
Toodoped: still talking to yourself, a stupido?! lol lol
Toodoped: hahahahahaha I can do it all day long
Toodoped: Cant believe this shit...im off to find some real pussy
Toodoped: aaaaand....the retarded stalker is back again
Toodoped: For those who enjoyed the "TD's Free Outfit Articles 2023/24" thread, well thanks to @TB for making it a sticky on the first page in the OC forum so everyone can enjoy it. Again, I want to personally say thanks to TB, JGeoff and the whole GBB forum. Salut
VanillaLimeCoke: I can’t take it anymore. Everything has gotta change. Or at least a lot.
Toodoped: Screw the world bro...the main thing today is to take care of you and yours.
VanillaLimeCoke: I’m hoping and praying that 2025 will be so much better. …. for real …. Too
Giacomo_Vacari: Damn, he is posting the same things over and over, nothing new. Watch out the flu is bad this year. January 20th Trump gets sworn in, and hopefully turn things around.
VanillaLimeCoke: Yeah, but they’re already planning things so he can’t turn them around
VanillaLimeCoke: Biden’s pardened over 8000 people, most of which were issued in the last 2-3 months
hoodlum: Yes, most likely 2 piss off that crybaby & compulsive liar now sadly in office.
Jason1969: Hey! After applying months ago, I finally got my button and was accepted as a member!
NYMafia: Just when I thought I was out…they pull me back in!
hoodlum: My 15 yr. old grandson who thinks his generation invented all got into a small debate.....I asked him 2 explain the old (Archie Bunkeresque) tale..."You don't buy beer,,,,You rent it..Needless 2 say , he was dumfounded ....stupid little fuck...
NYMafia: Hey! Paisan. Thatsa Somma Spicy Meeta Balla U Gotta Da, Kid!
NYMafia: ...Take Alka-Seltzer for fast relief
NYMafia: It’s all about the rhythm, gotta have rhythm.
VanillaLimeCoke: Let us take a moment to remember the fallen ones for this Memorial Day Weekend
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Archbishop Paul Marcinkus "God's Banker" dies
#148833
02/22/06 07:59 AM
02/22/06 07:59 AM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839 Elmwood Park, Illinois
YoTonyB
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Neighborhood Guy
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839
Elmwood Park, Illinois
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If it wasn't a true story, you'd think the premise was part of a movie script...a tough, immigrant kid from Cicero becomes a priest, rises through the ranks of the Catholic church to sit among the inner circle of the papacy, and serve as "God's banker" controlling the Vatican finances, only to become embroiled in a financial scandal that has the look and feel of a conspiracy and a cover-up. There were two stories in the Chicago Tribune.
Here's the story from February 21st...
Chicago priest who headed Vatican's bank dies By Ron Grossman Tribune staff reporter
February 21, 2006, 9:56 PM CST
Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, who went from the sandlots of Cicero to the Vatican's innermost circles, called a longtime golfing buddy Monday to say he didn't feel up for their weekly game—a rarity for a man who thrived on competition and bonhomie.
The prelate once known as "God's banker" had been living in retirement in Sun City, Ariz., a quiet coda to an ecclesiastical career filled with drama and scandal.
Marcinkus, 84, was found dead later Monday. No cause was given.
He made headlines around the world as head of the Vatican Bank, a post he lost in the wake of a massive scandal that rocked the Holy See and Italian financial circles in the 1980s.
Before that, he was a fixture in Rome, a confidant of popes who ended up as governor of Vatican City. Marcinkus had served successive pontiffs as a translator, troubleshooter, bodyguard and advance man. He performed those roles so diligently that he was dubbed the "pope's gorilla" by members of the press.
In 1970, Marcinkus overpowered an attacker armed with a knife who lunged at Pope Paul VI at the Manila Airport, during a papal visit to the Philippines.
That exploit came as no surprise to a childhood buddy, Walter Luksta.
Marcinkus and he were altar boys together at St. Anthony's parish in Cicero and basketball opponents in high school.
"When we played [Quigley Preparatory Seminary], our coach pointed to Paul and said: 'Be careful of that monster over there,'" said Luksta, 83. "He was a brute on a basketball court."
Larger than life in many ways, Marcinkus stood a powerfully built 6 foot 3 inches. He was fond of cigars, and had a five-stroke handicap as a regular at Rome's Aqua Santa golf club.
Marcinkus remained an avid golfer even after recent surgery for cancer, noted Rev. John Slobig, pastor of St. Clement of Rome Church in Sun City.
"He was still a big man at the end," Slobig said. "I wouldn't have wanted to tangle with him."
Pope Benedict XVI recalled Tuesday "the late archbishop's priestly zeal, his years of faithful service to the Holy See and, his valued work for the Vatican City State."
Marcinkus was born Jan. 15, 1922, to Lithuanian-immigrant parents who lived in a two-flat in a working-class neighborhood. The Depression brought hard times to the Marcinkus household, which included three brothers and a sister. But their pastor took a guiding role in Marcinkus' life, providing a role model of the priestly life.
"Father Vaicunas made sure Paul didn't go down the wrong tracks," recalled Luksta.
Ordained a priest in 1947, Marcinkus served at St. Christina Church on Chicago's Far South Side before going to Rome in 1950 to study canon law.
When the Second Vatican Council was convened, he was drafted to provide logistical support for American prelates, a task he discharged so efficiently that he rose quickly through the papal bureaucracy.
By the 1970s, he was in charge of Vatican finances, through its bank then known as the Institute For Religious Works.
But in the early 1980s, he was accused of playing a shady role in the collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, in which the Vatican Bank had a share. The scandal involved the mysterious disappearance of $1.3 billion in loans.
By 1987 Italian prosecutors wanted to charge Marcinkus as an accessory, but Vatican authorities and an Italian court refused to allow the arrest.
Marcinkus always maintained his innocence.
"I went back far enough with him to discuss things like that," said Luksta. "He said, 'Wally, don't believe everything you read in the papers.'"
Nonetheless, he never got the cardinal's hat once widely expected. And though Pope John Paul II defended Marcinkus, saying he had been treated "in a brutal way," by 1989, he was replaced as the bank's head.
He returned to Chicago, where Cardinal Joseph Bernardin said he would always be welcome. In 1991, he moved to Sun City, taking up a pastoral role.
"He said mass at our church twice a week, visited shut-ins, and carried the Eucharist to people in the hospital," said Slobig.
Funeral arrangements are pending with services likely in both Phoenix and Chicago, church officials said Tuesday. It was not clear whether any family members survive him.
rgrossman@tribune.com Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune
"Kid, these are my f**kin' work clothes." "You look good in them golf shoes. You should buy 'em"
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Re: Archbishop Paul Marcinkus "God's Banker" dies
#148834
02/22/06 08:02 AM
02/22/06 08:02 AM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839 Elmwood Park, Illinois
YoTonyB
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839
Elmwood Park, Illinois
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And here is the obit from today's (February 22nd) Chicago Tribune...
Archbishop Paul Marcinkus 1922 - 2006 Vatican banker linked to scandal
Archbishop served many roles for popes By Ron Grossman Tribune staff reporter
February 22, 2006
Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, who went from the sandlots of Cicero to the Vatican's innermost circles, called a longtime golfing buddy Monday to say he didn't feel up for their weekly game--a rarity for a man who thrived on competition and bonhomie.
The prelate once known as "God's banker" had been living in retirement in Sun City, Ariz., a quiet coda to an ecclesiastical career filled with drama and scandal.
Marcinkus, 84, was found dead later Monday. No cause was given.
He made headlines around the world as head of the Vatican Bank, a post he lost in the wake of a massive scandal that rocked the Holy See and Italian financial circles in the 1980s.
Before that, he was a fixture in Rome, a confidant of popes who ended up as governor of Vatican City. Marcinkus had served successive pontiffs as a translator, troubleshooter, bodyguard and advance man. He performed those roles so diligently that he was dubbed the "pope's gorilla" by members of the press.
In 1970, Marcinkus overpowered an attacker armed with a knife who lunged at Pope Paul VI at the Manila Airport, during a papal visit to the Philippines.
That exploit came as no surprise to a childhood buddy, Walter Luksta.
Marcinkus and he were altar boys together at St. Anthony's parish in Cicero and basketball opponents in high school.
"When we played [Quigley Preparatory Seminary], our coach pointed to Paul and said: `Be careful of that monster over there,'" said Luksta, 83. "He was a brute on a basketball court."
Larger than life in many ways, Marcinkus stood a powerfully built 6 foot 3 inches. He was fond of cigars, and had a five-stroke handicap as a regular at Rome's Aqua Santa golf club.
Marcinkus remained an avid golfer even after recent surgery for cancer, noted Rev. John Slobig, pastor of St. Clement of Rome Church in Sun City.
"He was still a big man at the end," Slobig said. "I wouldn't have wanted to tangle with him."
Pope Benedict XVI recalled Tuesday "the late archbishop's priestly zeal, his years of faithful service to the Holy See and, his valued work for the Vatican City State."
Marcinkus was born Jan. 15, 1922, to Lithuanian-immigrant parents who lived in a two-flat in a working-class neighborhood. The Depression brought hard times to the Marcinkus household, which included three brothers and a sister. But their pastor took a guiding role in Marcinkus' life, providing a role model of the priestly life.
"Father Vaicunas made sure Paul didn't go down the wrong tracks," recalled Luksta.
Ordained a priest in 1947, Marcinkus served at St. Christina Church on Chicago's Far South Side before going to Rome in 1950 to study canon law.
When the Second Vatican Council was convened, he was drafted to provide logistical support for American prelates, a task he discharged so efficiently that he rose quickly through the papal bureaucracy.
By the 1970s, he was in charge of Vatican finances, through its bank then known as the Institute For Religious Works.
But in the early 1980s, he was accused of playing a shady role in the collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, in which the Vatican Bank had a share. The scandal involved the mysterious disappearance of $1.3 billion in loans.
By 1987 Italian prosecutors wanted to charge Marcinkus as an accessory, but Vatican authorities and an Italian court refused to allow the arrest.
Marcinkus always maintained his innocence.
"I went back far enough with him to discuss things like that," said Luksta. "He said, `Wally, don't believe everything you read in the papers.'"
Nonetheless, he never got the cardinal's hat once widely expected. And though Pope John Paul II defended Marcinkus, saying he had been treated "in a brutal way," by 1989, he was replaced as the bank's head.
He returned to Chicago, where Cardinal Joseph Bernardin said he would always be welcome. In 1991, he moved to Sun City, taking up a pastoral role.
Funeral arrangements are pending with services likely in both Phoenix and Chicago, church officials said Tuesday. It was not clear whether any family members survived him.
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rgrossman@tribune.com Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune
"Kid, these are my f**kin' work clothes." "You look good in them golf shoes. You should buy 'em"
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