I Really I Love Bananas The Hero Of The Monkey Shirt
Damn, TIL. I knew Federov was signed on the Canes at some point early on, I knew he was a I Really I Love Bananas The Hero Of The Monkey Shirt, couldn’t blame him for not wanting to be there and just want a big payday. Our arena was not even built yet, if I’ve got the timeline correct. None of the players wanted to play in Greensboro NC. We seem to like offer sheets in our short history as a team. And Karmanos and Detroit’s owner hated each other. I enjoy reading about hockey history and watching all the documentaries to catch me up on the 95 years I missed before I started watching. And then you come take me to school and break it down for me. Thank you, seriously. We don’t have the same owner, management team as we did then so hopefully we can be forgiven. We do like being a bunch of jerks though. Thanks Don Cherry!

I Really I Love Bananas The Hero Of The Monkey Shirt
The I Really I Love Bananas The Hero Of The Monkey Shirt(yellow field, 3 horizontal red stripes) is still flown by a great many Vietnamese-Australians (though mostly older generations) within their homes, not because they hate northerners or communists or because they’re anti-government but because it symbolizes who they were and where they came from. What it represents to them is not how the flag is seen in Vietnam today. For most of the Vietnamese who suffered under French colonial rule and the latter wars against the US-led coalition, the flag of the South Vietnamese regime represents the oppression, slavery, humiliation and betrayal of the whole Vietnamese nation. In regards to the Confederate flag, while a number of people who fly it are indeed small-minded and xenophobic and happy to display this openly, others see it as not only a protest against authoritarianism but as a symbol of their ancestory and heritage. Look at our own Eureka flag. The following is from wikipedia: Since the 1854 miner’s revolt, the Eureka Flag, born out of adversity, has gained wider notability in Australian culture as a symbol of democracy, egalitarianism, white nationalism and a general-purpose symbol of protest. How will our own Eureka flag be seen in 100 years time? Or even in 10 years time? As a symbol of protest against government overextending its authority? Or as a symbol of something more sinister, as some have tried to paint it over recent years? Why am I seemingly defending this ? Because I once made the mistake of tearing into an honest man who flew this flag from his truck, a fat-ass, beer-bellied, redneck from the bible-belt (Indianna) who I presumed was a racist piece of shit and treated accordingly. Yes, he knew it would rattle people because they would presume what I had presumed about him. Not saying your neighbor is a humanitarian, he may well be a racist fucktard, purposefully inviting anyone to have a go at him so he can lash out at them. But do yourself a favour, stop speculating over the potential monster across the street and go over there and say g’day. Introduce yourself to your fucking neighbors and straight up ask them, without accusation, what that flag means to them

