Last message on previous page: @ sailer: Yeah California sucks balls, in my area at least, every city is full of crime, its very restricted, and i'm planning on moving out to Las Vegas this year for college and attend UNLV. Like sailer said, the weather is nice, but the area is just F***'d up.
@ chopper: Fontana, CA? hook it up with a job if it is. lol.
boxzor, dude, this corporation has very specific hiring requerements. A righteous chop, tattoos and a well developed distributon downstream are part of the prereqesites. I've been a favored supplier (of iron, not chemicals) for years.
Dude, I've got a loose afiliation with a major multinational corporation with ofices in Fontana and Oakland, so they'll be more than hapy to supply me with any firepower I require.
I know both Fantana and Oakland fairly well. Its good to have a bit of firepower there. A friend of mine was a teacher in Oakland for one year. She said that when a student came down a hallway it wasn't a question about if he/she had a knife, it was how many.
Just remembered, "major multinational organization with offices in Oakland and Fontana that has access to necessary firepower". Do the people in the office wear black leather jackets, tattoes, and blue jeans by any chance? I've known a few of those through the years, even given them rides in an ambulance when they concluded their "business" meetings. Oh yeah, I worked as a medic for 3 years back in my Air Force days while I studied pre-med.
well as far as tatoo's go i still have the crip tatoo on my forehead and as far as a chopper go how's a cbr-600 sound? =]
Nope. My "corporate" buddies shoot Crips on sight. As for the CBR600, rake the neck, extend the forks 8" over, remove two cylnders, bore out the other two from 150cc to around 800cc, heat them up and form into a 45 degre inline Vee, take off all that gaudy plastic that makes the bike look like a Pokemon toy, and you'll be geting close!
I know both Fantana and Oakland fairly well. Its good to have a bit of firepower there. A friend of mine was a teacher in Oakland for one year. She said that when a student came down a hallway it wasn't a question about if he/she had a knife, it was how many.
Just remembered, "major multinational organization with offices in Oakland and Fontana that has access to necessary firepower". Do the people in the office wear black leather jackets, tattoes, and blue jeans by any chance? I've known a few of those through the years, even given them rides in an ambulance when they concluded their "business" meetings. Oh yeah, I worked as a medic for 3 years back in my Air Force days while I studied pre-med.
Hey, those are my "associates!" Six degres of seperation! You've probably had some of their hemogloben spiled in your ambulance. Their busines meetings do tend to terminate in hot lead exchanges! Too bad nobody has painted a bullseye on Ruiz's face yet.
Hey, those are my "associates!" Six degres of seperation! You've probably had some of their hemogloben spiled in your ambulance. Their busines meetings do tend to terminate in hot lead exchanges! Too bad nobody has painted a bullseye on Ruiz's face yet.
Yes indeed, there was a bit of hemogloben spilled on the ambulance floor. I must say that they usually treated myself and my driver very nicely, kind of like we were protected people. I had an unusual experience in the Horseshoe Bar in Oroville, Calif when during one of their "business meetings" that I was called to so as to remove someone who was loosing some hemogloben, one of them put a knife in my side. He apologized, saying he was really trying to to get someone else. I graciously accepted his apology, as he promply took the floor. But normally we got along fairly well.
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Evil lurks in the databanks as it lurked in the streets of yesteryear. But it was never the streets that were evil.
Stickin a shiv in your side by mistake for one of these businesmen is kinda like accidentaly spilling a drink on you. Its regretable but it hapens fairly frequently and its ok as long as they apologize and you dont die.
Yeah, I didn't take it as being too serious. It was the only time it happened diuring three years on ambulance duty and another medic patched me up and gave me some antibiotics to stave of infection. Normally we got along fine and when I later opened a service station the guys would all stop by, fill up their bikes and talk a bit. No hard feelings anyplace.