Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View dorkitude's full-sized avatar

Kyle Wild dorkitude

View GitHub Profile
This is just one small piece of this mostrosity.
read on.
MEDICARE AT AGE 76, IMPORTANT PLEASE READ - ANYONE WHO DOUBTS THIS IS
TRUE CAN DOWNLOAD THE NEW OBAMA CARE AND LOOK UP THE PAGES MENTIONED.
THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING......................PLEASE PASS THIS
OUTRAGE TO EVERYONE ON YOUR LIST!!! THIS should be read by everyone,
especially important to those over 75....... If you are younger, then
it may apply to your parents....
{
"GOT31":["Apple Pie",
"cooking pot",
"Favorite food of Wormies",
"0",
"0",
"Bait",
"Apple Pie",
"3",
"1",
<script src="http://www.perfect800.com/resource/1281299095000/mootools_core" type="text/javascript"></script>
<style type="text/css" media="screen">
#menu {
display: none;
}
#menu a {
display: block;
<script src="http://www.perfect800.com/resource/1281299095000/mootools_core" type="text/javascript"></script>
<style type="text/css" media="screen">
#menu {
display: none;
}
#menu a {
display: block;
+----+---------------------------+----------------+----------------+---------------------------+
| id | name | major_subclass | minor_subclass | resident_interaction_type |
+----+---------------------------+----------------+----------------+---------------------------+
| 1 | Dry Path | Ground | Path | None |
| 2 | Cappuccino Path | Ground | Path | None |
| 3 | Emerald Grass | Ground | Grass | None |
| 4 | Aquamarine Path | Ground | Path | None |
| 5 | Olive Path | Ground | Path | None |
| 6 | Fireshoot Grass | Ground | Grass | None |
| 7 | Serpentskin Grass | Ground | Grass | None |
i think therefore important to understand why they would benefit from the information provided hereunder, including without limitation for promoting and redistributing wealth from the rich to the poorest communities affected by disasters by offering solutions to unmet needs and enhancing the quality and quantity of information available online at http://groups.google.com/group/django-users?hl=en
I'm from Cairo, IL.
I can tell you that it is most certainly special.
It is depressing simply as a pass-through town for tourists like the OP (to an inspiring extent -- see Stace England's album at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greetings_From_Cairo,_Illinois , or its piece in Neil Gaiman's book American Gods).. so imagine what it's like to live there and to have roots there.
With its population arguably below 1500 people and its unemployment well over 50%, the dead city is still alive with emotion, politics, and greed.
As the southernmost point in the union, Cairo's racial attitudes are a complicated history worthy of scholarly study. My hometown holds a position in literature as the beacon of hope for Mark Twain's ex-slave Jim, and in reality as an important link in the underground railroad. On the other hand, the city was one of the Union cities most plagued by segregation and therefore most polarized by the civil rights movement. In 1967, the city underwent days of violent race riots.
@dorkitude
dorkitude / gist:720589
Created November 29, 2010 20:48
originally posted on reddit I'm from Cairo, IL. I can tell you that it is most certainly special. It is depressing simply as a pass-through town for tourists like the OP (to an inspiring extent -- see Stace England's album at http://en.wikipedia.org/wi
I'm from Cairo, IL.
I can tell you that it is most certainly special.
It is depressing simply as a pass-through town for tourists like the OP (to an inspiring extent -- see Stace England's album at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greetings_From_Cairo,_Illinois , or its piece in Neil Gaiman's book American Gods).. so imagine what it's like to live there and to have roots there.
With its population arguably below 1500 people and its unemployment well over 50%, the dead city is still alive with emotion, politics, and greed.
As the southernmost point in the union, Cairo's racial attitudes are a complicated history worthy of scholarly study. My hometown holds a position in literature as the beacon of hope for Mark Twain's ex-slave Jim, and in reality as an important link in the underground railroad. On the other hand, the city was one of the Union cities most plagued by segregation and therefore most polarized by the civil rights movement. In 1967, the city underwent days of violent race riots.
I'm from Cairo, IL.
I can tell you that it is most certainly special.
It is depressing simply as a pass-through town for tourists like the OP (to an inspiring extent -- see Stace England's album at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greetings_From_Cairo,_Illinois , or its piece in Neil Gaiman's book American Gods).. so imagine what it's like to live there and to have roots there.
With its population arguably below 1500 people and its unemployment well over 50%, the dead city is still alive with emotion, politics, and greed.
I'm from Cairo, IL.

I can tell you that it is most certainly special.

It is depressing simply as a pass-through town for tourists like the OP (to an inspiring extent -- see Stace England's album at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greetings_From_Cairo,_Illinois , or its piece in Neil Gaiman's book American Gods).. so imagine what it's like to live there and to have roots there.

With its population arguably below 1500 people and its unemployment well over 50%, the dead city is still alive with emotion, politics, and greed.

As the southernmost point in the union, Cairo's racial attitudes are a complicated history worthy of scholarly study. My hometown holds a position in literature as the beacon of hope for Mark Twain's ex-slave Jim, and in reality as an important link in the underground railroad. On the other hand, the city was one of the Union cities most plagued by segregation and therefore most polarized by the civil rights movement. In 1967, the city underwent days of violent race riots.