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The Comedy Club (Jokes, Humor) Tell your favorite jokes here! Keep it PG rated, please. |
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#1
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Duck Butter
You just got knocked the ................... OUT
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Waltrip's Saltwater Guide Service jeremy@geaux-outdoors.com https://m.facebook.com/waltrip.guideservice?id=148838538646862&_rdr |
#2
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what are you, two years old or three?
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#3
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The Comedy Club (Jokes, Humor) Tell your favorite jokes here! Keep it PG rated, please.
__________________
Waltrip's Saltwater Guide Service jeremy@geaux-outdoors.com https://m.facebook.com/waltrip.guideservice?id=148838538646862&_rdr |
#4
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What?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I847 using Tapatalk 2 |
#5
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Haha. And Ace, it's just a joke. That 3tail thread might've been the most civil discussion ever on SC.
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#6
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Phhhhhhssssshhhhh Where's the derned fun in that? |
#7
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True
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#8
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In all seriousness, discussion is always a good thing. It even is a good thing in some ways that "W" is so contentious.... because whether you love him or hate him... he has got some discussion going and thereby is getting people to think about it.
Usually that's how things get fixed... so here's to hoping that this is going to end up with some fixes. |
#9
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Ha, Ha. I actually injured my foot trying to kick my daughter's punching bag last night.
The winners and losers in science and policy debates are not the participants, but rather the general public and those who will be most strongly impacted by good or repressive public policy. Duck Butter has made some good points, as have many other contributors to the discussion. As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another. Our hunting, fishing, and 2nd amendment rights are under attack from all angles. Bad conservation science is one angle. Dislike of lead projectiles is another angle, and the banning of lead bullets (where there is not a need demonstrated by sound science) is a back door to driving up the cost of hunting while at the same time reducing performance and ammo availability. Some states are even banning lead fishing sinkers. PETA type demands for "humanitarian" harvest is yet another angle. Requirements for circle hooks is another approach. There have also been proposals to require magnetic hooks in fisheries with elasmobranch by catch (sharks and rays). When you look at the totality of the hunting and fishing regulations of most states (esp if you include federal laws, gun laws, and boating laws that must be adhered to), you should see a burdensome maze of bureaucracy that presents a significant barrier to participation. Louisiana's laws for recreational angling and hunting are not nearly as burdensome and convoluted as many states, but take a peek at the commercial fishing regulations and assess the bureaucratic barriers needed to sell a few crabs or shrimp or crawfish a few weekends each year at a roadside stand. Are all those regulatory barriers really needed? |
#10
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Well said MG,
Our 1st, and 4th amendment rights are not fairing well in today's world either. Far to often interest's with the cheddar to do so, are changing rights / laws / regulations to suit their need for profit. Sadly the needs of the general public, and the need to preserve a greater good are far to often ignored. |
#11
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Today with advances in refrigeration and chemicals to keep the product looking fresh longer, added to people traveling long distances from where they bought the food to where it is consumed, you could run into all kinds of health problems. I think a reasonable person would agree that regulation is needed in today's world. |
#12
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But look at the overall bureaucratic burden by the time the currently applicable food safety regulations, commercial licensing regulations, insurance requirements, commercial fishing regulations, state and federal tax laws, boating regulations, zoning laws, and who knows what else need to be met simultaneously. The barrier to entry is so high, and the upfront investment in time and expense to meet all the requirements is so demanding that most aspiring entrepreneurs simply won't bother for a seasonal or occasional product availability. My wife and I owned and operated a small farm business in Ohio for a decade. We raised and sold beef, lamb, grapes, apples, vegetables, and other farm products both from the farm property and at local farmer's markets. Encroaching legal requirements and rapidly rising insurance costs constantly raised the burden of keeping a business profitable on gross revenues in the five figure range. The overall burden on a small seafood business in Louisiana is much, much greater, and complying with all the rules for a harvester to have a direct retail outlet will require either extensive existing infrastructure (property and capital already paid for) or a six figure annual gross revenue, both in many cases. When I stop at a roadside stand to buy shrimp or crawfish, I understand that there is a level of risk different from the supermarket, but I am willing to personally accept those risks to gain a fresher, better product (often at a lower price and in bulk quantities) than the supermarket. Those who are not capable of assessing the risks by inspecting the product, the storage conditions, and looking the vendor in the eye and asking a few key questions should stick to buying their seafood at brick and mortar shops. Walmart has plenty of talapia. |
#13
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Yeah talapia from Viet frickin' Nam...look we all know lawyers have ****ed this country up...yes we have to have them but they complicate the crap out of everything
__________________
The cops are the experts on the current criminal trends. If they have determined that a “high capacity” semiautomatic pistol and a .223 semiautomatic rifle with 30-round magazines are the best firearms for them to use to protect people like me and my family, they are obviously the best things for us to use to protect ourselves and our families . |
#14
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Did anyone see the episode of dirty jobs where they raised tilapia in sewer ponds? I will take fish from our waters any day over that!
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#15
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Thanks for the clarification. We're not able to raise our own beef and lamb any more, but we can still catch our own fish! |
#16
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I can't buy frozen shrimp from walmart after watching a show on how they are farmed in Vietnam and Thailand. It's pretty disturbing that people eat that stuff. Only gulf shrimp for me!
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#17
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Ate some Spanish crawfish last night. Pretty good.
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#18
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there is a farm in lafayette that raises organic tilapia.... They sell it at the hub city farmers market in the oil center on saturday mornings
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#19
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I was looking to raise possibly a few hundred at a time, They would have been housed in a system of 5 IBC containers converted to hydroponics use. The reason i didn't go tilapia is that i was made to understand that it is absolutely illegal to import, sell, raise, breed, multiply or in any way mess with this fish in the state of LA. I even checked with a friend who is a local LDWF agent and he said don't even think about it. Was told that there is a lot of fear that these fish will get into la waters and wreck havok like they have in some other states waters (i know they are getting pretty bad in some area's of texas) |
#20
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By the way meaux... not saying i don't believe... just wondering what kind of bribes must have been going on to make it happen.
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