Just in time for the opening of St. Marks Slush! SMS is the new 24 hour restaurant selling nothing but slush! Every night the staff goes to TSP and hand-shovels artisanal, organic, free-range show and serves it in a broken beer bottle. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, drunk!
Oh, Bloomberg will make sure the toys for for his rich babies are safe http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20131209/midtown/citi-bike-action-plan-aims-beat-winter-storms
while he ignores the homeless children http://patdollard.com/2013/12/bloombergs-reign-nyc-has-highest-number-of-homeless-children-since-the-great-depression/
Citibikes are toys for rich babies? they can cost $80 a year. How much do you pay TimeWarner for the internet connection you posted that snarky reply from? goes for about $45/month these days.
And one pays more in ConEd, utilities, and phone bills too. Citibike isn't a necessity, uncle Pete, it's a luxury for Bloomberg's self-entilted narcissistic rich kids like you http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/10/only-rich-white-people-use-citi-bike.html
yet you chose to comment on your beloved CitiBikes instead of the figures on the homeless children in NYC. Typical daftness and apathy of the rich.
HAHAHA but TimeWarner cable is a necessity like heat and electricity??
I'm lower middle class and never been on a citibike but keep flaming if it feels good. I reckon nows a good time to hit the next Fat Jewish's free spin class.
uncle Pete, your comments reeks of and echoes Bloomberg's comments on how people in the NYC housing must be rich since they have air conditioning. Much like Bloomberg, your clueless and out of touch.
We've managed to go completely off topic, but working three jobs to pay my rent without being able to afford TimeWarnerRipOff makes me of the opinion that TWC is not a necessity. Would make a good poll question, "Is overpriced access to TV and Internet a social necessity?", spun off from a debate in the comments section of a weather posting on a neighborhood blog. God Bless the Internet!
9 comments:
I'm grooving on those arrows, EV.
Just in time for the opening of St. Marks Slush! SMS is the new 24 hour restaurant selling nothing but slush! Every night the staff goes to TSP and hand-shovels artisanal, organic, free-range show and serves it in a broken beer bottle. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, drunk!
Let the CitiBikeApocalypse begin....
Oh, Bloomberg will make sure the toys for for his rich babies are safe
http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20131209/midtown/citi-bike-action-plan-aims-beat-winter-storms
while he ignores the homeless children
http://patdollard.com/2013/12/bloombergs-reign-nyc-has-highest-number-of-homeless-children-since-the-great-depression/
Citibikes are toys for rich babies? they can cost $80 a year. How much do you pay TimeWarner for the internet connection you posted that snarky reply from? goes for about $45/month these days.
And one pays more in ConEd, utilities, and phone bills too. Citibike isn't a necessity, uncle Pete, it's a luxury for Bloomberg's self-entilted narcissistic rich kids like you http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/10/only-rich-white-people-use-citi-bike.html
yet you chose to comment on your beloved CitiBikes instead of the figures on the homeless children in NYC. Typical daftness and apathy of the rich.
HAHAHA but TimeWarner cable is a necessity like heat and electricity??
I'm lower middle class and never been on a citibike but keep flaming if it feels good. I reckon nows a good time to hit the next Fat Jewish's free spin class.
uncle Pete, your comments reeks of and echoes Bloomberg's comments on how people in the NYC housing must be rich since they have air conditioning. Much like Bloomberg, your clueless and out of touch.
We've managed to go completely off topic, but working three jobs to pay my rent without being able to afford TimeWarnerRipOff makes me of the opinion that TWC is not a necessity. Would make a good poll question, "Is overpriced access to TV and Internet a social necessity?", spun off from a debate in the comments section of a weather posting on a neighborhood blog. God Bless the Internet!
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