Well a harbour is constructed with a concret bed water soaked hands people drowned i think the Pearl H attack was at 9 oclock so ..
in the afternoon i was on the rock floor of pear harbour m&m in mirror WW well done solera i lived to die soilder its there job best of all the land well soilders americas finest ect
at a guess im not even american
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Science has not yet taught us if madness is or is not the sublimity of the intelligence.
The answer is nothing then. Having wet hands is not a permanent quality. No matter how many times you tell us "IT IS LITERAL NOT FUIGUREITIVE!" we will continue to give you answers that ARE LITERAL. So before you try and prove this 'Biggest Retard' skit you are going on about look up the word Literal in that big book that is in the library. I think its called the Dictionairee. We are giving you LITERAL meanings for 'Wet Hands' and you are telling us it isn't. So either accept our constructive help or GTFO and STFU.
The answer is nothing then. Having wet hands is not a permanent quality. No matter how many times you tell us "IT IS LITERAL NOT FUIGUREITIVE!" we will continue to give you answers that ARE LITERAL. So before you try and prove this 'Biggest Retard' skit you are going on about look up the word Literal in that big book that is in the library. I think its called the Dictionairee. We are giving you LITERAL meanings for 'Wet Hands' and you are telling us it isn't. So either accept our constructive help or GTFO and STFU.
YOU WIN SO HARD
On a more serious note, this doesn't necessarily have to be about a person as Obex hinted.
Sure, the answer can't be googled, but you can piece it together accordingly.
Just a thought, and mulling it over a bit, I think it fits. But the PM part.. well >.> It should fit in somewhere, no?
"The 82-foot tug, named the Mary Cook until commissioned by the Navy, took part in the Battle of Mobile Bay, where Union Adm. David Farragut exclaimed, "Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!"
The Narcissus survived that naval operation and a blockade of New Orleans, but was sunk by a Confederate torpedo - the term then for exploding mines - in Mobile Bay on Dec. 7, 1864. It went down in 15 minutes but no lives were lost. The Narcissus was raised and taken to Pensacola for repairs. It finished out the war there before departing to New York on New Year's Day 1866 for decommissioning.
Two days later, the tug exploded in one of the worst U.S. Navy disasters up to that point."
Source: [Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
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My screenshot thread is inactive until further notice.