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2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/jp/ - Otaku Culture


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8067716 No.8067716 [Reply] [Original]

what do you think of Ika as a cheerleader?

>> No.8067717

I geso.

>> No.8067721

She gives me an erection nonetheless

>> No.8067724
File: 18 KB, 512x252, index2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067724

What do you think of Index as a cheerleader?

>> No.8067729
File: 223 KB, 725x674, 1307135516952.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067729

>>8067721
anon-san is so shameless -de geso

>> No.8067761

Where's that Rika Musume edit that I saw in the archives?

>> No.8067776
File: 114 KB, 1280x720, [Underwater] Shinryaku! Ika Musume S2 - 01 (720p) [E93ADEE3].mkv_snapshot_16.33_[2011.09.28_12.08.34].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067776

>> No.8067799
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8067799

>> No.8067863
File: 604 KB, 1024x1598, 1318575415008.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067863

I wonder what it would be like to have sex with a squid.

>> No.8067875

Well... just make sure you don't get squid to give you a bl*wjob... it's for your own safety...

>> No.8067877

>>8067863
Like putting your cock in a bag of shrimp

>> No.8067882

>>8067863

Likely very difficult. Their vaginas are exceedingly cavernous due to the way they reproduce.

Furthermore, since squids will literally fuck anything that moves (and are bisexual) be prepared for some serious STIs.

>> No.8067880
File: 124 KB, 850x700, Cirno - HELL -S3.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067880

>>8067875
Uncle Mugen...!!

>> No.8067902

>>8067880
Why HELLO there Yama mg good friend!... How are things here while I'm currently busy and away?... It seems there is this "Archive Wars" starting to simmer in the backstage...

Also, I think I owe you a drawing... that is if you wanted to... perhaps a drawing of you Yama and me Uncle Mugen enjoying a nice breakfast... together...

>> No.8067909
File: 737 KB, 713x480, mugen - onion smuggler.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067909

>>8067902
Never forget.

>> No.8067911
File: 38 KB, 184x184, Cirno - Akarin -S3.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067911

>>8067902
Things have been going great...!! - Not as great as when you are here Uncle...
You know... I've just been doing the usual, trying to raise some [HELL]. This time with this new Archive wars, hehehe ...Oh, I am also trying to learn how to use Sketchup to create something beautiful...!! - A++ tutorial Uncle Mugen...!

>Also, I think I owe you a drawing... that is if you wanted to... perhaps a drawing of you Yama and me Uncle Mugen enjoying a nice breakfast... together...
O-Oh my, I don't know what to say...That would be the best present ever Uncle Mugen...!!

>> No.8067915

>>8067911
Then I'm gonna ask you... which Touhou character you wanted having breakfast with me Uncle Mugen?... Don't by shy now... I'll deliver...

>> No.8067914

"We will not allow smugglers of agricultural products to place our local farmers in a very bad situation. We will extend the long arms of the law, wherever it will take us, if only to stop your illegal activities and to place you where you rightfully belong,"

>> No.8067918

>>8067914
Sorry Señor... but the same long arm of the law and the whole Judicial system proved me INNOCENT!... Give it a rest will ya! I'm innocent...

>> No.8067919
File: 49 KB, 216x215, uncle mugen.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067919

>>8067909
HELL yeah!

>> No.8067921
File: 275 KB, 500x500, Cirno - Kind.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067921

>>8067915
Oh my... I am so grateful Uncle Mugen...!

I-If it's ok could you do it Cirno then...?
I would be so happy if you did it Uncle Mugen...!!

>> No.8067929

>>8067918
Just because you bribed some poor people who needed the money to fool the system doesn't make you any less of a criminal.

Disgusting homo.

>> No.8067927

>>8067918
"It is very evident that there is serious malice to defraud the government of taxes and insult TCCP arrogantly in this incident,"

And think of the poor farmers who are struggling to live you sick monster.

>> No.8067930

>>8067921
Consider it done!... I'll post it in my blog later today... just for you Yama my friend...

>> No.8067931

>>8067927
They didn't have enough sense to smuggle their own onions, so fuck 'em

>> No.8067933

Ika has sexy belly. I would make it wet with my cum.

>> No.8067946
File: 109 KB, 850x714, Cirno - Kissu.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8067946

>>8067930
Thanks Uncle Mugen...!

Thank you very much...!!
I can barely wait!
I-I mean... Take your time Uncle Mugen, after all, Uncle always knows what is best...!

>> No.8068133
File: 131 KB, 1600x1067, Onions[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8068133

Walter E. Williams

Smugglers are heroes of sorts. The essence of what a smuggler offers is: "Government tyrants want to either prevent or interfere with peaceable voluntary exchange among individuals. I can reduce the impact of that interference." Let's look at smuggling, keeping in mind that not everything illegal is immoral and not everything legal is moral.

Leading up to our War of Independence, the British, under the Navigation Acts, had levied taxes on a wide range of imports. One of those taxes was on molasses imported from non-British islands. John Hancock, whose flamboyant signature graces our Declaration of Independence, had a thriving business smuggling an estimated 1.5 million gallons of molasses a year. His smuggling practices financed much of the resistance to British authority. In fact, a joke of the time was "Sam Adams writes the letters (to newspapers) and John Hancock pays the postage."

Hancock's smuggling, as well as that of many others, made the people of our nation better off by providing cheaper prices for molasses used for making rum. British oppressors were worse off by having lower tax revenues.

>> No.8068137

In 1920, the 18th Amendment, prohibiting the production, distribution and sale of alcoholic beverages in the United States, went into effect. It had wide public support. In my opinion, no case can be made for stopping another person from enjoying beer, wine and whiskey. That's oppression, but along came heroes to the rescue. The ink hadn't dried on the 18th Amendment before smugglers started smuggling beer and whiskey from Canada and Mexico. Ships lined up along our shores, just beyond the three-mile limit, to off-load whiskey onto speedboats. Smugglers and bootleggers spared millions of Americans from do-gooder oppression.

While the smuggler qua smuggler is my hero, several important negative effects surround his activity. Smuggling is illegal. It becomes a sometimes-nasty criminal enterprise because those who engage in it tend to be people with an overall lower regard for the law. Since smuggling is illegal, disputes must be settled with guns and violence instead of courts. Plus, police and other public officials are corrupted. Worse of all is the reduced respect for laws by the public at large. After the 18th Amendment's repeal, virtually all of the crime and corruption associated with Prohibition disappeared.

>> No.8068141

Not many Americans are aware of today's big smuggling activity -- cigarette smuggling. Confiscatory taxes that are as high as $7 a pack, in New York City, making one pack of cigarettes sell for $13, have encouraged a thriving smuggling business across our country. Like Prohibition, confiscatory tobacco taxes are popular with Americans.

A recent study by Michael LaFaive and Todd Nesbit of the Midland, Michigan-based Mackinac Center for Public Policy titled "Cigarette Taxes and Smuggling" shows that states with the highest cigarette smuggling rates are those with the highest tobacco taxes such as Arizona (51.8 percent of the state's total consumption are smuggled), New York (47.5 percent), Rhode Island (40.5 percent), New Mexico (37.2 percent) and California (36.3 percent).

>> No.8068144

Cigarette smuggling, like yesteryear's whiskey smuggling, has become a livelihood for criminals. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has found that Russian, Armenian, Ukrainian, Chinese, Taiwanese and Middle Eastern (mainly Pakistani, Lebanese and Syrian) organized crime groups are highly involved in the trafficking of contraband and counterfeit cigarettes. What's worse is that some of these groups use their earnings to provide financial assistance to terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah and Hamas. That means tax-hungry politicians and anti-tobacco zealots are providing the means for aid to America's enemies.

The solution to cigarette smuggling, and the criminal activities associated with it, is to eliminate the confiscatory taxes. Unfortunately for tax-hungry politicians and anti-tobacco zealots, who see confiscatory taxes as a tool in their moral crusade against tobacco, only benefits count. For them, the costs of their agenda are irrelevant or secondary at best. And, as novelist C.S. Lewis put it, "Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive."

>> No.8070081
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8070081

>>8067761
This one?

>> No.8070128

>>8068133
Somewhat true. They're just optimizing against unnecessary limits (such as those preventing free trade) imposed by territorial bodies. I can't fault mugen for it. If someone or something finds their processes no longer needed in face of modern technologies, they can either adapt or drop out, not petition the local nationstates to allow their obsolete ways to exist (looking not only at traditional business models, but also at the music/film industry ehre).

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