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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/06/2012 in all areas

  1. There was a competition at the fitness club I went to in Bangkok when I lived there last year. I thought some of you who like muscle might like to see my two favorite!
    2 points
  2. JKane

    Sandy meme...

    About says it all:
    1 point
  3. I forgot Felipes'pic
    1 point
  4. Hi, it's me again. I had a very nice Sunday at Club de Tobi. In the steam bath a young man (22 y.o. I guess), wiith a difined body and nice dick, wanted me to service him... He had this kind of attitude: hi, I'm young and pretty and people should adore me. Who was I to argue? Anyway, I did not stand a lot, since I had previously my session with beautiful Andrián (massage and tongue-bath)... I did my best and he got very excited, cumming copiously.... This time he got a higher typ (100K COP -- 50 USD, I guess). Monday was vacation here. After a nice trip to Santa Fe, nice colonial town at the Cauca river and 1 hour from Medellín, I met Rafael, a nice and strong guy of mixed race who contacted me last year at Manhunt. He is now more defined, a short guy with nice build, a little bit hairy. A freebie. Today I sent a message to a local guy via FB. He has the best body ever seen... and lots of pics. I hit the lottery and win: he was ready to meet me, but asked for some gift. The guy (22 y.o.) is a wonderful puppy. A remarkable contrast between his miuscle god image and the real self: a young professional, very very well articulated, quite handsome and modest. Great kisser & sucker, loved rimming, hot in bed....
    1 point
  5. Being surrounded by the ocean, I love to see the activities in the area. There are jet skis, para-sailing boats and people swimming all around. Pattaya and Jomtien are a bevy of water activities during the day. We saw this boat today and thought it was pretty cool.
    1 point
  6. Lookin, you will be pleased (well, maybe) that I also support Prop 30 and oppose prop 32. You will not be so pleased to know that I support the death penalty, although I abhor the way it is conducted and the process which is abused. But I do believe that there are crimes so heinous and criminals so evil that society only gains by putting them to death. For me, the death penalty would be exceptionally rare because I would require proof beyond any doubt, but once that burden has been met, sayonara. No long delays, just execute.
    1 point
  7. There are two other California propositions that will have a major effect on state finances and political power, and both took a surprising turn today when a curtain was lifted to reveal the big money involved in passing one and defeating the other. Proposition 30 is Governor Jerry Brown's attempt to avoid major cuts in education by raising the state sales tax and increasing taxes on high-income earners. And Proposition 32 would limit the role of unions in California politics by preventing them from collecting campaign funds from members, even though there are no such restrictions on the corporations who wrote and support the proposition. Not only are the typical suspects spending millions to defeat Proposition 30 and pass Proposition 32, but last month an Arizona nonprofit donated $11 million to California groups trying to torpedo the tax and muzzle the unions. Something smelled fishy to Governor Brown who wondered where a minor Arizona nonprofit would come up with $11 million and why it would spend that much on two pieces of California legislation. He wanted to know, and thought California voters had the right to know, who was behind the money. And he wanted voters to know before they voted tomorrow. If this were a national election, we wouldn't know until after the election, but California laws are different from federal laws and the California Supreme Court told the Arizona group they had to come clean. Which they did today, one day ahead of voters going to the polls. Through a convoluted set of maneuvers, which State Attorney General Kamala Harris has branded political money-laundering, the money trail leads from the Arizona group, Americans for Responsible Leadership, backwards to a group called Americans for Job Security, and back again to a group called The Center to Protect Patient Rights. The Center to Protect Patient Rights has pumped millions into the Romney campaign in recent months, and tens of millions into the 2010 mid-term Congressional elections in support of conservative candidates. The Center's president is a guy named Sean Noble who, wouldn't you know, turns out to be a front for - wait for it - none other than the fabulous furry Koch Brothers! If they'll pull this kind of shit to cover their tracks in a state ballot, imagine what they're up to at the national level. Of course, thanks to Citizens United, corporations are people too. Just not the kind of people I'd casually turn my back on.
    1 point
  8. Don't know if it's related but I also noticed an anomaly with logging out. After I logged out, the mini-profile screen - the one that pops up when you hold the cursor over your screen name - would show me as still being ONLINE . I didn't test it by trying to post or anything. I just logged in and logged out again, and the ONLINE symbol would be replaced by the OFFLINE symbol, as it should have been the first time. This happened regularly for a week or so, right after the site was rebranded, but I haven't noticed it lately. Perhaps just a bit of sand in the gears that's worked its way through. Mac with Safari browser.
    1 point
  9. Lucky

    Roku Anyone?

    Back in the old days, a poster was giving some good dvice on this topic. Can't remember his name now, but it should be in this thread: http://www.boytoy.com/forums/index.php?/topic/8451-hulu/page__hl__roku#entry47024
    1 point
  10. Lucky

    Currently Reading...

    It would be nice if those here who like to read, and have the time to do so, would keep the rest of us informed on what they are reading. I like to travel and read, so much so that I get a kick out of traveling and reading vicariously. I also understand that what interests me may not interest you, and vice versa. But it is fun to share stories, and what you read can give me some ideas as well. I just finished Brad Thor's Black List. Some might see Thor as a flag waver, think his novels have too much testosterone, or simply don't enjoy such good guy/bad guy stories. But his are well-written, and Black List informative on how the government is subverting our right to privacy.See the Politics Forum, where Lookin links to an article about a huge NSA data center being built in Utah that will allow the government to spy on us better than ever. That data center is the heart of Thor's novel when a secret shadow government of very powerful people take it over. Don't like that? Well, I am now reading Mr. Lucky, by James Swain. In the summertime, my library allows checkouts of older novels for six weeks, so I picked up several to read in spare moments. Mr. Lucky is about a guy who becomes exceptionally lucky after jumping from his Vegas hotel during a fire. he survives and goes on to win just about every game he plays. Former cop Tony Valentine is hired by Vegas casino owners to see where Mr. Lucky gets his wins. Surely he is cheating? My sister wrote to the entire family about her love for the non-fiction title Unbroken, which has over 2500 five-star reviews on Amazon. It tells the true story of an Olympic runner who goes to war in the Pacific in the 1940s. We get to know him, his buddies and flight mates, and then his plane crashes and a three year attempt to survive begins. I am only 100 pages into it, but the loss of life in the Pacific front is no more easy to understand than that in the European front. We just sent boys out to die in badly made planes; many flew over the Pacific and were never heard from again. So far, it's a tough read. So here is your chance to educate us on what we really should be reading, or just on what you like to read. I hope to hear from other readers, but one never knows!
    1 point
  11. Lucky

    San Juan Puerto Rico?

    I went to San Juan some years ago and my observations may or may not still be true. The hot Puerto Rican guys I saw in New York prompted me to go, but when I got there, I realized that all the hot guys had gone to New York! Truly, I did not see a plethora of hot men in San Juan. The entire city reminded me of the Mission District in San Francisco. The Old Town district was interesting and worth a visit. But again, no hot men. One gay club I walked by had strippers. The "early" show was at 2 a.m., the late show at 4 a.m. If you spend the day on the beach in the sun, you might get sleepy by 2 a.m. (So, a nap is in order.)
    1 point
  12. lookin

    Currently Reading...

    Just picked up Smart Aleck today. Thanks. I'll read the Vicountess' book too if I stumble across it. My latest book was an old one on computer history. I like reading about the early computers, the ones that used vacuum tubes and were strung together with baling wire. I can understand those. They lost me when they started putting everything inside a little black chip with legs.
    1 point
  13. Lucky

    Currently Reading...

    Then you would like 11/22/63, because, in my opinion, the first half is the best part of the novel.
    1 point
  14. Lucky

    Currently Reading...

    Some people seem to run when books come up. It goes back to their grade school teacher trying to force them to read things they did not enjoy...I think! In my family, we rushed to the library each week, came home with a stack of books, then wolfed them down and went back for more. I still do that.
    1 point
  15. Lucky

    Currently Reading...

    Oz, thanks for joining in. I see that you are, so far, the only one. I wonder how many guys are reluctant to say what they are reading lest they be jumped on for their reading tastes? I like reading and do so to please myself. If I am not highbrow enough, tough! I am sure having a good time.
    1 point
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