Message from @RustyShackleford
Discord ID: 476276235345854473
see?
he's happy 😃
kek
Dude hes so happy his third eye is leaking from his sockets
<:bogged:424795091698188289> give him the quick rundown <:bogged:424795091698188289>
<:switchtactics:447412769474609152>
Arent those the guys in charge of france?
Cocaine is for depressed people
Cocaine is for fat white girls
and very skinny white girls
no in between
Cocaine is for boner control
Does it work
As in, you ain’t getting one
Oh that sucks
Coke is poison
So
I heard you cant get a boner on molly but thats not true
@Deleted User Hunter S Thompson lived to his 70s, there is no way he was drinking and doing cocaine daily
anyone who has done coke will tell you that its fucking awful for you heart even short term
but for decades?
I believe he did it dude
nah that doesn't happen
Not everyday
Hunter was a mess
If you have sex while rolling, it ruins sex for you for a long time
Booze+Cocaine creates a different drug in your body https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocaethylene
super toxic to the heart
Coke is for sexually degenerate chefs
Cocaine is literally the dumbest drugs
Creating corrosive chemicals inside your own body
Where do I sign up
>In most users, cocaethylene produces euphoria and has a longer duration of action than cocaine. Some studies[4] suggest that it may be more cardiotoxic than cocaine and "it also carries an 18- to 25-fold increase over cocaine alone in risk of immediate death".[5] Cocaethylene has a higher affinity for the dopamine transporter than does cocaine, but has a lower affinity for the serotonin and norepinephrine transporters.[6][7]
"it also carries an 18- to 25-fold increase over cocaine alone in risk of immediate death".
hmmmmmmm
when authors have to explain the symbolism in their books
most authors either don't know the symbolism of their books and keep it secret from themselves even, or try to keep it enigmatic and shit
my point is that women cannot write books of any value or merit. not ever. never will.
I can’t counter-argue that with any female writer I’ve ever heard of or read