I don't loath anyone.
You still don't get it.
You see, in your mind, you think that anything I say doesn't matter because it's all fake and just pulled straight from my asshole.
That information is easily accessible and I'm not preventing you from educating yourself, it's something that I would never do...
However, this high horse you've put me on for all to see, is far above any questions you have to ask me.
English
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[quote]I don't loath anyone.[/quote]But do you loaf anyone?
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No, but I can love.
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Edited by ZeroSuitAlpha: 12/7/2013 9:02:16 AM[quote]Loath is an adjective meaning unwilling or reluctant. For example, you might say that you are loath to to spend time with your mean boss outside work.[/quote] So you're unwilling to help just anyone? I'm not a special case? I think you shouldn't say something online if you wouldn't be willing to say it in real life. I didn't think that everything that gets pulled from your bum was fake, what goes in and out of that isn't my business. Well I looked, went through a couple pages, but none of them really addressed if they do anything for discharged soldiers, the closest thing I found so far is in the link. This is how I phrased my google search: "Is there a mental health assessment for soldiers after discharge?" Would "after being discharged" work better? I'm putting you on a high horse? *scratches his head*
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I'm wherever you say I am.
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Could you pretty please reply to the rest of that?
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*seriously starts to cry because we know how much Camm loves being super cereal*