This saying must have originated in Australia.
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I dont know who you are calling idiot, but my point was that a Buell sure can make such a trip. As i said a 30 year japanese bike will do it and for sure also a 14 year old Buell. If not is it a non maintained crap bike, a normally maintained Buell should not have any problems.
Dont get this need for using insults here......
F. Rosen: i'm now thoroughly convinced you're specifically on here to either troll...cause problems...incite pointless arguments...or act like a douchebag. we've run alot of your type out of here thru the years and will be happy to make you our new project.
Case in point: this is the 2nd double entendre of yours invoked to generate friction....with its unimaginative transparency. your previous post, in essence, propped up jap bikes...then retorted the comment with a buell interrogative...then a snide remark bashing the buell brand.
Now you double-down not only mentioning maintenance, but trying to back-pedal out of your prior bashing with an affirmative opinion. there is absolutely no rhyme, reason or logic to your rational. Plus it's incredibly boring.
As a collective group, we'll tolerate very little more of your keyboard shenanigans.
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I pitty the foo
Barrett: you sounded like Dirty Harry just then!
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Idioms on line,
Up a creek without a paddle,
This idiom has its origin in 20th-century military slang, referring to being lost, as in when on patrol, etc., calling to mind someone in a canoe being stranded in a river with no way to paddle.
Gran torino such a great movie.*Oh, I've got one. A Mexican, a Jew, and a colored guy go into a bar. The bartender looks up and says, "Get the **** out of here."
I've always heard it as up **** creek without a paddle. Meaning your in alot of trouble
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