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OMFG!!! Look who's back and this time looking for BLOOD!!

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  • #46
    Originally posted by G6Performance
    Minus the heart of course.. this thing is pure evil!
    I was watching the news and they said they seen this guy flying around Orlando!



    Be scurred very scurred
    Hurricanes are like women : when they come, they're wet and wild, but when they leave they take your house and car.

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    • #47
      I would go shoot at him with my paintball gun....
      Mine - 2006 Black Grand Prix GXP

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      • #48
        Just show him the G6 GXP. Those big buck teeth will scare it away.

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        • #49
          Originally posted by jnak
          Just show him the G6 GXP. Those big buck teeth will scare it away.
          Depending on the angle the G6 GXP with teeth would be scary.. not in a good way either
          2006 G6 GTP: Traded

          2013 Mustang GT
          Gotta have it Green color
          Brembo brake package
          420 HP 5.0L
          Ford Racing Power Pack
          GT500 track pack differential cover
          BOSS 302 oil cooler, JLT oil separator

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          • #50
            Originally posted by G6Performance
            Originally posted by beitodesstrafe
            dude man, you gonna take that?
            from her, yes.

            ....tease

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            • #51
              he jus came back to give u a cake lol

              Mods- VMS ECM/TCM Tune, Custom Magnaflow Cat Back, Full CRAB Intake, Racing Line Motor Mounts and Strut Tower Brace. Tinted Windows & Tails. EBC USR Rotors Front and Rear running YellowStuff Pads
              Originally posted by ahuhn
              so i just realized there a drawer in my room that has nothing in it but tequila, condoms and a blow up doll. cant figure out if thats a good thing or not

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              • #52

                2007 Silver G6 GT Coupe (w/Hammerhead Spoiler)
                SWO Member
                Tinted Tails done by Chad (cbrenn71)

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                • #53
                  hey when did ryan secrest get here???
                  Originally posted by TLS2000
                  They cleaned my thing out
                  g6p memer 22

                  rip pbm 04 gto 7/7/09

                  1999 chevy s 10 xtreme
                  2007 honda vtx1300

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                  • #54
                    Originally posted by TLS2000
                    Fine. You're banned. Stupid redneck piece of shit!
                    http://www.cardomain.com/id/Amick
                    GTP: My list of mods got too long... just click the link

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                    • #55
                      wow

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                      • #56
                        Originally posted by Toyz
                        Originally posted by jnak
                        Pretty soon it will be the owl found floating facedown in the lake by Kyle's house.


                        Or Kyle found hanging up in a tree
                        someones gotta photoshop that
                        Originally posted by TLS2000
                        They cleaned my thing out
                        g6p memer 22

                        rip pbm 04 gto 7/7/09

                        1999 chevy s 10 xtreme
                        2007 honda vtx1300

                        Comment


                        • #57

                          http://www.cardomain.com/id/WS6Racing" Totaly Badged 2006 Red GT Loaded
                          Originally posted by [i
                          Nancy Reagan[/i]]"Theres no such thing as a stupid question, theres just stupid people that ask questions" 1987

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                          • #58
                            OMFG that pic is hilarious!!!
                            TRADED IN BUT NEVER FORGOTTEN: 2006 GT Coupe in granite metallic, 15/5% tint, vinyl side marker deletes, Doctor Speed Stage 3 CAI, RED calipers by DupliColor, RED LED interior lights, 45 LED tail lights, WideView 8000K HID coversion kit, Nokya Artic White fogs installed, running MoBil 1, FIRST ever granite metallic color matched headlights!! Color matched eyelids just finished! GT-R Exhaust installed. R1 Concepts drilled and slotted zinc plated front rotors.

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                            • #59
                              You have Pontiacs.... The Indians believed that the Owl was a very sacred
                              animal.

                              They are the fatal bellman for humans. You are right to be scared
                              but I wouldnt hurt it as it is a spirit that has departed our world.

                              It can help you aa it is the harbinger of your ultimate fate...

                              ref:

                              In many cultures, owls signal an underworld or serve to represent human spirits after death; in other cultures, owls represent supportive spirit helpers and allow humans (often shamans) to connect with or utilize their supernatural powers. Among some native groups in the Pacific Northwest of USA, owls served to bring shamans in contact with the dead, provided power for seeing at night, or gave power that enabled a shaman to find lost objects (Ray 1939 and Cline 1938, as cited in Keyser et al. 199.

                              As with the owls of the ancient Roman statesman Pliny the Elder, many forest owls have played key roles as signalers of death. The mountain tribes of Myanmar (Burma) know the plaintive song of the Mountain Scops Owl (Otus spilocephalus) in such legends (Smythies 1953, Voous 198. In one Navajo myth, after death the soul assumes the form of an owl (Saunders 1995).

                              In India, the Brown Wood Owl (Strix leptogrammica), Forest Eagle-owl (Bubo nipalensis), and Brown Fish Owl (B. zeylonensis) are found in dense riparian forests of Ficus near streams and ponds, sites often considered as sacred groves, or in cemeteries that bear the last of the largest trees with cavities and hollows in an area (Marcot 1995; B. Marcot, pers. obs.). Old-forest owls, particularly the Forest Eagle-owl, play major roles in many Nepali and Hindu legends. As heard calling at night from cemeteries and sacred groves, such owls are thought to have captured the spirit of a person departed from this world. In one sense, then, many of these owl species can serve as indicators of the religious value of a forest (Marcot 1995); conserving the religious site equally conserves key roost or nest sites.

                              Members of the animistic Garo Hills Tribe of Meghalaya, northeast India, call owls dopo or petcha. Along with nightjars, they also refer to owls as doang, which means birds that are believed to call out at night when a person is going to die; its cry denotes the death of a person (Nengminza 1996; B. Marcot, pers. obs.).

                              The aboriginal peoples of North Queensland, Australia, view owls in a similar way. In January 2000, a female aboriginal elder relayed that owls are special to her people. A little apologetically, she added that owls are also considered an ill omen, signifying a death in the family - but only if the owl hung around the home site for several days (R. Loyn, pers. comm.).

                              Throughout India, owls are construed as bad omens, messengers of ill luck, or servants of the dead. In general, owls often have been treated badly both in daily life and even in Indian literature. For example, in India it is very common to call a foolish person "an owl." But in Indian mythology the owl has been treated at times reverently and given some place of prestige. For instance, Laxmi, the Hindu goddess of money and wealth, rides on an owl. Even in present times, some people of India, particularly Bengali, believe that if a white owl enters a home it is treated as a good omen by relating it to the possible flow of wealth or money into that home (A. Saxena, pers. comm.; also see Box 1).

                              In India the Forest Eagle-owl is known to take peafowl, junglefowl, hares, jackals, and even young barking deer (Ali 1987). Ali noted that its cry is a low, deep, and far-sounding moaning hoot and a blood-curdling shriek as of a woman in grief, earning this creature the name of "Devil Bird." The call of the Ceylon Forest Eagle-owl subspecies (Bubo nipalensis blighi) consists of "shrieks such as of a woman being strangled" but that "the dreadful shrieks and strangulating noises are merely its 'mating love-song,' which would also account for their rare and periodic occurrence" (Ali and Ripley 1987). In related accounts, Ali described its noises as "a variety of weird, eerie shrieks and chuckles" and a scream "like that of a demented person casting himself over a precipice." Holmgren (198 also noted that in history, eagle-owls have been variously called Bird of Evil Omen, Death Owl, Ghost Owl, Mystery Owl, Knows-All Owl, and even Rat Owl.

                              In India, one of us (BGM) was told (see Appendix 1) that the Devil Bird or Devil Owl can be found in graveyards and big dead trees - evidence, albeit anecdotal rather than scientific - that this owl species associates with old forests and big old trees -- and death. Graveyards often contain the last old growth trees, and in India, the Muslims, especially, revere everything in a cemetery including the vegetation. Thus, the eerie cries of the Devil Owl are heard mostly in cemeteries, portending death. And here converge myth, culture, and biology to a consistent whole, as they should for successful conservation of cultures, people, and wildlife.

                              In China, owlets have been believed to pluck out their mothers' eyes (Saunders 1995). Saunders (1995:112) also noted that "The owl's night excursions, staring eyes and strange call have led to a wide-spread association with occult powers. The bird's superb night vision may underlie its connection with prophecy, and the reputation for being all-seeing could arise from its ability to turn its head through almost 180 degrees." In a similar vein, on Andros Island, Bahamas, an historically extinct species of flightless owl, Tyto pollens, scientifically known only from subfossils, stood one meter tall and may have been the source of old local legends of "chickcharnies" or aggressive leprachaun-like imps that wreak havoc, have three toes, and can turn their heads all the way around (Marcot 1995). This owl likely inhabited the dense stands of old-growth Caribbean pine (Pinus caribbeanensis), so much of which had been clearcut on Andros during the latter 20th century by American companies.

                              In ancient Egypt, India, China, Japan, and Central and North America, owls were the bird of death. In other cultures and religions, however, such as ancient Greece, they bore the role of supernatural protector. Some Native Americans, for instance, wore owl feathers as magic talismans (Saunders 1995).

                              Along the northwest coast of Alaska, the Yup'ik peoples made masks for a final winter ceremony called the Agayuyaraq ("way, or process, of requesting"), also referred to as Kelek ("Inviting-in Feast") or the Masquerade (Fienup-Riordan 1996). This complex ceremony involved singing songs of supplication to the animals' yuit ("their persons"), accompanied by the performance of masked dances, under the direction of the shaman. In preparation for the ceremony, the shaman directed the construction of the masks, through which the spirits revealed themselves as simultaneously dangerous and helpful. The helping spirits often took the form of an owl. The majority of masks contained feathers from snowy owls. Carvers strove to represent the helping spirits or animal yuit they had encountered in a vision, dream, or experience. In all cases, the wearer was infused with the spirit of the creature represented. Together with other events, the ceremony embodied a cyclical view of the universe whereby right action in the past and present reproduced abundance in the future.

                              On Java and Borneo, the Collared Scops Owl (Otus bakkamoena) has survived thanks in part to the fact that it is viewed in legends there with reverence or as an ill omen (Voous 198. These owls are taken in China and Korea for medicinal use and many have been lost annually for such purposes (Austin 1948, Gore and Won 1971, Voous 198.

                              Shakespeare wrote of "The owl, night's herald" (Venus and Adonis, 1593, Line 531) and recognized the role that owls have as the "fatal bellmen" (Macbeth, 1605-1606, Act II, Scene ii, Line 4) of that final deepest sleep. In this way, owls have been seen as harbingers of eschatology or the ultimate fate of humans.
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                              • #60
                                dude...it's just a fuckin bird

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