War Room Lounge V195: Cleaning your room while high on pills with your pet lobster

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I do understand the history and therefore @ElijahWood did have a point that maybe it does not matter what ultimately did it because Fawlty was on borrowed time.

I disagree with how the situation at hand was handled (plain wrong IMO, your quote does not change that there was no rule breach here if you take the context of the post. Calling an election unfair does not make it so, and calling that exchange an implied :eek::eek::eek::eek: accusation does not make it so, either.)

I do not disagree with the rule. But I disagree with your interpretation of it, putting it mildly. Oeshon has admitted to paying whores in a country where it is known that a high percentage of sex workers are underage. Fawlty challenged him on whether he was actively taking measures to ensure he did not accidentally contribute to this disgusting section of the industry there. Reading an implied :eek::eek::eek::eek: accusation into this is a highly curious interpretation.

In other words

@Lead

I’m coming In 10 pages late on this so I’ll just say that @Prokofievian and JD’s posts sum it up fine for me. Awful call.
 
Any white leftist POS who thinks being "woke" grants them a sense of moral superiority.

So about 85 percent of them

Have you tired being woke? It makes 85% more superior than other white folks. Give it a try, i have a money back guarantee.
 
Good god

https://nypost.com/2020/11/28/consu...rmacy-rebates-for-oxycontin-overdoses-report/


Powerhouse consulting firm McKinsey & Co. promoted a questionable strategy to increase the sales of OxyContin — giving distributors a rebate for every overdose tied to the pills they sold, according to a report.

A trove of documents released in a bankruptcy court case showed McKinsey’s role in advising the Sackler family, which owned Oxy maker Purdue Pharma, as opioid deaths mounted, The New York Times reported.

McKinsey, in a 2017 presentation, estimated that 2,484 customers of drug store chain CVS would overdose or become addicted to opioids in 2019 and it would pay a rebate of $14,810 “per event,” The Times reported.

CVS said it did not receive any rebates.

Purdue Pharma pleaded guilty Tuesday to three criminal charges for its role the national opioid epidemic.

Some of McKinsey’s strategy came to light last year in a court case filed by Massachusetts which accused the Sackler family of creating and making money off the epidemic.

The suit claimed McKinsey was helping to “counter the emotional messages from mothers with teenagers that overdosed in [sic] OxyContin.”
 
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