As we navigate life without Pat 'Rebarcock.' Flood, who passed on Sept 21, 2025, we continue to remember the profound impact he had on our community. His support was a cornerstone for our forum. We encourage you to visit the memorial thread to share your memories and condolences. In honor of Pat’s love for storytelling, please contribute to his ‘Rebarcock tells a story’ thread. Your stories will help keep his spirit alive among us.
Fvck Ireland and their leftist elite and entertainers who want this
This is my line of work now and it is a nice glossy brochure. He is creating unsurvivable mass. Their barracuda weapon has no rails to hang on in a peer war. If you need to make something go away the first time it is survivable, and not cheap. Weapons integration is a serious problem in the DOW.
And Yamamoto tossed a complete game gem in Toronto.AmericaJapan over Canada. Let's goDodgers!Rice Balls!

Are you being obtuse? The cartel stuff in Mexico. All of the interdiction in Southcom. What exactly are you looking for?Hey a few months back you said something was going to happen South of the border - what is it? when? has it happened?
TIA
When Henry Ford died in 1947, his family didn’t just inherit an empire — they opened a vault and found a fortune. Inside the Ford Motor Company’s private reserves lay nearly $700 million in cash, untouched by banks or investors.
It was a revelation that stunned even the business world. Ford had built one of the largest industrial empires in history — and he had done it without borrowing a single dime.
While other automakers leaned on Wall Street, Ford kept his company private, funding everything internally — from the Model T assembly lines to the massive River Rouge Plant that became the beating heart of American manufacturing. He refused to take loans, issue stock, or surrender control. Banks offered influence; Ford preferred independence.
His logic was simple but radical: “If you owe the bank $100, that’s your problem. If you owe the bank $100 million, that’s theirs.” He wanted no part of either.
By the 1920s, Ford Motor Company had become a self-contained economic ecosystem — smelting its own steel, producing its own glass, even generating its own electricity. The money that flowed in from every Model T sale didn’t leave the company; it fueled the next invention, the next plant, the next experiment.
And it worked. When the Great Depression crushed competitors drowning in debt, Ford’s privately funded machine kept turning. He could slow production, pay workers, and wait out the storm — all without a single bank call.
So when his heirs discovered hundreds of millions in cash sealed inside the company’s vault, it wasn’t greed. It was the ultimate proof of Ford’s obsession with control — and his defiance of the financial world that once mocked him.
In an age when corporations danced to Wall Street’s tune, Ford marched to his own rhythm — the sound of pistons, progress, and absolute independence.
He didn’t just build cars. He built a new kind of power — one that didn’t need permission.
Would you have trusted your instincts over every banker in America — and been bold enough to fund the future from your own pocket?
View attachment 241437
Bet on it...
Bet on it...
And no tattoos, nails, weaves
Are you being obtuse? The cartel stuff in Mexico. All of the interdiction in Southcom. What exactly are you looking for?
In Holland you cant advertise with pharma stuff. Or tabacco, or weed for that matter.
Ford also wrote a book about Jews.When Henry Ford died in 1947, his family didn’t just inherit an empire — they opened a vault and found a fortune. Inside the Ford Motor Company’s private reserves lay nearly $700 million in cash, untouched by banks or investors.
It was a revelation that stunned even the business world. Ford had built one of the largest industrial empires in history — and he had done it without borrowing a single dime.
While other automakers leaned on Wall Street, Ford kept his company private, funding everything internally — from the Model T assembly lines to the massive River Rouge Plant that became the beating heart of American manufacturing. He refused to take loans, issue stock, or surrender control. Banks offered influence; Ford preferred independence.
His logic was simple but radical: “If you owe the bank $100, that’s your problem. If you owe the bank $100 million, that’s theirs.” He wanted no part of either.
By the 1920s, Ford Motor Company had become a self-contained economic ecosystem — smelting its own steel, producing its own glass, even generating its own electricity. The money that flowed in from every Model T sale didn’t leave the company; it fueled the next invention, the next plant, the next experiment.
And it worked. When the Great Depression crushed competitors drowning in debt, Ford’s privately funded machine kept turning. He could slow production, pay workers, and wait out the storm — all without a single bank call.
So when his heirs discovered hundreds of millions in cash sealed inside the company’s vault, it wasn’t greed. It was the ultimate proof of Ford’s obsession with control — and his defiance of the financial world that once mocked him.
In an age when corporations danced to Wall Street’s tune, Ford marched to his own rhythm — the sound of pistons, progress, and absolute independence.
He didn’t just build cars. He built a new kind of power — one that didn’t need permission.
Would you have trusted your instincts over every banker in America — and been bold enough to fund the future from your own pocket?
View attachment 241437