Need something to bet on right now to soothe those 9 losses in a row I just had....

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  • baskets
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 11-24-11
    • 11691

    #1
    Need something to bet on right now to soothe those 9 losses in a row I just had....
  • baskets
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 11-24-11
    • 11691

    #2
    correction. that was 8 losses in a row

    LA Kings score 5th goal in the game was loss #8 in a row



    lol, o/c, there 6 goals in the game.... and 4 of them were by the Kings
    Comment
    • Sam Odom
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 10-30-05
      • 58063

      #3
      BMW

      Marin Cilic
      Comment
      • mh217
        SBR MVP
        • 12-05-10
        • 2226

        #4
        Gotta bet parlays sometimes...reasoning being if you are gonna cash out you will need a few straight winners anyway..and if you're running bad you can knock out a few losers on one ticket...
        Comment
        • baskets
          SBR Posting Legend
          • 11-24-11
          • 11691

          #5
          Sam, I need action right now. I gotta get all those losses out of my mind.


          That match starts in 7 hours!!!
          Comment
          • baskets
            SBR Posting Legend
            • 11-24-11
            • 11691

            #6
            I got it. nevermind


            Manatawu UNDER 170



            9 losses in a row or a soothed mind. I'll take the win here
            Comment
            • baskets
              SBR Posting Legend
              • 11-24-11
              • 11691

              #7
              starts in 2 hrs
              Comment
              • boeing power
                SBR Hall of Famer
                • 03-23-10
                • 9698

                #8
                Bet your whole bankroll on this lock.






















                Will Obama win the 2012 US presidential election? Yes -210
                Comment
                • baskets
                  SBR Posting Legend
                  • 11-24-11
                  • 11691

                  #9
                  you know, boeing, I am very depressed that that ***** will likely win the election.


                  but I suppose it's better he does win... for if he lost, then there would be riots and looting nonstop across the country
                  Comment
                  • Grits n' Gravy
                    Restricted User
                    • 06-10-10
                    • 13024

                    #10
                    Bet yes on your mom getting pounded by Shaq tonight.
                    Comment
                    • boeing power
                      SBR Hall of Famer
                      • 03-23-10
                      • 9698

                      #11
                      Grits,
                      that was fukin funny
                      Comment
                      • mh217
                        SBR MVP
                        • 12-05-10
                        • 2226

                        #12
                        Baskets someone of your net worth voting republican is a true testament of the ignorance of this country.
                        Comment
                        • Lookingtostart
                          SBR MVP
                          • 04-25-11
                          • 1584

                          #13
                          GWS Giants ML.
                          Comment
                          • baskets
                            SBR Posting Legend
                            • 11-24-11
                            • 11691

                            #14
                            Well, to be totally frank, my mother has always been a big proponent of humans. So your suggestion, Grits, is highly improbable.


                            It'd be like you having an IQ over 70 or having the capacity for introspection.

                            Anyways, look to Zimbabwe for your answers, Grits. This is what happens when you take the organizing principle out of the mechanism.



                            Economic Free Fall in Zimbabwe

                            For close to seven years, Zimbabwe’s economy and quality of life have been in slow, uninterrupted decline. They are still declining this year, people there say, with one notable difference: The pace is no longer so slow.

                            In recent weeks, the national power authority has warned of a collapse of electrical service. A breakdown in water treatment has set off a new outbreak of cholera in the capital, Harare. All public services were cut off in Marondera, a regional capital of 50,000 in eastern Zimbabwe, after the city ran out of money to fix broken equipment. In Chitungwiza, just south of Harare, electricity is supplied but four days a week.

                            The government awarded all civil servants a 300 percent raise just two weeks ago. But the increase is only a fraction of the inflation rate, so the nation’s 110,000 teachers are staging a work slowdown for more money; measured by the black-market value of Zimbabwe’s ragtag currency, even their new salaries total less than $60 a month.

                            Doctors and nurses have been on strike for five weeks, seeking a mammoth pay increase, and health care is all but nonexistent. Harare’s police chief warned in a recently leaked memo that if officers did not get a substantial raise, they might riot.

                            In the past eight months, “there’s been a huge collapse in living standards,” Iden Wetherell, an editor of the weekly Zimbabwe Independent, said in a telephone interview, “and also a deterioration in the infrastructure—in standards of health care, in education. There’s a sort of sense that things are plunging.”

                            Mugabe’s fortunes appear to have dimmed as well. In December, the ruling party that has traditionally bowed to his will, the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, balked at supporting a constitutional amendment that would have extended his term of office by two years, to 2010. That unprecedented rebuff exposed a fissure in the party, known as ZANU- PF, between Mugabe’s hard-line backers and the so-called moderates who fear he has brought their nation to the brink of collapse.

                            Soaring costs have made it impossible for both national and local governments to meet budgets and for businesses to afford raw materials, while subsidies for basic commodities have drained the government treasury and promoted corruption.

                            Seeking to revive farm production, for example, the government sells gasoline to farmers at a deep discount of 330 Zimbabwe dollars, or about $1.27, per liter—and farmers promptly resell it on the black market for 10 times as much, leaving their fields idle.

                            Mugabe, who blames a Western plot against him for Zimbabwe’s problems, has rejected all calls for economic reform. The government refuses to devalue Zimbabwe’s dollar, which fetches only 5 to 10 percent of its official value on the thriving black market, so foreign exchange to buy crucial imported goods like spare parts and fertilizer has effectively dried up.

                            The central bank’s latest response to these problems, announced this week, was to declare inflation illegal. From March 1 to June 30, anyone who increases prices or wages will be arrested and punished. Only a “firm social contract” to end corruption and restructure the economy will bring an end to the crisis, said the reserve bank governor Gideon Gono.

                            The speech by Gono, a favorite of Mugabe, was broadcast nationally. In central Harare, the last half was blacked out by a power failure.

                            That growing loss of control is apparent. The black market, which already flourishes beyond the reach of tax collectors and regulators, is likely to grab an even larger share of the economy when the government freezes prices in March, because stores will be unable to make a profit selling products at government-fixed prices.

                            Problems with water and power supplies have already become acute because of a lack of foreign exchange and salaries for workers; a wave of blackouts hit the nation early last month when 100 electrical workers walked out to protest low pay.

                            Zimbabwe’s political opposition has never staged an effective work stoppage to protest living conditions. But public workers, the bedrock of government support, have begun this year to walk off the job because there is no longer enough money to pay them a living wage.

                            The growing number of strikes has also emboldened the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, a center of public support and of opposition to Mugabe, to make its own plans for a general work stoppage.

                            Many experts now believe that Zimbabwe faces a political showdown within months, as the governing bodies of ZANU-PF wrangle over whether to grant Mugabe an extended term or to put less-radical members of the ruling party in power. Few expect a democratic revolution; the one rival party, the Movement for Democratic Change, is riven by splits and lacks a competent leader.

                            For the government, “the big problem about Zimbabwe is that the one thing you can’t rig is the economy,” said one Harare political analyst, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of being persecuted.

                            “When it fails, it fails. And that can have unpredictable effects.”
                            Comment
                            • Grits n' Gravy
                              Restricted User
                              • 06-10-10
                              • 13024

                              #15
                              Doesn't change the fact your mom eats more dark meat than poor people on Thanksgiving. In short baskets, your mother, is a jizz receptacle.
                              Comment
                              • baskets
                                SBR Posting Legend
                                • 11-24-11
                                • 11691

                                #16
                                You see, Grits, when they took the white farmers out of Zimbabwe.... what happened?

                                It's pretty simple to figure out. And it's all you need to know. It's quite fascinating, really.
                                Comment
                                • boeing power
                                  SBR Hall of Famer
                                  • 03-23-10
                                  • 9698

                                  #17
                                  Comment
                                  • Sam Odom
                                    SBR Aristocracy
                                    • 10-30-05
                                    • 58063

                                    #18
                                    Originally posted by Sam Odom

                                    BMW

                                    Marin Cilic

                                    10:1 you did NOT take Cilic ... Broke ass is asleep
                                    Comment
                                    • hydrosmak
                                      SBR MVP
                                      • 10-13-11
                                      • 1908

                                      #19
                                      Pound LA Dodgers today.

                                      Comment
                                      • Underdog5229
                                        SBR MVP
                                        • 10-31-11
                                        • 1856

                                        #20
                                        Chu can do it.
                                        Comment
                                        • jjgold
                                          SBR Aristocracy
                                          • 07-20-05
                                          • 388179

                                          #21
                                          I am a good guy

                                          Comment
                                          • konck
                                            SBR Posting Legend
                                            • 10-17-06
                                            • 12554

                                            #22
                                            Brock put out a rubber band play on the Dodgers this afternoon
                                            Millions and millions of faders are on this like me
                                            Go bet the CUBBIES your steak ends now
                                            Comment
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