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Comments Thread For: Cotto's Experience Will Trump Canelo, Says Moore

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  • #51
    http://news.yahoo.com/york-puerto-ri...JfMQRzZWMDc2M-

    12th paragraph. "buuu buu buuut you're a peasant doe. I agree with Trump doe." lol Fckng idiot.

    Comment


    • #52
      Originally posted by Bardock View Post
      Quote from the article

      "Right now that colonial experiment is not going so well, it looks like it's failing."
      The USA undermined PRs currency prior to the takeover... The sabotaged PRs agriculture and thus created a scenario in which PR had NO choice but to switch to the U.S. Dollar. If they took Texas, and the rest of the states from you peasants, what is to stop them from taking over a tiny island like Puerto Rico?


      Silly peasant. You are screaming from America's basement, acting like you held the Gringo off... You didn't. He took everything he wanted and left you with Cancun when he was done.


      Reality.

      Comment


      • #53
        Originally posted by bigjavi973 View Post
        besides old man mosley, old man baldomir & trout, who did he beat?
        Prime Lara!

        Comment


        • #54
          Puerto Rico has an unusual relationship with the United States. Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens but because the island is a commonwealth and not a state they cannot vote in U.S. presidential elections.

          "Puerto Rico at one point was a big American showcase of how the United States took over this island and turned it into this great democracy," said Angelo Falcon, president of the National Institute for Latino Policy. "Right now that colonial experiment is not going so well, it looks like it's failing."

          New York City remains a proud cultural magnet, particularly parts of Harlem in northern Manhattan and the south Bronx that became home during a huge migration wave after World War Two. Record stores sell Puerto Rican music, the nation's flag hangs in store windows. Spanish is the language of the street.

          Puerto Ricans pride themselves on their ability to adapt and survive, despite their homeland's woes.

          Manuel Thillet, a retired mechanic, arrived in New York in the 1960s to make money for his family back home. He visits his home town of Santa Isabel every few years but says he will never return to live.

          "I have my Medicaid, help from social services. Over there, there is nothing," said Thillet, 61, sitting on a low stool outside the Taino Mayor Records store in the Bronx, Puerto Rican flags flapping above his head.

          Thillet has doubled the amount of money he sends home to family - sometimes as much as $300 a month - due to the growing economic crisis.

          Chatting with three friends on a street corner in the Bronx, Santiago Wilfredo, 61, said he moved to the United States 30 years ago, and had considered going back to Puerto Rico. But then the debt crisis hit.

          "I thought about going back but now it will be difficult," said Wilfredo, who is unemployed. "With all that's happening now, what am I going to do there, die of hunger?"

          Whats he supposed to do peasant? Die of hunger?

          Comment


          • #55
            Originally posted by TOE-TO-TOE View Post
            Prime Lara!
            Very questionable. I had Lara winning 8-4. Many had him winning 7-5. Same for canelo some 8-4 (which I dont believe he won 8 rounds) & 7-5 (like 2 swing rounds)

            Comment


            • #56
              Originally posted by Bardock View Post
              This ****** talking **** about immigration, yet his country is so fcked up, the PR population is higher in the US than on the island. LOLOLOLOLOOLOLOOL

              "As of 2013, the 5.1 million Puerto Ricans living stateside outnumbered the 3.4 million living in Puerto Rico, according to Census data."

              12th paragraph down you fckng ****** ass peasant.

              Imagine if the Mexican population was higher in the US than in Mexico. Fckng irony at its finest.
              Lol murder!

              187.

              Comment


              • #57
                Originally posted by bigjavi973 View Post
                Very questionable. I had Lara winning 8-4. Many had him winning 7-5. Same for canelo some 8-4 (which I dont believe he won 8 rounds) & 7-5 (like 2 swing rounds)
                Indeed, that's fair enough i respect your card, but he did beat Lara, it was a SD, Lara is a ****ing beast. Great win for Nelo!

                Lara beats Cotto and anyone at 147 not named Mayweather.
                Great win for Canelo great for his resume, he's 24!

                Comment


                • #58
                  Originally posted by Bardock View Post
                  http://news.yahoo.com/york-puerto-ri...JfMQRzZWMDc2M-

                  12th paragraph. "buuu buu buuut you're a peasant doe. I agree with Trump doe." lol Fckng idiot.
                  "Rogaine doe..." "old doe.."


                  And yet I toy with you like a mastermind toys with a peasant.


                  You salty that a legend like Trump is not afraid to call it for what it is?

                  You think referrring to PR's economy changes the issue this country has with the border and the influx?



                  Silly peasant. Stay on topic.



                  Rogaine doe.

                  Comment


                  • #59
                    Originally posted by Bardock View Post
                    Puerto Rico has an unusual relationship with the United States. Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens but because the island is a commonwealth and not a state they cannot vote in U.S. presidential elections.

                    "Puerto Rico at one point was a big American showcase of how the United States took over this island and turned it into this great democracy," said Angelo Falcon, president of the National Institute for Latino Policy. "Right now that colonial experiment is not going so well, it looks like it's failing."

                    New York City remains a proud cultural magnet, particularly parts of Harlem in northern Manhattan and the south Bronx that became home during a huge migration wave after World War Two. Record stores sell Puerto Rican music, the nation's flag hangs in store windows. Spanish is the language of the street.

                    Puerto Ricans pride themselves on their ability to adapt and survive, despite their homeland's woes.

                    Manuel Thillet, a retired mechanic, arrived in New York in the 1960s to make money for his family back home. He visits his home town of Santa Isabel every few years but says he will never return to live.

                    "I have my Medicaid, help from social services. Over there, there is nothing," said Thillet, 61, sitting on a low stool outside the Taino Mayor Records store in the Bronx, Puerto Rican flags flapping above his head.

                    Thillet has doubled the amount of money he sends home to family - sometimes as much as $300 a month - due to the growing economic crisis.

                    Chatting with three friends on a street corner in the Bronx, Santiago Wilfredo, 61, said he moved to the United States 30 years ago, and had considered going back to Puerto Rico. But then the debt crisis hit.

                    "I thought about going back but now it will be difficult," said Wilfredo, who is unemployed. "With all that's happening now, what am I going to do there, die of hunger?"

                    Whats he supposed to do peasant? Die of hunger?
                    Do you even know why/how PR became a "common wealth" of the US? Do you know why PR is in the shape it's in now?

                    Comment


                    • #60
                      Originally posted by Bardock View Post
                      Puerto Rico has an unusual relationship with the United States. Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens but because the island is a commonwealth and not a state they cannot vote in U.S. presidential elections.

                      "Puerto Rico at one point was a big American showcase of how the United States took over this island and turned it into this great democracy," said Angelo Falcon, president of the National Institute for Latino Policy. "Right now that colonial experiment is not going so well, it looks like it's failing."

                      New York City remains a proud cultural magnet, particularly parts of Harlem in northern Manhattan and the south Bronx that became home during a huge migration wave after World War Two. Record stores sell Puerto Rican music, the nation's flag hangs in store windows. Spanish is the language of the street.

                      Puerto Ricans pride themselves on their ability to adapt and survive, despite their homeland's woes.

                      Manuel Thillet, a retired mechanic, arrived in New York in the 1960s to make money for his family back home. He visits his home town of Santa Isabel every few years but says he will never return to live.

                      "I have my Medicaid, help from social services. Over there, there is nothing," said Thillet, 61, sitting on a low stool outside the Taino Mayor Records store in the Bronx, Puerto Rican flags flapping above his head.

                      Thillet has doubled the amount of money he sends home to family - sometimes as much as $300 a month - due to the growing economic crisis.

                      Chatting with three friends on a street corner in the Bronx, Santiago Wilfredo, 61, said he moved to the United States 30 years ago, and had considered going back to Puerto Rico. But then the debt crisis hit.

                      "I thought about going back but now it will be difficult," said Wilfredo, who is unemployed. "With all that's happening now, what am I going to do there, die of hunger?"

                      Whats he supposed to do peasant? Die of hunger?


                      Trump 2016:

                      http://universalfreepress.com/illega...uring-october/



                      An inconvenient truth. We need a REAL fence on that border.

                      Comment

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