Maggie’s Funny & awesome pics, vids and memes thread (work safe, no nudity)

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Sam’s Club has this little pressure washer on sale now(or at least last weekend) that has an included foam cannon to wash cars. Pretty handy and it’s especially nice to exploit the labor of your children

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Made by Cat, should be good.

My experience is 2100-2200 is enough for washing your car or really lightweight jobs but for tough jobs you really need 3200. Adjustabel is nice so you can use lower pressure when needed.
 
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Clintons now control Soros , they hitched him with Wieners ex that was for decades Hillary Clinton's right hand

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They gonna be having an Ugly baby , if he’s capable! He’ll the spitting image of his piece of shit dad. 😖

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I sold it to my wife for a bunch of jobs around the house but the main thing in my mind was washing cars

Made by Cat, should be good.

My experience is 2100-2200 is enough for washing your car or really lightweight jobs but for tough jobs you really need 3200. Adjustabel is nice so you can use lower pressure when needed.

What Maggot asked ?
 
When Paul Newman first launched "Newman’s Own" in 1982, it started with a joke. He and his friend A.E. Hotchner were bottling salad dressing in old wine bottles to hand out as Christmas gifts. Friends loved it so much they urged them to sell it commercially. Most would have seen this as an entrepreneurial opportunity. Newman saw something else, a chance to give.
He had no interest in keeping the money. As the product line grew to pasta sauce, popcorn, lemonade, and more, Newman made a quiet but life-defining decision. Every single cent of post-tax profit from "Newman’s Own" would go directly to charitable causes. Not a portion, not a cut. All of it.
This choice wasn’t a marketing strategy. In fact, Newman avoided attention for it. He didn’t want the spotlight on himself, only on the causes he was helping. A.E. Hotchner recalled Newman’s words during their earliest days of the venture, “Let’s give it all away to those who need it. We’ll make it good. We’ll make it honest. And we’ll keep it fun.”
That decision sparked a ripple effect. By the early 1990s, the foundation had quietly donated tens of millions to education, nutrition programs, medical research, and children’s camps. Newman personally reviewed the list of causes. He didn’t just put his name on a bottle and walk away. He read letters from grant applicants, often scribbling handwritten notes on the margins about how a small community center in the Midwest or a children’s hospice in Boston could benefit from a check.
One of the most profound projects he supported was the creation of the “Hole in the Wall Gang Camp,” a summer camp for children with serious illnesses. Located in Ashford, Connecticut, it gave critically ill kids a place to laugh, swim, and feel normal for a week. Newman didn’t merely fund it. He visited, spent time with the children, watched their plays, and even cooked meals. Camp counselors often remembered how he would quietly sit by a child in a wheelchair, not saying much, just being there, his presence more powerful than any speech.
By the time of his death in 2008, over $250 million had been given away through "Newman’s Own" Foundation. But it wasn’t the number that defined him. It was the philosophy behind it. Newman believed money could be a tool, not a reward. He often said, “I’m a guy who makes salad dressing to help someone else’s kid.” That line wasn’t scripted. He meant it. He repeated it to journalists, staffers, even to campers when they asked why an actor was suddenly running a food company.
Even during his Hollywood years, Newman had been quietly funding scholarships and civil rights initiatives. He once paid off the mortgage of a struggling school in the South after learning they were on the verge of closing. He never wanted credit. When the school tried to thank him publicly, he asked that the announcement be withheld until the graduation ceremony was over.
Those who worked closest to him saw a man who gave not from excess, but from intent. It wasn’t that he had too much money. It was that he believed others needed it more. He lived modestly, drove an old car, and preferred handwritten letters to emails or press releases. To him, philanthropy wasn’t performance. It was duty.
His quiet generosity changed thousands of lives. But what made it extraordinary wasn’t the size of his fortune. It was how personally invested he was in ensuring that every dollar helped someone. In a world eager for attention, Paul Newman gave silently, persistently, and wholeheartedly.
He transformed a bottle of salad dressing into a lifeline for those who had none, and never asked for a thank you in return.
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Lake City is in flat farm land. The tornado was a EF-3. That part of the state usually doesn’t get hit but they got hit with a EF-4 in 2021.🤔
I just moved from SW Oklahoma. My asshole would pucker everytime the sirens went off. I dont know which is worse, and earthquake or tornado, both gve no warning and dont leave much place to hide.
 
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I just moved from SW Oklahoma. My asshole would pucker everytime the sirens went off. I dont know which is worse, and earthquake or tornado, both gve no warning and dont leave much place to hide.
Lake City is also on the San Madrid fault too.😳
Good move on your part. Usually when tornados happen in Oklahoma , we’re next.
For some strange reason they don’t use sirens here anymore ??
 
Lake City is also on the San Madrid fault too.😳
Good move on your part. Usually when tornados happen in Oklahoma , we’re next.
For some strange reason they don’t use sirens here anymore ??
I came to love Oklahoma but hated the city I was in. I dod coin a phrase,

"Oklahoma's greatest natural resource is it's people."

Just easy going, down home, polite folks, who would look you in the eye, like I grew up with in SW Virginia in the 50's
 
I sold it to my wife for a bunch of jobs around the house but the main thing in my mind was washing cars
Don’t go there bud… I’d been washing my cars w bucket and garden hose for 40 years… then I started washing mah sheet w my Simpson 4200 Pressure washer whose primary duty was for cleanup… I can dial the pressure down to 1200psi @4.2gpm. Once I started down that rabbit hole now I got a whole RO system to get me deionized water for spotless rinse…got a short gun w multiple protected nipples/tips… A whole mobile detailing rig.

Since detailers start at $100 for a simple wash can probably give it to the kid and have him make extra $$ of the side … but I have easily the price of an AI in the setup 😅