what would be involved in superoir muscle taking up a donation for the folks in japan and i know this could be met with some negative but dammit i am impressed with the stoic composure they have shown . u would have to rent a po box their in jersey (that way curtis who ever the hell he is wont know your address)..any ways u could take it out of the money sent . i for one trust u and if u choose to so this i will be the first to mail a money order. what and where the donation will go is up to u and the cats here at sm..:)
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hey bouncer..
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well just for the hell of it , i for one will donate 25 dollars to japan to redcross from superoir muscle with love from mofo , bouncer and buell . anty up fuckers and do the same:)Originally posted by mofo View PostBest bet is donate though a bank and put "Superior Muscle" in the memo. Or go through major organizations like the red cross.
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i hope the house u and yours live in does not get washed away..i hope u dont find a friend in a car under 20 feet of mud..i hope its not snowing as the nuke is spitting out steam as u find water to drink . these things your penny that u keep in your pocket would not have made a difference or maybe it would have.Originally posted by Shibby View PostI won't send a penny to foreign aid ever again until we start taking a lot better care of our own.
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Do I need to post the definition of "foreign" for you? And seriously take a look at this and tell me we shouldn't be more proactive at covering our own ass International response to Hurricane Katrina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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uncle and calf rope..jus sayin:)Originally posted by Shibby View PostDo I need to post the definition of "foreign" for you? And seriously take a look at this and tell me we shouldn't be more proactive at covering our own ass International response to Hurricane Katrina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A friend passed this on to me after I said "wtf did Japan do to help the US after Katrina?"
I had no idea....
15 September 2005
Japan Proves Truly "A Friend Indeed" After Hurricane Katrina
Japanese government, companies, individuals send assistance to victims
By Jane Morse
Washington File Staff Writer
Washington -- If the saying "a friend in need is a friend indeed" is true, Japan is one of the best friends the United States ever could have to provide support while so many Americans are suffering in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Japanese private citizens and the government alike have sent a virtual tsunami of assistance to the victims of Katrina, which devastated 90,000 square miles along the U.S. Gulf Coast in August. Hundreds of thousands of people lost their homes and hundreds lost their lives.
Japan has pledged more than $1.5 million in private donations. The government of Japan has donated $200,000 in cash to the American Red Cross and some $800,000 in relief supplies -- from blankets to generators -- already are arriving to aid the most needy. Japanese firms with operations in the United States have donated some $12 million in total, including Honda Motor Corporation ($5 million), Hitachi ($1 million) and Nissan (more than $750,000).
The U.S. Embassy in Tokyo was overwhelmed by the generosity of one Japanese individual -- Takashi Endo -- who donated $1 million from his personal funds to Katrina relief efforts. Endo said he was moved when, during a business trip to London, he saw a televised report about a mother separated from her children in the chaos of the flooding in New Orleans. The story so disturbed him he could not sleep that night; the next morning he resolved to do something to help.
Yuji Takahashi, president and chief executive officer of the Japan Petroleum Exploration Company Ltd., which has operations off the coast of Louisiana, donated $100,000 to U.S. federal government hurricane relief efforts. Takahashi said that when he learned of the destruction caused by the hurricane, he felt as if his own family had been affected.
Source(s):
http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-engli…
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:)we are here untill we are gone:)thank you blmOriginally posted by blm View PostA friend passed this on to me after I said "wtf did Japan do to help the US after Katrina?"
I had no idea....
1:)5 September 2005
Japan Proves Truly "A Friend Indeed" After Hurricane Katrina
Japanese government, companies, individuals send assistance to victims
By Jane Morse
Washington File Staff Writer
Washington -- If the saying "a friend in need is a friend indeed" is true, Japan is one of the best friends the United States ever could have to provide support while so many Americans are suffering in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Japanese private citizens and the government alike have sent a virtual tsunami of assistance to the victims of Katrina, which devastated 90,000 square miles along the U.S. Gulf Coast in August. Hundreds of thousands of people lost their homes and hundreds lost their lives.
Japan has pledged more than $1.5 million in private donations. The government of Japan has donated $200,000 in cash to the American Red Cross and some $800,000 in relief supplies -- from blankets to generators -- already are arriving to aid the most needy. Japanese firms with operations in the United States have donated some $12 million in total, including Honda Motor Corporation ($5 million), Hitachi ($1 million) and Nissan (more than $750,000).
The U.S. Embassy in Tokyo was overwhelmed by the generosity of one Japanese individual -- Takashi Endo -- who donated $1 million from his personal funds to Katrina relief efforts. Endo said he was moved when, during a business trip to London, he saw a televised report about a mother separated from her children in the chaos of the flooding in New Orleans. The story so disturbed him he could not sleep that night; the next morning he resolved to do something to help.
Yuji Takahashi, president and chief executive officer of the Japan Petroleum Exploration Company Ltd., which has operations off the coast of Louisiana, donated $100,000 to U.S. federal government hurricane relief efforts. Takahashi said that when he learned of the destruction caused by the hurricane, he felt as if his own family had been affected.
Source(s):
http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-engli…
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