Et "en même temps" :
Ben, c'est la merguez party, tant qu'y a de la braise c'est pas fini ♫
Oui et?
Bah, 500 000 euros pour la grandeur de la France, c'est rien
Mais AZB c’est super, une fois cuite ils pourront apporter la viande à ces gens de l’article au-dessus, bloqués toute la nuit. Le monde ne sera-t-il pas merveilleux comme ça ?
Voilà, donc merci les têtes de cons, mais bouffez-le votre gilet jaune de merde, et étouffez-vous avec
Et ce matin, on a ENFIN vu passer la facteuse... Sauf qu'avec le courrier accumulé au centre de tri, c'était du nouveau courrier, pas l'ancien qui est toujours bloqué!
J'aurai pu mettre ça dans "conneries du net", mais vu que c'est lié à un fait d'actualité : http://image.noelshack.com/fichiers/2018/47/3/1542819751-received-203408433906108.jpeg
According to extracts of a journal published in the Washington Post, on a previous visit, he had shouted at them: "My name is John, I love you and Jesus loves you."One of the tribesmen shot at him with an arrow, which pierced his waterproof Bible, he wrote.In a last note to his family, he wrote: "You guys might think I'm crazy in all this but I think it's worthwhile to declare Jesus to these people."God, I don't want to die."He had taken scissors, safety pins and a football as gifts to the tribe, according to a source quoted by Reuters news agency who had access to his notes and asked not to be named.He wrote he was "doing this to establish the kingdom of Jesus on the island... Do not blame the natives if I am killed," the source said.
Jeff King is president of International Christian Concern, the organisation with which Mr Chau was aligned, and was in contact with him during his visit."John went there to bring the gospel to these people... He had talked about it... planned it for a while, so it wasn't a whim, it wasn't a lark," he told the BBC's Newsday programme.