金比羅温泉(浪速区)17 [無断転載禁止]©bbspink.com
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>>50
…ここはもう手遅れなんじゃないの…?外国でも有名みたいだし。 >>50
でもゲイが居なくなると殆ど潰れるのは事実でしょ
玉造にしろ
昭和中旬じゃないんだから自宅に風呂がない家なんて殆ど無いだろうし >>56
近所かは知らんが親子連れとかたまに見るけどな(汗) もう 金比羅でハッテンも辞めたほうがいいんじゃないのか 木比羅って一番ダメなイメージだけど良いことあるかしら? 2,3時間も湯船やサウナを行ったりきたして長居する銭湯ってそうある? >>64
爺さんたちとデブどものラストリゾートなんだろ 自称30代ガリがなんか言ってる
鏡にカッパ映ってるよ 金曜日凄かったわ
マンガみたいなドタイプの兄貴が露天でランコウしてた 雨なのにおさかんね。
そういえばここで若い子が病気うつされたって話周りで最近よく聞くわ。20代前半を食い物にしてるおやじがいるわね?迷惑よ。治してからにしなさい。
あたしが知ってる限りでは、デカマラ普通体型の50前後でにたにたしたやつ。ちょっと上品な小綺麗な感じかしら。それからもはやゴリラみたいな柔道してそうなマッチョの顔がこすぎる奴よ。
アナル狙ってくるから注意して。挿入されかけたわ。そのあと立て続けに2人犯しててドン引きだわ。 >>78
そうよ。やったやつ全員気をつけなさいよほんとに。はやめに検査しなさい >>79
俺は生好きだよ
生で掘られてると興奮する 万博のときは世界中からここにいっぱい来るんでしょうね。
1970年のときは竹の家が大盛況だったそうだし。 五輪前に取り締まりがあるそうよ
日本の恥部なんだって だったらノンケが行く売春婦街(名前忘れた)潰す方が先でしょ。 この間の土曜日はデブのパラダイスになっててびっくりした。
どこを見てもデブだらけ。 >>93
イノシシ先生みたいなデブもいるのかしら? モラルのないデブが集結するのね
他に行き場もないのかしら と他の行き場がなくゲイ板のホモスレを徘徊してデブアンチすることしか能がないクソガリが一言 >>96
身長174センチ体重94キロのポッコリお腹の37歳デブは好きですか?
文化会系で草食系ですが、ダメですかね? じいさんたちもあの世へ行くし
もうデブしか残らないんじゃない デブでも爺でも不細工でもええけど、邪魔はすな。
見てるだけなら我慢できるけど、勝手に参加してくんな。 デブだけど基本待ちだし、デブのところにしか行かないから問題ない >>106
ほんまや
あんたに向けて勃たせてるんちゃうって >>105
あら〜 発狂してるの?
デブでブスだと辛いよね
金比羅が唯一のオアシスなのかしらw >>106
なんでお前の好みに合わせなあかんねん。いややったら断れ、アホ。 >>111
1度断れば撤退するアンタみたいな素直なデブか爺か不細工は少なくて、
やってる時、傍で見てるだけとか、横でしこってるだけとかを放置してると、
当たり前のように手を出してくるデブや爺や不細工の方が多いんやでw >>113
俺の中では、ガリ=不細工やから…
これから、デブ・爺・不細工・ガリにするわw
>>107
スチームや、奥のラドンや露天でたった一人で長時間
プカプカ浮いてるデブの待ち子も迷惑がられてるけどなw sage押してる人って何なの?何のためにやってるの?
書き込むなら、もっと面白いこと書いたら? >>117
他のスレも見なさいよ
そういう荒らしよ 282 :薔薇と百合の名無しさん [] :2019/06/25(火) 01:53:52.60 ID:2WlruMvq0
そらそうよデブならなんでもいい
アスペとADHDの集まりなんだからデブ専なんて発達障害者自負してるようなもん もう何年も行ってないんだけど、当時よりは店内も古く汚くなり、客層も悪くなってるのかしら。 おれも数年行ってないが
お亡くなりになった人けっこういるんだろうな
かまたきのじいさん逝ったらお終いか 草薙まあまあよく喋るようになってTV慣れしてきたな感 MPs have fled Ottawa, the federal political news cycle is winding down and our show has started panicking over how to fill
two hours.
It's a time to look back on the sitting that was and review what the government did and didn't do - which pieces of
legislation became law, which ones disappeared into the ether.
Some big stuff passed. Tanker bans, a new process for reviewing pipeline projects, pot pardons, national security laws.
Despite the occasional ping-pong battle between the House and the Senate, at the end of the day it got done. Mostly.
(And in case you're keeping score - the Liberals passed 88 bills during this term, while the previous Tory government passed
122 bills over the course of its last majority mandate.)
Meanwhile, bills that would have mandated sexual assault training for judges,
implemented the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples and banned "unhealthy" food and beverage marketing directed at children failed to cross the finish line.
Are they gone for good? That's where the election comes in.
The chances are that some of the bills that died a painful death will
be resuscitated after the upcoming election campaign. In some cases,
political parties already have pledged to do so.
According to former Conservative Party interim leader Rona Ambrose,
who was behind the bill to make sexual assault training mandatory for federally-appointed judges,
the Liberals, Conservatives, New Democrats and Greens have all
promised to re-introduce her bill as government legislation, should they form the next government.
Politically, that isn't surprising. Ambrose's bill passed unanimously in the House of Commons.
It then headed to the Senate where it sat for two years and ultimately fell victim to
Senate shenanigans. (We could have a long discussion about said shenanigans and the efficacy of the Senate, but I'll save that gem for another edition of this newsletter.)
The UNDRIP bill is another big one. This was a private member's bill, sponsored
by NDP MP Romeo Saganash. It would have aimed to harmonize federal laws with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples.
The bill was hotly contested in the Senate because of a provision that
calls on states to obtain "free, prior and informed consent" before approving activity on
Indigenous land, including natural resources extraction.
Conservative senators said they feared the bill would amount to an Indigenous veto over major resour
"Regardless if youre a municipal, provincial or federal government,
we all have that obligation to our veterans. And, unfortunately,
Deer Lodge Centre is not living up to that obligation to our veterans."
Deer Lodge's chief operating officer, Kevin Scott, said some "efficiencies"
were implemented last fall to reflect the declining number of veterans in
the health centre, which the federal government transferred to the province in 1983.
While the province provides Deer Lodge funding for all of 400-odd patients, the federal
government gives the health centre additional funding on a per diem basis for additional
services for each of the 60 Second World War and Korean War veterans at the centre.
However, the centre's funding agreement with Veterans Affairs Canada was originally
set up for 155 veterans, said Scott, "and so the funding was being adjusted accordingly
to match the number of veterans in beds." "So each individual veteran, the funding is still the same.
It's the total number of veterans that we are adjusting the staffing to match that."
While those adjustments resulted in an overall reduction in staff for recreational
programs, food services and porters, Scott said individual veterans have not been
directly impacted and have actually seen increased care.
"The investigation needs to deal with the level of care that is being provided to veterans,
" she said, "Because it's not the quality of care that our veterans deserve and we as
Canadians are obligated to ensure our veterans are taken care of properly."
MacAulay's spokesman Alex Wellstead said the government takes all concerns about
veterans' wellbeing seriously and is looking into the union's complaint about Deer Lodge.
"We expect all provincial facilities to deliver support to veterans in line with the
agreements the department has with those facilities," Wellstead said in an email.
"If any veteran is not receiving the support they deserve, we will always look intothe matter to ensure they do."
Deer Lodge is the second former Veterans Affairs health centre to come under the microscope over allegations
of declining care in recent months after a class-action lawsuit was
launched against Ste. Anne's Hospital in Quebec last year.
A Quebec Superior Court judge in February authorized the class-action claim,
which alleges the level of care and services have dropped at the Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue
institution since it was transferred from federal to provincial control in April 2016.
The suit contends the handover saw staff levels cut by 40 per cent.
The shortfall was made up by part-time employees which resulted in a constant lack of personnel, the suit says. government gives the health centre additional funding on a per diem basis for additional
services for each of the 60 Second World War and Korean War veterans at the centre.
However, the centre's funding agreement with Veterans Affairs Canada was originally
set up for 155 veterans, said Scott, "and so the funding was being adjusted accordingly
to match the number of veterans in beds."
Scott, said some "efficiencies"
were implemented last fall to reflect the declining number of veterans in
the health centre, which the federal government transferred to the province in 1983.
While the province provides Deer Lodge funding for all of 400-odd patients, the federal
government gives the health centre additional funding on a per diem basis for additional 明るいとこで堂々と見せないといけないからか
ちんこでかい人多いね。
まぁルックス、体型のレベルは最低だけど・・。 >>130
なんでカナダの政治の話になってんの?誤爆? 結構やることやってるし激しいのは激しい
見た目レベルが低すぎてね。本当に辛かったです。
お客も減ってるね、もうそろそろやと思いますね。 国際地下に匹敵する層の低さに唖然
体鍛えてそうなのは皆無 体鍛えるとかどういうこと?そんなの死ぬほどどうでもいいんだけど。アンタだけ鍛えてどころよそ行きなさいよ! 明日から10日間か6日間休みよー
記憶が曖昧でごめんなさいね >>148
長期連休するのね
暇見つけて行くところだったわ
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