(art credit @kohkum/@abelsbrother)
This is Michael Lee. He sucks so bad, and god needs to kill him.
@kumied be there or be square :>
I don't know where to start, but he just sucks so so so SO bad, okay? Guy who got hired to do media work for a company and worked his way up to just completely glossing over labor abuses and human rights issues. Gets taken by another world and winds up in a fantasy land where his first impulse is to guyboss his way into an administrative position for the country's government.
He also has a missing sister that he was the last to see. He claims she disappeared on him too, and now he spends most of his nights getting drunk and begging his bodyguard (who he picked out because she looks like his sister) to "forgive" him, so take that as you will.
Also he ruined his "roommate"'s energy project, started a fire that decimated like most of a town, pinned all the blame on his roommate and then ran off. 0/10 would not trust I hope he explodes.
KILL HIM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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The Cult
Live Cult: Marquee London MCMXCI
1993 Beggars Banquet
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Tracks Disc One:
1. Nirvana
2. Lil’ Devil
3. Spiritwalker
4. Horse Nation
5. Zap City
6. Brother Wolf, Sister Moon
7. Revolution
8. Love
9. Rain
Tracks Disc Two:
1. The Phoenix
2. Wild Flower
3. She Sells Sanctuary
4. Full Tilt
5. (Amplification Breakdown)
6. Peace Dog
7. Love Removal Machine
8. Earth Mofo
9. Fire Woman
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Ian Astbury
Billy Duffy
Michael Lee
John Sinclair
Kinley Wolfe
* Long Live Rock Archive
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We are not created or destroyed. We are constantly transferred, shifted, and renewed. Everything we are is given to us. Death does not come when a body is too exhausted to live. Death comes because the brilliance inside of us can only be contained for so long. We do not die. We pass on, pass on the life burning through our throats. When you leave me, I will not cry for you. I will run through the strongest wind I can find, and welcome you home.
Michael Lee
from Pass On
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For the second year in a row, North Carolina's state Senate is poised to pass legislation that would legalize medical marijuana.
• Backed by one of the most senior and powerful members of the chamber, the bill is expected to clear that first major hurdle with relative ease within the next week.
Driving The News: Once that happens, all eyes — and pressure — will be on the House, where the legislation stalled in last year's short session.
• The bill, dubbed the Compassionate Care Act, may have better odds this year.
• A growing number of House Republicans are throwing their weight behind the legislation, some political observers say, in part because of the bill's key sponsor's willingness to share his own experience with debilitating illnesses.
Why It Matters: If the legislation makes it across the finish line, the state would be the 38th to legalize medicinal cannabis, making it accessible to North Carolinians suffering from a narrow list of ailments, including cancer, epilepsy and PTSD.
Details: The proposal includes restrictions on medical marijuana that would be among the tightest in the country, bill sponsors say.
• "In addition to providing support to those who are suffering from debilitating conditions, we also want to protect the general public and that's why you see the processes in place," said one bill sponsor, Republican state Sen. Michael Lee.
Between the Lines: Among the factors driving House Republicans' shift is the bill sponsor himself: Senate Rules chairman Sen. Bill Rabon of Brunswick County, who's been crafting the legislation for the better part of the last decade.
• Rabon first introduced the legislation last year and has since championed it by sharing that cannabis could have helped him through a nearly deadly battle with cancer decades ago.
"Bill Rabon is the heavyweight — there are a number of lobbyists — but honestly my respect for Rabon probably carries the most weight with me," one top House Republican, Rep. Jason Saine, told Axios.
Another factor in the growing support in the House for the legislation, Saine said, is time.
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"There is no word for a journey comprised entirely of leaving."
Michael Lee
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Pain isn’t worth any more than the words we can dig up to describe it.
Michael Lee, The Only Worlds We Know
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