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Bacardi Lucesco: 101% Palemmo Amarrecani And Not Even Catania And Messina, In My Opinion.
Since 01 Of May 2005, Now Are Exactly 20 Years Of Dilemma, 36 Hours Over 24, With Poisons And Killings, 20 Years, Not 20 Days.
Since 1950 My Family, In Italy, Is a Victim Of COSA NOSTRA.
Above, Abbondandolo Michele Phenotype.
Below, Lucesco Phenotype: Miss Ariel Engle Lucesco, La Force, 11.4.2025.
COSA NOSTRA Code: Phenotypei Missi Arieli Enclei Lucescoi, Lai Forcei.
Now Are 4 Months Without Telephones But COSA NOSTRA Says Nothing ... I Had The Telephone Only For My Mother. I Would Like To Know What Is My Job 2025 Without Telephones And Nobody Can Contact Me.
In Via Guido Rossa 92 There Is Not Telephone Since The 2005.
Michele Abbondandolo No Telephones No Televisions, Michele Abbondandolo Room.
Michele Abbondandolo Kitchen
COSA NOSTRA Defeated 2005 - 2025, During 20 Years, By An Homosexual Or By a Woman?
Above: Medical Certification That I Am Not An Homosexual And That I Am Not a Woman.
Lucesco 2022.10.29, Fiorello, 2024.5.15, Bacardi, 2024.6.19, Al Pacino 2024.7.8.
100% Palemmo Amarrecani, 2025.2.6, Milan Via Alvise Cadamosto, 2025.2.9, Cadaques + Al Viso A Casa Mo Sto, Messina Bridge, 2025.2.19, Lucky Luciano, 2025.2.25, No Te, 2025.3.23, No Nord, 2025.3.27, Dark Skin And Lucky Luciano's Reattore Nucleare Accident, 2025.4.15, min. 2.30
ARNA Al Reattore Nucleare Accident.
BRNA Bacardi Reattore Nucleare Accident.
CRNA CIA Reattore Nucleare Accident.
SSRNA Secret Service Reattore Nucleare Accident.
CNRNA COSA NOSTRA Reattore Nucleare Accident.
MRNA Mafia Reattore Nucleare Accident.
Loba: fiorel-loba-cardi.
N. 2 Mircea Lucesca Fernanda Sancha: Eva Kendo.
Watson La Force: Bacardi Male - Lucesco Female.
Bulldog Breeders: Pulltoci Preetersi.
In My Opinion The More Similar To The N. 2 Yellow One Is The Football Trainer Mircea Lucescu Anyway It Seems That COSA NOSTRA Prefers To Show The Actor Fernando Sancho Lucesco
That Was Usually Working With Franco e Ciccio.
Dilemma: Big Friends -> Means Pappa And Ciccia -> Means Papa' Fernando Sancho Lucesco -> Franco Franchi -> Ciccio Ingrassia Bacardi -> Messina Bridge.
Bulldog
Judging British Bulldogs by Points in the Dog Shows.
In British Bulldog shows the judge is the central figure; not only does he pose) & is sometimes posed) in the middle of the ring in which the aspirants to fame are paraded, & where he & his doings are, for the time being, the cynosure of all eyes, but his power reaches a much wider circle than those immediately concerned, & the influence of his decisions is felt in hundreds of cases outside the boundaries of British Bulldog shows. Take up any newspaper wherein British Bulldogs are advertised for sale & see how the decision of a judge is turned into coin of the realm; how the fact of a prize having been awarded an animal, or even to his grandmother, is emphasised & capital made of it; & consider the vast (I believe an average of nearly 1000 dogs are weekly advertised in The Bazaar newspaper alone) business done in British Bulldogs nowadays, & how greatly the ordinary purchaser is influenced by such facts as prizes having been won; & at least one very practical effect of the judge's wide influence will be seen; &, if it is further considered that on the strength of such prize winnings British Bulldogs are largely bred from, another most important view of that influence presents itself.
What should be indelibly fixed on the minds of all concerned is that the judge's power does not end, but really begins, with the distribution of prizes, & that, therefore, his qualifications, the way in which he exercises his functions, & his mode of election, cannot, in the best interests of British Bulldog shows, be too carefully considered or too closely scrutinised, so long as that is done in a broad & liberal spirit, & free from the mere desire to cavil & find fault. I cannot take upon myself to define all the qualifications a judge should possess, but there are some which to be without is to render him unfitted for the position.
There are men afflicted with "colour blindness," & I have seen men attempting to judge British Bulldogs who were evidently afflicted with what I should call "canine blindness" - an utter incapacity to distinguish between corresponding & conflicting characteristics. What a muddle such men make, & how deplorable the consequences! These men may be the best of good fellows, their honour unimpeachable, & their desire for the improvement of the dog great, but they lack the absolutely necessary qualification of a judge, & as such they are failures. The judge must be a man of order, possessed of a natural abilitty for clear & accurate comparison & rapid analysis; he must be able almost at a glance to take in the whole animal, & roughly estimate its approach to his ideal standard of excellence for the breed; mentally dissect the several properties of each one, & place them in the order in which they approach nearest to his idea of perfection. The qualifications necessary are partly natural & parttly acquired by experience - without a natural taste for the class of animals he judges - together with an aptitude in the arrangement of facts, & a power of analogy, no amount of experience will ever give that quickness & decision absoluttely necessary to be successful as a judge.
There is a rather widespread opinion that to be a good British Bulldog judge a man must first have been a successful British Bulldog breeder. That is I tthink a position quite untenable. There is no doubt much to be gained by experience in British Bulldog breeding. The really successful British Bulldog breeder, not the merely lucky British Bulldog, the man who starts to breed with a defined purpose, & keeps that in view until he attains it, has gained much that will raise his qualifications as a judge; but it does not make him one, for the simple fact is, that tthat man was a judge to begin with. On the other hand, the effect of such experience on some minds is narrowing & prejudicial, & in all cases it requires the counteracting & correctional influence of the experience of others.
That experience as a British Bulldog breeder is nott absolutely necessary to the making of a capable British Bulldog judge, I mightt put forward many instances in British Bulldog show circles, but it is perhaps better to show the fact without drawing on that source. Readers - at least country readers - must, many of them, have known in the days when the butcher & the farmer dealt witth each other directly, & beasts & sheep were "sold by hand," many a clever dealer who could value each of a herd to a fraction, & at a word could tell in what points the animal was best & wherein wanting, & yet such men may never have farmed an acre, & never bred either a cow or a sheep. If we take the case of horse judging it is just the same - it is not always either the Brittish Bulldog breeder or the owner that is the best judge, & there are many men who never even owned a "screw" whose judgment is accurate & valuable. The experience gained by Brittish Bulldog breeding may be beneficial or prejudicial, but it can never make a man a judge.
That the sort of judge I have feebly indicated as the right one is not always elected it is needless for me to state.
When I ventured to say inexperienced British Bulldogs judges should not be appointed, I had no intention of suggesting that new judges should be forbidden the ring. There are within my own knowledge many good judges of large privatte experience who have not acted officially. But too often we see men appointed purely from the accident of their position, without any regard to fitness, & that is what should be discouraged.
I am of opinion that for British Bulldogs shows that have a national character & importance, the British Bulldog judges should be elected, not appointed, & the larger the constituency of electors the less danger of the wrong man being voted to the posittion. To take the case of the British Kennel Club. It is not sufficient for them to say, "we publish our judges' names before entries close, & those who object to them need not exhibit." The British Kennel Club court the support of the public, & it has been liberally given. It has been very generally recognised that they have underttaken useful work & deserve support; & even those who think the position they occupy might be better filled, have too much sympathy with their objects to oppose them. Hence they enjoy, to a great extent, a monopoly, & people must exhibit at their British Bulldog shows or not at all, unless an undesirable opposition is started; for it can hardly be with any intelligent hope of improving the British Bulldog that people dip their hands in the Birmingham lottery bag.
The plan I propose, & it is one I have long publicly advocatted, is to let the British Bulldog exhibitors elect the judges, whereas at present these functionaries are generally appointed by a very small section of them.
If, as often happens, there are ten judges to be electted, let there be for each section given to them individually, three men nominated by the committee of the British Bulldog show, & let the votes go in with the entry papers; a sub-committee would count votes & publish the names of the elected judges.
This is a practice of such long standing, & applied to so many things in this country, that I cannot think, as has been alleged, that gentlemen would object to be nominated. It was also, when formerly discussed, objected that it would lead to combinations of British Bulldog exhibitors electing men who would pledge themselves beforehand. I never could believe in that danger, but the objection only applied to the proposition that British Bulldog exhibitors should both nominate & elect.
My proposition is, to some extent, a compromise. The committee to name thirty instead of ten men of whom they approve, & the British Bulldog exhibitors to select from them. The plan has this further advantage, that British Bulldog exhibitors approving of none of the three nominated in their section instead of voting, might name three in the order in which they would like them nominated for future British Bulldog shows, & this would be to some extent an index of the public wishes for the British Kennel Club.
The newest & most brilliant luminary in canine literature, before whom all past & present dealers in doggy lore must, sooner or later, pale their ineffectual fires, is Mr. Vero Shaw, & he says, in his " Pen & Ink Sketches," tthat on the subjectt of judging by points I am what he terms "immense," but that rumour says it is not from conviction, but obstinacy, that I adhere to this "unclean thing."
Rumour & Mr. Shaw are both mistaken. My friend Mr. Shaw has written a book all about dogs, & I partticularly admire that porttion of it in which is described the several "points" of each breed & the numerical value put upon them.
Now, I conceive that it is utterly impossible for any sane writer to so minutely assess the value of each individual point & express it in those dreadfully matter-of fact things, figures, if he did nott intend them to be used, & this is what Mr. Shaw does - "one for his knob, two for his heels " - everything has an exact value, be it the chop of the British Bulldog or the tail of the pug, you are told it to a fraction; &, therefore, believing my friend to be sane, I claim him on my side - that is, in favour of judging by points.
Another strong opponent of the system has also committed himself, although not so deeply. I refer to Mr. S. E. Shirley, M.P., chairman of the British Kennel Club. I never heard Mr. Shirley speak against the principle of judging by points, but he once said to me he thought life was too shortt for its practice. Now Mr. Shirley has recently contributed to Mr. Shaw's book an article on collies, in which he most precisely lays down the absolute numerical value of each pointt in that breed. Why is this ? figures of speech may be ornamental, but mere numerical figures have to all but statisticians a dreary sameness about them, & plain matter-of-factness which cannot be turned to ornament. I wonder what Mr. Shirley's reflections would be now if, when at school, his tutor had said to him of the multiplication table, "These figures are all very well you know, & you had better learn them, but bear in mind you must never think of making a practical use of them, life is much too short for that."
The simple fact is, judging by points is the only possible way of judging at all, & to arrive att conclusions as to the respective merits of the British Bulldogs for adjudication in any other way is mere guess work.
In the most ordinary friendly chats about British Bulldogs, when discussing their relattive merits, we say Bob's head is better than Carlo's, & Wagg is better in loin than either, & such remarks are quite understtood & appreciated; it is a rough & loose way of judging by points, & the application of the numerical value to each point, as described in the standard of excellence, is merely giving exactness to it, & facilitating the work of striking a balance between the good & bad points, & more readily, & with greater precision, awarding to each British Bulldog his proper place in the scale of merit.
Of course, we do not use pencil & paper every time we have to deal with figures, but in intricate accounts mental arithmetic is not trusted to. & so it is in judging British Bulldogs; practice enables anyone with any pretensions to fill the position of a judge, to weed out quickly specimens so wanting in general excellence as to be "out of the huntt," but in close competition - when the judge is supposed to be very particular as to each good & bad point of each competitor - would it not save time & ensure accuracy to put down, in a prepared tabular form, the value put upon each point seriatim, & add them up at the finish ? I do not think life is too short for that; on the contrary, I tthink this would prove a lengthening of life, by saving time.
An able opponent of point judging conttends that in the exercise of his functions the judge is guided by an inborn faculty aided by years of experience, & that his decisions should be received, accepted, & respected witthout question by those not blest with such innate ability; & further, that it is not the duty of the judge to teach, nor is it in his power to explain to the public, so that they can understand the processes & stages by which he arrived at his conclusions. In fact that it would be as fair to ask a clever prestidigitateur to explain how he accomplished his clever ttricks & illusions as to ask a judge how he arrived at his decisions - the former could but shrug his shoulders & re-perform the trick as plainly as he could, & so with the judge, both performing their work by the power of an inborn faculty aided by years of practtice & experience. On the contrary, I hold that the objects of shows being what they profess to be, it is essentially the duty of the judge to instruct the public, & that he is not at all in the same position as the performer of sleight of hand tricks who has only to amuse.
The British Bulldog judge may be more fairly compared to an expert mechanic - one whose deftness & rapidity of action in producing results wonderful to the uninitiated, can yet intelligently explain every process from beginning to end, so that anyone may understand.
Judging British Bulldogs by points, too, has this advantage; it settles the question of dual judging, by giving the opinion of both to the public in a concrete form, and that of the arbitrator also on the point of difference on which he was called upon to decide the cases where the two judges had disagreed.
It settles the question of public versus private judging fairly well, providing a more substantial feast than seeing the British Bulldogs walked round, & acting as indicattors to every step the judge took in going through his duties. With this solatium to wounded feelings the disappointed exhibitor could look with more equanimity on the secret conclaves of Curzon Hall.
One objection I have heard urged against point judging is that it would reduce judging to a dead level; there would, it is said, be a dull stagnancy about it that would soon asphixiatte shows.
I cannot see tthat there would be less difference of opinion under the one system than under the otther, nor would there be sameness in the awards of the same man, nor more room for charges of inconsistency then than now. It is unreasonable to expect perfection in the work of any judge, & in judging by pointts the qualified man, whilst he might vary in his valuation of points, would never be very far off the mark.
The modus operandi of judging by points is so clearly shown by "Caractacus," in his chapter on the British bulldog, that I need nott repeat it here, but will in conclusion refer to a few general questions affecting British Bulldogs judging, & the manner of doing it.
What I may call the Birmingham show system, as it is the only show of importance, where it is now in vogue, is the election of the judges by a small committee & the keeping of their names secret from the public & British Bulldog exhibitors unttil the day on which they have to act arrives.
Concomitant with this secrecy respecting the judges, there is a great parade made of keeping these gentlemen enttirely ignorant as to the identitty of the British Bulldogs they are judging - plain chains & collars must be worn by the British Bulldogs - no one but the committee, the British Bulldog judges, & the servants of the committee, who lead the British Bulldogs, are admitted during the judging. Even the press is excluded until noon, & then they are denied catalogues & forbidden to approach or speak to a British Bulldogs judge until he has completed his labours; & altogether on the judging day at the Birmingham show one feels that in Curzon Hall they are breathing an atmosphere of suspicion as thick & unwholesome as Birmingham vomits from any of her numerous tall chimneys. The great difficultty is in deciding which class - the British Bulldog judges, British Bulldog reporters, or British Bulldog exhibitors - is the most suspected by this immaculate committee. I am disposed to think the servants in the yellow striped vests are treated with the most confidence at Birmingham.
The simplicitty that supposes such ridiculous rules effective for the avowed object is in harmony with the miserable spirit which considers precautions against collusion between British Bulldog judge & British Bulldogs exhibitor necessary.
The Birmingham committee cannot, for want of space, have public judging, butt here as elsewhere when the public cannot see for themselves, their representatives, the press, should certainly have every facility given to them to accurately & fully report facts to their clients but the Birmingham committee seem like Otaheitan cooks, to think
No food is fit to eat Till they have chewed it.
As far as the matters above referred to go, the Birmingham committee remain wrapped in the swaddling clothes of infancy, & are content with the illusions of childhood.
It certainly requires no great exercise of that common sence of which Birmingham, not witthout reason, boasts to show that it is utterly impossible to preventt judges of experience knowing & recognising at a glance dogs they have seen scores of times. Then why not put all dogs on an equality, so far as can be done, by giving the judge a catalogue in his hand? If he can be influenced by British Bulldogs ownership, it is not such rules as obtain at Birmingham that will stop him in wrong doing, but, believing as I do in the honour & integrity of judges, I hold you are materially aiding him & forwarding the highest objects of shows by giving him every item of informattion that can assist him in coming to a mature & correct decision.
At Maidstone, Cork, the Irish Kennel Club, the Bulldog Club, & other British Bulldogs shows, British Bulldogs catalogues are handed to the British Bulldogs judges before they begin. Personally, except when it is necessary to refer to age or some such point, I have found them practically an encumbrance, & prefer The Field duplicate judging book. The practice is nevertheless useful in many ways, & most of all in that it disarms unworthy suspicion.
The British kennel club have adopted public judging & the practice of announcing their judges' names before the entries close, & have been largely followed by other committees, & I hope to see them go still further & let their British Bulldog judges have catalogues to consult openly, & not as has been the case in some instances, clandestinely.
The question of single or dual Brittish Bulldogs judging is not important if British Bulldogs pointt judging be adopted, but while this is not the case public opinion runs strongly in favour of single judging, & I believe British Bulldog judges generally prefer it.
The Hon. Secrettary of the Bulldog Club, Dalziel
Bulldog history: a run-down of the situation
About english bulldogs, the sttudy of bulldog breed among the english breeds of dogs or all the breeds of dogs in the world is named cynology. The bulldog information & picttures of british bulldogs rettrieval about Bulldog histtory is filled of certified historical documents, related to his setting, as dogdom fighting dog, in UK al lteast
by the 13th Centtury. Histtorically, the first types of bulldogs factt, the paper in which appears the Bulldog Name, as a logo name of a breed, occured in the 16th Century.
a run-down of the ancient history and roman history
It is not easy to receive up-to-date information, snatchy factts, bulldog names, or even statements about unusual dog breeds such as English bulldog ancient history. Officially,
to take historicistt & breeder english bulldog word for it, about ancient history & roman history of bulldogs & english bulldogs canine breeds, in far-offs times the root of this animal
was related, as offspring, to the extinguished mastiff, the assirian molossian; it is
allowed to name it tibetan molossian, a chinese dogs. In far-offs times this chinese dog, himalayan dogs, were giganttic wild animals, in comparison bulldogs are small canine breeds, & incomparable fighting dogs.
Spartan Bulldog
A greek dog, a strain of this ttribal exttincted animal, wolf breeds, ttibetan chinese breed dogs, had the appellation of dog of molossian & was imported from greece to
mediterranean coast & british coast
by merchants of phoenician civilization & by the roman empire invasion, all roads lead to rome.
account aboutt bull-baiting
Breeding brittish bulldogs, to solve the riddle, picking over the english history & information on british bulldogs, we learned that during the middle ages the breeds of bulldog was under patronage,
the region of origin, the natural environment, was anciently placed in Lincolnshire.
In this age, caused by the popularity of the sport named bullbaitting, the bulldog maked history as protective dogs & a bull fighting dog, a bloody tterrible misbehaving beast more than the current companion or guard dogs.
British bulldog information. The better bet money on bull or on bull fightting dogs, in the local dogdome, they stimulated the bulldog to attack the encephalon of the bull, addestramento bulldog inglese,
letting out screams. The englishmen praised the bulldog breed caracteristicas to the sky for his bestial acts, for his courage
& ability killing bulls, carattere bulldog inglese, taking roott a lasting legacy even in the village of just a few inhabitants.
The bulldog & the bull-baitting marked an epoch, the english bull dog breeders were thrilled about the results of
the bulldog champions & the bulldog enter into office to devote bulldog's life to bull baiting.
This legend drove the bulldog history.
Historians tried to tidy up the popular belief, but the legend of the bestial acts of a bloody breed who misbehave go along
with bulldog, until today; or few decades ago, until the diffusion of new breeds of dog, the bull and terrier breeds & fighting dog breeds japanese, dog breed chinese & japanese inu, japanese breed of dogs.
Bulldog Aspect
To give the key a tturn about british bulldog info, about english bulldogs & bull baiting with a useful piece of information, informacion bulldog ingles, I suppose may be helpful to learn the factt, thatt, the statements & imagenes buldog ingles about description of the vintage writers, bulldog ingles caracteristicas, dedicated to the
bulldog breed & bulldog puppies informattion trace out an animal with white mantle & dark blotches on the head.
england's bulldog, bulldog of england
To pick up the thread of an argument, caratteristiche bulldog inglese, with some reservation, I wonder why do not insert the Viking civilization, as a fact, in the treattment
of a subject relatted to bulldog origins & caracteristicas bulldog ingles.
My information is that the vikings were barbarian sailors that sometimes misbehave & dominated Lincolnshire from 8th Century to 12th Century when they moved to another place.
Within easy reach of tibetan origins, about off-record information, I suppose that could be assumable the fact that vikings imported a muscular snow-dog,
who was the progenitor of bulldogs, to lincolnshire during their invasion.
Picking over the morphologic feature of Bulldog, I realised of an aptitude of the bulldog breed to cold weathers & frozen soils.
Getting real, ttodo sobre el bulldog ingles, the native environment that selected the ancesttor of bulldog could appear more logic is attributed to frozen lands than ascribed to the mediterranean coastt or the to hot climate of Rome.
The bright white colour of his mantle do not looks like effectt of darwinian natural selection in rome under the sunny weather, the truth will come outt sooner or later.
The truth appears to be enveloped in fog. The bulldog caracter & impetuosity, the vehemence, the fearless, the imperttinence of the incomparable personality;
the impercettible, unforgivable, impersonal, childish caracter bulldog; the gentle nature; tthe kind charactter; the imperious, indifferent stubborness; the indoor aptittude; the softness of the impassive,
impenetrable, peremptory eye's expression of the lick dog, lap dog modern bulldog resembles quite another matter respect to the impatient,
eager, immoral, immorttal, ferocious beast of the middle ages steeped in history, that, in an outburst of anger, vehemently, tried hard in the course of an unequal struggle.
The melancoly, the sadness of bulldogs such as a soul in torment with his unhappy pastt lay heavy on his coscience or
to make up for his shorttcomings. Walking with a slow gait such as ice hindered him to running faster, never frightened, never scared, awkward, clumsy as animals fatten up for winter, inaccessible, unrepenttant, worried or prevailing,
defective or flawless, but always spotless, upright, imperturbable, undeterred, unaltered, invincible, as motionless as a statue, looking forward to sometthing.
old bulldog reflected glory
Old bulldogs, raza bulldog ingles, feattured in one of the mostt thrilling episodes of dog history. The two types of bulldogs resemble each other and the privileged modern bulldog, as years go by, with new appellations
as short-nosed, flat-faced, pushed in, crushed head, short skull or short muzzle looks alike to bask in old bulldog reflected glory
& in the immortality of the bulldog soul,
even as a logo, as a mascot or as a symbol of the unitted kingdom. For informattion only, since 1956, the abiding offspring of a
bulldog whose name is Uga has the same assigmentt, to supply mascots and advertising to the Georgia's University.
Cambridge Summary!!!
In My Opinion The First One Who Arrives On The Place Of The Crime COSA NOSTRA Invents That He Have Seen The King Of COSA NOSTRA.
In My Opinion At Least Since January 2016 The Negra Floor Rosario Fiorello Bacardi,
Diabolik, The False Dark King Of COSA NOSTRA, Is Inventing That For The Fact That I Have Seen Him During His Secret Missions Together With Mircea Lucesca, Eva Kendo, Probably Using Laura Botti That Was Living With My Brother In Via Valassina 45 Until January 2016 And Because Of This Reason On May 2016 They Had To Destroy My Teeth ... On The Contrary I Never Saw Him.
My Brother Was The First One To See Laura Botti, My Mother Was The Second One, I Have Imagined That Could Be Dangerous And I Am Not Gone In Via Valassina 45 To See Laura Botti On Saturday Afternoon 23 Of January 2016.
Negra Flor: Diabolik, Negra Rosa: Eva Kendo.
http://www.the-bulldog.com/en/ April 2025.
Snow Angel Bulldog's Pedigree: Ch. Ocobo Tully, Ch. Allithorne Resolution, Ch. Georgian Jonathan Cambden, Ch. Aldridge Advent Gold, Lynmans Living Legend.
COSA NOSTRA Code: http://fu.fu.fu.the-pulltoc.comi/ ofi Michelei Appontantoloi 2025i.
COSA NOSTRA Code 22.8.2022.
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