File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
i'm in ur house

eatin ur other bugs
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
"earwig"?
>> Anonymous
"awesomewig"?
>> Anonymous
i'm on my chair

crying like a little girl
>> Anonymous
Hooray for the frigid north.
>> Anonymous
I have great respect for these critters.

They're the super-predators of the insect world. No arthropod in my house is safe as long as I have these guys scurrying about.
>> Anonymous
Wow. That thing takes everything that is creepy about both spiders and earwigs and magnifies it tenfold.

>>398612
Make room.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
I'm all over you at night, bitch.
>> Anonymous
What are they?
>> Anonymous
>>398619
my aunt hated spiders. Once I saw a hueg centapede in her basement and was about to stomp it. A voice informed me my death would immediately follow the bug's death. That was Aunty's pet spider-killer.
>> Anonymous
>>398803
dust mite
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>398616
I live in frequently frigid Colorado, and my house has plenty of these critters.

In another house I lived in here, I went down into the basement to do laundry and noticed that it was darker than usual down there. I looked up at the lone window to the outside, and it was completely covered in centipedes. I don't know if it was a mating frenzy or what, but it was a hideous swarm of the things. I'm crawling out of my skin just thinking about it.
>> Anonymous
Google "House Centipedes". I kill at least one of these motherfuckers every gawddamn day. I hate them.
>> Anonymous
>>398844
>I kill at least one of these motherfuckers every gawddamn day. I hate them.

But why? They're probably one of the most beneficial bugs you could possibly have in your home. ;_;
>> Anonymous
poor salt on them , it really fucks them up.
>> Anonymous
>>398834
Wow that centipede must have 100 legs
>> Anonymous
>>398932
What exactly do they do? Kill other bugs?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
>>398961
That's what they are suppose to do, but its like...the enemy of my enemy is my friend??? I CANT HAVE THESE THINGS CRAWLING AROUND, and they move fast as hell

::flush::
>> Anonymous
>>398973
pussy
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
they mark up my walls when I kill em
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
ick ick fucking ick
>> Anonymous
So many spineless turds in this thread. You should be more afraid of a grizzly bear smashing through your front door and raping your face.
>> Anonymous
Grizzly bears can't crawl up your vagoo while your sleeping in bed...
>> Anonymous
>>399083
That's what I thought too, before the camping trip last week.
>> Anonymous
>>398553
OH FUCK YOU. GET THE FUCK OUT OF MY HOUSE.
>> Anonymous
>>398961
>What exactly do they do? Kill other bugs?

Yes. With brutal efficiency I might add. They eat everything else that crawls around. Ants. Termites. Roaches. Yes, even spiders.

They're faster, larger, and more lethal than any other creepy crawler in your house. And unlike other bugs, they're not after your food, don't leave fucking webs everywhere, and generally don't want anything to do with you and do their best to keep out of your way.

Chances are, they're already in your house working hard in the shadows keeping everything else from infesting your home.

tldr;
I'm in ur house, eatin' ur pests
plz don't kill me cuz I look scary.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
if they come after you you're fucked. some are venomous


centipedes are evil
>> Anonymous
these guys are the sickness.

they always freak the womenfolk out tho... have to squoosh em in that case.

just remember that they move at up to 2m/s and do not feel fear or empathy.
>> Anonymous
I find it a marvel of badass evolution that house centipedes have adopted a form that not only makes them unstoppable bug killing machines, but also terrorizes higher mammals much larger in size.
>> Anonymous
MASSIVE heebie jeebies...
>> Anonymous
I JUST saw one of these scary mofo's in my apartment last night for the first time ever in my life. Creeped the fuck out of me, though now I know they are actually quite beneficial to have.
>> Anonymous
these things would scare the shit outta me if i saw one. but quite frankly those silver fish bugs or whatever the hell they're called freak me out too.
>> Anonymous
>>399115

They only scare the ones that do not understand them and those missing their backbones.
>> Anonymous
>>399103
So, they're basically a bigger/better version of spiders but don't leave webs around that kills pests amirite?

DO THEY KILL COCKROACHES? DO THEY?
>> Anonymous
>>399103

are you sure about all this? especialy about the "not getting in the way" thing. i don't want it crawling up my bed or something
>> Anonymous
>>399199
I have a fair number in my house, judging from occasional sightings. They generally keep out of sight, though, and keep to the creepier, less accessible parts of the basement.

When they do come out, I usually don't kill them, unless they get into the bath tub. Once while showering, my wife discovered a large, sodden one clinging to her foot to escape drowning. The screaming that ensued would've impressed Alfred Hitchcock.

tl;dr They do keep out of the way, but sometimes they seem to seek out water in the obvious places.
>> Anonymous
They are in my room and my mattress is on the floor. They're fine. strap on some fuckin balls, you lot.
>> Anonymous
>>398553
>>398609
>>398619
>>398978

Can we see you eat one?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>398553
A challenger appears!
>> Anonymous
>>399394
hahaha NO.
>> Anonymous
that is an unfair amount of legs
>> Anonymous
where are these thing indigenous to? I have these hateful spiders and crickets in my basement.... that even the local praying mantis colony cant seem to get the better of, and I'd like to toss a few of these at them.....
>> Anonymous
my basement for one... =\ (Toledo, Ohio)
>> Anonymous
I would pay to see one of those centipede trapped in a small glass box with a hungry praying mantis.
>> Anonymous
I'm pretty sure it's one here somewhere...

http://www.japanesebugfights.com/
>> Anonymous
if they're running around in the open you already have more than you need.

the ones you can't see are doing all the work.
>> Anonymous
>>398834

I'm not>>398616, but Colorado has nothing on the frigid north of Alaska.

Never seen one in my life.
>> Anonymous
Where the fuck are these native to? I lived in Japan for a bit and they were fairly common.
>> Anonymous
>>398844
I agree. I fucking hate these things and they are the bane of my existence. I don't give a shit that they eat other insects since they are just about the worst insect there is.

Not to mention, these motherfuckers will try to eat spiders. If I'm going to play geopolitics with my insects, I have no problem letting spiders live - in fact I do - to catch bugs. Spiders sit on their fucking webs and I generally know where they'll be at all times.

These creepy motherfuckers dart out of nowhere at the worst times.
>> Anonymous
>>399769
Meh, I think I'd rather take the 'pedes - especially since I learned that there are spiders in Australia that hide in boots...Oh, and they have fangs that will GO THROUGH YOUR GODDAMNED TOENAILS!!!!
*clears throat* So, yeah, centipedes > spiders
>> Anonymous
S. coleoptrata is indigenous to the Mediterranean region, but it has spread through much of Europe, Asia, and North America. In the United States, it has spread from the southern states, Mexico and Guatemala. It reached Pennsylvania in 1849, New York in 1885, and Massachusetts about 1890, and it now extends westward to the California coast and reaches north into Canada (Lewis 1981). In South Africa, they have been found in Gordon's Bay near Cape Town. In Japan, these creatures are referred to as gejigeji[4] and enjoy a level of popularity. They can often be seen for sale in pet stores.

They have also been found in eastern and south-eastern Australia, from Sydney to Tasmania as well as in New Zealand. Due to their nature of living in cool dark places with long lifespans, they have become an incredibly invasive species. The largest recorded specimen is 6 1/2 inches.
>> The Librarian
     File :-(, x)
This one looks kind of cute, won't you say?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
I didn't ever see one of these until a few months ago when we moved into our new house. These fuckers are all over the place at night and they use to scare the shit out of us before we knew what they were.
>> Anonymous
>>399755
Dude I'd rather take these centipede bastards over you fucking bat sized moths and beetles. Here I am after a 2 day travel to the artic circle and what flies into the fucking car? FUCKING MOTHRA THAT'S WHO
>> Anonymous
These guys I let live, along with spiders. Much to the dismay to the kids in the places I live.

Just this summer in NY while I was visiting my family there for a month, I was wondering why I haven't seen any cockroaches since we're in the basement. Then ones of these guys appeared.

Fuck yeah.

But those big tropical ones will be death on sight. Those guys can take me down so yeah.
>> Anonymous
Aside from the venomous ones they're harmless, like daddy long legs.

Yeah, they're creepy, but I've spotted 2 and I've had considerably less webbing around the house.

They're bugs, but at least these aren't venomous (midwest US) and dont leave webs.
>> Anonymous
>>399887

Daddy Long Legs? You let them live?

You do know that those fuckers are one of the most venomous spiders on Earth, but their mouths are just too small to pierce your skin. Imagine if you had an open wound though, just fucking imagine.
>> Anonymous
>>399893

That's bullshit, mythbusted even tested it.

MYTH BUSTED
>> Anonymous
>>399896
This anon speaks the truth. Daddy Long Legs venom is diluted piddle.
>> Anonymous
>>399909
Also, they're not spiders.
>> Anonymous
>>399394
http://encyclopediadramatica.com/Japanese_Bug_Fights
>> Anonymous
Centipede + Bagon = All
>> Anonymous
what's that?
>> Anonymous
can they kill you with their venom? somebody please answer me thanks in advance
>> Anonymous
OP here. I forgot I made this thread. I figured it would be deleted by now

I agree with everything>>399769said.

Since I have to slay at least one pretty much every night during the summer, I've gotten a lot braver over time. They seem to scurry from the light and remain pretty calm in the dark. When I was young I literally had a panic attack after seeing a huge one.

They always leave nasty brown stains on the walls when I smash them. It's also interesting how their legs continue to quiver even after they've been dismembered.

>The largest recorded specimen is 6 1/2 inches.
What the fuck? I read they're supposed to grow to about ~1.5inches max.

>I looked up at the lone window to the outside, and it was completely covered in centipedes.
WHAT
>> Anonymous
Epic thread! Lawl they creep me out, i hate how they movie so fast.
>> Anonymous
>>398949
>Wow that centipede must have 100 legs
>centipede
>100 legs

I fucking hate you. 11/10
>> Anonymous
>>399983
By the way in russian these things are called somewhat like "those with 40 legs" .
>> Anonymous
I live in alaska. fuck you bugs. lol.
>> Anonymous
cant kill humans
>> Anonymous
These get up to 6.5 inches? I'm going Ripley on these fuckers when I see the next one.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>399107
what?
>> Anonymous
just looking for>>400000th post
>> Anonymous
>>399732
lolz. thats so cool. Thanks.
>> Anonymous
>>398553
fuck these things, we have them in abundance where i live and i cant stand the fuckers.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>400181

in China they deep fry them on a stick and eat them.
>> Anonymous
>>400056
An 155MM APDS will sort that fucker out.


Hopefully.
>> Anonymous
>>400652
It won't sort it out...it'll do the exact opposite and scatter that fucker everywhere!
>> Anonymous
There's a lot of these around my house during winter too. I saw one in my bathtub once, but out of mercy I decided to spare it. As a thank you, it went on to eat all the spiders in my room, including their webs. When I got home, my room was spotless, and I was like, "WTF!?!"
>> Anonymous
those are yummy.
>> Anonymous
>>400693


Your ignorance is mildly amusing. I almost feel bad for you. In any case, you aren't a complete failure because you let the centipede be.
>> Anonymous
>>400804
Actually I think you guys acting smug and holier than thou about a fucking insect are fail.

By the logic that we should let these monsters infest our homes because they eat insects you could go around calling people who don't keep swarms of bees in their homes infantile. They produce honey!
>> Anonymous
You know what's even better than letting one nasty bug kill other bugs in your house? HOW ABOUT HAVING NO NASTY BUGS IN YOUR HOUSE. KILL EM FUCKING ALL. I don't care if it's not possible to kill them all KILL ON SIGHT KILL KILL KILL

that will be all
>> Anonymous
I never realized how beautiful these creatures are. Thanks /hr/
>> Anonymous
>>400914

You're allowed your ignorance. Rational != smug. You're baseless fears of these creatures are just that. They are a psychological disease passed down from generation to generation. Basically, you can thank whoever raised and conditioned you to think that creepy crawlies pose a threat to your well-being. Granted some do warrant genuine caution, but they are far and few between. Don't mess with any of them and chances are you will live a long, pitiful life never having any contact with them.

Also, your analysis of my logic regarding allowing arthropods to live in a human residence is way off. I liked the honey bee part though. I do keep about a dozen perforated 2x6's mounted under the eves of my house to provide nesting for Leaf-cutter bees.
>> Anonymous
>>401038
>you can thank whoever raised and conditioned you to think that creepy crawlies pose a threat to your well-being

I for one was never raised this way. I simply find these creatures to be hideous and invasive and my brain registers them as scary. It's really something innate. I know my father is rather fearless toward bugs and will go so far as to catch one just to watch it.

>>400693
At least here these things pretty much disappear by the winter. I've caught a few during the early winter who seem to be sickly and sluggish, perhaps due to the cold. They show back up around April~May and terrorize me until about November~December.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>401039
>>my brain registers them as scary

In normal people, natural curiosity takes precedent when encountering new experiences. So either you're naturally afraid of everything until you learn otherwise or someone taught you "more than four legs = ultimate evil" when you were young. You can pick one or the other, but arguing it only provides me with immediate entertainment, though less faith in humanity later.

Protip: You should have your father tie you to a chair and uncondition you.
>> Anonymous
>>399732
wow. thank you
>> Anonymous
Looking to see if this works O__O
Doubt it >>1
>> Anonymous
>>1
>> Anonymous
>>399788
Those centipedes don't have shit on a Sydney Funnelweb. I suggest checking your boots and then running if one pops out. Also, they can pierce leather, too.
>> Anonymous
>>401038
>>401038

So basically my analysis is right on. Now everyone who doesn't like these fuckers has been conditioned? You set up a toilet for your garden too? Did you know if you shit out there it's good fertilizer? Also, I've been having a rat problem in my house...think I should dump a bunch of snakes in the living room?

Seriously.
>> Anonymous
>>401108
>In normal people, natural curiosity takes precedent when encountering new experiences.

That's a pretty generalized statement and you sort of ignored the nuances of the human brain and individuals. Needless to say it's quite possible to fear something without being conditioned to fear it. Some people are afraid of the dark. Some people are afraid of clowns. Both are arguably irrational and both are hardly conditioned.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>401290

>>So basically my analysis is right on.
No, it's not.

>>Now everyone who doesn't like these fuckers has been conditioned?
Yes. It's how we learn. Haven't you ever watched a child discover something so wonderful to them that they can barely contain themselves? Have you ever seen a child so scared by an experience that they start crying if someone so much as references it later? Do you even understand what it means to condition a psychological response from an individual?

>>You set up a toilet for your garden too?
An outhouse? I don't think that's sanitary in the least.

>>Did you know if you shit out there it's good fertilizer?
That would be one way to fertilize a garden, I suppose. You should consult your local landscaping or home-improvement establishment for the best advice. I don't specialize in agricultural sciences.

>>Also, I've been having a rat problem in my house...think I should dump a bunch of snakes in the living room?
Of course. Make certain that you chose a highly-venomous species and keep a close watch on each snake that you release into your house to make sure that they do the job. Prodding them is an ideal way to encourage them to work quickly. If one of them bites you, do not be alarmed. Just sit down and allow natural selection to take its course.

>>Seriously.
Indeed.


>>401337

So you assert that fears can be born into each person as pure instinct, with absolutely no outside influence? I'd like to know more about this phenomenon. Link?
>> Anonymous
It would make evolutionary sense for people to have some fears develop at a very early age or pre-birth. A half-man, half-chimp child walking out on the savanna 3 million years ago didn't get a chance to pass on the lack of fear of big cats or of watering holes. The child that was cautious because it was scared shitless, it survived. That fear today is what puts those animals in zoos.

Insects posed less of a threat to our recent ancestors, but nobody died from being cautious. Those that played with dangerous spiders, are not one of our ancestors.

Going back even further, fears from our early mammalian ancestors likely explains our fear of snakes and other reptiles.

A quick check of google confirms this line of thinking is gaining approval in the scientific community.

That said, I agree whole-heartedly that fear from our past shouldn't be a bother in the modern world. 300+ million years of vertebrate evolution haven't prepared us fully for the modern world, so we need to adjust ourselves to fit it. Along that line, accepting of creatures that we wouldn't have accepted in a nest made of sticks or around our campfire is necessary, even beneficial.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>401399
I'm not convinced. Links or bullshit.

This is how fear conditioning works: Tomorrow, a child discovers and carefully captures a brightly colored jumping spider and proceeds to share the findings with their parents. The parents, upon seeing the bright colors and quick movements of the spider, deem it inherently dangerous (In reality, the spider normally avoids people and its bite isn't any worse than a wasp sting). Back to the parents, who have freaked out suddenly slapped the spider out of the child's hands and stepped on it. Rinse and repeat maybe a few more times. What does this teach the child? "Little crawlies are bad." The child won't understand why, but neither do the parents. Maybe the parents heard about someone dying from a "bug bite." Who knows. It just gets handed down through /conditioning/. People fear that which they do not understand. Some of us go out of our way to understand.
>> Anonymous
>>401399
>>That fear today is what puts those animals in zoos.

Oh wow. That drivel is just... wow. You are a certified moron. Stop posting. Disconnect your PC from the internet and kill yourself. Less botnets, less morons.
>> Anonymous
>>401413
>>It would make evolutionary sense for people to have some fears develop at a very early age or pre-birth. A half-man, half-chimp child walking out on the savanna 3 million years ago didn't get a chance to pass on the lack of fear of big cats or of watering holes. The child that was cautious because it was scared shitless, it survived. That fear today is what puts those animals in zoos.

>>Insects posed less of a threat to our recent ancestors, but nobody died from being cautious. Those that played with dangerous spiders, are not one of our ancestors.

>>Going back even further, fears from our early mammalian ancestors likely explains our fear of snakes and other reptiles.

>>A quick check of google confirms this line of thinking is gaining approval in the scientific community.

>>That said, I agree whole-heartedly that fear from our past shouldn't be a bother in the modern world. 300+ million years of vertebrate evolution haven't prepared us fully for the modern world, so we need to adjust ourselves to fit it. Along that line, accepting of creatures that we wouldn't have accepted in a nest made of sticks or around our campfire is necessary, even beneficial.


Hell, I'm quoting the whole thing just in case you come to your senses and try to delete it.
>> Anonymous
>>401416
You're the idiot that's preaching there's no such thing as instinct when it comes to things. As well as the fact you try to claim that parents teach kids to be scared of these things, then they were raised improperly.

Technically, if instinct doesn't exist at all in humans and all fears are irrational emotions that come from bad upbringing, I'll challenge that thought that we learn both form experiences AND associations.

Think about it for a second. You can sure teach a child that it's quite stupid to be afraid of a giant tarantula by letting them hold one, then working gradually smaller. They could in fact learn to like arachnids. The problem is then, they associate that ALL arachnids are good, when all are not good. I'm sure you would shit yourself screaming at your kid if you saw them handling a black widow or brown recluse.

Would that reaction then cause them to question what they've learned and perhaps start to dislike that certain type of creature?

With my kids, I teach that unless you know wtf it is, don't fucking touch it. A healthy dose of FEAR is not bad, it is in fact good for survival. Perhaps the fear that people have of these centipedes is irrational. That doesn't mean people are fucking crybabies because they weren't taught to enjoy all insects. Some were never given the chance to know wtf these things do, and just see them dart out. Healthy normal rational fear will have people backing up when a "creepy crawly" comes running towards them in a just lit bathroom.

So fuck off and die, thinking you know a goddamn thing about psychology. You know absolute shit. Please, put a bullet in that good for nothing brain in your skull.
>> Anonymous
>>401399
Looks like someone has been playing way too much Assassin's Creed. Genetic memory is pure science fiction.>>401410gave a perfect example about how responses are learned, not stamped in our DNA. If you had ever been around a small child you would know that they would just as soon pick up a damn rattlesnake as eat ice cream. They have to be taught that rattlesnakes can kill them and that they shouldn't pick them up. If the fears of our ancestors were embedded in our genes then every single human child would throw a screaming fit when they see ANY creature that could deal any amount of damage or that looks a bit odd. No one would have pet cats or dogs because cats and dogs hunted and ate us regularly back in the day. We would all be stupidly terrified of the dark because night is when the most dangerous predators are most active. We would all have intense fear of literally every goddamn thing.
>> Anonymous
>>399001
Hey it drinks your fucking BLOOD!

>>399838
With these long thin legs they look too weak to fight a cockroach or anything bigger, even if they can run around in circles around them. Are they poisonous?
>> Anonymous
>>401443
>Genetic memory is pure science fiction.
I don't think that's what he was getting at. He's saying that our ancestors who were born predisposed toward fearing certain things that were actually deadly would be more likely to pass on their genes than the ones who thought it was cool to casually walk by a hungry lion. Those types of people born with that fear will have kids and there's a chance those kids will have the same internal fears, which would aid in long-term, generational survival.

Now whether or not things actually went down like that, I don't know. But from a hypothetical standpoint it's not implausible.
>> Anonymous
>>401390
>So you assert that fears can be born into each person as pure instinct, with absolutely no outside influence? I'd like to know more about this phenomenon. Link?

To say absolutely no outside influence would be kind of absurd. One has to have at least a crude understanding of gravity to be afraid of heights. However, outside influence doesn't necessarily mean a fear was conditioned. My point is that the brain is an intricate piece of machinery and you can't just say every fear is outright conditioned. It's far too simple a conclusion on far too complex of a subject.

"It is generally accepted that phobias arise from a combination of external events and internal predispositions. In a famous experiment, Martin Seligman used classical conditioning to establish phobias of snakes and flowers. The results of the experiment showed that it took far fewer shocks to create an adverse response to a picture of a snake than to a picture of a flower, leading to the conclusion that certain objects may have a genetic predisposition to being associated with fear[3]. Many specific phobias can be traced back to a specific triggering event, usually a traumatic experience at an early age. Social phobias and agoraphobia have more complex causes that are not entirely known at this time. It is believed that heredity, genetics, and brain chemistry combine with life-experiences to play a major role in the development of anxiety disorders, phobias and panic attacks."

Look up "phobia" on Wikipedia.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
i have a suggestion: look up on titlebar. and what do you see? yeah, heheh. it's 4chan. now gtfo.
>> Anonymous
>>401500
Actually, it says "/hr/ - High Resolution". In fact, besides this one, yours is the only instance of the word "4chan" on the entire page.
>> Anonymous
>>401465
>With these long thin legs they look too weak to fight a cockroach or anything bigger, even if they can run around in circles around them. Are they poisonous?

To insects, quite. But to humans, no. Note the large venomous fangs on either side of the mouth in>>398554.
>> Anonymous
>>399103
thanks for the sanity & perspective. In China these are deep fried fast food. In the US they're cause to launch 1000 Orkin trucks.

weenies!
>> Anonymous
4chan 4chan 4chan
>> Anonymous
>>401441

I pity your children. You're concepts of the world around you are so warped that I feel bad for /anyone/ that has to rely on you.
>> Anonymous
>>398834
>I'm crawling out of my skin
THEESE WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOUNDS THEY WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILL NOT HEEEEEEALLLLLLLLLLLLLL
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>401491

No, he said that he believes that it is engraved in our DNA. I'm arguing that seniors teach it to inexperienced members of a group.

>>401492

Any adult with an ounce of sense can tell that a snake poses more of a threat than a flower. Snakes can move quickly/aggressively, have teeth/can bite, and are sometimes venomous. If a flower fit that description, the results would obviously show that flowers produce similar responses. I'm not talking about phobias. An adult doesn't have to have arachnophobia to cringe when they see a spider scurry across the floor. They just "know" that what they have to do is stomp on it. An adult doesn't have to have a phobia of heights to avoid the edge of a cliff. They just have a healthy respect for the forces of gravity.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
i took this, want more?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
the lens was an inch away from this fucker
>> Anonymous
>He's saying that our ancestors who were born predisposed

>No, he said that he believes that it is engraved in our DNA.... They just "know"

Oh, Kansas Board of Education, look what you've done.
>> Anonymous
>>402038
What?
>> Anonymous
>>399886
every home needs a couple centipedes or a gecko.