Show me your rear window decals/stickers
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#63
Honey Boo Boo's Child
![Default](https://www.f150forum.com/images/icons/icon1.gif)
I think this would make your truck more attractive than that red tiger... Lmao CRHS Class of 03!
#64
ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ
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[QUOTE=11BLKFX4EB;2859683]
Two little words. With these two words, two concepts were verbalized that have lived for nearly two and a half Millennia. They signify and characterize both the heart of the Warrior, and the indomitable spirit of mankind. From the ancient Greek, they are the reply of the Spartan General-King Leonidas to Xerxes, the Persian Emperor who came with 600,000 of the fiercest fighting troops in the world to conquer and invade little Greece, then the center and birthplace of civilization as we know it. When Xerxes offered to spare the lives of Leonidas, his 300 personal bodyguards and a handful of Thebans and others who volunteered to defend their country, if they would lay down their arms, Leonidas shouted these two words back.
We have adopted this defiant utterance as a battle cry in our war against oppression because it says so clearly and simply towards those who would take our arms.
It signifies our determination to not strike the first blow, but also to not stand mute and allow our loved ones, and all that we believe in and stand for, to be trampled by men who would deprive us of our God-given or natural, if you will rights to suit their own ends.
![](http://thefiringline.com/HCI/images/Leonidas.gif)
Molon Labe! (mo-lone lah-veh)
They mean, Come and get them! They live on today as the most notable quote in military history. And so began the classic example of courage and valor in its dismissal of overwhelming superiority of numbers, wherein the heart and spirit of brave men overcame insuperable odds. Today, there lies a plaque dedicated to these heroes all at the site. It reads: Go tell the Spartans, travelers passing by, that here, obedient to their laws we lie.We have adopted this defiant utterance as a battle cry in our war against oppression because it says so clearly and simply towards those who would take our arms.
It signifies our determination to not strike the first blow, but also to not stand mute and allow our loved ones, and all that we believe in and stand for, to be trampled by men who would deprive us of our God-given or natural, if you will rights to suit their own ends.
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#65
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This was on the back window of a Ford wrecker. It was too funny, I just had to share it.
On the back window of a wrecker from Acme towing and recovery (recovery a.k.a. repossession)
"Helping people get back on their feet"
I thought it was too funny!
On the back window of a wrecker from Acme towing and recovery (recovery a.k.a. repossession)
"Helping people get back on their feet"
I thought it was too funny!
![No](https://www.f150forum.com/images/smilies/no.gif)
#68
Police Officer
![Default](https://www.f150forum.com/images/icons/icon1.gif)
Molon labe (Greek: μολὼν λαβέ molṑn labé; Ancient Greek. "come and take", is a classical expression of defiance reportedly spoken by King Leonidas I in response to the Persian army's demand that the Spartans surrender their weapons at the Battle of Thermopylae. It is an exemplary use of a laconic phrase.
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