Really. Daughters should be responsible for the errors of their fathers. ) Such case is described in the book "Plaisirs de Tibère. Mœurs flagellantes de la décadence romaine" by H. Gaultier de Saint-Amand.Those patrician senators are always scheming, and it's their daughters who always suffer the consequences!
O tempora, o mores! (Cicero)View attachment 527599 Tied to a horse's tail while my own tail is whipped? Oh, those nasty people down in Languedoc!
Now that's how you conduct an interrogation Moore! Didn't you pay attention at the Police Academy or did you get through it by sleeping with your instructors?View attachment 527509 Yep! Must be me. Bit of angry, but probably I'll-considered, back talk going on there.
Gives meaning to the term "good old days"Old times
Unknown artists
In reality, one would loose consciousness after about thirty to sixty minutes and die within a few hours (harness syndrome).I really like #2. The thought of hanging by my wrists like that, half-naked, against a cold dungeon wall is exciting.
Some of those spanking machines look like Repertor inventions...EndArt
Some of those spanking machines look like Repertor inventions...
Repertor testing his new spanking machine. He is contemplating Loxuru's remark and imagining what the wonders of the chaos theory could do.The disadvantage of these spanking machines is that the punished can soon anticipate on the place and intesity of the next hit. Therefore, manual work is preferred, where each lash is different.
Replication: always a foundation of good scienceView attachment 527715 Repertor testing his new spanking machine. He is contemplating Loxuru's remark and imagining what the wonders of the chaos theory could do.
You should know that I’m not at all a fan of corporal punishment. However, I am very much a fan of the great lengths inventors and perhaps sometimes kinky “free-thinkers” are willing to go to when it comes to building an automated contraption that does things that a human would normally do.
Now you tell me! After I published all my papers in The Journal of Irreproducible Results http://www.jir.com/Replication: always a foundation of good science
Stephanie Burke