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Where is clement 

This is a phrase commonly used when your friend cannot find something that is very obvious. It can only be used by LSC students.
*Terry Lam coming
A: look behind u its terry lam
B: where is terry lam
A: where is clement
Where is clement by fuckurmompussy September 15, 2025

Where's Jake

When working on the 240 mainly but does happen to other cars Jake is involved in and never shows up or shows up late when the job is done.
Dam I just got all the dam broken wheels studs in this fuckers truck. Where the hell is he at? Where's Jake??

Where this hand come from

When someone asks for free handouts. Specifically about money or food from others without offering anything in return, usually expecting it to be given for free.
When his friend gave him the new notebook, he laughed and said, ‘Yo, where this hand come from?

Where the Fun Begins

The intersection marked by radio towers where Massachusetts State Routes 117 and 20 bridge over I-95
The two-story octagonal bank is one of many landmarks to Where the Fun Begins
Where the Fun Begins by o23gfh January 20, 2026

Where is the donkey tied

God, that'd be so fucking hot. Someone rips a fat, musty fart in the confined, tiny space you're in. You have no escape. The smell overwhelms your nostrils as you're forced to breathe in that smelly egg fart from a strong, Greek man. Your eyes water, your cock throbs. The smell in the room slowly goes away, and you notice. Desperate for that arousal to intensify you grip your cock and begin furiously jerking off. You jizz a load so hard it nearly alerts the Trojans about the truth of the horse. After that, you swore never to speak of this event.
Human 1: Where is the donkey tied? Human 2: You jizz a load so hard

Where-Is-Your-God Fallacy

A dismissive rhetorical move, often used in debates about religion or spirituality, where someone demands physical proof of the divine—"Where is your God? Show me!"—as if the absence of physical evidence proves non-existence. The fallacy lies in demanding a kind of evidence that the claim, by its nature, doesn't offer. Spiritual experiences aren't physical objects; divine reality, if it exists, may not be empirically accessible in the way rocks and trees are. The demand for physical proof of non-physical claims is category error dressed as skepticism.
"I tried to explain my spiritual experiences. Response: 'Where is your God? Show me a photo!' That's Where-Is-Your-God Fallacy—demanding physical evidence for what may not be physical. Spiritual claims aren't scientific hypotheses; they're about meaning, experience, and transcendence. Demanding empirical proof is like demanding to hear a painting. Wrong tool for the domain."