* Imagine important stuff you might want too read here *
- OHO!
Serverlist:
L4D:
House of Hellion (14 people vs): 66.150.221.94:27015
L4D2:
House of Hellion #2 (14 people vs): 69.147.229.218:27015
Rules of Conduct (originally written by hellion, edited and updated by OHO!)
1. No hacking!
2. No racism!
3. No harrassment of other players!
4. No bringing into dis-repute the WKH name at all under any circumstance!
5. No bringing dis-repute the name of our affiliates either ie. XPG, HK, NDA or Cybermarines!
Dis-respect to these rules will mean INSTANT DISMISSAL from our group! We are all about getting together and having fun, NOT to make enemies! Thank you!
[XsD]Smoken_Gun
In-Game
Company of Heroes: Tales of Va...
Have Gun Will Travel
In-Game
Left 4 Dead 2 - Join
scorpion
In-Game
Torchlight
[☭] [SGU]D£mΘnîÇ_ZyT3 [☭]
Online
Steam Profile
shiver
United States 
Patriotic American, who plays Left 4 Dead, Team Fortress 2, Fallout 3, Empire total war, World of Warcraft, and is very bad with spelling.
The Timber Rattle Snake was first used by Benjamin Franklin in the 1750s. He suggested, mockingly, that since the Brittish were deporting criminals to the Americas, The Americas should export Rattle snakes to england.
In the French & Indian War, he made a woodcut that depicted a snake cut into 8 pieces that reprisented various colonies. The slogan for this woodcut was "Join or Die". This was used to symbolize how, if divided against the French and their native allies, the colonies would be defeated individually. Franklin was using this to support the idea of a united continental army.
During the American Revolution, the Timberland Rattlesnake continued to become more prominant as a symbol for the colonies, and was even adopted by Paul Revere.
Christopher Gadson had the first yellow rattlesnake flag (possibly inspired by drums used by continental Marines) created and given to the newly appointed Commander and Cheif of the Navy.
Recently, the Yellow rattlesnake flag (or the Gadson Flag) has been very popular at modern tea-parties in the US, where citizens have increasingly been protesting increased taxes, federal deficits, and increased federal power.



