Comment Re:One small problem (Score 1) 509
Wow. He drops everything. He starts to turn away. They pepper him with half a dozen shots. Then yell "Get your hands up!".
Wow. He drops everything. He starts to turn away. They pepper him with half a dozen shots. Then yell "Get your hands up!".
"When dealing with the police, avoid being black"
Words to the wise, yet people still consistently break that rule. It's their own fault.
So, basically everyone is non-law-abiding at some point. What follows from that?
"The American Public has rights, an individual citizen has no rights. Welcome to America, sucker."
The scary thing to me is that I think the AC is a cop. And the way he lays his argument out tells me that he was trained that way. It's a gut feeling, though: I hope I'm wrong.
Think of the kittens!
Hear, Hear!
The coda: "I really now believe that in some parts of the United States people have started to mate with vegetables."
Good catch.
I think he was saying "it would be more fortunate if they had picked a less violent form of protest".
Great Onion article. I remember when it came out. Pretty much sums it up right there.
This shouldn't be modded flamebait. It is her considered opinion, delivered reasonably well, with no ad-hominems, etc. She states what she would do, and doesn't tell you what you have to do.
Let's try to hold
Plenty funny. Plenty true, though. My first thought was "what a terrible test image". First the washed out colors, then I zeroed on the skin tone--too red. As a test point for how a scanner/whatever can handle a poor image, I might see some value.
That's the problem with
True enough. But who has the time to re-write a book on
True, we didn't have problems getting the raw resources. It was getting the cooked resources half way around the world that, if the Japanese had a different sub strategy, could have caused havoc with the prosecution of the war.
Also, fwiw, I think certain special ops forces do have in/extraction methods involving air/sea/undersea.
Work expands to fill the time available. -- Cyril Northcote Parkinson, "The Economist", 1955