Comment Re:The bay area used to have affordable housing (Score 0) 359
The most crime-ridden location in the US is 80% white. Both violent and non-violent.
And there is black flight. Most definitely.
The most crime-ridden location in the US is 80% white. Both violent and non-violent.
And there is black flight. Most definitely.
You. I like you.
Who asked for sympathy? They just said they're glad these sadists are dead, and didn't even mention getting paddled themselves. So wtf to both of you.
They were culpable victims of their own stupidity, on multiple levels.
Oh, and the people getting off on beating kids are just some kind of force or nature, or what? Stockholm Syndrome much?
"We still need to find a cure for cancer."
"ORLY?! Amazing news there, buddy! Let me get right on getting pumped!"
"Oh, sarcasm! Just when I thought I knew you, you come up with something utterly new, out of nowhere. Too bad you have better things to do than curing cancer, I'm sure you would be awesome at it.
While that bit about sorting your books was a rhetorical question, trying to answer it in earnest might help you get up to speed. I'm not really concerned otherwise -- address my point once you understood it, but all this "but you haven't made a point!!1" stuff is a game you'll have to play by yourself, sorry.
It was not his choice to get stuck there, the US govt pretty much made sure. You know, even getting the Swiss to force down the plane of a president and search it, because he might be on board... really, your comment is unintentionally ironic: the invasion already happened -- that is, your external enemies ain't shit compared to the internal ones you bred yourself -- and it's YOU who is bending over and cheering.
Poor white people are not nearly as violent as poor black people.
Tell that to the families of the dead in Overland, Kansas.
You racist shit, what are you too embarrassed to post under your "Third Way" moniker tonight?
I predict a sucky game.
I agree about Left/Right. The real divide is Top/Bottom. Even the notion of "individual/collective" is kind of a dodge in this instance. The only "collective" that I see anywhere in the US is aggregate capital in the form of the corporation.
Thanks for the info. That's what I'd assumed, and hoped.
So I'm not sure where this idea that these audits are "American only" or that there is something preventing someone from pointing out a vulnerability comes from.
Generally, I trust stuff that has lots of eyes on it.
Awww. That's a lot of posturing for not answering a very simple question.
The same could be said about any other label politicians use, and we're not really talking about (just) politicians here anyway, so that's kind of doubly moot.
Do you group your books by predominant color of the cover and texture? Or do you group them by subject matter, wether you read them already, wether you would read them again, size, that sort of stuff? The whole idea of human "races" is kind of broken.
I have books with small print that are stupid, I have books with big colorful pictures which are smart. Selecting them by superficial criteria like that, stuff like "is the page count a multiple of 11?" is just hurting yourself.
We operate by finding patterns of large data sets and then manipulating the patterns.
That is literally how our species thinks.
Yup. And our thinking gets *better* by repeating that process. Maybe even reflecting a little, trying to find patterns in the patterns we think we see. Maybe in some dark age it was really important to trust the person who looks like you more than a tree, a lion or a person who is painted in a completely different way (I dare guess that in the times that stuff evolved biologically, differences in skin tone probably played exactly no role). But things quickly got way more complex than that. Using symbols made our thinking powerful, yes, but confusing symbols with things can also become more costly than useful real quick.
Memory fault - where am I?