Domain: mp3lyrics.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to mp3lyrics.org.
Comments · 15
-
Re:Interesting technology
16s appears to be the whole song. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A12o3gjvKtg http://www.mp3lyrics.org/d/descendents/i-like-food/
-
Re:More Juggalo research is needed
Why don't you try simply reading the lyrics for yourself instead of parroting other sites who obviously got it wrong? Here, I'll even help you seeing how your search apparently only comes up with crap you want to support your misconceptions. You will find the first few lyrics set the premise for the entire song. It starts with If magic is all we've ever know
Then it's easy to miss what really goes onBTW, when you look at the rest of the lyrics, you will find things you can add to your list that have more then obvious answers then miracles; like the pyramids, UFO's, the shit you believe when your a kid, animals in in various forms, Music, and so on. You will find lines like Take a look at this fine creation- And enjoy it better with appreciation, Just open your mind, and it ain't no way- To ignore the miracles of every day.
The entire song is about appreciating the stuff that goes on around you. Work an scientists were most likely used only to get a rhyme with dirt and pissed.
-
Re:Some also want knives banned
I suppose you could make that argument. Still you take the same person and subject them to one of two stimuli and you can often predict what will happen. I don't see that as changing the person so much as changing their environment.
My argument can be (and probably should have been) summarized as "FOOD! CLOTHES! AND SHELTER!" The non-click, non-think explanation being that when you get past surviving it leaves you a lot more time to think about bettering yourself.
-
Cue the Human League!
Time for the Human League to release a megamix of "Being Boiled" and "The Dignity of Labour"
-
Re:The Definition of Evil
"What I don't know is how these men sleep at night. How do they live with themselves? I don't know. Maybe they don't get it. Maybe they think it's all a game. Maybe they don't realize that other people aren't just sprites on a videogame screen. I've heard more than one psychology professor claim that psycho-and scoiopaths line our boardrooms. Maybe they're right."
NOFX said it best, although in a slightly different context: "The guilty don't feel guilty; they learn not to." [The Irrationality of Rationality]
I can neither confirm nor deny the following statements:
Someone I know worked in IT for a very, very large, unnamed chemical company rooted in the first State to ratify the US Constitution. Some of her responsibilities included tracking licenses, per-seat and per-user contracts, and maintenance agreements for some very expensive engineering applications, as well as run-of-the-mill office software from an unnamed monopoly. The license tracking database went down, and since parts of IT had been outsourced and management had done away with anyone in IT who had any decision-making power, the database could never be replaced. Since she felt a sense of loyalty to her employer (especially being that she has an inoperable form of an unusual neuropathy: when it's being treated (which effectively relies on having health coverage), the patient is capable of doing desk work well enough; when it's not being treated, the patient is considered fully disabled), she started tracking all of the licenses herself, knowing her employer could be screwed if the licenses could not be accounted for. Well, her boss liked her decently well, but their "team manager" was replaced by a guy who was told to come up with a strategy for firing everybody. When he got around to her, he talked to her boss, but her boss doesn't really have any guts and decided to answer a query about whether she was necessary or easily replaceable with the latter option. (Her boss had told her that she had become pretty critical to certain processes and, unofficially, that she would fight to keep her, and if she had to let her go, she would give her some sort of unofficial notice.) (Of course, the new team leader evidently has very questionable morals, given that he knowingly telephoned her boss while her boss was fresh out of a joint surgery, chock full of narcotics, and still recovering from the anaesthesia, but I digress.) She is eligible for COBRA so that she can continue to receive health coverage, but due to some tricky legal situations, getting COBRA was very uncertain (until recently, and her papers are en route via USPS, thank god), so she hoping to get another job very quickly (which has proved to be difficult, since she was actually working through a contracting firm at this last job (and, having never had the money to finish her degree, she's largely been limited to contracting throughout her career), but one that had a not-too-awful benefits option, unlike most of the contracting firms which have given her employment offers since) but has not yet succeeded, unfortunately.Anyway, so that's the background. What's disturbing is that her boss knew she might lose her health coverage and become disabled, but didn't say a word of this to the team leader, even though it might have given her some time to figure out her options. The team leader actually did a few things of questionable legality in the process of terminating her (I won't go into them here), after which she spoke to him on the phone and pointed these out, and, of course, he backed out of the conversation, and then consulted with his partner; he and his partner agreed that he should have recorded this conversation (which took place through POTS, not the internal company telephones) whether he notified her that it was being recorded or not (illegal, I believe, particularly in this situation), to protect the employer from any potential legal ramifications.
-
Re:The real question here is...
Did they break in with a sledgehammer?
Nah - the intruder knows something about opening windows and doors. Unfortunately, when asked for comment, the security agency responsible for protecting these assets responded that they "had no memory of anything, anything at all."
A visibly angered spokesman for Gabriel issued a statement directly to the thieves, saying, "This time, you've gone too far." -
Re:The real question here is...
Did they break in with a sledgehammer?
Nah - the intruder knows something about opening windows and doors. Unfortunately, when asked for comment, the security agency responsible for protecting these assets responded that they "had no memory of anything, anything at all."
A visibly angered spokesman for Gabriel issued a statement directly to the thieves, saying, "This time, you've gone too far." -
Re:The real question here is...
Did they break in with a sledgehammer?
Nah - the intruder knows something about opening windows and doors. Unfortunately, when asked for comment, the security agency responsible for protecting these assets responded that they "had no memory of anything, anything at all."
A visibly angered spokesman for Gabriel issued a statement directly to the thieves, saying, "This time, you've gone too far." -
English lyrics
If you don't want to watch the music video with English subtitles (from MP3 Lyrics:
I know a bot,
her name is Anna, Anna is her name
And she can ban you, ban you so hard
She cleans up our channel
I want to tell you that I know a Bot
I know a bot,
her name is Anna, Anna is her name
And she can ban you, ban you so hard
She cleans up our channel
I want to tell you that I know a Bot
That always watches everyone in our channel
And sees that there is no trouble in here
And it can no way be taken over
And remember, I know this Bot
The bot that nobody can kick
And she can kick when she wants
She kicks all the spammers
Yeah, nothing can hit our Bot
(Ready for take off) -
Got a big white X, On the top of his car...Speed Racer has everything I want in a cartoon, a heroin addicted chimp (look at those scary red ringed eyes), a driving instructor from Tibet, a car than can drive on boulders, and Speed himself who never seems to remember to check the trunk of his car before a race.
Steve Albini has even already written a catchy theme song for the movie.
-
Re:Like that's a good idea?
1) the fools die happy
2) The earth lives on without them happily talking away on /.
Perfect! -
Townshend and kids???
...Rough boys
Don't walk away
I wanna buy your leather
Make noise
Try and talk me away
We can't be seen together...
Rough boys
Come over here
I wanna bite and kiss you
I wanna see what I can find
Uh, yeah. -
Re:Who has time?
"And how did you find out about Zeppelin, exactly?
And guess what? Now with the intarweb, you still can, and you're no longer limited to the stations that are within physical broadcast range. I grew up on Long Island, where we had an embarassment of riches: WNEW from NYC, and our own WLIR. Oh,for the days
Why don't you just keep doing that?"
I heard them on the RADIO.... ...
But wait! Vin Scelsa, such a mainstay of WNEW that the Ramones put him in a song, is still broadcasting free-form radio, both on WFUV and Sirius!
If you're really willing to listen to the radio to discover new music, both WFUV and Philadelphia's WXPN are streaming online, with intelligent DJs that make it worth your while to listen with a high hits-vs-misses ratio. The quality is out there, even the filtering is out there -- and for me it's easier to find than ever before. -
I'm My Own Grandpaw: Logic and Lyrics
The logic of this article reminded me of this hillbilly classic: I'm My Own Grandpaw.
-
Re:Not quite as the summary says
Particles such as ethane and even polystyrene have been suggested
It's life Jim, but not as we know it....
Sometimes you can't help what what springs to mind