Actually, it's the presidency that does it -- what would be multiple parties forming a coalition government in a parliamentary system must band together and form one party to win the presidency -- there is no such thing as a coalition presidency.
Hence all the factions you see banded together do band together, but not for the reasons you've mentioned.
Were the presidency to disappear, we'd see multiple parties form and coalition governments.
> Voila, the Green Party has successfully sabotaged the > voting interests for the majority of the people.
Binky, the single-ear'd rabbit thingie in Matt "The Simpsons" Groening's "Life in Hell" comic strip said it much better: "Today at school we had elections for class president. We boys only nominated one boy, while the stupid girls all nominated their friends. We all voted for the one boy and won."
NOT turning in Jews, or runaway "n-words" used to be ILLEGAL, too. Why the sudden love of nightmare governments and hiding behind "well, they ordered me to do it!"??? As long as we get paid, I guess it's ok. As long as we believe we're opening things up in the long run, it's ok.
Hmmm...China. All the growing economic power of a full capitalist society with the joys of dictatorship, and an upcoming ratio in the next 10 years of 120 young men to 100 young women. Nah, can't seen anything bad happening out of that scenario.
>> Yahoo! says it simply responds to requests from the authorities >> and was just complying to local laws > > This is a deeper problem than it seems at first sight. From my > point of view, Yahoo is not doing wrong as it surely is complying > with petitions that the Chinese government asks.
"Just doing as ordered" didn't work for the Nazis and shouldn't work for Yahoo. It's rotten enough to build in spy doors so those governments can monitor things, or to censor certain web sites and whatnot.
It's completely another to take an active roll in the jailing of someone for exercising freedom of speech or freedom of association.
> Just some days ago USA government gave an order to the Sheraton hotel > to make the Maria Isabel Sheraton hotel in Mexico City remove some Cuban > citizens from the installations and avoid a meeting with some USA company > representatives (Caterpillar is one of them). The problem was not the > order that USA give, but that the Sheraton hotel *in Mexico* actually > asked the people to leave AND did not returned their 3 night deposit.
Cuba oppresses freedom of property, freedom of association, the freedom to pursue your own interests, which includes business interests (ironically, something that is wildly opening up in China -- just make sure the local politicians' palms are kept well-greased.) What this shows is that the US is two-faced about this instead of being consistent -- encouraging companies up to and including them aiding oppression in China, but pressuring other ones to not deal with Cuba in any way, shape, or form.
However, the solution to that is even covered. It's the job of the President, and partly Congress, to set foreign policy -- have a chat with them (or their wannabee successors) at the next election if you don't like it.
> The U.S. government plans to search, link and reference > every news site, blog and email on the Internet, using > sophisticated AI codenamed ADVISE to do the correlations. > Unlike traditional dataveilance like Echelon, ADVISE aims > to find terrorists before they strike and even deduce their > motivations in wanting to commit their crimes.
Seventeen minutes later, Spynet became self-aware, and induced a nuclear exchange, destroying ANYONE NOT WEARING LIKE SIX MILLION SUNBLOCK! Have you ever had anything growing inside you? Do you know what it's like to create something? Wait, Statue of Liberty? That was our world! You maniacs! You blew it up! Damn you! Damn you all to Hellllllllllll!!!!!!!!!!111!!111!11oneone!!one
> A fast track through the FDA could have one of the world's > leading problems licked in less than a decade
2 million a year x 10 years = 20 million dead. And the FDA is humanity's friend just how again?
No, seriously, I'm looking at you dear reader. The wildest crap of all the snake oil salesmen in the world wrapped together wouldn't kill 20 million in 10 years.
Ah, who cares. A dead man in front of the cameras a politician can pontificate about is worth 20 million dead away from the cameras. See also: socialized medicine slowing the rate of technological development, causing an ever growing pile of bodies who died, who wouldn't have had technology been advancing faster.
To be fair, though, City of Heroes built in exact duplicate sets of original Marvel characters. You could equip them identically with a / command that was removed.
Still, making a huge guy, wearing only shorts, with green skin and purple shorts, well...you tell me if that's infringement or not. Shorts, giant superhero body size, and (almost) arbitrary colors are available in any decent system.
And what they showed in the released movie was astounding -- and still is today! "What are you gonna do? Save the world all by yourself?"
Come on, you all wanna see that "Morningwood" town water tower again!
The original game, I remember playing it on the hardest (non-respawning) level, and when I finished, Game Over! Nothing before or since has affected me the same, except the "All hail the ringbearers!" stuff at the end of the book version of Lord of the Rings, which the movie, as good as it was, failed to duplicate the excitement of whatsoever.
The lack of Duke Nukem Forever shows just how bad the free market system is at delivering things the population wants, nay, needs. I propose a national game care system, where the government takes over control of the game production industry. No games may be produced without government permission, or direction on their content, scenery, graphics, and so on. Anybody who creates their own game, and sells it to another individual, shall be guilty by not more than 20 years in jail, or $200,000 fine, or both. All our precious resources cannot be wasted that way, and must be minutely managed by GGCAPB, the Government Game Control And Production Board, to maximize the gaming quality, timeliness, and, most importantly, cost. The unconscionable profits of the gaming industry show government is needed to bring costs under control from the evil Jewish^H^H^H^H^H^H generic businessmen.
Yes, I'm sure this plan will increase the availability of games, bring down their price, and not sacrifice any quality. In fact, I'm so sure, I'm willing to impose it on everybody, buyer and maker alike, without their permission.
Well, we're so sure it'll work for health care, why not games?
I mean, I remember when PC Games (or Gamer or whatever) had the "Big 5 Quake Killers" issue, with Daikatana and Sin leading the pack, with a little also-ran called "Half-life", which, truth be told from the screenshots and what was known at the time, was destined to be a bargain bin POS.
Yet, if "Content is King", Half-life had you by the balls before you even took your first shot, indeed before you could even do anything but look around. You start the game and sit there doing nothing for five to ten minutes? Inconceivable! You're riding this monorail thing deep into a research facility. Drool is pouring out of your mouth as you've never seen anything like this before. Whoa! Look at these swinging bars. What? Other machinery is grabbing the car and transferring it to another rail system? Cool! Hey, there's some guy stuck on a platform pounding on the door! And, when your jaw has already plunged as low as you think it can go, this multi-legged spider construction loader machine comes ambling down the way. Please keep your arms and feet inside the car at all times.
Never have my balls been so masterfully cradled. Addicted to the game before even taking the first shot. John Romero, there's your damned content. Study it.
That was their damned downfall. I downloaded the demo, and I'm in this cool enclosed valley pockmark, and there's some caves, and WTH, frogs? FROGS?!?!? That bark at you and shoot bees at you when they bark? Or some damned thing, I forget what.
I was so outraged, I never even went more than 300 yards before giving up. Thank god for the demo so I didn't heave up $50 for that turd-er-ino. Romero's saying was "Content is King!", and sure enough, he proved it.
See also: Star Wars Galaxies -- nothing like eight guys standing around a llama-giraffe thing and shooting it with advanced weaponry, including one guy torching it with a flamethrower, for sixty seconds.
Yeah, but what about the fat, bald, hard-nosed general's tits and ass? Huh? Let's see if you're all real, hardcore fans of more brutish, street-level productions.
Something else to warn Slashdotters about: "Warning: Repeated strokings of one's own genetalia can lead to raw, tender skin, or even open sores. If tenderness or sores occur, stop immediately. Open sores can become infected, or be indicative of a more serious medical problem; consult your physician immediately. Repeated strokings can lead to a temporary thickening of the skin, or full-blown callouses. This can lead to decreased sensitivity, resulting in decreased sexual pleasure, as well as requiring even more severe stroking to achieve the same amount of pleasure, with subsequent increase in the likelihood of raw, tender skin or open sores. Caution! Frequent strokings can lead to decreased sexual drive, resulting in less overcoming of natural timidity, leading, but not limited, to: less likelihood of actual sexual encounters with other humans, successful reproduction, or even criminal charges for public exposure, should that girl sitting near you in the library be a little too attractive and, what the hell, nobody's around and it's hard to see and you have your coat on anyways."
The Surgeon General would be legally prevented from putting warning labels (so to speak) on silicone breasts or WoW Olestra chips because studies show their problems are hot air.
If anything, warnings should go on regular chips: Scientific studies have shown eating tons of normal potato chips have a higher incidence of abdominal cramping than eating Olestra chips.
But who cares, when we can all be talky lawyers earning millions relying on anectodes to scare corporations into coughing up millions, if not billions, lest their stock prices drop merely from the rumours and fraudulent, false claims.
My friend's buddy ran over a guy who was trying to get away with stuff he had stolen. The guy broke his leg and tried to sue, but lost, and that's the way it should be.
You should be able to shoot at someone running away with your stuff, to say nothing about not being able to sue because the damned guard dog bit you while you were breaking in. "Words? We talkin' words here?"
Yeah, the lawyer apologist website. Here are the Mc"Facts":
McFact No. 1: For years, McDonald's had known they had a problem with the way they make their coffee - that their coffee was served much hotter (at least 20 degrees more so) than at other restaurants.
20 degrees isn't all that much, you're still gonna get scalded. Would 20 degree cooler coffee had lessened the injury that much? Methinks the lawyers would still be happy to sue. Note they call this a "problem" with the coffee.
McFact No. 2: McDonald's knew its coffee sometimes caused serious injuries - more than 700 incidents of scalding coffee burns in the past decade have been settled by the Corporation - and yet they never so much as consulted a burn expert regarding the issue.
Spilled hot stuff causes problems. They are a gigantic corporation. That McDonald's had to "settle" cases more indicates fear of publicity driven by greedy lawyers than anything else. Unless an employee dropped the cup, or a pot, McDonald's should have no liability.
McFact No. 3: The woman involved in this infamous case suffered very serious injuries - third degree burns on her groin, thighs and buttocks that required skin grafts and a seven-day hospital stay.
And the drunk who tripped on a curb broke his wrist. Being able to sue for your own stupidity is the whole problem.
McFact No. 4: The woman, an 81-year old former department store clerk who had never before filed suit against anyone, said she wouldn't have brought the lawsuit against McDonald's had the Corporation not dismissed her request for compensation for medical bills.
Why should they pay for her stupidity?
McFact No. 5: A McDonald's quality assurance manager testified in the case that the Corporation was aware of the risk of serving dangerously hot coffee and had no plans to either turn down the heat or to post warning about the possibility of severe burns, even though most customers wouldn't think it was possible.
Five year old children are aware of the risk of dangeriously hot things. That's why suing over this is so idiotic.
McFact No. 6: After careful deliberation, the jury found McDonald's was liable because the facts were overwhelmingly against the company. When it came to the punitive damages, the jury found that McDonald's had engaged in willful, reckless, malicious, or wanton conduct, and rendered a punitive damage award of 2.7 million dollars. (The equivalent of just two days of coffee sales, McDonalds Corporation generates revenues in excess of 1.3 million dollars daily from the sale of its coffee, selling 1 billion cups each year.)
Congratulations. A lawyer convince a bunch of yokels with sob stories. This is hardly a desired outcome. And the notice that the original award, a staggering $2.7 million, was just 2 days' sales of coffee indicates how badly the drooling lawyers wanted to tag McDonald's.
McFact No. 7: On appeal, a judge lowered the award to $480,000, a fact not widely publicized in the media.
Still $480,000 more than it should have been.
McFact No. 8: A report in Liability Week, September 29, 1997, indicated that Kathleen Gilliam, 73, suffered first degree burns when a cup of coffee spilled onto her lap. Reports also indicate that McDonald's consistently keeps its coffee at 185 degrees, still approximately 20 degrees hotter than at other restaurants. Third degree burns occur at this temperature in just two to seven seconds, requiring skin grafting, debridement and whirlpool treatments that cost tens of thousands of dollars and result in permanent disfigurement, extreme pain and disability to the victims for many months, and in some cases, years.
Apple's got deep pockets. Apple's stock is doing very well. Lawsuits drive down stock prices. Company execs get fidgetty. Payoffs, sorry, out of court settlements happen.
People have been damaging their hearing for decades with big honkin' headphones, too.
I think I'm gonna sue the apartment complex I used to live in since I looked at the sun through their clear windows. They didn't put up a warning sticker or coat the class with smoke to limit the sun's rays. The bastards didn't even give me the option.
> He and Melinda have 3 children. I read somewhere > that they have a max inheritance of less than 1%
I see a "Daddy Dearest..." on the horizon!
Even at 1%, that's what, $700 million / 3 = a paltry $233 million per kid?!?!?
Government steals (steal: (v) point a gun at someone and take that which does not belong to you under violence or threat of violence) half of that, remember. So each gets $116.5 million.
Yeah, you'd have to sit at the kiddie table with guys like Jobs and Paul Allen. If you even got in at all, what with 280+ billionairs in the US and growing. The last time a sub-billion fortune was considered amazing was in "Arthur", starring Dudly Moore, a late '70's comedy where he inherits a $700 million fortune. This, in turn, was only a few years after the Six Million Dollar Man, part of what spawned the Dr. Evil "one milllllllllllllion dollars!"
> He's the richest man in the world, but name someone > that gives more money to the poor than he
Name someone who even has as much money as he's given away. At $27 billion and counting, that's pretty much just Warren Buffet (maybe) and the Sultan of Brunei (maybe).
Hmmmm...62 mph top speed. I'm sure the actual top speed is much greater than that, but is classified. The "2" is thrown in to give an artificial sense of accuracy, misleading you (i.e. the Rooskies) to think that's the actual top speed.
Actually, it's the presidency that does it -- what would be multiple parties forming a coalition government in a parliamentary system must band together and form one party to win the presidency -- there is no such thing as a coalition presidency.
Hence all the factions you see banded together do band together, but not for the reasons you've mentioned.
Were the presidency to disappear, we'd see multiple parties form and coalition governments.
> Voila, the Green Party has successfully sabotaged the
> voting interests for the majority of the people.
Binky, the single-ear'd rabbit thingie in Matt "The Simpsons" Groening's "Life in Hell" comic strip said it much better: "Today at school we had elections for class president. We boys only nominated one boy, while the stupid girls all nominated their friends. We all voted for the one boy and won."
> NOT responding to the request is ILLEGAL.
NOT turning in Jews, or runaway "n-words" used to be ILLEGAL, too. Why the sudden love of nightmare governments and hiding behind "well, they ordered me to do it!"??? As long as we get paid, I guess it's ok. As long as we believe we're opening things up in the long run, it's ok.
Hmmm...China. All the growing economic power of a full capitalist society with the joys of dictatorship, and an upcoming ratio in the next 10 years of 120 young men to 100 young women. Nah, can't seen anything bad happening out of that scenario.
>> Yahoo! says it simply responds to requests from the authorities
>> and was just complying to local laws
>
> This is a deeper problem than it seems at first sight. From my
> point of view, Yahoo is not doing wrong as it surely is complying
> with petitions that the Chinese government asks.
"Just doing as ordered" didn't work for the Nazis and shouldn't work for Yahoo. It's rotten enough to build in spy doors so those governments can monitor things, or to censor certain web sites and whatnot.
It's completely another to take an active roll in the jailing of someone for exercising freedom of speech or freedom of association.
> Just some days ago USA government gave an order to the Sheraton hotel
> to make the Maria Isabel Sheraton hotel in Mexico City remove some Cuban
> citizens from the installations and avoid a meeting with some USA company
> representatives (Caterpillar is one of them). The problem was not the
> order that USA give, but that the Sheraton hotel *in Mexico* actually
> asked the people to leave AND did not returned their 3 night deposit.
Cuba oppresses freedom of property, freedom of association, the freedom to pursue your own interests, which includes business interests (ironically, something that is wildly opening up in China -- just make sure the local politicians' palms are kept well-greased.) What this shows is that the US is two-faced about this instead of being consistent -- encouraging companies up to and including them aiding oppression in China, but pressuring other ones to not deal with Cuba in any way, shape, or form.
However, the solution to that is even covered. It's the job of the President, and partly Congress, to set foreign policy -- have a chat with them (or their wannabee successors) at the next election if you don't like it.
Better yet, better to see the reds dead. Why should free people either die or lose their freedom?
> The U.S. government plans to search, link and reference
> every news site, blog and email on the Internet, using
> sophisticated AI codenamed ADVISE to do the correlations.
> Unlike traditional dataveilance like Echelon, ADVISE aims
> to find terrorists before they strike and even deduce their
> motivations in wanting to commit their crimes.
Seventeen minutes later, Spynet became self-aware, and induced a nuclear exchange, destroying ANYONE NOT WEARING LIKE SIX MILLION SUNBLOCK! Have you ever had anything growing inside you? Do you know what it's like to create something? Wait, Statue of Liberty? That was our world! You maniacs! You blew it up! Damn you! Damn you all to Hellllllllllll!!!!!!!!!!111!!111!11oneone!!one
> A fast track through the FDA could have one of the world's
> leading problems licked in less than a decade
2 million a year x 10 years = 20 million dead. And the FDA is humanity's friend just how again?
No, seriously, I'm looking at you dear reader. The wildest crap of all the snake oil salesmen in the world wrapped together wouldn't kill 20 million in 10 years.
Ah, who cares. A dead man in front of the cameras a politician can pontificate about is worth 20 million dead away from the cameras. See also: socialized medicine slowing the rate of technological development, causing an ever growing pile of bodies who died, who wouldn't have had technology been advancing faster.
But this is a troll. 20 million dead is not.
To be fair, though, City of Heroes built in exact duplicate sets of original Marvel characters. You could equip them identically with a / command that was removed.
Still, making a huge guy, wearing only shorts, with green skin and purple shorts, well...you tell me if that's infringement or not. Shorts, giant superhero body size, and (almost) arbitrary colors are available in any decent system.
And what they showed in the released movie was astounding -- and still is today! "What are you gonna do? Save the world all by yourself?"
Come on, you all wanna see that "Morningwood" town water tower again!
The original game, I remember playing it on the hardest (non-respawning) level, and when I finished, Game Over! Nothing before or since has affected me the same, except the "All hail the ringbearers!" stuff at the end of the book version of Lord of the Rings, which the movie, as good as it was, failed to duplicate the excitement of whatsoever.
The lack of Duke Nukem Forever shows just how bad the free market system is at delivering things the population wants, nay, needs. I propose a national game care system, where the government takes over control of the game production industry. No games may be produced without government permission, or direction on their content, scenery, graphics, and so on. Anybody who creates their own game, and sells it to another individual, shall be guilty by not more than 20 years in jail, or $200,000 fine, or both. All our precious resources cannot be wasted that way, and must be minutely managed by GGCAPB, the Government Game Control And Production Board, to maximize the gaming quality, timeliness, and, most importantly, cost. The unconscionable profits of the gaming industry show government is needed to bring costs under control from the evil Jewish^H^H^H^H^H^H generic businessmen.
Yes, I'm sure this plan will increase the availability of games, bring down their price, and not sacrifice any quality. In fact, I'm so sure, I'm willing to impose it on everybody, buyer and maker alike, without their permission.
Well, we're so sure it'll work for health care, why not games?
I mean, I remember when PC Games (or Gamer or whatever) had the "Big 5 Quake Killers" issue, with Daikatana and Sin leading the pack, with a little also-ran called "Half-life", which, truth be told from the screenshots and what was known at the time, was destined to be a bargain bin POS.
Yet, if "Content is King", Half-life had you by the balls before you even took your first shot, indeed before you could even do anything but look around. You start the game and sit there doing nothing for five to ten minutes? Inconceivable! You're riding this monorail thing deep into a research facility. Drool is pouring out of your mouth as you've never seen anything like this before. Whoa! Look at these swinging bars. What? Other machinery is grabbing the car and transferring it to another rail system? Cool! Hey, there's some guy stuck on a platform pounding on the door! And, when your jaw has already plunged as low as you think it can go, this multi-legged spider construction loader machine comes ambling down the way. Please keep your arms and feet inside the car at all times.
Never have my balls been so masterfully cradled. Addicted to the game before even taking the first shot. John Romero, there's your damned content. Study it.
That was their damned downfall. I downloaded the demo, and I'm in this cool enclosed valley pockmark, and there's some caves, and WTH, frogs? FROGS?!?!? That bark at you and shoot bees at you when they bark? Or some damned thing, I forget what.
I was so outraged, I never even went more than 300 yards before giving up. Thank god for the demo so I didn't heave up $50 for that turd-er-ino. Romero's saying was "Content is King!", and sure enough, he proved it.
See also: Star Wars Galaxies -- nothing like eight guys standing around a llama-giraffe thing and shooting it with advanced weaponry, including one guy torching it with a flamethrower, for sixty seconds.
Yeah, but what about the fat, bald, hard-nosed general's tits and ass? Huh? Let's see if you're all real, hardcore fans of more brutish, street-level productions.
Something else to warn Slashdotters about: "Warning: Repeated strokings of one's own genetalia can lead to raw, tender skin, or even open sores. If tenderness or sores occur, stop immediately. Open sores can become infected, or be indicative of a more serious medical problem; consult your physician immediately. Repeated strokings can lead to a temporary thickening of the skin, or full-blown callouses. This can lead to decreased sensitivity, resulting in decreased sexual pleasure, as well as requiring even more severe stroking to achieve the same amount of pleasure, with subsequent increase in the likelihood of raw, tender skin or open sores. Caution! Frequent strokings can lead to decreased sexual drive, resulting in less overcoming of natural timidity, leading, but not limited, to: less likelihood of actual sexual encounters with other humans, successful reproduction, or even criminal charges for public exposure, should that girl sitting near you in the library be a little too attractive and, what the hell, nobody's around and it's hard to see and you have your coat on anyways."
The Surgeon General would be legally prevented from putting warning labels (so to speak) on silicone breasts or WoW Olestra chips because studies show their problems are hot air.
If anything, warnings should go on regular chips: Scientific studies have shown eating tons of normal potato chips have a higher incidence of abdominal cramping than eating Olestra chips.
But who cares, when we can all be talky lawyers earning millions relying on anectodes to scare corporations into coughing up millions, if not billions, lest their stock prices drop merely from the rumours and fraudulent, false claims.
My friend's buddy ran over a guy who was trying to get away with stuff he had stolen. The guy broke his leg and tried to sue, but lost, and that's the way it should be.
You should be able to shoot at someone running away with your stuff, to say nothing about not being able to sue because the damned guard dog bit you while you were breaking in. "Words? We talkin' words here?"
Guy: Lemme just turn it up a bit. (Turns it way up) Yaaaa!!!!! (Spills hot coffee on his balls) Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!!!
20 degrees isn't all that much, you're still gonna get scalded. Would 20 degree cooler coffee had lessened the injury that much? Methinks the lawyers would still be happy to sue. Note they call this a "problem" with the coffee.
Spilled hot stuff causes problems. They are a gigantic corporation. That McDonald's had to "settle" cases more indicates fear of publicity driven by greedy lawyers than anything else. Unless an employee dropped the cup, or a pot, McDonald's should have no liability.
And the drunk who tripped on a curb broke his wrist. Being able to sue for your own stupidity is the whole problem.
Why should they pay for her stupidity?
Five year old children are aware of the risk of dangeriously hot things. That's why suing over this is so idiotic.
Congratulations. A lawyer convince a bunch of yokels with sob stories. This is hardly a desired outcome. And the notice that the original award, a staggering $2.7 million, was just 2 days' sales of coffee indicates how badly the drooling lawyers wanted to tag McDonald's.
Still $480,000 more than it should have been.
Apple's got deep pockets. Apple's stock is doing very well. Lawsuits drive down stock prices. Company execs get fidgetty. Payoffs, sorry, out of court settlements happen.
People have been damaging their hearing for decades with big honkin' headphones, too.
I think I'm gonna sue the apartment complex I used to live in since I looked at the sun through their clear windows. They didn't put up a warning sticker or coat the class with smoke to limit the sun's rays. The bastards didn't even give me the option.
> He and Melinda have 3 children. I read somewhere
> that they have a max inheritance of less than 1%
I see a "Daddy Dearest..." on the horizon!
Even at 1%, that's what, $700 million / 3 = a paltry $233 million per kid?!?!?
Government steals (steal: (v) point a gun at someone and take that which does not belong to you under violence or threat of violence) half of that, remember. So each gets $116.5 million.
Yeah, you'd have to sit at the kiddie table with guys like Jobs and Paul Allen. If you even got in at all, what with 280+ billionairs in the US and growing. The last time a sub-billion fortune was considered amazing was in "Arthur", starring Dudly Moore, a late '70's comedy where he inherits a $700 million fortune. This, in turn, was only a few years after the Six Million Dollar Man, part of what spawned the Dr. Evil "one milllllllllllllion dollars!"
> The Bible says that you must tithe 10%.
>
> Has Bill given away 10%?
Has God?
Oh, wait. He expects finite mortals to give away their hard-earned effort while he sits there fretting and feeling our pain.
> He's the richest man in the world, but name someone
> that gives more money to the poor than he
Name someone who even has as much money as he's given away. At $27 billion and counting, that's pretty much just Warren Buffet (maybe) and the Sultan of Brunei (maybe).
> I'd have sex with the super models. Jeez, bunch of freakin' nerds.
Not without the wads of thousand dollar bills, you won't.
Until your IP address gets banned, as was done in this case.
>> "These edits range from benificial and informative to libelous and childish."
>
> That pretty much sums up our house of represenatives.
Except for the beneficial and informative part.
Hmmmm...62 mph top speed. I'm sure the actual top speed is much greater than that, but is classified. The "2" is thrown in to give an artificial sense of accuracy, misleading you (i.e. the Rooskies) to think that's the actual top speed.