John McCain doesn't endorse torture. I don't even know if I can trust the rest of your argument after that major discrepancy, considering most of it's probably taken out of context.
And if your justification is him making that remark to Bush about the guidelines packet earlier this year, McCain was making a point about signing statements, not torture.
I agree with the last part because if you look closely at the slow motion reaction shot of the crossbow hit, you can see dents (light reflection) from where the previous hammer hits and the like took place. And I don't really see the utility of the marker tests; my monitor could stand up to being drawn on with a marker, long as I have some Windex nearby before it dries.
Remember that your monitor itself might be making the change, if you're using an LCD. If I stand almost over my monitor, I can see them as the same color, but at a sitting position A is so high on it the color is changed quite a bit.
John McCain doesn't endorse torture. I don't even know if I can trust the rest of your argument after that major discrepancy, considering most of it's probably taken out of context. And if your justification is him making that remark to Bush about the guidelines packet earlier this year, McCain was making a point about signing statements, not torture.
I agree with the last part because if you look closely at the slow motion reaction shot of the crossbow hit, you can see dents (light reflection) from where the previous hammer hits and the like took place. And I don't really see the utility of the marker tests; my monitor could stand up to being drawn on with a marker, long as I have some Windex nearby before it dries.
Remember that your monitor itself might be making the change, if you're using an LCD. If I stand almost over my monitor, I can see them as the same color, but at a sitting position A is so high on it the color is changed quite a bit.
Where Mozilla is in the middle of this? They could easily take a piece of the action, like google has.