Coming to America
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Christian Graus wrote: Yeah Dave - c'mon. They don't have HOUSES in the UK !!! Christian, David still lives at home. If he were here he could live on his own in a house he could purchase. Christian Graus wrote: Plus, you need to realise that your life is defined by STUFF, not by anything else. So CG, tell me about your new computer...
Martin Marvinski wrote: If he were here he could live on his own in a house he could purchase If I really had the urge to move away from my cut rate four star hotel accomodation, I would lease a house with my mates; however, I don't. I like where I live - it is central to my life and everything that makes it good.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
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You're saying that housing is cheap in the USA ? Yes and no. Totally depends on where you want to live. Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
Ditto.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
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Ok I know you all "hate" America, but would you ever consider coming here to work? How much would someone have to pay you in order for you to accept a job here? I know people like CG think there are alot of looneys with guns here but I know even he has his price. So what's your position on this?
Too late Martin. I've already applied for an immigration visa to move from Australia to the states. Of course, the fact that my wife is American and my step-kids are also American might have something to do with this decision :-) Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
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You're saying that housing is cheap in the USA ? Yes and no. Totally depends on where you want to live. Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
Tim Smith wrote: Totally depends on where you want to live. Which is exactly the same as here, and exactly what I would expect. Christian I am completely intolerant of stupidity. Stupidity is, of course, anything that doesn't conform to my way of thinking. - Jamie Hale - 29/05/2002
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Martin Marvinski wrote: What if by coming to America you could have your own house, broadband internet that you could use 24/7 (No British Telecoms here), a fancy car, and other great things, would you do it then? But Martin, I can get all of those things and anything else you can think of here in Britian. There is just no reason to move stateside - in fact there are compelling reasons not to considering the differences between our societies. Don't feel too bad - someone had to get the short straw. :-D Martin Marvinski wrote: Then you hate the world because Americans by definition are from everywhere Don't pick holes in my logic! Okay then, if you insist... let's see if you really have changes since you became a member... I dislike the strongly-American approach to, quite simply, what is right, what is wrong and what is acceptable; the assumptions that are made on others' behalf and the general attitude you convey both to yourselves and to others; the intollerance of extremes and even the pettiest of oppositions; the way you prefer to lie to yourselves than face the truth; and finally I dislike the way you interfere with international relations that quite simply do not concern you - well maybe financially - and whine and bitch if another power tries to do the same to you. Being a modern super-civilisation, I'd have thought you'd have learnt from the mistakes we have both made in the past centuries, and for a nation with a large proportion of it's citizens reportedly believing in a single divine being, you really should realise that you are not a god. In attitude. * Note that I said "strongly-American approach to" for a reason. As you said, Americans as a rule of thumb are as normal as you or I. On second thoughts... ;P The problem with America is that is is essentially a room full of individual pubescent countries that are trying to play nice together, while being told when they can go out and play by a super-power that simply cannot control them all effectively. If you were to be given true freedom, you would revert to anachy and wipe yourselves out for the pettiest of reasons. ---- I say "in your face". You say "up yours" Well, what goes up must come down - and *that* is a certainty.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
and i really hate the way you think you can lump 280 million people into whatever package fits whatever point you're trying to make. David Wulff wrote: Well, what goes up must come down - and *that* is a certainty. as the British Empire has been proving nicely, for the past 100 years. -c
Being just contaminates the void.
--Robyn HitchcockImage Processing - easy, like Sunday morning.
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and i really hate the way you think you can lump 280 million people into whatever package fits whatever point you're trying to make. David Wulff wrote: Well, what goes up must come down - and *that* is a certainty. as the British Empire has been proving nicely, for the past 100 years. -c
Being just contaminates the void.
--Robyn HitchcockImage Processing - easy, like Sunday morning.
Hey Chris, did you read any of that? :confused: How many times can I say I am not talking about the, you say, 280 million people, nor trying to fit anyone into any package? Chris Losinger wrote: as the British Empire has been proving nicely, for the past 100 years Er, yes, which is also the same example I gave in my text. This response has been a prime example of what I was talking about. :suss:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
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Tim Smith wrote: Totally depends on where you want to live. Which is exactly the same as here, and exactly what I would expect. Christian I am completely intolerant of stupidity. Stupidity is, of course, anything that doesn't conform to my way of thinking. - Jamie Hale - 29/05/2002
Yup. Nothing new. I really don't think he is trolling. He just picks the damn strangest topics. Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
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Yup. Nothing new. I really don't think he is trolling. He just picks the damn strangest topics. Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
It's not the question as much as the way it was asked. Christian I am completely intolerant of stupidity. Stupidity is, of course, anything that doesn't conform to my way of thinking. - Jamie Hale - 29/05/2002
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Martin Marvinski wrote: What if by coming to America you could have your own house, broadband internet that you could use 24/7 (No British Telecoms here), a fancy car, and other great things, would you do it then? But Martin, I can get all of those things and anything else you can think of here in Britian. There is just no reason to move stateside - in fact there are compelling reasons not to considering the differences between our societies. Don't feel too bad - someone had to get the short straw. :-D Martin Marvinski wrote: Then you hate the world because Americans by definition are from everywhere Don't pick holes in my logic! Okay then, if you insist... let's see if you really have changes since you became a member... I dislike the strongly-American approach to, quite simply, what is right, what is wrong and what is acceptable; the assumptions that are made on others' behalf and the general attitude you convey both to yourselves and to others; the intollerance of extremes and even the pettiest of oppositions; the way you prefer to lie to yourselves than face the truth; and finally I dislike the way you interfere with international relations that quite simply do not concern you - well maybe financially - and whine and bitch if another power tries to do the same to you. Being a modern super-civilisation, I'd have thought you'd have learnt from the mistakes we have both made in the past centuries, and for a nation with a large proportion of it's citizens reportedly believing in a single divine being, you really should realise that you are not a god. In attitude. * Note that I said "strongly-American approach to" for a reason. As you said, Americans as a rule of thumb are as normal as you or I. On second thoughts... ;P The problem with America is that is is essentially a room full of individual pubescent countries that are trying to play nice together, while being told when they can go out and play by a super-power that simply cannot control them all effectively. If you were to be given true freedom, you would revert to anachy and wipe yourselves out for the pettiest of reasons. ---- I say "in your face". You say "up yours" Well, what goes up must come down - and *that* is a certainty.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I can say practically everything you just said about most any 1st world country. It is just when you do it, you are also too arrogant to see how foul it is. Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
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I can say practically everything you just said about most any 1st world country. It is just when you do it, you are also too arrogant to see how foul it is. Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
Okay... first Chris then you - which part of it confused you into thinking I meant anything otherwise? I am talking attitudes here, with exception to one paragraph, and made damned sure I included every country to prevent just this sort of response. :confused:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
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Hey Chris, did you read any of that? :confused: How many times can I say I am not talking about the, you say, 280 million people, nor trying to fit anyone into any package? Chris Losinger wrote: as the British Empire has been proving nicely, for the past 100 years Er, yes, which is also the same example I gave in my text. This response has been a prime example of what I was talking about. :suss:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
David Wulff wrote: Hey Chris, did you read any of that? sure did. you are trying to define a stereotypical "American" in terms of your interpretation of American foreign policy. and, i don't know anyone, in any country, who could be accurately described as a living breathing representation of their country's foreign policy. (regardless of what you try to disclaim in your footnote) David Wulff wrote: How many times can I say I am not talking about the, you say, 280 million people, nor trying to fit anyone into any package? only you know the answer to that. David Wulff wrote: This response has been a prime example of what I was talking about. sure, you can come up with cartoon American based on whatever feature you think you see and then want to exaggerate; but it's nothing more than a caricature. and as usual, you're dancing that cartoon around, trying to score points against it. -c
Being just contaminates the void.
--Robyn HitchcockImage Processing - easy, like Sunday morning.
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Ok I know you all "hate" America, but would you ever consider coming here to work? How much would someone have to pay you in order for you to accept a job here? I know people like CG think there are alot of looneys with guns here but I know even he has his price. So what's your position on this?
I'd like to move to America; anywhere north of the 49th parellel would be great. Oh, wait, I'm already there... :laugh: "Programming is really just the mundane aspect of expressing a solution to a problem. There are talents that are specifically related to actually coding, but the real issue is being able to grasp problems and devise solutions that are detailed enough to actually be coded." -John Carmack [^]
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Ok I know you all "hate" America, but would you ever consider coming here to work? How much would someone have to pay you in order for you to accept a job here? I know people like CG think there are alot of looneys with guns here but I know even he has his price. So what's your position on this?
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Okay... first Chris then you - which part of it confused you into thinking I meant anything otherwise? I am talking attitudes here, with exception to one paragraph, and made damned sure I included every country to prevent just this sort of response. :confused:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
Heheh, once again, proof that people don't read footnotes. Just generalize it... People Suck. Of course, this'll get all the perverts & smart asses replying, but hey, that's nothing new...
- Shog9 -
Aaah... It's time to relax. You know what that means: a glass of beer, your favorite ergo chair... And of course, The Code Project loaded on your Personal Computer System. So go on, and indulge yourself, put your feet up. Lean back and just enjoy the articles. After all, CP sooths even the savage :bob:
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David Wulff wrote: Hey Chris, did you read any of that? sure did. you are trying to define a stereotypical "American" in terms of your interpretation of American foreign policy. and, i don't know anyone, in any country, who could be accurately described as a living breathing representation of their country's foreign policy. (regardless of what you try to disclaim in your footnote) David Wulff wrote: How many times can I say I am not talking about the, you say, 280 million people, nor trying to fit anyone into any package? only you know the answer to that. David Wulff wrote: This response has been a prime example of what I was talking about. sure, you can come up with cartoon American based on whatever feature you think you see and then want to exaggerate; but it's nothing more than a caricature. and as usual, you're dancing that cartoon around, trying to score points against it. -c
Being just contaminates the void.
--Robyn HitchcockImage Processing - easy, like Sunday morning.
To avoid wasting my time answering all of that individually, it can be nulled with just one answer: Chris Losinger wrote: you are trying to define a stereotypical "American" in terms of your interpretation of American foreign policy No I am not. Would you like that enboldended? How about superscripted? Indeed, in addition to that, I can say that nowhere have I stated otherwise. You said you had read it, well read it again with your font size a little bigger and you might notice there is some small text about half way through that says I am talking Americanisms, per se, which is no more speaking about Americans than saying Jet Li is British because he can speak English. :(
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
-
Heheh, once again, proof that people don't read footnotes. Just generalize it... People Suck. Of course, this'll get all the perverts & smart asses replying, but hey, that's nothing new...
- Shog9 -
Aaah... It's time to relax. You know what that means: a glass of beer, your favorite ergo chair... And of course, The Code Project loaded on your Personal Computer System. So go on, and indulge yourself, put your feet up. Lean back and just enjoy the articles. After all, CP sooths even the savage :bob:
Shog9 wrote: Heheh, once again, proof that people don't read footnotes It would seem so. :(( Shog9 wrote: Just generalize it... People Suck I don't think that is fair on all people though, I mean (apparently) it's just other people that suck... :laugh: Shog9 wrote: perverts & smart asses replying Oh sh*t, am I at the wrong site again?! :~ :rolleyes:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
-
To avoid wasting my time answering all of that individually, it can be nulled with just one answer: Chris Losinger wrote: you are trying to define a stereotypical "American" in terms of your interpretation of American foreign policy No I am not. Would you like that enboldended? How about superscripted? Indeed, in addition to that, I can say that nowhere have I stated otherwise. You said you had read it, well read it again with your font size a little bigger and you might notice there is some small text about half way through that says I am talking Americanisms, per se, which is no more speaking about Americans than saying Jet Li is British because he can speak English. :(
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
sorry, a little wink-wink footnote doesn't get you off the hook. -c
Being just contaminates the void.
--Robyn HitchcockImage Processing - easy, like Sunday morning.
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sorry, a little wink-wink footnote doesn't get you off the hook. -c
Being just contaminates the void.
--Robyn HitchcockImage Processing - easy, like Sunday morning.
Well I am sorry too, because that little "wink-wink footnote" was clearly marked as a core part of my text, and if you can't be bothered to, even after asking, read it as such then quite frankly you sir have your eye on the doughnut*. * Quote from Bill Sergio.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
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Well I am sorry too, because that little "wink-wink footnote" was clearly marked as a core part of my text, and if you can't be bothered to, even after asking, read it as such then quite frankly you sir have your eye on the doughnut*. * Quote from Bill Sergio.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
I could have created a cool signature brought to life with complex interactive DHTML, but I don't like to show off.
-
Ok I know you all "hate" America, but would you ever consider coming here to work? How much would someone have to pay you in order for you to accept a job here? I know people like CG think there are alot of looneys with guns here but I know even he has his price. So what's your position on this?
For starters :- USD 8K / month High speed net access Fast computer with large monitor MSDN subscription What they get :- 12 hours a day, 7 days a week, fast programmer!!! Nish
Author of the romantic comedy Summer Love and Some more Cricket [New Win] Review by Shog9 Click here for review[NW]