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Interesting commentary

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  • D David Wulff

    Jeremy Falcon wrote: Dude, ever notice you judge way too much? LOL! Again please... LOL! Quite the contrary I'm afraid, I don't judge anywhere near enough. I have this rather unfortunate faith in the goodness and honesty of man kind you see, one that keeps trying to proove itself misplaced. Maybe one day, but sure as hell is rosey not now. What I was referring to is not so subtle and very sincer comments made by some people (and no I can't name them, nor would I care to) who take the common stereotypical jokes and use them without any intention of taking the piss. It's quite sad really, nothing in turn to joke about. Jeremy Falcon wrote: Exactly, and what the hell have the Americans ever done to you? Yeeess... notice my humour rating please. I shall not answer that, there is little point when the horse is already dead. ;P


    David Wulff

    "David Wulff can't live without me, so you shouldn't either" - Paul Watson

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    Jeremy Falcon
    wrote on last edited by
    #40

    David Wulff wrote: Yeeess... notice my humour rating please. That's what I was wondering. The only reason I took the piss is because of the mad emoticon and I "remembered" the rating defaulting to something like H4 when it was HAS. Oh well. Now, to answer your original question about what the French has done to me -- hairy women! Now, if that's not enough reason for war, I don't know what the hell is. ;P Jeremy Falcon Imputek

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    • N Nemanja Trifunovic

      David Wulff wrote: Exactly, and what the hell have the French ever done to you? :omg: A Brit defending "Froggies" ?!?!? I must've had too much wine last night.

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      David Wulff
      wrote on last edited by
      #41

      What's wrong with the French? They have some great scenery and gave us the story for Allo Allo. :-D


      David Wulff

      "David Wulff can't live without me, so you shouldn't either" - Paul Watson

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      • J Jeremy Falcon

        David Wulff wrote: Yeeess... notice my humour rating please. That's what I was wondering. The only reason I took the piss is because of the mad emoticon and I "remembered" the rating defaulting to something like H4 when it was HAS. Oh well. Now, to answer your original question about what the French has done to me -- hairy women! Now, if that's not enough reason for war, I don't know what the hell is. ;P Jeremy Falcon Imputek

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        David Wulff
        wrote on last edited by
        #42

        For future reference - only the sincerity rating is defaulted incase I forget to set it - it reads four by default. Jeremy Falcon wrote: hairy women Nowhere near as bad as hairy men, so if you'd like to invade Scotland first it would be very much appreciated. :laugh:


        David Wulff

        "David Wulff can't live without me, so you shouldn't either" - Paul Watson

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        • P Paul Watson

          Richard Stringer wrote: I would rather be called a Texan - that most superior form of American. If called a yank it had best be done at long range. Do Brits like being called a "Limey ". Do most even know where that term came from ?. Just so you know, most South Africans would have a good chuckle and fob you off if you announced yourself as a Texan. We associate Texans with GWB and J. R. Ewing from Dallas. i.e. Not good. Just a tip :)

          Paul Watson
          Bluegrass
          Cape Town, South Africa

          Macbeth muttered: I am in blood / Stepped in so far, that should I wade no more, / Returning were as tedious as go o'er DavidW wrote: You are totally mad. Nice.

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          Chris Austin
          wrote on last edited by
          #43

          Paul Watson wrote: We associate Texans with GWB and J. R. Ewing from Dallas. i.e. Not good. Like the saying goes 'Life is too short to live in Dallas.' The word abbreviation is awfully long for what it means.

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          • P Paul Watson

            Richard Stringer wrote: I would rather be called a Texan - that most superior form of American. If called a yank it had best be done at long range. Do Brits like being called a "Limey ". Do most even know where that term came from ?. Just so you know, most South Africans would have a good chuckle and fob you off if you announced yourself as a Texan. We associate Texans with GWB and J. R. Ewing from Dallas. i.e. Not good. Just a tip :)

            Paul Watson
            Bluegrass
            Cape Town, South Africa

            Macbeth muttered: I am in blood / Stepped in so far, that should I wade no more, / Returning were as tedious as go o'er DavidW wrote: You are totally mad. Nice.

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            Richard Stringer
            wrote on last edited by
            #44

            Chuckle they can -Texans like a good laugh and often make fun of themselves - fobing one off may be dangerous to ones health however. To be associated with GWB is a GOOD thing. J.R. was what 30 years ago - don't yall get anything newer than that. You really don't want to know what most Texans think of South Africans either. It has something to do with pith hats and old land Rovers and running thru the jungle behind gun bearers wearing khaki shorts and singing "KumBaya" :) Richard In Italy for thirty years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love; they had five hundred years of democracy and peace and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. Orson Welles

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            • T tidge

              riiiiiiiiight. not saying they are friends, but how much trade goes on between France and Iraq? Quite a bit I believe. I haven't looked up the numbers recently, but as of a few years ago France earned a lot of money in trade with Iraq.

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              Juan Carlos Cobas
              wrote on last edited by
              #45

              tidge wrote: a few years ago France earned a lot of money in trade with Iraq Yep, that's true, but the main difference is that France made money pacifically whilst Bush (not US) wants to earn money by means of a war.

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              • D Daniel Turini

                "It is France that is truly motivated by oil politics, and Germany that is motivated by economics, not the U.S." I stopped reading here.


                It's not the fall that kills you: it's the sudden stop - Down by Law, Jim Jamursch (1986)

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                Juan Carlos Cobas
                wrote on last edited by
                #46

                Daniel Turini wrote: "It is France that is truly motivated by oil politics, and Germany that is motivated by economics, not the U.S." I stopped reading here. Yeah, what a bunch of lies!! :mad::mad:

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                • R Richard Stringer

                  I would rather be called a Texan - that most superior form of American. If called a yank it had best be done at long range. Do Brits like being called a "Limey ". Do most even know where that term came from ?. Richard In Italy for thirty years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love; they had five hundred years of democracy and peace and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. Orson Welles

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                  David Wulff
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #47

                  Richard Stringer wrote: Do Brits like being called a "Limey ". I think you'll find most Brits wouldn't care less if you called them most things, even to their face. Richard Stringer wrote: Do most even know where that term came from ?. I do! My dad told me years ago when I heard it mentioned on the telly and didn't know what it was! I can remember getting all embrassed as soon as I called out "what's a Limey?" as I was going through that phase at the time, where everything I said I somehow became very conscious of it having 'another' meaning. Like the time I asked what a tampon was... :laugh:


                  David Wulff

                  "David Wulff can't live without me, so you shouldn't either" - Paul Watson

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                  • D Daniel Turini

                    "It is France that is truly motivated by oil politics, and Germany that is motivated by economics, not the U.S." I stopped reading here.


                    It's not the fall that kills you: it's the sudden stop - Down by Law, Jim Jamursch (1986)

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                    Kevnar
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #48

                    Well just becuase we may disagree, doesn't mean there is not some truth in another person's opinions. Sometimes we disagree because there is truth in other people's opinions. In any case, we all have a choice to decide what we read. I just hope my opinions are informed before I let my knee jerk.

                    "How many more people have to die before no one ever dies again?" - Daniel Haley, The Onion

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                    • J Juan Carlos Cobas

                      tidge wrote: a few years ago France earned a lot of money in trade with Iraq Yep, that's true, but the main difference is that France made money pacifically whilst Bush (not US) wants to earn money by means of a war.

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                      tidge
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #49

                      How does Bush plan to earn money? Not that I am defending Bush. I'd just like to understand how.

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                      • D Daniel Turini

                        "It is France that is truly motivated by oil politics, and Germany that is motivated by economics, not the U.S." I stopped reading here.


                        It's not the fall that kills you: it's the sudden stop - Down by Law, Jim Jamursch (1986)

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                        tidge
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #50

                        Because why? You think France and Germany don't have a substantial amount to lose if the U.N. comes down on Iraq?

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                        • T Tim Smith

                          If anything, CP might be subject to Canadian laws. Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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                          Jamie Hale
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #51

                          Tim Smith wrote: CP might be subject to Canadian laws. Oh it is. You must bow down in worship of the Almighty Tim-bit before you may access CP. J

                          "You can get anything you want at Alice's Restaurant."

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                          • C Chris Losinger

                            Freedom Fries and Freedom Toast. http://www.salon.com/mwt/wire/2003/03/11/fries/index.html[^] everybody knows France is opposed to "freedom". duh. i can't wait for Freedom Kissing, Freedom Bread and Freedom Cuffs. then maybe we can start getting rid of all the French words in the English language. then we'd be speaking... oh yeah, German. -c


                            Image tools: ThumbNailer, Bobber, TIFFAssembler

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                            Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #52

                            How sad can you get? I mean - "Freedom Fries". They could at least have the decency to serve chips during their so-called "boycott". :rolleyes: An official spokesman caught eaving a strip joint cafe earlier today laid down the UK Government position very clearly: If they continue to dishonour the UK in this disgusting manner, we'll be forced to withdraw our support and export the EU Baguette mountain to Washington in retaliation. So there you have it. ;P Anna :rose: www.annasplace.me.uk

                            "Be yourself - not what others think you should be"
                            - Marcia Graesch

                            Trouble with resource IDs? Try the Resource ID Organiser Add-In for Visual C++

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                            • T tidge

                              How does Bush plan to earn money? Not that I am defending Bush. I'd just like to understand how.

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                              Juan Carlos Cobas
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #53

                              I thought that was cliear, just by controlling Iraq's oil.

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                              • J Juan Carlos Cobas

                                tidge wrote: a few years ago France earned a lot of money in trade with Iraq Yep, that's true, but the main difference is that France made money pacifically whilst Bush (not US) wants to earn money by means of a war.

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                                Doug Goulden
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #54

                                You believe to much of the junk you read. The idea that Bush wants a war to help the economy is ridiculous. Nobody wants to see pictures of bodybags coming back from the Gulf, or pictures of bombed out rubble. You seem to have forgotten the efforts that have been going into trying to get Saddaam to live up to an agreement made 12 years ago. The UN coalition granted SH a cease fire in '91 contingent on him ceasing his WMD programs and inspections. He also agreed to not fly fixed wing aircraft over the no-fly zones. Of course that didn't stop him from flying helicopters into the Northern no fly zone to attack the Kurds. The only reason he resumed inspections after kicking out the inpectors he agreed to 4 years ago was because the US has forced him to, period. You ought to realize what SH is about and look at the real motivations behind all of the people involved are. Don't just believe the Left leaning (or Right leaning) crap you see in the media. The truth tends to fall somewhere in between Rush Limbaugh and Phil Donahue. Uptight Ex-Military Republican married to a Commie Lib - How weird is that?

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                                • T tidge

                                  Because why? You think France and Germany don't have a substantial amount to lose if the U.N. comes down on Iraq?

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                                  Daniel Turini
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #55

                                  tidge wrote: Because why? You think France and Germany don't have a substantial amount to lose if the U.N. comes down on Iraq? Oh, I agree with you, they have. And I'm not so innocent to believe anyone in the world will spend billions of dolars in a war to "save the innocent" from "Hussein's tirany". I just don't like biased articles using misleading reasoning to make their point. Read again: "It is France that is truly motivated by oil politics, and Germany that is motivated by economics, not the U.S." Now, I stopped reading the article, because the writer is trying to prove US is NOT motivated by oil politics just saying that their counterparts are. It's simplistic and an offense to the reader's IQ.


                                  It's not the fall that kills you: it's the sudden stop - Down by Law, Jim Jamursch (1986)

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                                  • K Kevnar

                                    Well just becuase we may disagree, doesn't mean there is not some truth in another person's opinions. Sometimes we disagree because there is truth in other people's opinions. In any case, we all have a choice to decide what we read. I just hope my opinions are informed before I let my knee jerk.

                                    "How many more people have to die before no one ever dies again?" - Daniel Haley, The Onion

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                                    Daniel Turini
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #56

                                    Kevnar wrote: Well just becuase we may disagree, doesn't mean there is not some truth in another person's opinions. Sometimes we disagree because there is truth in other people's opinions. Like I wrote to tidge, just don't like biased articles using misleading reasoning to make their point. Read again: "It is France that is truly motivated by oil politics, and Germany that is motivated by economics, not the U.S." Now, I stopped reading the article, because the writer is trying to prove US is NOT motivated by oil politics just saying that their counterparts are. It's simplistic and an offense to the reader's IQ. It's just like saying: "It is C that has a scary syntax for beginners, not C++". You are trying to prove that C++ has a nice syntax for beginners just because C also has such a syntax. The article is full of this kind of contradiction and simplistic reasoning. So, I don't mind reading opinions contrary to mine. Actually, contrary to most people, I like doing it, because then I'll have more arguments when I try to prove my points. Reading something you agree with won't give you as many arguments...


                                    It's not the fall that kills you: it's the sudden stop - Down by Law, Jim Jamursch (1986)

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                                    • J Juan Carlos Cobas

                                      I thought that was cliear, just by controlling Iraq's oil.

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                                      tidge
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #57

                                      But the oil has always been there? If it was because of the oil, why wouldn't this have happened already? Couldn't it have anything to do with the fact that Saddam has yet to come into compliance with agreements he signed years ago? But then, you could make the counter-point asking "Then why is it now becoming an issue?" The only facts, are statements made by Bush saying that intelligences shows him terrorism flowing through Iraq, he sees them as a threat, and to top it off they have weapons of mass distruction that could be aqcuired by terrorists (not to mention those weapons are illegal and Iraq has already said they don't exist). What will controlling Iraq's oil do? Is the U.S. going to say "Hey, we own all the oil in Iraq now, and the U.S. gets it all for free?" I would be surprised if this were the case, but we'll have to wait and see. Should that be the case, the U.N. should come down on the U.S. Currently the U.S. gets more oil from Saudi Arabia and Mexico than they do from Iraq.

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                                      • P Paul Watson

                                        Richard Stringer wrote: I would rather be called a Texan - that most superior form of American. If called a yank it had best be done at long range. Do Brits like being called a "Limey ". Do most even know where that term came from ?. Just so you know, most South Africans would have a good chuckle and fob you off if you announced yourself as a Texan. We associate Texans with GWB and J. R. Ewing from Dallas. i.e. Not good. Just a tip :)

                                        Paul Watson
                                        Bluegrass
                                        Cape Town, South Africa

                                        Macbeth muttered: I am in blood / Stepped in so far, that should I wade no more, / Returning were as tedious as go o'er DavidW wrote: You are totally mad. Nice.

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                                        Michael A Barnhart
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #58

                                        Paul Watson wrote: We associate Texans with GWB and J. R. Ewing from Dallas. We can take this down several paths. To be stereo typed based on politicians and actors roles could get interesting. http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html[^] FYI: GWB was born in New Haven, Connecticut so yes by most standards he could be called a yank. Sorry George. Also you are generally accepted as a transplant if you father a Texan. We will skip the discussion of other options for President, This is the lounge:) http://www.dallasnet.co.uk/LHAD.htm[^] Larry was born in Weatherford, Texas, (that is just west of Fort Worth, where the west begins :-D ) his parents separated when he was five and he spent much of his childhood with his grandmother in Los Angeles. So although he is a Texan, Hollywood has taken it's toll. I need to take you to the Railhead BBQ. Which leads me to story. A friend had never seen the local watermelon (they are orange not red) and when he asked the farmer what is was the farmer made a comment about him being a yank. Well I have never seen this mild manner fellow get his dander up so quickly. His response was "Sir, I may be new to Texas but never call anyone born and raise in Richmond a Yankee!" (That's in Virginia, Capital of the Confederacy) Now the farmer was wise enough to offer a very sincere apology. What is interesting is we do work with a number of Brits and he has no offence at all with them calling him a yank. So it is all in context. ""

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                                        • D David Wulff

                                          Richard Stringer wrote: Do Brits like being called a "Limey ". I think you'll find most Brits wouldn't care less if you called them most things, even to their face. Richard Stringer wrote: Do most even know where that term came from ?. I do! My dad told me years ago when I heard it mentioned on the telly and didn't know what it was! I can remember getting all embrassed as soon as I called out "what's a Limey?" as I was going through that phase at the time, where everything I said I somehow became very conscious of it having 'another' meaning. Like the time I asked what a tampon was... :laugh:


                                          David Wulff

                                          "David Wulff can't live without me, so you shouldn't either" - Paul Watson

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                                          Michael A Barnhart
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #59

                                          David Wulff wrote: I think you'll find most Brits wouldn't care less if you called them most things, even to their face. I still remember the glare I got when I called that Irishman (who grew up in Scotland, boy what an accent), English :rolleyes: I am also smart enough to know when an immediate apology is in order. ""

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