RE: World News - SERIOUSLY THOUGH - 05-17-2016
(05-17-2016, 07:21 PM)Space Jockey Wrote: (05-17-2016, 03:27 PM)BumblebeeCody Wrote: (05-08-2016, 04:19 PM)Space Jockey Wrote: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2016/05/05/honor-killing-pakistan-couple-elope/83973870/?utm_source=feedblitz&utm_medium=FeedBlitzRss&utm_campaign=usatodaycomworld-topstories
Pakistan police arrest 13 people for burning girl in ‘honor killing’
Shit so stupid. There's no such thing as "honour killing".
Hey! i wans't the one who inveted that term, that's what the article says
If I'm not mistaken, he was going after the term itself, rather than your use of it.
RE: World News - SERIOUSLY THOUGH - 05-18-2016
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-36309492
A Paris-Cairo flight has just disappeared off the radar. Here's to hoping it's just a malfunction.
http://www.bbc.com/news/live/world-africa-36328976
The plane apparently swerved and sent out a distress call before crashing. Could be an engine malfunction, pilot error, or hijack attempt. I hope they find the black boxes soon so we can find out, and hopefully rule out the fact that a potential aggressor got past security in Paris.
RE: World News - ZpaceJ0ck0 - 05-21-2016
http://fortune.com/2016/05/20/coke-venezuela-suspends/
Coke Has Suspended All Production in Venezuela
EDIT: Some of you may ask "how bad is that?" or "what's the current situation in Venezuela", if you are one of those, i'm going to leave this in-depth analisys by reddit user "A-soporific":
This is a longer story than I'm telling, but yeah here we go.
Venezuela has always had issues with corruption, but it's not normally this much of an issue. I mean, lots of countries have issued with corruption. But, around twenty years ago a fellow by the name of Hugo Chavez was elected president some years after he tried to take the job by force in a coup that, obviously, failed.
You see, Chavez was enamored with two things: Simon Bolivar and the wave of revolutions that cleared the Spanish from the New World, and international socialism. Now, Simon Bolivar was cut from much the same cloth as Thomas Jefferson or George Washington and is really a man who deserves remembering. But Chavez wanted to be Bolivar, just swap out the Spanish for the United States and Bolivar's liberalism for socialism.
At first Chavez appeared to be doing a good job, but the man was a bit suspicious of absolutely everyone. He knew how easy it was to plot a coup and was constantly being convinced that one was brewing against him. This wasn't entirely unjustified because 2002 there was one. There were a lot of powerful people in the country that were unhappy with strained relations with US and EU and very close ties to Cuba to the point where the nation was basically trading oil for Cuban grade school textbooks and doctors. The coup ousted Chavez for about 47 hours before failing because the military wouldn't back the coup and the poor of Caracas came out to defend the Bolivarian Revolution. One of the primary causes of failure was a complete lack of backing from the US, and George W. Bush's insistence that the US not be involved.
This was, in many ways, a breaking point. The man put up lead by the planners of the Coup was head of the Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce. In short, businesses became the enemy as much as the US in the eyes of the Chavista movement. So, even though the State-run Oil company was 70% of the nations exports, it's leadership was culled and replaced by political supporters of Chavez. The media, who had not been a friend to Chavez prior to the coup, found itself being seized, forced to close, or force out of the nation altogether. A number of companies tied to the coup were outright seized. When the markets reacted poorly to this and the Bolivar (the currency of Venezuela) suffered price controls were put in place "fixing" the rate at which money can be (legally) exchanged for a different nation's currency.
Things didn't go great after that. The price fixing made it hard to sell Venezuelan made stuff outside the country hard. For a while, at least, people managed and found local sources or tightened belts. There were the occasional nationalization of a newspaper or oil platform but Chavez was popular and on the ball enough to prevent things from getting worse.
Then, in 2013 Chavez died. Everything got much worse. Nicolas Maduro was elected by a narrow margin, and he was Chavez's hand-picked successor. Not hand-picked because he was as good as Chavez, but because he was ideologically pure and a good friend. Maduro is, in every way, a pale echo of Chavez. He is not as talented, charismatic, or skilled as his friend and mentor. His inadequacy took a bad situation and made it much worse.
There have been periodic problems since. For the first time shortages appeared on shelves in 2013, as many of the companies who had stockpiled money for imports ran out. In 2014 there were massive protests and riots. Last year a number of airlines either stopped accepting Bolivars in exchange for plane tickets or abandoned their routs to the country altogether because they couldn't buy the things they needed there and the state wouldn't let them convert Bolivars into Dollars. There were no resolutions to any of these problems. Instead, the police and military were able to "restore order" either by seizing the offending business and turning it over to more ideologically pure supporters of the government or by clearing the streets of protestors. The last independent news broadcasters were also forced out, meaning that the only news is that the Government is producing itself.
What has happened here is the fact that his Coke subsidiary has run out of dollars with which to buy sugar. Normally, this isn't much of a problem in that the company can simply go to the bank and change local currencies (Bolivars) for the currency to buy imports (US Dollars), only because the price controls the banks don't have any dollars. The only export of any note that can bring in dollars is oil, which is controlled by the government. The problem is that the global price of oil has fallen by more than half and at the same time oil production has faltered under mismanagement and corruption on the part of those political appointees. So, the government just doesn't have the dollars to trade to the Coke bottler to buy sugar. The Coke subsidiary simply cannot function and has announced as such. This is the same thing that happened to the Clorox plant, beer manufacturer, and that consumer electronics chain last year. The Coke subsidiary will most likely be seized by Maduro and forced to "open" but still fail to produce output because they can't make anything without sugar.
Coke, as a company, prides itself on being literally everywhere. They're in China and were in Russia towards the end of the Soviet Union. When World War II happened, they built portable bottling plants and shipped them around the South Pacific following US Marines, to ensure that they could always get a Coke. In terms of prevalence and hardiness Coke is the cockroach of the business world. It's always there, it survives just about anything. When Coke can't take it, you're talking apocalypse level disaster.
That's actually pretty much where we are now in Venezuela. There was already a coup, and hundreds of thousands protesting for months. The party of Chavez and Maduro were already voted out of power, but are using "emergency" laws to maintain their positions. There's no democratic or undemocratic process left for the average person to try to fix things other than "burn it down-start from scratch". If Maduro was smart he would step down in favor of someone more capable and willing to compromise, but if Maduro was smart it wouldn't have gotten this far in the first place.
RE: World News - SERIOUSLY THOUGH - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 07:24 AM)USpace Jockey Wrote: http://fortune.com/2016/05/20/coke-venezuela-suspends/
Coke Has Suspended All Production in Venezuela
EDIT: Some of you may ask "how bad is that?", if you are one of those, i'm going to leave this in-depth analisys by reddit user "A-soporific":
This is a longer story than I'm telling, but yeah here we go.
Venezuela has always had issues with corruption, but it's not normally this much of an issue. I mean, lots of countries have issued with corruption. But, around twenty years ago a fellow by the name of Hugo Chavez was elected president some years after he tried to take the job by force in a coup that, obviously, failed.
You see, Chavez was enamored with two things: Simon Bolivar and the wave of revolutions that cleared the Spanish from the New World, and international socialism. Now, Simon Bolivar was cut from much the same cloth as Thomas Jefferson or George Washington and is really a man who deserves remembering. But Chavez wanted to be Bolivar, just swap out the Spanish for the United States and Bolivar's liberalism for socialism.
At first Chavez appeared to be doing a good job, but the man was a bit suspicious of absolutely everyone. He knew how easy it was to plot a coup and was constantly being convinced that one was brewing against him. This wasn't entirely unjustified because 2002 there was one. There were a lot of powerful people in the country that were unhappy with strained relations with US and EU and very close ties to Cuba to the point where the nation was basically trading oil for Cuban grade school textbooks and doctors. The coup ousted Chavez for about 47 hours before failing because the military wouldn't back the coup and the poor of Caracas came out to defend the Bolivarian Revolution. One of the primary causes of failure was a complete lack of backing from the US, and George W. Bush's insistence that the US not be involved.
This was, in many ways, a breaking point. The man put up lead by the planners of the Coup was head of the Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce. In short, businesses became the enemy as much as the US in the eyes of the Chavista movement. So, even though the State-run Oil company was 70% of the nations exports, it's leadership was culled and replaced by political supporters of Chavez. The media, who had not been a friend to Chavez prior to the coup, found itself being seized, forced to close, or force out of the nation altogether. A number of companies tied to the coup were outright seized. When the markets reacted poorly to this and the Bolivar (the currency of Venezuela) suffered price controls were put in place "fixing" the rate at which money can be (legally) exchanged for a different nation's currency.
Things didn't go great after that. The price fixing made it hard to sell Venezuelan made stuff outside the country hard. For a while, at least, people managed and found local sources or tightened belts. There were the occasional nationalization of a newspaper or oil platform but Chavez was popular and on the ball enough to prevent things from getting worse.
Then, in 2013 Chavez died. Everything got much worse. Nicolas Maduro was elected by a narrow margin, and he was Chavez's hand-picked successor. Not hand-picked because he was as good as Chavez, but because he was ideologically pure and a good friend. Maduro is, in every way, a pale echo of Chavez. He is not as talented, charismatic, or skilled as his friend and mentor. His inadequacy took a bad situation and made it much worse.
There have been periodic problems since. For the first time shortages appeared on shelves in 2013, as many of the companies who had stockpiled money for imports ran out. In 2014 there were massive protests and riots. Last year a number of airlines either stopped accepting Bolivars in exchange for plane tickets or abandoned their routs to the country altogether because they couldn't buy the things they needed there and the state wouldn't let them convert Bolivars into Dollars. There were no resolutions to any of these problems. Instead, the police and military were able to "restore order" either by seizing the offending business and turning it over to more ideologically pure supporters of the government or by clearing the streets of protestors. The last independent news broadcasters were also forced out, meaning that the only news is that the Government is producing itself.
What has happened here is the fact that his Coke subsidiary has run out of dollars with which to buy sugar. Normally, this isn't much of a problem in that the company can simply go to the bank and change local currencies (Bolivars) for the currency to buy imports (US Dollars), only because the price controls the banks don't have any dollars. The only export of any note that can bring in dollars is oil, which is controlled by the government. The problem is that the global price of oil has fallen by more than half and at the same time oil production has faltered under mismanagement and corruption on the part of those political appointees. So, the government just doesn't have the dollars to trade to the Coke bottler to buy sugar. The Coke subsidiary simply cannot function and has announced as such. This is the same thing that happened to the Clorox plant, beer manufacturer, and that consumer electronics chain last year. The Coke subsidiary will most likely be seized by Maduro and forced to "open" but still fail to produce output because they can't make anything without sugar.
Coke, as a company, prides itself on being literally everywhere. They're in China and were in Russia towards the end of the Soviet Union. When World War II happened, they built portable bottling plants and shipped them around the South Pacific following US Marines, to ensure that they could always get a Coke. In terms of prevalence and hardiness Coke is the cockroach of the business world. It's always there, it survives just about anything. When Coke can't take it, you're talking apocalypse level disaster.
That's actually pretty much where we are now in Venezuela. There was already a coup, and hundreds of thousands protesting for months. The party of Chavez and Maduro were already voted out of power, but are using "emergency" laws to maintain their positions. There's no democratic or undemocratic process left for the average person to try to fix things other than "burn it down-start from scratch". If Maduro was smart he would step down in favor of someone more capable and willing to compromise, but if Maduro was smart it wouldn't have gotten this far in the first place.
Venezuela in a nutshell - "our country is crashing ? It's the fault of those American imperialists and their western allies !"
Right, s'all us.
RE: World News - ZpaceJ0ck0 - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 07:35 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: (05-21-2016, 07:24 AM)USpace Jockey Wrote: http://fortune.com/2016/05/20/coke-venezuela-suspends/
Coke Has Suspended All Production in Venezuela
EDIT: Some of you may ask "how bad is that?", if you are one of those, i'm going to leave this in-depth analisys by reddit user "A-soporific":
This is a longer story than I'm telling, but yeah here we go.
Venezuela has always had issues with corruption, but it's not normally this much of an issue. I mean, lots of countries have issued with corruption. But, around twenty years ago a fellow by the name of Hugo Chavez was elected president some years after he tried to take the job by force in a coup that, obviously, failed.
You see, Chavez was enamored with two things: Simon Bolivar and the wave of revolutions that cleared the Spanish from the New World, and international socialism. Now, Simon Bolivar was cut from much the same cloth as Thomas Jefferson or George Washington and is really a man who deserves remembering. But Chavez wanted to be Bolivar, just swap out the Spanish for the United States and Bolivar's liberalism for socialism.
At first Chavez appeared to be doing a good job, but the man was a bit suspicious of absolutely everyone. He knew how easy it was to plot a coup and was constantly being convinced that one was brewing against him. This wasn't entirely unjustified because 2002 there was one. There were a lot of powerful people in the country that were unhappy with strained relations with US and EU and very close ties to Cuba to the point where the nation was basically trading oil for Cuban grade school textbooks and doctors. The coup ousted Chavez for about 47 hours before failing because the military wouldn't back the coup and the poor of Caracas came out to defend the Bolivarian Revolution. One of the primary causes of failure was a complete lack of backing from the US, and George W. Bush's insistence that the US not be involved.
This was, in many ways, a breaking point. The man put up lead by the planners of the Coup was head of the Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce. In short, businesses became the enemy as much as the US in the eyes of the Chavista movement. So, even though the State-run Oil company was 70% of the nations exports, it's leadership was culled and replaced by political supporters of Chavez. The media, who had not been a friend to Chavez prior to the coup, found itself being seized, forced to close, or force out of the nation altogether. A number of companies tied to the coup were outright seized. When the markets reacted poorly to this and the Bolivar (the currency of Venezuela) suffered price controls were put in place "fixing" the rate at which money can be (legally) exchanged for a different nation's currency.
Things didn't go great after that. The price fixing made it hard to sell Venezuelan made stuff outside the country hard. For a while, at least, people managed and found local sources or tightened belts. There were the occasional nationalization of a newspaper or oil platform but Chavez was popular and on the ball enough to prevent things from getting worse.
Then, in 2013 Chavez died. Everything got much worse. Nicolas Maduro was elected by a narrow margin, and he was Chavez's hand-picked successor. Not hand-picked because he was as good as Chavez, but because he was ideologically pure and a good friend. Maduro is, in every way, a pale echo of Chavez. He is not as talented, charismatic, or skilled as his friend and mentor. His inadequacy took a bad situation and made it much worse.
There have been periodic problems since. For the first time shortages appeared on shelves in 2013, as many of the companies who had stockpiled money for imports ran out. In 2014 there were massive protests and riots. Last year a number of airlines either stopped accepting Bolivars in exchange for plane tickets or abandoned their routs to the country altogether because they couldn't buy the things they needed there and the state wouldn't let them convert Bolivars into Dollars. There were no resolutions to any of these problems. Instead, the police and military were able to "restore order" either by seizing the offending business and turning it over to more ideologically pure supporters of the government or by clearing the streets of protestors. The last independent news broadcasters were also forced out, meaning that the only news is that the Government is producing itself.
What has happened here is the fact that his Coke subsidiary has run out of dollars with which to buy sugar. Normally, this isn't much of a problem in that the company can simply go to the bank and change local currencies (Bolivars) for the currency to buy imports (US Dollars), only because the price controls the banks don't have any dollars. The only export of any note that can bring in dollars is oil, which is controlled by the government. The problem is that the global price of oil has fallen by more than half and at the same time oil production has faltered under mismanagement and corruption on the part of those political appointees. So, the government just doesn't have the dollars to trade to the Coke bottler to buy sugar. The Coke subsidiary simply cannot function and has announced as such. This is the same thing that happened to the Clorox plant, beer manufacturer, and that consumer electronics chain last year. The Coke subsidiary will most likely be seized by Maduro and forced to "open" but still fail to produce output because they can't make anything without sugar.
Coke, as a company, prides itself on being literally everywhere. They're in China and were in Russia towards the end of the Soviet Union. When World War II happened, they built portable bottling plants and shipped them around the South Pacific following US Marines, to ensure that they could always get a Coke. In terms of prevalence and hardiness Coke is the cockroach of the business world. It's always there, it survives just about anything. When Coke can't take it, you're talking apocalypse level disaster.
That's actually pretty much where we are now in Venezuela. There was already a coup, and hundreds of thousands protesting for months. The party of Chavez and Maduro were already voted out of power, but are using "emergency" laws to maintain their positions. There's no democratic or undemocratic process left for the average person to try to fix things other than "burn it down-start from scratch". If Maduro was smart he would step down in favor of someone more capable and willing to compromise, but if Maduro was smart it wouldn't have gotten this far in the first place.
Venezuela in a nutshell - "our country is crashing ? It's the fault of those American imperialists and their western allies !"
Right, s'all us.
That's the goverment, not the people, NO one believes Maduro's cheap propaganda (beetween 70-80% of Venezuelan population doens't believe his lies, if you want to be more specific)
EDIT: i mean seriously, putting an entire country into the same bag is just plain silly and borderline racist, i mean, do you actually believe that everyone in Venezuela is so stupid to believe Maduro's lies?
Do you actually believe everyone here is brainwashed pawn?
EDIT 2 (OCTUBER 14TH, 2017): Jesus Christ! I can't believe I actually overreacted like this, and for what? For nothing. Even to this day I have no idea what happened.
I guess this is what happens when your reading comprehension skills are piss-poor and you are willing to jump to conclusions just like that.
If anything, this goes to show I came a long way since then.
RE: World News - SERIOUSLY THOUGH - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 08:46 AM)Space Jockey Wrote: (05-21-2016, 07:35 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: (05-21-2016, 07:24 AM)USpace Jockey Wrote: http://fortune.com/2016/05/20/coke-venezuela-suspends/
Coke Has Suspended All Production in Venezuela
EDIT: Some of you may ask "how bad is that?", if you are one of those, i'm going to leave this in-depth analisys by reddit user "A-soporific":
This is a longer story than I'm telling, but yeah here we go.
Venezuela has always had issues with corruption, but it's not normally this much of an issue. I mean, lots of countries have issued with corruption. But, around twenty years ago a fellow by the name of Hugo Chavez was elected president some years after he tried to take the job by force in a coup that, obviously, failed.
You see, Chavez was enamored with two things: Simon Bolivar and the wave of revolutions that cleared the Spanish from the New World, and international socialism. Now, Simon Bolivar was cut from much the same cloth as Thomas Jefferson or George Washington and is really a man who deserves remembering. But Chavez wanted to be Bolivar, just swap out the Spanish for the United States and Bolivar's liberalism for socialism.
At first Chavez appeared to be doing a good job, but the man was a bit suspicious of absolutely everyone. He knew how easy it was to plot a coup and was constantly being convinced that one was brewing against him. This wasn't entirely unjustified because 2002 there was one. There were a lot of powerful people in the country that were unhappy with strained relations with US and EU and very close ties to Cuba to the point where the nation was basically trading oil for Cuban grade school textbooks and doctors. The coup ousted Chavez for about 47 hours before failing because the military wouldn't back the coup and the poor of Caracas came out to defend the Bolivarian Revolution. One of the primary causes of failure was a complete lack of backing from the US, and George W. Bush's insistence that the US not be involved.
This was, in many ways, a breaking point. The man put up lead by the planners of the Coup was head of the Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce. In short, businesses became the enemy as much as the US in the eyes of the Chavista movement. So, even though the State-run Oil company was 70% of the nations exports, it's leadership was culled and replaced by political supporters of Chavez. The media, who had not been a friend to Chavez prior to the coup, found itself being seized, forced to close, or force out of the nation altogether. A number of companies tied to the coup were outright seized. When the markets reacted poorly to this and the Bolivar (the currency of Venezuela) suffered price controls were put in place "fixing" the rate at which money can be (legally) exchanged for a different nation's currency.
Things didn't go great after that. The price fixing made it hard to sell Venezuelan made stuff outside the country hard. For a while, at least, people managed and found local sources or tightened belts. There were the occasional nationalization of a newspaper or oil platform but Chavez was popular and on the ball enough to prevent things from getting worse.
Then, in 2013 Chavez died. Everything got much worse. Nicolas Maduro was elected by a narrow margin, and he was Chavez's hand-picked successor. Not hand-picked because he was as good as Chavez, but because he was ideologically pure and a good friend. Maduro is, in every way, a pale echo of Chavez. He is not as talented, charismatic, or skilled as his friend and mentor. His inadequacy took a bad situation and made it much worse.
There have been periodic problems since. For the first time shortages appeared on shelves in 2013, as many of the companies who had stockpiled money for imports ran out. In 2014 there were massive protests and riots. Last year a number of airlines either stopped accepting Bolivars in exchange for plane tickets or abandoned their routs to the country altogether because they couldn't buy the things they needed there and the state wouldn't let them convert Bolivars into Dollars. There were no resolutions to any of these problems. Instead, the police and military were able to "restore order" either by seizing the offending business and turning it over to more ideologically pure supporters of the government or by clearing the streets of protestors. The last independent news broadcasters were also forced out, meaning that the only news is that the Government is producing itself.
What has happened here is the fact that his Coke subsidiary has run out of dollars with which to buy sugar. Normally, this isn't much of a problem in that the company can simply go to the bank and change local currencies (Bolivars) for the currency to buy imports (US Dollars), only because the price controls the banks don't have any dollars. The only export of any note that can bring in dollars is oil, which is controlled by the government. The problem is that the global price of oil has fallen by more than half and at the same time oil production has faltered under mismanagement and corruption on the part of those political appointees. So, the government just doesn't have the dollars to trade to the Coke bottler to buy sugar. The Coke subsidiary simply cannot function and has announced as such. This is the same thing that happened to the Clorox plant, beer manufacturer, and that consumer electronics chain last year. The Coke subsidiary will most likely be seized by Maduro and forced to "open" but still fail to produce output because they can't make anything without sugar.
Coke, as a company, prides itself on being literally everywhere. They're in China and were in Russia towards the end of the Soviet Union. When World War II happened, they built portable bottling plants and shipped them around the South Pacific following US Marines, to ensure that they could always get a Coke. In terms of prevalence and hardiness Coke is the cockroach of the business world. It's always there, it survives just about anything. When Coke can't take it, you're talking apocalypse level disaster.
That's actually pretty much where we are now in Venezuela. There was already a coup, and hundreds of thousands protesting for months. The party of Chavez and Maduro were already voted out of power, but are using "emergency" laws to maintain their positions. There's no democratic or undemocratic process left for the average person to try to fix things other than "burn it down-start from scratch". If Maduro was smart he would step down in favor of someone more capable and willing to compromise, but if Maduro was smart it wouldn't have gotten this far in the first place.
Venezuela in a nutshell - "our country is crashing ? It's the fault of those American imperialists and their western allies !"
Right, s'all us.
That's the goverment, not the people, NO one believes Maduro's cheap propaganda (beetween 70-80% of Venezuelan population doens't believe his lies, if you want to be more specific)
EDIT: i mean seriously, putting an entire country into the same bag is just plain silly and borderline racist, i mean, do you actually believe that everyone in Venezuela is so stupid to believe Maduro's lies?
Do you actually believe everyone here is brainwashed pawn?
Whatch your words next time, kiddo, the internet is not an owlet for you xenophobia.
I would have specified the people, were I writing about them.
Next time, ask for confirmation before jumping down someone's throat.
RE: World News - ZpaceJ0ck0 - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 11:34 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: (05-21-2016, 08:46 AM)Space Jockey Wrote: (05-21-2016, 07:35 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: Venezuela in a nutshell - "our country is crashing ? It's the fault of those American imperialists and their western allies !"
Right, s'all us.
That's the goverment, not the people, NO one believes Maduro's cheap propaganda (beetween 70-80% of Venezuelan population doens't believe his lies, if you want to be more specific)
EDIT: i mean seriously, putting an entire country into the same bag is just plain silly and borderline racist, i mean, do you actually believe that everyone in Venezuela is so stupid to believe Maduro's lies?
Do you actually believe everyone here is brainwashed pawn?
Whatch your words next time, kiddo, the internet is not an owlet for you xenophobia.
I would have specified the people, were I writing about them.
Next time, ask for confirmation before jumping down someone's throat.
If that's the case, then i apologize, things get easily misunderstood on the internet.
I actually feel a little stupid stupid right now.
RE: World News - SamuraiGaiden - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 11:34 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: Next time, ask for confirmation before jumping down someone's throat.
He won't. Par for the course.
-----
https://www.yahoo.com/celebrity/david-hasselhoff-im-broke-174557769.html
In other news...David Hasselhoff is broke. He claims that he makes $112,000 a month, but has expenses totaling $66,000 so he can't pay his ex-wife's alimony any longer. He is currently paying her $252,000 a year, which equates to $21,000 a month.
Tell ya what, Davie...I'll switch you. :) I can live off of $91,000 a month and I won't spend anywhere near $66,000 of it.
RE: World News - ZpaceJ0ck0 - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 04:31 PM)SamuraiGaiden Wrote: (05-21-2016, 11:34 AM)SERIOUSLY THOUGH Wrote: Next time, ask for confirmation before jumping down someone's throat.
He won't. Par for the course.
Could you please elaborate? You were talking about me, after all.
EDIT: No, seriously. Why do you dislike me so much? Is it because I was rude to you that one time on the Anime thread?
RE: World News - Kakariko Kid - 05-21-2016
Whoa! Whoa! Whoa! Let's chill. Let it go. I just told Metal Snake there's Hella lot less drama than Facebook here. I feel like A Zombie Riot is back.
RE: World News - ZpaceJ0ck0 - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 05:20 PM)Kakariko Kid Wrote: Whoa! Whoa! Whoa! Let's chill. Let it go. I just told Metal Snake there's Hella lot less drama than Facebook here. I feel like A Zombie Riot is back.
What do you mean? No one here is making drama, i'm just asking a question to SamuraiGaiden.
As for the whole "SERIOUSLY THOUGH and the venezuelans" thing, i though (hah) that he was insulting the people of my country , i give him my response, but then he told me that's not the case (that he never insulted the people of my country) and that i should "ask for confirmation before jumping down someone's throat", and he's right, I made a mistake, so i apologized for said mistakes. Sorry for my bad English
RE: World News - Kakariko Kid - 05-21-2016
I'm just saying we should drop it before it blows up.
Moving on....The black box flight recorders of EgyptAir Flight 804 have been found
RE: World News - ZpaceJ0ck0 - 05-21-2016
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/may/20/oil-company-records-exxon-co2-emission-reduction-patents
Oil company records from 1960s reveal patents to reduce CO2 emissions in cars
RE: World News - SERIOUSLY THOUGH - 05-21-2016
(05-21-2016, 06:37 PM)Kakariko Kid Wrote: Moving on....The black box flight recorders of EgyptAir Flight 804 have been found
I'm glad they've heard the pings, they only generally last 30 days, that why it took them so long to find out what happened to the Rio-Paris flight in 2009.
I hope they find out it wasn't terrorism, but then it'd be a plane error. Whatever we get from the black boxes won't be good news :(
RE: World News - Psychospacecow - 05-22-2016
http://www.bbc.com/news/36349031
Florida got Crocodiles and Alligator confused again.
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