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Ping : Don White
On Thu, 07 May 2009 10:12:14 -0500, Richard Casady
wrote: On Wed, 06 May 2009 18:32:10 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: roblem is, arguing about whether water torture is torture is sort of meaningless, don't you think? I mean, it's called water torture. Well it was - until the American government started using it. Then it became waterboarding. I guess some folks are easily confused. Anybody who lets a name get in the way of truth isn't thinking clearly. When I was a kid reading about the Japs using it on US POWs it was torture. They put a long strip of cloth in the victims mouth. They would hold on to one end while the victim swallowed it. Then they would pull it out, slowly, so slowly. They use the cans the cooking kerosene came in and didn't bother to rinse them well. They also ****ed into them. When the victim was full, looking 9 1/2 months pregnant, they would smack them across the belly with a heavy iron bar and burst the stomach. They knew how to waterboard in those days. I figure they ought to send torturers to prison with pedophile paperwork. See how they like being raped to death. Casady The US executed Japanese soldiers who were found to have waterboarded our troops. Seems pretty clear that human physiology hasn't changed in 60 years, how could our definition of this form of torture? Ideology allows anything. |
Ping : Don White
On Thu, 07 May 2009 10:18:10 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote: On Thu, 07 May 2009 09:48:48 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: I never could understand some peoples obsession with royals, especially by Americans. The Canadians have an excuse, the Queen is even on their dough. But then I am rather unimpressed with celebrities in general. I would never dream of asking a movie actor for an autograph. I figure they are entitled to a life when not working. One of my kids told me about a hilarious incident he had when he visited Hollywood while on a cross-country driving vacation. He hit a big Mercedes with his Chevy station wagon, or the Mercedes hit him. The Merc had a "driver' and the owner was in the back seat. The black guy from a TV show called E.R. Never watched it and don't know who he is. My son didn't either. It was a little fender bender deal where my son had inched out of an alley or parking lot and the Merc came speeding by, scraping the side against the kid's front bumper. Probably mostly my son's fault. The Merc went on a hundred feet or so before stopping. Son was barely out his car before a guy came running from a nearby restaurant. "Do you know who you're in a accident with!!?" Guy is all breathless excited, and say's "That's blah blah" My kid is thinking WTF? And this guy gets even more excited because my son never heard of him. There was other stuff about how he and this actor did a stare-down. Funny, but you have to hear him tell the story. Anyway, there's lots of people who live their lives worshiping others. Bottom line and most important is it didn't cost the kid a dime. Probably best to pick rich actors for fender benders. --Vic Color is always the most easily distinguished detail. If the actor were "default" white, you wouldn't have said so. Your description would have only included the gender. I'm not calling you a racist, it's just an interesting aside. I've never watched ER either. |
Ping : Don White
On Thu, 07 May 2009 08:37:46 -0700, jps wrote:
Color is always the most easily distinguished detail. If the actor were "default" white, you wouldn't have said so. Your description would have only included the gender. I'm not calling you a racist, it's just an interesting aside. I've never watched ER either. You're thinking too much. If I didn't know Mutt from Jeff I'd say the tall guy or the short guy. You wouldn't suspect tallism or shortism. If I knew the name I'd say Mutt, or Jeff. ER was a popular show and some here probably know who I'm talking about. Just gave some identification info. --Vic |
Ping : Don White
Vic Smith wrote:
On Thu, 07 May 2009 08:37:46 -0700, jps wrote: Color is always the most easily distinguished detail. If the actor were "default" white, you wouldn't have said so. Your description would have only included the gender. I'm not calling you a racist, it's just an interesting aside. I've never watched ER either. You're thinking too much. If I didn't know Mutt from Jeff I'd say the tall guy or the short guy. You wouldn't suspect tallism or shortism. If I knew the name I'd say Mutt, or Jeff. ER was a popular show and some here probably know who I'm talking about. Just gave some identification info. --Vic I think JPS would have been happy if you called the man negro. He gets so upset when you use the racist term "black". |
Ping : Don White
On Thu, 07 May 2009 08:26:39 -0700, jps wrote:
The US executed Japanese soldiers who were found to have waterboarded our troops. Seems pretty clear that human physiology hasn't changed in 60 years, how could our definition of this form of torture? Ideology allows anything. You don't have to go back 60 years. In the Vietnam War, US soldiers were court-martialed for waterboarding. |
Ping : Don White
On Wed, 06 May 2009 18:58:42 -0400, BAR wrote:
My wife's ancestors had the good sense to leave Canada back in the 1850's. They must have seen socialism, especially national health care coming and got out fast. I bet it was the Winters |
Ping : Don White
On May 9, 7:38*am, Richard Casady wrote:
On Wed, 06 May 2009 18:58:42 -0400, BAR wrote: My wife's ancestors had the good sense to leave Canada back in the 1850's. They must have seen socialism, especially national health care coming and got out fast. I bet it was the Winters No, his family were ****ed because Canada didn't allow Slavery...... |
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