jaydeehess
Penultimate Amazing
Well, it is becoming so very obvious that we have another Christophera in our midst and i am not going to feed this troll any longer.
bye now
bye now
I'll gladly start taking orders from you, just as soon as you stop using 'and' next to a comma and stop starting a sentence with 'And', never mind a paragraph.I agree. In order to guarantee that no facts are confused with conjecture, we should leave all facts out of this discussion and state only conjecture.
Which, of course, is what you've been doing all along. I respect that, and I've been doing my best to follow suit in my responses.
And you're wrong about the explosives in the towers. The collapses were triggered by 100-ton iron deadweights (non-explosive bombs) dropped from high-altitude Zeppelins and laser-guided to impact the buildings' cores. The deadweights had thermite cores with delayed fuses to melt them down and destroy the evidence after the collapses. That explains the lack of detonation sounds (no explosions), the molten metal, the subterranean hot spots, the thermite residue, the lack of explosive damage or residue, the lack of witnesses of anyone planting explosives, the collapse of WTC7 even though it was not hit by a plane, the willingness of that rocker feller (you mean Bono, don't you?) to sign off on the plan (if the planes missed the towers, the bombs could be aborted or used on different buildings, with none of the risk of discovery that planted explosives have).
I just imagined asking Bono whose plan was better, your planted demolition charges or my Zeppelins, and he said mine had much lower risk, and that you should take your orders from me from now on.
Respectfully,
Myriad
You mean someone, who puts commas where they are not needed?You know how hard it can be, taking orders from someone, who is clearly not as well educated as yourself.
A few posts ago, you were telling us that it was a special military plane that hit the WTC, and that was how it got through the wall.
Now you're saying it was a standard 757, but it had a missile in a pod.
We should put a sign up over the forums saying "One conspiracy theory per person at any one time."
http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/commas.htmUse a comma + a little conjunction (and, but, for, nor, yet, or, so) to connect two independent clauses, as in "He hit the ball well, [FONT=Arial, Helvetica]but[/FONT] he ran toward third base."
Contending that the coordinating conjunction is adequate separation, some writers will leave out the comma in a sentence with short, balanced independent clauses (such as we see in the example just given). If there is ever any doubt, however, use the comma, as it is always correct in this situation.
One of the most frequent errors in comma usage is the placement of a comma after a coordinating conjunction. We cannot say that the comma will always come before the conjunction and never after, but it would be a rare event, indeed, that we need to follow a coordinating conjunction with a comma. When speaking, we do sometimes pause after the little conjunction, but there is seldom a good reason to put a comma there.
You mean someone, who puts commas where they are not needed?
That's what a kaishakunin is for.
(Says the jap.)
That's the guy playing backup, in case you screw up seppuku, right?
You got it in one.
Scout's honor I didn't google it.

That is correct, you'll make a philosopher yet. Perhaps a bit sooner, if you jettison the dickie bow.
No,
It was an ex military bad boy, with a pod and a missile and a homing device, to lock onto the beacon, on the computer floor.
See how everything fits, when you read things slowly.
Or uses sentence fragments?Precisely.
Kenjutsu, iaido, iaijutsu, or other?Just in case any of you are thinking about it, after dealing with this thread, might I humbly suggest....
[URL]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_9490455fc02f55e04.jpg[/URL]
Satisfaction guaranteed, or your money back.
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Could you just clarify exactly what the differences are between a standard everyday 767 and an "ex military bad boy" 767, please?
Not necessarily.Or uses sentence fragments?
Armour? Is that like Armour Boulevard in North Kansas City? That's where North Kansas City Hospital is! Are you a nurse there? Do you know my cardiologist? He works there. He's not as nice as you are, because he doesn't tell me fairy tales like you do. He must let you use the special pills in his cabinet. Is that where you get the fairy tales from?My pleasure, one is very heavily armoured. I leave you to work out which is which.
If you require further and better details of that armour, let me refer you to my previous posts.
A miltary 757/767 is made out of different materials thana civilian 757/767.I'm going to go out on a limb and predict that Malcolm believes that a military 757/767 is made out of different materials than a civilian 757/767.
Go ahead, MK, say it.
ETA: Damn! I'm too slow! Which of your previous posts detailed the armor used?
Someone who is oblivious to their own errors, even when mocked for them, then?Not necessarily.
what floor was the computer floor?No,
It was an ex military bad boy, with a pod and a missile and a homing device, to lock onto the beacon, on the computer floor.
See how everything fits, when you read things slowly.
Once again, you are referring to the mechanics of the hijacking. That is not what we were discussing.If you are anything like your photograph, you'll have some experience of lifting a baby out of a pushchair. Maybe your sister's or a friend's baby.
Now lift a 16 stone man out of a chair and we'll take it from there.