Phrost
The Fighting Skeptic
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2003
- Messages
- 1,653
DavidJames said:Do you not see the irony in that comment?
How so?
Do I not equally have the right to express a desire to punch him in the face?
DavidJames said:Do you not see the irony in that comment?
Phrost said:Why would I be concerned with impressing anyone?
I'm absolutely sincere about wanting to punch this person in the face, having served in the Army defending this douche's freedom to run his mouth.
Fortunately for people like you two, there isn't such a device. If there were, I'd wager we'd see less of you, and your smug comments.
CFLarsen said:
Wonders never cease. I actually agree with you!
Phrost said:
How so?
Do I not equally have the right to express a desire to punch him in the face?
Phrost said:
The internet lets the mice of the world roar like lions.
rikzilla said:
Phrost, I have to say I'd love to watch you punch EDave in the gob!Hell, I'd pay to see it! I'll even get your back so AUP or Mr.M doesn't try to sneak up on ya!
If Dave is willing we should get you guys inside a ring @ TAM3...we could sell tickets and donate the proceeds to JREF.
What say you?
-z
Skeptic said:Your desire to react violently as a substitute for honest discourse is understandable.
It sure is, especially when it is clear he meant he merely WANTS to do it, not that he WILL do it. The whole point of his post is that this is the sort of feeling some posters deserve, not that one should act on those feelings.
The reason is that at a certain point, there is no such thing as an "honest discourse" with someone who thinks Abu Gharib scandal is equivalent to beaheding innocents, any more than there is one with a flat-earther.
I doubt few here suspect you to be much of a threat intellectually.
He's more-or-less on the right, after all; what do you expect? We all know right-wingers are stupid and no match for the superior left-wingers. That's because the left-wingers understand that prejudice against other groups is wrong, unlike those morons on the right!
I don't know. He posted:Skeptic said:It sure is, especially when it is clear he meant he merely WANTS to do it, not that he WILL do it. The whole point of his post is that this is the sort of feeling some posters deserve, not that one should act on those feelings.Your desire to react violently as a substitute for honest discourse is understandable.
A statement which I still think is far below him. Why did he want to puch him in the face? Because he "compared religious nutcases who cut the heads off non-combatants and a nation which pursues a war against such nutcases". (Which I can't see is a fair description of what was said, but that's another story).I'm being completely honest that if this was said to my face with the sincerity 'evildave' has expressed, said person would likely get punched.
Yeah, something like that .....crackmonkey said:Yeah, but MY Dad could beat up YOUR Dad...
crackmonkey said:It's customary to provide some kind of factual support for outlandish claims such as yours.
Torturers who start wars to pay off... etc. etc.
God. I expect better form this place.
WASHINGTON -- Forced nudity, hooding and the use of dogs all were interrogation techniques approved for use in Guantanamo Bay prison -- but, top Bush administration lawyers insisted this week, never meant to be applied in Iraq.
WASHINGTON - The Bush administration didn't ease its hard-line tactics for interrogating terror suspects until after concerns were raised repeatedly by State Department and military officials worried about violating international and U.S. law, memos released by the White House show.
The Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR) unit of Halliburton (HAL: up $0.54 to $20.66, Research, Estimates), of which Cheney was CEO from 1995 to 2000, said late Monday that it was awarded a contract by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to put out oil fires and make emergency repairs to Iraq's oil infrastructure.
President Bush Tuesday asked Congress for $489.3 million to cover the cost of repairing damage to Iraq's oil facilities, much or all of which could go to Halliburton or its subcontractors under the terms of its contract with the Army.
(CBS/AP) A Pentagon e-mail indicates that a multimillion-dollar Halliburton contract for Iraqi reconstruction was "coordinated" with the office of Vice President Dick Cheney, the company's former chief executive, a newsmagazine reports.