Man_Of_Leisure
Man_Of_Leisure
Man_Of_Leisure

@rashomon: 9/10 of the titanium for SR71 construction came from soviet russia, purchased through dummy companies. In the end these materials will find there way to America, also through dummy companies.

Sounds like someone needs to set up a company in china making monazite, cerite, allanite paper weights!

I'm waiting for the Ronald McDonald, lil' jon 'get low' remix. 'aww skeet skeet skeet!'

@InsertBullets: That would be before TV was invented. So no, we, including you, do not.

Well guess what I'm stocking in my bomb shelter!

@MacTodd: I love the powerglove. It's so bad!

@Bizdady: Who says they would pay a huge fee if they wouldn't pay the 75 a month in the first place. A bill is not a sure fire way to get paid. Even when you take them to court, a judgement to pay does not mean someone forces them to pay. It just means you have slightly more legitimate ways to enforce collection. In

@Margatron: My interpretation of what they're saying is that one layer of graphene is one atom thick. The weight of a truck would not be able to collapse the carbon atoms in graphene even if focused on a surface area the size of a pencil. Which I suppose is a comarison you cant make with other materials because

@SKZA: Thanks SKZA, This is the information I was looking for.

@Gein07: Salmonella is naturally, and commonly carried by chickens and other birds. Ebolla is from Africa and would have to be imported and the eggs would be laced. Stop being a dumbass.

My understanding is that the salmonella is on the egg shell and never in the eggs themselves. Doesn't this then mean that contracting salmonella is always a case of improperly handling and preparing food?

@4th_Dimension: Hmmm, thats a good way to avoid being eaten!

I sneer at this thread, and at the devaluation of the word 'epic'.

@silkworm: you've had your internets license revoked.

@hawkeye18: Those are warnings for genetic engineering. Not happy/brave/agressive/consumerism hats.

Reminds of a story I read about a lightbulb at some gas station in california that has been lit almost continuously for a 100 years or so. Apparently the bulb was flawed when manufactured and burns at significantly cooler temperatures than it is supposed to, significantly improving its longevity. Albeit at the cost of