Looks like they already fixed it. A search for Aston Martin now returns no results.
Looks like they already fixed it. A search for Aston Martin now returns no results.
We had to catch a connecting flight in Beijing. There was a 4 hour gap between the two flights. Many people barely made it. They had two security lines to recheck baggage for all international passengers.
I have no answer to that. The Kurds are generally who I’d take as they tend to be pretty friendly to America. But like you said, the Turks would want none of that.
Extremely good for only the third episode of the series. I was having this discussion with people here yesterday. How are we ever going to do significant damage to Assad’s forces without causing Russian collateral damage? If we can’t solve that problem, how do we ever make any headway?
This all reminds me of that first season West Wing episode where they argue over proportional response. It’s what you do when you feel like you can’t make it look like you’re not going to respond at all, but you don’t want to escalate things either. 59 Tomahawks make for a great headline even if they don’t do any…
I was speaking in general of the Syrian Air Force, not those specific planes. They have a lot of MiGs. You are correct those specific planes are not.
Very true. So that would depend on if we’re just making a show of force or trying to do real damage to the Assad military. I cant answer that. If it’s just a show of force, it doesn’t matter if the buildings are mostly empty when they were hit.
As long as they’re Syrian operated MiGs. I was thinking more of Russian Air Force proper.
And to answer your original question, there are 21 airfields in Syria, 15 under Assad control from what I can see.
More importantly, how many Syrian airfields can we take out without hitting Russian equipment or personnel. My guess would be that the Russians would have been given our target ahead of time.
Going off the idea that the lottery is a bit of a gamble, why not get a base model Alfa Giulia AWD? That’s $40k and gorgeous. The reliability has the same odds as winning the lottery, and that already worked out okay. Besides, he wants to get rid of it when the warranty expires, so long term Alfa Romeo repair costs…
Lots of things were supposed to happen immediately when Trump became president. Oops.
That’s what I was getting at but you said it much better.
People who don’t like him think of those memes as jokes, but his supporters believe him 100%. I’ve seen plenty of these in my Facebook feed. Between those and George Soros/Hillary Clinton New World Order conspiracy theory posts, my FB feed is just full of Trump-love.
Damn, you are an angry person. My original comment had nothing to do with the Jalopnik title. I thought that was fine. I was talking about the inability of a lot people to read beyond the headline of a story. Calm down.
I am aware of the history of journalism, but it did improve in objectivity as the 20th century progressed. My concern is the reversion back to an era of “You furnish the pictures. I’ll furnish the war.”
I don’t agree with all the “fake news” charges made by certain individuals, but sensationalist headlines and biased content seem all too common in modern journalism.
I have a feeling most headlines won’t be as responsible.
Because people see headlines that say “Driverless Uber car involved in crash” and fail to read the rest of the story. They conclude autonomous vehicles are unsafe.
Personally, I’ve enjoyed the racing itself so far this year. The problem I have is that I can’t get excited about the drivers. They’re bland PR robots until the moment they snap. Once they snap, they throw tantrums on and/or off track. Dale Jr, whether you think he’s overrated or not, at least has what comes across as…