You do realize you just described Jim Crow laws, right?
You do realize you just described Jim Crow laws, right?
Not to mention their operating expenses were massive $4.5 billion last year (Yale’s was $3.2 billion, for perspective).
I’d like to think it’s possible to care about racial injustice while at the same time not caring what Colin Kaepernick does/doesn’t do.
Maybe instead we should be teaching kindergartners if you throw a pie in someone’s face, you might get your ass whooped.
Oh. Did throwing a pie at his face fix all of that?
My assumption is this exception exists because otherwise the offense could run a play (on a down other than 4th), and if it doesn’t work as intended, draw an intentional grounding penalty and get another attempt at it.
Her children’s lives are certainly worth more than $15,000 a piece, I don’t think anyone is arguing otherwise.
You have a point that her life has been permanently and significantly altered, but you are forgetting that Cinemark was not liable for this woman’s injuries. She turned down $30,000 from a company that was not at fault, presumably because it was not enough for her, which looks suspiciously like greed to a lot of…
I believe they are being called greedy because the one plaintiff turned down $30,000 from a company that was not liable for her injuries (which had already been established in state court), likely because she thought she could get more money. That seems to fit the definition of “greed” pretty well.
It’s anything but unrestricted. The government creates incentives for their purchase and so far the FDA has prevented any other entrants into the market. It’s literally a monopoly created by the government.
It’s a reference to 1984.
He was arrested for being in possession of a “hoax bomb” which is illegal in Texas. He also plugged the damn thing in, and intentionally set the alarm to go off in class, purposefully causing a disruption. That was the point at which he got into trouble. There was never really any confusion about whether or not it was…
Molitor is blocking release of the video, not Mixon.
Nowhere in the article does it state that people are being banned for no reason.
Also, getting Dion Waiters to play an actual supporting role, instead of whatever the hell he was trying to do before, is a pretty impressive feat.
My guess is because it gets over 100 degrees pretty frequently in July and August.
It was supposed to be paid off in 2035, but they’re about a decade ahead of schedule. They’re aiming for 2024.
That’s not at all how this works. AT&T stadium was financed through a bond repaid by the half-cent sales tax, a 2% hotel occupancy tax, and a 5% car rental tax. In addition the city receives $2 million a year in rent from the Cowboys and $500k a year from AT&T for the naming rights. And they’re on pace to pay off the…
It’s probably more because the sales and alcohol tax revenue is much more significant for Arlington (and Irving in the past) than it would be for Dallas (where the Cowboys haven’t played in since 1971 and the Rangers never played in).
I didn’t notice okra wasn’t on the list until you mentioned it, and now I am genuinely embarrassed and upset. Should be top 5.