Amazing how just seconds after he was hacked, he managed to sleepwalk to his phone and delete the tweet while sleeping.
Amazing how just seconds after he was hacked, he managed to sleepwalk to his phone and delete the tweet while sleeping.
The second guy does a “well, actually” and proceeds to say the same thing the first guy said...
Saunders said that Broner is not cooperating with Cincinnati Police on their felonious assault investigation of the shooting.
Great, Ley changed the line without noting it so this conversation makes no fucking sense and now Hernandez kills himself which makes this WHOLE discussion MEANINGLESS!
Solid. Obscure and solid
Or Euskadi Ta Askatasuna, if you’re Basque.
Weird that Griffin and Paul scored 51 and a guy who is 51 wound up hitting the game winner.
Now that Ley changed that particular line in the post without noting it, this whole discussion makes even less sense than before haha
One difference is that “not guilty” as opposed to “innocent” reflects the fact that the burden is on the state. When a jury retires to deliberate in a criminal case, they are not deciding whether the evidence proves the defendant is innocent, but rather whether the prosecution has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that…
A judge I worked with would say “guilty or not guilty is judged by a jury of people, innocence is between you and God”
It’s a strictly moral distinction; by your definition, he’s legally innocent. by myname’s definition he’s morally not guilty (the implication being that he’s morally guilty). Both interpretations are accurate.
And people laughed at me for not dropping him from my fantasy team.
I hear Phil Simms might be available
#Elite.08
That’s a Nate-meg.
Why don’t we have a name for Philly’s obsessive trading for 2nd round picks yet, like “the strategy” or something
Seeing as my trash talk doesn’t explicitly refer to my opponents by name but rather creates a obvious allegory about present circumstance with which they should identity, I’m more of a subwoofer.
Just brilliant.
Contemporary sociologists trace the origin of the phrase “alternate facts” back to the 2015, the year that the Super Bowl champion Carolina Panthers became the first team in NFL history to go undefeated.