I love this show and your comment :) Plus my little one is turning 5 this year, so by the time she is let's say, 12 or older *goes off to start training* lol
I love this show and your comment :) Plus my little one is turning 5 this year, so by the time she is let's say, 12 or older *goes off to start training* lol
<3 Plok
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I think this is crap and Gamestop should be held accountable, though as far as Metroid Prime Trilogy is concerned at least it's been 4 years since it was in print, not about a year. MPT is a legitly hard to find game and it was sold everywhere.
I'm one, if I go there it's get in and get out; I got more important things to do that hang around a gamestop all day, like playing games :)
But that's not any fun, lol :)
It was in my regular history book in high school, don't know where this guy went but whoever was buying their history books sucks, lol.
so we can point and laugh at this guy?
aw Dancing Mad and Zeromus' music already here? Ah well, Final Boss music for Sonic 3/Sonic 3 and Knuckles it is :).
I'm Sorry, But The Princess Has Been Eaten By Another Dragon.
Crack Pipe.
Because autosound competitions and playing with sound waves is fun. :)
Ahem I am a Vet as well, haven't shot a person in my life.
Explained :)
You have won the internets for the day :)
Understood, however, the car itself may be in a public area but the interior of said car is not. I never said anything about rights to privacy, Amendment 4 protects people against unreasonable search and seizure which is exactly what the NY State Police are attempting to go around. If a person has their phone in their…
While you are correct in that, as long as that amendment exists it doesn't matter what you consider. Or even what I consider for that matter, what it says is what it says and automobiles fall under it. A governmental entity just can't go making a targeted attempt to do something this in the way they are trying to do…
Let me rephrase, 5% is the absolute darkest, meaning with permit. And if you are inside your car, with a phone in your lap that is not plain view. The officer would have to pull up next to you, physically looking down into your car at your lap to see if there is a phone there. That does not constitute plain view. An…
A person can barely see into a car with 5% tint which is the typical legal limit for tinting windows. So your 0% over exaggeration is unnecessary, but again there is no good reason for peering through people's windows, for what essentially amounts to spying. Oh yeah and it's 4th Amendment violation, there is that.