I know, right? That guy went down like Hillary at a 9/11 ceremony!
I know, right? That guy went down like Hillary at a 9/11 ceremony!
In fairness, the original idea for the Russell Crowe version, where he was going to play the Sheriff of Nottingham as the good guy, seemed like a great idea. It’s a shame they made it just another Robin Hood movie.
You realize that the last Brazillian President was a socialist that was impeached for cooking the books and funneling money to cronies, right? She was preceded by another socialist, who was also corrupt.
The Patriots DBs did that all game against the Steelers and it definitely did not make the game better
Hate to reply to an old comment, but have you seen Breaking Bad? Skyler got on board and was helping Walter launder his money. Sure she was somewhat uncomfortable with it, but she knew why he did it and didn’t outright leave him. The only reason she turned on him was because Hank got killed and the law caught up with…
You bring up a good point, if only inadvertently. If the things that were said were so bad that they necessitated cancelling the seasons, I’d imagine that they violate the schools’ codes of conduct. I understand FERPA would stop the schools from announcing any discipline, but it has to be coming, right? I can’t…
I agree. Looks like they’re getting started early in making sure Trump gets reelected in four years.
I like to think that things have changed so drastically in the last six years that that piece wouldn’t be published today. But you and I know that it’s not true, and Deadspin would gleefully publish it all over again. Yet if a guy did that he would be the worst person in the world.
If I recall correctly, she comes from a very wealthy family and she relied on family connections for her initial investors/evangelists. Once she had a few of them on her side, it was much easier to persuade others to invest their money and reputations in her company. But like every pyramid scheme, it eventually…
Agreed completely. It’s not like Politico reporters were running stories by the Hillary campaign to see if they approved of them before publishing, and there definitely wasn’t a CNBC reporter (who moderated a Republican debate!) asking the Hillary campaign to submit questions for his Jeb Bush interview. That…
If I understand the Internet, and I think I do, there’s only one appropriate reply to this article:
The Countrywide part really bothered me too. She was a Harvard educated woman, which isn’t the typical background of someone who falls victim to “predatory lending.” Much more likely she refinanced for the low rate and just assumed she could refinance again before the rates got too high.
“People are fully entitled to invite, or seek, the type of intention they want from whom they want, and reject the type of attention they don’t want, from people they don’t want attention from.”
There’s a place that you can dress however you want and only get attention from the specific people you want. It’s called your home.
Pretty sure it’s a statutory 10 year minimum. But try getting an AUSA to prosecute it even with a confession. And even if they do prosecute, it’s usually results in a plea for little to no jail time.
Why is it a terrible take? If he were a football player, who can’t play in the NFL for three years after HS, he would have a legit argument.
He’s a junior, right? As in, he could have been in the NBA last year making millions of dollars in salary and endorsements, with more to come this year. If he were good enough.