geminiid
Geminiid
geminiid

Santorum says he wants them to “take responsibility” - these kids have literally been spending every spare waking moment waging absolute war on the NRA and politicians who’ve accepted contributions from them, and doing a whole lot of media and social media on the side to boot. Short of going door to door and

Eric Garner.

Thank you.

NO.

Yeah...it’s weird how whenever I’m in conversation with older police officers or those who’ve retired or been promoted to detective etc. there’s almost the universal story: “I’ve never fired my gun in the line of duty” but these guys tend to be the ones who live or lived in the neighborhoods they patrol, they know

The use of violence, on its face, is a failure - an admission of a weak position or inadequacy, lack of communication skills and an inability or unwillingness to assess a situation and problem solve. And so the use of violence in law enforcement (investigation, policing - whatever you want to call it) especially the

How is it that US Police Officers are literally the only people *on the whole planet* who can’t tell the difference between a handgun and a cellphone? This doesn’t happen anywhere else in the world.

Hydrogen peroxide and chlorine bleach are both oxidizing agents and, in the proper concentration, denature enough proteins and DNA to prevent microbial activity. They cannot create resistance, as the active process is pretty fundamental, and not specific to any particular type of organism or structure (they’ll oxidize

Nylon scrub pads (the pores are big enough that they can dry out completely in a pretty short period of time) or brushes, Steel Wool (for your less delicate items), and silicone scrubbers (a silicone pad with knobby or spiky protrusions on either or both sides). My health department actually bans sponges in

Can’t the criteria just relate to the maximum possible rate of fire for the device, and require a special license for anything over a certain threshold? That would cover all existing weapons, AND any new weapons or mods developed to convert existing weapons. Rate of fire is the real killer, after all, nobody does a

Then you need to work on reading comprehension a bit. Assault weapons or mods didn’t exist when the precious 2nd amendment was written. We managed just fine, until very recently, without them being in the hands of civilians, so take your simpleton “rebuttal” somewhere the level of discourse is more befitting of your

This community, and these kids especially, want to burn it all down and start fresh, and it sounds like alot of people are willing to donate matches. How many are willing to stick around and rebuild though? Rubio is a tool, but makes a point about the assault weapons ban - manufacturers and retailers were already

SO the border patrol folks can enter private property within 25 miles of the border to stop an illegal crossing. If the property is that far from the border, hasn’t the illegal crossing already happened at that point, so the agents aren’t stopping anything, in point of fact, and are just trapsing around some private

Please explain more about this tax break thing of which you speak...louder though, so my friends from Sears and Sam’s Club sitting in the back can hear you.

There are laws, usually wrapped up in part of the health code (see your local Department for Public Health) unfortunately most of them are worded in such a way that it’s only criminal if the infected knows they’re contagious, which in reality would only happen if they’ve already seen a doctor for their condition.

I’ve seen illness pass from one person to another to another and then back to the original person within the workplace more than once. I’m the guy off avoiding everybody, and wiping down contact surfaces with disinfecting wipes every opportunity. I’ve wanted to institute the rule that if the sick people won’t stay

Weirdly, I did a brief stint in healthcare administration (legal) and just before flu season began, there’d be nurses set up in a common area of our facility a couple times a week doling out free flu shots. I don’t remember anybody ever being out with the flu. There were injuries, and food poisoning and staying home

So many of his real estate holdings are coastal, that I will love to play all these statements back for him when he’s trying to collect flood insurance on his ill-conceived golf courses and resorts one day...assuming the dementia doesn’t take complete hold of him before then.

My only hook into this third film is that Dylan O’Brien nearly died* early in production, and willed himself back into fighting condition while the rest of production basically held their breath over the course of a year. That the real life story is probably a million times more inspiring and wrenching than the

People should have the same issue with this as they do with the no-fly list: it’s all extra-legal malarkey. Individuals are discriminated against despite having violated no law, yet have a bunch of absurd legal hoops to jump through (that will cost them time and/or money) to correct the agency’s mistake.