henrykissingersacidflashback--disqus
HenryKissinger'sAcidFlashback
henrykissingersacidflashback--disqus

Instead of arguing, I am just going to say I find it abhorrent that someone would voluntarily kill over one hundred people just because they were told to.

You gotta tell 'em! Green apples are made out of people!

Disagree. There are many delicious apples, and they taste even better when they're straight from the tree.

Oh yes, because if there's one thing preventing the terrorists from shutting down a globally integrated communications network, it's an American with a gun.

We watched that in seventh grade Social Studies. I'll never forget the bloody hands hanging off the barbed wire fence. Brutally effective film.

It's understandable. I too was shocked by how many Americans consider soldiers to be unassailable heroes.

I don't understand this. How are you supposed to gun down the thug who just snatched your purse in a crowded mall food court if your gun is in the purse he just snatched?

Yeah, you'd love to load me into a boxcar and cart me away to No-Gun Hippie-Dippy Barack HUSSEIN NO-bama Bad Time Terror camp, you Nazi.

It would be easier if voters and politicians on both sides of the argument weren't all batshit hysterical reactionaries about the whole thing.

More specifically, they're being violated because we need those Stinger missiles to keep a tyrannical government in check, but we aren't allowed to get permission from the government to buy Stinger missiles so we can keep that tyrannical government in check. If they'd just give us permission, it would be fine.

I'm 100 percent for gun ownership, but completely against American gun idiots and amateur Constitutional scholars.

I've been saying it for years: The average person's brain just isn't neurologically sophisticated enough to safely drive a car.

I welcome Google Glass' ability to start a conversation about that in the same way I encourage everyone not involved in legitimate activism to stop being paranoid about privacy and overload the NSA with all their banal day-to-day activities.

I agree 100 percent with the plane crash analogy.

There's a huge difference between expectation of privacy — which for reasons having to do with not crapping all over the Constitution doesn't exist in public spaces — and feeling uncomfortable because someone is either oblivious of what you consider to be your personal space in public or exploiting the law to intrude

I am so pumped for this season.

Yes, but where is "Eyes Wide Shut Simulator 2015"?

Put an' appy cake in 'our tummay!

WE'RE HERE TO TENDERIZE!

I have always liked "Escape from L.A." better than "Escape from New York", and you've pretty much hit the nail on the head as to why.