mnbska--disqus
mnbska
mnbska--disqus

Whatever dude. Schopenhauer 24. This alone paints you as a child incapable of having an adult discussion.

They are on the left and the right, which makes Billy Corgan's opinion incomplete but not incorrect. Political extremists are precisely the kind of ideals-based, knee-jerk, "you're wrong I'm right" people that are vulnerable to doing such things. Those people are easy to spot. The real danger is when the legal system

Ugh. Are you up for a discussion or not? Take yourself out of it. Consider the other people involved.

You're not hearing my point, and you're deliberately dodging the facts. What's been demonstrated in several instances is that Internet justice has harmed people: often times disproportionally, other times inaccurately. What's also been demonstrated (and is not in dispute) is that someone's livelihood can be taken

Also this one from Forbes:

That's what you think at first, but when you realize the law is going unenforced year after year… that's when "what feels good" trumps the laws we've put in place.

My favorite is this one, when a guy calls out an lemonade stand operating for years, gets shamed by his neighbors, gets ignored by the cops, then someone digs into his past to find dirt. All while the lemonade stand is far out of reasonable legal territory, but hey.. who cares about the law? Just find something

You don't have to look hard to find someone who took a legitimate stand on an issue, and then their address or phone number gets published online, and the thousands of people who disagree decide to DOS their life by flooding them with hate messages.

They're not entirely wrong. They may be nuts on other things, but they're right on this one. I'm legitimately afraid of the Net mob deciding to shame me for something. I could lose my job, my family, and my house and there's no redress. Nobody to sue, nobody to get compensation from. Once the Internet decides it's

It's because we can't use trans fat (hydrogenated oils) anymore. Palm oil is by far the cheapest substitute.

Oh you're right, though. He loves to write love letters to locations/languages/archetypes, but in that book it's just too much.

I was in Nigel Tufnel Park.

HA!

I read the book and kept waiting for it to kick in. One of the more boring Le Carre books. I'm surprised they made this one.

LCK is fast descending into pathos. He's one of roughly a half dozen self-appointed social commentator comedians that command a big audience. With this, now he's even higher up on the cross.