privatedoberman
Pvt. Duane Doberman, U.S. Army
privatedoberman

You buy a spray tan like that I bet you get a free bowl of soup.

I actually think this is a great way to relate to the common wrestling fan, who is also married to his thirteen-year-old cousin.

This child-pageant mom coverage is really unecessary.

Nepotism?

There is an official beer of the NFL and every NFL team. Fuck this guy.

Mitch reminds me a lot of Kyle Boller (not in terms of specific style or scouting comparisons). But like Kyle, he’s just a guy that was on no one’s radar before his last college season and then everyone talks themselves into it because he kinda looks like a pro QB. But in Kyle’s case, even the Ravens waited until 19

ESPN lost money because it was too liberal. Therefore, it’s cutting people from baseball, hockey and college football, sports that are too liberal.

Their liberal agenda of showing sports with so many colored players has really hurt ESPN’s standing with conservatives.

“Yeah, suck on Rex Grossman, everyone.”

It’s a means to an end. They use it as a tool to justify keeping him on their draft board. And getting it out there that he willingly sat for the polygraph was a proactive PR move meant to be viewed as a vote of confidence in his innocence. That was probably agreed upon by the agent beforehand, that he would sit for

Well, that’s very exciting news for the state of Wisconsin and it’s 5 million Packers owners.

Here’s how polygraphs are used in law enforcement:

Someone who commits a rape/sexual assault may feel like they did nothing wrong and that there was no sort of unwanted sexual contact involved. So if they asked him, “Did you have sex with her?”. “Yes”. “Was that sex consensual?” “Yes.” Even if the polygraph was accurate, in that case he would have passed the test

No one said a polygraph test was the only due diligence performed (regardless of its evidentiary value in court), and you have no idea (nor do I) what due diligence was performed. And no one can argue the contrary either. I don’t expect straw man arguments from you, Barry.

They’re inadmissible because the results are just an interpretation by the person administering the test. The person administering the test supposedly is an expert who is able to flawlessly determine a baseline physiological response to “control questions” like stating your name, and then interprets when your

My understanding is that they are around 80%-90% accurate. That makes them inadmissible in court because 10%-20% is big when someone’s future freedom is in the balance. They use them extensively in the clearance process for gigs at places like the CIA, FBI, NSA, and various military orgs for Top Secret Clearance. That

Polygraphs are pseudoscience the same way fingerprints are — not reliable enough for a courtroom, but generally fairly accurate. Use of polygraphs is standard practice in monitoring sex offenders, for example. And prosecutors and defense attorneys both use them on occasion to support or oppose charging decisions, even

The guy killed it in Conan the Barbarian. The gravitas he brought to the Thulsa Doom role elevated the entire movie from camp to something memorable.