sweetjennielee
SweetJennieLee
sweetjennielee

This wasn't gerrymandering. This was taking kids who should have been on other teams and putting them on JRW. Yes, 12-year-olds understand this. They know where other kids live.

The kids damn well know what's going on.

You have just defined "no goal."

I wonder if that has ever happened before to a goalie wearing a throat protector.

No, because people don't just want him deemed guilty in the public eye; they want him thrown out of school, with all the consequences that go with it. If your standard is to punish people who have not been convicted by some fair, independent process, say so.

"I wanted to show the world how flawed the college process for handling cases of sexual assault is."

We are talking about a vastly different situation than the one you are familiar with.

Yeah, you state things quite correctly. Short-term dibs is not the problem—especially since in the first 24-48 hours a lot of cars aren't circulating at all and are neither vacating and saving nor hunting for parking spaces. If nothing else, in cold-blooded terms, the math is indeed the problem, because dibs

I know. Person doesn't realize the comment doesn't add up; has a warped view of what a tight parking situation is.

And Boeheim was coach where when that shit for which he and the program that pays him today are being punished?

What about the 3 hours of shoveling? Don't forget that.

There is at least some logic to dibs right after a big snowstorm—since it can be a true ordeal getting a parking place. But in Chicago, it's also used as a way to reserve a private space for weeks in winter. And you'll see spots claimed after an inch or two falls on bare pavement; no shoveling even involved.

You must not live in a crowded residential area where parking is tight and it just isn't possible always to have that space right in front of your house, whether there is snow or not. In many urban neighborhoods, you might have to park a block or more away from your house, any time of year. One of the biggest problems

I've done it plenty of times, and worked to get others on the block to do the same. It didn't kill me. It's what you have to deal with when you park on the street in a snowy climate.

True, actually. Dibs is an example of why socialism always fails. The ideal would be for everyone on the block to pitch in. But people fear that others will benefit from their labor while they themselves won't benefit. So they only expend effort on what they can claim for their own. It's the reason collective

It's an injustice that one can't appropriate part of a public street as one's own, often for the price of minimal effort exaggerated as "hours of shoveling." But thanks for revealing your mindset.

Dibs people are scummy bratty children. In defending dibs, they are proudlyannouncing, "I am a selfish, anti-social person who finds it painful to expend any effort that might benefit someone besides me."

I don't know why hockey fans want it back on ESPN, other than to feel it makes the sport "big league." The NBC outlets show a ton of games, and for the first time you can see all the playoff games. Used to be you had to pray that your team was in the ESPN rotation for a series.

Do we know she spoke to Variety, or was this a statement issued by her lawyer or publisher?

In general announcers give short shrift to unsportsmanlike penalties, even though the yardage is huge.