thisnameisanalias
ThisNameIsAnAlias
thisnameisanalias

I wouldn't go that far. Feminism is good and has its place in evening the playing field (women are paid less for the same job simply because they have a uterus, or in the fact that we collectively don't trust none-white, non-male leaders in general) or in fighting for rights that I, as a man, should not have any say

Until...

Holy cow. OP changes for Terran. Haven't even started up the other videos yet but holy cow *_*

edit: just finished watching all 3, and for a Protoss expansion, they seemed to have gotten gypped in the new units department. At least for now according to these videos.

Sweet.

That looks like it could be a pain in the neck to fix.

You, sir (or ma'am), greatly underestimate the internet's propensity for extreme kneejerk reactions.

People these days are practically tripping over themselves to be offended.

So I've got an idea. What if someone who had a passion for this subject (fair wages and treatment) created an organization that "graded" game companies and publishers based on how they treated their employees (particularly the programmers and artists who pull 90 hour work weeks). It could be kind of like those "Fair

omg

Actually, if i remember right, Celebrimbor made the three elven rings last after Sauron had already left to forge the One. Once he realized what Sauron was up to, he conspired with Galadriel to hide the three away. Not that any of that really matters and yes, I'm a geek :)

Only entry in the series I couldnt finish. It was just so damn boring.

Racial profiling in Seattle, as with many other cities, was of the type that I'd label structural or institutional discrimination. While I occasionally had to deal with (that is to say fire) cops who engaged in individual racism, the real problem was tied to disproportionate arrests of street dealers. A real problem,

Yes. To all. The drug war has cost this country well over a trillion dollars. It's resulted in the incarceration of tens of millions of low-level, nonviolent drug offenders — overwhelmingly young people, poor people, people of color. It's severely damaged the relationship between the police and those communities that

As a Chief, if you had reason to suspect that one of your officers was racist and/or showed poor judgment in the field, but they had never been formally brought up on charges or punished, what leverage would you have to keep them off the streets? I'm imagining a scenario where other cops came to you with stories, and

Is there a strong sense of "brotherhood" between officers? As a Police Chief is it difficult to separate yourself from that in order to make responsible and unbiased judgments if there is misconduct within your department? Do you always side with your officer first?

What is the least effective or practical aspect of police officer training in the US?

What do you think of the parallels between "the blue wall" and "stop snitching"?

Did you ever have to deal with racial profiling inside your department? If so how did you handle it?

Why are cops so aggressive, confrontational, and violent? Are those sought-after traits for recruits or are they learned?