uwir--disqus
UWIR
uwir--disqus

See, now how things work in not-mob-justice-world is that when someone is being accused of murder, that's not justified merely by some random person on the internet making assertions with no citations whatsoever. If all this comes down to is dueling assertions, then Presumed-Innocent-Until-Proven-Guilty kicks in, and

I never said anything of the sort, and you are being wildly dishonest. You are presenting the blatantly false dichotomy that either I accept the leftist view of the event without question, or I think Martin deserved to die.

You're simply proving my point. There is a large number of people who assert Trayvon's death was murder, yet they absolutely refuse to explain what their basis for the assertion is, and start hurling personal abuse at anyone who asks what it is. It's simply a classic example of people trying to create a consensus

I have yet to meet anyone who believes that George ZImmerman is guilty of murder who is willing to discuss the matter civilly. I guess you all just believe in mob justice: once someone is accused, no one is challenge the accusation. What the fuck are you thinking? Do you think that continually being an asshole to

C) Calling Martin's death a "murder" assumes facts not in evidence.

Fun fact: The Sopranos was also a prequel to The Walking Dead. What happens after the cut to black? Tony gets attacked by a walker!

Depends on how much of a cut you're getting. Distribution isn't free, you know. Plus there's the precursors.

In the Spanish language version, does the analog of Jesse go to the United States where the cartel talks about him in English right in front of him, but he doesn't understand what they're saying because he doesn't speak English?

Well? Is it?

I think it was not only the fact that there was a meth lab, but that they hadn't disclosed that fact, so they could have been charged with fraud.

I really liked The Seminar. At the end, when Dwight et al try to convince Andy that he's going to fail if he doesn't accept their help, and he answers something like "Maybe I will. But only maybe", that was pretty cool.

I like to think that Martin Sheen played the younger Jed Bartlet (note the spelling) in the movie "The Dead Zone", and his character changed his name to revive his presidential ambitions.

That was silly of them. They should have saved the low quality ones as wavs so that they would be indistinguishable to your computer.

Perhaps the question isn't so much how CH made money, so much as how music stores got away with charging $20 for an album.

I joined BMG and got the initial free CDs, but then when I tried to buy the required full-price CD, they sent me a letter saying that they had canceled my membership. I thought that was rather odd, but whatever. Then a few months later they sent me a letter saying that I owed them money for the CD I didn't pay for. I

Produce a CD as in manufacture a compact disc, or produce a CD as in record an album? There's a huge difference between the marginal cost of a CD versus the overhead cost amortized over the number of CDs sold.

Supersatanic's claim that Sandler is his least favorite actor is all the more bizarre when one remembers that Pauly Shore exists. But I can see how someone might have blocked that knowledge from their conscious awareness.

And high definition, 3D rendering of 8-bit video game characters has just the right mix of stupidity and genius.

Are you confused as to what "Ponzi scheme" means, or does Sandler convince people to give him money, and then use that money to repay the previous people he convinced to give him money?

I would think most would. I guess you could get underneath the doll, but it seems like it would be awkward.