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lostfan

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Everything posted by lostfan

  1. lostfan

    Films Thread

    QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ Nov 27, 2010 -> 10:06 PM) It was a great movie, but not as much of a kids movie as the other ones. People who saw the first one when they were kids grew up in the 90s and they're all grown now
  2. This officiating sucks... let them play. f*** all these ticky-tack free throw gifts.
  3. lostfan

    Films Thread

    Just watched Toy Story 3... yeah, I cried a little at the end, so what
  4. My take is that Palin is to politics what Kim Kardashian is to entertainment
  5. QUOTE (mr_genius @ Nov 27, 2010 -> 03:08 PM) should have used Comic Sans "The United States has the highest homicide rate of any affluent democracy - nearly four times that of France and the United Kingdom and six times that of Germany. Why? Historians haven't often asked this question. Even historians who like to try to solve cold cases usually cede to sociologists and other social scientists the study of what makes murder rates rise and fall or what might account for why one country is more murderous than another. Only in the nineteen-seventies did historians begin studying homicide in any systematic way. In the United States that effort was led by Eric Monkkonen, who died in 2005, his promising work unfinished. Monkkonen's research has been taken up by Randolph Roth, whose book 'American Homicide' offers a vast investigation of murder in the aggregate and over time. ... "In the archives murders are easier to count than other crimes. Rapes go unreported, thefts can be hidden, adultery isn't necessarily actionable, but murder will nearly always out. Murders enter the historical record through coroners' inquests, court transcripts, parish ledgers, and even tombstones. ... The number of uncounted murders, known as the 'dark figure,' is thought to be quite small. Given enough archival research, historians can conceivably count with fair accuracy the frequency with which people of earlier eras killed one another with this caveat: the farther back you go in time - and the documentary trail doesn't go back much farther than 1300 - the more fragmentary the record and the bigger the dark figure. ... "In Europe, homicide rates, conventionally represented as the number of murder victims per hundred thousand people in the population per year, have been falling for centuries. ... In feuding medieval Europe the murder rate hovered around thirty-five. Duels replaced feuds. Duels are more mannered; they also have a lower body count. By 1500 the murder rate in Western Europe had fallen to about twenty. Courts had replaced duels. By 1700 the murder rate had dropped to five. Today that rate is generally well below two where it has held steady with minor fluctuations for the past century. "In the United States, the picture could hardly be more different. The American homicide rate has been higher than Europe's from the start and higher at just about every stage since. It has also fluctuated, sometimes wildly. During the Colonial period the homicide rate fell, but in the nineteenth century while Europe's kept sinking, the U.S. rate went up and up. In the twentieth century the rate in the United States dropped to about five during the years following the Second World War, but then rose reaching about eleven in 1991. It has since fallen once again to just above five, a rate that is nevertheless twice that of any other affluent democracy. ... "2.3 million people are currently behind bars in the United States. That works out to nearly one in every hundred adults, the highest rate anywhere in the world and four times the world average. ... "[Roth theorizes] that four factors correlate with the homicide rate: faith that government is stable and capable of enforcing just laws; trust in the integrity of legitimately elected officials; solidarity among social groups based on race, religion, or political affiliation; and confidence that the social hierarchy allows for respect to be earned without recourse to violence. When and where people hold these sentiments the homicide rate is low when and where they don't it is high." Author: Jill Lepore Title: "Rap Sheet" Publisher: The New Yorker Date: November 9, 2009 Pages: 79-81 About Us Delanceyplace is a brief daily email with an excerpt or quote we view as interesting or noteworthy, offered with commentary to provide context. There is no theme, except that most excerpts will come from a non-fiction work, mainly works of history, are occasionally controversial, and we hope will have a more universal relevance than simply the subject of the book from which they came. To visit our homepage or sign up for our daily email click here To view previous daily emails click here. To sign up for our daily email click here.
  6. McDaniels/Broncos being fined for illegally taping a practice. That is hilarious to me.
  7. QUOTE (Chisoxfn @ Nov 27, 2010 -> 12:07 AM) Lucas is a career 81% free throw shooter and I always thought you want your best free throw shooters on the court at the end of the game. They signed him, like... a few hours ago, and he had barely been in the game at that point (if at all)
  8. Boneheaded ass coaching decision. That game was very winnable even if they had no business winning it at first.
  9. QUOTE (Real @ Nov 26, 2010 -> 11:19 PM) Where's rose and gibson?? Rose has a stiff neck. Gibson, IDK
  10. lol. I totally missed the part about Obama making Rubio his VP. f*** it, he should just go for broke and ask Palin to be his VP.
  11. Corn ethanol really isn't all it's cracked up to be.
  12. It's not really for lack of effort on Rose's part. He just hasn't put it together yet.
  13. I've had what Rose has right now before. You don't have full range of motion, and it stings, but it goes away after a couple of days like nothing ever happened.
  14. QUOTE (lord chas @ Nov 26, 2010 -> 06:50 PM) i think that is an old MJ commercial from the late 90s seems like ive seen it before it is.
  15. The ratings on her TV shows certainly aren't coming from liberals... her daughter's fans on Dancing With the Stars weren't a bunch of liberals keeping her on the show in favor of better dancers, it's not a bunch of Obama voters running out buying her books. So she gets a disproportionate amount of attention on the Huffington Post and Salon, but that's not what's keeping her in the news. Really it isn't.
  16. QUOTE (dasox24 @ Nov 26, 2010 -> 04:53 PM) Absolutely awesome... I just wish it was real. Regardless, I still love it. It may as well be. It's like MJ is talking directly to LeBron.
  17. Only Dennis Rodman. http://bossip.com/312190/dennis-rodman-doe...int-video69691/
  18. a) she's not a random reality show host b) you should ask America this. Americans as a whole can be persuaded to follow/believe stupid things relatively easily. See the Chicago Cubs
  19. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ Nov 26, 2010 -> 03:22 PM) And one is the Vice President of the United States of America. How is that comparable again? It was your comparison, my friend
  20. I just noticed Chase was charging me an "inactivity fee" for the checking account that I don't use anymore. I never noticed they changed the rules over the years so I moved all of it to my savings account and I'm about to close it, but really, that is so dumb, and it's a cheap and desperate way to earn money. It doesn't cost anything for them to hold my money, really, they make money just by me letting them have my money (it's effectively a loan). That's okay though because I have a couple of other places that I can keep that money where they aren't so desperate.
  21. Biden is Biden. He gets about the standard amount of attention a VP gets. Which is to say, not usually as much attention as someone who is heavily marketed and plastered all over TV (and her daughter, even).
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