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Random Stupidity (Read 541194 times)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #990 - May 15th, 2007 at 12:49pm
 
Check out this guy's eBay feedback page.  The comments he has left for others is absolutely hilarious!

http://feedback.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewFeedback2&ftab=FeedbackLeftForOthe...

-b0b
(...roffled.)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #991 - May 15th, 2007 at 1:06pm
 
...

Yes, that is good stuff.
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #992 - May 16th, 2007 at 11:06am
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070516/ap_on_re_mi_ea/greenpeace_noah_s_ark

Look at that picture...sometime tells me Greenpeace isn't going to do an accurate model.  Also...I thought Greenpeace hated all things God?

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #993 - May 16th, 2007 at 3:06pm
 
...

They're going to need alot more wood than that, unless that's the door hehe
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #994 - May 16th, 2007 at 3:26pm
 
Wouldn't it be sweet to build a nuclear-powered Noah's Ark?

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Reply #995 - May 16th, 2007 at 4:07pm
 
Why?  The Ark was made to float...not travel.
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #996 - May 16th, 2007 at 4:12pm
 
or travel through time...go go time ark!


and greenpeace is right, global warming is a serious threat, think about it...mother nature is sitting with a 100% kill ratio for humans, THAT BITCH!
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Reply #997 - May 16th, 2007 at 4:22pm
 
Quote:
"Global climate change is the biggest threat to our planet since the times of Noah. We are about to face a new flood"


Obviously they skipped the part where God promised not to destroy the Earth again by water...next up...is fire!

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #998 - May 16th, 2007 at 4:41pm
 
X wrote on May 16th, 2007 at 4:07pm:
Why?  The Ark was made to float...not travel.


Sure, the original ark wasn't, but they're going to make SUPER ARK.  It's going to be the arkiest ark that ever arked!

-b0b
(...wonders how many habitats Greenpeace will destroy to get their ark lumber?)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #999 - May 16th, 2007 at 4:48pm
 
screw lumber, they should use partially deweaponised plutonium!


take that environment!
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1000 - May 16th, 2007 at 4:58pm
 
If you're trying to destroy the environment, why both deweaponizing it?  I'm aiming for fully-weaponized plutonium!

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1001 - May 18th, 2007 at 10:22am
 
looking around ebay and found this:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/10-HP-to-any-car-Instant-street-cred-Type-R-Fast_...

didn't think it was that funny till I saw "Do you drive a Minivan and need street cred?" and remebered briney doesn't have nearly enough street cred!
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #1002 - May 18th, 2007 at 12:34pm
 
Yeah, but does it have VTEC?

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VTEC.jpg (11 KB | )
VTEC.jpg

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Reply #1003 - May 21st, 2007 at 10:36pm
 
What do you do when your industry is suffering from losses due to horrible products?  Why repeal laws that gets your product out there...oh by the way...this is a RIAA article...and I think they got their idea from The Onion!

Quote:
Artists and labels seek royalties from radio
By Jim Puzzanghera, Times Staff Writer
May 21, 2007

WASHINGTON — With CD sales tumbling, record companies and musicians are looking at a new potential pot of money: royalties from broadcast radio stations.

For years, stations have paid royalties to composers and publishers when they played their songs. But they enjoy a federal exemption when paying the performers and record labels because, they argue, the airplay sells music.

Now, the Recording Industry Assn. of America and several artists' groups are getting ready to push Congress to repeal the exemption, a move that could generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually in new royalties.

Mary Wilson, who with Diana Ross and Florence Ballard formed the original Supremes, said the exemption was unfair and forced older musicians to continue touring to pay their bills.

"After so many years of not being compensated, it would be nice now at this late date to at least start," the 63-year-old Las Vegas resident said in Milwaukee, where she was performing at the Potawatomi Bingo Casino. "They've gotten 50-some years of free play. Now maybe it's time to pay up."

The decision to take on the volatile performance royalty issue again highlights the rough times the music industry is facing as listeners abandon compact discs for digital downloads, often listening to music shared with friends or obtained from file-sharing sites.

"The creation of music is suffering because of declining sales," said RIAA Chief Executive Mitch Bainwol. "We clearly have a more difficult time tolerating gaps in revenues that should be there."

It's not the first attempt to kill the exemption. In the past, politically powerful broadcasters beat back those efforts.

But with satellite and Internet radio forced to pay "public performance royalties" and Web broadcasters up in arms about a recent federal decision to boost their performance royalty rate, the record companies and musicians have a strong hand.

Broadcasters are already girding for the fight, expected to last more than a year. In a letter to lawmakers this month, the National Assn. of Broadcasters dubbed the royalties a "performance tax" that would upend the 70-year "mutually beneficial relationship" between radio stations and the recording industry.

"The existing system actually provides the epitome of fairness for all parties: free music for free promotion," wrote NAB President David Rehr.

Performance royalties are collected from traditional radio stations in nearly all major industrialized countries, but U.S. musicians and record companies can't because there is no similar royalty on the books here.

"The time comes that we really have to do this," said John Simson, executive director of SoundExchange, a group created by the recording industry to collect and distribute Internet and satellite music royalties.

For record labels and musicians, addressing the issue now is crucial because digital radio, now being rolled out, allows broadcasters to split a signal into several digital channels and play even more music exempt from performance royalties.

Groups preparing to push Congress to change the law include the RIAA, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, the American Federation of Musicians and other organizations. The U.S. Copyright Office has long supported removing the exemption.

The groups have a major ally in Rep. Howard L. Berman (D-Valley Village), who now chairs the House subcommittee dealing with intellectual property law. Berman is "actively contemplating" leading a legislative push to end the exemption.

"Given the many different ways to promote music now that didn't exist as effectively when this original exemption was made," he said, "the logic of that I think is more dubious."

Congress granted composers and publishers of music copyright protection in 1909. But the recording and radio industries were in their infancy, and the actual musical recordings were not covered. Congress extended limited copyright protection to musical performances in the 1970s to guard against an earlier form of piracy: the copying of records and tapes.

But by then, broadcasters were influential enough to snuff out any talk of making them pay musicians and recording companies for playing their music.

"The old saying is the reason broadcasters don't pay a performance royalty is there's a radio station in every congressional district and a record company in three," said Chris Castle, a music industry lawyer.

Broadcasters even successfully fought a group of singers and musicians led by Frank Sinatra in the late 1980s who tried to pressure Congress into changing the law. Broadcasters also prevailed in 1995, when Congress exempted them from new fees for digital recordings that everyone else had to pay.

"Congress has always recognized that broadcasters generate enormous sums of revenue to record companies and artists in terms of airplay," said NAB Executive Vice President Dennis Wharton. Radio stations also have public-interest obligations that satellite and Internet broadcasters don't have to worry about, he said.

Satellite radio, Internet broadcasters and cable television companies offering digital music channels now pay performance royalties. The recording industry and musician groups say it's time for traditional radio stations to pony up.

"Most of the artists in the world are kind of middle-class cats, trying to piece together a living," said Jonatha Brooke, a singer-songwriter who is part of the Recording Artists Coalition advocacy group. "It's important to be recognized and paid for our work."


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Reply #1004 - May 23rd, 2007 at 11:17pm
 
This is just weird...how is distributing flyers a hate crime?

Quote:
No bond for accused teen

By Charles Keeshan
ckeeshan@dailyherald.com
Posted Wednesday, May 23, 2007

     
A 16-year-old Crystal Lake girl facing a felony hate crime charge alleging she and a friend distributed anti-homosexual fliers at her high school must remain locked up until her case goes to trial, a McHenry County judge ruled Tuesday.

Citing concerns over the girl’s home environment and her already lengthy juvenile record, Judge Michael Chmiel denied the girl’s request for home detention. Instead Chmiel ordered her held in the Kane County Juvenile Justice Center while the case is pending.

The girl’s record, Chmiel said, features 13 contacts with police, including an arrest for marijuana possession in August. McHenry County court records show that within the past year the girl also has been charged for driving without a license, consumption of alcohol by a minor, possession of tobacco by a minor, trespassing and three curfew violations.

“I’m concerned about you having some potentially negative influences around you,” Chmiel told her. “I think the environment is ripe for failure.”

The girl’s mother said her daughter had gone through some “rough spots” but had not been a problem in the home for at least a year. She later declined comment on the judge’s decision or the charges.

In part because of Chmiel’s ruling Tuesday, the girl appears to be heading quickly toward a trial, which now is scheduled to begin Tuesday.

She and her 16-year-old friend each face charges of hate crime, disorderly conduct and resisting a peace officer stemming from their arrest May 11 outside Crystal Lake South High School. The charges allege the girls were distributing fliers showing two men kissing and containing inflammatory language toward homosexuals.

Authorities say the fliers were directed specifically toward a male classmate — and neighbor of one of the girls — with whom they had been feuding. Both girls are suspended from school as a result, authorities said Tuesday, and likely will not be allowed back until at least the next school year.

Chmiel agreed Tuesday to place the second girl on home detention. She will be placed on electronic monitoring and allowed to leave only for school, counseling, work or other activities approved by a probation officer.

Unlike her friend, her trial does not appear imminent. Instead her lawyer Tuesday filed a motion asking Chmiel to throw out the hate crime and disorderly conduct charges.

“I believe it more attacks the speech, and at this point, they haven’t shown what conduct was truly disorderly,” said her attorney, Charles McKenney. “The issue should be her conduct, not the content of the flier.”

The girl’s parents declined comment Tuesday. Chmiel scheduled a June 26 hearing on her motion to dismiss the charges.


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