201

(12 replies, posted in Politics)

How about if passsengers were allowed to carry guns on board of an airplane?
Should take the wind out of any aspiring terrorists sails.

>Europe should be occupied and managed f

Goldman Sachs is  working on it

In Australia you would get thrown into prison for owning one.

204

(953 replies, posted in Universal News)

Heineken rules

205

(953 replies, posted in Universal News)

stop locking down the endu market
it sucks

206

(48 replies, posted in Universal News)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhhvCftswCQ&feature=related

207

(24 replies, posted in Politics)

Didn`t Bill Clinton invent thiis?

208

(23 replies, posted in Politics)

I like the British  "elect -a-tyrant" political system and the combination of dog eat dog capitalism and a nanny state.
Makes it quite unique.

they are very similar

Americans:  Right wing anarchists
Greeks:      Left wing anarchists

Americans: Don`t want to pay taxes
Greeks: Actually don`t pay taxes

Americans: Love the Republic
Greeks:  Invented the Republic

Americans: Love heroism
Greeks: Invented the [blam] word

interested?

"The United States is one of the only countries to tax its citizens on income earned while they're living abroad. "

What if iam  hidiing in Vladivostok,send in the Marines?

211

(32 replies, posted in Politics)

Does this include libertarians?

Nobody told him shooting commies is not en vogue anymore

The next big thing: snakehead farms
governments will never learn

214

(55 replies, posted in Politics)

Zimmerman will sit on the chair.
bzz! bzz!

215

(9 replies, posted in Politics)

>celebration of drug use and sodomy

huh?

216

(4 replies, posted in Politics)

this is about 5 years old

217

(8 replies, posted in Bugs)

The are two instances of my fam on the fam screen
and yes,i cleared cache and stuff

218

(6 replies, posted in General)

Alsocheck out Shadowrun Returns

219

(6 replies, posted in General)

the video is the shit
so true

220

(3 replies, posted in Bugs)

this bug is older than you

221

(2 replies, posted in Bugs)

You were so  exited about casting it,you clicked the "go" button twice

222

(6 replies, posted in Politics)

too bad  about current tv
their cartoons were funny

The good news is  this redneck law will be struck down.
Here are the consequences if free speech is not protected by a strong constitution.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-17515992

Arizona marches to the beat of its own drummer. But if that drummer gets upset and starts hollering on the Internet, he might get tossed in the clink.

After spending years targeting illegal aliens, the Grand Canyon State is turning its sights on obnoxious Internet users (commonly called 'trolls'). A new update to the state's telecommunications harassment bill could make the practice of harassing people online illegal.

Arizona House Bill 2549 has already passed both of the state's legislative bodies and is currently sitting on the desk of Governor Jan Brewer. While there's a lot in there that doesn't concern trolling, here's the line that has people worried:

It is unlawful for any person, with intent to terrify, intimidate, threaten, harass, annoy or offend, to use ANY ELECTRONIC OR DIGITAL DEVICE and use any obscene, lewd or profane language or suggest any lewd or lascivious act, or threaten to inflict physical harm to the person or property of any person.

Violators could be charged with a Class 1 misdemeanor and face up to 6 months in jail. If electronic devices are used to stalk someone, the charges then become a Class 3 felony, with penalties ranging from a minimum sentence of two and a half years in jail for non-dangerous offenders with no prior record to 25 years.



At the heart of the bill is an anti-bullying agenda. Cyber-bullying has been on the rise in recent years and has been in the news lately. A 2010 report in The New York Times found that one of out five middle-school students said they had been victims of cyberbullying.

Despite its good intentions, the Arizona law is already being called "overly broad" by critics. By using vague terms like "annoy" and "offend," it could easily encompass Internet forums or even comments like the ones found at the end of this story.

Free speech groups say they don't believe the law would ever stand up to court scrutiny if Gov. Brewer does, in fact, sign it. And many have pointed out the flaws in the bill to the governor herself.

"Government may criminalize speech that rises to the level of harassment and many states have laws that do so, but this legislation takes a law meant to address irritating phone calls and applies it to communication on web sites, blogs, listserves and other Internet communication," Media Coalition wrote in a letter last week.

225

(217 replies, posted in General)

dragons,zombies and porn