Official BBO Hijacked Thread Thread No, it's not about that
#2982
Posted 2017-July-09, 05:10
Zelandakh, on 2017-June-30, 04:52, said:
Seems like the Tour organisers agreed with me and decided to spice things up a bit. Now the green jersey is suddenly one of the most interesting competitions in the race. Real shame for Sagan though - seems hard to justify the decision to exclude him on any sporting grounds.
#2983
Posted 2017-July-09, 05:15
Cyberyeti, on 2017-July-09, 05:00, said:
Here is the video for the incident.
#2984
Posted 2017-July-09, 05:16
Zelandakh, on 2017-July-09, 05:10, said:
Seems like judging on the consequences of an action rather than the action itself. Interestingly this is enshrined in law in some sports (judging of dangerous tackles in rugby for example) but seems over the top here.
#2985
Posted 2017-July-09, 05:17
Zelandakh, on 2017-July-09, 05:15, said:
if you clicked the arrow in the middle of my link, it has the video, but your link is clearer
#2988
Posted 2017-July-21, 07:52
Quote
“I don’t believe most of what he said,” said Mr. Morrow, 32. “I thought, there’s no way they’ll let this guy do anything other than spend his life in prison.”
But as Mr. Morrow walked into a barbershop for a trim, he saw the news on his phone and showed it to his stylist, Nick Shaffer, 26.
“The Juice is loose!” Mr. Shaffer shouted. Throughout the haircut, the men discussed what might happen next.
“For sure he’s going to do something else, he’ll cause trouble somehow,” Mr. Morrow said.
Perhaps it’s not entirely his fault, Mr. Shaffer replied.
“He’s clearly a case of years of concussions from playing football,” he added. “They should be studying his brain too.”
#2989
Posted 2017-August-04, 17:01
One would think that personal finance classes would be a curriculum requirement. Financial literacy is a lifesaving skill EVERY high school graduate needs to get through this thing called LIFE regardless of chosen occupation or life path.
http://business.time...nce-in-schools/
#2990
Posted 2017-August-04, 17:17
Lottery as your 401(k) retirement plan.....who would've thought?
http://www.cbc.ca/be...dents-1.2517046
#2991
Posted 2017-August-04, 22:00
No one ever told me to save my money for old age.......really?
#2992
Posted 2017-August-06, 01:50
Priorities.... Corporate-branded stadiums always come first. . .as infrastructure projects.
COST OF THIS IS $1.5 billion
https://www.usatoday...llion/19806585/
#2993
Posted 2017-August-09, 02:35
It's just sad that New York has allowed its transportation infrastructure to depreciate, decay, and crumble to this point. . .
Aren't these repairs covered for federal grants under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act? Did New York apply for these federal grants and use them for transportation infrastructure rehabilitation and replacement?
#2994
Posted 2017-August-09, 14:43
#2995
Posted 2017-August-11, 04:45
Zelandakh, on 2017-August-09, 14:43, said:
Yes it is sad. People nowadays want something for nothing even when it comes to a public good such as transportation. New York can't afford to play hardball when it comes to its transportation infrastructure.
This is a sad testament to where we are as a nation. We are fighting over who pays a little extra so the New York rail can operate and take folks to work to make the doughnuts that make this nation and local economy great.
#2996
Posted 2017-August-13, 00:15
gee is the first rock and roll song ...can anyone link to it and play it
1953
#2997
Posted 2017-August-16, 22:46
fwiw where the heck is Elizabeth Hurley?
#2998
Posted 2017-August-17, 14:31
https://www.rt.com/u...ollege-student/
http://www.bbc.com/n...canada-40959693
http://www.huffingto...4b08a247275e473
Correction: It showed up in 2015 in The Washington Post but the conclusion of this case has not been followed up:
https://www.washingt...m=.d4d9701ef343
IS OUR MEDIA ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL about what occurred in Texas?
And why are there 850 rape kits growing mold in Austin Texas?
https://www.dailydot...t-backlog-mold/
How can a city/state government not find the money to process rape kits but as soon as a stadium is needed they find millions of $$$ in bond proceeds to pay for stadiums?
#2999
Posted 2017-August-18, 06:57
Quote
When you see something, information flows from the eyes and to the back of the brain. The interesting thing is that more information is going the other way, which means that we see what we think we see, and the actual process involving the eyes is a question of correcting what’s already there. I have always suspected something like that! But I got it confirmed in a book called “The Brain: The Story of You,” by David Eagleman. I picked it up at an airport recently and didn’t stop reading it till I came home five hours later. I also learned that the act of seeing involves the whole body and all the other senses — it is not an abstract enterprise, but very physical — and that the things observed always come together in the brain with a delay, so that we basically live in the past. Everything we see has already happened. And finally, that the feeling of flow we all know, when we are so deeply immersed in something that we lose track of time and who we are, has a neurological explanation: In a state of flow, the activity in the frontal lobe is reduced, it is almost shut down — and it is in the frontal lobe the ability for abstract thinking situated, the planning for the future and the sense of self. Everything that makes us human, in other words, and that makes perfect sense: You lose yourself and sink into a state of pure being, like an animal — belonging to the world, not to yourself.
Who is your favorite fictional hero or heroine? Your favorite antihero or villain?
My first relation to and understanding of love also came from a literary character, Lieutenant Glahn, the protagonist in Knut Hamsun’s novel “Pan.” I read it when I was 16 and became kind of obsessed by it. It wasn’t a particularly healthy identification; Lieutenant Glahn was a very romantic, very narcissistic and reclusive man who shot himself in the foot to make an impression on the woman he loved. I would have saved myself a lot of trouble if I hadn’t read that book.
You’re organizing a literary dinner party. Which three writers, dead or alive, do you invite?
James Joyce has to be the most intriguing writer from the last century, but I have a feeling that he was a dominating person, and with only two other guests available that would perhaps make for a one-sided evening. Therefore, to make him a bit more humble, I would invite Homer. Just by showing up, he would also have settled the Homeric question once and for all. I’m sure Homer would have loved hearing about “Ulysses” and the, to him, strange and futuristic but maybe also familiar world it describes. The last guest would be one of the most interesting contemporary writers, Anne Carson, who also has immersed herself in the ancient Greek literature. I would enjoy listening to their conversation, and after a while, when I was starting to get a bit drunk, maybe talk with Joyce about raising children, with Homer about the color of the sea and with Carson about love — which all, we maybe would agree on, is associated with blindness.
#3000
Posted 2017-August-20, 14:54
http://www.aljazeera...0052647111.html