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  2. Pakalolo? (Not sure on the spelling.) Not my thing….but it’s early here so I’m just waiting to go for a run before hitting the beach. 😎
  3. Camp Mystic co-owner and director Richard “Dick” Eastland has been confirmed dead. He died trying to heroically rescue some of his campers before they were swept away in the deadly Texas floodwaters.
  4. Keep hitting that Maui Wowie. Do they still call it that?
  5. I’m absolutely 100% serious. You, on the other hand, just want to scream into the internet. (And cutting his balls off would be a criminal case verdict…I think?) 😉
  6. Yes. And it can happen here. You tell us. He’s running on that. Is he a liar? Being the centerpiece of his campaign, seems like this should be disqualifying. He’s a communist. Why NYC is a disaster. The Democrats that run it. de Blasio was terrible. DOGE it all. You can’t. So the city is F ed anyway. Let’s not use it to prop up the new communist Democrat party in the U.S. More on that below. Fund the police. End restorative justice in the schools. Allow ICE to do its job. Sounds like you should support the tariff regime for this very reason. Venezuela can happen here - but it will take the Courts to become filled with communists. And that starts with the Democrats - that will soon be embracing full on nationalization… We’re extraordinarily close to that. https://www.cfr.org/timeline/venezuelas-chavez-era
  7. Are you serious? How about this - they cut the guys balls off. Happy now? 🤣🤣
  8. Thank you for yet another great post! It amazes me how so many great players were drafted so late. I noticed that they chose Jake Scott on pick 159 over Bryce Paup. I was very young when Scott played but remember thinking that he was great. Bryce's career being cut short had to affect this ranking, but some of my favorite Bills memories consist of watching Bryce rush the passer at RWS. He was brutal and great at using his long, strong arms to fend off blockers. Really, that was a great link!
  9. https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/114806881411557795
  10. Ugh. No …it’s not! Think of this discussion like the deliberations we’d be having in the jury room. The question I’m asking you, my fellow jury member, is who should receive the proceeds from those damages?
  11. Eh.....maybe but he ate up massive amounts of credibility by being a massive head case in the prior 2 NFL seasons. It was surprising the Bills gave him a shot. I don't think people like McBeane understand self-defeating personality disorders like Claypool clearly has because you rarely see people with issues like that reach the NFL. Being extraordinarily big and fast got him a long way but once he started getting criticized for his behavior on the field he decided he was going to withhold commitment to the game and that f#cked his career but good.
  12. “Punitive damages, also known as exemplary or vindictive damages, are awarded in civil lawsuits to punish the defendant for egregious misconduct and deter similar actions in the future. They are not meant to compensate the victim for their losses, which is the purpose of compensatory damages. Instead, punitive damages serve as a penalty for particularly harmful behavior.” Is this really a foreign concept to you?
  13. Wrong. I’ve not even come to a conclusion. We’re having a discussion here about a very complicated topic.
  14. You are just fishing for someone to agree with you. Anytime anyone disagrees, you plead innocent and are just trying to have a “conceptual conversation”.
  15. Sierra, This is why we’re having an adult discussion about a complicated issue. If you actually read my post you’ll see I’ve been careful not to judge the validity of her claim. I’m simply asking whether this is the appropriate remedy for the damage she claims that she suffered. Make sense? And to add to your question about if it was my daughter, I’ve actually thought about that exact question. The answer I’ve come to is that I don’t think I could EVER sit in the new car she bought with the proceeds….but that’s just me.
  16. We traded him for the 5th round pick that we used to select Kyle Williams. I think it worked out for us pretty well.
  17. Deek... imagine this happened to your daughter. Now tell me what you would advise her to do... file suit or don't file suit?
  18. They are “modest” policies in the sense that they are well-supported in the international macroeconomics research literature. The public grocery stores idea is Zohran’s only one that would be classified in Europe as an example of socialism. If you are so perturbed by the thought of government owning the means of production for 5 NYC grocery stores, then consider redirecting your ire towards your precious free markets that created the urban food desert conditions in the first place. “Laissez-faire” was a hyperbolic remark meant to characterize this post-1970’s era of neoliberalism. It would be perfectly reasonable to characterize the historical American economy as laissez-faire all the way up through the Gilded Age. Neoliberalism, for the record, is economically sub-optimal and leads to middle class degradation, working class immiseration, and massive political instability. Laissez-faire economics, for the record, is even worse and includes all the above plus outrageous human rights violations, widespread ecosystem destruction, and intolerably deep and lengthy busts in the natural boom-bust cycles. You’re not averse to hyperbole yourself, as evidenced by your Venezuela remark. Do you have even the slightest clue as to how authoritarian socialism in Venezuela came about, or why socialism specifically failed in that country?? How about a step-by-step outline of the political process in which a city mayor can go from 5 public grocery stores to the complete seizure of the means of production for every bodega (and every private business, in general) in every borough?? Your attacks are all over the place. First, clarify the problem. We are discussing urban affordability for lower and middle classes, which comes down to a discussion of wages versus cost of living (food, housing, transportation, utilities, education, health care) and other economic subtractions (various forms of taxation, inflationary effects). Next, figure out the approximate allocation of responsibility and blame. Surely you understand how local politicians are limited in the extent that they can affect the aforementioned economic factors, compared to state and national politicians? Do you also understand how little political power the actual far left has and has historically had, relative to the establishment left and to right-wingers? Recall one of the most basic definitions of the far left: no acceptance of corporate/big-money campaign donations. NYC hasn’t had a far-left mayor in the ideological vicinity of Zohran since La Guardia (though de Blasio admittedly did a few good things that were progressive). Okay, so NOW you can begin to fairly assess the culpability of local far-left politicians with regard to the aforementioned economic factors. I’m a reasonable person and could concede frivolous far-left regulations and wasteful far-left spending here and there, but it would be absolutely LAUGHABLE to blame the big-ticket items (especially wage growth and health care expenditures) on far-left politicians and not neoliberal ones! It’s genuinely shocking to see the lengths you PPP’ers go to defend corporate oligarchical empowerment. You’re okay with your tax dollars going to low-wage workers when they have to subsist on food stamps, yet you scream “Communism!” at the thought of raising taxes proportionately on the billionaires who won’t pay these low-wage workers higher wages…
  19. There's an ages old saying that "Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity." In modern times it's more common to say that "Luck is the residue of design." Regardless of the above, there is an element of true, random, uncontrollable luck involved in sports... which have black and white outcomes. And no one will argue that the Bills have been the more talented team compared to the Ravens. I agree that the Chiefs will win the West... but at what cost? Will a more rugged and challenging division create regular season hardships and injuries that will affect them come playoff time... or will better competition actually make them a better team? That is the question.
  20. Yes, I think most of us know the difference between criminal and civil suits. That gesture might make some people feel better, but IF she was wronged I don’t see any reason to restrict what our expectations are for her use of any funds that come as a result. Maybe she wants to give it away, or pay for a graduate degree, or put a down payment on a house. She can give it to YOU for all I care. It should be entirely up to her, IF she was the person harmed. She can’t “un-do” that night. This is all she has by way of getting some “justice”, so I won’t tell her how to handle it if she were to win a verdict of some type. I don’t like this whole line of discussion, because it’s mostly speculation. Have a nice Sunday!
  21. If you take away the clean sweep of the swing states it could have gone either way.
  22. not much a WR can do when his foot was hurt and couldn't play.. just that simple. Bills moved on as it would not cost them anything. Frankly, Bills prob would have done the same with Curtis Samuel if it wasn't for the contract commitment. They pretty much had to keep him and rehab him back to playing. Claypool (and Cooper for that matter) they could just cut /do nothing and get healthier or younger bodies in there. NFL is pretty brutal to guys who can't get/stay on the field. There's always somebody else out there ready to go.
  23. When you stop and think about it, he’s probably not uncorrect. Flip everything around and we could be looking at a completely different outcome in the election. Though, if you flip it back again, we’re back where we started.
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