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Days Won
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Everything posted by Park Life
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Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
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Lot of the PL players are well overplayed by the time the WC comes around.
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Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
As the clip you posted shows, Maher invites dissenting voices on to argue against Israel. Just because he personally is pro-Israel it doesn't make him as bad as Fox he doesn't censor. I agree. But they're all pro-Israel is what I'm saying..ALL OF THEM. Most also have alligence issues between Isreal and America. See how he is visibly shaken when the the guy says no American lives are worth losing for the state of Israel. I thnk when you boil it down it might be harsh to blame the average american, cause infact he has almost no chance of getting a well rounded view of Middle East issues. -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
See the thing is masses in America are media illiterate. They can't see the differance between entertainment/news and propoganda (to an extent it is all parcelled as one on most channels). These light chat shows/comedy I see as the friendly social worker as much as Fox or whatever is the policeman at the gate, packaged how they are makes no differance to the message and the message is nearly always pro Israel. -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Here it is... Interesting exchange with Micheal Schauer former CIA Bin Laden unit. You can see Maher is irritated at the realism of Schauer. About 4.30 in... -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
He maybe less so than Maher, but are both part of the game. I've seen him (Maher) in full shill mode when a guest says he's more worried about America than Israel. Here, cause it's so FUNNY... -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
...but they released them without charge. That Ken O' Keefe fella has a way about him alright. -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
That's fake like all the other fake shit the Zionists have been putting out (like pics from 2008). Who was the last voice Mickey Rourke? -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
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Film/moving picture show you most recently watched
Park Life replied to Jimbo's topic in General Chat
Thin Red Line. Excellent 8.8/10 -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Strange how it's always portrayed like a conspiracy when Israel is rightfully criticised for its actions. The long finessed and caricatured role of victim. -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Here's some of the American hypocrasy de-mysticised. Obama's team: Benjamin Bernanke(Jewish) - Chairman, Federal Reserve System Timothy Geithner(Jewish) - Secretary, U.S. Treasury Department Lawrence Summers(Jewish) - Chairman, National Economic Council Paul Volcker(Jewish) - Chairman, Economic Recovery Advisory Board Jared Bernstein(Jewish) - Chief Economist and Economic Adviser, Vice President Douglas Shulman(Jewish) - Commissioner, Internal Revenue Service(IRS) Peter Orszag(Jewish) - Director, Office of Management and Budget(OMB) Jon Leibowitz(Jewish) - Chairman, Federal Trade Commission(FTC) Gary Gensler(Jewish) - Chairman, Commodity Futures Trading Commission(CFTC) Mary Schapiro(Jewish) - Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission(SEC) Sheila Bair(Jewish) - Chairman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation(FDIC) Karen Mills(Jewish) - Administrator, Small Business Administration (SBA) Christina Romer(Jewish husband) - Chairman, Council of Economic Advisers And of course the White House Chief of staff is Rahm Emanuel. -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
CHOMSKY Keeping to the diplomatic record, the first -- both sides, of course, rejected 242. The first important step forward was in 1971, when president Sadat of Egypt offered a full peace treaty to Israel in return for Israeli withdrawal from the Occupied Territories. That would have ended the international conflict. Israel rejected the offer, choosing expansion over security. In this case, expansion into the Egyptian Sinai, where General Sharon's forces had driven thousands of farmers into the desert to clear the land for the all-Jewish city of Yamit. The U.S. backed Israel's stand. Those decisions led to the 1973 war, a near disaster for Israel. The U.S. and Israel then recognized that Egypt could not be dismissed and finally accepted Sadat's 1971 offer at Camp David in 1979. But by then, the agreement included the demand for a Palestinian state, which had reached the international agenda. In 1976, the major Arab states introduced a resolution to the U.N. Security Council calling for a peace settlement on the international border, based on U.N. 242, but now adding a Palestinian state in the Occupied Territories. That's Syria, Egypt, Jordan and every other relevant state. The U.S. vetoed the resolution again in 1980. The General Assembly passed similar resolutions year after year with the United States and Israel opposed. The matter reached a head in 1988, when the PLO moved from tacit approval to formal acceptance of the two-state consensus. Israel responded with a declaration that there can be no, as they put it, "additional Palestinian state between Jordan and the sea," Jordan already being a Palestinian state -- that's Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Shamir -- and also that the status of the territories must be settled according to Israeli guidelines. The U.S. endorsed Israel's stand. I can only add what I wrote at the time: "It's as if someone were to argue the Jews don't need a second homeland in Israel, because they already have New York." In May 1997, for the first time, Peres's Labour Party agreed not to rule out the establishment of a Palestinian state with limited sovereignty in areas excluding major Jewish settlement blocks, that is, the three cantons that were being constructed with U.S. support. The highest rate of post-Oslo settlement was in 2000, the final year of Clinton's term and Prime Minister Barak's. Maps of the U.S.-Israel proposals at Camp David show a salient, east of Jerusalem, bisecting the West Bank, and a northern salient virtually dividing the northern from the central canton. I have the maps if you want them. The current map considerably extends these salients and the isolation of East Jerusalem. My maps are from the leading Israeli scholars, Ron Pundak, the Director of the Shimon Peres Center. The crucial issue at Camp David was territorial, not the refugee issue, for which Arafat agreed to a pragmatic solution, as Pundak, the leading scholar, reveals. No Palestinian could accept the cantonization, including the U.S. favorite, Mahmoud Abbas." -
Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Ther original Jews were semetic tribes with a wide diaspora incorporating ancient Mesapotamia, parts of what is now Egypt, Iraq and Jordan. Their faith was pretty much 'mysticism' and they had trading links to Asia minor. They were often caravan bound and had strong trading and tribal traditons. They 'arrived' in Jerusalem 14thC B.C. (inhabted at the time by the Canannites, Hittities and Philistines)and were given a beating by the Philistines." [/Parky] -
Super 8 sound film = Dodo bird Only for the shear hell of it. Of course for serious stuff you transfer all your S8 over to hi band and then add sound later. Tiny bits of in sync dialogue was still possible with sound super 8 and you didn't have to carry a Nagra around with you.
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Used to have about 3, made all my early masterworks on them (the image is so much more warm and organic compared to video) till I got hold of a 16mm. I used to love adding sound to the little sound strip on the edge - I had a S8 editor/viewer on which you could dub sound as well.
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Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
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No catsuit no go.
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Israel continues its merciless pounding of the defenceless.
Park Life replied to Park Life's topic in General Chat
Damn shame. She'll be missed. Forced out by the Jewish lobby no doubt. -
The truth is relative sweetie.
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I honestly believe it will be between us and Spain. Germany are fucked as well. France have been shit for at least a year. We have our best chance to win this thing in years... Trouble is, we've been saying this since 1998! It's one of those things in life, it's important to keep saying it and keep believing it will happen. One day it will.
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On the eve of the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa, what are you expecting from the tournament? I’m expecting a festival of football, like the one four years ago in Germany. I think we’re in for a peaceful and magnificent World Cup. The finals are taking place in a country where the people are passionate about football. I think the passion will sweep over the field of play from the stands, and vice-versa. I expect an African team to make the semi-finals, because they definitely have what it takes. Lothar Mattaus Just like the other 31 FIFA World Cup hopefuls, Germany are in the final stages of preparation for the finals. Are Joachim Low’s players ready for the task? That's very hard to say as an outside observer. Their preparations have hardly been optimal. The loss of Michael Ballack was a blow, as he would have been a dominant personality at the tournament. And the Bayern contingent joined up with the rest of the squad very late. You mentioned that Germany captain Michael Ballack is out of the tournament. How much of a loss is that? It's obviously a setback at first, but we’ve seen teams grow closer together in the past as a result of things like this. The players regroup and become even more determined. It also means a change in the hierarchy. The players who’ve been around for a while take another step up the ladder. At the end of the day, Ballack’s absence could even prove a positive. First-choice keeper Rene Adler is also out of the finals with injury. How much of a setback is that? I view the situation with Rene Adler a little differently. He’s not as strong a character as Ballack. It's a choker for Rene, and I’m gutted for him, but that’s football. It's a tough business. In any case, Germany don’t have a goalkeeping problem. All three keepers are on a par with Rene Adler - not to detract from the huge contribution he made towards Germany qualifying for South Africa, especially in the games against Russia. You’ve said the three keepers are all as good as Adler, so who should keep goal in South Africa? Before Adler’s injury, Manuel Neuer was second-choice and Tim Wiese third. Logically, Neuer should now be No1. Both Wiese and Jorg Butt have plenty of factors in their favour, as both have greater international experience. But Neuer was outstanding at the U-21 European Championship. I believe he has what it takes to provide a strong last line of defence at the World Cup. In Ballack’s absence, Germany have appointed a new captain for the finals. Is Philipp Lahm the right choice? I see Philipp Lahm as Michael Ballack’s natural successor. The only thing that bothers me is that he’s a full-back, so by definition he’s not in the midfield area. But otherwise, he has everything you need from a captain. He’s an excellent communicator, be it with the other players, the association, the media or anyone else in the national set-up, and that is vital at a World Cup. He’s respected by everyone, and especially his team-mates at club level. That power base will protect and support him. The Germans finished third at the 2006 FIFA World Cup and runners-up at UEFA EURO 2008. Where will they finish in South Africa? Expectations are high, but other countries have caught up fast. Germany lack the brilliant individuals who can settle a match on their own, and that’s been obvious for some years now. But there’s still a huge amount of respect for Germany, which is part of what makes them so dangerous. They have to make the quarter-finals at a minimum. Whether they go any further depends on a lot of factors. Who are your favourites for the trophy? I have European champions Spain, Confederations Cup winners Brazil, and Argentina at the top of my list. They can pick from the best players in the world. The Netherlands have great players too, but with the exception of 1974 and 1978, they’ve never really done well at the World Cup. There’s a tendency for their individuals to play to the gallery, and that affects their performance as a team.