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RF Generation Message Board | Other | Idle Chatter | A Completely Unrelated Series of Thoughts.. Part 5 0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »
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Author Topic: A Completely Unrelated Series of Thoughts.. Part 5  (Read 569972 times)
Tynstar
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« Reply #1305 on: November 25, 2006, 07:12:16 PM »

That was really uncalled for.

I'm sorry, pot calling the kettle black?

I was thinking the same thing.
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The Metamorphosing Leon
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« Reply #1306 on: November 25, 2006, 09:08:17 PM »

I finally saw the Kramer video today and looked like he was high as a kite. I couldn't believe my eyes & ears. Like they said, it was wrong and highly uncalled for. I saw the video and a whole bunch of altered footage on youtube.

Bullshit, don't let the press make up your mind for you.

It was perfectly well called for. If you're getting heckled you should be able to yell back. Look at how the Roman senate operated.

And the fact that these stupid words are still associated with racism is for the most part because of these fucking black racist "ministers" who want to make money in lawsuits. Race wouldn't be half the problem if these nutjobs would sit down. These "leaders of the black race" need to forget about it. There shouldn't be "a black race." We should all be people.

What if it had been a black guy calling a white guy a "cracker ass bitch"? Well first of all it never would have surfaced and secondly people would have said "Oh, those crazy black guys. That white dude got told" and that would have been the end of it.

I'm going to drop kick Al Sharpton in his fucking face for being one of the biggest racists in this country.
« Last Edit: November 25, 2006, 09:10:13 PM by The Maligned Sony-Fan Leon » Logged

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shaggy
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« Reply #1307 on: November 26, 2006, 12:02:58 AM »

I finally saw the Kramer video today and looked like he was high as a kite. I couldn't believe my eyes & ears. Like they said, it was wrong and highly uncalled for. I saw the video and a whole bunch of altered footage on youtube.

Bullshit, don't let the press make up your mind for you.

It was perfectly well called for. If you're getting heckled you should be able to yell back. Look at how the Roman senate operated.

And the fact that these stupid words are still associated with racism is for the most part because of these fucking black racist "ministers" who want to make money in lawsuits. Race wouldn't be half the problem if these nutjobs would sit down. These "leaders of the black race" need to forget about it. There shouldn't be "a black race." We should all be people.

What if it had been a black guy calling a white guy a "cracker ass bitch"? Well first of all it never would have surfaced and secondly people would have said "Oh, those crazy black guys. That white dude got told" and that would have been the end of it.

I'm going to drop kick Al Sharpton in his fucking face for being one of the biggest racists in this country.

Nicely put.  We finally agree on something!
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Izret101
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« Reply #1308 on: November 26, 2006, 05:07:22 PM »

I will be getting reinstated into my math class on tuesday Smiley

Thank god.
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The Metamorphosing Leon
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« Reply #1309 on: November 26, 2006, 06:17:26 PM »

I don't think I would ever thank God for reinstating me into anything that has to do with math.
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Izret101
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« Reply #1310 on: November 26, 2006, 06:36:45 PM »

If it was going to save you 500(+ or -) dollars i think you would Wink
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The Metamorphosing Leon
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« Reply #1311 on: November 26, 2006, 07:31:52 PM »

No, I hate math THAT much. Math's making seriously consider dropping out of school and joining the Marines.
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Izret101
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« Reply #1312 on: November 26, 2006, 08:49:12 PM »

Well technically i am saving double that.
Since i already am paying for the class now and i would have had to take it agin if she dropped me :-/
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James
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« Reply #1313 on: November 27, 2006, 04:20:53 AM »

I got my copy of Splinter Cell: Double Agent LE in the post today. It came with a UV keyring and a leaflet with a hidden code to enter a competition with. But I can't find the code anywhere. I assume that means I haven't won the chance to be entered into the draw. Sad
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TraderJake
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« Reply #1314 on: November 27, 2006, 04:09:40 PM »

Nothing to do at work right now.... Is it December 22nd yet?
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shaggy
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« Reply #1315 on: November 27, 2006, 04:11:14 PM »

What's with the 22nd of December?  School break?  Also, I'm bored out of my mind at work, too.
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TraderJake
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« Reply #1316 on: November 27, 2006, 04:13:44 PM »

My last day of work.
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Seamar
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« Reply #1317 on: November 27, 2006, 08:10:43 PM »

My last day of work.

Retiring already?  Wink
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Rejinx
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« Reply #1318 on: November 27, 2006, 09:25:30 PM »

This isn't worth a new thread, because it's an old artacle and because I stole it from DP, but I love this story and wanted to share it.
Bested
I don't know who you are, but I know you're out there.

Was that you who just passed me, walking out as I was walking in? Maybe you were here this morning. Maybe you were already here yesterday.

I've had good, no, GREAT luck thrifting in and around Oklahoma City. There are dozens of thrift stores within a very short drive of my house, and I've found great finds at every one of them. I guess the retro-craze never fully made its way to the Midwest, at least on the scale that it has taken over both coasts. I quit buying $5 Sega Genesis consoles and $10 NES systems simply because I got tired of it. It was too easy. A slow day for me at the thrift stores was one where I didn't find at least five or ten things to buy. I've picked up several SMS, Genesis, NES, SNES and PSX consoles as well as several classic computers for practically nothing, just because they were there.

But now, now there is another.

Over the past couple of months I've watched my watering holes slowly dry up. Thrift stores that used to have plentiful piles of Atari 2600 games now have been replaced with all-too-familiar stacks of Super Mario Brothers/Duck Hunt cartridges for the NES. Working consoles and game controllers have been replaced by ratty old computers and broken flight sticks. The fact that all my sources dried up overnight has to be more than a coincidence. Something a bit more sinister is afoot; someone else is buying my stuff.

Over the past couple of years, I wanted it all, and I wanted it bad. Like clockwork, I'd make my way around the city from store to store, searching for treasure. Routes became second nature. If I got off the interstate at Macarthur, stopping at the thrift store there was mandatory … which lead to the store off of 23rd and Macarthur, which is only a mile northeast of the store at 16th and Meridian, which is in itself a mile south of the store at 23rd and Meridian. I had every thrift store, pawn shop, and game store listed in the phone book written down in my Palm Pilot, sorted by address. No matter where I was in town or what I was doing, I could tell you the closest treasure trove. My lunches, for the most part, either led me to the corner of SW44th and Penn (home to not one but two great thrift stores), or further south to 74th and Penn, where a thrift store sits next door to a GameXchange. On more than one occasion, I spent my lunch hour visiting all four locations. My wife was growing tired of hearing me say “it'll just take five minutes!” every time we drove past a store on my list. Getting around in town was taking forever!

And so, I cut back. Instead of hitting my spots on Macarthur every day, I started hitting them once a week on Wednesdays (the day I don't carpool to work with my wife). I quit getting up early on Saturday mornings just to “make the rounds”. I quit buying every single thing I could find (“Why do you need yet another Commodore 64 disk drive?” my wife once asked me. “Are you going to buy every one of them you ever find for the rest of your life?”). So yeah, I cut back. And someone caught me slipping.

Somebody out there is hungrier than I am. Someone wants it more than I do (or at least did). Someone is beating me to the punch, beating me at my own game. By the time I get there, it's too late. The treasure is gone.

So now when I stop by the thrift stores, I'm not just looking for games -- I'm looking for you. Was that you, the teenage boy who walked out when I was walking in, scouring MY stores for ancient relics to sell on eBay? Or maybe you're the 30-something woman, searching for videogames from her childhood. Maybe you're buying games to trade in at one of the multiple used game chains that have popped up all over town; worse yet, maybe you're an employee or even an owner of one of those stores, buying everything on the cheap so you can repackage it and resell it.

I've been bested -- maybe not by somebody younger, or quicker, or richer, but definitely by someone more determined. As I look around my game room and admire the stacks upon stacks of games I haven't even got around to playing yet, I'd say I did okay.

So to you, whoever you are, let me give you a little advice. Don't sleep late. Don't get soft. Don't give up the race. When you do, rest assured there will be someone right behind you, waiting to take up the slack. Maybe it'll be someone even younger, quicker or richer than you are.

Or maybe it'll be me.
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The Metamorphosing Leon
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« Reply #1319 on: November 27, 2006, 10:08:29 PM »


This isn't worth a new thread, because it's an old artacle and because I stole it from DP, but I love this story and wanted to share it.
Bested
I don't know who you are, but I know you're out there.

Was that you who just passed me, walking out as I was walking in? Maybe you were here this morning. Maybe you were already here yesterday.

I've had good, no, GREAT luck thrifting in and around Oklahoma City. There are dozens of thrift stores within a very short drive of my house, and I've found great finds at every one of them. I guess the retro-craze never fully made its way to the Midwest, at least on the scale that it has taken over both coasts. I quit buying $5 Sega Genesis consoles and $10 NES systems simply because I got tired of it. It was too easy. A slow day for me at the thrift stores was one where I didn't find at least five or ten things to buy. I've picked up several SMS, Genesis, NES, SNES and PSX consoles as well as several classic computers for practically nothing, just because they were there.

But now, now there is another.

Over the past couple of months I've watched my watering holes slowly dry up. Thrift stores that used to have plentiful piles of Atari 2600 games now have been replaced with all-too-familiar stacks of Super Mario Brothers/Duck Hunt cartridges for the NES. Working consoles and game controllers have been replaced by ratty old computers and broken flight sticks. The fact that all my sources dried up overnight has to be more than a coincidence. Something a bit more sinister is afoot; someone else is buying my stuff.

Over the past couple of years, I wanted it all, and I wanted it bad. Like clockwork, I'd make my way around the city from store to store, searching for treasure. Routes became second nature. If I got off the interstate at Macarthur, stopping at the thrift store there was mandatory … which lead to the store off of 23rd and Macarthur, which is only a mile northeast of the store at 16th and Meridian, which is in itself a mile south of the store at 23rd and Meridian. I had every thrift store, pawn shop, and game store listed in the phone book written down in my Palm Pilot, sorted by address. No matter where I was in town or what I was doing, I could tell you the closest treasure trove. My lunches, for the most part, either led me to the corner of SW44th and Penn (home to not one but two great thrift stores), or further south to 74th and Penn, where a thrift store sits next door to a GameXchange. On more than one occasion, I spent my lunch hour visiting all four locations. My wife was growing tired of hearing me say “it'll just take five minutes!” every time we drove past a store on my list. Getting around in town was taking forever!

And so, I cut back. Instead of hitting my spots on Macarthur every day, I started hitting them once a week on Wednesdays (the day I don't carpool to work with my wife). I quit getting up early on Saturday mornings just to “make the rounds”. I quit buying every single thing I could find (“Why do you need yet another Commodore 64 disk drive?” my wife once asked me. “Are you going to buy every one of them you ever find for the rest of your life?”). So yeah, I cut back. And someone caught me slipping.

Somebody out there is hungrier than I am. Someone wants it more than I do (or at least did). Someone is beating me to the punch, beating me at my own game. By the time I get there, it's too late. The treasure is gone.

So now when I stop by the thrift stores, I'm not just looking for games -- I'm looking for you. Was that you, the teenage boy who walked out when I was walking in, scouring MY stores for ancient relics to sell on eBay? Or maybe you're the 30-something woman, searching for videogames from her childhood. Maybe you're buying games to trade in at one of the multiple used game chains that have popped up all over town; worse yet, maybe you're an employee or even an owner of one of those stores, buying everything on the cheap so you can repackage it and resell it.

I've been bested -- maybe not by somebody younger, or quicker, or richer, but definitely by someone more determined. As I look around my game room and admire the stacks upon stacks of games I haven't even got around to playing yet, I'd say I did okay.

So to you, whoever you are, let me give you a little advice. Don't sleep late. Don't get soft. Don't give up the race. When you do, rest assured there will be someone right behind you, waiting to take up the slack. Maybe it'll be someone even younger, quicker or richer than you are.

Or maybe it'll be me.
This isn't worth a new thread, because it's an old artacle and because I stole it from DP, but I love this story and wanted to share it.
Bested
I don't know who you are, but I know you're out there.

Was that you who just passed me, walking out as I was walking in? Maybe you were here this morning. Maybe you were already here yesterday.

I've had good, no, GREAT luck thrifting in and around Oklahoma City. There are dozens of thrift stores within a very short drive of my house, and I've found great finds at every one of them. I guess the retro-craze never fully made its way to the Midwest, at least on the scale that it has taken over both coasts. I quit buying $5 Sega Genesis consoles and $10 NES systems simply because I got tired of it. It was too easy. A slow day for me at the thrift stores was one where I didn't find at least five or ten things to buy. I've picked up several SMS, Genesis, NES, SNES and PSX consoles as well as several classic computers for practically nothing, just because they were there.

But now, now there is another.

Over the past couple of months I've watched my watering holes slowly dry up. Thrift stores that used to have plentiful piles of Atari 2600 games now have been replaced with all-too-familiar stacks of Super Mario Brothers/Duck Hunt cartridges for the NES. Working consoles and game controllers have been replaced by ratty old computers and broken flight sticks. The fact that all my sources dried up overnight has to be more than a coincidence. Something a bit more sinister is afoot; someone else is buying my stuff.

Over the past couple of years, I wanted it all, and I wanted it bad. Like clockwork, I'd make my way around the city from store to store, searching for treasure. Routes became second nature. If I got off the interstate at Macarthur, stopping at the thrift store there was mandatory … which lead to the store off of 23rd and Macarthur, which is only a mile northeast of the store at 16th and Meridian, which is in itself a mile south of the store at 23rd and Meridian. I had every thrift store, pawn shop, and game store listed in the phone book written down in my Palm Pilot, sorted by address. No matter where I was in town or what I was doing, I could tell you the closest treasure trove. My lunches, for the most part, either led me to the corner of SW44th and Penn (home to not one but two great thrift stores), or further south to 74th and Penn, where a thrift store sits next door to a GameXchange. On more than one occasion, I spent my lunch hour visiting all four locations. My wife was growing tired of hearing me say “it'll just take five minutes!” every time we drove past a store on my list. Getting around in town was taking forever!

And so, I cut back. Instead of hitting my spots on Macarthur every day, I started hitting them once a week on Wednesdays (the day I don't carpool to work with my wife). I quit getting up early on Saturday mornings just to “make the rounds”. I quit buying every single thing I could find (“Why do you need yet another Commodore 64 disk drive?” my wife once asked me. “Are you going to buy every one of them you ever find for the rest of your life?”). So yeah, I cut back. And someone caught me slipping.

Somebody out there is hungrier than I am. Someone wants it more than I do (or at least did). Someone is beating me to the punch, beating me at my own game. By the time I get there, it's too late. The treasure is gone.

So now when I stop by the thrift stores, I'm not just looking for games -- I'm looking for you. Was that you, the teenage boy who walked out when I was walking in, scouring MY stores for ancient relics to sell on eBay? Or maybe you're the 30-something woman, searching for videogames from her childhood. Maybe you're buying games to trade in at one of the multiple used game chains that have popped up all over town; worse yet, maybe you're an employee or even an owner of one of those stores, buying everything on the cheap so you can repackage it and resell it.

I've been bested -- maybe not by somebody younger, or quicker, or richer, but definitely by someone more determined. As I look around my game room and admire the stacks upon stacks of games I haven't even got around to playing yet, I'd say I did okay.

So to you, whoever you are, let me give you a little advice. Don't sleep late. Don't get soft. Don't give up the race. When you do, rest assured there will be someone right behind you, waiting to take up the slack. Maybe it'll be someone even younger, quicker or richer than you are.

Or maybe it'll be me.

And don't forget that I'm also somewhere behind you, and I've got a knife.

In other news, unfortunately, Kroger has started to play its Christmas muzak. It hurts, although their radio selection always hurts.

Oh well God invented ear plugs for a reason.
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