travisw
Well-Known Member
Clayton? Did you guys finally meet up?Hey Unclebuck, Obama never said you could keep your doctor, if you like your doctor, right? LOL
Clayton? Did you guys finally meet up?Hey Unclebuck, Obama never said you could keep your doctor, if you like your doctor, right? LOL
Nah, UncleBuck threatened to call the cops and sue me if it got psychical.Clayton? Did you guys finally meet up?
How does he know your name?Nah, UncleBuck threatened to call the cops and sue me if it got psychical.
Bucky is the little kid at the zoo that teases the monkeys behind the cage, then has a temper tantrum when the monkeys throw shit on him.
Same way I know his.How does he know your name?
Ban pressure cookers now! For the children.well then who's committing all these mass murders if not people with guns then?
what year was that?..how many states did we have at that time?..how many americans?And I might add, the 2nd amendment, notwithstanding of a well armed militia, gave the right of the people to keep bear and arms.
Maybe if you were a man capable of controlling his emotions, then you wouldn't have this issue. I like how the fact that you would react violently to something as trivial as a question of your sexuality is somehow a shortcoming on Buck's part.Nah, UncleBuck threatened to call the cops and sue me if it got psychical.
Bucky is the little kid at the zoo that teases the monkeys behind the cage, then has a temper tantrum when the monkeys throw shit on him.
So brilliant that they didn't let anyone poor, non-white, non-male, and non-landowning vote. What's with the idolization of the few men that were famous for helping found this country? They had good ideas, but they also had some damn stupid ones.To think the founding fathers couldn't envision today is ludicrous to me. They were brilliant people.
I think they are rolling over in their graves at how much power the Feds have these days. But they could certainly envision it. That's why they limited the Feds power.
Just like politicians today. But politicians today don't have the experience with other forms of tyranny like the founding fathers did. They knew what could happen and planned for it.So brilliant that they didn't let anyone poor, non-white, non-male, and non-landowning vote. What's with the idolization of the few men that were famous for helping found this country? They had good ideas, but they also had some damn stupid ones.
Where in the constitution is it written that certain aspects of it will become obsolete as time passes and as the US grows? Please point me to that section please.what year was that?..how many states did we have at that time?..how many americans?
It's the idolization that bothers me. Many folks gve them this air of infallibility.Just like politicians today. But politicians today don't have the experience with other forms of tyranny like the founding fathers did. They knew what could happen and planned for it.
I would recommend not looking fondly on anyone from before the present. Odds are, they felt the same way.
Brilliant how? I didn't notice them do anything particularly innovative. Their ideas weren't new or entirely their own.They were very fallible, like all people are.
Doesnt make them not brilliant.
Einstien had his issues, so did newton, Galileo, and hawkings. Still brilliant.
Ok, we get it...they were brilliant. Give us an example of their fallibility.Jefferson fucked his slaves and Ben was involved in many orgies and was quite the ladies man and partier. Fallible but brilliant.
Maybe if you were a man capable of controlling his emotions, then you wouldn't have this issue. I like how the fact that you would react violently to something as trivial as a question of your sexuality is somehow a shortcoming on Buck's part.
Lol. Funny.Ok, we get it...they were brilliant. Give us an example of their fallibility.
I recall you stating that if he were to question your sexuality, then you would hit him.I think you're talking about UncleBuck here, kpmarine.
I actually do pretty well these days controlling my emotions, however, you'd never catch me calling another man a fucking racist or a loser to his face without expecting a mouth full of fist, that my friend, is grown man who does NOT have control over his emotions.
I guess we'll have a diifference of opinion here. Most were intelligent and educated, there is no doubt about that. I just don't see something as superlative as "brilliant" being correct for all of them. They were mostly well off men with an education; which gave them most of the tools they needed to make everything happen. I'd say a few were genuinely brilliant (Franklin being one.), but most were folks of average intellect who were in the right place at the right time.They had the vision, the drive, and the knowledge to start a whole new nation and fight off its oppressors to accomplish that feat.
The constitution is a brilliant document in my opinion. Good examples of brilliance: Thomas Jefferson invented quite a few things and we all know about Ben Franklin.
Jefferson fucked his slaves and Ben was involved in many orgies and was quite the ladies man and partier. Fallible but brilliant.
It honestly doesn't bother me if someone doesn't think they are to be idolized, but to say they didn't have brilliance and downplay their contributions is downplaying what they accomplished.