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It's Aladdin!

Getting Locked Up For Drinking a Half & Half Arizona Ice Tea

Jaer says...

Random guy walks up says he's a cop, doesn't show any badge. I have a feeling he wasn't really a cop, but just an asshole who worked at the liquor shop.

If this isn't staged, I hope that this douche with handcuffs either gets hit with impersonating a police officer, or if he is a police officer, get's fired for what happened.

The guy wasn't in the wrong at all, only thing that someone could "complain" about is that he was loitering, but if he had just bought that drink from that store, then it's no longer loitering.

Arnold Schwarzenegger Driving by Wil Sasso (Pt. 1 - 14)

Nascar driver freaks out at turning multiple directions

Young man shot after GPS error

shatterdrose says...

Do people realize the whole "if a good guy owns a gun" goes both ways? I love this argument because it's so one sided and utterly blind. I'd like to call it the "dumbass argument".

Let's think for a moment: kids looking for friend suddenly have a man open fire on them, so they all pull out their firearms to protect themselves from the raving lunatic old man who opened fire on them first. Old man is dead, riddled with dozens of bullets. Good guys win. Oh . . . wait. That's not what happened. The good guys didn't have a gun. Or was the old man a good guy? I'm confused now. Who's the good guy?

We had something similar here in Florida where a man was going door to door to sell lobster. Homeowner shot him in the head as he walked away, kept shooting him, and went to reload while an officer was trying to arrest him.

The real issue is the fact this man, and the man in my example, simply thought owning a gun meant they could shoot and kill someone for almost a pathetic reason. Both were "defending my home" against the evils of lobsters and ice skating. I believe this is the movie line of "shoot first, ask questions later." This is what is referring to as the "gun culture."

Yeah, guns (unless it's a colt) don't kill people, people with guns kill people. But there's an old mentality (that's pretty much dead now) that using a gun was cheating. That using a gun wasn't personal, so they resorted to swords and fists. Now, it's so easy to kill a person that it's almost impersonal just to shoot at some brown kid who's "invading" your home by showing up in a car, knocking on the door politely, and asking "Dónde está Paul?"

So anyway, now that we're arguing on the internet . . . .

Guns, Paranoia and The American Family

harlequinn says...

No, firearms are not designed to "kill". They are designed to accelerate a projectile in a specified direction. Some projectiles are designed to expand when they hit flesh, other projectiles are designed to cut perfect holes in cardboard or paper. As a comparison example a knife is designed to part molecules and a hammer is designed to collide two masses together.

Their designated use is determined by a human's choice. They may be designated for use as a weapon or for putting holes in paper targets.

Just recently a lady decided to mow down someone who threw some chips at her car. You can use just about anything as a weapon even if it is designed for something else.

In regards to guns vs cars - he has a point. Cars do cause significantly more death each year. It's just not purposeful death, therefore it's a risk we take because it is impersonal - an "accident". I don't know the relative risk but I'd say you're more likely to die in a car accident than to be massacred. Should we accept one sort of premature death more readily than another? (I don't know)

Jinx said:

Oh please. I'm so tired of this comparison to cars. Can you not see the difference between a weapon designed to kill or injure with only niche use and a car? Hey, if cars are so fucking dangerous why not use them to defend yourselves :3

Kevin Pollack does an Amazing Christopher Walken Impression

Kevin Pollack does an Amazing Christopher Walken Impression

VERY impressive Brad Pitt, Kevin Spacey, Harrison Ford

VERY impressive Brad Pitt, Kevin Spacey, Harrison Ford

MichaelL says...

Funny, his Pacino was the weakest of the bunch and normally Pacino is the one most impersonators nail. At least he didn't inflict another standard -- Christopher Walken -- on us.

However, he nailed the subtleties of Ford, Spacey and Pitt, not an easy thing to do.

VERY impressive Brad Pitt, Kevin Spacey, Harrison Ford

VERY impressive Brad Pitt, Kevin Spacey, Harrison Ford

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'Ross Marquand, Kevin Spacey, Harrison Ford, James Gandolfini, Matthew McConaughey' to 'Ross Marquand, Kevin Spacey, Harrison Ford, Gandolfini, McConaughey, impersonations' - edited by chilaxe

Sasha Obama's Reminder To Her Dad On Election Night

kymbos says...

Could benefit from a touch of 'taxocrat' and a socialism reference, but I'm nit-picking: 8/10>> ^Kofi:

Typical Nobama. Needs to be reminded to thank those whom he turns his back to. A courtesy so simple that even a child knows it.
It's only a matter of time before his Earness hikes up taxes and burns all those who voted for him.
(Was that too articulate to be a QM impersonation?)

Sasha Obama's Reminder To Her Dad On Election Night

Kofi jokingly says...

Typical Nobama. Needs to be reminded to thank those whom he turns his back to. A courtesy so simple that even a child knows it.

It's only a matter of time before his Earness hikes up taxes and burns all those who voted for him.

(Was that too articulate to be a QM impersonation?)

A Good Day To Die Hard - First trailer



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