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Drunk

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Everything posted by Drunk

  1. Q: What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up? A: The Army.
  2. Thanks for the utterly irrelevant point.
  3. That was brilliant, and right on point!
  4. Get a fucking clue. Iraq DECLARED it had weapons of mass destruction years ago. Under the current UN resolution, IRAQ was responsible for proving it had destroyed those weapons it had previously declared. It cannot account for previously declared WMD, so Iraq is in BREACH. Moreover, you refer to "puppet weapons inspectors?" Just watch any interview with Khidr Abd Al-Abbas Hamzah, Saddam's top nuclear scientist who defected and he can tell you about Saddam's WMD. Someone with facts, not someone who talks out of his ass.
  5. Twilo was closed then reopened. Tunnel was closed then reopened. Being reopened doesn't mean shit. Once the NYPD is hell bent on shutting down a place permanentyl it will happen EVENTUALLY.
  6. Sweetie, guess what? I don't give a flying fuck if you work for the club or not. If a club ALLOWS shit like that to happen, they're responsible too.
  7. Did you show up to JP's birthday party?? If you did, WERE YOU FUCKING BLIND?????
  8. One of MY FRIENDS was one of the eleven ARRESTED. I think I KNOW.
  9. Not too smart? It isn't too smart to basically allow your OWN security let people snort lines of K out in the open for everyone to see along with just about every drug under the sun. Security at Factory almost always looked the other way, especially if it was one of the regular crackheads they knew. Those signs by the bathrooms "Don't even THINK of doing drugs here" are SUCH a joke. Now if you think that's a smart way to run a business, you're a dope.
  10. Didn't take too long for TUNNEL to become a banquet hall! We could always use another banquet hall in this city.
  11. Tell it to the judge! :laugh:
  12. You just compared al Qaeda to the United States? You're fuckin pathetic.
  13. Tell that to al Qaeda, K? Extermination is the answer.
  14. A jew won't win the White House for a lonnnnnnnnnnnnng time. Sad, but true.
  15. Factory has turned into a steaming pile of dog shit anyway since I first started going. No big loss. Get over it.
  16. With this comment you just proved yourself to be a Grade A idiot. Congratulations moron! :rolleyes:
  17. You are so money and you don't even know it, fag.
  18. Ok, remember this phrase . . ."Would you like fries with that?" You'll be needing it! But anyway, back to the topic, Nympho, consider a PhD in finance, as I think it would be more marketable than one in business admin (of course, assuming you have an interest in finance). By the time you get into the job market the economy will likely have improved anyway.
  19. HUH???? Before you go get your "doctrite" make sure you learn how to spell "doctorate". And YES Nympho is right, there IS such a thing as a PhD in Business Administration, Duke for instance has such a program. Although the MBA is the degree most commonly sought after. I wouldn't bother with the PhD, if I were getting a PhD it would be in something esoteric, like quantitative analysis. Go for the MBA from a top school instead!
  20. Hey idiot, Factory was an afterhours club for the most part. No alcohol served AFTERHOURS.
  21. You're behind the times. Vinyl has been filled with Factory people for well over a YEAR!
  22. This investigation started two years ago so I don't think terrorism was a factor at all. As for your first comment, I think the city would get more money from the property and income taxes on the clubs over the long term as opposed to trying to extract money via a lawsuit.
  23. Yeah that's what they said about Twilo. I mean really, do you expect them to say that they AREN'T going to be open? "We've just been busted by the cops and are closed indefinitely." Cops are trying to shut them down for at least a year.
  24. Seriously, this A LOT more important than two stupid clubs being shut down. ----------------------------------------------------------- (Feb. 8) - Law enforcement and private business braced for a possible terrorist attack after the starkest warning since the Sept. 11 anniversary, stopping more cars at borders, readying Coast Guard cutters, and tightening security from airports to theme parks. Worries were raised New York once again could be a target. While stepped-up protection stretched across the country, a high-ranking law enforcement source told The Associated Press intercepted communications between suspected terrorists suggested a potential threat to New York. The communications, some intercepted as late as Thursday night, raised specific concerns about hotels and subways in the city and the East Coast, said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Airports, subways, nuclear plants, hotels, even plans for Sunday's NBA All-Star Game in Atlanta received new attention after the federal government upgraded the terror alert color to ``orange,'' warning of a growing possibility that the al-Qaida network would launch an attack to coincide with Muslim holy days. ``What's being communicated is that we're entering into a very sensitive period,'' said Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, who joined other governors in a conference call with Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge. ``We're possibly on the brink of war. Obviously there has been some intelligence gathered by the CIA among other agencies that suggests something could happen.'' Attorney General John Ashcroft said Friday the government had received intelligence information, corroborated by multiple sources, that Osama bin Laden's terror organization sought to attack Americans at home or abroad during the annual hajj pilgrimage to the holy Saudi city of Mecca. The five-day hajj involving more than a million Muslim pilgrims begins Saturday. Potential targets, he said, could include ``soft'' or lightly guarded targets such as apartment buildings and hotels, and could involve chemical, biological or radiological devices. Al-Qaida might also seek to hit economic targets connected to transportation and energy, or ``symbols of American power.'' At U.S. border crossings, inspectors began searching more vehicles, and running computer checks on all pedestrians, said Lauren Mack with the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Before Friday, Mack said, inspectors ran computer checks on about 80 percent of pedestrians entering the country. Commercial vehicles entering from Mexico will also be inspected more thoroughly, with many screened by X-ray, said U.S. Customs spokesman Vince Bond. ``It may be drugs. It may be avocados. It may be Cuban cigars. It may be weapons of mass destruction. We're looking for anomalies,'' he said. Chicago restarted its emergency operations center for the first time since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and it will remain open 24 hours a day for an indefinite period. In New York, Gov. George Pataki said specialized units of the state police and the National Guard were activated. He and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced extra security at bridges, tunnels, airports, subways and many public buildings. Nuclear facilities in California and Washington state, and utilities in New England and elsewhere, all put security plans into action. The warning about soft targets spurred a response by private businesses from Las Vegas to Florida to New York. ``We have greatly enhanced what was already strict security since 9-11,'' said Universal Orlando spokesman Jim Canfield. He wouldn't discuss specific new measures. In New York, the president of the city's tourism bureau, Cristyne Nicholas, warned guests they might encounter new security procedures. ``We should be patient, we should be understanding. If we're asked to show our room key or identification, it's for the betterment of the entire city.'' Not everyone felt the same worries. In Hawaii, authorities decided there wasn't any reason to change its security alert. ``There is nothing to indicate there is a direct threat to Hawaii,'' said Gov. Linda Lingle. On the streets, some said they couldn't really tell any difference. ``Looking around, it seems like everybody's getting on with their daily lives,'' said Ansley Dickens, a 20-year-old student in Boston. ``The likelihood of an earthquake is more of a huge concern of mine,'' said Rob Huntley, general manager of The Inn At Union Square in San Francisco. 02/08/03 08:33 EST
  25. Bad facts. See e.g., http://216.239.37.100/search?q=cache:Ca1KGwy4ZgUC:news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1632000/1632521.stm+%22carpet+bombing%22+%22gulf+war%22&hl=en&ie=UTF-8 The keywords are hilighted for you. Plus, Carpet bombing is what B-52's do, we still do it. And yes, 93% of the bombs in Iraq were "dumb" bombs, not precision munitions. For video: http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1630000/video/_1632114_attacks_adams13_vi.ram
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