suck it and seeMacbeth wrote:
Is it possible to embed links of SNL videos on bf2s?
Like the one in this link
http://www.slashfilm.com/2008/02/24/i-d … ke-on-snl/
I usually wait for him to say he loves me before I start the sucking.AussieReaper wrote:
suck it and seeMacbeth wrote:
Is it possible to embed links of SNL videos on bf2s?
Like the one in this link
http://www.slashfilm.com/2008/02/24/i-d … ke-on-snl/
Macbeth wrote:
I usually wait for him to say he loves me before I start the sucking.
I actually like Rousseau, Nietzsche is still my all time favorite though.Rousseau wrote:
Nowadays, when more subtle studies and more refined taste have reduced the art of pleasing into principles, a vile and misleading uniformity governs our customs, and all minds seem to have been cast in the same mould: incessantly politeness makes demands, propriety issues orders, and incessantly people follow customary usage, never their own inclinations. One does not dare to appear as what one is. And in this perpetual constraint, men who make up this herd we call society, placed in the same circumstances, will all do the same things, unless more powerful motives prevent them. Thus, one will never know well the person one is dealing with. For to get to know one's friend it will be necessary to wait for critical occasions, that is to say, to wait until too late, because it is to deal with these very emergencies that one needed to know him in the first place.
burnzz wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MbcHTO64ZGEMacbeth wrote:
I usually wait for him to say he loves me before I start the sucking.
hume is goodMacbeth wrote:
I actually like Rousseau, Nietzsche is still my all time favorite though.Rousseau wrote:
Nowadays, when more subtle studies and more refined taste have reduced the art of pleasing into principles, a vile and misleading uniformity governs our customs, and all minds seem to have been cast in the same mould: incessantly politeness makes demands, propriety issues orders, and incessantly people follow customary usage, never their own inclinations. One does not dare to appear as what one is. And in this perpetual constraint, men who make up this herd we call society, placed in the same circumstances, will all do the same things, unless more powerful motives prevent them. Thus, one will never know well the person one is dealing with. For to get to know one's friend it will be necessary to wait for critical occasions, that is to say, to wait until too late, because it is to deal with these very emergencies that one needed to know him in the first place.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Enlightenment era Philosophy isn't my strong point, so I'm unfamiliar with Hume. Everything from Marx, Machiavelli, Nietzsche, Engels, Rand and a few others I can discuss, mind you those are really the more famous ones that everyone knows but never read anything from.Uzique wrote:
hume is goodMacbeth wrote:
I actually like Rousseau, Nietzsche is still my all time favorite though.Rousseau wrote:
Nowadays, when more subtle studies and more refined taste have reduced the art of pleasing into principles, a vile and misleading uniformity governs our customs, and all minds seem to have been cast in the same mould: incessantly politeness makes demands, propriety issues orders, and incessantly people follow customary usage, never their own inclinations. One does not dare to appear as what one is. And in this perpetual constraint, men who make up this herd we call society, placed in the same circumstances, will all do the same things, unless more powerful motives prevent them. Thus, one will never know well the person one is dealing with. For to get to know one's friend it will be necessary to wait for critical occasions, that is to say, to wait until too late, because it is to deal with these very emergencies that one needed to know him in the first place.
discourses on livy
the machiavel in jacobean tragedy
talk to me
the machiavel in jacobean tragedy
talk to me
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
This is what happens when an immovable object meets an unstoppable force.
A discourse on a character archetype in period of English literature.Uzique wrote:
the machiavel in jacobean tragedy
After I finish writing this essay on Kant vs Rousseau.
an astute expanding there of... well a very simple termMacbeth wrote:
A discourse on a character archetype in period of English literature.Uzique wrote:
the machiavel in jacobean tragedy
After I finish writing this essay on Kant vs Rousseau.
you're new to this whole intellectual thing arent you?
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
The Last Emperor
Would you guys give it a rest already?
Sober enough to know what I'm doing, drunk enough to really enjoy doing it
I didn't even do anything.this timeKing_County_Downy wrote:
Would you guys give it a rest already?
No, no no. It's highly entertaining.
Well, as long as no one gets butt hurt, have fun.
Sober enough to know what I'm doing, drunk enough to really enjoy doing it
This isn't the "DST thread sucks" thread, downy.
you gon git raped
unf unf unf
unf unf unf
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Somebody should put lowing up to post a "EE sucks" thread.AussieReaper wrote:
This isn't the "DST thread sucks" thread, downy.
I'm just glad I didn't have to use my A-K, I gotta say it was a good day.
Sober enough to know what I'm doing, drunk enough to really enjoy doing it
One of the funnier parts of Generation Kill, the ending though was a disappointment. I mean the allusion to Ice Cube as a warrior poet.King_County_Downy wrote:
I'm just glad I didn't have to use my A-K, I gotta say it was a good day.
Last edited by Macbeth (2009-11-26 19:56:28)
Uzique wrote:
you gon git raped
unf unf unf
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
You've got it backwards m8AussieReaper wrote:
This is what happens when an immovable object meets an unstoppable force.
It's when they move away from each other?ebug9 wrote:
You've got it backwards m8AussieReaper wrote:
This is what happens when an immovable object meets an unstoppable force.
nvm...thought you were referring to 0:13AussieReaper wrote:
It's when they move away from each other?ebug9 wrote:
You've got it backwards m8AussieReaper wrote:
This is what happens when an immovable object meets an unstoppable force.