fuckin lax brosJohnG@lt wrote:
Delaware is popular too. It's a lacrosse thing and it's far enough away from home to be considered 'going away' and yet close enough to drive home in a few hours.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Poseidon why do so many jew yorkers, and even plain ol' new yorkers come to UMD?
guess it means you should stop smoking crack rocks
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
i could quit whenever i want to
Tu Stultus Es
Don't like lax?Hurricane2k9 wrote:
fuckin lax brosJohnG@lt wrote:
Delaware is popular too. It's a lacrosse thing and it's far enough away from home to be considered 'going away' and yet close enough to drive home in a few hours.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Poseidon why do so many jew yorkers, and even plain ol' new yorkers come to UMD?
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
yeah ive said that a few times myselfeleven bravo wrote:
i could quit whenever i want to
once you start tweakin', the meth dont stop speakin
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Can't say I care one way or another for the sport proper, but the vast majority of people who play it make me want to drive railroad spikes into their skulls.JohnG@lt wrote:
Don't like lax?Hurricane2k9 wrote:
fuckin lax brosJohnG@lt wrote:
Delaware is popular too. It's a lacrosse thing and it's far enough away from home to be considered 'going away' and yet close enough to drive home in a few hours.
i think its got something to do with the 16 years ive been smoking cigarrettes
Tu Stultus Es
unless it was from your vaginaeleven bravo wrote:
I just spit out a significant amount of blood. I guess that means Im a man.
EE (hats
It's a sport for people who play hackeysack in their spare time. You'll find tie-dyed t-shirts under the uniforms of many. I liked it anyway even though I wasn't a stoner.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Can't say I care one way or another for the sport proper, but the vast majority of people who play it make me want to drive railroad spikes into their skulls.JohnG@lt wrote:
Don't like lax?Hurricane2k9 wrote:
fuckin lax bros
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
no more blood, emergency averted
Tu Stultus Es
Erm at my high school a lot of the lacrosse players were the douchey, bro, prep types.
@GS get some e-cigs. Were you drinking red gatorade? The other day I was sick and had a horrible sinus infection (accompanied with coughing up tons of mucus), and after drinking some red gatorade I went and spat out some spit and it was red. I nearly shat myself but then I remembered I just drank red gatorade.
@GS get some e-cigs. Were you drinking red gatorade? The other day I was sick and had a horrible sinus infection (accompanied with coughing up tons of mucus), and after drinking some red gatorade I went and spat out some spit and it was red. I nearly shat myself but then I remembered I just drank red gatorade.
Last edited by Hurricane2k9 (2010-10-24 10:45:57)
poseidon plays lacrosse?
Tu Stultus Es
are you surprised?eleven bravo wrote:
poseidon plays lacrosse?
EE (hats
nope, its blood.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Erm at my high school a lot of the lacrosse players were the douchey, bro, prep types.
@GS get some e-cigs. Were you drinking red gatorade? The other day I was sick and had a horrible sinus infection (accompanied with coughing up tons of mucus), and after drinking some red gatorade I went and spat out some spit and it was red. I nearly shat myself but then I remembered I just drank red gatorade.
Tu Stultus Es
yeah, baby!Morpheus wrote:
are you surprised?eleven bravo wrote:
poseidon plays lacrosse?
Tu Stultus Es
lacrosse is the poor man's hockey here which is the poor man's poloJohnG@lt wrote:
It's a sport for people who play hackeysack in their spare time. You'll find tie-dyed t-shirts under the uniforms of many. I liked it anyway even though I wasn't a stoner.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Can't say I care one way or another for the sport proper, but the vast majority of people who play it make me want to drive railroad spikes into their skulls.JohnG@lt wrote:
Don't like lax?
all are considered pretty 'gent'-type sports, though
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
I saw invictus last night now i wanna play rugby
Tu Stultus Es
Rugby is fucking fun.eleven bravo wrote:
I saw invictus last night now i wanna play rugby
This is some Red Faction shit.
i have to do a 2,000 word critique on futurism in regard to sound/literature and it's fucking hard and i'd rather not do it
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
put it off till the very very last minute. test your mettle
Tu Stultus Es
it's due in tomorrow mid-day and i also have to read a 300 page novel for tomorrow 1pm
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying that critique is a pointless enterprise and that criticism is dead. I'm just saying that it's a practice with a built-in bias. The trouble is not simply that it acquires cultural ascendency with the emergence of the bourgeois public sphere. [1] It's also that the presumed progressivity of criticism ("the truth will make you free") links it to a developmental narrative that has served for centuries to "race"--and I would say to "class"--the public sphere. [2] In this sense critique is only half the story, and the hegemonic half at that. Ideology as opposed to what? We need a practice that exceeds critique in creative possibility. What, I wonder, would that look like? Genealogy? Deconstruction? Uh, oh my, Hip Hop?
my thoughts on critique as an academic practice right now
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying that critique is a pointless enterprise and that criticism is dead. I'm just saying that it's a practice with a built-in bias. The trouble is not simply that it acquires cultural ascendency with the emergence of the bourgeois public sphere. [1] It's also that the presumed progressivity of criticism ("the truth will make you free") links it to a developmental narrative that has served for centuries to "race"--and I would say to "class"--the public sphere. [2] In this sense critique is only half the story, and the hegemonic half at that. Ideology as opposed to what? We need a practice that exceeds critique in creative possibility. What, I wonder, would that look like? Genealogy? Deconstruction? Uh, oh my, Hip Hop?
my thoughts on critique as an academic practice right now
Last edited by Uzique (2010-10-24 11:05:06)
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Pay a guy to do it nahmean?
[1] and [2]Uzique wrote:
it's due in tomorrow mid-day and i also have to read a 300 page novel for tomorrow 1pm
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying that critique is a pointless enterprise and that criticism is dead. I'm just saying that it's a practice with a built-in bias. The trouble is not simply that it acquires cultural ascendency with the emergence of the bourgeois public sphere. [1] It's also that the presumed progressivity of criticism ("the truth will make you free") links it to a developmental narrative that has served for centuries to "race"--and I would say to "class"--the public sphere. [2] In this sense critique is only half the story, and the hegemonic half at that. Ideology as opposed to what? We need a practice that exceeds critique in creative possibility. What, I wonder, would that look like? Genealogy? Deconstruction? Uh, oh my, Hip Hop?
my thoughts on critique as an academic practice right now
Who you citin' bro?
I have a midterm tomorrow
Tu Stultus Es