Originally Posted by Enginerd
(Post 1456597)
Musta been a tall curb.
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Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1456512)
https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...e1057a70c8.gif
Kitty doesn't know how ice works |
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Originally Posted by Roda
(Post 1456815)
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Originally Posted by thirdgen
(Post 1456928)
Props if anybody can name that bike before 9PM.
(And it's 8:04pm here.) |
lol I was thinking Honda SuperHawk 996, props anyway for being clever.
https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...b83dbdf583.jpg |
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Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1456938)
(Net Neutering)
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Originally Posted by 99mx5
(Post 1456911)
[Freddy with pussy]
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Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1456930)
Its name is Dunkin'.
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^ That's an interestingly false argument.
I honestly don't know whether the people who are chanting about "net neutrality" even realize that, prior to the Fed seizing regulatory control in 2015, this was just the natural state of things. And now I'm wondering if people actually believe that "powerful brands can pay to block information" on the internet... https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...dcc9299006.png |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1457001)
^ That's an interestingly false argument.
NET NEUTRALITY OUTRAGE IS A LESSON IN HOW EASY IT IS TO POLITICALLY MANIPULATE PEOPLE Editorial by Kevin Ryan During World War II, Japanese leaders told residents of the island of Okinawa that American soldiers would eat them and their babies if America captured the island. As a result, thousands of Okinawans fought to the death or took their own life rather than face capture. Of course the claim was untrue, but such is the power of propaganda to manipulate the masses into doing your bidding, whether it’s defending an island to the death... ...or giving control of the internet to politicians and bureaucrats. Watching people lose their minds on social media today after the FCC voted to repeal the so-called net neutrality regulations was a sad reminder that government propaganda remains the best way to control the populace. Like the bogus cannibal American soldiers, the net neutrality repeal is a fake boogeyman so wrapped up in hyperbole that its detractors honestly believe it will lead to the collapse of the internet if not society itself. Yet one need only look back to 2014 to realize it’s a total falsehood. Before net neutrality took effect in 2015, the internet was in no way broken. It was a bastion of free information. ISPs weren’t engaging in the behavior that the new regulations were written to protect us from, prices were dropping, new applications and services were emerging daily. And President Obama’s own FCC commisioners recommended against applying Title II regulation to ISPs, believing the regulations written in 1934 would be detrimental to the modern and rapidly evolving technology of the internet. But, in a saavy political move, the president publicly announced that he wanted the Title II regulations “in order to protect Americans from big internet bandwidth providers controlling internet content” via throttling or blocking. The notion that hated ISPs like Comcast might somehow censor or slow our internet experience so terrified many voters that they virtually begged the government to take over the internet. And they are still so obsessed with that fear over a non-existent problem that the public has reacted to word of net neutrality’s repeal with truly unbelievable claims of the disasters it will cause. Feminist Sandra Fluke: Killing Net Neutrality would kill access to abortion information... There is no reproductive freedom without Net Neutrality. The New York Times: The Internet Is Dying. Repealing Net Neutrality Hastens That Death Mike Caufield, director, Washington State University Vancouver: Killing net neutrality will throw us back to the Dark Ages GLAAD: The repeal of Net Neutrality is an attack on the LGBTQ community Wired: Expect Fewer Great Startups if the FCC Kills Net Neutrality Rolling Stone: Repeal Could Kill the Careers of Indie Musicians The Verge: Ending net neutrality would contribute to inequality of education and opportunity and could threaten the basic foundation of American democracy. And that’s just the media and other organizations. Read through your Facebook news feed today if you want more insane hyperbole from friends and family. And coming next week: Many of the same people begging the government to regulate the internet will be pleading with the government not to let them keep more of their own pay check, and saying tax cuts will threaten the basic foundation of American democracy. Sigh. SOURCES: https://nypost.com/…/no-the-end-of-net-neutrality-isnt-cyb…/ http://reason.com/…/net-neutrality-supporters-should-actuall http://reason.com/…/pro-net-neutrality-graphic-makes-argumen https://twitchy.com/…/bless-her-heart-sjw-sandra-fluke-get…/ BREAKING NEWS: THE FCC HAS VOTED TO ELIMINATE THE 2015 OPEN INTERNET ORDER, BETTER KNOWN AS NET NEUTRALITY
by Kevin Ryan The FCC has voted 3 to 2 to eliminate the Obama Administration’s 2015 regulation forcing ISPs to charge the same for all internet traffic, no matter how heavy the bandwidth usage. ... “For those of you out there who are fearful about what tomorrow will bring, take a deep breath, this decision will not break the internet,” FCC Commissioner Michael O'Reilly said. “While repealing net neutrality rules grabs headlines... net neutrality started as a consumer issue but soon became a stepping stone to impose vastly more common carrier regulation on broadband companies.” Prior to net neutrality, ISPs were regulated under Title I, which classified them as information services. In 2015 the FCC voted to instead regulate ISPs under Title II of the Communications Act of 1934, the same regulation that had in the past been applied to companies like ground line phone networks. Opponents of net neutrality argued that the same regulation that for decades stifled telecommunications innovation would do the same to internet innovation. Indeed since the regulation was imposed in 2015, investment has declined, broadband deployments have been put on hold, and planned innovations were shelved. Net neutrality proponents argue that without it, ISPs might charge more for bandwidth heavy users like Netflix, and less for reading text-based sites, which uses much less bandwidth. However, mobile broadband was not regulated under net neutrality, and that industry has been able to lower prices and offer many different options based on a user’s needs that ISPs cannot. And the fear that ISPs could offer à la carte access to individual services may actually be misguided. It could actually be a boon for consumers, who are now saddled with having to buy the full package, even if there are services they may not need. Net neutrality is comparable to how cable television providers force subscribers to purchase large packages of channels, including ones they’ll never watch, rather than allowing viewers to choose individual channels they actually want. Indeed some ISPs want to keep net neutrality in place, because it forces their broadband customers to purchase services they don’t need. |
Political Contribution 2016 Presidential Candidate
Comcast H: 522,850 T: 14,798 Verizon H: 297,720 T: 21,409 Charter H: 44,625 T: 0 ATT H: 339,260 T: 34,994 Total H: 1,204,455 T: 71,201 Trump. The puppet of big ISPs...... Oh and the Russians |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1457001)
^ That's an interestingly false argument.
I honestly don't know whether the people who are chanting about "net neutrality" even realize that, prior to the Fed seizing regulatory control in 2015, this was just the natural state of things. And now I'm wondering if people actually believe that "powerful brands can pay to block information" on the internet... https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...dcc9299006.png |
Originally Posted by bbundy
(Post 1457013)
Remember when America was great and a few free market railroad tycoons free from the burden of government regulations enabled and controlled the large scale movement of goods and people about the country. In their quest for ever increasing profit they made railroads great. They could pick industry partners and choose economic winners all while avoiding stepping on toes of other railroads even controlling 100% of the goods that could be transported to certain markets was a power they exercised. Then big government came along and built interstate and state highway systems and had the audacity to make it free and with equal access to everybody. Yea that screwed everybody. lets go backwards.
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Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1457014)
You do realize rail road companies were only able to do that because of government mandate right?.....
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Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1457010)
Political Contribution 2016 Presidential Candidate
Comcast H: 522,850 T: 14,798 Verizon H: 297,720 T: 21,409 Charter H: 44,625 T: 0 ATT H: 339,260 T: 34,994 Total H: 1,204,455 T: 71,201 Trump. The puppet of big ISPs...... Oh and the Russians |
Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1457014)
You do realize rail road companies were only able to do that because of government mandate right?.....
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This thread used to be fun... and now its devolved into more bs political vomit... Keep your pants on and keep it to yourself.
Hey look a real random picture! Not just some stupid meme generated by your moronic extreme left/right political dumbtank of choice. https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...e9a9412834.jpg |
Originally Posted by DNMakinson
(Post 1457017)
SEXIST POST... Uses last name for Trump, first name for Clinton. I'm offended. (Can't find a "wink" emoji)
https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...30938207dc.jpg |
Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1457014)
You do realize rail road companies were only able to do that because of government mandate right?.....
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Monopoly is a fun game.
Here I am enjoying a "Revenge of the Sip" while watching the previews during the viewing of "The Last Jedi https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...a7d0e34911.png |
Originally Posted by Braineack
(Post 1457029)
Monopoly is a fun game.
Here I am enjoying a "Revenge of the Sip" while watching the previews during the viewing of "The Last Jedi https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...a7d0e34911.png |
Originally Posted by bbundy
(Post 1457024)
the railroads did it themselves.
Munn v. Illinois [1877, SC] indirectly lead to the Interstate Commerce Commission [1887] This body of five individuals was created to hear complaints of individuals or individual businesses, and to ensure that the railroads maintained "just and reasonable" rates Random internet pic; https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...a679806e9f.jpg |
Originally Posted by bbundy
(Post 1457024)
Which came first, The railroads or the political donations to ensure a regulatory environment enabling railroads to dictate things on their own terms ensuring a monopoly? I reject your argument that the government created railroad monopolies, the railroads did it themselves.
Do you honestly think these top-level executives in their Industries gave up top pay to go into government for altruistic reasons? |
I am going to start deleting political content in this thread if it continues.
https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...fa437ed299.png |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1457051)
I am going to start deleting political content in this thread if it continues. (There IS a dedicated thread for that) http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/...62/732/742.jpg |
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Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1457051)
I am going to start deleting political content in this thread if it continues.
https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...fa437ed299.png https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...8f34c27f47.jpg |
https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...a5a5b9e503.jpg
Best Christmas tattoo EVER. |
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Correction...Christmas ornament?
https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...d23d6ea072.jpg |
Uh, post #33848 above?
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Wow, sorry dude, I didn't even see that. Somebody texted me that exact photo and I laughed my ass off. I will have to redeem myself by posting a random photo of the subject of your choice. LMK.
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I miss the shipped box thread. Here's a rigged one in action.
How it's setup. |
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Originally Posted by mitymazda
(Post 1457215)
[img]racist iPhone X[/img] http://s2.quickmeme.com/img/72/725e3...6fb85dec9a.jpg |
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Welp, I've got a second home again. It's a bit of a fixxer upper but with a little paint and some throw pillows it should be fine.
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^It looks like it's made of wood.
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Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1457239)
^It looks like it's made of wood.
There are pecan trees, a Chinaberry tree (mahogany family), and a hardwood I don't readily recognize. Anyone know what these leaves are? |
I believe that may be white oak.
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Originally Posted by rleete
(Post 1457248)
I believe that may be white oak.
I should probably pick some cotton. |
I believe rleete was half right.
Many oak species are"white oaks". I think what you have there is a "swamp chestnut oak", sometimes called a "swamp white oak", or Quercus michauxii if you're fancy. https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...8b3b679ca5.jpg https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...e855e8f309.jpg |
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That leaf is shaped right. Thank you both.
I finally got a set of cheap 15x9 for the track. SM7 fits good on it and it lets me upgrade from one of the narrower spare wheel sets I have (Helium in 6.5). I also have 15x8 6ul and some Rota Slipstream in 15x6.5 acquired with a parts car along the way. Time to free up some garage space. |
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