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Jul 21 2023 11:53pm
Quote (Plaguefear @ Jul 21 2023 09:41pm)
Its not just shooting the shit with a friend when a week later you get the ar you were talking about then go shoot people with it..
If i said "i want to go rob a bank" to a friend then rock up at a bank with a shotgun a week later its the same thing.


Imagine thinking this came close to being a good analogy
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Jul 22 2023 03:24am
Quote (Sixers @ Jul 22 2023 01:21pm)
I'm a terrible person because I'd shoot a criminal in the face to defend myself, my family, and my community?

You are one confused individual. Each and every one of those people rioting and looting can take a bullet and I wouldn't lose an ounce of sleep.


Who was he defending? they were business buildings and closed..
He went out there wanting to shoot someone and he managed to do it.
I do not give a shit about the scum he shot either, but he clearly spoke his desire to murder some one then went ahead and did it.
He put HIMSELF in that situation, no one else gave him a gun and told him to go stand in front of a riot.
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Jul 22 2023 05:54am
Quote (Plaguefear @ Jul 22 2023 09:24pm)
Who was he defending? they were business buildings and closed..
He went out there wanting to shoot someone and he managed to do it.
I do not give a shit about the scum he shot either, but he clearly spoke his desire to murder some one then went ahead and did it.
He put HIMSELF in that situation, no one else gave him a gun and told him to go stand in front of a riot.


So he went out just to shoot people for the sake of shooting them? Nothing to do with rioters, Antifa and blm terrorists robbing, shooting and destroying other people's livelyhoods? Nothing to do with self defence. Nothing to do with protecting the streets and being a role model aspiring law enforcement. Maybe it's time to update the msm chip.
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Jul 22 2023 06:02am
Quote (addone @ Jul 22 2023 06:54am)
So he went out just to shoot people for the sake of shooting them? Nothing to do with rioters, Antifa and blm terrorists robbing, shooting and destroying other people's livelyhoods? Nothing to do with self defence. Nothing to do with protecting the streets and being a role model aspiring law enforcement. Maybe it's time to update the msm chip.



It has been two years and these people still willingly ignore the overwhelming amount of video documentation and the facts from the court case that ended up exonerating him from every accusation made. Everything down to the legality of him being a minor and wielding the rifle was proven to be 100% legal.
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Jul 22 2023 06:47am
Quote (Sixers @ Jul 22 2023 12:49am)
Relax, male Karen.


My feelings hurt bad now, owie

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Jul 22 2023 08:34am
Quote (Plaguefear @ Jul 22 2023 05:24am)
Who was he defending? they were business buildings and closed..
He went out there wanting to shoot someone and he managed to do it.
I do not give a shit about the scum he shot either, but he clearly spoke his desire to murder some one then went ahead and did it.
He put HIMSELF in that situation, no one else gave him a gun and told him to go stand in front of a riot.


Who was he defending you ask? Himself.

And that's all that needs to be said. He had every right to be there and armed. He was attacked, and as a result he defended himself from a mob of people who were attacking him. One of the men attacking him had a handgun and pointed it at him. Another attacked him with a skateboard (a weapon). One tried to take his weapon. This was an easy self defense situation and that's why he was exonerated.

Simply put, the idiots attacking him were dumb as fuck. Attacking someone who is armed and not expecting them to shoot you? Yeah, darwinism. They got what they deserved.

This post was edited by Sixers on Jul 22 2023 08:42am
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Jul 22 2023 08:42am
Kyle rittenhouse is innocent
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Jul 22 2023 09:58am
same vibes tbh

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Jul 22 2023 01:02pm
Quote (Crunkt @ Jul 21 2023 12:31pm)
the only people that use the word woke is hogs

funny how you would assume people not wanting to be racist you assume is liberals. basically conceding that hogs are racist reactionary plebs. proving my point

hey you know how i know your mind is poisoned? 10 years ago the same shit was happening but hogs werent squeelling all over message boards crying about owning the libs.

take a step back and i dont know wake up and maybe you can see its a lot more complicated than 'them libs'



please provide some form of the following to back this statement up: context, evidence, proof, example(s).


u uneducated mutt
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Jul 22 2023 02:34pm
Quote (GuyLadouche @ 22 Jul 2023 15:02)
please provide some form of the following to back this statement up: context, evidence, proof, example(s).


u uneducated mutt


google is this very very simple website you can go to and type things into it and it tells you about history

its a pretty cool thing you should try it sometime instead of licking a wall as a hobby

Believe it or not its not my job to educate you on simple facts and history and the body of knowledge. That is what school was for.. You know? The thing you spent your entire time sticking crayons in your ears?

20. Heaven 17

(We Don’t Need This) Fascist Groove Thang (1981)

A nervy BBC banned the Human League splinter group’s funky debut single for potentially libelling the US’s new president Ronald Reagan as a “fascist god in motion”. Reagan probably had bigger problems, given that he survived an assassination attempt later that March. Political references aside, Fascist Groove Thang remains depressingly relevant.
19. The Who

My Generation (1965)

The Who’s single didn’t fall foul of the prudish BBC for flipping off their wartime elders or espousing nihilism, but because the corporation worried that Roger Daltrey’s stutter – “Why don’t you all f-fade away” – might offend people afflicted with the condition. (It eventually backed down.)
18. Neil Young

This Note’s for You (1988)

By declaring that he “ain’t singing” for Pepsi, Young is effectively doing its bidding for free. Still, the video is a great satire of 80s corporate rock: a dog in sunglasses licks his chops at a bikini-clad girl, and a Michael Jackson lookalike catches fire, leading MTV to ban the clip after threats from MJ’s lawyers.
17. Lady Gaga

Judas (2011)

Lebanese officials unfortunately agreed with Gaga’s claim, in her single Judas – released at Easter, no less – that “in the most Biblical sense / I am beyond repentance”. It was banned from radio and police impounded boxes of its parent album, Born This Way, when they arrived at Beirut international airport. (They also eventually gave in.)
16. Olivia Newton-John

Physical (1981)

ONJ’s single was banned from several radio stations in Utah for being “more suggestive than most songs”. But perhaps this just reveals KFMY and KSL-FM’s dirty minds. There are plenty of things that ONJ could have be talking about doing “horizontally” with her beau. Spirit levels. Barre classes. Sanding. Breaststroke.
15. The Beatles

Happiness Is a Warm Gun (1968)

Another instance of the BBC’s gift for misinterpretation. The Beatles’ track was not censored for referencing firearms, or for its phallic implications, but, John Lennon claimed, for being “about shooting up drugs”. Given that the phrase came from Charlie Brown, it would have been an endearingly innocent heroin reference.
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14. Robin Thicke feat TI and Pharrell

Blurred Lines (2013)

Banned by dozens of student unions for its coercive lyrics, Blurred Lines started an important conversation about pop’s sexual politics. The video is as objectionable as the lyrics, but the song remains sort of irresistible. That must be the Marvin Gaye part.
13. Ian Dury & the Blockheads

Spasticus Autisticus (1981)

Dury wrote Spasticus Autisticus to protest against what he saw as the patronising International Year of Disabled Persons, and then it was blocked by the BBC, which deemed Dury’s descriptions of physical disability offensive. Redemption finally came at the 2012 Paralympic opening ceremony, where it was sung by a group of performers with disabilities.
Wreckers of civilisation! ... Abba.
Wreckers of civilisation! ... Abba. Photograph: Olle Lindeborg/EPA
12. Abba

Waterloo (1974)

During the Gulf war, the reliably literal BBC wasn’t taking any chances, and expunged 67 songs – featuring even the vaguest and most metaphorical references to armies, fighting, boats, killing, cavalry or the Middle East – from its playlists. Among them, Abba’s notoriously hawkish hit, Waterloo. Don’t mention the ... 1974 Eurovision Song Contest?
11. NWA

Fuck Tha Police (1988)

Fuck Tha Police didn’t need banning: it was too profane for radio broadcast anyway. But that didn’t deter Australia’s Triple J, which happily played it for six months. Then the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (under pressure from a rightwing senator) banned it. Triple J protested by putting NWA’s Express Yourself on loop for 24 hours.
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10. 2 Live Crew

Me So Horny (1989)

The standout from the Florida group’s album As Nasty As They Wanna Be, which was ruled obscene and produced a cracking defence from Christopher Hitchens, who called the judge and sheriff a “pair of racist shitheads who should be told to fuck right off”. Despite being cartoonishly puerile, it seems weirdly innocent now.
9. Lil Louis

French Kiss (1989)

French Kiss features a woman having a lovely time and was initially banned by the BBC for the charmingly coy crime of “heavy breathing”. Lest you thought society was finally OK with female pleasure, Ofcom found the east London digital station 883 Centreforce in breach of its broadcast standards for playing it one lunchtime last August.
8. Queen

I Want to Break Free (1984)

Many claim that MTV banned this Corrie-spoofing video, although accounts conflict as to whether that really happened. Regardless, the US didn’t take to Freddie Mercury in drag: Brian May recalled midwestern radio programmers saying: “We can’t possibly play this. You know, it looks homosexual.” (MTV did ban the raunchier video for 1982’s less good Body Language.)
7. Madonna

Justify My Love (1990)

Justify My Love was accused of being so outrageous that Madonna had to invent a new format to contain her smuttiness: when MTV pulled the video for being too sexually explicit, she released the first ever VHS single (certified 18). It was a global hit, the clunky format a testament to the tenacity of perverts everywhere.
6. Billie Holiday

Strange Fruit (1939)

Columbia refused to let Holiday record it; when Commodore Records did, Atlantic co-founder Ahmet Ertegun called it “the beginning of the civil rights movement”. Strange Fruit – a song about lynchings – was considered so powerful that some US cities banned it, worried it would provoke civil disharmony.
Attaching lust to love ... George Michael.
Attaching lust to love ... George Michael. Photograph: Channel 4
5. George Michael

I Want Your Sex (1987)

Once again, in an attempt to protect the nation – this time from the promotion of casual sex – the BBC missed the mark and ended perpetuating dodgy stereotypes: Michael reprimanded them for “[dividing] sex and love incredibly”, and asserted that I Want Your Sex “is about attaching lust to love, not just to strangers”.
4. Loretta Lynn

The Pill (1975)

Lynn’s iconic hit details more than just the liberation from pregnancy offered by the contraceptive pill, including the fun she will have, the clothes she will wear, how “the feelin’ good comes easy now / Since I got the pill”. Naturally, country radio flipped its wig at the scandalous notion of a woman enjoying sex and banned it widely.
3. Donna Summer

Love to Love You Baby (1975)

The orgasmic obstacle strikes again as Donna Summer unleashes her majestic carnal rhapsodies amid Giorgio Moroder’s arpeggiations. What radio stations banned, discos lapped up. Why is it that the sound of female climax is prohibited in pop, yet male guitarists get to play great wanking guitar solos until kingdom, well, come?
2. Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin

Je T’aime ... Moi Non Plus (1969)

The ne plus ultra of coming on strong, this breathy 1969 (nice) single upset everyone from Portugal to the pope (whom Gainsbourg called, per Birkin, “our greatest PR man”). Little did they know that, three decades later, Birkin’s rhapsodic delivery would be appropriated by M&S ads hawking posh salmon.
Frankie Goes To Hollywood.
Frankie Goes To Hollywood. Photograph: Michael Putland/Getty Images
1. Frankie Goes to Hollywood

Relax (1984)

In January 1984, Mike Read yanked Relax off Radio 1 before the song had finished playing, appalled after having realised that they weren’t singing about, you know, calisthenics. Despite his rashness, Read was pretty slow off the mark: Frankie’s label ZTT had already taken out ads that included such phrases as “all the nice boys love sea men” and “nineteen inches that must be taken always”. Of course, it went on to be a giant hit, spending 52 weeks in the Top 75. It just goes to show, the best way to suppress smut is – like a pervert on public transport – just to ignore it.

This post was edited by Crunkt on Jul 22 2023 02:36pm
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