Kuwaiti: 'The terrorist Katrina' is a soldier of Allah'

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Midas, Sep 1, 2005.

  1. OldDan

    OldDan New Member

    i have saved some of Moen's answers, and can just post these again. Giving credit to the originator, of course. That should more than make of for the loss(if you want to call it a loss)

    I was thinking more along the line of "BLESSING" Praise Allah
    See there I'm already getting into the role.
     
  2. lawdogct

    lawdogct New Member

    twitch dance, twitch dance, twitch dance.......snip fall

    Alas poor Moen, we knew him well....anyway, how about them Red Soxs?

    Compassion and backbone do not often mix well. Without one, tyranny runs rampant, without the other, freedom dies as a doormat. The US has gone too long in catering to paper cut emotions and done to little equip most of two generations with the tools (taking personal responsibility, working hard, community involvement) to cope with reality's sharp edges. Both are a disservice to individual citizens and our entire nation. Worse, when backbone is shown, it is now declared as barbaric and evil. Better to bleed to death with a smile than draw clear concrete ENFORCED lines with those who attack us. Maybe some of you were brought up to smile when someone punched you in the face, or stand aside when they tried to rape your sister or your mother all because that person didn't have a lily white silver spoon fed life (like that's something to aspire to). Well, not me. My life hasn't been a cakewalk either. But still I was brought up never to start a fight, but to defend myself to my fullest when one came looking for me. I was taught to defend my family even more than my personal being. The same applies to the freedom and liberty of OUR country. Choose: Stand by and watch it be desecrated, or defend it tooth and nail. There is no middle ground.
     
  3. Andy

    Andy Well-Known Member




    Ok I will now be the idealistic but yet misguided person whose name I will not name but who is no longer posting but is most likely a good person who is um misguided.

    I think that terrorists are just misunderstood gentlemen who need a big hug so they can feel loved by us and if we can not hug them then we should have warm fuzzy thoughts about them and maybe they will pick up on our positive energy.

    I think that anyone who wants to defend themselves against an enemy that wants to destroy them are violent and closed minded.

    I think Albania will be the next big tourist attraction.

    I think that old people were never young and only the young knows importent stuff like you know stuff.
     
  4. Stu Joe

    Stu Joe New Member

    I normally just lurk some of the interesting topics on the coin forums on CT.

    But I have been reading this thread since it started. It is kind of like watching a train wreck. I just can't turn away from it lol

    Switching back to lurk mode... ;)
     
  5. Steve E

    Steve E New Member

    I am probably the most quiet, shy person in my home town. I'm even afraid to talk to my wife!! :0

    I just love this general forum where I can unleash my innermost beast and show how ignorant I really am. But boy, what entertainment!! Go Air Force!!!
     
  6. Midas

    Midas New Member

    Amen to that...I glad to know that there are people here in this forum that think and believe as I do. God Bless America...there is hope after all.

    "Paper cut emotions"...too funny, I love that line. It pretty much describes many on the other side of the fence who "feel our pain"...as they bite their bottom lip.
     
  7. Andy

    Andy Well-Known Member

    I'm not shy and I have been prone to being um violent when necessary in the past, the distant past. But I think that most people in this country who are anti-war are nice people they just don't get it that just because they are nice means that others are or care to be.

    "A smile and a handshake are quite often more respected when there is a grip to it".
    Gandhi after he was shot.




    well maybe not Gandhi but you get the "point".
     
  8. zaneman

    zaneman New Member

    double.
     
  9. zaneman

    zaneman New Member


    You know, I have to agree with some of the people who can't understand your "big words", which probably puts me at their intelligence level. So perhaps, since you MUST be smarter than me, you can help me with a question I have.

    For a fully developed laminar incompressible flow through a straight noncircular duct, the navier-stokes equations clearly reduce to:

    (∂^2)u/( ∂ )y^2 + (∂^2)u/( ∂ )z^2 = 1/u(dp/dx)= const < 0

    where (y,z) is the plane of the duct from the cross section and x is along the duct-axis. Using a non-square rectangular grid, I need to develop a finite-difference model for this equation, and indicate how it may be applied to solve for flow in a rectangular duct of side lengths a and b.

    Your help would be greatly appreciate in this matter, oh great all-knowing one. My feeble right-winged brain could take me close to the answer, but not to the caliber of a left-wing mind.
     
  10. ajm229

    ajm229 New Member

    Obviously, the answer is 42, as it is for all life's mysteries!
     
  11. kvasir

    kvasir New Member

    Personally, I'm a fan of the Bernoulli Equation.
     
  12. zaneman

    zaneman New Member

    Bernoullis equation is very similar to Navier-Stokes, because if you take the first integral of the Navier-Stokes equation under inviscid conditions, you get bernoulli's equation.
     

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