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[QUOTE=blue3]You just realized it? The computers at my school are really slow.[/QUOTE]
mine aren't much better. and yes, I'm very sleepy, so I only just conciously(sp?) noticed I was here. the whole trip to school (about an hour) I was just on autopilot :p that's what you get from traveling the same stretch over and over again. damn, I really need to get some schoolwrok done now talk to you later. :wave: |
I used to understand American sports....except American Football, never got that...
I had a load of games for me Megadrive back in the day... |
Damn, why am I still on MX
I should be doing school stuff :( EDIT: oh well, I will make 5 more posts and than leave :p |
Here, I'll help. Post about the demo in death heads. :p
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ok :p
It's really funny to see at the main page of R&M the top 5 threads last pots are all by me.. OMFG 4800 :chug: |
I did some school stuff, but have a couple of drama lessons today and that's it...
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[QUOTE=Lord Abortion]I did some school stuff, but have a couple of drama lessons today and that's it...[/QUOTE]
drama is cool. I have to type out stuff that's all :( Boooring np: Arcturus - Reflections |
I have a (n hour long) lecture at midday, and then I have to figure out how to do the six hours preparation I'm supposed to do for my tutorial, by 3 o'clock.
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[QUOTE=the2stranger]drama is cool.[/QUOTE]
I couldn't stand Drama, I felt so happy to give it up. Every lesson I used to sit there praying I wouldn't have to get up and perform something. |
[QUOTE=Happy]I couldn't stand Drama, I felt so happy to give it up. Every lesson I used to sit there praying I wouldn't have to get up and perform something.[/QUOTE]
that's the most awesome thing of it. last week we had a drama presantation I ran round the stage like a cave man in my boxers, it was so funny. I even got an awesome score |
[QUOTE=the2stranger]that's the most awesome thing of it.
last week we had a drama presantation I ran round the stage like a cave man in my boxers, it was so funny. I even got an awesome score[/QUOTE] :lol: Nah, all we did was stuff like running away from home with a girlfriend :rolleyes: The most fun thing I did in Drama was in year 8, baking a cake. Was a huge piss take but the teacher liked it. |
mornin samich bar :D
...after an extended weekend, i get to leave today at lunch. |
how's it all going, I havn't been on in weeks.]
sup? NP: Pantera- I'll be alright [quote=paul]mornin samich bar ...after an extended weekend, i get to leave today at lunch.[/quote] yo, long time no see :) sup? |
[QUOTE=Axe]how's it all going, I havn't been on in weeks.]
sup? NP: Pantera- I'll be alright[/QUOTE] Didn't miss much. As usual. |
[QUOTE=Happy]Didn't miss much. As usual.[/QUOTE]
:( hope you don't miss my message (in your user cp ;) ) |
damn, it was cld and windy today.
But i''m home again, I hope my guitarist calls today, I feel like making music |
[QUOTE=Axe]:( hope you don't miss my message (in your user cp ;) )[/QUOTE]
Cheers :D |
[QUOTE=Axe]
yo, long time no see :) sup?[/QUOTE] been busy huh? hit me up on aim... I had Erock (mx name) come up to my house this weekend. It was mostly filled with guitar playing and jamming, but we almost burned down the house :lol: |
[QUOTE=Happy]Cheers :D[/QUOTE]
I havn't repped in nearly 2 weeks, I might as well splash out a little :p [QUOTE=kurrptsenate]been busy huh? hit me up on aim... I had Erock (mx name) come up to my house this weekend. It was mostly filled with guitar playing and jamming, but we almost burned down the house :lol:[/QUOTE] I'm on a different computer, sorry :( sounds sweet |
[QUOTE=kurrptsenate]I had Erock (mx name) come up to my house this weekend. It was mostly filled with guitar playing and jamming, but we almost burned down the house :lol:[/QUOTE]
Let me guess: your fingers were on fire from your intense shredding! |
[QUOTE][B]Have a look at first and final paragraphs from a review article concerning 'British collective identity'. Write a coherent text of no more than one sheet of A4 (about 350 words) about the concept of collective identity in your own country. Use information from the paragraphs below. Please use two quotations and one paraphrase from the extract below in your text.[/B]
THE INCREDIBLE VAGUENESS OF BEING BRITISH/ENGLISH Why is it important to have a collective identity? Three propositions may be advanced. First, if the group is a visible or despised minority it may require a strong identity to maintain cohesion for defensive purposes and as a means of offsetting negative prejudices through the affirmation of a positive self-image. Second, a majority (or dominant minority, as in the case of whites in apartheid South Africa) need a means of deciding who is excluded, who does not get to sit at the top table or have equal access to power, goods or resources. Third, at the national level, an identity helps to bring into rough congruence that which is frequently ruptured, namely a people and the territory they inhabit or--in a slightly different formulation--a nation and a state. Why then have the British/English managed perfectly well without a strong national identity and why do they appear to aspire to one now? Is such a prospect in sight? The starting point to answer these questions--as the forward slash indicates--is to distinguish between Britishness and Englishness, two notions that are so widely conflated in popular sentiment and public discourse that all four authors of the books reviewed here have a wretched time trying to come up with a satisfactory means of separating them. Davies at first takes the undergraduate way out, by resorting to dictionary definitions. As he concedes, this hardly suffices. The compilers of the Oxford and Shorter Oxford get stranded before 1707, while the Shorter also offers definitions of England that include 'the southern part of Great Britain', 'the English nation', 'the English state' (whatever 'that is), 'the British nation' and 'the British state'. This is hardly a display of Cartesian logic, but of course does reflect the muddle mentioned. For Nairn, who proclaims simultaneously has Scottish nationalism, Marxism and belief in democracy, the British/English confusion is enraging and frustrating. He sees the English, who constitute 80 per cent of the United Kingdom's population, as unthinkingly appropriating the cultures and distinctiveness of the Welsh and Scottish. (I shall ignore the Irish, southern and northern, for the moment.) For him the break-up of Britain into its component 'nations', which he sees foretokened in devolution and which he has been announcing for 27 years, cannot come too soon. Paxman, the abrasive television presenter and scourge of mendacious politicians, concedes to this Celtic pique, suggesting that the English would do well to mind their language when they refer to the other nations of Britain. His lively, amusing book is something of a wry English--he means English-manifesto. Yet he too concedes that the history of the peoples of the British isles is fatefully intertwined. I liked his illustration. In his dying words Scottish Lieutenant General Sir John Moore, fatally wounded at the battle of Corunna in 1809, expressed his hope that 'the people of England will be satisfied' and that 'my country [England] will do me justice' (p. 44). The military prowess of the British and the British Empire are also at the heart of an innovative account provided by Baucom, a South African literary scholar working at Princeton and Duke Universities. His central epigram derives from one of Salman Rushdie's stuttering characters who suggests that: 'The trouble with the Engenglish is that their hiss hiss history happened overseas, so they dodo don't know what it means.' Englishness is thus locationally, and in its provenance, conjoined to the British Empire. The pressure now to resolve these ambiguities derives from a number of sources. At the most general level globalization is challenging the capacity of all nation-states, with perhaps the exception of the United States, to legislate, tax and to fashion economic, social and political priorities autonomously. As many authors have pointed out, this does not mean the end of the nation-state, but may signify a crucial shift in its roles. Migration policy remains a national function (who is included and who is excluded here takes a literal form). However, the nation-state is also engaged in reconciling the acceptance of the loss of sovereignty with the perceived need to continue and develop its affective role as a rallying point for the symbolic identity needs of its population. The result is often risible. Nairn's tongue-lashing of New Labour easily hits its targets in this respect. What else is the 'rebranding of Britain' or the wet behind the ears outpourings of the so-called 'think-tank', Demos, which produced a pamphlet with the splendidly instructive title Britain(TM) in 1997? A similar imperative to reconstruct a post-imperial Britain informed the rehabilitation of the tarnished post-Diana House of Windsor and the insistence that a theme park--the Millennium Dome--could symbolize the 'great' in Great Britain. […] To return to my starting point about why strong collective identities are normally formed. The British/English are not a threatened minority. Neither, after the end of Empire, do they seek hegemony over other peoples. Despite Scottish whinging about English domination, Scots occupy the three most important orifices of state at Westminster, while Scotland gets a disproportionate share of the taxpayers' money. The people of Britain do not need the simplicity and uniformity of an over-assertive identity and they should beware of politicians wrapping themselves either in the flag of St George or the Union Jack. Having an elaborated, multi-layered identity is not the same thing as not having one at all. At any rate, given the peculiarities of their imperial and postimperial history, this is the best the British are likely to get. Cohen, Robin. “The Incredible Vagueness of Being British/English” International Affairs. 76.3 (2000): 575-582. Books reviewed: · Davies, Norman. The Isles: a history. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1999. · Baucom, Ian. Out of Place: Englishness, Empire and the locations of identity. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999. · Nairn, Tom. After Britain: New Labour and the return of Scotland. London: Granta, 2000. · Paxman, Jeremy. The English: a portrait of people. London: Penguin, 1999.[/QUOTE] Someone do my homework. :( |
[QUOTE=Superpeer]Someone do my homework. :([/QUOTE]
tl;dr Im busy doing my computer work :-/ NP: A Perfect Circle - Thomas edit: actually if I was, I wouldnt be on here |
[QUOTE=Superpeer]Someone do my homework. :([/QUOTE]
Your homework sucks. I look at questions like that and go blank. |
[QUOTE=Jom]Let me guess: your fingers were on fire from your intense shredding![/QUOTE]
haha actually, we were up till 4 am that night playing guitar hero. I went to bed and was trying to pass out, and i heard this crack that sounded like glass. I assumed erock knocked a glass over, and didnt pay any attension to it. Apparently the ash trash heated up so much that it cracked, and put 3 burn marks on the coffee table. Obviously i was reprimanded for this, but i explained that we saw no smoldering ashes, and it was a freak accident. |
Morning all.
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[QUOTE=Slug]Morning all.[/QUOTE]
damn slug. Your postcount makes mine look bad :lol: ...or good depending on your perspective |
[QUOTE=kurrptsenate]haha
actually, we were up till 4 am that night playing guitar hero. I went to bed and was trying to pass out, and i heard this crack that sounded like glass. I assumed erock knocked a glass over, and didnt pay any attension to it. Apparently the ash trash heated up so much that it cracked, and put 3 burn marks on the coffee table. Obviously i was reprimanded for this, but i explained that we saw no smoldering ashes, and it was a freak accident.[/QUOTE] :eek: wow. |
Im getting my brothers guitar hero for christmas
NP: Modest Mouse - Float On |
it was kind of fukked up....
i mean you'd figure that since we were up so late that we would have some kind of indicator to tell us something was wrong, but apparently not. Like i said, i heard the weirdest noise, and assumed it was something else. Apparently the whole filter burned to ash before it stopped. I woke up to see a heavy arse ash tray cracked completely in half, and a few burn marks. WHOOPS :lol: edit : guitar hero is friggin great. Erock is gonna get a PS2 specifically for this game. The solos on expert are RIDICULOUS. I still am not sure how i beat the solo to "symphony of destruction" by megadeath |
[QUOTE=kurrptsenate]damn slug. Your postcount makes mine look bad :lol:
...or good depending on your perspective[/QUOTE] I've been posting only 1-2 times a day lately, if that :-/ |
[QUOTE=kurrptsenate]it was kind of fukked up....
i mean you'd figure that since we were up so late that we would have some kind of indicator to tell us something was wrong, but apparently not. Like i said, i heard the weirdest noise, and assumed it was something else. Apparently the whole filter burned to ash before it stopped. I woke up to see a heavy arse ash tray cracked completely in half, and a few burn marks. WHOOPS :lol: edit : guitar hero is friggin great. Erock is gonna get a PS2 specifically for this game. The solos on expert are RIDICULOUS. I still am not sure how i beat the solo to "symphony of destruction" by megadeath[/QUOTE] Ahh guitar hero's that new eyetoy game right? I NEED it. |
How do you play it?
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nah
guitar hero is that PS2 game that comes with an SG guitar controller 5 fret buttons, strum bar (up/down), and a working whammy erock is so fukking good with a real whammy actually. You should see him use it in the game :lol:. I was seriously hoping it wasnt going to fall off |
[QUOTE=kurrptsenate]nah
guitar hero is that PS2 game that comes with an SG guitar controller 5 fret buttons, strum bar (up/down), and a working whammy erock is so fukking good with a real whammy actually. You should see him use it in the game :lol:. I was seriously hoping it wasnt going to fall off[/QUOTE] :lol: That's what I meant. It sounds liek great fun. |
That sounds hard.
Is the controller shaped like a guitar? |
[QUOTE=Slug]That sounds hard.
Is the controller shaped like a guitar?[/QUOTE] its shaped like a gibson SG, since the game is licensed by gibson |
Noice, very noice.
I don't want to go to work. :angry: |
[QUOTE=Superpeer]Someone do my homework. :([/QUOTE]
ouch. I have to type out 2 pages of stuff about children bevahior and upbring for psychology :( |
i was supposed to leave work today at 12:00 to go see Yngwie Malmsteen in Philadelphia.
For some reason, my boss has it marked that I get the whole day off, and im still here!!!! Ill still leave at 12 |
[QUOTE=kurrptsenate]i was supposed to leave work today at 12:00 to go see Yngwie Malmsteen in Philadelphia.
For some reason, my boss has it marked that I get the whole day off, and im still here!!!! Ill still leave at 12[/QUOTE] Lucky bugger. |
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