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Don't care if I have to be a lone wolf the rest of my life, bitches ain't ****.
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That and breaking her hipster ex in two will achieve a great deal. Worst guy, srsly.
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[QUOTE=2muchket!;17966041]Me and this girl I've been kinda seeing, are having somewhat similar issues, she just think she's going to hurt me if we get really serious.
I'll win her round though. I have that tr00 english charm down to a T.[/QUOTE] speaking quickly with immeasurable amounts of metaphors and similes to the point that nobody knows wtf you're saying? |
as long as we understand it we dont care if anyone else does
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That and flashing a crooked, wry smile every now and then.
I could clean up over in 'murikaaaaa with this ****. |
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKlbBgQHPqo&feature=related[/url]
these women are so artsy and free spirited omg |
i asked this girl if she had been raped before and she was like "not really"
i always ask girls that cause it seems everyone just gets raped nowadays |
a girl once told me she was raped
all i could say was 'oh really that must've sucked' i think she was lying though |
Women are more pathetic than ever.
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It's awesome when people lie about stuff like.
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[QUOTE=Nostalgia;17966091]i asked this girl if she had been raped before and she was like "not really"
i always ask girls that cause it seems everyone just gets raped nowadays[/QUOTE] just ****ing cracked up laughing in the library some irish dude is giving me funny looks nao |
it's not rape, it's surprise sex
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So it just dawned on me that [I]Castles[/I] by Score One For Safety is one of the best EP's of all time.
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pretty good ep
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I'm so in love with this band again idk. The a-ca-pella bit in Castles I is so perfect.
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[QUOTE=Aaron;17966000]I'm a real man. The water will purify when it hits my body.[/QUOTE]
the current will take you to russia before you reach the other side :lol: and the bosphorus is not like the ganj river in india lol. |
Prove it, fag.
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Aaron can walk on water.
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I can. :)
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Me scared of water.
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just slept in the school cafe for an hour
so college |
Fat bagz 2day doods. Gonna nod out in the park, hopefully not get kidnapped or sumfin.
What a piece of ****. |
u guyz wanna read my 500 word intro to the 3000 word essay im writing
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I'm down. Your writing is usually solid as hell.
[QUOTE=RetiredAt21;17966216]Fat bagz 2day doods. Gonna nod out in the park, hopefully not get kidnapped or sumfin. What a piece of ****.[/QUOTE] :lol: @ ending of post I think I might be getting some fent tonight. Or at least some herb, going job hunting w/ my nigga Anna, should be good. |
so youre going to get blazed and then find jobs?
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[I]Which is Australia’s most important bilateral relationship, in your judgement? Why? What capacity do Australian policymakers have to shape it to their perceived advantage?[/I]
When it comes to the issue of Australia’s most important bilateral relationship, perspective is crucial. One could perceive the same titbit of information in a completely different way from someone else – in other words, and hypothetically speaking, while one may see Australia’s historical ‘closeness’ with the United States a fundamental part of the current relationship, another may see that very same thing as a part of an era passed, one from which Australia has moved on. While the US has played an enormous role in Australia’s political history (and still continues to do so), it’s not entirely possible to unequivocally proclaim the Americans as Australia’s most ‘important’ bilateral relationship. The word ‘important’ here is, well, important. What does it exactly signify? Looking at the question from a purely economic perspective, a pro-American voice nowadays will find it difficult to back up any claim of ‘importance’. What this paper will attempt to show is that while the American relationship has been (and still is) of utmost ‘importance’, in terms of security, political alignment and various other reasons, the old Australian way of acting internationally (i.e. blindly following whatever greater power is watching over them) is no longer an applicable foreign policy consideration. At various points in the last two decades, Canberra has ventured further into the realms of multilateralism and, what is a little more relevant to the question at hand, into the good graces of the new ‘biggest thing’ happening above their very heads – the ‘rise and rise’ of China. It has reached the point, some may argue, that Australia’s livelihood is now resting on China’s sustained growth, but China is viewed by many as an unpredictable factor in the decline of American hegemony and the dawn of a new world order. On one hand, it would be extraordinarily foolish for this sense of ‘regionalism’ and critical economic ties with China to cloud a positive and arguably beneficial alliance with the United States – those favourable to China need tread carefully for the idea that China will become another Japan, or even worse, a military rival of the US, is not an impossible scenario. On the other hand, one can view the alliance with the Americans as now mostly symbolic – practically, in both economic and security terms, the US is not so much the pivotal ally it once was. Relations with China in the last decade have continued to thrive, and Canberra must consider the economic connection as well as the increasing ‘Asian integration’ that this relationship is fostering. Naturally, there are benefits from both relationships, some which may be regarded as more important than others, depending on which perspective you hold. But this is not necessarily a dichotomy – the ups and downs of the relationship between China and the US can be greatly advantageous, or possibly disastrous, for Australian policymakers. They do have the ability to exploit this for the time being, shaping Australia’s policy to incorporate both affiliations, but a certain degree of caution must be taken when it comes to points of contention between the fledgling superpower and its hot-headed challenger. Ultimately, a neat balance must be found in the appeasement of both, and it is in this steady state that policymakers in Canberra can reap the best of both relationships. |
[QUOTE=Daddy Baldrs;17966220]I'm down. Your writing is usually solid as hell.
:lol: @ ending of post I think I might be getting some fent tonight. Or at least some herb, going job hunting w/ my nigga Anna, should be good.[/QUOTE] **** I get right now has fent in it, the rush is ****ing nuts. n_n |
i mad
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[QUOTE=rasputin;17966227][I]Which is Australia’s most important bilateral relationship, in your judgement? Why? What capacity do Australian policymakers have to shape it to their perceived advantage?[/I]
When it comes to the issue of Australia’s most important bilateral relationship, perspective is crucial. One could perceive the same titbit of information in a completely different way from someone else – in other words, and hypothetically speaking, while one may see Australia’s historical ‘closeness’ with the United States a fundamental part of the current relationship, another may see that very same thing as a part of an era passed, one from which Australia has moved on. While the US has played an enormous role in Australia’s political history (and still continues to do so), it’s not entirely possible to unequivocally proclaim the Americans as Australia’s most ‘important’ bilateral relationship. The word ‘important’ here is, well, important. What does it exactly signify? Looking at the question from a purely economic perspective, a pro-American voice nowadays will find it difficult to back up any claim of ‘importance’. What this paper will attempt to show is that while the American relationship has been (and still is) of utmost ‘importance’, in terms of security, political alignment and various other reasons, the old Australian way of acting internationally (i.e. blindly following whatever greater power is watching over them) is no longer an applicable foreign policy consideration. At various points in the last two decades, Canberra has ventured further into the realms of multilateralism and, what is a little more relevant to the question at hand, into the good graces of the new ‘biggest thing’ happening above their very heads – the ‘rise and rise’ of China. It has reached the point, some may argue, that Australia’s livelihood is now resting on China’s sustained growth, but China is viewed by many as an unpredictable factor in the decline of American hegemony and the dawn of a new world order. On one hand, it would be extraordinarily foolish for this sense of ‘regionalism’ and critical economic ties with China to cloud a positive and arguably beneficial alliance with the United States – those favourable to China need tread carefully for the idea that China will become another Japan, or even worse, a military rival of the US, is not an impossible scenario. On the other hand, one can view the alliance with the Americans as now mostly symbolic – practically, in both economic and security terms, the US is not so much the pivotal ally it once was. Relations with China in the last decade have continued to thrive, and Canberra must consider the economic connection as well as the increasing ‘Asian integration’ that this relationship is fostering. Naturally, there are benefits from both relationships, some which may be regarded as more important than others, depending on which perspective you hold. But this is not necessarily a dichotomy – the ups and downs of the relationship between China and the US can be greatly advantageous, or possibly disastrous, for Australian policymakers. They do have the ability to exploit this for the time being, shaping Australia’s policy to incorporate both affiliations, but a certain degree of caution must be taken when it comes to points of contention between the fledgling superpower and its hot-headed challenger. Ultimately, a neat balance must be found in the appeasement of both, and it is in this steady state that policymakers in Canberra can reap the best of both relationships.[/QUOTE] pageturn |
rasputin your writing style is quite similar to mine
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