ncdwbmk6's Replies


And during Prohibition, you could still get whiskey in Cuba. Lt. Cdr. Galloway was on the team because she was good at research. She wasn't in charge because she took too long to finish cases. Lt. Kaffee was in charge because he was skilled at closing cases quickly. <blockquote>AND KILL EVERYBODY</blockquote> That's how all movies should end. Everyone dies. No ... one ... survives. If the robbery took place in town, there would have been more witnesses. It's odd that Russell was on the stage. Considering his apathy toward other people and his "outdoor skills", why didn't he travel alone? I like Brawndo. It's got electrolytes! One of the women said that Tom Keating was a little drunk. That could have caused him to carelessly reveal the "secret" to Cal Reynolds. (Applying the Chekhov's Gun principle, there's no other reason for Keating to have been described as being drunk.) His second-in-command, Gen. O'Hara, told him that they'd taken the field, i.e. won the battle, so there was no legitimate military reason to continue fighting. Cornwallis wasn't satisfied with that, and wanted to end the rebellion. It's not stated how far he was going to go. You have to use your imagination. He was trying to impress his old friend Jerry Marks, who he wanted to invest in his business venture. Capt. Wilkins figured that Col. Tavington would want to burn down the houses, etc., not kill civilians, especially women and children. Gen. Cornwallis wanted to destroy the colonists' will to continue rebelling. It's debatable whether he was actually a pedophile. The closest he gets is taking a young child for a ride in his car, and bringing her back without having touched her. He also played a bad guy in From Russia with Love (1963). He was a good guy in Black Sunday (1977). I found this on a reddit board. I can't vouch for its accuracy. <blockquote>Was not hair commencing to grow upon his face? All the apes had hair upon theirs but the black men were entirely hairless, with very few exceptions. True, he had seen pictures in his books of men with great masses of hair upon lip and cheek and chin, but, nevertheless, Tarzan was afraid. Almost daily he whetted his keen knife and scraped and whittled at his young beard to eradicate this degrading emblem of apehood. And so he learned to shave–rudely and painfully, it is true–but, nevertheless, effectively.</blockquote> <i>Edgar Rice Burrows "Tarzan of the Apes"</i> Gordon didn't care whether Bud would be okay with it. Gordon did what he wanted, and assumed that Bud was powerless to stop him. What bugs me is that Bud knew that Gordon had become wealthy by buying and selling, even if companies were destroyed and people lost their jobs. Why did he think that Gordon's behaviour would change in the case of Bluestar? Thanks to President Trump, I'm watching the arrival of the American Space-X Crew 1 vehicle at the International Space Station right now, on NASA TV. Three of the four astronauts in the vehicle are Americans. I figured it meant "Rear, march" (or "To the rear, march"), which is a legitimate infantry command. I don't know if it makes sense for cavalry. The joke, aside from the pronunciation, is that he uses it in every situation. "Believing in history" is associated with the political theories of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. The projected map was for Jenny's benefit, so that she could drive him to the location. Maybe he could have used one of his spheres to transport himself to the crater, but that would have made the movie very short. In one episode, Fred was in court for some reason. The courtroom was packed with his friends and neighbors. At one point he says to the judge, "Look at all the <i>n-words</i> here. There're enough <i>n-words</i> here to make a Tarzan movie!" Show me ... Skim-a leaves! SHOW! He might have gotten demoted for smoking Oregano.