Guest DRH 502 Posted August 29, 2006 Report Posted August 29, 2006 Wow. My John Titor comment went unnoticed. This leads me to believe you all aren't in the know...(and its been like 6 years now) www.johntitor.com
Guest Vitamin X Posted August 29, 2006 Report Posted August 29, 2006 No, it's just that we've seen it before and we don't care.
Guest InuYasha Posted August 30, 2006 Report Posted August 30, 2006 That's genius. Pure freaking genius. Great assessment, Crono! That photoshop has only been bouncing around the Internet since like, you know, ten minutes after the original picture came out. Now tell me: how do you feel about the Jesusland picture? I've never seen it.
Guest InuYasha Posted August 30, 2006 Report Posted August 30, 2006 Wow. My John Titor comment went unnoticed. This leads me to believe you all aren't in the know...(and its been like 6 years now) www.johntitor.com They were all distracted by the "bouncy-bouncy" in your Avatar.
Special K Posted August 31, 2006 Report Posted August 31, 2006 Its not too bright to build a major city on land thats several feet below sea level. It's the mouth of the damn Mississippi. There was going to be a city there no matter what. Anyway, I've also learned that New Orleans wasn't really the 24-hour party I thought it had been. Seems like most of it kinda sucks. I went to school there, and I can definitely confirm that. It's run down, and filthy. The whole city from the Garden District to the French corner smelled like must and piss before the flood.
Dobbs 3K Posted August 31, 2006 Report Posted August 31, 2006 There's also still people living in hotels getting government aid a year after Katrina...a lot of 'em were deadbeats before, and they're deadbeats now.
Art Sandusky Posted August 31, 2006 Author Report Posted August 31, 2006 Man, it isn't worth typing out all the real lessons that were supposed to be learned.
Art Sandusky Posted January 12, 2007 Author Report Posted January 12, 2007 http://www.cnn.com/2007/LAW/01/11/katrina....e.ap/index.html State Farm Insurance lost a case and must pay $2.5 million for refusing to cover hurricane damage. This will open the road for the rightful smiting of the insurance companies and lessen the burden being placed on the government. If people's insurance doesn't cover anything, we end up having to make up the difference instead of these companies the citizens paid to protect them. We wonder why progress has been so slow.
Art Sandusky Posted January 12, 2007 Author Report Posted January 12, 2007 Also: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16585614/site/.../site/newsweek/ There's not so much Joementum for seeing the potential criminality in the whole mess.
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