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greekfire
ParticipantI don’t blame OCRenter for the position he is taking. I am sure that his privacy took a major hit after he bought his property. Perhaps something leaked out. Regardless, his right to privacy and the safety of him and his family is paramount. Too many jerkoffs out there try to bring about change through acts of aggression and threats. That’s when you know you have them by the balls!
OCRenter – One option might be to hand off the torch to willing contributor(s) who you think will help to continue the purpose of BMIT. Maybe someone can start BMIT2 and, if possible, port the old archives from BMIT over to it for reference.
greekfire
ParticipantI don’t blame OCRenter for the position he is taking. I am sure that his privacy took a major hit after he bought his property. Perhaps something leaked out. Regardless, his right to privacy and the safety of him and his family is paramount. Too many jerkoffs out there try to bring about change through acts of aggression and threats. That’s when you know you have them by the balls!
OCRenter – One option might be to hand off the torch to willing contributor(s) who you think will help to continue the purpose of BMIT. Maybe someone can start BMIT2 and, if possible, port the old archives from BMIT over to it for reference.
greekfire
Participant[quote=nostradamus]… one day the two cowboys come across a cow stuck in a fence…
link[/quote]
I swear, officer, I was merely trying to help the cow over the fence!
greekfire
Participant[quote=nostradamus]… one day the two cowboys come across a cow stuck in a fence…
link[/quote]
I swear, officer, I was merely trying to help the cow over the fence!
greekfire
Participant[quote=nostradamus]… one day the two cowboys come across a cow stuck in a fence…
link[/quote]
I swear, officer, I was merely trying to help the cow over the fence!
greekfire
Participant[quote=nostradamus]… one day the two cowboys come across a cow stuck in a fence…
link[/quote]
I swear, officer, I was merely trying to help the cow over the fence!
greekfire
Participant[quote=nostradamus]… one day the two cowboys come across a cow stuck in a fence…
link[/quote]
I swear, officer, I was merely trying to help the cow over the fence!
greekfire
ParticipantTo say that the Chargers out-coached the Colts in this game is a bit of a cop out. If that were true, the Colts would have never scored on the long bomb to Reggie Wayne. The Chargers were in the midst of substituting and Peyton picked up on it and quick-counted them.
Darren Sproles and Mike Scifres were the true stars of this game. Sproles essentially dominated on the offensive side and on special teams returns. Maybe it was me, but the guy just seemed to be running at twice the speed of everyone else on the field.
As for Scifres, enough cannot be said for the importance of the kicking game and special teams in the game of football. I constantly remind people that the name of the game is still “FOOT”ball, meaning that kicking is (and will always be) king, regardless of how much the pundits and friends at cocktail parties make fun of kickers. Field goal kickers almost always score the most points every year and punters can mean the difference between a win or a loss on any given Sunday. Scifres’ booming punts looked as though the footballs were filled with helium and they gave the Chargers a commanding edge in field position.
greekfire
ParticipantTo say that the Chargers out-coached the Colts in this game is a bit of a cop out. If that were true, the Colts would have never scored on the long bomb to Reggie Wayne. The Chargers were in the midst of substituting and Peyton picked up on it and quick-counted them.
Darren Sproles and Mike Scifres were the true stars of this game. Sproles essentially dominated on the offensive side and on special teams returns. Maybe it was me, but the guy just seemed to be running at twice the speed of everyone else on the field.
As for Scifres, enough cannot be said for the importance of the kicking game and special teams in the game of football. I constantly remind people that the name of the game is still “FOOT”ball, meaning that kicking is (and will always be) king, regardless of how much the pundits and friends at cocktail parties make fun of kickers. Field goal kickers almost always score the most points every year and punters can mean the difference between a win or a loss on any given Sunday. Scifres’ booming punts looked as though the footballs were filled with helium and they gave the Chargers a commanding edge in field position.
greekfire
ParticipantTo say that the Chargers out-coached the Colts in this game is a bit of a cop out. If that were true, the Colts would have never scored on the long bomb to Reggie Wayne. The Chargers were in the midst of substituting and Peyton picked up on it and quick-counted them.
Darren Sproles and Mike Scifres were the true stars of this game. Sproles essentially dominated on the offensive side and on special teams returns. Maybe it was me, but the guy just seemed to be running at twice the speed of everyone else on the field.
As for Scifres, enough cannot be said for the importance of the kicking game and special teams in the game of football. I constantly remind people that the name of the game is still “FOOT”ball, meaning that kicking is (and will always be) king, regardless of how much the pundits and friends at cocktail parties make fun of kickers. Field goal kickers almost always score the most points every year and punters can mean the difference between a win or a loss on any given Sunday. Scifres’ booming punts looked as though the footballs were filled with helium and they gave the Chargers a commanding edge in field position.
greekfire
ParticipantTo say that the Chargers out-coached the Colts in this game is a bit of a cop out. If that were true, the Colts would have never scored on the long bomb to Reggie Wayne. The Chargers were in the midst of substituting and Peyton picked up on it and quick-counted them.
Darren Sproles and Mike Scifres were the true stars of this game. Sproles essentially dominated on the offensive side and on special teams returns. Maybe it was me, but the guy just seemed to be running at twice the speed of everyone else on the field.
As for Scifres, enough cannot be said for the importance of the kicking game and special teams in the game of football. I constantly remind people that the name of the game is still “FOOT”ball, meaning that kicking is (and will always be) king, regardless of how much the pundits and friends at cocktail parties make fun of kickers. Field goal kickers almost always score the most points every year and punters can mean the difference between a win or a loss on any given Sunday. Scifres’ booming punts looked as though the footballs were filled with helium and they gave the Chargers a commanding edge in field position.
greekfire
ParticipantTo say that the Chargers out-coached the Colts in this game is a bit of a cop out. If that were true, the Colts would have never scored on the long bomb to Reggie Wayne. The Chargers were in the midst of substituting and Peyton picked up on it and quick-counted them.
Darren Sproles and Mike Scifres were the true stars of this game. Sproles essentially dominated on the offensive side and on special teams returns. Maybe it was me, but the guy just seemed to be running at twice the speed of everyone else on the field.
As for Scifres, enough cannot be said for the importance of the kicking game and special teams in the game of football. I constantly remind people that the name of the game is still “FOOT”ball, meaning that kicking is (and will always be) king, regardless of how much the pundits and friends at cocktail parties make fun of kickers. Field goal kickers almost always score the most points every year and punters can mean the difference between a win or a loss on any given Sunday. Scifres’ booming punts looked as though the footballs were filled with helium and they gave the Chargers a commanding edge in field position.
greekfire
ParticipantMany good recommendations have been made so far. I would offer up the following:
“A History of Money and Banking in the United States” – Murray Rothbard
“The Creature From Jekyll Island – A Second Look at the Federal Reserve” – G. Edward Griffin
Not sure if they are a precise fit for your criteria, but they should expand the realm of your thinking nonetheless.
greekfire
ParticipantMany good recommendations have been made so far. I would offer up the following:
“A History of Money and Banking in the United States” – Murray Rothbard
“The Creature From Jekyll Island – A Second Look at the Federal Reserve” – G. Edward Griffin
Not sure if they are a precise fit for your criteria, but they should expand the realm of your thinking nonetheless.
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