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View Full Version : #1000..... too bad only a few hundred were "controversial" topics...


elite_hunter_sh3
10-23-07, 11:13 PM
:roll: all i can say for #1000..

jus wanna comment on some topics ive recently read

1. assualt weapons ban... "a mans home is his castle" when i have a loving family.. i WILL be buying an assault rifle, preferably a nice kalashnikov model 47.. im surprised anyone doesnt notice this ban as a way to disarm american citizens.. ( im talking white americans.. the descendants of the europeans who CREATED America) so the illegal immigrants (who surprisingly r criminals from mexico....) and then you have your black gangs bla bla bla.. id rather have a Ak47 then no gun at all...:arrgh!:

2.AL in the brig.. good for her.. she deserved SOME punishment for trash talking other religons.. (noticably islam) over the years ...:shifty::shifty:


that is all :arrgh!:

happy 1000# and cheers to all :()1:

joea
10-24-07, 04:32 AM
...well too bad in Canada we don't have the right to bear arms. :-? <----may be sarcastic or not.

Anyway I thought the "First Nations" were the first here (or there as I am not there but here where whitey came from). ;)

Jimbuna
10-24-07, 04:53 AM
No right either in the UK....thankfully.

We like to give the criminal a sporting chance ;)

elite_hunter_sh3
10-24-07, 11:11 AM
http://www.livescience.com/history/060219_first_americans.html

wrong..
europeans from spain and france area were in North America first.. its our land by history not Natives From Asia...:rock:

"The first humans to spread across North America may have been seal hunters from France and Spain.
This runs counter to the long-held belief that the first human entry into the Americas was a crossing of a land-ice bridge that spanned the Bering Strait about 13,500 years ago. "

"Also, when archaeologist Dennis Stanford of the Smithsonian Institution places American spearheads, called Clovis points, side-by-side with Siberian points, he sees a divergence of many characteristics.
Instead, Stanford said today, Clovis points match up much closer with Solutrean style tools, which researchers date to about 19,000 years ago. This suggests that the American people making Clovis points made Solutrean points before that.
There’s just one problem with this hypothesis—Solutrean toolmakers lived in France and Spain. Scientists know of no land-ice bridge that spanned that entire gap."

and yes i wish the castle law did exist in Canada.. i would hate to be the person who gets sued by the B&E suspect after he tripped and fell on a knife...:damn:

Tchocky
10-24-07, 11:16 AM
Hey, this kind of talk is disrespectful to the memory of our dinosaur brethren.
They were here first, after all.

Sailor Steve
10-24-07, 11:18 AM
"The first humans to spread across North America may have been seal hunters from France and Spain."
The clovis tips seem to be more in line with European than Asian technology? How do they tell?

Also, 13,500 years ago there wasn't a France or Spain, just a bunch of wandering nomads. Possession is 9/10ths of the law. Finders=keepers, losers=weepers. France and Spain had their chance here, and they lost. Big time.:p :rotfl:

elite_hunter_sh3
10-24-07, 11:18 AM
:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:

dinosaur brethren.. :rotfl: :rotfl:

heres more evidence

http://www.trussel.com/prehist/news168.htm
"says Neolithic fishermen and hunters sailed the Atlantic in tiny boats made of animal skins 18,000 years ago and colonized the eastern United States.

http://www.trussel.com/prehist/empty10.gifSuch a journey would represent one of the most astonishing migrations ever undertaken — the Earth was then in the grip of the Ice Age and much of its high northern and southern latitudes were desolate wastelands blasted by storms and blizzards.
http://www.trussel.com/prehist/empty10.gifOn the other hand, much of the planet's water was locked in icecaps and glaciers, and sea levels would have been much lower than today's. The edges of the continents would have extended further into the oceans. http://www.trussel.com/prehist/empty10.gif"The gap between Europe and America was greatly reduced," Stanford said. "It could have been quite feasible for fishermen and whale and seal hunters to sail around the southern rim of the packs of sea-ice that covered the North Atlantic and reach land around the Banks of Newfoundland."

elite_hunter_sh3
10-24-07, 11:20 AM
"The first humans to spread across North America may have been seal hunters from France and Spain."
The clovis tips seem to be more in line with European than Asian technology? How do they tell?

Also, 13,500 years ago there wasn't a France or Spain, just a bunch of wandering nomads. Possession is 9/10ths of the law. Finders=keepers, losers=weepers. France and Spain had their chance here, and they lost. Big time.:p :rotfl:

they do tell because they are very close as to tips found in the land we now cal lfrance and spain.... and the asian tips used by the natives are based off tips in Asia.... tips from europe..:hmm: so why are they there then???

STEED
10-24-07, 11:35 AM
Are crap I missed your 1000 post party :damn: looks like I've have to sneak in the back door for your 1004 post party, that is if there is one?

elite_hunter_sh3
10-24-07, 11:40 AM
:arrgh!: the party still goess on till i hit 1500 or 2000:arrgh!::()1:

u mean 1005 right??

Kapitan_Phillips
10-24-07, 12:21 PM
No right either in the UK....thankfully.

We like to give the criminal a sporting chance ;)


Reason 30: Garden tools to defend your home.

More reasons to shop at Morrisons.


:lol:

Jimbuna
10-24-07, 12:35 PM
No right either in the UK....thankfully.

We like to give the criminal a sporting chance ;)


Reason 30: Garden tools to defend your home.

More reasons to shop at Morrisons.


:lol:

:roll: ................:lol:

STEED
10-24-07, 12:43 PM
No right either in the UK....thankfully.

We like to give the criminal a sporting chance ;)


Reason 30: Garden tools to defend your home.

More reasons to shop at Morrisons.


:lol:


COOL :cool:

I got one within a ten minute walk. :)

Sailor Steve
10-24-07, 04:58 PM
...so why are they there then???
My only point was that, to me, a pointy stone thing is a pointy stone thing.

But then, that's only one of many things I've never studied, so I'm sure I don't really know.




By the way, congrats on passing the quadrupe-digit mark.:sunny:

elite_hunter_sh3
10-24-07, 05:02 PM
thanks :arrgh!:

a LONG ago congrats on passing the 10 grand mark :arrgh!: