Yet adults going mental about Dr Who is popular which is a kids show imo.
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Yet adults going mental about Dr Who is popular which is a kids show imo.
I don't think it's a matter of not doing childish things. It's much more about accepting that there will be consequences and that you will be responsible for them and then making your decisions based on that understanding. People simply make better choices that way. For everyone.
If you can be a satisfactory husband and raise a decent family and, indeed, afford gas for the wife's new two-seater as well as all the other sundries of a life, whilst, or even through, playing games then fair enough, imo.
Nonsense. Football is a game of endeavour, skill, strength, speed, courage, dedication, power, subtelty, balletic grace. To watch a football match is to see men at the peak of physical, moral and mental exertion.
Fiddling with the buttons to make pretendy people move on a screen is, well, a bit silly.
That's half the trouble. Rather than this shrugging of the shoulders and saying "Bof!", what we can do is recognise our mistakes and try to rectify them as best we can while promising ourselves and everybody else that we won't make them again.
The modern fashion though, of course, is to continue behaving, and believing, in a way that we have demonstrated does not work. We don't admit our failure, we merely blame others for it; we take no responsibilty for it ourselves #snowflakes
Well the dead people might care, if they had a split second to realise they were about to die. Their relatives will probably care. The crew's relatives will probably care.
I demand you acknowledge that killing 300 people is a serious business without being gnomic. Otherwise I shall fight you.
Not me. I am a white leftie but I find the British Empire fascinating. It is also difficult to argue that it was wholly negative if you spend time in Singapore, Malaysia, India. The work of Raffles in particular exemplified the most enlightened of its era.
Obviously, there were unpleasant episodes, particularly in India, but the british presence is still felt there today and not in a wholly negative way.