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POPSTo be or not to be: Genocide & the Melancholy President Turkey is a lose lose situation for us. There's no way we'll pull them off of the Kurds through appeasement. Of all the times Bush stood strong, this is the time for a little bravado, where did it go? What kind of President caves in on issues like genocide? He just took away Pansy of the Week award from Gordon Brown!
3
POPSCut, but Not Run for Gordon Brown Cut yes, Run no. It seems like a peculiarly British form of democracy that holds elections at the leisure of the elected officials. And isn't it in bad taste to dodge an election right as you are pushing a controversial agenda? Way to wuss out of an election Gordy. You just got my "Political Pansy of the Week" Award. Turns out he's just another spineless New-Labor nerd.
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POPSMilitary Hand Signals The Signals the Military uses may be for a different purpose but here they have been given a different interpretation altogether. "This Gear is Heavy, My Lower Back Could Use a Massage"
0
POPSPansy. I like Carmelo, don't get me wrong... but I hate it the most when the athletes run away. If you're gonna start something, or act like you are, you better be able to finish it.
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POPSMake your own flamethrower "Like any red-blooded, masculine man of the male gender, I love PVC weaponry. You should too. If the concept of heading on down to the local Home Depot and transforming $100 worth of random pipe bits into a killing machine doesn’t appeal to you, you’re a frikkin' pansy. Also, you’re probably sane and will live significantly longer than I will. Nonetheless you disgust me, and I take comfort in the knowledge that your obituary will be nowhere near as humorous as mine. For those of you who laugh in the face of hypersonic shards of plastic puncturing your spleen, here’s an intimate look at how I’ve kept myself busy for the past week: building a PVC flamethrower."
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POPSBarlowe worked on Alien Planet http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/alienplanet/splash.html A host of talking heads are assembled from the scientific community, including theoretical physicists Stephen Hawking and Michio Kaku, NASA scientists James Garvin and Victoria Meadows, geneticist Craig Venter and paleontologist Jack Horner. These voices of learning offer commentary throughout the program, offering up factual discussion related to such matters as the search for life in the universe, evolution and the ongoing discovery of extrasolar planets, but at the same time they address specific elements in the "documentary" as if they were real-time discoveries and revelations.