Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...


@темы: history, video, US, Israel

Good boy, zero for conduct...


@темы: junk food, video, US, fascism

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@темы: junk food, video, GMO

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Good boy, zero for conduct...


@темы: web, video, US

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@темы: video, US, WW III

11:42

US:

Good boy, zero for conduct...
We’re adopting a solution that won’t work to a problem that doesn’t exist using legal authority that we don’t have.” (c) Ajit Pai

@темы: (c)

Good boy, zero for conduct...
American engineer Richard Pfeiffer, age 33, swears up and down that he is not in fact the provocative elusive artist.
Unfortunately for him he would have major difficulty proving it to the cops who must have been watching/listening to him and his fiancee while they imbibed at an East Village coffee shop last summer. It was after admiring a "smiley" on the wall that he thought might be a Banksy piece that they had their "Gotcha!" moment and arrested him outside Third Rail Coffee shop.
According to NY Post who discuss in detail his upcoming lawsuit for false arrest, the man tried to show them how he couldn't have possibly had done the wall marking. He smudged it showing the art was old and not newly sketched. They found his marker (he is an engineer) - he demonstrated that it wasn't the same kind and had a significantly different tip. All to no avail.
The traumatized man missed a week's wages and is still reeling from it. He is suing for false arrest for an undisclosed amount.

Of course, they already know all of that. They were acting sociopathic and wanted to see him sweat and squirm. Never mistake this behavior for incompetence, although intelligence quotient is not a part of the hiring process.
As everyone knows, criminals always come back to the scene of the crime and admire themselves while speaking in a third person narrative. It's a good thing he didn't say "what an interesting smiley...I wonder if it's a me" or he might be in the state pen, as that would be a sure confession.
The question no one is asking - "Why would being Bansky be a crime??">American engineer Richard Pfeiffer, age 33, swears up and down that he is not in fact the provocative elusive artist.
Unfortunately for him he would have major difficulty proving it to the cops who must have been watching/listening to him and his fiancee while they imbibed at an East Village coffee shop last summer. It was after admiring a "smiley" on the wall that he thought might be a Banksy piece that they had their "Gotcha!" moment and arrested him outside Third Rail Coffee shop.
According to NY Post who discuss in detail his upcoming lawsuit for false arrest, the man tried to show them how he couldn't have possibly had done the wall marking. He smudged it showing the art was old and not newly sketched. They found his marker (he is an engineer) - he demonstrated that it wasn't the same kind and had a significantly different tip. All to no avail.
The traumatized man missed a week's wages and is still reeling from it. He is suing for false arrest for an undisclosed amount.

Of course, they already know all of that. They were acting sociopathic and wanted to see him sweat and squirm. Never mistake this behavior for incompetence, although intelligence quotient is not a part of the hiring process.
As everyone knows, criminals always come back to the scene of the crime and admire themselves while speaking in a third person narrative. It's a good thing he didn't say "what an interesting smiley...I wonder if it's a me" or he might be in the state pen, as that would be a sure confession.
The question no one is asking - "Why would being Bansky be a crime??


@темы: link, society, US, Activist Post

Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...

@темы: link, video, WRH

Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...
Good boy, zero for conduct...