Bandit Alley
GENERAL MOTORCYCLE FORUMS => GENERAL MOTORCYCLE => Topic started by: stormi on November 10, 2007, 01:20:42 AM
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http://www.dallasobserver.com/search/events.php?oid=791990
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Wow! I haven't seen that much rebutted heated passion since the gun control backlash of 1998. In reality he probubly did more good for the sport by inviting the very strong response by the readers which many in neutral territory probubly agree was a stupid comment, albeit he has the right to free speech.
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In Australia we would simply refer to this bloke as a wanker who has his head shoved so far up his arse he never sees daylight.
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The Dallas Observer is a fringe publication that caters to a decidedly different crowd. It isn't considered a mainstream leading source of information unless you're interested in party spots and alternative lifestyles. As always - we can never justify our passion for motorcycles to an impassionate crowd. The author has managed to draw attention to the publication - no doubt bringing heaps of praise from the "bosses".
Move along, move along... nothing to see here.
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"The author has managed to draw attention to the publication" Good point and so its worth talking about. Actually for most audience groups motorcycling in the USA has become much more popular even gaining popularity with the Hollywood and art community. So we have made progress in being accepted more withing the last 10 years. I think what has changed for the worse is the amount of obtuse dogma that minority fringe groups try and shove down the throats of the majority common sense. We have a right in the USA to free speech, but nowhere is it written in our constitution that you have a right to be heard, if you understand my meaning.
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Well look at it this way, If stupidity was painful this moron would be dead by now.
I bet hes scared of motorcycles. Probally dumped his honda express when he was younger and got scared and never rode again.
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Wow, talk about bias. What next, a theater review that starts out, "Everyone knows live theater, especially muscials, appeal only to faggots, but if you've just got to see one, take your boyfriend to see THE PRODUCERS"?!
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You know what they say about Texas...
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You know what they say about Texas...
Yup... we don't put our bikes up for storage.... EVER. :stickpoke: :monkeymoon:
Oops... forgot to add - it was only 79 degrees today... had to use the mesh gear. :bandit:
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You know what they say about Texas...
I dunno what you heard, but what I heard is there's only two good things that come out of Texas...
Freeways & highways. :lol:
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Yup... we don't put our bikes up for storage.... EVER. :stickpoke: :monkeymoon:
OUCH. :sad: I bet I could swing a leg over today, but I also bet that the shed door would crack as I tried to open it to swing that leg over. *sigh*
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Follow that desired relocation dream you talked about in a long ago privious post (Arizona). We have so many snow birds down here you could easily be one of them. :grin:
Yup... we don't put our bikes up for storage.... EVER. :stickpoke: :monkeymoon:
OUCH. :sad: I bet I could swing a leg over today, but I also bet that the shed door would crack as I tried to open it to swing that leg over. *sigh*
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Follow that desired relocation dream you talked about in a long ago privious post (Arizona). We have so many snow birds down here you could easily be one of them. :grin:
Difference being,.. most of them can afford to live down there without working. I still have to work. As far as I can tell,.. immigration is harder than extended visits. :wink:
It just means that I have to plan more.
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As far as I can tell,.. immigration is harder than extended visits. :wink:
Doesn't seem too hard for the ~400,000 illegal immigrants we get each year from our other border, or the ~400,000 folks annually that stay beyond their visas.
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Good reply, and incentive point.
"Doesn't seem too hard for the ~400,000 illegal immigrants we get each year from our other border, or the ~400,000 folks annually that stay beyond their visas."
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Do most of those 800,000 people own land? pay taxes? Run companies? Run public webservers that make them easy to track?
Here's where we'd have a problem. I would likely be more visible than a lot of them. :wink:
Now,.. if I had a wireless connection that was good anywhere, let my server here, and managed it remotely, lived in an RV and toured around, and didn't have to work for a living,.... hey,... I'm starting to like the sound of that. Permanent vacation....
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The irony is many of them have wised up in the past 20 years and are doing exactly that. I had a fried from Texas tell me that in his cattle community havening the aliens work the farms and cut production and wages providing great profits for the land and cattle owners when he was a kid. Now that he has grown up everyone in the community is complaining that too many of the aliens formed cooperatives buying large farms and working it themselves undercutting the traditional owners markets bids and cost. So you see where there is a will there is a way. I always told my kids that the only thing stopping them from reaching their goals is a lack of perspicacious desire.
Do most of those 800,000 people own land? pay taxes? Run companies? Run public webservers that make them easy to track?
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OK,.. this is where I'm confused,.. if you aren't a resident, how do you hold land?? Also,.. unlike a lot of these others,.. I really do care if I get kicked out,.. I don't wanna have to come back to the cold.... :iddi:
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Well obviously they were sponsored by their employer, at least the rich ones were LOL. But on a separate issue last time I checked you don't have to be a citizen in this country to own land here, jumping through the hoops to get sponsored and naturalized is a different issue. I take it you work at home on your computer like my daughter does, she is a program writer for a company based out of San Fran but lives in Los Angeles and will soon be moving to Arizona. With your skills I would think that working for an American company here you telecommute then get sponsored by working your charm on the company sponsor you to help you make the move with a little creative justification.
But even if you were here illegally, I cant imagine INS kicking the door down and taking you into custody and I bet people who live on the border have probubly been living and working illigally and INS doesn't even care and would never use the resources to chase down your persuasion anyway.
OK,.. this is where I'm confused,.. if you aren't a resident, how do you hold land?? Also,.. unlike a lot of these others,.. I really do care if I get kicked out,.. I don't wanna have to come back to the cold.... :iddi:
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Well obviously they were sponsored by their employer, at least the rich ones were LOL. But on a separate issue last time I checked you don't have to be a citizen in this country to own land here, jumping through the hoops to get sponsored and naturalized is a different issue. I take it you work at home on your computer like my daughter does, she is a program writer for a company based out of San Fran but lives in Los Angeles and will soon be moving to Arizona. With your skills I would think that working for an American company here you telecommute then get sponsored by working your charm on the company sponsor you to help you make the move with a little creative justification.
I work from home, because it's my base. I'm not a programmer ( anymore). I do Server Administration, Network administration, Desktop Support, and training. I have project management experience, but no certificate. Not a lot I can do remotely. I would have to be sponsored from the get go.
But even if you were here illegally, I cant imagine INS kicking the door down and taking you into custody and I bet people who live on the border have probubly been living and working illigally and INS doesn't even care and would never use the resources to chase down your persuasion anyway.
really?? I thought that was why they existed. And why not go for the easier to get one,.. rather than the one they have to work to catch?
The way I see it, I have a certain waiting period that I have to observe anyway. I have a dog that wouldn't be able to "pass the entrance exam", and I wouldn't leave him here. So, until he expires, I have time to work out a nice feasible way to move legally.
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I work from home, because it's my base. I'm not a programmer ( anymore). I do Server Administration, Network administration, Desktop Support, and training. I have project management experience, but no certificate. Not a lot I can do remotely. I would have to be sponsored from the get go.
The way I see it, I have a certain waiting period that I have to observe anyway. I have a dog that wouldn't be able to "pass the entrance exam", and I wouldn't leave him here. So, until he expires, I have time to work out a nice feasible way to move legally.
Well in life I think for most of us including myself, knowing something is possible and having the desire to do something about it are two different things, otherwise I would have lost these 20 pounds I have been resolved to loose a long time ago LOL.
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I work from home, because it's my base. I'm not a programmer ( anymore). I do Server Administration, Network administration, Desktop Support, and training. I have project management experience, but no certificate. Not a lot I can do remotely. I would have to be sponsored from the get go.
The way I see it, I have a certain waiting period that I have to observe anyway. I have a dog that wouldn't be able to "pass the entrance exam", and I wouldn't leave him here. So, until he expires, I have time to work out a nice feasible way to move legally.
Well in life I think for most of us including myself, knowing something is possible and having the desire to do something about it are two different things, otherwise I would have lost these 20 pounds I have been resolved to loose a long time ago LOL.
No lack of desire,.. just know that the time isn't -quite- right yet. My sled dog isn't going to last much longer, and the move might kill him if the quarantine time away from all of us doesn't. That's not a quality of life I will put him through. So,.. once he's gone, which unfortunately isn't like to be much longer (a 13yr old sled dog is well past the average 8yr expectancy, and I can see him aging by the day these days.), then I'll start making plans in earnest.
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Hoo! Bailey is at best a "Shmuck" or a "Schweinhundt".
Please remember that it's the risk-takers that join organizations like FEMA or the local Emergency Management groups, fire rescue squads and ambulance squads. Just don't plan on being in the position of having to depend on members of these groups to have to save your sorry ass.
Herb
http://www.dallasobserver.com/search/events.php?oid=791990