Court documents stated that "One oriental rug shall also be retained, as officers find that it really ties the break room together, urine stain notwithstanding."
Also, a quick check of their website shows that it's very reasonably priced coffee as well ($11/lb). While their tagline, "A Taste of Woodward" isn't the most encouraging (mmm, oil, asphalt, and despair), I'll be placing an order today to support them.
Re: President Obama's Insistence That He Cannot Pardon Snowden
No. You're arguing the difference between can and will/may. If my second grade teacher taught me anything, it is that I CAN go to the bathroom at any time, but the times when I MAY go to the bathroom are a subset of the larger CAN set.
Pres. Obama most certainly CAN, but it's obvious that he will/may not. That's a conscious choice, and it's a pretty poor semantic dodge.
I recall a recent instance where a supposed minority was actually a majority (electorally speaking) who just kept quiet until the polls opened.
I realize that alt-right is not "the right", but when presented with the binary choices we have on election day they stand as a part of the ruling majority, and as such can't easily be marginalized.
When the entire premise of this article is showing that Foer's initial article is almost entirely crap, I think we can safely assume that no, this isn't something that matters in the slightest. A company server sending marketing emails is a breed apart from a personal server housing classified information, so your attempt at establishing equivalence is pretty weak.
By the by, your liberal usage of commas left me reading your comment as a person very seriously out of breath.
You are correct that heroin is horrible, horrible stuff. Knowing that, one would think that a responsible cop would do everything in her/his power to ensure that investigations and arrests go exactly by the book. Wouldn't want those dope pushers to go back to peddling their poison just because they were too lazy, sloppy, or stupid to do their job correctly, would we?
So long as they aren't alleging that her husband was the abuser. There were quite a few voices that she felt didn't deserve to be heard when it didn't suit her agenda.
No, sir, we should hit her repeatedly on this one. This isn't a policy choice, which would be trumpeted publicly in press conferences. This is a serial liar, a professional in obfuscation, realizing that the person she would have hanged has domain expertise and recognizing that his expertise should be respected. Saying a junkyard dog is good at guarding the junkyard is a far cry from saying that you want to let him sleep at the foot of your child's bed.
If you expect HRC to say that the rank and file should get to play by the same rules that she does, you will be repeatedly and viciously disappointed.
Salient bit from the earlier article: "The lawsuit also goes after a smaller Getty competitor, Alamy, that is doing the same thing, and some Getty subsidiaries, LCS and Piscount, who, again, are doing the same thing (in fact, the threat letters Highsmith received were from Piscount and LCS). To make matters even more confusing, even though Alamy is a Getty competitor, it uses a Getty subsidiary, LCS, to send out threat letters demanding cash."
It absolutely doesn't, especially when, in this case, you can delete 'found' from your question and replace it with 'uploaded original image file to which she owns the rights'.
Something tells me that Getty, unlike government agencies, can't just run a search query on the contents of random people's hard drives.
The admin who wrote the original press release is currently in solitary confinement, and is expected to serve 15 years for publicizing National Whistleblower Appreciation Day.
On the post: Apple Says Nebraska Will Become A 'Mecca For Hackers' If Right To Repair Bill Passes
Re:
On the post: Sheriff's Office Raids Home, Seizes All The Furniture, Ultimately Returns Everything But The Couch
Also retained, one rug
On the post: Trademark Dispute Between Coffee Companies Over 'Detroit' Trademark Demonstrates The USPTO's Carelessness
Re: Seriously
On the post: Trademark Dispute Between Coffee Companies Over 'Detroit' Trademark Demonstrates The USPTO's Carelessness
Re: Seriously
A local roasting/blending/packaging operation ensures that you get fresh product, plus it keeps the retail dollar local.
I'm just down the road from the D, may well check these folks out. So, in answer to your question, me.
On the post: President Obama Claims He Cannot Pardon Snowden; He's Wrong
Re: President Obama's Insistence That He Cannot Pardon Snowden
Pres. Obama most certainly CAN, but it's obvious that he will/may not. That's a conscious choice, and it's a pretty poor semantic dodge.
On the post: Why Twitter's Alt-Right Banning Campaign Will Become The Alt-Right's Best Recruitment Tool
Re: Re: Re: Re: The left could learn this lesson
I recall a recent instance where a supposed minority was actually a majority (electorally speaking) who just kept quiet until the polls opened.
I realize that alt-right is not "the right", but when presented with the binary choices we have on election day they stand as a part of the ruling majority, and as such can't easily be marginalized.
On the post: Confused Reporter Doubles Down On Bogus Trump/Russian Server Story With 'I'm Just Asking Questions' Non-Apology
Re: But:
By the by, your liberal usage of commas left me reading your comment as a person very seriously out of breath.
On the post: FBI Boss Blows Past Policies, Guidelines, His Own Staff To Bring Back Clinton Email Investigation
Re: Prosecution for classified spillage
On the post: FBI Boss Blows Past Policies, Guidelines, His Own Staff To Bring Back Clinton Email Investigation
Re: Gentlemen's agreement?!
On the post: FBI Boss Blows Past Policies, Guidelines, His Own Staff To Bring Back Clinton Email Investigation
Re: Waiting for the Gerald Ford no-look pardon play
Seriously though, would she take a guarantee that the investigations would end if it meant tacit admission of wrongdoing?
On the post: Cops Dodge 4th Amendment By Phoning In 'Anonymous' Tips; Watch Their Drug Bust Vanish After They're Exposed
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On the post: Gizmodo Completely Misses The Point Of Cord Cutting
Life without cable, first month - $180
Life without cable, every month after - $100
Too bad Amazon didn't think to charge you monthly fees for their hardware, otherwise I might have to actually think about cutting the cable.
On the post: Clinton Campaign Happily Using Strong End-To-End Encryption To Communicate; Will They Let The Rest Of Us Use It Too?
Re: Re: ignorant narcissists being led by ignorant sychophants
On the post: Clinton Campaign Happily Using Strong End-To-End Encryption To Communicate; Will They Let The Rest Of Us Use It Too?
Re:
So long as they aren't alleging that her husband was the abuser. There were quite a few voices that she felt didn't deserve to be heard when it didn't suit her agenda.
On the post: Clinton Campaign Happily Using Strong End-To-End Encryption To Communicate; Will They Let The Rest Of Us Use It Too?
Re: Maybe Mrs. Clinton's opinions are evolving.
If you expect HRC to say that the rank and file should get to play by the same rules that she does, you will be repeatedly and viciously disappointed.
On the post: Comcast/NBC Ignores Lessons From The Cord Cutting Age, Buries Olympics Under An Ocean Of Annoying Advertising
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On the post: Getty Makes Nonsensical Statement On Photographer Carol Highsmith's Lawsuit For Falsely Claiming Copyright
Re: Re: Public Doman
"The lawsuit also goes after a smaller Getty competitor, Alamy, that is doing the same thing, and some Getty subsidiaries, LCS and Piscount, who, again, are doing the same thing (in fact, the threat letters Highsmith received were from Piscount and LCS). To make matters even more confusing, even though Alamy is a Getty competitor, it uses a Getty subsidiary, LCS, to send out threat letters demanding cash."
On the post: Getty Makes Nonsensical Statement On Photographer Carol Highsmith's Lawsuit For Falsely Claiming Copyright
Re: Public Doman
On the post: Getty Makes Nonsensical Statement On Photographer Carol Highsmith's Lawsuit For Falsely Claiming Copyright
Re:
Something tells me that Getty, unlike government agencies, can't just run a search query on the contents of random people's hard drives.
On the post: Director Of National Intelligence 'Celebrates' National Whistleblower Day... Without Mentioning Snowden Once
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