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Posts by FrogBurger

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  • Driver runs pedestrians over while screaming "Allah is great"

    12/21/2014 2:41:50 PM PST · 1 of 28
    FrogBurger
  • Lemony Lerner's Series of Unfortunate Events [Humor]

    07/26/2014 8:07:41 AM PDT · 1 of 6
    FrogBurger
  • Sarkozy nixes halal meat in schools for Muslims

    03/03/2012 6:29:18 PM PST · 20 of 21
    FrogBurger to rawcatslyentist; All; Hunton Peck; DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis

    Again? Like in 2007, the French President pretends to be a hard-liner in the fight against Islamization of France. Meanwhile, Islamization is progressing, and Sarkosy does absolutely nothing to slow it down.

    Take a random news item in France: “The Chamber of Agriculture of the Parisian Region confirmed today in a statement that 100% of the meat slaughtered in the Parisian Region was according to Muslim and Jewish traditions. “No choice is given to farmers in the Region”. (...) “In France it is estimated that 30% of the meat is slaughtered according to Muslim and Jewish rites as demand accounts for only 7%, 23% are sold as meat ‘traditional’”, according to professionals.”

    Source: Le Parisien newspaper, Feb 21, 2012.

    Got that? Every gram of meat you buy in Paris is Hallal. The animals are alive while their throat is sliced, and a few euros per kilogram go to an Imam.

    An article in the Feb 20 issue told us that three out of the four meatpacking plants serving Paris and its suburbs were slaughtering animals according to the Muslim Hallal religious commandments. The 4th slaughterhouse specializes in pork.

    So rest assured that Sarkozy, in spite of his fake attitude, actually helps Muslim conquer Europe.

    He is not just a coward that doesn’t sound the alarm, he’s actually accessory to the crime.

  • Iraq war veteran, husband-to-be, future farmer among 6 killed in Kansas grain elevator blast

    11/01/2011 8:31:28 AM PDT · 5 of 18
    FrogBurger to libstripper; All

    Yeah, and 1271 cases of ammo helped the coal dust quite a bit:

    http://www.lusitania.net/deadlycargo.htm

    Don’t forget that Britain was forced to import a quarter of its ammo and most of its guncotton (cannon propellant). Every US ship heading to GB carried some war supplies.

  • Dennis Ritchie, Digital Era Trailblazer, Dies at 70 (Designer of the C Programming Language/UNIX)

    10/14/2011 8:48:25 PM PDT · 27 of 29
    FrogBurger to SeekAndFind; All
    The C programming language, a shorthand of words, numbers and punctuation

    The New York Times, a shorthand of drivel, stupidity and incompetence...

    That's the worst possible description for a programming language. Once again, the "journal of reference" talks about things they don't understand.

  • Germany detains 2 in alleged bomb plot (Muslims building fertilizer bomb)

    09/08/2011 8:00:33 PM PDT · 4 of 4
    FrogBurger to ElectronVolt

    That’s really low. Comparing modern Germany and the Nazis, how original!

  • Why did Japan surrender? (Historian argues Soviet Declaration, Not A-Bomb)

    08/19/2011 10:59:37 PM PDT · 87 of 157
    FrogBurger to farmguy; All
    What a coincidence that they decided Russia was a concern right after we obliterated two of their cities.

    Stalin's attack certainly destroyed any hope to end the conflict on a negotiated basis. According to "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" (a recommended book) and other sources, the Japanese had asked the Soviet -- who were not at war with them -- to intercede and ask for an armistice. They wanted to keep the Emperor. Stalin, knowing that, raced to grab a large piece of Asia (China and North Korea notably).

    Thus betrayed by the Soviets, Japan lost its last hope for a negociated peace. The atomic carnage was the last drop. On this you are right.

    In that sense, yes, the Soviets helped end the war. But they could simply have said "no". Their surprise land grab created conditions for multiple conflicts, past and future. We are still paying for the fateful weakness of Roosevelt against Stalin.

  • Germany's WWII offensive against Russia [Operation Barbarossa], 70 years later

    06/22/2011 9:28:46 PM PDT · 40 of 45
    FrogBurger to Perdogg; All

    The article doesn’t tell the full story. After The Stalin-Ribbentropp pact (which, among other, divided Poland between USSR and the Reich), Stalin and Hitler both lined up troops along a wavy-shaped border going through Poland.

    Hitler was almost entirely dependent on Stalin’s good will for critical supplies. Copper, tungsten, special steel, aluminum, and especially oil were flowing from Russia to Germany. The one lone oil field controlled by Germany was in Romania, within a day’s drive of Russian tanks.

    Neither of the two “partners” were trusting the other. Stalin had an extensive network of spies behind German lines. Among other duties, they collected rags left behind by Wehrmacht troopers after their daily weapon oiling and shipped them to Moscow, where the oil was analyzed. The oil formula was not freeze resistant, and so Stalin was comfortably sure that Hitler didn’t plan an attack. It’s very likely that the Reich would attack Russia, but only after the situation on the Western front and the Mediterranean calmed down.

    The Russians started piling up reserves on the front and dismantling protective installations such as anti-tank barriers and blockhaus. This was captured by the Zeiss cameras of the Fieseler Storch (or “Stork”) light reconnaissance planes that the Luftwaffe flew frequently over the Russian-German border in Poland. Seeing the dangers, the Nazis took the incredible risk of attacking the Russians in a state of total unpreparedness. Since the lines were so long, equipment manufactured in Germany took month to reach the front. Without winter uniforms, gloves, frost-resistant batteries, or low-temperature grease, the Wehrmacht could not stay operational past October.

    Operation Barbarossa was nothing but the desperate struggle of a ruthless warmonger caught with his pants down by an even more ruthless one. The Wehrmacht destroyed the ammo, fuel supplies, and reserves of the Red Army piled up in depots within a few miles of the front. This allowed the Reich to strike unopposed while the Russian scrambled to manufacture hardware and equip a new army. But General Winter stopped the Germans, killing the batteries, gumming the rifles, freezing the troops. The rest is history.

    We now know that Stalin thought he’d be able to drive his tanks through Europe and invade England — We found the English conversation manuals to be distributed to the Soviet occupation troops! It is sobering to think that England owes its Freedom to Hitler and Stalin devouring each other.

  • Nazi bomber comes back from the deep: Dornier shot down in 1940 is found off the coast of Kent

    04/08/2011 8:50:25 PM PDT · 15 of 18
    FrogBurger to Celtic Cross

    There are plenty of German servicemen that were simply motivated by the need to serve their country in time of war. Most were neither Nazi or even political. What does a 17-yr old understand to politics anyways? It’s silly to paint them as demons and Hollywood villains.

    You can read the memoirs of remarkable men that served under the Third Reich uniform and were completely honorable.

    I’d recommend two books
    1. the amazing tale of a soldier forced into the Wehrmacht: “The Forgotten Soldier” by Guy Sajer (at amazon). Highly recommended.
    2. the story of a U-Boot commander (I even tracked down the reference: Schäffer, Heinz, U-Boat 977: The U-Boat That Escaped to Argentina 2005 ISBN 1-84145-027-8 )

    As usual, the worst of the Nazis were the bureaucrats and the civilians who ordered the senseless carnages.

    The German soldiers genuinely believed they were the good guys in the fight to save Western Civilization from the Bolsheviks. As such, they might have been misguided, but they certainly were not the devils that they are often painted as.

    Hope it helps.

  • What is good (really good) data wipe software?

    04/05/2011 8:33:25 PM PDT · 15 of 42
    FrogBurger to MeneMeneTekelUpharsin

    I concur. Download DBAN (Dban.org), boot and your all your disks will get wiped irretrievably.

  • The Objectivist with the Dragon Tattoo

    03/12/2011 10:12:37 AM PST · 10 of 11
    FrogBurger to Sherman Logan; trapped_in_LA

    For believable SF heroins, I second the Honor series, and I recommend Michael Z. Williamson’s “Freehold”. She’s not a super-hero, but she turns into a very competent soldier.

  • Mandatory TSA Peep-Show Misses Gun 5 out of 5 Times

    03/05/2011 7:34:15 PM PST · 10 of 10
    FrogBurger to Terry Mross

    Heck, on some flights, passengers are routinely so drunk that their *pee* could be set on fire.

  • Mandatory TSA Peep-Show Misses Gun 5 out of 5 Times

    03/05/2011 7:33:58 PM PST · 9 of 10
    FrogBurger to Terry Mross

    Heck, on some flights, passengers are routinely so drunk that their *pee* could be set on fire.

  • Mandatory TSA Peep-Show Misses Gun 5 out of 5 Times

    03/05/2011 11:41:02 AM PST · 1 of 10
    FrogBurger
    Funny read!
  • France is 'baby champion' of Europe

    01/22/2011 6:27:54 PM PST · 19 of 19
    FrogBurger to Right Wing Assault; All

    There is no question that a disproportionate number of births in France come from immigrants, particularly Muslims of Arab and African descent. The birth announcements section of any newspaper leaves no doubt.

    If you want more proof, you can take a look at the average kindergarten in cities and suburb. French babies are few and far between.

  • Hackers Steal $150,000 With Malicious Job Application

    01/19/2011 9:51:30 PM PST · 6 of 9
    FrogBurger to All

    It’s sad, but no AV is able to keep track of the flow of Windows malware. New vulnerabilities are found every week. They are exploited within hours by bandits. No protection software can keep up.

    Antivirus software is protecting against yesterday’s threats only.

    If you are a business and you access your bank account from a Windows PC that is not entirely dedicated and isolated from your network, you WILL get infected by malware.

    Use a Mac or a Linux desktop.

  • What the heck is a "Manurhin"? (pistol)

    08/14/2010 10:51:29 PM PDT · 26 of 35
    FrogBurger to paddles

    Paddles,

    The US got their corn-fed butt kicked by a bunch of dirty, illiterate, under-equipped peasants wielding rusty AK-74s in Mogadishu. Yet the French don’t make fun of you guys. At least, the French army never dropped their pants fighting half-starving Africans.

  • Video of forced eviction in Paris suburb prompts shock

    07/31/2010 7:19:36 AM PDT · 11 of 17
    FrogBurger to Castlebar
    There is no such thing as an "anchor baby" in France, or anywhere else outside the United States, for that matter.

    Why do you say that?

    A child born in France is a citizen, and so cannot be deported, and since a child needs parents, his illegal parents aren't going to be deported either. At least that's the legal reasoning in Cheeseland.

  • The Con of the Decade

    07/10/2010 10:19:10 PM PDT · 12 of 36
    FrogBurger to delapaz; All
    From the article: The police had mounted communications antennae on it [the Eiffel Tower] and therefore wanted it kept up. It was perhaps then the first cell tower.

    Err, what? This guy needs to check his sources. The tower was built for the 1889 Universal Exhibition. That's a tad early for radio, or any kind of wireless.

  • French admit they are racist

    05/31/2010 4:53:44 PM PDT · 30 of 34
    FrogBurger to IronJack; All

    The population of French prisons is about 90% Muslims. So yes, Arabs are quite more likely to commit crimes than Caucasian French. Case closed.