Mexican chicks are hot.
I'd blow my brains out if I lived in New Jersey.
I'd blow my brains out if I lived in New Jersey.
Fuck Israel
In British terms I would liken it to Sheffield or Scunthorpe.Mekstizzle wrote:
is new jersey really as bad as everyone says it is
It is. Princeton is kind of nice (primarily because Princeton University is there), but the vast majority is either urban dump (all of the north), disgusting beachfront cities such as that featured in Jersey Shore and Atlantic City, or dysfunctional and bland rural towns with no geographical character.CameronPoe wrote:
In British terms I would liken it to Sheffield or Scunthorpe.Mekstizzle wrote:
is new jersey really as bad as everyone says it is
That has to be the most dumb/ ignorant statement I've heard in a long while.S.Lythberg wrote:
America's "happiness" ranking is very low among developed nations, we're overworked, underpaid, and generally miserable.
US homicide rates are 7 per 100k AFAIK. Most of it is either drug or gang related.Bertster7 wrote:
I don't know about that - ignorance is bliss....Turquoise wrote:
You gotta admit though, the happy part must be nice... (not so much the other two).Dilbert_X wrote:
Fat, dumb and happy syndrome.Can't speak for Aus, but the UK still has significantly lower per capita knife crime rates than the US.Cybargs wrote:
Instead of guns, you get stabbings instead with Aus and UK.
Gun crime in the US is a far higher proportion of homicides - but the differences in the figures are immense. Knife crime in the UK is supposedly a youth phenomenon. Lets look at the homicide figures for the US, UK, France and Germany - for the US the rate is 11/100000, in the UK it is 0.9, in Germany 0.8 and in France 0.6. That's a vast difference. (Latin America averages 36 and Africa 17 BTW)
I'd interpret that to mean it's fucking awful.CameronPoe wrote:
In British terms I would liken it to Sheffield or Scunthorpe.Mekstizzle wrote:
is new jersey really as bad as everyone says it is
cheer the fuck upIoan92 wrote:
That has to be the most dumb/ ignorant statement I've heard in a long while.S.Lythberg wrote:
America's "happiness" ranking is very low among developed nations, we're overworked, underpaid, and generally miserable.
You've noticed that too?S.Lythberg wrote:
Me tooJohnG@lt wrote:
I'm happyS.Lythberg wrote:
We kill each other instead.
America's "happiness" ranking is very low among developed nations, we're overworked, underpaid, and generally miserable.
But the people who took the easy way out when they were younger are now (unsurprisingly) unfulfilled later in life.
me too. II didnt get a chance to beat it before my old pc died.jord wrote:
i wanna play fallout 3 again.
I did, but there's so many side quests and hours of gameplay. plus all the expansions.eleven bravo wrote:
me too. II didnt get a chance to beat it before my old pc died.jord wrote:
i wanna play fallout 3 again.
Last edited by DrunkFace (2010-01-31 08:51:12)
Must be all the marijuana....Dilbert_X wrote:
Well apparently Mexicans are twice as happy as Americans.
Thread fails.
One of the levels in Half-Life was inspired by New Jersey.Mekstizzle wrote:
is new jersey really as bad as everyone says it is
It really is garbage.Doctor Strangelove wrote:
One of the levels in Half-Life was inspired by New Jersey.Mekstizzle wrote:
is new jersey really as bad as everyone says it is
I believe it was "Ravenholm"
Ioan92 wrote:
That has to be the most dumb/ ignorant statement I've heard in a long while.S.Lythberg wrote:
America's "happiness" ranking is very low among developed nations, we're overworked, underpaid, and generally miserable.
stfuPiecing together information from more than 100 studies in the growing field of happiness research, a British psychologist has produced what he says is the first world map of happiness.
It ranks 178 countries, with Denmark at the top and the African nation of Burundi at the bottom. The United States comes in 23rd.
“While happiness is intangible, the scales used in these studies are very accurate,” said Adrian White, an analytic social psychologist who is working toward a doctorate at the University of Leicester. “Happiness research is far from an exact science, but it is the best way we have of looking at it.”
White analyzed the data in relation to a nation’s health, wealth and access to education. The United States came in relatively low — beneath Bhutan, Brunei and Canada, among other countries — in large part because of health factors. “You don’t have the highest life expectancy,” he noted.
youre an angry lad. you just proved the OP you bitter bitter man.Dilbert_X wrote:
Covered one, used another as background.Turquoise wrote:
You gotta admit though, the happy part must be nice... (not so much the other two).Dilbert_X wrote:
Fat, dumb and happy syndrome.
On a totally unrelated note, The Saturdays covered a Depeche Mode song?
But yes, if you're ignorant about how tenuous your fortunate position is, and don't give a shit about anyone elses situation its easy to be happy.
chalk ioan up there as another typical bf2s anti america douche fuck with incorrect information as usual. they have no facts and usually are unable to provide solid examples about anything. fuck em. well done sir.S.Lythberg wrote:
Ioan92 wrote:
That has to be the most dumb/ ignorant statement I've heard in a long while.S.Lythberg wrote:
America's "happiness" ranking is very low among developed nations, we're overworked, underpaid, and generally miserable.stfuPiecing together information from more than 100 studies in the growing field of happiness research, a British psychologist has produced what he says is the first world map of happiness.
It ranks 178 countries, with Denmark at the top and the African nation of Burundi at the bottom. The United States comes in 23rd.
“While happiness is intangible, the scales used in these studies are very accurate,” said Adrian White, an analytic social psychologist who is working toward a doctorate at the University of Leicester. “Happiness research is far from an exact science, but it is the best way we have of looking at it.”
White analyzed the data in relation to a nation’s health, wealth and access to education. The United States came in relatively low — beneath Bhutan, Brunei and Canada, among other countries — in large part because of health factors. “You don’t have the highest life expectancy,” he noted.
hey man their college prof and the bbc told them so...so it is fact.jsnipy wrote:
ITT: People who think know the world because of the internets
I forgot, 1st year university students understand the world so clearly (that's also an issue for americans)11 Bravo wrote:
hey man their college prof and the bbc told them so...so it is fact.jsnipy wrote:
ITT: People who think know the world because of the internets
Last edited by jsnipy (2010-01-31 10:10:39)