Tag Archives: system

Can I get Banned form xbox live if I repaired my xbox 360?

I just recently repaired my xbox 360 from the ring of death. I replaced the x-clamps with screws and removed the black small screws from the metal shall. the system works find now, but scared to log on to xbox live. I heard that once your xbox 360 is on it try to detect if any of the screws are missing. I just got my copy of call of duty modern warfare 2 to scared to log on to xbox live

Schematics for a sluice box system?

Anyone know where I can find one? We probably have the resources to fabricate one but we kind of need directions. Preferably online and gravity water driven, It does not have to be large, in fact the smaller the better since its purpose is to prospect for gold dust and flour.

Why did they make the treasure system so stupid in Final Fantasy XII?

I’ve been playing Final Fantasy XII for a little over a month now, and overall I’ve really enjoyed the game. But now that I’m getting to the end of the game, I’m starting to like it less and less. I’m discovering that the treasure system is really stupid! For example, I spend hours running around unlocking these gates to get to the zodiac shield in the great crystal.. after hours of searching, looking up maps online, running back and forth, I finally managed to get to the room where this treasure was supposed to be.. only when I get there, the room was empty.. no shield.. no chest.. nothing.. I ran in and out hoping maybe it would spawn, but it never did.. I’ve about had it with the randomly appearing treasures in this game! It’s not fun running into a room, finding the treasure isnt’ there, and then resetting the console to try again! what were they thinking when they made this? does anyone else think the treasure system in this game is just downright stupid?
and don’t get me started on the stupid zodiac spear! how the heck is anyone supposed to know they aren’t supposed to touch certain chests early in the game? there were no warning signs or indications.. I didn’t look in my guidebook at the beginning of the game because I think it’s fun to discover things on my own.. but what I discovered was that I already screwed myself out of any hope of ever getting the best weapon in the game.. nice.. when I first started playing this game, I loved it.. I would’ve given it a 10/10.. now I think it’s possibly my least favorite final fantasy game..

Is Border control our right (“Remember what happened to the Indians”)?

If the Indians knew then what they know now, they’d have tried mightily to keep out the Pilgrims and all who followed. Over time, waves of immigrants overwhelmed the Indians, their societies and their culture. Early arrivals brought their own culture, religion, laws, language, system of political economy and technology with them. Later arrivals assimilated to this melting pot. It was the Indians who had to adapt.

I kind of like our culture, our customs and our language the way they are, and I’d like to preserve all that. I’m not opposed to immigration – legal immigration, that is – as long as it serves our interests. By controlling our borders and setting immigration limits and qualifications we can avoid the fate of the Indians and keep from being swamped by future waves of immigrants. Is this selfish? You bet. Just as every other nation in the world that behaves rationally is selfish.

Once upon a time, America thirsted for immigrants. That’s when we were rapidly expanding our frontiers, heading west, homesteading, prospecting for gold and building railroads from sea to shining sea. We needed many skills including an army of hearty laborers. That was then; this is now. We still need refined skills and manual labor, some of which can be supplied by immigrants and guest workers. But we don’t need this in infinite quantities.

Another thing that’s changed since the days of rugged individualism and Manifest Destiny is the creation of the welfare state. Now you don’t have to necessarily carry your own weight. The government has woven an intricate safety net to support you. We don’t need more net tax receivers.

A recent letter to the editor attempted to make some tortured point that those who oppose open borders are un-Christian, arguing that the Bible instructs us to “take in and help the stranger, the alien and the downtrodden,” and that Jesus would not have said, “Go thou and build a wall” to keep out illegal immigrants. Advocates of liberation theology use similar arguments to paint Jesus as a socialist, which might have amused Lenin and Stalin. The distinction is that there’s a vital difference between one’s behavior toward an individual encountered on the street and a nation’s public policy.

The Bible might envision the day when we could beat our swords into plowshares, but in the meantime there’s nothing un-Christian about a nation defending itself from Islamofascist suicidal murderers. Similarly, sovereign states (like the Vatican, for example, which has boundaries and a protective wall) are entitled to secure their borders and establish their own immigration policies. If Christians, or anyone else, as individuals, want to assist the downtrodden, adopt a child from an impoverished nation or go on a mission abroad to help others, God bless them. But that doesn’t mean they can’t also subscribe to reasonable and practical immigration and border security policies for their secular government at home.

The United States now has a population of 300 million. It’s doubled in the last 50 years, increasingly from immigration. The world population is 6 billion today and projected to grow to 8 billion in 20 years. I don’t doubt that half of them would love to come here if they could. That would be good for them but not so good for us. And that latter consideration should be the first criterion for our immigration policy. Remember what happened to the Indians.

Is Border control our right (“Remember what happened to the Indians”)?

If the Indians knew then what they know now, they’d have tried mightily to keep out the Pilgrims and all who followed. Over time, waves of immigrants overwhelmed the Indians, their societies and their culture. Early arrivals brought their own culture, religion, laws, language, system of political economy and technology with them. Later arrivals assimilated to this melting pot. It was the Indians who had to adapt.

I kind of like our culture, our customs and our language the way they are, and I’d like to preserve all that. I’m not opposed to immigration – legal immigration, that is – as long as it serves our interests. By controlling our borders and setting immigration limits and qualifications we can avoid the fate of the Indians and keep from being swamped by future waves of immigrants. Is this selfish? You bet. Just as every other nation in the world that behaves rationally is selfish.

Once upon a time, America thirsted for immigrants. That’s when we were rapidly expanding our frontiers, heading west, homesteading, prospecting for gold and building railroads from sea to shining sea. We needed many skills including an army of hearty laborers. That was then; this is now. We still need refined skills and manual labor, some of which can be supplied by immigrants and guest workers. But we don’t need this in infinite quantities.

Another thing that’s changed since the days of rugged individualism and Manifest Destiny is the creation of the welfare state. Now you don’t have to necessarily carry your own weight. The government has woven an intricate safety net to support you. We don’t need more net tax receivers.

A recent letter to the editor attempted to make some tortured point that those who oppose open borders are un-Christian, arguing that the Bible instructs us to “take in and help the stranger, the alien and the downtrodden,” and that Jesus would not have said, “Go thou and build a wall” to keep out illegal immigrants. Advocates of liberation theology use similar arguments to paint Jesus as a socialist, which might have amused Lenin and Stalin. The distinction is that there’s a vital difference between one’s behavior toward an individual encountered on the street and a nation’s public policy.

The Bible might envision the day when we could beat our swords into plowshares, but in the meantime there’s nothing un-Christian about a nation defending itself from Islamofascist suicidal murderers. Similarly, sovereign states (like the Vatican, for example, which has boundaries and a protective wall) are entitled to secure their borders and establish their own immigration policies. If Christians, or anyone else, as individuals, want to assist the downtrodden, adopt a child from an impoverished nation or go on a mission abroad to help others, God bless them. But that doesn’t mean they can’t also subscribe to reasonable and practical immigration and border security policies for their secular government at home.

The United States now has a population of 300 million. It’s doubled in the last 50 years, increasingly from immigration. The world population is 6 billion today and projected to grow to 8 billion in 20 years. I don’t doubt that half of them would love to come here if they could. That would be good for them but not so good for us. And that latter consideration should be the first criterion for our immigration policy. Remember what happened to the Indians.