Vigor Commensurate With The Audience

Are all things personal?

Try this link for 160GB. Note the rating thing too of sellers and the convenience of price sorting with shipping calculated into the full price. On the hard drive, avoid 2mb buffer, rather than 8mb or 16mb.

The USB case can be regularly had for 20 bucks or less. Check here or here. The latter link contains a comment thing for each post like with any blog. They will even argue over a 6 dollar flashlight; proving that a link to the community is far more important than price.

This comment warrants moderation, I suppose.

The last link, directed at the host declares simply: "Ben, you're a retard. [p] cherub15V AAA Battery (included)" to clarify whether the post needs to be fixed, to properly reference batteries.

At least with gadgets obtained from abroad the features are much easier to quantify than for hardened ideological ideals in the minds of highly educated folks. Consider the persona non grata in europe and his troubled web site brusselsjournal.com that some would prefer to just shut down.

The good folks at Samizdata even drift off to ponder whether Baileys is a girly drink notwithstanding advertisements -- under the post titled False Advertising.

Perhaps a good shot of gut rot whiskey might do wonders for the soul, or at least loosen up the inhibitions to speak candidly. No false advertising to it at all.

Never mind that bojack is the closest that the Oregon State Bar has to someone who might speak without total blind loyalty to the powers that be -- where to step on someones toes or turf can be something akin (for professional purposes) to driving into a brick wall at 90. The absence of vigor is akin to a stale pond or puddle, or like the accumulation of stuff in Blue Lake that ultimately requires the whole system to be drained to flush out the disease.

UPDATE: Here is an article that reads like a profile of courage. thesun: I fled from a forced marriage.

AT 16, Jasvinder Sanghera had to run away from home to escape a forced marriage to a man she had never met.

Now 41, and living in Derby, she tells the story of how she was disowned by her family - who told friends she had died.

But shockingly, there are no laws dedicated to preventing forced marriages.

Today Jasvinder explains why she's taking other survivors to the House of Lords to back Lord Lester's Forced Marriages Bill.

As I arrived home from school, my mother showed me a picture of a stranger. ‘This is the man you’re going to marry,’ she announced cheerfully.

I was barely 15, but growing up in Derby, I had watched each of my five older sisters be married off to men they didn’t know.

Two of my sisters were taken out of school at, 14 or 15, flown abroad to be married and then arrived back at school with nothing said.

And I knew these marriages had not all worked out well.

[. . .]

Can you match it?