That doesn't give you the right to abuse the privilege. Especially when your deviation from the actual topic is just to start another of your America bad rants. We have enough of them already.
The more I post here, the more I dislike Americans. Though, it may have something to do with Donald Trump.
Regarding the stones and prostitutes, the difference is that prostitutes are more honest and make less damage than any rock'n roll band.
Not always. "HOLLYWOOD (CBSMiami) — Two women have been arrested for separate theft incidents at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino.
Makita Calhoun, 26, admitted to police she was paid cash to meet a man in his hotel room on September 8th, according to the Seminole Police Department arrest report.
Detectives said surveillance video showed her and another woman spend more than three hours in the room that night. Police said as the women left, Calhoun stole the man’s $8,500 Rolex watch and an $8,300 diamond pendant, and could be seen dashing from the hotel room where she was eventually picked up by an accomplice.
Calhoun was arrested eight days later while walking the casino floor and charged with grand theft."
Being a good news however I regret to inform my dear Ersi that Estonia lost against Portugal by 7-0 in football. Maybe next time you should learn how to play the game before trying to play against us.
"Well our tv in Gt Britain is saturated with US stuff...I prefer documentaries and historical programmes" So do I, and some of our favorites are British shows on Netflix. We like Inspector Morse and Inspector Lewis. There's a good show, Frasier, that both of like.
I've read the novel and seen the movie and liked both. The movie was made in 1940. I was a bit too young to have seen it in a theater, so I must have seen it on TV.
To be fair to Russia, it does get a lot colder and warmer than here. It can't be easy to make an affordable material that deals well with both circumstances. I guess melting a little in summer is a better trade-off than breaking in winter.
October 10 – The state of Russia’s road system, which now ranks 136th out of 144 countries evaluated, is so bad that even Vladimir Putin, who recently has been given to upbeat statements about the country, has had to change his tone. But his comments in Novosibirsk yesterday suggest that he won’t or can’t change the main underlying problems.
According to commentator Aleksandr Ivakhnik, Putin’s public statements in recent times have seldom featured any critical comments about the situation in Russia. Instead, the Kremlin leader has preferred to stress his confidence about the basic stability of the economy and its good future prospects.
But at a meeting of the presidium of the State Council on the day after his birthday break, Putin changed his approach and spoke about the real problems of what he said was “a vitally important” sector of the Russian economy, one that other participants painted in even darker colors than he.
Rustam Minnikhanov, the president of Tatarstan and head of the State Council working group on roads, told the Novosibirsk meeting that 53 percent of federal highways and 63 percent of regional ones are substandard and that the situation is growing worse: Every year, the number of cars in Russia rises by six percent, but the highway system expands only 2200 kilometers.
In his speech, Putin said that the road sector remained “a difficult and problematic issue,” with any resolution of current problems being a matter for the future. He suggested that the quality of existing roads had not improved despite massive spending and that the size of the network is insufficient to support economic growth.