And don't forget - he has a tiny head! — CasKev
"When I was about eight or nine, I lived in New Jersey with my mother and we were seven deep in one bedroom and sometimes we didn't have electricity." Mayweather said. "When people see what I have now, they have no idea of where I came from and how I didn't have anything growing up."
It was not uncommon for young Mayweather to come home from school and find used heroin needles in his front yard.[24] His mother was addicted to drugs, and he had an aunt who died from AIDS because of her drug use. "People don't know the hell I've been through," he says.
The most time that his father spent with him was taking him to the gym to train and work on his boxing, according to Mayweather. "I don't remember him ever taking me anywhere or doing anything that a father would do with a son, going to the park or to the movies or to get ice cream," he says. "I always thought that he liked his daughter (Floyd's older sister) better than he liked me because she never got whippings and I got whippings all the time."
Mayweather's father contends that Floyd is not telling the truth about their early relationship. "Even though his daddy did sell drugs, I didn't deprive my son," the elder Mayweather says. "The drugs I sold, he was a part of it. He had plenty of food. He had the best clothes and I gave him money. He didn't want for anything. Anybody in Grand Rapids can tell you that I took care of my kids".[25] Floyd Sr. says he did all of his hustling at night and spent his days with his son, taking him to the gym and training him to be a boxer. "If it wasn't for me he wouldn't be where he is today," he maintains. — Wikipedia
Conor Anthony McGregor[12] was born on 14 July 1988 in Crumlin, Dublin, the son of Tony and Margaret McGregor.[1] He was raised in Crumlin and attended a Gaelscoil and Gaelcholáiste at both primary and at secondary level in Coláiste de hÍde in Tallaght, where he also developed his passion for sport playing association football. In his youth, he played football for Lourdes Celtic Football Club.[13] At the age of 12, McGregor also began boxing at Crumlin Boxing Club.[14][15]
In 2006, McGregor moved with his family to Lucan, Dublin, attending Gaelcholáiste Coláiste Cois Life. Following that, he commenced a plumbing apprenticeship.[16] While in Lucan, he met future UFC fighter Tom Egan and they soon started training mixed martial arts (MMA) together.[17] — wikipedia
How will we as a civilization cope with the abundance of luxuries and lack of demand for any un-educated or unintelligent workforce? How do we prevent our civilization from ripping itself apart with workers revolts without halting technological progress? — Eric Wintjen
Eventually we humans will extend our reach beyond Earth and we will have access to more resources than we could ever consume in a calculable amount of time, as technology progresses we will be able to be able to harvest those resources with ease. — Eric Wintjen
Some people are horrible. — Wosret
How many people actually do this, though? I don't even idealize my mother, so it's hard to imagine there being swaths of infatuated kiddos... — Buxtebuddha
The problem is wealth concentration not of production. — Rich
things like quietly restoring local economies, quietly restoring the extended family, and quietly restoring local communities and anything else local — WISDOMfromPO-MO
There's nothing that says anybody has to accept the way things are and should not do anything to disrupt the order of things. That sounds like fatalism or something else from ancient times. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Like in what way? — Buxtebuddha
I said let's break the garage-in-garbage-out cycle — WISDOMfromPO-MO
No, I am constantly adding novelty to my life. — Rich
by the application of the right strategies. In fact, it may be possible to turn such a person from someone who hates you at the time, into someone who deeply loves you once they realise who you really are. — Agustino
I am suggesting that we all cooperate, respect one another, respect non-human life, and respect the Earth as the home of all life. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
A complete rupture and departure from the worldviews that have created and sustained modern business and science might be a no-brainer — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Because of course, getting an education and a job is important, but if we forsake forming bonds in order to focus entirely on getting ahead in life, when we finally achieve that goal, how much time will be left? — Eric Wintjen
"It Is What It Is' is an idiomatic phrase, indicating the immutable nature of an object or circumstance. This is commonly used in American culture as a response of acceptance to something that makes little sense or has little to no validity. [edit: used a lot because so any things make so little sense.] It may also refer to: It Is What It Is, a 2001 film directed by Billy Frolick.
It may also refer to:
It Is What It Is, a 2001 film directed by Billy Frolick
It Is What It Is, a 2007 autobiography by David Coulthard
It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, a project by English artist Jeremy Deller
It Is What It Is, a radio show hosted by Michigan sports radio broadcaster Sean Baligian
In Music
It Is What It Is (ABN album), a 2008 album by the rap duo ABN
It Is What It Is, a 1982 album by the Australian rock band The Hitmen
It Is What It Is, a working title for the 2007 album by the rapper Cassidy released as B.A.R.S. The Barry Adrian Reese Story
"It Is What It Is (What It Is)", a song by the rock band Adam Again on the 1992 album Dig
"It Is What It Is", a song by Lifehouse on the 2010 album Smoke & Mirrors
It Is What It Is, a song by Kacey Musgraves on the 2013 album Same Trailer Different Park
"It Is What It Is", a song by Lecrae on the 2016 mixtape, Church Clothes 3"
She found me, if you know what I mean, O:) — Buxtebuddha
Sociology can be an important science, and sometimes it gives us valuable insights. But all too often sociologists and other social scientists are blind to anything other than social causes of social outcomes. Professionals in these fields continue to act as if we were blank slates waiting for social forces to mold us into the people we become. More to the point, many social scientists ignore the fact that genetic predispositions can explain social trends, and that individual differences in heritable personality traits can explain important social outcomes.
How many students were taught that human beings evolved about around 150,000 years ago in Africa? How many know what a gene is? How many can describe Mendel’s laws, or sexual selection? The answer is very few. And, what is worse, many sociologists do not think this ignorance matters.
In the minds of many sociologists, it is a great sin to “biologize” human affairs.
This is hilariously awful, DB. I recall an article a couple of years back about the dangers of zoos reinforcing gender stereotypes in visiting children. — Wayfarer
So, I came across this series of essays (I guess you could call them that) — darthbarracuda
written by a belligerent feminist (or something) — darthbarracuda
that basically claims that the chemicals in males' semen influences the behavior of females and that this is at least partially responsible for the patriarchy. — darthbarracuda
Second or third syllable in, someone continues on with their conversation as if it wasn't obvious I was talking. — Chany
The events in Charlottesville took place days after an earth-shattering Disobedient Media report broke into the mainstream, unequivocally and finally debunking the baseless Clinton-Obama argument that it was Russian hackers who interfered in the 2016 American election...
Massive court victories by Judicial Watch calling for emails from Clinton’s aides around the 2012 Benghazi attack, and others pertaining to the handling of the infamous “Comey memos” the DOJ failed to turn over following former Director James Comey’s departure, have party leadership in a state of utter paralysis as various scandals unfold and the party descends into free-fall...

I'll have somebody send it to you as soon as I am dead.Let me know how I can get or adopt said tumor. — Posty McPostface
It is at least quite strange (to mention one of the cases listed in the link) that the US authorities knew the Manchester guy before the UK authorities did. — Mariner
