"Rudolf Polzer" <AntiATField_adsgohere@durchnull.de> wrote:
> Scripsit illa aut ille Kakarotto <kakarotto@xtra.co.nz>:
> > You mean the closer I get to anyone the more I get hurt? Hmmm no not
really,
>
> That's why I asked: because it sounds like what Disaster wrote, but I do
> not think it is right. I wanted to read Disaster's argument about this,
> not yours... now my attempt has been spoiled. But you could not have
> known this before, so you do not need to excuse *g*
>
> It's a trick I like to do to get more information: state something that
is
> wrong in my opinion, ut I am not sure about - but it sounds like what I
> am referring to on first view.
>
> A similar trick is rephrasing the opinion of someone else to make him
> deny it - but which then means denying what he said before. It's a way
> of asking a "Are you completely sure?"-question.

You want me to hit you over this? I enjoy it actually! Although I'm still
waiting for you to use it. You seem to claim using mind games yet you have
not used any yet. I suggest you claim credit for those actions that you
are responsible for.

> > I have been verbally abused by my peers over the years (still in high
> > school, 15yrs old) that the majority of insults or anything for that
matter
> > doesn't really bother me.
>
> I do not know how insults can bother anyone... in Germany it's the same:
> you grow up being insulted by many people. No matter where - at school,
> at school or at school. That's life, that's nature - and it makes
> sense. The goal of this is that you become independent of other's
> opinions - that you can be on your own.

No that's crap! Being mocked is in no way helpful to you. It serve's only
to drive you away from others and at best will develop walls of distrust
and dislike with your world.

> > What a said about Tiffany was shallow,
>
> *I* do not have a problem with that. You have the right to freely
> express your opinion, and nobody can take it from you. Or don't you have
> that in .nz?

Unless it isn't his opinion. For the record, I have yet to hear of any
country but the US declaring that it's citizens have the right to speak,
or otherwise express themselves, freely.

> > I admit it, but I don't see why everyone is like "Oh Tiff" blah blah
> > blah.
>
> That's because Disaster is the boss here and Disaster likes Tiff.

Well, who em I to argue with logic like that?

> I hope
> Disaster does not read this, but I like Miyamura Yuuko better. I heared
> some other songs sung by her (including some opening songs), and I
> always find it funny to hear English words spoken by Japanese in an
> extremely wrong way.

Fortunately for you I am a dense headed boss and have no idea what you are
talking about

> After what I heared from Miyamura Yuuko, "Fry me to
> the moon" is completely harmless. The new record is "idol" spoken as
> "aidoru" with a *long*, *loud* and *stressed* (on the first beat of a
> bar) "ru" syllable. Interestingly the other English words are mostly
> correct in this song, especially the difficult word "chance" with a
> z-like consonant at the end.

However I'm also cruel!
*Thwack*

> Tiff *did* a good job - but once you know the - better - original
> voices, you won't want to hear the English dubbed ones any more.

I found the original rather squeaky actually.

> Especially because you normally don't hear that way of speaking...
> in 2000 I was in South Korea, and I heared two of them (both females)
> arguing. Not that I understood any word, I could *guess* what was meant
> because I knew why they were arguing. BTW, it was a funny story. One of
> them wanted to get one of my teammates in the German delegation drunk in
> order to you know what (it was just too obvious), but there was one
> problem: Thomas could drink much more alcohol than she could, so the
> "wrong" person got completely drunk. The other one - BTW the guide of
> the German delegation - tried to convince her stop this because it
> is won't last very long and she was the guide of some *other* delegation
> and it is a bad thing if one delegation has 0 and another 2 guides. But
> try explaining anything to a drunk - you'll fail. Interesting: the usage
> of the languages. We Germans spoke in German dialects in order to make
> it impossible for the guides to understand what we said, while the
> German guide changed between bad German+English (whenever you do not
know a
> word of one language, use one of the other) and Korean and the other one
> used only good English and Korean (the arguing was mustly Korean). You
> can imagine how funny this has been - and why I like the Japanese voices
> of Misato and Asuka (they speak a similar way). Did you ever think that
> an International Mathematical Olympiad could be that funny?

....... I once sat behind two Japanese students on a school bus and their
yattering made my headache worse. Of course that was back when most of my
headaches turned into Migraines, unfortunately I didn't get home in time
to take something for the headache and I ended up crawling some of the way
back home.

> > I am in a great relationship with my girlfriend, and despite what many
> > people believe about young couples, I am determined not to let this
> > one get away.
>
> Which is completely understandable. But there are too many (Mist, wie
> hei