Yes, the legacy of the wall lives on in the US military.
Yes, the legacy of the wall lives on in the US military.
No
No. The highways and malls of the usa and it's military to defend that waste
Murder invasion? You ignorant kunt! Your country has recently invaded countries and terrorized and slaughtered hundreds of thousands of innocent women and children and men. For what? Because you're the leading terrorist state in the world
I'd say yes if not for the Danesters 52 thons in 52 weeks!!!!
TROLL 0/10
ken Ya wrote:
Murder invasion? You ignorant kunt! Your country has recently invaded countries and terrorized and slaughtered hundreds of thousands of innocent women and children and men. For what? Because you're the leading terrorist state in the world
ken Ya wrote:
Murder invasion? You ignorant kunt! Your country has recently invaded countries and terrorized and slaughtered hundreds of thousands of innocent women and children and men. For what? Because you're the leading terrorist state in the world
Again, get a grip.
We had Clay Johnson to thank for the security of our homeland from Murder/Invasion back in the day.
Nothing could be a bigger waste than the pyramids. Only government could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.
Smooth Daddy wrote:
Nothing could be a bigger waste than the pyramids. Only government could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.
Pretty sure that the pharoahs were also religious leaders and considered to be gods at the time. So perhaps it would be more accurate to say, 'Only religion could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.'
Should Really be Added wrote:
sure that the pharoahs were also religious leaders and considered to be gods at the time. So perhaps it would be more accurate to say, 'Only religion could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.'
Religion got its hands on political power—the levers of government.
Should Really be Added wrote:
Smooth Daddy wrote:Nothing could be a bigger waste than the pyramids. Only government could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.
Pretty sure that the pharoahs were also religious leaders and considered to be gods at the time. So perhaps it would be more accurate to say, 'Only religion could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.'
Pretty sure that the Egyptian monarchs used religion to cement their reign.
So perhaps it would be more accurate to say, "Only those who claim that one human being is inherently better than another could exploit an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones."
ghjdfhj wrote:
No, the Maginot line was the biggest waste
This is the correct answer if we're talking engineering/structures etc.
Here are the official rankings for mankind's biggest wastes of time and energy .....
1. The Maginot Line
2. Boston's Big Dig
3. Seattles current Alaskan Way Viaduct replacement project
4. The Colorado Midland Railroad
5. The Eiffel Tower
6. The Space Needle
7. Epcot Center
8. Detroit
9. The original Tacoma Narrows Bridge
10. The William H. Clinton Presidential Library
Smooth Daddy wrote:
Nothing could be a bigger waste than the pyramids. Only government could squander an entire civilization's manpower and resources building giant tombstones.
They had perfect, reliable agriculture, good technology, medicine, a dominant army, and faced few challenges. Their one problem was their own success. With so much good stuff, demand was low and people didn't have jobs. The king was wise to pay them to pile up some rocks. Even wiser to make it a real big pile of rocks, and wiser still to bring religion into it so everyone else couldn't complain about it being a government handout.
Plain old socialism, inevitable in all superdeveloped countries. Shame about the religion part though. Chances are your job is about as useful as pyramid-building in the grand scheme of things.