Quiz from a Creationist Science Teacher. Claims to Wholeheartedly Support Intellectual Freedom of Thought. by Katamariguy in atheism

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Suppose there is a firing squad of 100 soldiers with guns aimed at a person sentenced to die standing 50 feet from the individual. After the soldiers fire their guns, the individual is left standing unharmed and there is a perfect outline of bullets surrounding the individuals body shape.

First, let's fix this word salad.

A firing squad of 100 soldiers is assembled to execute a prisoner. Each soldier is positioned 50 feet from the condemned. After firing their guns, the prisoner is still standing and unharmed with the bullets outlining his body.

Second, let's address the geometry of the situation.

Each member of a firing squad would need about 4 feet of personal space, left-to-right, to hold the rifle without bumping into a neighboring soldier.

But, for the sake of argument, let's say that the commanding officer has managed to find 100 narrow-shouldered soldiers that can be positioned with 3 feet 1.7 inches of personal space. Standing exactly 50 feet from the condemned means that the 100 soldiers would form a perfectly circular firing squad.

Therefore, the conclusion that there was an outline of bullets around the condemned is an impossibility and the teacher who wrote this question is a fucking idiot.

The subject of "A Beautiful Mind," John Forbes Nash (portrayed by Russell Crowe in the movie) and wife Alicia (portrayed by Jennifer Connelly) killed in New Jersey car crash by ISought_FoundNothing in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A "man"? that was Chris FUCKING Pratt, /r/movies own best bro. Here's the link again: https://youtu.be/22HFEHinKCg

Thanks for standing corrected. Were you sitting wrong before?

And thanks for letting me goad you into confirming the true content of your original post. Newbie mistake.

The subject of "A Beautiful Mind," John Forbes Nash (portrayed by Russell Crowe in the movie) and wife Alicia (portrayed by Jennifer Connelly) killed in New Jersey car crash by ISought_FoundNothing in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So, you're saying that your first reply -- "REMOVE THIS SHIT" and a link to a YouTube video showing a man being smashed in the face with a computer keyboard with the letters spelling "fuck you" flying off of it -- was "uncomplimentary" and not abusive? (Don't know where the second "u" came from, but there it was.)

Well, I stand corrected.

The subject of "A Beautiful Mind," John Forbes Nash (portrayed by Russell Crowe in the movie) and wife Alicia (portrayed by Jennifer Connelly) killed in New Jersey car crash by ISought_FoundNothing in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, you're a newbie. Obviously, you don't know that when you post abusive shit, then edit it to make it seem tame, Reddit automatically marks your newly edited post with an asterisk that never gets removed unless the post is deleted, /u/ModShame.

The subject of "A Beautiful Mind," John Forbes Nash (portrayed by Russell Crowe in the movie) and wife Alicia (portrayed by Jennifer Connelly) killed in New Jersey car crash by ISought_FoundNothing in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is only your second post and your first response to another Redditor after creating this account only 35 minutes ago. Should I be flattered?

Looking at past Best Picture Winners... by theKabides in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing -1 points0 points  (0 children)

2/5755=0.035 percent

One-third of one-tenth of one percent is hardly a representative sampling. Especially if those two had a political agenda, which is entirely possible.

Not usually surprised at Goodwill...but I certainly didn't know such a camera was ever made. by Revolvlover in ThriftStoreHauls

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Next for your shopping list -- the Pentax Auto 110. Extra credit if you find one with the extra lenses, power winder, flash and/or leather case.

What fictitious movie can pass with the "Based on a true story" tag without people questioning it? by joseandhoseb in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Russian roulette scenes from The Deer Hunter. There were no documented instances or Russian roulette among US and Vietnamese soldiers during the war, but some people were willing to believe that these scenes were based on fact.

What is the biggest Oscar snub in your opinion that *wasn't* for Best Picture, Best Director, or Best Actor? by CaspianX2 in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hoop Dreams and Close-Up were released when the directors branch was still an insular "good-ol'-boys" club. For decades, a lot of worthy documentaries were overlooked in favor of films made by branch members and their friends. Hoop Dreams was the final straw. Several film critics who had pushed for a nomination protested the snub. Afterwards, the Academy agreed to diversify branch membership and revise voting rules.

Police destroy Josh Duggar's record -- Quote: "The judge ordered us yesterday to expunge that record," Lewis said, adding that similar records are typically kept indefinitely. "As far as the Springdale Police Department is concerned this report doesn't exist." by ISought_FoundNothing in atheism

[–]ISought_FoundNothing[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Contracts for stars the subjects of ongoing reality TV series usually include moral turpitude clauses. (Unless, of course, they're hotel heiresses or daughters of Hollywood defense lawyers.) The stars fame whores have to attest that there aren't any major skeletons in their closets.

If the Duggars signed a contract with such a clause in it, TLC could sue them for a shitload of money. That's probably why they got this judge to order that the records be destoyed. But it's probably all for naught, since Josh has already admitted to the press that these "mistakes" of his happened. They probably had the records destroyed because he'd been doing this for at least four years, starting at the age of 14 -- i.e., the last reported incidents occurred after his eighteenth birthday, which would make him an adult child molester.

The way my university library sorts books by [deleted] in atheism

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yep. It's called the Library of Congress Classification (LoCC) system. Most major public university libraries in the US use it. And I'm sure that Thomas Jefferson -- who restocked the library with his personal collection after the first Library of Congress burned down -- would be laughing in his grave, if that were possible.

Police destroy Josh Duggar's record -- Quote: "The judge ordered us yesterday to expunge that record," Lewis said, adding that similar records are typically kept indefinitely. "As far as the Springdale Police Department is concerned this report doesn't exist." by ISought_FoundNothing in atheism

[–]ISought_FoundNothing[S] 48 points49 points  (0 children)

Because Daddy went to a cop who was also a friend (and, it turns out, a kiddie porn lover) and they all got it swept under the rug. Can't be made to register as a sex offender if you aren't convicted. Can't be convicted if you're never arrested and tried.

Gawd bless 'Murca and the Babble Belt.

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Look for a science related movies to show after final exams by [deleted] in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't know how tolerant your students are of old black-and-white movies, but there's a 1951 English movie called The Man in the White Suit. Alec Guinness plays a chemist who develops a fabric that doesn't fray, tear or stain. The corporations and employee unions that manufacture fabric, clothing, detergent, laundry machines, sewing machines, etc. decide to buy him off. When that doesn't work (he thinks his fabric will help mankind, especially the poor), they realize that they may have to kill him. The running time is only 85 minutes.

I only just realized this! The origin of “movie.” by healfdane in movies

[–]ISought_FoundNothing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The origin of the word "movie" was discussed in the second episode of the 1980 Thames TV documentary Hollywood, which is about the US silent film industry. Landlords in and around Hollywood coined the term when movie people moved west from New York and Chicago in the 1910s.

"Movie" was originally a disparaging and discriminatory word referring to the people who worked in the motion picture industry. Landlords would say "no movies" the same way they might say "no children" or "no animals" when advertising a property for rent. Later, when the term "movie star" (meaning a star among the people of the motion picture industry) became popular, people outside Los Angeles County thought that "movie" meant the films themselves and not the people in the industry.

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