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RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 12:55:34 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

...your claim was roundly disproved.



No, it wasn't.  But do continue trying to pretend.



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RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 12:56:50 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


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quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl


So according to you, she wasn't raped... yeah, she just made it up.



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RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:00:08 PM   
Hillwilliam


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MasterSlaveLA

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

...your claim was roundly disproved.



No, it wasn't.  But do continue trying to pretend.




One word. BULLSHIT!

Why don't you try reading an article before posting next time so you don't look like an idiot?

That way you won't have to lie and whine when you get called on it.


Keep backtracking and moving those goalposts tho. It's funny as hell to watch you squirm.

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Profile   Post #: 43
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:00:19 PM   
tazzygirl


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I never said she wasnt raped.

Try not to put words into my mouth. I bite.


So the Occupy Shit-Bags FINALLY pull off an event without RAPE, CONSPIRING TO HIDE RAPE, RACISM, RIOTING, VIOLENCE, VANDALISM, TERRORISM, LOOTING, or MURDER. Well gee... give the pathetic loser-scum a lollipop.

Murder... you cant prove.

OWS... the organization didnt rape anyone.

I hadnt heard of any looting... but it wouldnt surprise me.

The rest? A result of protests... and even the local police have stated some of the vandalism was the result of Black Bloc, not the protesters.

So, what proof do you have about rape, since you accused OWS of raping?


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Profile   Post #: 44
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:03:16 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

BULLSHIT!



That about sums everything you've posted thus far.



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RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:04:19 PM   
Hillwilliam


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MasterSlaveLA

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

BULLSHIT!



That about sums everything you've posted thus far.



Awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww. did I hurt it's widdle feewings so it can't do anyting but try and get personal.

Call da WAAAAAAAAAMbulance.

_____________________________

Kinkier than a cheap garden hose.

Whoever said "Religion is the opiate of the masses" never heard Right Wing talk radio.

Don't blame me, I voted for Gary Johnson.

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Profile   Post #: 46
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:06:26 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


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1)  The murder -- happened, and under investigation.

2)  The rape -- happened, and an OWS person arrested.


Yet more reading for the SCUM you are so happy to defend...

"A 25-year-old woman from Atlantic City called authorities about 7:45 p.m. to report a rape, Lt. Ray Evers, a Philadelphia police spokesman, said. A 50-year-old man from Michigan, who also has an address in Philadelphia, was in custody and faced charges of rape and related offenses, Evers said.

The suspect was arrested shortly after the 911 call. Authorities believe both the woman and the suspect were participants in the Occupy Philadelphia encampment, which consists of scores of tents pitched out on the plaza."

http://articles.philly.com/2011-11-13/news/30394158_1_tent-camp-authorities





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RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:07:18 PM   
tazzygirl


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Fail yet again. You still didnt prove OWS raped anyone.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to MasterSlaveLA)
Profile   Post #: 48
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:07:27 PM   
thompsonx


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MasterSlaveLA

 
Baroccoli O'Vacation is the laziest piece-of-shit fuck-tard out there -- the only thing he continues to "run" is his lying, class-warfare mouth, and our country down the toilet.  Should take a lesson from some of America's "CEOs".

Who is baroccoli o'vacation???


How CEOs Get the Energy To Work Marathon Days
By Carol Hymowitz, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal 


THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE of Tyco International, L. Dennis Kozlowski, calls his job "a game of endurance."

He starts work each day at dawn and goes nonstop for 16 hours or more. Last Wednesday, for example, he had a 6 a.m. meeting with investment bankers in Boston and then flew to Livingston, N.J., to meet for several hours with employees of CIT Group, the financial-services business that Tyco just announced plans to acquire.

He then traveled to New York City to have dinner with the chief executive of a company Tyco does business with, and didn't check into his hotel there until after 11 p.m.

He slept for just five hours -- his usual regimen -- and was on the phone the next morning at 5:30 a.m. with staffers in Europe. Then, he held a series of back-to-back meetings all day with employees and investors before heading to a dinner at a Chinese restaurant "to talk about synergies with CIT," he says.

"This is what it takes to be a CEO, and if you're not willing to do it you should step out of the way so someone else can take your place," says Mr. Kozlowski, who is 54 years old and believes he was born with the ability to keep going when everyone around him wants to stop and rest. "As a kid, I drove my parents crazy."

THIS BOUNDLESS ENERGY is a common trait in most CEOs, and a critical one. As business becomes more global and technology calls for 24/7 performance, those who lead companies must be able to move through several time zones several times a week, and communicate with staff and customers around the clock.

"Travel time used to be downtime, but now I'm on the phone or e-mail while on airplanes," says Mr. Kozlowski, who worries that if he stays out of touch for even a few hours he'll miss something important. "While you sleep, things are going on in Asia."

So how do CEOs sustain and replenish their high energy levels? Mr. Kozlowski says he refuels on weekends -- but that doesn't mean rest. He rides his motorcycles and races his sailboat.

Apple Computer's Steve Jobs, 46, stays energized during the week by avoiding caffeine and drinking lots of water throughout his long workdays. T.J. Rodgers, president and CEO of Cypress Semiconductor, rarely breaks for lunch. But five times a week, the 55-year-old Mr. Rodgers leaves his office midday for a five- or six-mile run. When he wants to do an extra mile or two, he'll give up changing time and sit in his wet running clothes for the rest of the afternoon. "The jogging keeps him focused and strong," says a spokesperson.

Unlike scientists, scholars or even surgeons, who must concentrate for long periods of time on one task or goal, business leaders must move quickly from situation to situation, handling scores of disconnected events each day.

CEOs tend to thrive on the pace and diversity. "Sometimes you have fires blazing in one place that you need to put out, and then you must quickly shift gears and go calmly to another location where you have to do something ceremonious," says Kay Koplovitz, the 55-year-old CEO of Working Women Network.

SHE TRIES TO RESERVE some energy for reflection and some strategic thinking. "If you are always reacting to people and things, you are not moving your business forward," says Ms. Koplovitz.

Each day, she ensures she takes some time to think without interruptions. She typically does this while working out at the gym -- or when traveling. She also boosts her energy by participating in adventure sports.

"When you are whitewater rafting in class-five waters or altitude hiking, you have to pay rapt attention and can't let thoughts about business intrude," she says. That focus "takes my energy but also frees me [from everyday concerns] and so restores my energy."

Even the most vigorous CEOs, however, must learn to let go of some workplace tasks, or risk burnout. Kimberly-Clark Chairman and CEO Wayne R. Sanders, 53, realized while on a 15-day swing through Asia two years ago that he needed help overseeing his company's expanded global businesses.

He had been logging thousands of miles flying overseas each month and then putting in marathon hours between trips to catch up with work at Dallas headquarters. Unable to sleep one night in a foreign hotel, reading a book and eating a candy bar, he realized he needed to delegate some of his workload. Soon after, he named a No. 2, President Thomas J. Falk.

Mr. Sanders now focuses on investor relations and other CEO matters at home, while Mr. Falk, 42, travels extensively, managing Kimberly-Clark's world-wide operations.

Michael Fisch, the 38-year-old president of American Securities Capital Partners, a New York leveraged buyout firm, admits, "I find work more exciting when I'm running very hard and approaching things with a sense of urgency."

As a child, he says, he thought about "whether it's more efficient to button your shirt top to bottom or bottom to top." But he knows the danger of never resting. "I know I'm in trouble," he says, "when I start thinking that sleep is inefficient."

 

http://www.markrosa.com/Stock%20Market%20News/ceo_work_hours.htm

Looks to me like he spends a lot of time flying around and eating in nice restaurants.
You did notice that this is from the wsj which it's owner rupert murdoch, has described as the propaganda arm of the gop.





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Profile   Post #: 49
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:08:17 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


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No... you merely further destroyed any credibility you think you have. 



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RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:09:43 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


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Keep defending the RAPISTS... it's okay, you're a Lefty... I expect your hypocrisy.



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Profile   Post #: 51
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:10:38 PM   
Lucylastic


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ohhh callbacks, how old are you three? "I know you are but what am I" that comment is lamer than a quadraplegic in a coma
rubber, glue? shit,blanket? yawwwwwwwwn
get a clue and try to have an adult insult at least

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Profile   Post #: 52
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:10:47 PM   
tazzygirl


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Joined: 10/12/2007
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Let me try and explain where you went wrong in your accusations.

If a police officer rapes a woman.... do you believe the Police Department committed rape?



_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to MasterSlaveLA)
Profile   Post #: 53
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:12:45 PM   
Lucylastic


Posts: 40310
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quote:

ORIGINAL: MasterSlaveLA

 
Keep defending the RAPISTS... it's okay, you're a Lefty... I expect your hypocrisy.



who is defending a rapist?
please show me where?
ooh thats right, its the same place as your proof about the murdering rapists that are the OWS

_____________________________

(•_•)
<) )╯SUCH
/ \

\(•_•)
( (> A NASTY
/ \

(•_•)
<) )> WOMAN
/ \

Duchess Of Dissent
Dont Hate Love

(in reply to MasterSlaveLA)
Profile   Post #: 54
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:13:50 PM   
Hillwilliam


Posts: 19394
Joined: 8/27/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx


quote:

ORIGINAL: MasterSlaveLA

 
Baroccoli O'Vacation is the laziest piece-of-shit fuck-tard out there -- the only thing he continues to "run" is his lying, class-warfare mouth, and our country down the toilet.  Should take a lesson from some of America's "CEOs".

Who is baroccoli o'vacation???


How CEOs Get the Energy To Work Marathon Days
By Carol Hymowitz, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal 


THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE of Tyco International, L. Dennis Kozlowski, calls his job "a game of endurance."

He starts work each day at dawn and goes nonstop for 16 hours or more. Last Wednesday, for example, he had a 6 a.m. meeting with investment bankers in Boston and then flew to Livingston, N.J., to meet for several hours with employees of CIT Group, the financial-services business that Tyco just announced plans to acquire.

He then traveled to New York City to have dinner with the chief executive of a company Tyco does business with, and didn't check into his hotel there until after 11 p.m.

He slept for just five hours -- his usual regimen -- and was on the phone the next morning at 5:30 a.m. with staffers in Europe. Then, he held a series of back-to-back meetings all day with employees and investors before heading to a dinner at a Chinese restaurant "to talk about synergies with CIT," he says.

"This is what it takes to be a CEO, and if you're not willing to do it you should step out of the way so someone else can take your place," says Mr. Kozlowski, who is 54 years old and believes he was born with the ability to keep going when everyone around him wants to stop and rest. "As a kid, I drove my parents crazy."

THIS BOUNDLESS ENERGY is a common trait in most CEOs, and a critical one. As business becomes more global and technology calls for 24/7 performance, those who lead companies must be able to move through several time zones several times a week, and communicate with staff and customers around the clock.

"Travel time used to be downtime, but now I'm on the phone or e-mail while on airplanes," says Mr. Kozlowski, who worries that if he stays out of touch for even a few hours he'll miss something important. "While you sleep, things are going on in Asia."

So how do CEOs sustain and replenish their high energy levels? Mr. Kozlowski says he refuels on weekends -- but that doesn't mean rest. He rides his motorcycles and races his sailboat.

Apple Computer's Steve Jobs, 46, stays energized during the week by avoiding caffeine and drinking lots of water throughout his long workdays. T.J. Rodgers, president and CEO of Cypress Semiconductor, rarely breaks for lunch. But five times a week, the 55-year-old Mr. Rodgers leaves his office midday for a five- or six-mile run. When he wants to do an extra mile or two, he'll give up changing time and sit in his wet running clothes for the rest of the afternoon. "The jogging keeps him focused and strong," says a spokesperson.

Unlike scientists, scholars or even surgeons, who must concentrate for long periods of time on one task or goal, business leaders must move quickly from situation to situation, handling scores of disconnected events each day.

CEOs tend to thrive on the pace and diversity. "Sometimes you have fires blazing in one place that you need to put out, and then you must quickly shift gears and go calmly to another location where you have to do something ceremonious," says Kay Koplovitz, the 55-year-old CEO of Working Women Network.

SHE TRIES TO RESERVE some energy for reflection and some strategic thinking. "If you are always reacting to people and things, you are not moving your business forward," says Ms. Koplovitz.

Each day, she ensures she takes some time to think without interruptions. She typically does this while working out at the gym -- or when traveling. She also boosts her energy by participating in adventure sports.

"When you are whitewater rafting in class-five waters or altitude hiking, you have to pay rapt attention and can't let thoughts about business intrude," she says. That focus "takes my energy but also frees me [from everyday concerns] and so restores my energy."

Even the most vigorous CEOs, however, must learn to let go of some workplace tasks, or risk burnout. Kimberly-Clark Chairman and CEO Wayne R. Sanders, 53, realized while on a 15-day swing through Asia two years ago that he needed help overseeing his company's expanded global businesses.

He had been logging thousands of miles flying overseas each month and then putting in marathon hours between trips to catch up with work at Dallas headquarters. Unable to sleep one night in a foreign hotel, reading a book and eating a candy bar, he realized he needed to delegate some of his workload. Soon after, he named a No. 2, President Thomas J. Falk.

Mr. Sanders now focuses on investor relations and other CEO matters at home, while Mr. Falk, 42, travels extensively, managing Kimberly-Clark's world-wide operations.

Michael Fisch, the 38-year-old president of American Securities Capital Partners, a New York leveraged buyout firm, admits, "I find work more exciting when I'm running very hard and approaching things with a sense of urgency."

As a child, he says, he thought about "whether it's more efficient to button your shirt top to bottom or bottom to top." But he knows the danger of never resting. "I know I'm in trouble," he says, "when I start thinking that sleep is inefficient."

 

http://www.markrosa.com/Stock%20Market%20News/ceo_work_hours.htm

Looks to me like he spends a lot of time flying around and eating in nice restaurants.
You did notice that this is from the wsj which it's owner rupert murdoch, has described as the propaganda arm of the gop.






You forgot the rafting trips and mountain vacations.

I'm also skeptical about someone in their mid 50's who isn't a fulltime guide navigating classV rapids unless it's one of those rafting trips on the Colorado or similar. In that case, you're basically a passenger.



_____________________________

Kinkier than a cheap garden hose.

Whoever said "Religion is the opiate of the masses" never heard Right Wing talk radio.

Don't blame me, I voted for Gary Johnson.

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Profile   Post #: 55
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:19:17 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


Posts: 3991
Status: offline
 
Let's try to explain where YOU went wrong... if an OWS person is arrested for RAPE (regardless of WHO is raped... in this case, it was an OWS girl), then it's factually accurate to state that "rape", as well as violence, vandalism, and so forth has taken place at OWS.  Not exactly rocket-science.



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Profile   Post #: 56
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:21:46 PM   
LaTigresse


Posts: 26123
Joined: 1/15/2006
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quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


What do you think?  Is "America" lazy?

Firm




I would say that the greater percentile of U.S. citizens are indeed, quite lazy.


_____________________________

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Just because you are well educated, articulate, and can use big, fancy words, properly........does not mean you are right!

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Profile   Post #: 57
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:22:48 PM   
tazzygirl


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Actually, not quite true. Someone can be arrested for rape who never committed the crime. But thats not what you said.

So the Occupy Shit-Bags FINALLY pull off an event without RAPE, CONSPIRING TO HIDE RAPE, RACISM, RIOTING, VIOLENCE, VANDALISM, TERRORISM, LOOTING, or MURDER. Well gee... give the pathetic loser-scum a lollipop.


You accused OWS of rape. Not one person... the group. And, as of yet, you cannot prove the group raped anyone.

You accused them of murder, something you have already admitted you cannot prove.

< Message edited by tazzygirl -- 11/14/2011 1:25:18 PM >


_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to MasterSlaveLA)
Profile   Post #: 58
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:23:23 PM   
MasterSlaveLA


Posts: 3991
Status: offline
 
1)  The murder -- happened, and under investigation.

2)  The rape -- happened, and an OWS person arrested.

"A 25-year-old woman from Atlantic City called authorities about 7:45 p.m. to report a rape, Lt. Ray Evers, a Philadelphia police spokesman, said. A 50-year-old man from Michigan, who also has an address in Philadelphia, was in custody and faced charges of rape and related offenses, Evers said.

The suspect was arrested shortly after the 911 call. Authorities believe both the woman and the suspect were participants in the Occupy Philadelphia encampment, which consists of scores of tents pitched out on the plaza."

http://articles.philly.com/2011-11-13/news/30394158_1_tent-camp-authorities



Close your eyes all you want, but in doing so, you DEFEND the rapist by alleging it didn't happen -- despite the OWS guy being arrested for this very thing... RAPE!!!  Good thing the rape victim doesn't need to count on YOU for any help.



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Profile   Post #: 59
RE: Are Americans "Lazy"? - 11/14/2011 1:24:57 PM   
thompsonx


Posts: 23322
Joined: 10/1/2006
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quote:

You forgot the rafting trips and mountain vacations.

I'm also skeptical about someone in their mid 50's who isn't a fulltime guide navigating classV rapids unless it's one of those rafting trips on the Colorado or similar. In that case, you're basically a passenger.


One has to wonder how much time these folks spend at work. Learning how to climb or negotiate class 5 white water takes a fair amount of time to learn and large amount of time to keep sharp at it.

(in reply to Hillwilliam)
Profile   Post #: 60
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