10-11
Got nipped by the Chrysler GM bailout, both.
10-11
Got nipped by the Chrysler GM bailout, both.
[QUOTE=stevemcqueen1;9306501]10/11. I shouldn't have missed the one I did, that was just stupid and obvious (Afghanistan). Probably no one else missed that one.
I get my news primarily from NPR and this place. But it can be tough to catch all of it when I'm usually mostly flipping to NPR during the commercial breaks for sports radio. I'll watch CNN during the day sometimes but I don't really care for the network's general policy of sensationalism and repetition. I used to get a subscription for The Week, well done magazine and I occasionally read it still but it's really just an abstract of the news.
Not surprised to see NPR listeners were better informed in general than most of the network consumers. But yeah, you know, it's just the liberal version of Fox News.[COLOR="Gold"]
10/11 and I missed the Afganistan one too, LOL! And I knew it, one of the things I'm not happy about with the Obama Admin., and then I miss it there, LOL!
10/11 - Got me on the Obamacare one.
9/11...#7 is nutty. Like you'd expect them not to...(no spoiler here).
11/11. I'm really not that well-informed, the questions just seemed obvious.
Here's a link that doesn't give you the first answer right off...
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2010/12...iz-to-find-out
For future reference, the URL itself often tells you what you did wrong in these situations. The end of the one in OP had "/(result)/1", deleting that did the trick.
Last edited by Enter Apotheosis; December-6th-2012 at 10:38 PM.
10 of 11.
Message too short.
11 for 11. Pretty easy questions. That said, I don't watch Fox, CNN, MSNBC or TV in general. Honest to God, I can't remember if I've turned on a TV since the Skins game Monday. And I definitely can't remember the last time I watched something on TV that wasn't sports related. The Internet is beautiful thing to stay informed with. It's just a shame that so many (older) folks don't seem able to separate the legit information sources from the bull****.
I know exactly what you're talking about. In juxtaposing side A with side B, it creates a dialectic that might not really be there. And it's a de facto statement that both sides have equal weight.
But I do like that it gives editorials from a variety of sources so I can get a summary of what the general pundit conversation is. I'm not going to places like the National Review on my own. I'm familiar enough with the sources now that I can usually tell when to roll my eyes.
I will check out The Economist though.
Last edited by stevemcqueen1; December-7th-2012 at 07:34 AM.
"John Wall will never be as good as Kyrie Irving was in his first week in the NBA" - David Falk, published February 14, 2013.
Got them all right, but it didn't register my 1st answer for whatever reason.
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"It is our true policy to steer clear of entangling alliances with any portion of the foreign world. The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is, in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible." George Washington.
"Peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations,entangling alliances with none." Thomas Jefferson.
10/11 missed the bailout one, kind of surprised the republicans didn't really campaign on that fact at all they pretty much let obama take full credit for the auto bailout
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