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Messages - Anonymous (User Deleted)

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2101
The Flood / Re: I did it again
« on: October 01, 2015, 12:50:45 PM »

2102
Gaming / Re: They are selling Req Pack codes with Monster and Hot Pockets
« on: October 01, 2015, 12:07:21 PM »
343 trying to remind me of halo 3 in high school

...and reminding me how I still haven't tried hot pockets before

What is it with Halo doing promo stuff with junk food? They did a promo with Halo 4 before the Mountain Dew and Dorito meme started.
Hot Pockets was a meme thing around Halo 3



2103
The Flood / Re: new sep7agon poster BETTER THAN JOCEPHALOPOD
« on: October 01, 2015, 12:43:58 AM »
a poster to surpass Metal Gear

2104
The Flood / Re: How They Do It: Plumbus
« on: September 30, 2015, 11:09:31 PM »
public access tv da bes

YouTube

2105
The Flood / Re: I want some new headphones.
« on: September 30, 2015, 10:59:53 PM »
Buy Beats by Dr. Dre.
I have some beats studios but the left speaker is dying on me. I paid like $300 for these hoes.
Don't by Beats. Stylishness in exchange for being hideously overpriced with awful sound quality to boot. Not worth it.

2106
The Flood / Re: man this commercial is cringey
« on: September 30, 2015, 08:30:00 PM »

2107
Gaming / Solar Fields returning for Mirror's Edge 2
« on: September 30, 2015, 08:28:31 PM »
http://www.mirrorsedge.com/news/solar-fields-returns-to-create-mirrors-edge-catalyst-soundtrack

EA announced today that Solar Fields, aka Magnus Birgersson, is returning to compose the Mirror's Edge sequel.

I am so skeptically hyped for this game, omg. It's a huge relief that EA DICE brought him back, because the first game's soundtrack was perfect.

Here's a sample of the new music, by the way.

hyyyyype

2108
The Flood / Re: So with all the new people...
« on: September 30, 2015, 08:19:21 PM »
B.net got ruined by the grand pegboi DeeJ. No one can post unless they've played destiny
it was ruined years ago tbh

Well yeah but they're driving away the last of us
yeah my account turned 7 years old there some time ago and i am convinced that the glory b.net once was will never come back pretty much ever
I'm just waiting for the other shoe to drop re: Bungie

it's a dreadful wait

2109
Gaming / Re: First Person Exploration Games
« on: September 30, 2015, 08:17:49 PM »
Minecraft was a financial flop.

2110
Gaming / Re: Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain Discussion Thread
« on: September 30, 2015, 08:14:07 PM »
I could ask the same question with Quiet's mission I just finished.

She was forced to speak English, yet you're telling me they didn't have Code Talker on the line like literally every other time? I suppose the storm dimmed the coms though, so that makes sense.
why can't she just write shit down
uh... because that would make sense?

2111
Serious / Secret Service wanted to discredit oversight committee chairman
« on: September 30, 2015, 07:59:19 PM »
Confidential information about Rep. Jason Chaffetz of the House Oversight Committee and Government Reform was illegally distributed through the Secret Service with the intention of discrediting him. Some of this information was leaked to the press.

Source
Quote
An assistant director of the Secret Service urged that unflattering information the agency had in its files about a congressman critical of the service should be made public, according to a government watchdog report released Wednesday.

“Some information that he might find embarrassing needs to get out,” Assistant Director Edward Lowery wrote in an e-mail to a fellow director on March 31, commenting on an internal file that was being widely circulated inside the service. “Just to be fair.”

Two days later, a news Web site reported that Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), chairman of the House Oversight Committee, had applied to be a Secret Service agent in 2003 and been rejected.

That information was part of Chaffetz’s personnel file stored in a restricted Secret Service database and required by law to be kept private.

The report by John Roth, inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security, singled out Lowery, in part because of his senior position at the agency. The report also cited Lowery’s e-mail as the one piece of documentary evidence showing the degree of anger inside the agency at Chaffetz and the desire for the information to be public.

Lowery had been promoted to the post of assistant director for training just a month earlier as part of an effort that Secret Service Director Joseph Clancy said would reform the agency after a series of high-profile security lapses. Clancy had tapped Lowery to join a slate of new leaders he installed after removing more than two-thirds of the previous senior management team.

During the inspector general’s probe, Lowery denied to investigators that he directed anyone to leak the private information about Chaffetz to the press and said his e-mail was simply a vent for his stress and anger.

The Chaffetz file, contained in the restricted database, had been peeked at by about 45 Secret Service agents, some of whom shared it with their colleagues in March and April, the report found. This prying began after a contentious March 24 House hearing at which Chaffetz scolded the director and the agency for its series of security gaffes and misconduct. The hearing sparked anger inside the agency.

The inspector general’s inquiry found the Chaffetz information was spread to nearly every layer of the service.
 
Staff members in the most senior headquarters offices, the president’s protective detail, the public affairs office, the office of investigations and field offices in Sacramento, Charlotte, Dallas and elsewhere accessed Chaffetz’s file — and many acknowledged sharing it widely, according to the report. The day after the March 24 hearing, one agent who had been sent to New York for the visit of the president of Afghanistan recalled that nearly all of the 70 agents at a briefing were discussing it.

All told, 18 supervisors, including assistant directors, the deputy director and even Clancy’s chief of staff knew the information was being widely shared through agency offices, the report said.

“These agents work for an agency whose motto — ‘Worthy of trust and confidence’ — is engraved in marble in the lobby of their headquarters building,” Roth wrote in his summary report. “Few could credibly argue that the agents involved in this episode lived up to this motto.”

Chaffetz issued this response Wednesday night in a statement to The Washington Post: “Certain lines should never be crossed. The unauthorized access and distribution of my personal information crossed that line. It was a tactic designed to intimidate and embarrass me and frankly, it is intimidating. It’s scary to think about all the possible dangers in having your personal information exposed. The work of the committee, however, will continue. I remain undeterred in conducting proper and rigorous oversight.”

Clancy said in an e-mailed statement earlier Wednesday: “I have reviewed the DHS OIG Report and have provided additional information to the DHS IG. The Secret Service takes employee misconduct very seriously, and as I have stated before, any employee, regardless of rank or seniority, who has committed misconduct will be held accountable. This incident will be no different and I will ensure the appropriate disciplinary actions are taken.

“On behalf of the men and women of the United States Secret Service, I again apologize to Representative Chaffetz for this wholly avoidable and embarrassing misconduct. Additionally, I will continue to review policies and practices to address employee misconduct and demand the highest level of integrity of all our employees.”

After reviewing the IG report, the Oversight Committee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (Md.), said in a statement that he was “deeply troubled” by what Roth’s team uncovered and that staffers who have shown themselves to be “unwilling or unable to meet the highest ethical standards” should leave the agency.

“Chairman Chaffetz and I have worked together to help restore the Secret Service to its standing as the most elite protective agency in the world,” Cummings said. “Today’s findings by the Inspector General go directly against this goal and are completely and utterly unacceptable and indefensible.”

DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson, whose department includes the Secret Service, urged in a statement that those personnel who had engaged in inappropriate conduct should be held responsible.

Roth said in his report that it was “especially ironic and troubling” that the Chaffetz information circulated so widely inside the agency and yet Clancy did not know about it. Even Clancy chief of staff Michael Biermann and Deputy Director Craig Magaw had been privy to the information, the report said, but did not alert Clancy.

Clancy had previously raised concerns about the failure of his staff to keep him properly informed. At the March 24 hearing, he said he was “infuriated” that he was not alerted by his senior management to an incident earlier that month in which two senior supervisors drove onto the White House complex after a night of drinking and crossed through an active bomb-investigation scene.

“He testified that he was ‘working furiously to try to break down these barriers where people feel that they can’t talk up the chain,’ ” Roth wrote. “Yet the Director himself did not know.”

Roth’s investigation examined not only who accessed Chaffetz’s personnel file inside the service but also who disclosed information about the file to the media. The Daily Beast first reported on April 2 that Chaffetz had once been rejected for a job at the service. The Post reported additional details later that evening.

One official told The Post that the material included a parody poster that pictured Chaffetz leading a hearing on the Secret Service from his congressional dais, with the headline, “Got BQA from the Service in 2003.” Within the Secret Service, “BQA” is an acronym meaning that a “better qualified applicant” was available.

Roth’s report said investigators were unable to pin down how The Post and the Daily Beast obtained their information. “Because of the significant number of individuals who had knowledge of Chairman Chaffetz’s application history, we were unable to conclusively determine the universe of sources of the disclosure . . . to individuals outside of government,” the report said.

Roth himself has faced criticism over his handling of the investigation because he allowed inspectors from the Secret Service’s internal affairs office to sit in on interviews and question some witnesses alongside his investigators. Legal experts and former government investigators have said the service’s involvement was a potential conflict of interest because top officials at the agency had an incentive to embarrass Chaffetz. Experts also expressed concerns that it could deter internal whistleblowers from coming forward with additional allegations of misconduct, for fear of retribution by their bosses.

2112
The Flood / Re: woah
« on: September 30, 2015, 07:45:09 PM »
Expecting an influx of new members because B.new keeps killing off their member base.

2113
Gaming / Re: Is LOTR War in the North any good?
« on: September 30, 2015, 07:42:45 PM »
You're probably better with Shadow Of Mordor tbh. Best LOTR game there is exempting maybe Conquest. WITN is a hack and slash grindfest.
Conquest was awful IIRC. I have nothing but bad memories of it.

OT: I believe the Return of the King game is actually a better War in the North-style game than War in the North.
I guess if you're not into the Battlefront class orientated games then it's not for you. I found it hella fun.
Maybe it was just the demo, but I remember it being terribly unbalanced and kind of a disappointing send-off for Pandemic  :'(

2114
Gaming / Re: Is LOTR War in the North any good?
« on: September 30, 2015, 02:15:43 PM »
You're probably better with Shadow Of Mordor tbh. Best LOTR game there is exempting maybe Conquest. WITN is a hack and slash grindfest.
Conquest was awful IIRC. I have nothing but bad memories of it.

OT: I believe the Return of the King game is actually a better War in the North-style game than War in the North.

2115
The Flood / Re: welcome to good games
« on: September 30, 2015, 02:13:28 PM »
copy that

2116
Way to ignore the fact that the committee hasn't held a hearing in nine months.
Not sure what you want me to talk about. I'm not defending the committee; I don't know very much about them. You asked if they'd found anything, I explained what they did, then you criticized it as pointless, so I clarified its significance. It's not about being slow, it's about refusing to release information as required under the Freedom of Information Act. Frankly, liberals should be the ones spearheading this; it's usually the republicans claiming information should be kept private for various reasons.
All it's confirmed is that Hillary doesn't like State Department transparency rules, but that's a different outrage entirely. There has been zero evidence of any Benghazi misconduct on her part.
I don't think anyone from the committee has ever claimed the state department's misconduct resulted in the attack. The committee isn't disciplinary in nature as far as I'm aware. Its purpose is to collect information, with the State Department's refusal to release information being the primary source of delay.
Perhaps 'misconduct' was too specific. There's nothing relevant to Benghazi that was found by the committee that changes anything. The committee didn't even break the news about the email server--The New York Times broke that story.

It was meant as a reply to your statement:

So, question - has this panel found anything of relevance on Benghazi? At all?

Quite a bit. Tens of thousands of emails and related documents, interviews of dozens of witnesses and survivors of the attack, and probably the most important: exposing Clinton's use of a personal email account when conducting state affairs and the subsequent publication of her attempt to cover up the information in the account by deleting swaths of emails and cherrypicking which to release publicly.

I really see nothing wrong with his praise of the committee. They exposed a pretty damn insidious pattern of behavior during Clinton's tenure related to Benghazi and helped inform Congress (and the public) of more details behind the attack.
We already knew that information and then some from various other sources. Still none of it directly related to Clinton's actions regarding Benghazi. Considering that the committee actually vindicated her, the correct answer to the question is no, it didn't.

2117
So, question - has this panel found anything of relevance on Benghazi? At all?

Quite a bit. Tens of thousands of emails and related documents, interviews of dozens of witnesses and survivors of the attack, and probably the most important: exposing Clinton's use of a personal email account when conducting state affairs and the subsequent publication of her attempt to cover up the information in the account by deleting swaths of emails and cherrypicking which to release publicly.

I really see nothing wrong with his praise of the committee. They exposed a pretty damn insidious pattern of behavior during Clinton's tenure related to Benghazi and helped inform Congress (and the public) of more details behind the attack.
All it's confirmed is that Hillary doesn't like State Department transparency rules, but that's a different outrage entirely. There has been zero evidence of any Benghazi misconduct on her part.

2118
Gaming / Re: Why does Steam have such poor quality control?
« on: September 30, 2015, 12:49:24 AM »
Valve just runs the marketplace, they're not publishing anything. They have zero obligation to ensure "quality control," except to avoid particularly fraudulent games like The War Z.

They use to be incredibly strict when it came to what games were allowed to be sold on steam back when they didn't have a monopoly on the market. Getting your game on steam was almost like having a gold seal of approval or something.
Huh... now that I think of it, that does sound familiar. Ancient history by now I guess.

2119
Gaming / Re: Why does Steam have such poor quality control?
« on: September 30, 2015, 12:17:29 AM »
Valve just runs the marketplace, they're not publishing anything. They have zero obligation to ensure "quality control," except to avoid particularly fraudulent games like The War Z.

2120
Gaming / Re: Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain Discussion Thread
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:30:39 PM »
I'll get back to this game after I get my Australium Gun Mettle Coin. I have to hurry up with that, it ends tomorrow ;_;

2121
The Flood / Re: Soup
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:28:41 PM »
i don't think a diet consisting solely of soup is entirely healthy

That's not what I'm saying.
nice damage control

2122
The Flood / Re: Tell Me Things.
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:28:24 PM »
- the earth is round
the earth isn't technically round because it's bumpy

soz

2123
The Flood / Re: Soup
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:27:42 PM »
i don't think a diet consisting solely of soup is entirely healthy

2124
The Flood / Re: Well the year has gone by quick once again
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:25:51 PM »
slightly better than last year cept for all the famous dudes who died

2125
The Flood / Re: stop locking my shit
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:18:32 PM »
reported

2126
The Flood / Re: happy birthday slash !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
« on: September 29, 2015, 06:17:56 PM »

2127
The Flood / Re: The Answers - Part 1
« on: September 29, 2015, 04:14:38 PM »
nice vidya mang, looking forward to Part 2.

2128
good ol' stem cell research saving the day again

YouTube

2130
Gaming / Re: Sum up The Metal Gear Solid story so far as quickly as possible
« on: September 29, 2015, 01:38:47 PM »
Super Baby Method?!?

nakecartwheels

NANOMACHINES, SON!


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