Author Topic: British Dental Health, and Overweight Americans.  (Read 1341 times)

Offline Swoop

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British Dental Health, and Overweight Americans.
« Reply #60 on: October 09, 2002, 03:34:21 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by lazs2
swoop... met you briefly at the con...  I am sure we would get along fine.   You can move into my neiborhood...  come on over... I'll buy you a gun or 6 and a musclecar and introduce ya to my dentist.   You will fit in just fine.
lazs


:) I'm sure we would.

Please dont buy me a gun though, after the time spend on the range with Puck, Rip, Curval and....er.....that other fella who's name I forgot but had a colt .45 with 280 g ammo......I'm almost positive I'd end up shooting someone.  I'll never forget the story Udie came out with: "9mm or .45.......I never had to shoot a man twice with a .45" :eek:

And.....ya can keep the musclecar, I'll stick with my rice burning pocket rocket thanks.

Plus, my teeth are just fine appart from the missing one.  :D  Maybe a bleeching kit would be useful, all the caffine and nicotine takes it's toll.....



But no, I could never live in the US.......I love Arbies too much.  Luckily we dont have Arbies in Europe or I'd weigh around 350lbs.



P.S.  EDIT:  And Presidents choice cookies........*homer sound*
« Last Edit: October 09, 2002, 03:37:49 PM by Swoop »

Offline Dowding (Work)

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« Reply #61 on: October 10, 2002, 03:38:18 AM »
Urchin - that's not football you play - it's some padded up, tight short wearing, face painted version of handball.

Besides, how many people on this board play your 'football'? So saying one sport is better than another is a moot point, if you don't actually play any sport at all. :D

PS. Rugby is better than American football if you like action.

Offline Swoop

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« Reply #62 on: October 10, 2002, 05:57:02 AM »
Actually Dowd, I used to think that about football as well......and I used to be a 2nd row forward......see, with Rugger you're not actually getting tackled that much and when you do it's generally only 1 or 2 blokes at once.  In football these lads are getting pounded every play, 400lbs offensive liners jumping up and down on your head......without the pads there'd be deaths every game.  


Offline Dowding (Work)

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« Reply #63 on: October 10, 2002, 06:13:32 AM »
Sure Swoop, but take the pads away and you'd have rules to stop dangerous tackles... wait a minute... then you'd have... rugby! ;)

Besides, I was reading a couple of months ago about how the introduction of shoulder pads in Rugby Union has actually increased the number of injuries. Basically, players become over-confident and make tackles that they would otherwise be more cautious about.

Offline funkedup

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« Reply #64 on: October 10, 2002, 07:57:06 AM »
Dangerous tackles are what it's all about.

Offline lazs2

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« Reply #65 on: October 10, 2002, 09:14:31 AM »
swoop... you probly wouldn't like my 44mags then.  
lazs

Offline Dowding (Work)

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« Reply #66 on: October 10, 2002, 09:19:49 AM »
Dangerous tackles... and no skill? :p

Offline Ripsnort

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« Reply #67 on: October 10, 2002, 09:20:52 AM »
Dowding, do you play sports?

Offline straffo

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« Reply #68 on: October 10, 2002, 09:35:17 AM »
It remind me an horrible expression of our local slang (argot in french ...)

You will hate me dowding :p

seen here :  http://www.notam02.no/~hcholm/altlang/ht/French.html

les Anglais (noun, masculine, plural)

 the Redcoats (the Red Flag, etc...) French, as any other language, has numerous periphrastic and euphemistic expressions to indicate female menstruation, a phenomenon that our male-dominated societies, until recently, did not consider dignified enough to even mention in society. The image of blood leads automatically to "les Anglais ont débarqué" (the Redcoats have landed), which proves how much the French loved the English. Other potential phrases include "Ma tante Rose a débarqué" (Aunt Rosie's arrived), "j'ai mes fleurs" (i've got my flowers - roses, probably), "j'ai mes ours" (i've got my bears), or the flat and very BCBG "je suis indisposée", equivalent to "I'm sick" in English and "Ich bin krank" in German. To be fair, let's admit that Tampax and other tampons certainly changed the outlook on periods: until then, most women had to wear big chunks of linen between their legs, and male children were inevitably exposed to bloody rags in chamberpots or other sanitary fixtures, certainly reinforcing negative visions of menstrual blood.

Offline Dowding (Work)

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« Reply #69 on: October 10, 2002, 09:41:11 AM »
I play football every week, Ripsnort. I also snowboard, and have been known to ski. In my distant past, I played Rugby. Up until recently, I rowed competitively.

And Straffo - that's disgusting and offensive. ;)

Offline Urchin

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« Reply #70 on: October 10, 2002, 09:49:39 AM »
Having played both (granted, only at the intramurel level), here is what I think.  You'll get a helluva lot better cardiovascular workout playing rugby.  The whoopee game just never seems to stop.  Also, there is *more* hitting in rugby, but it is a lot less violent.  Rugby, in my opinion, is kind of like a mix between soccer and football (U.S. style).  Football is a tougher game.  You've got to be bigger and stronger to play football competitvely, compared to rugby (in my experience).  People are looking to to take you down, and they are looking to take you down *HARD*.  You might think that the only people that really get hammered are the wide recievers, running backs, and quarterbacks.  Not true.  You come around your end blitzing the quarterbacks blindside and a tackle pops you in YOUR blindside, and you feel it.  I've hit the ground so hard that my teeth clicked (well, they would have but for the mouthpiece).. and thats on DEFENSE.  

I saw a fair share of broken bones and other assorted injuries, but they tend to be a lot more severe in football.  You'll get broken fingers, broken noses, maybe a ripped ear (which is rather disgusting to look at) playing rugby.  I never SAW anything more harmful than that.  Even playing at the intramural level in football, I saw a kid break a leg, a couple broken ankles, a buttload of hyperextended knees, a couple broken wrists, and other more minor injuries (sprains, pulls, etc.).  

There is a reason that there are ambulance crews standing by at all college and pro football games.

Offline Dowding (Work)

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« Reply #71 on: October 10, 2002, 10:09:44 AM »
I'm only taking the piss. ;) It's a tough game, I'm sure.

I never played rugby at a really high level, but a friend did. Rugby League in fact, and he almost went pro. Anyway, the worst injury I've ever witnessed occured while watching his team. A guy basically was hit and spun around at a dizzying speed. Unfortunately, another player's knee got in the way, and the spinning guy hit this guy's knee with his cheekbone. Which shattered. The guy just started to scream like some stuck pig - I nearly vomitted. I've never seen someone in so much pain or make a noise like that. It was inhuman.

But football is my game. Love watching it, love playing it.