Search Results

  1. White_Rook
    Transform and roll out!
    Post by: White_Rook, Aug 15, 2007 in forum: The Spam Zone
  2. White_Rook
    90% commonality between human and ape hemoglobin protein is all I will ever need.
    Post by: White_Rook, Aug 15, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  3. White_Rook
    One day a man got up and went around talking about how good life would be if we were just a little bit nicer to one another. How hard is it to return to something like?
    Post by: White_Rook, Aug 15, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  4. White_Rook
    For women it eventually becomes impossible because of menopause. But from anywhere up until that time they're still able to have children. The basics behind it concern the fact that we age because our genetic codes degrade.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 30, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  5. White_Rook
    Studies have shown there to be a correlation between a woman's age and the probability of genetic defects, that being that as the age of a woman increases so does the chance that the child/children she carries will be born with genetic deficiencies. This is why you don't see many elderly couples still rearing children.

    As for teens just hitting puberty, we need to face the fact that they are growing up in a world where they are learning about things like sex a lot faster. At puberty males and females are perfectly able to reproduce, all it comes down to is how they are raised and taught. Sex is good but teen pregnancy never is.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 29, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  6. White_Rook
    I've only observed it as the most probable cause for existence. In my opinion the odds of the Universe being created with the compression of matter and it's immediate explosion outward seem too hollow. I'd imagine that another force was at work, just what it was is the whole matter of the great debate. I can't help but see some sort of genius behind evolution. Like Lego it started out with one tiny 2x2 block, and suddenly there are entire structures. I've always thought of science as making method out of myth, not completely destroying it. For years people thought that every thing in existence is simply a balance of fire, water, wind, and earth. Now we know that we're comprised of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and other organic elements- in fact the whole meaning of 'element' has changed altogether.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  7. White_Rook
    135 as of now.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: The Spam Zone
  8. White_Rook
    Post

    Animatrix

    I enjoyed it. It was great how you could piece the much larger story together.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: Movies & Media
  9. White_Rook
    The second generation Black Power Ranger does Ichigo's voice... he should've stayed as the Black ranger.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: The Spam Zone
  10. White_Rook
    Well you're just beating around the bush with that statement. Never did anyone say that just humans evolved. Evolution is an on-going process that encompasses all organisms. Some simply have fewer evolutionary transformations that aren't as noticeable.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  11. White_Rook
    ...That were buried millions of years ago and preserved in the fallen sediment.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  12. White_Rook
    We can imagine such figures like Christ and Buddha who had the whole picture right, yet we fail to aspire to them. The more organized it becomes, the worse people become with it.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  13. White_Rook
    One man's miracle or intervention of a divine being is another man's streak of luck. And like I said earlier, the whole self-enlightened thing never comes off in a good way. It's like if I were to say Sora healed my cancer with curaga,
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 26, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  14. White_Rook
    Religious extremism at its best. By that logic, those who speak on the "church's" behalf regarding how Harry Potter is evil are against all thought.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 25, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  15. White_Rook
    Tom Riddle dies. The end.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 25, 2007 in forum: Literature
  16. White_Rook
    The same could be said for almost any other action that we are capable of performing. The incentives range from personal gain to psychological instability.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 25, 2007 in forum: Discussion
  17. White_Rook
    I tip my hat to these Pirates. ARRRRRR!
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 24, 2007 in forum: Gaming
  18. White_Rook
    Again with the self-proclaimed enlightened testimonials. If people are going to at least argue in favour of Religious beliefs it isn't difficult to do it without the whole miracle thing. Bringing up personal experience about how a priest touched your cousin's sister's best friend's aunt and cured her cancer means nothing in a debate. To be truthful it just makes you look like you're a few noodles short of a ramen bowl.

    On another note, I hear these things called "fawsulls" are on display in museums.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 24, 2007 in forum: Debate Corner
  19. White_Rook
    Post

    Soushrook

    There was a big mid-air motif that day. All the other photos I have are either of us jumping vertically, from swings, or at each other. I specifically remember saying "Ong Bak" a lot when trying to explain my vision for this picture to Soush.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 21, 2007 in forum: The Spam Zone
  20. White_Rook
    Well I'd imagine that having a little brother or sister around isn't a bad thing. It's just something you have to deal with. All it means is that you're going to have to be a little more independent.
    Post by: White_Rook, Jul 21, 2007 in forum: The Spam Zone