turzovka
Gold Member
- Nov 20, 2012
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Never the twain shall meet - meaning and origin.How many people put a pillow over their face, before they die?
What relevance does that have to Scalia's death? The pillow was above his head. Not over his face.
Next.
And I was intent on not saying another word here.
But would you correct me if I am wrong? I heard on the radio that, was it Poindexter?, he first said the pillow was on his face when the news broke. Then the radio report the next day said he (poindexter) clarified what he meant. And then he said it was above his head.
Nope. He said the the pillow was over his head. As in between his head and the headboard.
If you can find a quote of Poindexter saying that the pillow was over Scalia's face, show us. You'll find you have no idea what you're talking about.
Now if that is true, then that is the most startling fact of this whole case! He is in a panic mode scramble mode. Why? Because now he needs to lie to bring less suspicion to all this?
Its not true. The 'original quote' that you've offered us is imaginary horseshit. But it didn't stop you from offering it.
That's how conspiracies work.
Ah, B.S. The original quote was found dead with a pillow over his head. When someone says that the first thing 99% people would think was "on his head and face" --- not over his head, as in behind his head! Got it? That is why it bore suspicion. You got that?
As between his head and the head board. Exactly as Poindexter said.
So my next question is Why in the world would poindexter mention the pillow at all if it were not even touching him? Why? Why not tell us there was a lamp on the bed stand to Scalia's left, too? After all, that is just as inconsequential as some pillow behind his head?
You're really polishing a turd here. Literally calling into question Poindexter's account because he mentioned a pillow.
That's silly. Try again, this time with something of consequence.
"Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet."
The phrase never the twain shall meet was used by Rudyard Kipling, in his Barrack-room ballads, 1892. There, Kipling is lamenting the gulf of understanding between the British and the inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent.
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And here I am using the phrase to describe my lament between I, a Christian and mostly conservative, and so many secular humanists and often social liberals like yourself. : (