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HuskerNMO

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Everything posted by HuskerNMO

  1. This, I remember lining up to get a look at the players as a kid back in the 80's as they walked out of the locker room. The music and video may be newer, but the other was there in the late 80's at least, and obviously earlier from your post.
  2. @evan_commited77Evan BoehmIm a freakin MIZZOU TIGER #NationalChamps MU has a solid class so far, great get for them.
  3. I think he'll take the opinion of coaches and people he's worked with that actually have worked with NFL level talent than a casual fan. Cody has great size and athleticism, and a very strong arm, nobody would have said Matt Cassel was a NFL QB, but now he starts for KC.
  4. He specifically says in that article that he does not want to be in a run and shoot type offense, and says our passing game is moving in that direction. He also confirmed that he did have a concussion in the Iowa State game.
  5. NU's equipment managers take the game used jerseys and wash them for the next game, why would Suh have his after the game? I don't know if this is still the practice, but NU's equipment managers used to hold the players jerseys until after they graduated, then gave them to the players.
  6. It was a balanced offense, to be fair, take the 26 sacks out of rushing attempts and make them passing attempts. Runs 512-26= 486 Passes 476+26= 502 So in reality the passed it a bit more than they ran, but still very balanced.
  7. The official list of known missing came out today at 232, but several of those have been accounted for today. The worst thing I heard is what the makeshift morgue is going through, they have to wait to release bodies until they have DNA or dental evidence. They had a mom that positively identified her dead child visually, but then DNA proved it wasn't her child. My brother just got word that he's being dispatched to handle auto claims over the next 3 weeks (he lives in Lincoln).
  8. I don't think that I'm the one confused on the subject. Choosing to hold it doesn't change the fact that you have to pee. That Hetero Joe didn't act on the fact that he is straight until he happened to get lucky one day doesn't make him any less straight during his years of abstinence. Harry the Homo is just as homosexual whether or not he chooses to avail himself of an opportunity to get his gay sex on. Just as with straight romantic relationships, there's more to being gay than the gay sex. Feelings and actions are different. People think about killing others, the ones that do it are murderers, the ones that don't, aren't. People think about taking advantage of really drunk or passed out women, the ones that do it are rapists, the ones that don't aren't. To be clear, I am not trying to equate those things with sexual orientation, just pointing out that there is a difference between feelings and actions. For some people, those internal feelings never change about their orientation, I have posted a CDC study that showed between the ages of 18-44, 87% of people who have had same-sex experiences have also had opposite-sex experiences. Greater than 5 of 6 people that identified themselves as "gay" had gone one way or the other. That to me sounds like they are choosing, and changing their minds. How else can you explain it? I've known a girl for going on 13 years now, she was straight in high school, during the college years she "found" herself and was gay, by time she was 26 she changed her mind back and is now married to a guy and has 2 kids. That's just one example, but I promise you it's far more common than one side would want you to beleive. But to be VERY clear, I do not think the government should tolerate discrimination based on sexual orientation even if I disagree with it. I do however think that it would be wrong and unconstitutional to force churches to perform or recognize same-sex unions.
  9. So for the first x number of years of your life before you popped your cherry, you weren't straight, right? You only became straight when you chose to dip your wick in some lady business, right? Also, and this isn't directed at you, jliehr, but at anyone hiding behind their religion on the matter: What a person's preferred book of fairy tales says on the subject should be irrelevant to a decision of public policy. We don't all share your belief that some mysterious space ghost made us all and gets mad when we stick our naughty bits where some bronze age witch doctor says we shouldn't. Or when we eat shellfish. Or when we opt not to kill our friends and neighbors that don't share our beliefs. You're free to believe whatever nonsense you want, but if you want to deny someone the same opportunities available to anyone else, you'd better have a better reason than some old mythological nonsense. You're confusing feeling vs actions. An example, I feel like I have to go to the bathroom, I have a choice to not go to the bathroom, to go on the floor where I am, or find a restroom. As far as the second part, I don't really know what to say to that other than, super.
  10. couldn't agree more. People do not choose to be gay. There's two components to that IMO, do they choose what they are attracted to? Probably not (although some do I'm sure) Do they choose to act on it? Yes, they could always choose not to act on their feelings. In the same breath murderers could say they don't have a choice, they have problems so on and so forth. I would agree the feelings are there, but you always have a choice on how you act, always. Every lifestyle is a choice, sexual orientation, drug use, alcohol use, tobacco use, religion. All life is, is a series of choices. Some may be very difficult or confusing choices, some are no brainers, but they are all choices. Are you suggesting that gay people can choose to just... not be gay? Would it reasonable for me to tell you to stop acting on your 'feelings of heterosexuality'? Of course not. This isn't akin to choosing to not have that extra cheeseburger because you're on a diet. Companionship is a fundamental human desire, and to suggest that consenting gay adults not act on their feelings, which would require them to either stay single their entire life, or be incredibly unhappy in a forced heterosexual relationship, is nothing short of ridiculous. Not suggesting anything, just saying that they have a choice to live that lifestyle or not. That choice has benefits and consequences, just like eating an extra cheeseburger. You may not be able to control wanting a cheeseburger, but you do have a choice if you eat it or not, right? The difference is human beings are hard-wired to have sex. We're not hard-wired to eat cheeseburgers. There are humans that choose to be celibate, right? How can that be if they are "hard-wired" for it? This gets in to nature vs nurture as discussed before. One thing that is certain, someone can choose if they act on their tendencies or not. I am not saying that is right or wrong, or if those tendencies are natural or a result of experience, but that is a choice. Just because some people choose to be celibate doesn't change the fact that sex is a part of our basic instincts. What are you actually arguing here? Are you saying gays should be celibate? Why? I think it's a very clear point that acting on ones instincts is a choice, plain and simple. Therefore living ANY lifestyle is a choice on the most fundamental levels. You may not be able to control how you feel, but you can control how you act. Not saying anything other than living that lifestyle (or any lifestyle for that matter) is a choice, and every choice has its benefits and issues associated with it. Being gay is no worse than lying, cheating, stealing or other things that are in the bible from a Christian viewpoint. If Christians spent as much time showing love and compassion to people that they feel are sinners rather than trying to legislate our moral compasses, we would accomplish a heck of a lot more and probably be disliked a heck of a lot less.
  11. couldn't agree more. People do not choose to be gay. There's two components to that IMO, do they choose what they are attracted to? Probably not (although some do I'm sure) Do they choose to act on it? Yes, they could always choose not to act on their feelings. In the same breath murderers could say they don't have a choice, they have problems so on and so forth. I would agree the feelings are there, but you always have a choice on how you act, always. Every lifestyle is a choice, sexual orientation, drug use, alcohol use, tobacco use, religion. All life is, is a series of choices. Some may be very difficult or confusing choices, some are no brainers, but they are all choices. Are you suggesting that gay people can choose to just... not be gay? Would it reasonable for me to tell you to stop acting on your 'feelings of heterosexuality'? Of course not. This isn't akin to choosing to not have that extra cheeseburger because you're on a diet. Companionship is a fundamental human desire, and to suggest that consenting gay adults not act on their feelings, which would require them to either stay single their entire life, or be incredibly unhappy in a forced heterosexual relationship, is nothing short of ridiculous. Not suggesting anything, just saying that they have a choice to live that lifestyle or not. That choice has benefits and consequences, just like eating an extra cheeseburger. You may not be able to control wanting a cheeseburger, but you do have a choice if you eat it or not, right? The difference is human beings are hard-wired to have sex. We're not hard-wired to eat cheeseburgers. There are humans that choose to be celibate, right? How can that be if they are "hard-wired" for it? This gets in to nature vs nurture as discussed before. One thing that is certain, someone can choose if they act on their tendencies or not. I am not saying that is right or wrong, or if those tendencies are natural or a result of experience, but that is a choice.
  12. couldn't agree more. People do not choose to be gay. There's two components to that IMO, do they choose what they are attracted to? Probably not (although some do I'm sure) Do they choose to act on it? Yes, they could always choose not to act on their feelings. In the same breath murderers could say they don't have a choice, they have problems so on and so forth. I would agree the feelings are there, but you always have a choice on how you act, always. Every lifestyle is a choice, sexual orientation, drug use, alcohol use, tobacco use, religion. All life is, is a series of choices. Some may be very difficult or confusing choices, some are no brainers, but they are all choices. Are you suggesting that gay people can choose to just... not be gay? Would it reasonable for me to tell you to stop acting on your 'feelings of heterosexuality'? Of course not. This isn't akin to choosing to not have that extra cheeseburger because you're on a diet. Companionship is a fundamental human desire, and to suggest that consenting gay adults not act on their feelings, which would require them to either stay single their entire life, or be incredibly unhappy in a forced heterosexual relationship, is nothing short of ridiculous. Not suggesting anything, just saying that they have a choice to live that lifestyle or not. That choice has benefits and consequences, just like eating an extra cheeseburger. You may not be able to control wanting a cheeseburger, but you do have a choice if you eat it or not, right?
  13. couldn't agree more. People do not choose to be gay. There's two components to that IMO, do they choose what they are attracted to? Probably not (although some do I'm sure) Do they choose to act on it? Yes, they could always choose not to act on their feelings. In the same breath murderers could say they don't have a choice, they have problems so on and so forth. I would agree the feelings are there, but you always have a choice on how you act, always. Every lifestyle is a choice, sexual orientation, drug use, alcohol use, tobacco use, religion. All life is, is a series of choices. Some may be very difficult or confusing choices, some are no brainers, but they are all choices.
  14. So when did you choose to be heterosexual? Every single day I make that choice. http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/forum/2011-05-23-Sex-survey-revelations-on-gay-identity_n.htm Interesting study, 3.7% of Americans in the 18-44 year old group (37% of the us population, or 113.6 million people in the group) identified themselves as bisexual or homosexual (or 4.2 million out of the group in the 18-44 age bracket) , but 81% of that group admits to experiencing relations with a member of the opposite sex. That means that of the 4.2 million "gays", only 800,000 of them have stayed strictly with the opposite sex. Sounds like a LOT of choice to me, how about you? I do think it's hypocritical in our society though that gay men are the most discriminated against. Many people think lesbians are awesome and want to watch that, yet are revolted by gay men. It's just a double standard setup by men in our society who should find more important things to worry about. People who claim religious reasons for not accepting homosexuality based on the bible but also hang out with alcoholics and other addicts are being hypocritical and selective in their interpretation of the bible and its teachings.
  15. In your discussions with your family members, did they tell you it was a choice they made? Of course not, I don't know of any homosexual who says that it is a choice. Ultimately it comes down to my religious beliefs. Lets just leave it at that and get back to talking about football. If you know it's not a choice, I find it odd that you would judge them for "choosing" to be gay. If they were born gay, God made them that way, correct? He said he doesn't know any that would say it's a choice, but he believes that it is a choice. As do I personally, but whatever floats someones boat. Let me ask a question, is it okay to be a racist college athlete? Should we allow players on the team that are openly anti-semitic, anti-black or anti-hispanic? People were say they were just born that way or were raised that way, that doesn't mean it isn't a choice. There's a choice in just about everything humans do, some choices may feel natural, but that doesn't make them right. In America it took until 2003 to strike down laws against sodomy nationwide via Lawrence v. Texas.
  16. It was the lack of warning and the amped severity of the storm in a short time. I know at the hospital they had a 20 minute warning, or so they thought, 5 minutes later the tornado hit the hospital. If you look at the devestation to all the businesses and homes, I look at it the opposite as you and am amazed that people survived it. EMS people from the hospital I work at went over and said it's unlike anything they've ever seen, and these are guys that were some of the first to arrive after Katrina hit in New Orleans.
  17. It's different, worse is relative. I live an hour east and work at a hospital in town. My hospital has taken 90+ patients from the area, the worst part about this is many of the places people would turn to for help are gone. One of the 2 main hospitals in the city, essentially destroyed and evacuated, the other, jammed full. Wal Mart, Home Depot, Grocery Stores, gas stations, restaurants destroyed. 2,000 or so buildings/home destroyed, up to 10,000 damaged. Not only did many lose their houses, many have lost their place of employment. Extremely blessed that the storms died down after leaving Joplin and tracked east\southeast rather than their normal northeast lines, my house would have been right in the path otherwise, as would a metro area of 300K+
  18. I could also see KC as an option, closer than Denver and Dallas.
  19. http://www.gothunderwolves.com/sports/fball/2007-08/news/05162008_Jensen http://www.gothunderwolves.com/sports/fball/2008-09/news/chieftain-bonham http://www.chieftain.com/sports/local/blue-chipper-quits-pack-football-team/article_a3189a42-a3cc-594b-830d-8bdb08688be4.html Seth Jensen, a Division I transfer from the University of Nebraska, turned in his gear Friday. "Sure I'm disappointed, because I was counting on him," ThunderWolves head coach John Wristen said. "He's had a lot of surgeries, and he said his body was beat up and sore, and he said that he felt like his body couldn't take it anymore." Jensen, at 6-foot-4, 292 pounds, was a highly touted recruit out of Fort Morgan High School by several scouting services. Jensen, however, was running with the second unit at nose guard. Through nine practices, he was unable to unseat former Pueblo South High School standout Victor Quintana as the starter at that position. The ThunderWolves are thin at offensive line, and moving Jensen to that side of the ball was an option - one that didn't sit well with the sophomore. Several players already have checked it in and no coach, including Wristen, wants to talk about players who aren't in camp. The ThunderWolves, however, celebrated Jensen's arrival and were excited about his potential. "You have to coach and play with the guys who are here," Wristen said. "College football is for guys that truly love the game. We've had nine straight practices . . . and it is a grind. Those who love it fight through it. "We live in a Playstation society. Guys play the video game and when the going gets tough, they hit the reset button and start over. You can't do that in life. It's too easy to quit nowadays."
  20. Bubba can take the money and negotiate the college money into his contract. http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/official_info/scholarship.jsp?content=guide_post_20041003
  21. Kiper's latest also has Prince going to the Bucs at 20th FWIW.
  22. Every Adidas school, and most Nike schools are going to the tighter fit. They're lighter, and more difficult to hold onto.
  23. Don't know, there's a bunch for other teams in their Facebook gallery, several look new. But several also look like there was some photoshop work done to the jerseys. I certainly like them better than our 2010 jerseys FWIW.
  24. Saw these the other day, if this is correct, we're dropping the numbers for 2011 on the shoulder pads. That's a good thing, because Wisconsin's are even closer to ours now
  25. I've said it before and will say it again, there was no magic in the plays that we ran under TO. A majority of our playbook was taken from other teams and were concepts from other teams. In fact, until the national title runs TO's offenses came up short more often than not in big games against good teams. What happened during the run was a coaching staff that sold out 100% to get the best players on the field, and they were all on the same page giving everything they had to the game. Don't forget that run left TO in very poor health, which led him to step away. The level of talent in that staff, and their experience running that offense over years and years is what made it great. Not a series of lines on a notebook showing players where to go. It was about execution and physical football, something that our offensive staff isn't experienced enough to do at this point. Fans often confuse the playbook with the success, it was a group of coaches with tremendous experience that had many years refining their craft and learning from their previous failures. It's not like TO could throw that playbook at them, we run through fall camp and go win a national title with Beck calling the plays. Beck needs to install what he's comfortable with, and make sure all of the offensive staff is on the same page giving their all for the success on the field.
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