OP
ßöмßäяðîëя
Apr 12, 2004
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  • Thread Starter #28,862
    I have joked about it before because some do honestly believe that's the sole purpose of them. All I'm saying is that the powers have been given for Homeland Security to round up people and send them to the camps. It's really free legislation for Homeland to whatever they want with it, which is a scary precedent when the President can so easily declare martial law after variations to the Patriot Act. There are no checks and balances.
    Fair enough, I just don't want you to say that gay shit.
    Some guy called in to Coast to Coast (the world famous UFO and conspiracy radio show) and said he was Gordon Freeman who worked at Area 51. He fooled the host and acted like the aliens were coming for him. Pretty funny.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=biqnL84l85s
    You do realize where that came from, right?

    Why he used the name Gordon Freeman?
     

    Bjerknes

    "Top Economist"
    Mar 16, 2004
    116,996
    ßüякε;1903914 said:
    Fair enough, I just don't want you to say that gay shit.
    It's better to question than to let happen. Remember, it was easy for Hitler to achieve what he did...


    You do realize where that came from, right?

    Why he used the name Gordon Freeman?
    Yes, that video game. Half Life.

    Here's the alien guy.


    :lol2:
     
    OP
    ßöмßäяðîëя
    Apr 12, 2004
    77,164
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  • Thread Starter #28,864
    Half-Life is a science fiction first-person shooter video game developed by Valve Software and the company's debut product.

    Most of the game is set in a remote desert area of New Mexico in the Black Mesa Research Facility, a fictional complex that bears many similarities to both the Los Alamos National Laboratory and Area 51, between the years 2000 and 2009. The game's protagonist is the theoretical physicist Gordon Freeman, a graduate of the Institute for Experimental Physics and the University of Innsbruck, in Innsbruck, Austria, and Doctor of Philosophy in theoretical physics via MIT. Freeman becomes one of the survivors of an experiment at Black Mesa that goes horribly wrong, when an unexpected "resonance cascade" – a fictitious phenomenon – rips dimensional seams, devastating the facility. Aliens from another world—known as Xen—subsequently enter the facility through these dimensional seams (an event known as the "Black Mesa incident").[12]
    As Freeman tries to make his way out of the ruined facility to find help for the injured, he soon discovers that he is caught between two sides: the hostile aliens and the Hazardous Environment Combat Unit, a United States Marine Corps Special Forces division dispatched to cover up the incident by eliminating the aliens, as well as Dr. Freeman and the other surviving Black Mesa personnel. Throughout the game, a mysterious figure known (but not actually referred to in-game) as "G-Man" regularly appears, and seems to be monitoring Freeman's progress. Ultimately, Freeman uses the cooperation of surviving scientists and security officers to work his way towards the mysterious "Lambda Complex" of Black Mesa (signified with the Greek "λ" character), where a team of survivors teleport him to the alien world Xen to kill the Nihilanth, the creature keeping Xen's side of the dimensional rift open.[12]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half_life_(game)

    Best game ever, best plot, best game play, just the best.
     
    OP
    ßöмßäяðîëя
    Apr 12, 2004
    77,164
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  • Thread Starter #28,866

    swag

    L'autista
    Administrator
    Sep 23, 2003
    84,968
    ßüякε;1903932 said:
    :lol2:

    He's crying like a bitch.
    Hey, I saw the first episode of South Park. Those anal probes can be nasty...

    Which reminds me of another great Douglas Reynholm non sequitur: "God damn these electric sex pants!"
     

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