Author Topic: "America's Best Value Inn" (not-so-funny rant alert)  (Read 2268 times)

You don't get Virgin Fibre-Optic in your area? I live in Tuebrook and I get 100mbit/s fibre-optic for around £30 a month.
Nah. The north got a better deal than the South West.
Only Cornwall has it down here to any sort of degree.

I'm just on broadband through the ol' coppa' wires.

I think Devon will get it eventually, but it's not getting here quick enough.
We're with Sky Broadband at the moment. They do start to offer Fibre-Optic, but it's not cheap for the install if I recall correctly.
Not until BT spreads it around the country fully.

shouldn't have put funny in the title, that was terrible

I only put that there so people wouldn't assume I was just bitching. I'll change the title.


i reported it for misleading title

I'm pretty sure that doesn't fall under the ambiguous title rule.


Title misleading, rant wasn't that funny.  Also you're tribal as hell.

I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic or not, but I clearly stated in the beginning that I wasn't being tribal. I said that they were business Indians like the ones that try to scam you over the phone, not just Indians.


I've stayed at that stuffstain before too
Same internet thing they told me
loving bastards

It really was a terrible experience. ;_;

You mean it affects your internet. Effect is a noun. Affect is a verb, which means to cause an effect on.
I've decided to ignore the word affect because it confuses me too much.

The wind effects my electricity too, You guys and your modern standards suck.

Effect is a noun. Affect is a verb

Not always. Effect can be a verb, too, meaning "to bring about something."

The wind effects my electricity too, You guys and your modern standards suck.

This sentence still uses "effect" incorrectly, as it implies that the wind is creating electricity, in case you needed clarification as to what the difference between "affect" and "effect" as verbs. Also, "affect" can be a noun when you're talking about psychology. One's affect is the emotion they display, rather than the emotion they actually feel. Whenever I see someone try to correct someone on this the specific way you did, Stocking, I have a bad habit of saying this.

It was supposed to be incorrect there, That's why it's in italics.

I just flip a coin if I'm trying to work out which to use. I like English, but there are so many rules I forget, or more often, was never actually taught in school.

It was supposed to be incorrect there, That's why it's in italics.

I...

i can't pick up sarcasm on the internet wow i'm so stupid.

It was supposed to be incorrect there, That's why it's in italics.
But what if you're running off a windmill~


Those damn Indians are trying to scam us in buying AOL again?

An Indian (or Pakistani) call centre selling junk told my brother to go forget himself because he told them not to call back.

They actually called to sell, and my brother told them to stop and hung up. They then called back just to say "forget you".

I haven't read the whole thing but I'm assuming you mean from india not native american

propane tanks under critical areas
« Last Edit: November 04, 2013, 04:10:31 PM by lolz?? »

I haven't read the whole thing but I'm assuming you mean from india not native american
oh lord
He was in Oklahoma so I am sure he meant Native American.

Speaking of Native's, I haven't seen any real Native's. Most of the people I see who come out of the reservations are light skinned, blue eyed. The one's outside claim they are Cherokee.


He was in Oklahoma so I am sure he meant Native American.

Speaking of Native's, I haven't seen any real Native's. Most of the people I see who come out of the reservations are light skinned, blue eyed. The one's outside claim they are Cherokee.

No, they were Indian. Native Americans are legit. Even though they're Jewish as forget, at least you get what you're paying for.
« Last Edit: November 05, 2013, 01:10:22 AM by Moonstar Akemi »

No, they were Indian. Native Americans are legit.
Indians on the other hand, they aren't real people.