August 22, 200816 yr the ability to look at shit that is absolutely disgusting and not being phazed by it at all. the abillity to laugh at every situation and not give a shit.
August 22, 200816 yr Wixx Satan said: mygot has taught me that oh and also to have :gaysex: ...............to have bananna and pig sex?
August 24, 200816 yr insane_jr said: =[ idling or IDLE''LINGG tha channel made me drop out of elementry skewl =[ sorry elem3ntry skewl
September 2, 200816 yr To MAN THE FUCK UP EVEN MORE, in addition to continuing the spirit of giving online gamers a new gaming experience.
September 2, 200816 yr Well basically what geesus said. I don't really give a fuck about anything except my immediate family and close friends. I never get angry on the internet and rarely in real life... etc etc.
October 15, 200816 yr it showed me that the world isn't filled with just dumbasses. it's filled up with dumbasses and people with huntington's.
November 7, 200816 yr captainamerica said: myg0t has taught me how to not care You must've been one of those fucking mormons before that.
November 15, 200816 yr learning not to care from myg0t constitutes that one had mormon beliefs before learning not to care. got it.
November 15, 200816 yr myg0t has put off my suicide attempts, one night i did an ounce of heroin straight and had a shotgun in my mouth, googled and found myg0t.
November 15, 200816 yr to fuck around and not give a shit and make everyone mad myg0t fer life fuck the fuck fuck fuck fuck shit outta the fuck we're going into the ass and outta the fuck
January 17, 201114 yr When you walk onto a stage and look at the faces around the room before giving a public speech you feel nervous because you know each one is judging you. Behind each person's eyes, in their blood-fed brains, a hundred judgments are being made in the span of a few seconds, most of them negative. You dress poorly, you're trying too hard with that haircut, you look like a poseur with that outfit, your nose is too big, your hair is greasy, who are you kidding with that piercing? you're ugly, your skin is bad. In the "real world" this is happening at every event where several people are involved. The difference between meatspace and cyberspace is that in the "real world" people do not voice these thoughts. Out of training or "manners", but mostly out of fear of consequences. On the internet there is no consequnce. We "hide behind our computers." You can say whatever you're thinking. And most people do. The barrier of private thoughts is broken down--from the brain to the fingers to the keyboard to the internet. You get direct access to those private thoughts that usually go unuttered, thoughts most people would like to think aren't true. But they are. Your girlfriend wants to suck other cocks. Your marriage will get stale. Your friends don't last, and they talk shit about you all the time. You connect even less with your "family" than your "friends." The more you get to know someone the more disgusted by them you become. This is reality. People are bad. On the internet you just get to see it more clearly. "Once you realize what a joke everything is, being the Comedian is the only thing that makes sense" - The Watchmen http://images.wikia.com/watchmen/images/9/96/The_Comedian_Barbequing.jpg Edited January 17, 201114 yr by rainbow brite
April 17, 201114 yr John_Winthrop said: How has myg0t affected your beliefs, thoughts, daily habits, and life ambitions? For me, myg0t has taught me to sit back and laugh at disaster and chaos. It has also hardened my sense of what is obscene and what isn't. Please participate! dude its taught me to A: be a fagget as much as i can B: avoid getting banned and C: NOT TO LICK THE FRUIT SALAD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:emot-lol::emot-bang::emot-w00t:
April 17, 201114 yr rainbow brite said: When you walk onto a stage and look at the faces around the room before giving a public speech you feel nervous because you know each one is judging you. Behind each person's eyes, in their blood-fed brains, a hundred judgments are being made in the span of a few seconds, most of them negative. You dress poorly, you're trying too hard with that haircut, you look like a poseur with that outfit, your nose is too big, your hair is greasy, who are you kidding with that piercing? you're ugly, your skin is bad. In the "real world" this is happening at every event where several people are involved. The difference between meatspace and cyberspace is that in the "real world" people do not voice these thoughts. Out of training or "manners", but mostly out of fear of consequences. On the internet there is no consequnce. We "hide behind our computers." You can say whatever you're thinking. And most people do. The barrier of private thoughts is broken down--from the brain to the fingers to the keyboard to the internet. You get direct access to those private thoughts that usually go unuttered, thoughts most people would like to think aren't true. But they are. Your girlfriend wants to suck other cocks. Your marriage will get stale. Your friends don't last, and they talk shit about you all the time. You connect even less with your "family" than your "friends." The more you get to know someone the more disgusted by them you become. This is reality. People are bad. On the internet you just get to see it more clearly. "Once you realize what a joke everything is, being the Comedian is the only thing that makes sense" - The Watchmen http://images.wikia.com/watchmen/images/9/96/The_Comedian_Barbequing.jpg What is wrong with you?
May 8, 201113 yr rainbow brite said: When you walk onto a stage and look at the faces around the room before giving a public speech you feel nervous because you know each one is judging you. Behind each person's eyes, in their blood-fed brains, a hundred judgments are being made in the span of a few seconds, most of them negative. You dress poorly, you're trying too hard with that haircut, you look like a poseur with that outfit, your nose is too big, your hair is greasy, who are you kidding with that piercing? you're ugly, your skin is bad. In the "real world" this is happening at every event where several people are involved. The difference between meatspace and cyberspace is that in the "real world" people do not voice these thoughts. Out of training or "manners", but mostly out of fear of consequences. On the internet there is no consequnce. We "hide behind our computers." You can say whatever you're thinking. And most people do. The barrier of private thoughts is broken down--from the brain to the fingers to the keyboard to the internet. You get direct access to those private thoughts that usually go unuttered, thoughts most people would like to think aren't true. But they are. Your girlfriend wants to suck other cocks. Your marriage will get stale. Your friends don't last, and they talk shit about you all the time. You connect even less with your "family" than your "friends." The more you get to know someone the more disgusted by them you become. This is reality. People are bad. On the internet you just get to see it more clearly. "Once you realize what a joke everything is, being the Comedian is the only thing that makes sense" - The Watchmen http://images.wikia.com/watchmen/images/9/96/The_Comedian_Barbequing.jpg Adam Gopnik of The New Yorker expressed a similar thought in an article about the internet and its effects on people. Quote What we live in is not the age of the extended mind but the age of the inverted self. The things that have usually lived in the darker recesses or mad corners of our mind—sexual obsessions and conspiracy theories, paranoid fixations and fetishes—are now out there: you click once and you can read about the Kennedy autopsy or the Nazi salute or hog-tied Swedish flight attendants. But things that were once external and subject to the social rules of caution and embarrassment—above all, our interactions with other people—are now easily internalized, made to feel like mere workings of the id left on its own. (I’ve felt this myself, writing anonymously on hockey forums: it is easy to say vile things about Gary Bettman, the commissioner of the N.H.L., with a feeling of glee rather than with a sober sense that what you’re saying should be tempered by a little truth and reflection.) Thus the limitless malice of Internet commenting: it’s not newly unleashed anger but what we all think in the first order, and have always in the past socially restrained if only thanks to the look on the listener’s face—the monstrous music that runs through our minds is now played out loud. A social network is crucially different from a social circle, since the function of a social circle is to curb our appetites and of a network to extend them. Everything once inside is outside, a click away; much that used to be outside is inside, experienced in solitude. And so the peacefulness, the serenity that we feel away from the Internet,... has less to do with being no longer harried by others than with being less oppressed by the force of your own inner life. Shut off your computer, and your self stops raging quite as much or quite as loud. (LOL) Honestly I think I put it better. Read more http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2011/02/14/110214crat_atlarge_gopnik#ixzz1LnjhXGUd unimportant v.i.p.: the burden of insight Edited May 8, 201113 yr by rainbow brite
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