ellauri217.html on line 808: Kerouac appreciated what America had allowed him to do — that is, the America of freedom, which meant free markets, property rights, individualism, all polar opposites of the socialist-collectivist state hailed by his New Left appropriators. Truer words were never spoken. Just as it boggles the mind to today observe Millennials stump for “democratic socialism” on laptops and iPhones at the corner Starbucks. When Ginsberg playfully draped an American flag over Jack’s shoulders at Kesey’s place, Kerouac responded in kind: “So I took it, and I folded it up the way you’re supposed to, and I put it back on the sofa … the flag is not a rag.”
ellauri425.html on line 640: Honestly, you can’t tell me that nobody on the entire planet ever had a problem with a laptop not recognizing its charger even tho the hardware of both is fine (which is an example of one problem i tried to google)
ellauri425.html on line 642: And even if that problem is too niche, I doubt that nobody ever googled where to get a small pc or laptop fast and cheap.
xxx/ellauri068.html on line 133: Borat visits Luenell and they return to Kazakhstan together. They bring several American customs and traditions back to his village, including the apparent conversion of the people to Christianity (the Kazakh version of which includes crucifixion and torturing of Jews) and the introduction of computer-based technology, such as iPods, laptop computers and a high-definition television.
xxx/ellauri085.html on line 377: The software you are using right now… came from wealthy people. The monitor, or laptop screen, the computer, the cables or wifi, the router, modem, the internet service provider…. the chair you are sitting on, the desk your are sitting at, the clothes you are wearing….
xxx/ellauri124.html on line 407: across your laptop during Zoom meetings. An arsenal of texts to send when you’re
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