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pirate,piracy,documentary,idea,book,Jesse,Alexander,Mark,Kotlinski,Carluccio The Pirate's Dilemma

The Pirate's Dilemma
published by ant 6 months 1 week ago • 597 views
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"An idea for how the book might work on screen as a documentary - produced by Jesse Alexander, Mark Kotlinski and John Carluccio."

From http://torrentfreak.com/coming-soon-pirate-tv-show-080629/ and http://digg.com/software/Coming_Soon_Pirate_TV_Show ...
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Interesting that about the origin of "jankes". In my language we still call them that.

Pretty funny then that the US today is bitching and moaning about the Chinese not respecting intellectual rights.
Actually, not fun at all. Just horrible.


written by Abducted  | 6 months 1 week ago | CH
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it was never a one way street

And if indeed piracy can help business then we're really out of options...

The rebels become lawyers and bankers,

Hows it called... ?
Oh yeas -
the manufacturing of dissent


written by bluecliff  | 6 months 1 week ago | CH
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great sift. long live the pirates.


written by Trancecoach  | 6 months 1 week ago | CH
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I'm always curious when people use word etymology to politically persuade people. Here they said "janke" is Dutch meaning pirate. According to http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?l=y the etymology of Yankee is:

"1683, a name applied disparagingly by Du. settlers in New Amsterdam (New York) to English colonists in neighboring Connecticut. It may be from Du. Janke, lit. "Little John," dim. of common personal name Jan; or it may be from Jan Kes familiar form of "John Cornelius," or perhaps an alt. of Jan Kees, dial. variant of Jan Kaas, lit. "John Cheese," the generic nickname the Flemings used for Dutchmen. It originally seems to have been applied insultingly to Dutch, especially freebooters, before they turned around and slapped it on the English. A less-likely theory is that it represents some southern New England Algonquian language mangling of English. In Eng. a term of contempt (1750s) before its use as a general term for "native of New England" (1765); during the American Revolution it became a disparaging British word for all American native or inhabitants. Shortened form Yank in reference to "an American" first recorded 1778."


written by blankfist  | 5 months 2 weeks ago | CH
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Politics at its worst by Abducted

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