RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (Full Version)

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TNDommeK -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (12/30/2015 4:22:06 PM)

This thread right here is why I come back to the forums.
That and I have people here that I enjoy talking with and hearing their ideas and such.




Spiritedsub2 -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (12/30/2015 6:05:05 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: mnottertail


quote:

ORIGINAL: royalarchmason

I entered this thread late and do not know what it's about.



Its about me soliciting blowjobs.

blowjob success level: gruesome.


Shit. Now THAT is the true tragedy here.




Greta75 -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (12/31/2015 3:04:29 AM)

FR
While it looks like a sock trolling himself and talking to himself.

But I think for me, it all started with IRC. I absolutely love IRC, because you can go into a chat room of a topic that you are interested in and just hang out and chat with people who have the same interest and passions as you. It just made finding people with the same interest sooo much easier! I formed alot of friendships through IRC that translated into real life friendships. And met people out of my social circle I would have never met or found out that we had so much in common. But that was when it first started out when lots of genuinely curious people were just starting to use the internet and explore it's capabilities to connect with others. Now it's just filled with pervs who wants to talk dirty. And I'm no longer bothering with it.

Now message board takes it to another level. In a chat room, you need to give instant replies which is time consuming. A message board is like emails. You reply whenever you are free to reply. And if you're never free to dig it up and reply, no big deal too. It's a little like, you get to read alot of people's opinion of an issue or topic you give a damn about at your own time and own target.

It's just great for me.




coldwarlore -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (1/2/2016 8:08:09 AM)

THE Cold War was a sustained state of political and military tension between the United States, its allies and Soviet Russia which lasted from 1947 to 1991.

It was called the Cold War because it never featured direct military action, since both sides possessed nuclear weapons, and their use would probably guarantee their mutual assured destruction. Cycles of relative calm would be followed by high tension which could have led to war. One of the most well known was Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 when an American U-2 spy plane discovered Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba.


What followed was 13 day stand off between the world’s two largest super powers. President John F Kennedy and his counterpart Khrushchev confronted each other and after a week of secret deliberations Kennedy announced the find to the world and imposed a naval blockade on Cuba. The crisis was resolved at the last minute on October 28 when Khrushchev accepted the U.S. offer.

During this time a British civilian organisation called the United Kingdom Warning and Monitoring Organisation (UKWMO) utilising Royal Observer Corps (ROC) premises and its uniformed volunteers was on high alert. In Britain the public would have had a mere four minute warning of the approach of nuclear missiles and it was the job of the Royal Observer Corps to warn the UK Military and civilian authorities of the impending attack, report the explosions and plot the path of the deadly nuclear fallout.

Two ROC sites were established in St Helens, at Eccleston Hill in 1965 and Billinge Hill in 1960. Both sites were mainly underground sites and formed a network of 1563 sites, each about 7-8 miles apart across the UK.


The posts where grouped in clusters of 3-4 with a main master post in each cluster. The master post had a VHF radio as well as the land-line based loud speaker telephone which ensured that communication was possible from all posts to the group HQ’s. To give protection from the fall-out of a nuclear attack these monitoring rooms were constructed 15ft underground, usually at the location of a pre-existing World War 2 post. The underground room measured 15ft by 7ft and was manned by 2-3 staff. The vast majority of the staff was unpaid volunteers with only senior staff and scientific officers at group HQ’s being salaried staff.


In 1968 the Corps was re-organised and about half the posts were closed. In Sept 1991 the remaining 872 posts were stood down and were abandoned. All items were removed and the posts securely locked and alarmed.


The site at Eccleston Hill was on land which is now the Carmel College playing fields near to the ‘red rocks’ and closed in 1991. The Billinge site is located close to the Beacon and closed in 1968 however some of the the surface structures are still visible today.

If anyone has any photographs or memories of working at these sites please can you contact Ian Griffiths via the St Helens Star Coffey Time column?




Wayward5oul -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (1/2/2016 3:25:18 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Greta75

FR
While it looks like a sock trolling himself and talking to himself.

But I think for me, it all started with IRC. I absolutely love IRC, because you can go into a chat room of a topic that you are interested in and just hang out and chat with people who have the same interest and passions as you. It just made finding people with the same interest sooo much easier! I formed alot of friendships through IRC that translated into real life friendships. And met people out of my social circle I would have never met or found out that we had so much in common. But that was when it first started out when lots of genuinely curious people were just starting to use the internet and explore it's capabilities to connect with others. Now it's just filled with pervs who wants to talk dirty. And I'm no longer bothering with it.

Now message board takes it to another level. In a chat room, you need to give instant replies which is time consuming. A message board is like emails. You reply whenever you are free to reply. And if you're never free to dig it up and reply, no big deal too. It's a little like, you get to read alot of people's opinion of an issue or topic you give a damn about at your own time and own target.

It's just great for me.

I never could get interested in chat rooms. For the reasons you stated, the immediacy of it. I like to be able to read message boards, think on it, reply or not, see other perspectives, etc.




WHIPPEDHERMIT -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (1/4/2016 4:24:52 PM)

Now that mate is the mystery of the ages!




Saintchrispin -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (1/7/2016 9:10:47 AM)

Why you do of course! What wonderful character youvhaves




Gretasockpuss -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (1/10/2016 4:45:14 AM)

Why the amount of nonsense. That is what attracts me personally I should say! nonsense spouted in the threads nowadays




padrepedro -> RE: What exactly attracts people to the message boards? (1/12/2016 6:53:35 AM)

One of life's great mysteries more difficult to fathom than the existence of GOD. Yes indeed what exactly attracts people to the message boards of any lifestyle website?




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