Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

Lv 738,236 points

WACO

Favorite Answers48%
Answers5,179
  • Why not register a title for all guns, like cars, but with a copy of a ballistics report for each gun?

    Cars kill several thousands of people a year. Is it a violation of your rights to have to register the ownership of a car?

    I own three guns and I do not care who knows it. I also own a car, a pickup truck, and a Harley and I do not care who knows that either.

    The Constitution says you have the right to bare arms not the right to hide the fact that you do bare arms.

    10 AnswersLaw & Ethics8 years ago
  • My Tritton Detonator right earphone goes silent?

    My Tritton Detonator right earphone goes silent?

    When I move my head it jiggles the wire as it enters the earpiece and it goes silent until I move it a little to just the right spot. But, i cannot just sit like a zombie. Something is loose in the earphone, but how can you get to the wiring to fix it. After taking out the three screws which holds the earpiece padding, I cannot find a way through the metal perforated cover. Anyone able to help me?

    1 AnswerPlayStation8 years ago
  • Isn't man's creation of God the epitome of Arrogance?

    Would a perfect God create something, in his own image, as pitiful as man?

    10 AnswersReligion & Spirituality8 years ago
  • What is the difference between a Drone and a B-17 bomber?

    Or, what is the difference than what we used in Shock and Awe over Iraq? Don't Drones create far less collateral damage?

    9 AnswersPolitics8 years ago
  • Can an ordinary citizen run a background criminal check on an employee?

    Can an ordinary citizen run a background criminal check on an employee?

    I have 36 employees in four shops in three states; Texas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. I hired a man in my Oklahoma shop and he is very good at his work. The problem is that information came my way that he may not be all he claims to be. I do not want to lose this man. However, due to the nature of my business, I cannot have employees with questionable backgrounds.

    I see ads for background checks and tried two of them and they turned out to be questionable on their own. What would be a good reliable way to run a criminal check on this man without him knowing about it. If he turns out with a clean record, I need to promote him to a more sensitive position. Anyone have a suggestion? Thanks.

    2 AnswersLaw & Legal8 years ago
  • Can an ordinary citizen run a background criminal check on an employee?

    I have 36 employees in four shops in three states; Texas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. I hired a man in my Oklahoma shop and he is very good at his work. The problem is that information came my way that he may not be all he claims to be. I do not want to lose this man. However, due to the nature of my business, I cannot have employees with questionable backgrounds.

    I see ads for background checks and tried two of them and they turned out to be questionable on their own. What would be a good reliable way to run a criminal check on this man without him knowing about it. If he turns out with a clean record, I need to promote him to a more sensitive position. Anyone have a suggestion? Thanks.

    *

    4 AnswersLaw & Ethics8 years ago
  • Can an ordinary citizen run a background criminal check on an employee?

    I have 36 employees in four shops in three states; Texas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. I hired a man in my Oklahoma shop and he is very good at his work. The problem is that information came my way that he may not be all he claims to be. I do not want to lose this man. However, due to the nature of my business, I cannot have employees with questionable backgrounds.

    I see ads for background checks and tried two of them and they turned out to be questionable on their own. What would be a good reliable way to run a criminal check on this man without him knowing about it. If he turns out with a clean record, I need to promote him to a more sensitive position. Anyone have a suggestion? Thanks.

    *

    3 AnswersLaw Enforcement & Police8 years ago
  • Can an ordinary citizen run a background criminal check on an employee?

    I have 36 employees in four shops in three states; Texas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. I hired a man in my Oklahoma shop and he is very good at his work. The problem is that information came my way that he may not be all he claims to be. I do not want to lose this man. However, due to the nature of my business, I cannot have employees with questionable backgrounds.

    I see ads for background checks and tried two of them and they turned out to be questionable on their own. What would be a good reliable way to run a criminal check on this man without him knowing about it. If he turns out with a clean record, I need to promote him to a more sensitive position. Anyone have a suggestion? Thanks.

    5 AnswersSmall Business8 years ago
  • Can there be two different Operating Systems (XP and Win 8) on the same hard drive?

    If not, can you have two hard drives on a Toshiba Laptop computer or a Desktop for that matter? I do not like Win 7 or 8. I like my XP OS. Why did Microsoft fix something that was not broken?

    .

    5 AnswersLaptops & Notebooks8 years ago
  • Can there be two different Operating Systems (XP and Win 8) on the same hard drive?

    If not, can you have two hard drives on a Toshiba Laptop computer or a Desktop for that matter? I do not like Win 7 or 8. I like my XP OS. Why did Microsoft fix something that was not broken?

    .

    2 AnswersOther - Hardware8 years ago
  • Can there be two different Operating Systems (XP and Win 8) on the same hard drive?

    If not, can you have two hard drives on a Toshiba Laptop computer or a Desktop for that matter? I do not like Win 7 or 8. I like my XP OS. Why did Microsoft fix something that was not broken?

    .

    2 AnswersSoftware8 years ago
  • Can there be two different Operating Systems (XP and Win 8) on the same hard drive?

    If not, can you have two hard drives on a Toshiba Laptop computer or a Desktop for that matter? I do not like Win 7 or 8. I like my XP OS. Why did Microsoft fix something that was not broken?

    3 AnswersDesktops8 years ago
  • What part of "A well regulated militia" does the Supreme Court and the NRA not understand?

    If you need a semi-automatic rifle, with a 100 round magazine, to bring down a ferocious deer, you are not much of a hunter.

    9 AnswersOther - Politics & Government8 years ago
  • Who creates jobs, consumers or plutocrats?

    Who pays sales taxes, consumers or plutocrats? Who pays payroll taxes on income, consumers or plutocrats? Who pays the largest percentage of their income for taxes and those things necessary just to get by, consumers or plutocrats?

    If, after paying payroll taxes on my work income, I have to pay a sales tax when I invest it in an automobile for transportation to that work, isn't that the same double taxation that investors claim a federal tax payable on investment income would represent?

    If a consumer has no job or a low paying job and has no money to buy a product or service or health care, what incentive does a plutocrat have to create jobs to produce a service or product or health care service when few can afford them?

    Which came first, the chicken or the egg? Which comes first, the supply or the demand? What does a sound and balanced cash flow system have to do with economics? What was my question again?

    4 AnswersPolitics9 years ago
  • How many trickles does a gallon of gas cost?

    Nothing more is necessary to say.

    5 AnswersPolitics9 years ago
  • Why would anyone, who is not a plutocrat, want to settle for a trickle?

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1936, paraphrased the republican argument against him in his reelection bid, when he mocked the republicans with the following one minute section of his speech.

    “Let me warn you! Let me warn America! Of course we believe in social security. We believe in jobs for the unemployed. We believe in saving people’s homes! Cross our hearts and hope to die, we believe in all these things! But, we do not like the way the present administration is doing them. Just turn them over to us! We will do all of them! We will do more of them! We will do them better, and most important of all, the doing of them will not cost anybody anything."

    www. youtube.com/watch?v=SUZGkNAUSvY

    Now, 76 years later, the Guardians of Plutocracy (GOP) are singing the same old song. So, if you are willing to settle for a trickle, vote for Romney; he will thank you for the tax cut for the wealthy.

    .

    3 AnswersGovernment9 years ago
  • Why would anyone, who is not a plutocrat, want to settle for a trickle?

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1936, paraphrased the republican argument against him in his reelection bid, when he mocked the republicans with the following one minute section of his speech.

    “Let me warn you! Let me warn America! Of course we believe in social security. We believe in jobs for the unemployed. We believe in saving people’s homes! Cross our hearts and hope to die, we believe in all these things! But, we do not like the way the present administration is doing them. Just turn them over to us! We will do all of them! We will do more of them! We will do them better, and most important of all, the doing of them will not cost anybody anything."

    www. youtube.com/watch?v=SUZGkNAUSvY

    Now, 76 years later, the Guardians of Plutocracy (GOP) are singing the same old song. So, if you are willing to settle for a trickle, vote for Romney; he will thank you for the tax cut for the wealthy.

    .

    3 AnswersOther - Politics & Government9 years ago
  • Why would anyone, who is not a plutocrat, want to settle for a trickle?

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1936, paraphrased the republican argument against him in his reelection bid, when he mocked the republicans with the following one minute section of his speech.

    “Let me warn you! Let me warn America! Of course we believe in social security. We believe in jobs for the unemployed. We believe in saving people’s homes! Cross our hearts and hope to die, we believe in all these things! But, we do not like the way the present administration is doing them. Just turn them over to us! We will do all of them! We will do more of them! We will do them better, and most important of all, the doing of them will not cost anybody anything."

    www. youtube.com/watch?v=SUZGkNAUSvY

    Now, 76 years later, the Guardians of Plutocracy (GOP) are singing the same old song. So, if you are willing to settle for a trickle, vote for Romney; he will thank you for the tax cut for the wealthy.

    4 AnswersElections9 years ago
  • Why would anyone, who is not a plutocrat, want to settle for a trickle?

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1936, paraphrased the republican argument against him in his reelection bid, when he mocked the republicans with the following one minute section of his speech.

    “Let me warn you! Let me warn America! Of course we believe in social security. We believe in jobs for the unemployed. We believe in saving people’s homes! Cross our hearts and hope to die, we believe in all these things! But, we do not like the way the present administration is doing them. Just turn them over to us! We will do all of them! We will do more of them! We will do them better, and most important of all, the doing of them will not cost anybody anything."

    www. youtube.com/watch?v=SUZGkNAUSvY

    Now, 76 years later, the Guardians of Plutocracy (GOP) are singing the same old song. So, if you are willing to settle for a trickle, vote for Romney; he will thank you for the tax cut for the wealthy.

    6 AnswersPolitics9 years ago