Wednesday (Late) Morning Links

Today’s late links are brought to you by Benadryl.

  • The French are using giant eagles (or tiny handlers) to fight drones. One presumes by carrying the terms of their unconditional surrender to the other party.
  • Looks like the 4th Circuit wants to get smacked down on the 2A by the Supreme Court. Everyone knows that assault rifles just “go off”
  • The Atlantic wants you to pay no attention to the entrenched bureaucracy behind the curtain
  • Trump to issue new EPA orders. Hopefully, these orders were drafted and reviewed by someone who actually passed law school.

    Benadryl
    Not my actual picture

Comments

329 responses to “Wednesday (Late) Morning Links”

  1. Bronson. Missouri

    Hello

    1. Rufus the Monocled

      Son of a….

      1. Lachowsky

        show me stater?

      2. John Titor

        Dis ain’t ovah.

    2. bacon-magic

      Hello Misery. /Illinessian

    3. Zero Sum Game

      Hello.

      I left a somewhat lengthy comment late last night that most everyone will have missed. It ought to explain what’s been going on out there in the world of Kek for a lot of you.

      1. Slammer

        It was a great summary. I’ve been in on it for a while. “What did you do in the Great Meme Wars, daddy?” ?

        1. Zero Sum Game

          My memetic warfare contribution has been to pretend at being an SJW while simultaneously insulting them on Twitter. This permits me to fly under the radar of the rolling bans and squelching while still having an effect. Hilariously, SJWs buy my trolling often. Everyone on our side recognizes the tactics and help to agree and amplify with the occasionally horrific things I’ve said (sometimes I sound AntiFa-like in promoting violence with stupid colorful emojis and a “tell” that it’s all a joke).

          I’ve contributed to some memes as well, and rabble rousing when it serves the cause.

      2. bacon-magic

        I read something on the whole Kek thing…a giant troll operation against the “normies” that is turning into a religion/modern magic thing. Weird.

        1. Zero Sum Game

          Yeah, this is one of the funniest strategies. I think they actually got the idea from Trump’s own tactics.

          When someone tries to insult you and brand you as something you’re not, accept their label and turn it to your advantage. Sometimes their method of doing that is just to inject even more weirdness into it so that it becomes indefinable. The cult of Kek is mostly a response to the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Clinton campaign branding Pepe as a racist symbol.

          The media called Trump a whiner. Even Obama chimed in. And he took the label, accepted it and said (paraphrasing) “Yeah, I’m a whiner. I whine and I whine until I win.”

          And yeah, the “weaponized autism” is also referred to as “meme magic.” They realized a fundamental truth: image macros and short quips travel much further than long dissertations that the left refuses to read. You have to hit them hard with something very visual that goes from zero to triggered in a heartbeat.

          1. Slammer

            There’s also a current trend of referring to young kids as OF or IN the internet as opposed to just growing up with it.
            The kids know the Left is all fake and are gonna meme a thousand times better than we did.
            So supposedly the Future is conservative. Kind of gives one hope.

          2. Zero Sum Game

            It’s because kids have a really good sense of how to say exactly the right thing to really upset people. They try a bunch of memes and when the find the right one that makes proggies scream when hit with it, they spread the effective ones and start a cascade of triggering everywhere. Most of us who are old farts to the kids have forgotten how to do this in our path to adulthood.

            It’s sad watching the left try to wrangle these methods under their own control (i.e. “this will trigger the right”). They’re so laughably bad at it that all it does is inspire more focused attacks.

            It’s probably the first time that I confess that children being little sociopathic monsters can be a good thing.

          3. Slammer

            Hillary bringing up Pepe on the campaign trail was glorious.
            You can’t attack kek without making it stronger.
            And dismiss it at your peril.

  2. John Titor

    This would have never happened if Virginia Postrel was still in charge.

  3. Scruffy Nerfherder

    Who’s got the secret sauce for embedding images? img src doesn’t work

    1. robc

      THIS IS A TEST

      1. Drake

        Did I pass?

        1. Negroni Please

          reply hazy. try again

        2. robc

          apparently the blink tag isn’t supported.

    2. ExcellentI don’t know if there is a secret sauce.

      1. Scruffy Nerfherder

        I know a thinly veiled expression of superiority when I see one.

        *kicks can, pouts*

      2. Slammer

        The Sacred Order of the Cat’s Ass runs this town

        1. Lol. Well played, sir.

        2. Swiss Servator

          Nice…. I guess that makes me a Feline Nates Major?

      3. Juvenile Bluster

        Abusing your admin privilege? This beautiful offshoot’s just going to turn into Animal Farm, isn’t it, Napoleon.

        1. ::spit take::

          Offshoot?

          1. Juvenile Bluster

            I couldn’t think of a better word.

          2. It’s a fair word. I guess we never really considered what we “were” in that respect. Especially since there is a broad range of reasons for starting this site among the people who did so.

          3. DenverJ

            You’re in it for the chicks, right Sloopy?

          4. I thought it was assumed that “broad range” meant “a wide range of broads.”

          5. Seguin

            “Splitters!”

        2. leonadasiv

          But if he’s snowball, we can run him out…

          1. leonadasiv

            Snowball was the pig That led the revolt with Napoleon in animal farm. Napoleon ran him out.

            He’s the Goldstein to Napoleon.

          2. John Titor

            More like Orwell’s glorified, hagiographic pig version of Trotsky.

          3. leonadasiv

            Oh and now you abuse the edit feature… This is getting to Stalin levels of corruption here…

            Or I’m crazy and didn’t see that link at first…

          4. I remember. Unfortunately, Kevin Smith has ensured that “Snowball” will be Willam Black from now on.

          5. Swiss Servator

            Same with me Sloopy – I can’t make the association without Clerks getting in my head first.

          6. Gustave Lytton

            Clerks, not Full Metal Jacket?

            What kind of crowd did I fall into here?

          7. Swiss Servator

            John Wayne, is that you?

    3. Hyperion

      It would if the path was on the server and you had access to it. Sloopy, please give everyone access to the OS drive now.

      1. Brett L

        SP will literally hunt you down by your IP address and kill you if you lead any of the admins down a bad path.

  4. Scruffy Nerfherder

    I have been chided for linking to this site too often, so I will limit it to once a week, SJWednesday.

    I bet you didn’t know the gender binary was causing all the problems in the world, alternatively titled “A Banana Rests Harmlessly”

    1. Drake

      Wow. I checked out their homepage. That is the motherload of all derp.

      “6 Questions to Ask If You Have More Privilege Than Your Partner”

      “Healing from Toxic Whiteness”

      and, probably most useful to their regulars: “Living Through the Fog of a Psychotic Break”

      1. Lachowsky

        I siphon off my toxic whiteness and use it a degreasing solvent to clean my oven. It works pretty well.

        1. leonadasiv

          giving a whole new meaning to Mr. Clean…

        2. Seguin

          I use it on my eyes after reading Sugarfree’s work.

      2. Rhywun

        Several of us are convinced it’s satire. It has to be.

        1. Swiss Servator

          Andy Kaufmann is alive and running a website…

    2. Suthenboy

      I remember reading a vegan screed once that declared how unnatural it is for humans to eat meat. According to them humans are not naturally hunters or meat eaters. People who run on feels live in a pretend world that is what they wish the real one is. Good luck with that.

      *Over my shoulder people are wiping away tears and declaring in trembly voices that we will soon have people being shot trying to get over the great wall of Trump just like they were when trying to jump the Berlin wall.

      1. leonadasiv

        And in their minds it was people trying to get in to USSR that were being shot…

        1. R C Dean

          Well, a lot of them were in the early 1940s . . .

      2. Slammer

        I guess some vegans don’t believe in evolution. or teeth.

        1. Swiss Servator

          “It doesn’t take much cunning to sneak up on a leaf”

          1. robc

            Swiss Kzinti?

        2. Suthenboy

          Clovis man would like to have a word with them.

          1. Cliche Bandit

            Clovis man did put a fine point on it.

          2. bacon-magic

            Knappy.

          3. Cliche Bandit

            forget it bacon, he isn’t coming.

            *skulks off*

  5. Negroni Please

    Resurrecting hawking certainly seems like a wise and fruitful course of action. Hopefully phase two involves destriers charging into the hordes of muslim invaders.

  6. Slammer

    Wow.

    Mom will give birth to terminally ill daughter to donate her organs

    An Oklahoma mom has decided to give birth to her terminally ill daughter so that she can donate the newborn’s organs.

    Keri Young, from Oklahoma City, was devastated to discover that her baby, who she named Eva, would be born without a portion of her brain and skull due to a condition known as anencephaly.

    1. leonadasiv

      For this ‘Egoist’, that is one of those as ‘close as to altruism as I can tell.’

    2. John Titor

      Baby organs are probably pretty hard to get. At least until China can sell the ‘this baby is a political dissident so harvest time’ argument.

      1. Swiss Servator

        “Interesting – expound further”

        /CCP Central Committee

    3. Lachowsky

      That’s a fucked up situation, but I don’t have a problem with the mother’s decision. It would take a firm will to be able to go through with something like that.

      1. Glitterstorm

        No kidding.

  7. Noodlez

    I’ve got to be honest here, I’m totally digging this place.

  8. Bob

    A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld Maryland’s ban on assault rifles, ruling gun owners are not protected under the U.S. Constitution to possess “weapons of war,” court documents showed.

    Obviously the founders were looking to ban the revolutionary war.

    1. MikeT86

      Are they going to come for our Surplus Mosins?

      I need my $80 Nugget.

      1. Brett L

        They better stand behind 8 cinder block walls 2 counties away if they want to avoid the wrath of the Mosin.

      2. Lachowsky

        $80. Haha sucker. I traded a Rick of firewood for mine.

      3. another Kevin

        +7.62x54r spam cans

      4. This Machine

        I need my $80 Nugget

        Dammit, wish I would’ve gotten in on the whole cheap-Mosin thing years ago. I might be a bit of a masochist, but I love shooting my Finnish one – it just cost me about three times the regular price. Damn if she ain’t a beauty though.

        1. Gustave Lytton

          Or the sub $100 SKS packed in beautiful cosmoline…

          *reminisces wistfully*

        2. MikeT86

          Local place had a couple Finnish Mosins and I was staring them down with intensity. Few beat up SMLEs as well, and a couple pre war Nuggets, which are interesting just for being more rare.

    2. Juice

      We tried to transfer an AR-15 to MD but it didn’t fit the criteria, which included a “heavy barrel.” So you can have your “assault rifle” as long as it conforms to the arbitrary specs set by the MD legislature.

      “Put simply, we have no power to extend Second Amendment protection to the weapons of war,”

      You just need some pistols and shotguns to keep your state free, I guess. The militia don’t need no weapons of war.

    3. R C Dean

      gun owners are not protected under the U.S. Constitution to possess “weapons of war,” court documents showed.

      Haven’t looked to see how they define that term, but if it includes “weapons issued to the military”:

      (a) It doesn’t cover civilian model ARs.
      (b) It covers probably millions of handguns in civilian use.
      (c) Its going to catch a lot of shotguns.
      (d) Its going to catch a few models of hunting rifles, unless the mods the military puts on them means the civilian models aren’t weapons of war (see, also, ARs).

      Here’s hoping SCOTUS takes the appeal and doesn’t fuck it up.

  9. Lachowsky

    “ruling gun owners are not protected under the U.S. Constitution to possess “weapons of war,”

    A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

    First, all federal gun laws are blatantly unconstitutional. Second, in the miller case that upheld the 1934 NFA, the reason the ban on short barreled shotguns was upheld was that a short barrel shotgun was NOT held to be weapon of war and therfore not covered under the 2nd amendment.

    Gun Grabbing anti-constitutionalists can all burn in hell.

    1. There’s no way this doesn’t get tossed. And when it does, MD will probably get hammered as hard as DC did in the Heller case.

    2. leonadasiv

      Not to be taken as a threat

      Gosh man, are you trying to call Preet down on this place?

      1. Lachowsky

        I get it, but gun stuff really gets me riled up. Guns are what brought me toward Libertarianism in the first place. I don’t believe there is any other political philosophy that actually respects my right to self defense and the means to accomplish it.

        1. leonadasiv

          Oh don’t worry I wasn’t chastising you, just making the joke that came to my mind when you said it.

        2. SugarFree

          I only got into libertarianism for the girls.

          🙁

          1. Dr. Fronkensteen

            Girls? You were misinformed.

    3. cyto

      I just had this conversation with a couple of lawyers. One was actually able to comprehend and extend my argument which is basically this:

      The second amendment is perfectly clear. “Shall not be infringed” is absolute. So when people ask “Do you think people should be able to have machine guns?” I answer : “The language is clear. Not only can you have machine guns, you can have howitzers, battleships, nuclear missiles…. It might not be a good idea, but that is what the law says.”

      At which point the lawyer with a clue said “which is why lazy congressmen should get off their ass and change the law instead of expecting the courts to cover their asses. If you don’t like it, amend the constitution. They have a whole process just for that, and it is pretty easy to do. ”

      First and only lawyer I’ve heard that gets it. And I liked the interesting spin that it is the responsibility of the lawmakers to address this situation, not just the courts.

      1. Swiss Servator

        That has been my position for a number of years!

        /Glances down at IL ARDC card

      2. Lachowsky

        I have given that same response to many a person about gun control.

        If you don’t like the second amendment, then change it. There is a process for it.

      3. one true athena

        That was my Constitutional Law professor’s discussion on it, as well. There’s a perfectly usable amendment process, use that, but the 2nd says what it says and pretending it doesn’t, weakens the protections of everything else as well.

      4. Emmerson Biggins

        Ya. I could get on board with a constitutional amendment granting US govmt the power to regulate (in the modern sense of the word) stuff needed to make nuclear weapons. I’d want to see the wording off course, and I’d want to grant as little power as possible to get the job done, but I’d be OK with that.

  10. The Late P Brooks

    The Atlantic wants you to pay no attention to the entrenched bureaucracy behind the curtain

    I read a couple of “deep state” apologia, the other day; probably not that one.

    They boiled down to, “We’re not as bad as Egypt or Turkey, so stop talking about a ‘deep state’ you anti-government freaks!”

    1. John Titor

      Egypt’s deep state is at least still doing its job, Turkey’s crapped out recently.

      1. Drake

        I work with a guy from Turkey. He believes that it was a kind of deep-state who tried to kill Erdogan but svrewed it up. He tells me they were the same guys who helped him purge the army and bury Ataturk’s secular state.

        1. Gustave Lytton

          Wouldn’t be surprising. Rely on “the generals” to step in every time and sooner or later someone will realize that the place to start is with those same generals, rather than passing legislation.

  11. leonadasiv

    Looks like the 4th Circuit wants to get smacked down on the 2A by the Supreme Court.

    I wonder if journalists who use the word ‘assault rifle’ realize how stupid they sound.

    1. Lachowsky

      English Language 101.

      Assault is a verb.

    2. cyto

      I wonder if journalists who use the word ‘assault rifle’ realize how stupid they sound.

      I think they realize that they sound authoritative and knowledgeable and that they perfectly conveyed just how dangerous those killing machines are. And they probably realize that they are wicked-awesome and the proles are all just illiterate idiots.

    3. Suthenboy

      Or how pointless the ban is. Does their ban define assault rifle?

  12. The Late P Brooks

    A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld Maryland’s ban on assault rifles, ruling gun owners are not protected under the U.S. Constitution to possess “weapons of war,” court documents showed.

    You can have my stone axe when you pry it from my cold dead fingers.

    1. What about bow hunters? Flintlock gun collectors? Hell, people use their fists in war when TSHTF. They gonna start lopping hands in Balmer next?

    2. leonadasiv

      Weapons of war, now that’s a fun rabbit hole to go down. What is classified as a weapon of war? Honestly, what hasn’t been used, at some point, as a weapon during a war? If the Jason Bourne movies are to be believed, and they are the most realistic movies out there, anything can be used to kill your opponent.

      1. Brett L

        It would ban us from possessing dirty bombs, biological weapons, poison gas, white phosphorus, and canister munitions for use against human targets. And probably a couple of others I can’t remember.

        1. leonadasiv

          You mean it wouldn’t prohibit ownership of those weapons, as those are no longer weapons of war. At least in the sense that they are banned in war.

          1. Brett L

            Right, right. Shit. I can’t keep their current stance straight.

        2. Sweet! I can finally start planting those land mines again.

          1. leonadasiv

            A new meaning to ‘get off my lawn’

          2. Swiss Servator

            “Bouncing Betty here says, ‘go ahead, step on my lawn’”

          3. tarran

            +1 Farnham’s Freehold

          4. This Machine

            +1 FRONT TOWARD ENEMY

        3. Private Chipperbot

          Ball point pens, staplers, 2×4. I’ve lots of stuff in war movies kill people.

      2. Lachowsky

        I understand machetes are very popular is parts of sub-Sahara africa.

    3. Slammer

      Napolitano’s argument goes: Since all the rights of the government only come from the People, it’s impossible to give the government rights that the people don’t have. So allowing the government to have weapons of war, while the People don’t, makes no sense.

      1. Vida Hobo

        The problem is that far too many of the People believe it’s just the opposite. We’ve conditioned ourselves as a society to believe that our ‘rights’ (and that word has lost all meaning) come from the government. I’m not sure how we got to bickering over cherry picked language in individual amendments when the founders were pretty clear the intent of what they were trying to create. Then I don’t understand why so many want to be ruled by some jackasses 2000 miles away either.

    4. And the walking sticks that the WWI officers used to carry – banned.
      And the pistols – banned.
      And the clubs they used for scouting out No Man’s Land – banned.
      And bayonets – banned.

      1. F. Stupidity Jr.

        Rick Danko, Garth Hudson, Richard Manuel, and Robbie Robertson – Band

        1. Bobarian LMD

          Levon Helm, you philistine!

      2. Gustave Lytton

        Swagger sticks aren’t much for walking. I’m surprised they haven’t made a comeback. Sure you can’t use them to rectify malingerer anymore but a much better pointing tool for PowerPoint slides than a laser point.

        Personally, I’ve always had my eye on the RSM’s pace stick. Now there’s a badge of office.

  13. Rufus the Monocled

    What the heck is wrong with David Frum and his TDS?

    1. John Titor

      Shut it Rufus, keep him down there, if we’re lucky he’ll be America’s problem forever.

      1. Swiss Servator

        *petitions for deporting Frum to Newfoundland*

  14. Hyperion

    Now you’ve gone and done it. Sessions is going after benadryl.

    In other news:

    At least some in the media are honest

  15. straffinrun

    The military is designing mittens of leather and Kevlar, an anti-blast material, to protect their talons,” Agence France-Presse reported.

    Great. The talons will be pristine as the charred carcass falls to earth.

    1. John Titor

      To be fair, fighting against radical Islamic Arabs is one of the few times I’d go “yep, they’re probably not going to be able to shoot that eagle down.”

      1. Drake

        Only if Allah will it! (Which he rarely does when it comes to marksmanship)

    2. zwak

      Its the new Chinese way of increasing the chichen foot market!

  16. Brett L

    This one was too rough for the actual post.

    nvestigators in Washington D.C. have arrested a woman for allegedly beating her boyfriend to death last week — with a metal baseball bat — over the course of 36 hours, PEOPLE confirms.

    1. Scruffy Nerfherder

      Ouch

    2. 36 hours? Jesus, Stephen Hawking could beat someone to death with a bat faster than that.

      1. cyto

        I laughed out loud. Like literally out loud, not metaphorically. There’s something wrong with a person who would laugh at that.

        1. leonadasiv

          I laughed too, so at least there will be a fellow glibertarian to hang out with in the circle of hell we are headed to.

          1. MikeS

            I’ll be meeting you guys there. Good one sloopy! And by good, I mean horrible…in a good way.

          2. Private Chipperbot

            Welp. Looks like it’s a party.

          3. After a few centuries the burning pitch feels like warm bathwater – so I’ve heard.

          4. Dr. Fronkensteen

            I’ll save you all a seat at the bar.

          5. zwak

            I hear its a dry heat.

          6. juris imprudent

            OMG you mean we’re going to Phoenix?

      2. straffinrun

        67 year old lady. Claims she had been smoking “Love Boat” with her 63 year old beau the night before. I’m guessing she’s not quite Sammy Sosa.

        1. Lachowsky

          I didn’t read the article. Had to be Florida?

          1. straffinrun

            DC. Maybe we’ll get lucky and that will become an epidemic there.

          2. Drake

            Hopefully she was dating a senior bureaucrat?

      3. westernsloper

        Whoa….

    3. Slammer

      PEOPLE confirms

      More like DEAD PEOPLE, ammirite?

      1. Swiss Servator

        *strongly narrows gaze*

        1. Slammer

          Yes! My first @ Glibs

  17. The Late P Brooks

    Speaking of TDS- it occurs to me that one reason so many people are outraged by Trump is their slavish reverence for the Imperial Presidency and the personality cult-ism it engenders. They revere the President is a lordly higher being; someone to be revered. Then, one day, they discover the court jester has ascended to the throne.

    It’s like a Catholic waking up to find Pee Wee Herman has been chosen as the new Pope.

    My feeble hope is to see them awaken from their slumber and recognize the folly of devotion to government and the vermin who run it.

    1. Negroni Please

      What? If PeeWee Herman was the new Pope I would absolutely become a Catholic. Are you saying you wouldn’t?

    2. Negroni Please

      especially of Larry Fishburn could turn Cowboy Curtis into Cardinal Curtis

    3. straffinrun

      I challenged Trump to a swim across the Tiber one day. He called out, “Help me, I’m drowning.!” When I went back to help him, he threw his toupee in my face and called me low energy as he climbed up on victory point.

    4. John Titor

      This was part of my criticism of The Other Side’s coverage. It was less about the Imperial Presidency, however, and more about a general unconscious bias towards viewing politicians as a whole with a TOP MAN ideal. I never saw a Reason writer try to psychoanalyze a career politician. But then Trump is elected and suddenly it’s Armchair Psychology day. They’re willing to hold Trump to a standard above other politicians, and I argue that it’s a product of a TOP MAN bias.

      “Oh, Obama can’t be a narcissist, he’s in the public service, and speaks so calmly and rhetorically. But Trump, he’s a narcissist, he’s a boorish capitalist.”

      1. Suthenboy

        How many R writers do you think pulled the lever for Obumbles? My guess: all but one or two.

        1. MikeT86

          I suspect you’re wrong, especially in 2012, however, I’m curious who are your 2?

        2. MikeS

          This should be easy enough to check for someone less lazy than me. For the last few cycles they’ve posted who they’re voting for. IIRC, “not voting” is the number 1 choice.

    5. Swiss Servator

      the court jester has ascended to the throne

      Stolen.

    6. GSL in E

      it occurs to me that one reason so many people are outraged by Trump is their slavish reverence for the Imperial Presidency and the personality cult-ism it engenders

      Is it reverence for the Imperial Presidency, or just for Obama? I will give it to you that the air of Messiah worship surrounding Obama for 8+ years has been absolutely disturbing, but I’m not sure we’ve seen anything like it before. Even popular ex-Presidents like Reagan and Clinton weren’t treated with the same reverence that Obama gets.

      1. SugarFree

        Even most liberals would admit to Bill Clinton being a piece of shit if you pressed hard enough, but fall back on him being “our piece of shit.”

        1. GSL in E

          Very much so. My recollection of the liberal reaction to Clinton’s misogyny is that it was, basically, “Oh, Bill, you horny old rascal! Just can’t keep it in your pants, can you?”

    7. Azathoth

      King Verence des a pretty good job.

      1. Azathoth

        of course, I don’t.

        ‘does’

  18. Hyperion

    Now you’ve gone and done it. Sessions is going after benadryl

    In other news:

    At least some in the media are honest

  19. Slammer

    The French are using giant eagles (or tiny handlers) to fight drones.

    The Falconist

  20. Hyperion

    Ok, now you’ve done it, Sessions is going after benadryl.

    1. cyto

      Last night I had to make a run to Walgreens for the wife who is down with the flu. I had to wait around to get the good stuff from behind the counter because “the man” is all worried that I’m about to cook up some meth.

      He, Donald! you wanna do something of use with that executive order pen? Get rid if the idiotic restrictions on sudafed.

      Thanks, Don. I’ll be over here while I wait…..

      1. Hyperion

        Yeah, the war on ephedrine is absurd. I’m not even sure who started that crap, but without looking I’m going to guess that John McCain and/or Chuck Schumer had their hands in it.

        1. Raven Nation

          If I followed the rabbit trail correctly, it looks like it was Bart Stupak in the house and Slade Gorton in the senate.

          1. GSL in E

            There’s no way those names are real.

          2. Swamp Think

            I remember Slade!

        2. Emmerson Biggins

          I think the last time I actually laughed at something Colbert did was when he made a joke about going out and buying some meth, then some getting some matches, some anti-freeze and renting a hotel room …. so he could make some Sudafed, because he had already bought up his monthly allotment and he couldn’t breathe.

  21. Lachowsky

    “Trump to issue new EPA orders.”

    I have coal beneath the dirt on my property. There is not a lot, most of it was dug out in the 1930s. I currently cannot extract the coal from property for any use without a mountain of permission slip that I can not afford. I would like Trump to disband the EVA so that I can dig out the coal on my place, convert my wood heater to coal, and never have to cut anymore firewood.

  22. Hyperion

    Is posting links broken? I just tried 3 times, no go.

    1. cyto

      Here is a random link about posting links.

      1. cyto

        I will say this, a preview button would be nice. Not that I would use it properly. They just look nice.

      2. Hyperion

        Thanks, bro. I’m a software engineer, I don’t really need a HTML guide. It just isn’t working for me, not sure why. I posted links yesterday.

        1. cyto

          Yeah. I posted the link as a test. Hence the random use of whatever was the top link on google. Now we have our answer. It’s just you. It is probably Weigel griefing you.

          1. Hyperion

            There’s something in that link that will not let it be posted here as a link:

            “https://news.grabien.com”

            “story-brzezinski-our-job-control-exactly-what-people-think”

          2. Hyperion

            There’s something in that link that will not let it be posted here, even as text. Weird. The link is on drudge right at the top:

            MSNBC BRZEZINSKI: ‘OUR JOB’ TO CONTROL ‘EXACTLY WHAT PEOPLE THINK’…

          3. cyto

            Wow. In my head I picture him saying that on a Sunday morning news show while the South Park “THIS IS WHAT THEY ACTUALLY BELIEVE” blinks across the bottom.

    2. Slammer

      I can do it. It’s just confusing because there’s 3 fields to fill: Text, URL, and Hover Text. I can’t figure what the TEXT field is for.

      1. Hyperion

        I just hand type links. The problem is that right now, it stopped working for me. I even tried to noob way and it doesn’t work. I hit post comment and the entire comment disappears. I’m gonna try restarting the browser, must be a browser issue.

        1. Hyperion

          Well, shit. This link will just not work. If anyone cares, you can cut and paste the URL, that works.

          https://news.grabien.com/story-brzezinski-our-job-control-exactly-what-people-think

        2. Hyperion

          another try

          something in this that won’t let it work here as a hperlink

          story-brzezinski-our-job-control-exactly-what-people-think

        3. cyto

          Pbbbt. Hand type. Real developers post their comments in vi.

          You are probably one of those new-fangled fancy-pants guys who reads the web in emacs.

  23. The Fusionist

    How can feminists reach conservative white women?
    More than half of white women voted for Donald Trump. How can feminists reach out to them?

    “Why did white women vote so differently to Latinas and black women? In Our Separate Ways: Black and White Women and the Struggle for Professional Identity (2003), the authors Ella L. J Edmondson Bell and Stella M Nkomo find that because white women grow up in households where they are accustomed to having access to power through their white fathers and husbands, we expect that patriarchal power will also be accessible to us. We “can get caught up in assimilating white male models of behaviour,” becoming “competitive, instrumental, and individualistic”.

    “Black women, by contrast, grow up in communities of resistance and under the shadow of racism. White women don’t expect to have to struggle in the same way. Given these conditions, how can feminists reach very conservative white women?…

    “Becoming a feminist is a massive shift in world view. For very conservative, white, heterosexual women it involves giving up what might otherwise seem to be your few remaining privileges: the social affirmation of motherhood, the security of family and tradition, the approval of the community….

    “What do highly conservative white women need to hear in order to think feminism has anything to do with them? The first thing they may want to hear is that they are important and we want to listen. The radical feminists of the 1960s and 1970s argued loudly and often about the importance of listening to women. And lesbians are particularly good at listening because our primary commitments are to other women.”

    1. F. Stupidity Jr.

      How can feminists reach conservative white women?

      The radical feminists of the 1960s and 1970s argued loudly and often about the importance of listening to women.

      “Listening” = “You shut the fuck up and fall in line, you stupid WASP bitches.” And if those women don’t accept said listenings, they’ll be declared gender traitors or some such.

      1. Tonio

        ^This. The stench of their desperation is heavy.

        1. Slammer

          Its coming out of their whatevers

    2. leonadasiv

      I know we all have made this point before, but how the general public doesn’t immediately identify this kind of thought as racist, sexist and demeaning, is astounding to me.

      1. Rhywun

        “Black women, by contrast, grow up in communities of resistance and under the shadow of racism”

        Give me a break. FFS, these people think we’re still living a hundred years ago. Worse, that is the world they want to live in.

        1. John Titor

          Stuff like this is utterly bizarre to people outside of the United States. I wonder why a great deal of the world thinks you live in an ignorant racist dystopia?

          1. Rhywun

            Because those people have the loudest voices & they won’t STFU and realize we are in fact one of the least ignorant and racist places on earth.

          2. GSL in E

            This. If you think the US is a horribly racist place, try spending some time as a racial minority in Asia or southern Europe.

        2. Homple

          “There is another class of coloured people who make a business of keeping the troubles, the wrongs, and the hardships of the Negro race before the public. Having learned that they are able to make a living out of their troubles, they have grown into the settled habit of advertising their wrongs — partly because they want sympathy and partly because it pays. Some of these people do not want the Negro to lose his grievances, because they do not want to lose their jobs.”

          Booker T. Washington, 1911

      2. They might. After all, there’s a reason so many women voted against the feminist #I’mWithHer party line.

    3. Rhywun

      Stop posting nonsense like “Healing from Toxic Whiteness” for starters.

    4. John Titor

      Tone your feminism down to like 4% of your max and suddenly they’ll be more interested.

      It’s your beliefs, stupid. They disagree with you.

      1. leonadasiv

        I so want to steal that, but the only people I would use it with are friends and family, whom is like to keep…

        (I luckily work in a very libertarian company)

    5. Drake

      Try not running a crooked, incompetent, evil bitch who’s only achievement ever was marrying a successful man.

    6. Scruffy Nerfherder

      Are we talking about actual 60’s and 70’s feminists, or are we talking about third-wave feminists, because there’s a world of difference between those groups. That’s like comparing Rousseau to Pol Pot.

    7. Hyperion

      They’re just not femsplaining it right. They need to femsplain harder.

    8. robc

      For very conservative, white, heterosexual women it involves giving up what might otherwise seem to be your few remaining privileges: the social affirmation of motherhood, the security of family and tradition, the approval of the community….

      Or maybe the feminists could try adopting those things for themselves.

      1. leonadasiv

        So they are arguing that women should give up on motherhood and family? Because I can tell you there is a reason those digital affirmations exist, and they both aren’t going away. Think survival of the species… (Of course we know femenist are no good at evolution

    9. Lachowsky

      Becoming a feminist means that you have to accept a victimhood identity. Maybe happy, married, family oriented, women (not just white women) are happy in their lot and are interested in conserving it. Maybe they don’t want to buy into the destructive to the family ideology of the mode feminist movement.

      1. Rhywun

        I’m remembering how stunning and brave Murphy Brown was for having a child without a man. From that point on single-motherhood became the woke thing to do.

        1. F. Stupidity Jr.

          And Dan Quayle’s bitching about it was the Republican party in microcosm during that time.

    10. Hyperion

      “Why did white women vote so differently to Latinas and black women?”

      Stupid question. The answer is: The patriarchy. She has to femthink harder.

    11. Banjos

      This isn’t rocket surgery, married women are more likely to vote Republican/conservative, single women (especially single mothers) are more likely to vote Democrat/liberal because caring for children takes a shit ton of resources, resources belonging to men/financially stable families. In other words, each are voting for their own interests, single women/mothers for the stolen “free shit”/ married women to stop their shit from being stolen.

      Statistically, white women are more likely to be married than Hispanic and black women. Hence, more white women are willing to vote Republican than black and Hispanic women.

      1. Banjos

        The majority of poverty in this country can be solved by making single motherhood a stigma and the majority of crime can be solved by legalizing drugs. But you are a considered crazy and the world’s biggest asshole if you suggest either, so we continue to do the same thing over and over again expecting different results.

    12. Cliche Bandit

      you could “Grab ’em by the pus…:

  24. The Late P Brooks

    I can dig out the coal on my place, convert my wood heater to coal, and never have to cut anymore firewood.

    I used to know a guy who lived in an old cabin with nothing but the original fireplace for heat. He found some coal along the railroad tracks one day, and decided to burn some in the fireplace. He said that coal burned so hot he had to open all the windows.

    1. Lachowsky

      That would be great. I use wood as my primary heat source. (I have an out door wood burning heater) I spend a lot of effort that I would rather not cutting firewood to make my house warm.

  25. Slammer

    Anyone else get random posts with no reply button on them? I’m using the computer, not the phone…so the entire screen is being used.

    1. F. Stupidity Jr.

      Once a string of replies reaches the right side of the screen, the reply button gets lost. At least that’s my experience.

      1. R C Dean

        So the far-right comments can’t be replied to?

        So yokel. Much bigot.

    2. Pomp

      Only when threading gets very deep.

      1. Private Chipperbot

        These euphemisms…

    3. Someone should tell Brooks. It’d basically be an “align right” for him.

  26. westernsloper

    The French are using giant eagles (or tiny handlers) to fight drones. One presumes by carrying the terms of their unconditional surrender to the other party.

    Nice

  27. bacon-magic

    The French are using giant eagles (or tiny handlers) to fight drones. One presumes by carrying the terms of their unconditional surrender to the other party.

    Right here, this is how you keep commenters. *waves flag of the Glibertarians*(yes, all of your thoughts on what this flag should be would be appreciated.)

    1. Swiss Servator

      A monocle hovering above toiling orphans, with “Fuck off, slaver” below…maybe in Latin to be all classy?

      1. Lachowsky

        My avatar may be appropriate, Seeing as we libertarians are all for child labor.

    2. Juvenile Bluster

      Picture of a middle finger?

    3. Hyperion

      What flag?

      1. Hyperion

        My avatar? Just needs some orange background and we be rockin dat flag.

    1. bacon-magic

      Neigh, no one would do that around here. Hay, you might want to canter off to another site to check it out.

    2. westernsloper

      I saw a story the other day about a gardener being arrested for being caught raping a dog in some dudes yard. People be weird.

      1. straffinrun

        BItch be lyin!

      2. bacon-magic

        Give a dog a bone.
        It’s a song, saying and now action.

    3. Juvenile Bluster

      I was wondering who here did this. At least we know it wasn’t OMWC.

      1. another Kevin

        Smells like Crusty’s handiwork.

  28. The Fusionist

    Pro-abortion-rights feminist acknowledges that coerced abortions actually are a thing

    “The bigger problem with viewing abortion through the restrictive lens of “choice” is that the conversation completely sidesteps the reasons that may lead to an unintended or unwanted pregnancy in the first place.

    “Research has shown that between 6 and 22 per cent of women who seek an abortion also report experiences of intimate partner violence, in which that violence forms the basis for the decision to terminate the pregnancy itself.

    “Indeed, some men use forced pregnancies (through birth control sabotage, for example) as a tool of control to keep their partner from leaving them, or simply as continuity of their abuse.

    “Physical violence often begins when a women is pregnant, or can escalate if violence is already present in the relationship….

    “When ‘choice feminism’ focuses solely on women’s unrestricted access to abortion and contraception, it misses the opportunity to discuss issues like pregnancy coercion, men’s refusal to wear condoms, and forced abortion — in other words, the limitations of women’s choices in abusive circumstances.”

    Just to be clear about her bona fides as a prochoice feminist, a couple of quotes to prove her allegiance:

    “…a pro-life political position that fails to trust in women’s equality, which places foetal rights above the mental and physical health of a woman, and doesn’t recognise women in law as agents capable of making informed choices, is incompatible with feminist politics.”

    and

    “Rachel Hirsch is currently completing her PhD at the University of Melbourne. Her research examines the links between sexual violence and Australian football, with an emphasis on the intersections between sport, law, and culture. She has an avid interest in feminist theory and politics, and proudly lives in a home filled with cats.”

    1. cyto

      Parody profile? Has to be a parody, right?

    2. Rhywun

      the links between sexual violence and Australian football

      *head-desk*

      Don’t you dare take away my beloved footy, bitch.

  29. Scruffy Nerfherder

    I must go now, the AS400 needs me.

    (God, I hate that system)

    1. Hyperion

      Crikey, those still exist?

      1. robc

        Unfortunately, yes. But that is always my thought too. Its like the 1990s all over again.

    2. cyto

      Wow. You just gave me flashbacks. We had a bunch of terminals on an old, old AS400. The terminal servers were in the pipe chase on each floor, and every now and then they would freeze up. So we’d get a bunch of calls that “the system is frozen”.

      The remedy was to go down to the pipe chase and press the reset button on the terminal server.

      I’m way too lazy for that.

      So I wired into the reset button and ran the wire all the way back to the IT office. And then I wrote a little program to ping each of the terminal servers. If they didn’t respond, I’d send a signal out the serial port where one of the guys in the electronics shop had rigged up a set of relays to push the button for me.

      Dumbest thing in the history of dumb things. But it worked like a champ and I never got another call about the system freezing up. So we spent 3 days busting our ass to get it working, and eliminated a couple of work interruptions each day for a bunch of users.

      Lazy can be really productive, if properly applied.

      1. Hyperion

        At my first IT job, they had all of these old inline printers running, printing packing slips and invoices all day non-stop. They had an entire room for that with these two older ladies who had been there for like 40 years, typing that stuff up all day. I started talking to one of them one day and she had a rubber mallet lying on her desk. I asked her what it was for and she told me that the IT guy that had been there before, the one that slept in his office most of the day (the office being a hall closet converted to office) gave it to her and told her that if the printer ‘froze up’ to just hit it with that and only bother him if that didn’t work.

      2. Nephilium

        One department in a company I worked for needed someone lazy to streamline their process. They had documentation faxed to them daily, these faxes were converted to PDF and put into a shared Outlook folder. Each person in the department would find “their” documents, print them out to the printer. Pick up the printout, and scan them back into PDF to put into a new location. They did this for years…

        1. Hyperion

          One company I worked for, they had no shared data. No database of any type, or any way to enter data. All of the managers had their own spreadsheet on their desktop with their data. In meetings they would sit around and argue for 2 hours about whose data was right.

      3. Brett L

        What was the one where a guy put a pin on the end of an old computer cd tray and wrote a script to open the cd tray every x hours to push a server reset button… That was pretty classic.

    3. Lachowsky

      Ah, the AS 400. The store room where I work is still using that. I’m 29 years old. I think that system is older than I am.

      1. Flawgic

        I had the pleasure of working on one of the first AS/400s released into the wild. This was in 1988, so it is very close to being older than you.

    4. Trolleric the Goth

      we just migrated off of our old AS400 system right about a year ago.

      we could do almost anything on that system, the new system is far less amenable to workarounds and cleverness

  30. Juvenile Bluster

    Submitting without comment because thinking about this too hard may make my brain melt.

    Robert Reich
    ‏@RBReich

    Trump’s lies have consequences. 48 hrs after his comments on Sweden, riots broke out in an immigrant community.

    1. Truly, his power is great. Is there nothing he cannot do?

      1. Hyperion

        “Is there nothing he cannot do?”

        By himself, yes there are a few things. But when he merges with Putin and becomes the TRUMPUTIN, truly nothing is beyond his grasp. I mean, after all, he hacked our democracy. Who can hack our democracy?

    2. leonadasiv

      Robert Reich …. I’m at a loud for words to explain my feelings about him…

      1. robc

        Advanced dungeons and dragons is better than regular dungeons and dragons.

    3. Lachowsky

      #Trumpocalypse

      1. Hyperion

        I’m just waiting for the part where they run out of PUTIN!, and go straight on to space aliens or bigfoot, whichever comes first.

        1. John Titor

          STEVE SMITH NO MAKE TRUMP DO THINGS, HE JUST PARTY WITH HIM THAT ONE TIME.

        2. DenverJ

          Clowns

    4. The Fusionist

      My first thought was “parody account.”

    5. John Titor

      Yep, people don’t have agency, events occur because they are willed into existence by Trump’s rhetoric.

      I need to start selling Trump-repelling rocks.

    6. Juice

      Here’s one at the top.

      The 14th Amendment bars government from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property without due process.

      Trump says to hell with it.

      Anwar al Awlaki says hi.

    7. Tonio

      I’ve seen derpbook progs claim that the riots were a false flag. They are desperate.

    8. Suthenboy

      These are the people who think intentions or just saying something makes it come true, so I see where he is coming from. Fortunately for us it doesnt work that way.

  31. The Late P Brooks

    Our plunge into darkness, courtesy of You-Know-Who

    The United States has no ministry of culture. In this vacuum, the N.E.A., founded in 1965, serves three critical functions: It promotes the arts; it distributes and stimulates funding; and it administers a program that minimizes the costs of insuring arts exhibitions through indemnity agreements backed by the government. This last, perhaps least-known responsibility, is crucial. This fall, the Met will host a major exhibition on Michelangelo that will bring together masterpieces from across the world. The insurance valuation is a whopping $2.4 billion — not even our museum, the largest art museum in the nation, could come close to paying the premium for such coverage without the federal indemnity the N.E.A. makes possible.

    No Ministry of Culture? No wonder Hillary lost!

    1. Lachowsky

      Jesus Christ. these people never read 1984. Or maybe they did…

      1. The Fusionist

        I know, right? WIthout federal support for the arts, it’s no wonder the voters supported Trump and his Orwellian agenda!

      2. leonadasiv

        But who could be against a Ministry of Love? It’s about love!!

      3. Colonel Slanders

        They think it’s a guide book.

        1. Hyperion

          ^this^

      4. Hyperion

        When you can read 1984 and believe that being pro-big brother makes you part of the revolution, you’ve truly lost your grip on reality.

        1. Colonel Slanders

          ^This^

    2. “See? Without an enormous government sucking the productivity out of the economy, we couldn’t have art exhibits!”

    3. Hyperion

      “Michelangelo”

      Well, it’s a good think that guy was able to rely on a Ministry of Culture, or he would have never done anything, amirite?

    4. John Titor

      These people don’t realize that a ministry of culture actually proves how massively inefficient and irrational the state is. Art is inherently a solipsistic product, it serves no other function than for its own sake. Any public funding for art is either a waste of money that could be directed to their supposed goals, or used to create propaganda to prop up the state.

      1. Gustave Lytton

        +1% for art requirement

        It’s gotten so that new road projects have these scrap metal heaps by the side of the road just to meet that idiotic requirement. Or an installation on top of the roof of a new building where no one will ever see other than the HVAC mechanic.

    5. Slammer

      according to Forbes:

      The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

      Total Revenue: $440 M
      Government Support $13 M
      Private Donations $209 M
      Other Income $218 M
      Total Expenses: $421 M
      Charitable Services $351 M
      Management & General $58 M
      Fundraising $12 M
      Surplus/Loss $21 M
      Net Assets $3,283 M

      1. Juvenile Bluster

        The Met would die without that $13 million of government support.

      2. robc

        There was an econtalk back in 2015 I think where the guest argued that the law should be changed allowing museums to sell off the art that is never going to be displayed to help with revenue.

        Basically, any decent size museum is displaying a small percentage of their art at any time, and maybe 10% will ever see the light of day.

    6. robc

      So the NEA is backstopping losses just like Fannie and Freddie.

    7. Gustave Lytton

      So what is the insurance premium? Conveniently not mentioned.

      Why would it matter if the artwork no longer was sent to other museums and people traveled to see the art? International travel is relatively cheap these days. Other than these type of traveling shows are money makers for both the sending and exhibiting museums.

      I’m also guessing that the valuation is just a dart thrown at a number. It’s irreplaceable really but as a number, and it’s too expensive to exhibit, then it’s probably a net negative value just to store it indefinitely. Adjust accordingly.

  32. The Late P Brooks

    I fear that this current call to abolish the N.E.A. is the beginning of a new assault on artistic activity. Arts and cultural programming challenges, provokes and entertains; it enhances our lives. Eliminating the N.E.A. would in essence eliminate investment by the American government in the curiosity and intelligence of its citizens. As the planet becomes at once smaller and more complex, the public needs a vital arts scene, one that will inspire us to understand who we are and how we got here — and one that will help us to see other countries, like China, not as enemies in a mercenary trade war but as partners in a complicated world.

    Without government support and encouragement, art will be a thing of the past. Art does not arise from the hearts and imaginations of individuals; creativity, like rights, must be conjured up out of thin air and bestowed upon those deemed deserving, by government bureaucrats.

    1. The Fusionist

      “I’m glad I had the opportunity to watch that nude interpretive dance…it really enhanced my understanding of this complex and changing world! I’m still trying to figure out the meaning of that thing with the chickens, but maybe it was intended as a reassurance that the Chinese government wasn’t waging a mercenary trade war.”

    2. Raven Nation

      I’m too lazy to look it up, but the Bastiat quote would seem appropriate here.

    3. Vida Hobo

      Why is it they never pull out renaissance Florence to bolster this argument?

      1. The Fusionist

        Is Renaissance Florence one of the supporting characters in a chick flick? You know, the protagonist’s eccentric friend who encourages her to overcome her shyness and stand up for herself?

        1. Vida Hobo

          Don’t be so silly. She’s the sassy waitress at Mel’s Diner known to invite one to hiss her grits, you philistine. Pretty sure the grits thing is a euphemism.

  33. The Late P Brooks

    all of your thoughts on what this flag should be would be appreciated

    A small, helpless, wounded dog being devoured by a pack of bigger, stronger dogs.

    With DEATH TO THE WEAK below.

  34. straffinrun

    Maxine Waters is the gift that keeps on giving.

    “Can’t people see what’s going on? Why do you think they hacked into our election? They hacked into the election because they have to make sure that Donald Trump got elected, so that he could help them with what I think is a huge deal––not only to lift these sanctions, but to take over all of these Soviet countries and pull ’em back into the Soviet Union so that they could have access to all of these resources. It’s clear to me. And I just think the American people had better understand what’s going on. This is a bunch of scumbags, that’s what they are.”

    1. Juvenile Bluster

      I can’t laugh about her any longer. I think she’s honest-to-goodness schizophrenic. She needs help.

      1. straffinrun

        Even Chris Hayes is looking at her like she tucks her shirt into her panties.

        1. Slammer

          and people make fun of Trump’s hair. her wig creeps me the fuck out.

      2. Suthenboy

        You are thinking of Hank Johnson. Waters is just a shill with an IQ below 60.

    2. Slammer

      Functional retard. The problem with quoting her in text is one misses how ridiklis she sound when sayin’ it.

      1. Hyperion

        Although, you have to admit that it would be impossible for anyone to say that and not sound ridiculous.

        1. Slammer

          Fo sho

          1. Hyperion

            You have to wonder why these people did not just stay with ‘mo free shit’, that was actually working.

        1. Wait, that was a Corrine Brown.

          Jesus, that woman was insanely stupid too.

    3. bacon-magic

      Maxine Waters is the Black Caucus version of Nancy Pelosi. She eats lead paint, folks.

    4. John Titor

      I see we’re running on the 90s definition of ‘hacking’ again. A.K.A. Not hacking.

      1. Drake

        “Hacked into our election” She really has no idea what she’s saying, just repeating the current holy words.

  35. Good morning, QueerGlibertarianRightWingWackos!

  36. The Late P Brooks

    The simple fact that Maxine Waters has been elected to Congress repeatedly is enough to make me think the American system of public education is an abject failure, and cannot be replaced in its entirety soon enough.

    1. Slammer

      It makes me suspicious it’s all going according to plan.

      1. It makes me think the Joozians at the network are planning a plot twist for “Earth”.

    2. Hyperion

      Anytime some asshole tries to make it about race, I present to you one John McCain. Is there something in the water in AZ? Lead?

    3. Hyperion

      I’ve had a long time to think about this, and at first I was against, but now for. We need term limits. 4 terms in Congress, period, then that person goes home and assumes life as a private citizen, banned for life from ever serving in public office again, as a bureaucrat, and cannot be involved in lobbying of any kind under severe penalty of law.

      Right away we get rid of Waters, McCain, Schumer, Feinstein, and more. What’s not to like?

      1. Rhywun

        I’d settle for term limits right away. The rest of that stuff has no chance of passing. But I think term limits could be sold pretty easily.

  37. Last night I had a long phone conversation with a old high school friend and long-time Democrat.

    He started ranting about how much he hated Donald Trump – and always has since the 80s. I don’t some much in reply because I don’t want to damage the few friendships that I have left.

    After calming down he say that the reason that Trump won is because “the Left” has overreached: specifically pushing transgender rights, the bathroom wars, and trying to move the culture war too soon and too fast. And also the term “flyover country”; the attempt to make the left and right coasts the centers of cultural and political power.

    Anyhoo- he’s an interesting guy but suffers from the only child mentality (he doesn’t play well with others) and some Aspie-ness (like me!).

    1. straffinrun

      I’ve got only one lefty friend that I’ll talk politics with. He actually will admit that I honestly believe that my preferred system would help the poor more than his preferred system. I won’t argue politics with any friends, acquaintances or co workers unless they at least give me that for starters.

  38. Hyperion

    And here we go

    Ellison, Ellison, woot woot!

    1. Juvenile Bluster

      Democrats say that Trump isn’t denouncing anti-Semitism hard enough and then go ahead and elect an honest to goodness anti-Semite to head their party.

      1. Hyperion

        Just don’t try to discourage them. Go Ellison!

    2. I’ve been listening to a Podcast called Wrongful Conviction

      Based on the files of the lawyers who freed them, Wrongful Conviction features interviews with men and women who have spent decades in prison for crimes they did not commit – some of them had even been sentenced to death. These are their stories.

      First episode is an interview with one of the Central Park Five and how he was railroaded into becoming a suspect in the rape of a jogger. Disturbing. The second episode dealt with Barry Gibbs, who served 17 years for a crime he didn’t commit – thanks to a cop who was working as a hit man for the mob. Also some discussion on prosecutors and their lake of accountability.

      1. not meant as a reply – derp.

      2. Suthenboy

        Maybe Barry didn’t commit that murder, but look what he did to music in the 70’s. I say put him back in.

  39. The Late P Brooks

    We need term limits. 4 terms in Congress, period, then that person goes home and assumes life as a private citizen, banned for life from ever serving in public office again, as a bureaucrat, and cannot be involved in lobbying of any kind under severe penalty of law.

    My version was (I think) 12 years; up to two terms as Senator. Then released back into the wild, to be shot on sight if they return to the Beltway for any reason.

    1. Hyperion

      “Then released back into the wild, to be shot on sight if they return to the Beltway for any reason.”

      +1 rule I like

  40. The Elite Elite

    Late links? Brett L is Robby Soave. You heard it here first.

  41. The Late P Brooks

    I’d settle for term limits right away. The rest of that stuff has no chance of passing. But I think term limits could be sold pretty easily.

    Montana has term limits, and the good government party lefties are incessantly bleating about lack of continuity and “good people needlessly forced out of public service”.

    *I’m taking a flyer on a strikethrough; fingers crossed.

    1. Rhywun

      This is one of the rare situations where the left is often quite honest that what they really want is to grab power – because they can pass it off as bringing more free shit to their subjects.

  42. The Late P Brooks

    Ha!

  43. Ken Shultz

    As of a few moments ago, the top five stories on You Know Where have a combined total of 19 comments between them, and those stories have been up for a while now.

    So much of the content I consumed over there was actually created by commenters. That’s what they’re missing out on over there. It ain’t our page views they’re losing–it’s the free content. They didn’t have to pay us to write content for their site.

    I’d post to both sites, but today I’m having a hard time finding something over there worth responding to. It really is about interacting with you people.

    I’m not consciously avoiding the place, but if all I can interact with over there is sock puppets, after a while, I’ll stop looking.

    1. Suthenboy

      I stopped looking a while ago Ken. You hit the nail on the head. Even the idiocy they wrote (Dalmia, Suderman, chapman) would generate a lot of interesting comments.

    2. The Elite Elite

      Completely agree. I used to check that other place fairly regularly throughout the day on my days off, but since this site started I find myself only looking over there maybe a few times a day. Not much to respond to over there, and there’s only so much entertainment in getting Hihn all worked up.

      1. DOOMco

        wait, he’s over there?

        1. The Elite Elite

          When I checked some comments yesterday I saw a bit of a Hinhfection going on.

          1. DOOMco

            I miss that loon.

  44. mrfamous

    Pewdiepie’ latest video response to the WSJ.