Another Great Long-Form Exploration by John Oliver: Bias in Medicine [VIDEO]
John Oliver discusses the roles that gender and racial bias can play in medical treatment.
John Oliver discusses the roles that gender and racial bias can play in medical treatment.
It’s long past time for everyone to see clearly that this man is not mentally healthy. https://t.co/z56WIqy3r6
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 19, 2019
Yeah, Trump cultist, you really showed me by tweeting a Ben Garrison cartoon at me. Devastating. pic.twitter.com/jWRTwKKElj
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 19, 2019
re: #1 Charles Johnson
Wait, what the fuck does Google even have to do with voting?
Or is this just Trump making less and less sense like he usually does?
The wingnut elites are still losing their shit over the NYT report on slavery. Erick Erickson is doing that “I know you are but what am I” thing the right loves so much - the Times has “embraced a neo-Confederate world view.” WTF is wrong with these numpties? pic.twitter.com/CZWBgkei52
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 19, 2019
re: #1 Charles Johnson
[Embedded content]
2.6 to 16 million, seems legit considering how they narrowed it down so much.
//
re: #3 Eclectic Cyborg
Wait, what the fuck does Google even have to do with voting?
Or is this just Trump making less and less sense like he usually does?
if he retweets he can say he didnt make it up
that makes it ‘legitimate’
nevertheless trump is a loon
re: #2 Charles Johnson
Ben Garrison, paragon of mental health.
So, I’m hearing reports here on Czech news that TSA and Border Patrol computers have gone done in the US, making international air travel a bit chaotic.
Any confirmation from stateside Lizards?
re: #8 Dr Lizardo
So, I’m hearing reports here on Czech news that TSA and Border Patrol computers have gone done in the US, making international air travel a bit chaotic.
Any confirmation from stateside Lizards?
A brief jaunt through Twitter indicates there were some outages at both agencies on Friday (8/16) but nothing today it would appear.
re: #4 Charles Johnson
[Embedded content]
“Revising history” in this case seems to mean revising the standard wingnut boilerplate version of US history where any vestige of “racism” in our societal system belongs only to the distant past, has been completely erased by law, and exists only as a hollow insult to (obviously tolerant and open-minded) Real Americans: made by America-hating hippie commie atheists. Who, of course, use said insult to try to avoid the “obvious reality” that black peoples’ problems with society are all their own fault…..
She came with parents from Taiwan when she was 10, overstayed visa. For 16 years lived in the country undocumented until she married her husband and gained citizenship in 2013
But, that’ll be OK, she’s a Trump supporter
Pro-Trump Republican immigrant to challenge Dem lawmaker who flipped Michigan seat https://t.co/K0DCMZQpWb pic.twitter.com/WYy9zeJuIS
— The Hill (@thehill) August 19, 2019
Proud Boys Maxwell Hare and John Kinsman were convicted today of attempted gang assault, attempted assault and riot for their involvement in an Oct 2018 violent attack following Gavin McInnes’ speech at the Metropolitan Republican Club in NYC. https://t.co/NY3QzmolYS
— Caroline Orr (@RVAwonk) August 19, 2019
re: #9 Eclectic Cyborg
A brief jaunt through Twitter indicates there were some outages at both agencies on Friday (8/16) but nothing today it would appear.
Nothing showing today at downdetector.com
re: #9 Eclectic Cyborg
A brief jaunt through Twitter indicates there were some outages at both agencies on Friday (8/16) but nothing today it would appear.
OK. I might’ve misunderstood.
Those Proud Boys morons are really a piece of work.
If you’re pissed off at the world, there ARE healthy ways to work out your aggression. I guess it just isn’t fun for them unless they are hurting people.
When the Proud Boys carried out the violent attack in NYC in Oct 2018, Fox News tried to blame it on antifa.
Sound familiar?https://t.co/CwJfTFyE5M— Caroline Orr (@RVAwonk) August 19, 2019
re: #11 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
She came with parents from Taiwan when she was 10, overstayed visa. For 16 years lived in the country undocumented until she married her husband and gained citizenship in 2013
But, that’ll be OK, she’s a Trump supporter[Embedded content]
The 11th is (or was) an R+6 district; yet Haley won by 6 points.
And I’m not sure that this argument is going to work so well for Mrs. Williams:
“Now as a citizen, I want to help change the Washington culture,” she says in her announcement video. “I’m sick and tired of political games, and I’m sure you are too. When I’ll go to Congress as a pro-life conservative who supports strong border security, Democrats are going to have a hard time using their typical playbook against me.”
Supporting stronger border security when you previously benefited directly from weaker security is a terrible argument - you’re basically arguing to close the door behind you.
Then again, I’m beginning to think that “border security” is about stopping the poor brown people from the south, rather than some sort of organized and just immigration system. Because it’s always about the border and never about people overstaying visas. So, maybe it’ll work in the GOP primary.
re: #11 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
She came with parents from Taiwan when she was 10, overstayed visa. For 16 years lived in the country undocumented until she married her husband and gained citizenship in 2013
But, that’ll be OK, she’s a Trump supporter[Embedded content]
Fuck you, I got mine.
re: #20 KGxvi
The 11th is (or was) an R+6 district; yet Haley won by 6 points.
And I’m not sure that this argument is going to work so well for Mrs. Williams:
Supporting stronger border security when you previously benefited directly from weaker security is a terrible argument - you’re basically arguing to close the door behind you.
Then again, I’m beginning to think that “border security” is about stopping the poor brown people from the south, rather than some sort of organized and just immigration system. Because it’s always about the border and never about people overstaying visas. So, maybe it’ll work in the GOP primary.
Benefiting from the liberal laws regarding Cuban immigrants didn’t stop Ted Cruz.
re: #11 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
She came with parents from Taiwan when she was 10, overstayed visa. For 16 years lived in the country undocumented until she married her husband and gained citizenship in 2013
But, that’ll be OK, she’s a Trump supporter[Embedded content]
so she was a criminal for 16 years
that makes her ripe for immediate deportation, right?
re: #24 DangerMan
so she was a criminal for 16 years
that makes her ripe for immediate deportation, right?
By her own standards she should be. Not that I support it.
re: #22 HappyWarrior
But but Antifa.//
The answer is training teachers to drill school children in how to hide from antifa. https://t.co/iTQI4q1Fl1
— David Waldman-1, of Yorktown LLC™ (@KagroX) August 19, 2019
“He’s an odious little grifter and it’s time for him to go.”
— Fox News host Steve Hilton, quoted by The Hill, on National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre.
i swear before i read the cite, i thought it was referring to trump
Imagine the level of delusion necessary to maintain that Antifa is a “tyranny.”
Today’s GOP.
re: #28 jaunte
Imagine the level of delusion necessary to maintain that Antifa is a “tyranny.”
Today’sGOPMedia.
Unfortunately, just like always, the right-wing narrative on this is the one that’s being accepted credulously as ‘the truth’, despite the bullshit being easily called all over.
re: #26 jaunte
[Embedded content]
yeah, way more important than focusing on right wingers who are threatening and actually shooting people
re: #27 DangerMan
“He’s an odious little grifter and it’s time for him to go.”
— Fox News host Steve Hilton, quoted by The Hill, on National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre.
i swear before i read the cite, i thought it was referring to trump
He’s always been. You just didn’t notice since he was your odious grifter.
re: #31 DangerMan
yeah, way more important than focusing on right wingers who are threatening and actually shooting people
Don’t wanna offend their base.
re: #24 DangerMan
so she was a criminal for 16 years
that makes her ripe for immediate deportation, right?
Interesting aspect about Castro’s argument of decriminalizing border crossings. From what I’ve read of the statutes, overstaying a visa does not subject you to criminal liability in the way that crossing the border does. Which makes sense, when you consider that the author of the law criminalizing unauthorized border crossings was a racist asshole.
But it also opens up an interesting argument regarding the “well just go back and get in line” argument we often hear. If you admit that you’ve crossed the border without authorization, you’ve admitted to a misdemeanor or felony, which would otherwise bar you from re-entry. But if you overstay a visa, you don’t have a criminal record and thus can re-enter the US.
re: #32 HappyWarrior
He’s always been. You just didn’t notice since he was your odious grifter.
i dont often do ad homs but lapierre looks like what we used to call ‘oily’
This would seem a simple extension of logic: If you think ANTIFA are terrorists because you support what they are against…you are a Fascist.
I don’t agree with Antifas tactics, but I think every American has a duty to NOT support Fascism.
JFC.
re: #26 jaunte
[Embedded content]
This is deeply fucking nuts. I mean we are truly well down the rabbit hole.
re: #27 DangerMan
“He’s an odious little grifter and it’s time for him to go.”
— Fox News host Steve Hilton, quoted by The Hill, on National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre.
i swear before i read the cite, i thought it was referring to trump
That applies to so many in the GOP.
re: #26 jaunte
What antifa attacks on journalists?
re: #24 DangerMan
so she was a criminal for 16 years
that makes her ripe for immediate deportation, right?
Hmmmm…wondering if Daddy and Mommy’s money gave her family a pass…
nice.
yet another incident that would have tanked any normal president’s career
The mayor of Dayton, Ohio, needed extra security after President Donald Trump publicly insulted her, The Dayton Daily News reported.
Mayor Nan Whaley, grappling with the aftermath of a mass shooting this month in which nine people were killed, received a torrent of threats and abusive comments after the president traveled to the city to visit with victims and meet with local leaders.
So Pence just admitted publicly that he and the president are not carrying out their oath of office? https://t.co/ExAKB1ghTP
— Kevin Baron (@DefenseBaron) August 19, 2019
Rockabilly Brucehttps://t.co/wqzelmbqqZ
— Edwin Mix (@TheEdMix) August 19, 2019
This will lead to more abortions.
This administration is evil *and* stupid. https://t.co/A8cd9bGlx0— Scafe for America (@erinscafe) August 19, 2019
re: #26 jaunte
Rep. Mark Walker
✔
@RepMarkWalker
Antifa’s oppressive and dangerous attacks on journalists and law enforcement officers must be curtailed. That’s why @RepMarkGreen & I introduced a resolution to encourage the administration to recognize Antifa’s threat and protect Americans and our institutions from their tyranny
Since the resolution is in the House, it’s DOA. Of course, they will use it as a bludgeon to attack their Democratic opponents in 2020.
Why is it every time I click on any article in the Washington Post, Wayne LaPierre’s ugly mug pops up on the sidebar. I click on the ad and tell Google it’s offensive and it keeps propping up.
Once in a while there is another ad that pops up for “Save California Prop 13”. But when I click on that ad, Wayne’s ugly-ass face pops up again!
BREAKING: Twitter says it has uncovered a “significant state-backed information operation” originating from inside China aimed “deliberately and specifically attempting to sow political discord in Hong Kong.” https://t.co/3bvGVtlcj6
— CNBC Now (@CNBCnow) August 19, 2019
re: #49 jaunte
Planned Parenthood said it will withdraw from the federal Title X program that helps low-income people access contraception
vote like your life depends on it.
Because it does.
re: #51 Joe Bacon 🌹
Why is it every time I click on any article in the Washington Post, Wayne LaPierre’s ugly mug pops up on the sidebar. I click on the ad and tell Google it’s offensive and it keeps propping up.
Once in a while there is another ad that pops up for “Save California Prop 13”. But when I click on that ad, Wayne’s ugly-ass face pops up again!
When I use Google on my phone, I get Fox News bullshit (blocked, yet displayed again a couple of weeks later, blocked again and this time it appears to have taken) and various right-wing blogs (blocked - those seem to take just fine on the first block attempt).
re: #52 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
And therefore Twitter’s repsonse will be to block all attempts by HK residents to discuss it.
Do you think Russia has its hands in this Hong Kong thing too?
— Edwin Mix (@TheEdMix) August 18, 2019
Proud Boys = 1488= Nazi https://t.co/bvkmUtBPf4
— Edwin Mix (@TheEdMix) August 17, 2019
This is superb.
Monty Python’s “what have the Romans ever done for us?” 👇😂pic.twitter.com/N2K7cJqPTw— Mike Galsworthy (@mikegalsworthy) August 17, 2019
re: #56 Eclectic Cyborg
Do you think Russia has its hands in this Hong Kong thing too?
Nah, this is just China (and Xi in particular) being China. Putin seems to believe in the old spheres of influence world view and would see Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan as all being China’s.
Garbage Hobbit steps on his dick again.
Ben Shapiro, apparently forgetting that Donald Trump is the Republican President of the United States, says “I’m not aware of a single major Republican figure who said the Barack Obama was not the legitimate President of the United States” pic.twitter.com/rM0TkWvo8y
— Jason Campbell (@JasonSCampbell) August 19, 2019
.@jack is a Nazi. Oh, wait a minute, this is Facebook, not Twitter. OK: Facebook is a Nazi. https://t.co/2ycveGZHbb
— Roy Edroso (@edroso) August 19, 2019
re: #63 gocart mozart
Right wing goons using algorithms to suppress opposing speech.
This is going to become a BIG fucking problem during the election.
re: #64 Eclectic Cyborg
Right wing goons using algorithms to suppress opposing speech.
This is going to become a BIG fucking problem during the election.
The algorithms wouldn’t be this easily exploited if those that were in charge put effort into fixing them. And considering how long this has been a problem, it raises the question of whether those in charge actually see it as a problem, or whether they see it as working exactly as it should to them.
In other words, at some point, complicity becomes a more likely explanation than incompetence.
EDIT: Case in point, remember how Twitter and Facebooksaid they couldn’t be harsher in moderation on white supremacists, because if they did, their algorithms would pick up Republican pols in their net? Because clearly if they were elected GOP officials they couldn’t actually be racist?
Funny how that shit never seems to apply on the left either, they just give them the full fucking boot for shit 10% as bad.
re: #62 The Pie Overlord!
Garbage Hobbit steps on his dick again.
[Embedded content]
Also: Roy Moore, Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich, Mike Huckabee, etc, etc.
I’m in Facebook jail for calling Trump the White Trash President.
Relative uses N word about Kamala Harris and Facebook approves…
Ben Shapiro: “If you had to work more than one job to have a roof over your head or food on the table, you probably shouldn’t have taken the job that’s not paying you enough. That’d be a you problem” pic.twitter.com/HDKSvIGBfW
— Jason Campbell (@JasonSCampbell) August 14, 2019
This coming from a scumbag who gets paid thousands of dollars for nothing more than to spew racist and misogynist crap on a daily basis.
re: #65 Citizen K
The algorithms wouldn’t be this easily exploited if those that were in charge put effort into fixing them. And considering how long this has been a problem, it raises the question of whether those in charge actually see it as a problem, or whether they see it as working exactly as it should to them.
In other words, at some point, complicity becomes a more likely explanation than incompetence.
I suspect that there is an overwhelming percentage of white dudes still in positions of power in these companies and as a result they can’t see how to fix the problems. It’s literally a lack of diversity that’s causing a giant fucking blind spot.
re: #68 DodgerFan1988
[Embedded content]
This coming from a scumbag who gets paid thousand of dollars for nothing more than to spew racist and misogynist crap on a daily basis.
Doesn’t Benjyboy’s wife work?
Trump has reshaped American attitudes to a remarkable extent on a trio of his key issues—race, immigration, and trade.
There’s just one catch: The public is turning *against* Trump’s views. https://t.co/UdNg3cXu0f— David A. Graham (@GrahamDavidA) August 19, 2019
Jennifer Rubin has a good one today:
She breaks it down on why Abrams is such a good political mind.
re: #67 Joe Bacon 🌹
I’m in Facebook jail for calling Trump the White Trash President.
Relative uses N word about Kamala Harris and Facebook approves…
Isn’t this just a byproduct of using algorithms to flag speech without having knowledgeable humans reviewing the decision? Because it’s too expensive to involve humans in these decisions, given the level of content on these platforms. Our host can keep this a safe place for the honest exchange of ideas because there are only hundreds comments daily — and only a few hundred members. But this is not a scalable task. It would become impossible task for a single person to manage if they were confronted with thousands of active members who posted tens of thousands comments, let alone tens of millions of active participants. Suddenly you would have to involve hundred of reviewers — and how can you guarantee that they are all honest?
re: #73 Hecuba’s daughter
Isn’t this just a byproduct of using algorithms to flag speech without having knowledgeable humans reviewing the decision? Because it’s too expensive to involve humans in these decisions, given the level of content on these platforms. Our host can keep this a safe place for the honest exchange of ideas because there are only hundreds comments daily — and only a few hundred members. But this is not a scalable task. It would become impossible task for a single person to manage if they were confronted with thousands of active members who posted tens of thousands comments, let alone tens of millions of active participants. Suddenly you would have to involve hundred of reviewers — and how can you guarantee that they are all honest?
I asked for a review and they still suspended me.
re: #74 Joe Bacon 🌹
I asked for a review and they still suspended me.
AND
They sustained the decision to let my relative use the “N” word.
re: #69 KGxvi
I suspect that there is an overwhelming percentage of white dudes still in positions of power in these companies and as a result they can’t see how to fix the problems. It’s literally a lack of diversity that’s causing a giant fucking blind spot.
if they in fact see ‘problems’ at all
So, everyone’s worried about it except the people most likely to do it.
in new NBC/WSJ poll:
are you worried US will suffer another mass shooting by white nationalists?
Republicans 24%
non-college white men 27%
rural residents 37%
independents 58%
suburban residents 55%
white women college grads 70%
African-Americans 80%
Hispanics 72%
Democrats 82%— John Harwood (@JohnJHarwood) August 19, 2019
re: #73 Hecuba’s daughter
Isn’t this just a byproduct of using algorithms to flag speech without having knowledgeable humans reviewing the decision? Because it’s too expensive to involve humans in these decisions, given the level of content on these platforms. Our host can keep this a safe place for the honest exchange of ideas because there are only hundreds comments daily — and only a few hundred members. But this is not a scalable task. It would become impossible task for a single person to manage if they were confronted with thousands of active members who posted tens of thousands comments, let alone tens of millions of active participants. Suddenly you would have to involve hundred of reviewers — and how can you guarantee that they are all honest?
As others have said, the algorithm flags, but it’s still humans doing the reviews. And almost unerringly they fall on letting racists be racists but giving the boot to those who challenge said racists. Which again leads to my point that this may be the algorithms performing exactly as they want them to. Complicity over incompetence.
re: #71 Blind Frog Belly White
Trump has reshaped American attitudes to a remarkable extent on a trio of his key issues—race, immigration, and trade.
i dont know if ‘shaped’ is the right word
-brought out the evil in some people that was already there
- certainly made others more aware though likely cemented how they probably already felt
‘shaped/reshaped’? i dont think so
uncovered or laid bare maybe
People with mental illness commit less than 5% of violent crimes. They‘re much more likely to be victims of violent crime than perpetrators.
pic.twitter.com/JGNU04xFVG— Shannon Watts (@shannonrwatts) August 16, 2019
re: #77 Blind Frog Belly White
So, everyone’s worried about it except the people most likely to do it.
[Embedded content]
Makes sense… those most likely to do it aren’t worried about being targets.
re: #80 Belafon
Donald Trump says we need to build “institutions” to prevent gun violence and mass shootings.]
he could be on to something
build ‘institutions’
put the guns in them
re: #74 Joe Bacon 🌹
I asked for a review and they still suspended me.
But who actually does these reviews? A low wage worker in Mumbai? A more sophisticated AI routine? Someone who was on Jay Leno’s Jaywalking sketch?
re: #81 KGxvi
Makes sense… those most likely to do it aren’t worried about being targets.
Not to mention the depth of denial - El Paso wasn’t about white supremacy, or anti-immigrant hatred, you see. It was Mental Illness!
re: #82 DangerMan
he could be on to something
build ‘institutions’
put the guns in them
We could call them “Places of Gun Worship” or “Places to Practice Shooting” or something like that.
re: #80 Belafon
The sort of mentally ill people we used to institutionalize aren’t the ones shooting people. Most shooters had jobs, making enough money to buy the guns and ammo, so they’re not incapable of functioning in society. The Las Vegas shooter was a well to do business man, for example.
OK, watched the videos and there’s no doubt about it, Kudlow was drunk as a skunk this morning.
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 19, 2019
It seems that Joni Ernst is having some trouble answering questions:
And the second part of Joni Ernst’s answer on gun violence and the crowd’s reaction: pic.twitter.com/TY90rJBWfD
— Iowa Starting Line (@IAStartingLine) August 17, 2019
Good thread on the “Italian Hollywood” Cinecitta, or cinema city
The Studio was constructed in 1937 after the Cines Roma studios had had a fire. As you can see in this picture, they were also limited for space, and Mussolini wanted there to be greater native Italian film production pic.twitter.com/l00wduGEw5
— Ben Grabham (@BenGrabham) July 10, 2019
re: #80 Belafon
[Embedded content]
Classify white nationalism and racism as a mental illness and I’m in.
Correction: I should have said yesterday morning. Here’s a clip. https://t.co/CsVdoQv7y4
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 19, 2019
Dana asks Larry Kudlow about purchasing Greenland “The President knows a thing or two about buying real estate” #FNS pic.twitter.com/HeaxR49JuU
— FoxNewsSunday (@FoxNewsSunday) August 18, 2019
re: #88 Belafon
It seems that Joni Ernst is having some trouble answering questions:
[Embedded content]
Clips not loading for me: what did Senator Hog-Chopper have to say?
re: #62 The Pie Overlord!
Ben Shapiro, apparently forgetting that Donald Trump is the Republican President of the United States, says “I’m not aware of a single major Republican figure who said the Barack Obama was not the legitimate President of the United States”
He is damn aware but he knows how to employ the rhetorical devices he learned in law school.
re: #94 Charles Johnson
LOL Kudlow was stinking drunk. Probably smelled like a rotgut distillery.
re: #62 The Pie Overlord!
We see the rare moment where Ben Shapiro has removed his head from his ass, only to to bury it in the sand.
…no wait, he’s managed to do both at the same time somehow. He’s a man of many talents apparently.— White Supremacy = Terrorism, K? (@Citizen_Kryptik) August 19, 2019
re: #98 Citizen K
[Embedded content]
Who else remembers Benjyboy saying Obama was an illegitimate President?
IT’S ALIVE https://t.co/rgZTrqMaOq
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 19, 2019
The debunked study you’re referring to was based on 21 undecided voters. For context that’s about half the number of people associated with your campaign who have been indicted. https://t.co/0zHnWvGjSv
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) August 19, 2019
re: #100 Charles Johnson
He’s lying, he has no soul.
re: #100 Charles Johnson
[Embedded content]
Narrator: “It wasn’t his soul.”https://t.co/B57cJd51XH
— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) August 18, 2019
re: #95 Jay C
Clips not loading for me: what did Senator Hog-Chopper have to say?
“As part of my teacher training this past week, I was asked to listen to popping sounds and then determine if they were gun shots or not,” said Ellie Holland, a speech and language pathologist teacher. “I was then asked to be trained to man a family reunification center to provide counseling to parents seeking their children following a catastrophic event.”
“My question to you today, Senator, is when can I plan to get back to trainings that simply teach children to read and write?” she asked.
After some applause from the crowd, Ernst replied as she did throughout all the questions this morning, talking about laws already on the books and calling for more action on mental health care.
“This is a very, very difficult time, and we have gone through many of these,” Ernst began. “I remember going through all types of drills as a child growing up.”
Parts of the crowd yelled out “not like this,” along with intermittent “do something!” shouts.
Ernst also tries to talk about a lack of counselors, but doesn’t seem to be acknowledging being part of the reason there are fewer.
Kurt Eichenwald had a pretty good tweet-rant about Adam Lanza: his parents had done pretty much everything possible in terms of mental health (short of institutionalizing him), so there was very little that mental health care could have done. The one thing that would have prevented that loss of precious life was to take guns out of the house.
Why did Hate Groups Go After Johnny Cash in the 1960s? It was because of his appearance with a woman some thought was African-American…https://t.co/uUg1HzEEqc
— EssenViews (@essenviews) August 19, 2019
Main problem for 1619 Project—as usual—is that those most in need of its instruction won’t read it.
re: #107 DodgerFan1988
[Embedded content]
From the linked article:
Though the National States Rights Party was not the Ku Klux Klan, it had close ties to the organization and in publicity about the campaign against Cash, many outlets—and Cash himself—identified it as the KKK.
Hmmm, where have we heard that before…?
re: #106 Barefoot Grin
Kurt Eichenwald had a pretty good tweet-rant about Adam Lanza: his parents had done pretty much everything possible in terms of mental health (short of institutionalizing him), so there was very little that mental health care could have done. The one thing that would have prevented that loss of precious life was to take guns out of the house.
i think its hard to acknowledge that no matter what laws might be put in place (short of actual, effective and total confiscation) (and they wont) is that there is no way to stop the next mass shooting. certainly reduce the numbers. and they do id and catch some of the less than careful ones out there. but there will always be a next mass shooting.
focus on reducing the total number of gun deaths overall
focus on accountability, especially regarding sales and transfers
focus on things they cant say no to: “who else but the owner is responsible for whatever is done with his gun, including who he sells or gives it to?”
“The same prez who … said trade wars were ‘easy to win’ told his supporters that ‘I never said China was going to be easy.’ Same prez who compared America’s intel agencies to ‘Nazi Germany’ … complained that Democrats ‘use the term Nazi’ to attack…”https://t.co/CuyXAkcfRj
— Aaron Blake (@AaronBlake) August 16, 2019
Kudlow predicted the deficit would decline in 2018. It increased 17%.
He said we’d get 3-4 percent GDP growth off the tax cuts. It’s been 2.5 percent.
He predicted we could hit 5% GDP growth for a short period. The highest it’s hit has been 3.5%.https://t.co/Q6FAvUxOtC— Aaron Blake (@AaronBlake) August 19, 2019
re: #110 DangerMan
i think its hard to acknowledge that no matter what laws might be put in place (short of actual, effective and total confiscation) (and they wont) is that there is no way to stop the next mass shooting. certainly reduce the numbers. and they do id and catch some of the less than careful ones out there. but there will always be a next mass shooting.
focus on reducing the total number of gun deaths overall
focus on accountability, especially regarding sales and transfers
focus on things they cant say no to: “who else but the owner is responsible for whatever is done with his gun, including who he sells or gives it to?”
It’s definitely a long, long term project (guns last a long time and there’s no way in hell they’ll ever be banned or confiscated), but I agree on your suggestions.
re: #94 Charles Johnson
[Embedded content]
Kudlow, drunk as Lot, sounds just like Trump sounds all the time! (Right down to the coke sniffs)
Narrator V.O: “It was, in fact, not the least racist system in the country due to all of the easily substantiated racism.” https://t.co/iq9V7JhLfx
— Elon James White (@elonjames) August 19, 2019
I’d ask where chuds like that come from, but that is sadly all too obvious.
re: #106 Barefoot Grin
Kurt Eichenwald had a pretty good tweet-rant about Adam Lanza: his parents had done pretty much everything possible in terms of mental health (short of institutionalizing him), so there was very little that mental health care could have done. The one thing that would have prevented that loss of precious life was to take guns out of the house.
When my son was diagnosed, I sold all of my semiautomatic firearms. I lost about a thousand dollars that gunshow, especially for my M1 carbine. He has never shown any interest in doing anything like that but l felt the need to be safer.
Still miss that carbine.
Well my wife better watch her step.
And with that Barrister telling me my distant relatives were wiped out in a horrible accident In Kenya, and I’m the only known living relative and they were LOADED…… and all I need to do is send him my bank information and I get MILLIONS, she just better shape up…..
re: #116 William Lewis
When my son was diagnosed, I sold all of my semiautomatic firearms. I lost about a thousand dollars that gunshow, especially for my M1 carbine. He has never shown any interest in doing anything like that but l felt the need to be safer.
Still miss that carbine.
Yeah, I think AL’s mom took him shooting as a kind of last-resort bonding experience.
I am confident Johnny Cash would punch the shit out of Nazis.
Big story just now: Twitter and Facebook jointly take down a network of Chinese forged accounts attacking Hong Kong, both (!) linking the activity to the Chinese government—note the remarkably crude, vile content
Twitter: https://t.co/R8q0Giievb
Facebook: https://t.co/O4Tq4eVmWI— Thomas Rid (@RidT) August 19, 2019
re: #115 Citizen K
[Embedded content]
I’d ask where chuds like that come from, but that is sadly all too obvious.
These fucking people.
re: #110 DangerMan
focus on things they cant say no to: “who else but the owner is responsible for whatever is done with his gun, including who he sells or gives it to?”
Clearly covered by the “well-regulated militia” part of the 2A
I’m working on an historical fiction novel set on the day before 9/11. As part of my research I’m sending some questions to a 17 year old girl I know from church (who of course was not alive at the time of the events) to get an idea of her perspective on them.
This should be interesting.
re: #125 Eclectic Cyborg
We have an author in our midst!! How nice.
re: #126 Patricia Kayden
We have an author in our midst!! How nice.
Hopefully a fully published author by the time I’m 40 (just turned 38 last week). Fingers crossed…
re: #104 Belafon
iowastartingline.com
“This is a very, very difficult time, and we have gone through many of these,” Ernst began. “I remember going through all types of drills as a child growing up.”
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 29 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
(edited to correct my math error)
re: #111 Dread Pirate
Who could have predicted that a man who bankrupted several businesses would mess up the booming economy he inherited from President Obama?
re: #127 Eclectic Cyborg
Hopefully a fully published author by the time I’m 40 (just turned 38 last week). Fingers crossed…
Yes You Can!!
re: #128 sagehen
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 19 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
Actually, that would have made her 29.
re: #128 sagehen
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 19 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
Yep. I’ve said this before: Every door at my elementary school opened to the outside. We never had shooter drills. I’m just a little bit older than she is, having been born in November, 1969.
This is the best “farewell:” to Trump’s Republican Party I have seen, written by Don Fuller. Please share widely! Really excellent! pic.twitter.com/A9snSOzeHC
— krupali MD (@krupali) August 19, 2019
re: #128 sagehen
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 19 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
she meant fire drills /s (not really)
re: #128 sagehen
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 19 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
Typo about the Senator’s age aside, it’s REALLY unlikely she had experienced any “active-shooter” drills in rural Montgomery County, Iowa in the 1970s. Maybe she was busy “drilling” with a BS shovel…..
re: #134 DangerMan
she meant fire drills /s (not really)
That’s what she’s implying, for sure. But the parents aren’t buying it, because we’ve all been through those.
Pence today at the Detroit Economic Club:
Pence’s message to 300 Detroit Economic Club members and guests, in short, was that the economy was in dire straits before Trump became president but now is riding high, and will continue to do so as long as voters don’t turn to what he termed Democratic socialists.
re: #133 The Pie Overlord!
Great letter. I only wish the dude had the stones to switch to the Democratic party. Not voting because you don’t want to vote for a Republican only helps get Republicans elected.
Hi Ben. Here is you saying he would be the best challenger for Obama prior to 2012 and explaining how birtherism was the reason for that. You are bad at this. pic.twitter.com/11T2hZLI9G
— Collin Reischman (@CMReischman) August 19, 2019
Good god, Ben is such a shitty weasel. And yet he keeps getting treated like some great prodigal scion of conservatism.
re: #139 Citizen K
Good god, Ben is such a shitty weasel. And yet he keeps getting treated like some great prodigal scion of conservatism.
Your first sentence is WHY he gets treated as you described in the second.
re: #89 gocart mozart
Thanks for sharing this, I was completely unaware of Cinecitta and its history!
re: #139 Citizen K
[Embedded content]
Good god, Ben is such a shitty weasel. And yet he keeps getting treated like some great prodigal scion of conservatism.
Sarah Palin too but lie some more will ya Ben if it soothes your conscience. And Romney never disavowed it.
re: #139 Citizen K
Hi Ben. Here is you saying he would be the best challenger for Obama prior to 2012 and explaining how birtherism was the reason for that. You are bad at this.
He was fully aware, he is just being a demagogue who will lie and twist things in order to “win” an argument and be able to walk away smirking.
re: #132 Belafon
Yep. I’ve said this before: Every door at my elementary school opened to the outside. We never had shooter drills. I’m just a little bit older than she is, having been born in November, 1969.
I was born in 1969 as well - and while we had earthquake drills (living in L.A. and all that as a kid) we never once had a shooter drill.
Never.
re: #142 HappyWarrior
Sarah Palin too but lie some more will ya Ben if it soothes your conscience. And Romney never disavowed it.
Sheriff Joe Arpaio (whom Trump later pardoned) was not a major figure, but his “cold case posse” was sure popular with the GOP
Hell all I’m 18 years younger than Ernst and we didn’t. I have cousins around the same age who grew up in much more populated areas than Ernst. I’d ask them but I’m sure their recollection is the same as yours.
re: #144 Dr Lizardo
I was born in 1969 as well - and while we had earthquake drills (living in L.A. and all that as a kid) we never once had a shooter drill.
Never.
Heck, I still recall duck-and-cover drills
re: #145 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
Sheriff Joe Arpaio (whom Trump later pardoned) was not a major figure, but his “cold case posse” was sure popular with the GOP
Right. With the exception of McCain, there were few who called the birther bs nonsense. Most did the weasel thing of not denying it outright but there were plenty of people like Joe.
She’d be the first to tell you she’s STILL a leftist and concerned about social justice, but even more about active pacifism. Specifically, she’s the type who unironically uses the term “right-wing liberal” and felt like Hillary would inevitably have started WWIII against Russia.
— (((Chrysi Cat))) (@chrysicat) August 19, 2019
>>>provoke armed resistance that would lead to a proper unitary Bolshevik state on US territory rather than 50 entities that it’s becoming clear are still countries in their own right—because every1 would know to take fascism down before it became established. #howdthatworkout
— (((Chrysi Cat))) (@chrysicat) August 19, 2019
Dammit, Bernie, why’d you even accept that endorsement, let alone invite her to introduce you at the Iowa Social?
re: #134 DangerMan
she meant fire drills /s (not really)
And we’ve had a couple of shootings where the murderers triggered fire alarms to get the people outside and thus gathered and in a place where they were much easier to shoot.
Elementary and high school I went to were 1960s construction. Sort of sprawling single-floor layouts with a lot of fire exit doors that opened directly outside simply by pushing a bar down. They were, with a few exceptions, not usable to come into the building unless someone unlatched the door for you from the inside.
Post-70s energy crisis those buildings were notoriously more expensive to heat since they had a lot of surface area and single pane glass for their volume.
re: #118 Barefoot Grin
Yeah, I think AL’s mom took him shooting as a kind of last-resort bonding experience.
My brother and I go shooting for sibling bonding time. We also watch Japanese kaiju and cheesy science fiction movies.
How A German City Found An Absolutely Genius Way Of Handling Neo-Nazis
…in 2014, sponsors agreed to donate money for each step marched by the neo-Nazis, with the cash going to programs that fight Nazis, the Guardian reported at the time.
It was billed as Germany’s most involuntary walkathon.
Instead of greeting the group with protests, they put up banners welcoming them to the “Nazis Against Nazis” walkathon, according to a video on a YouTube channel run by the organization that promoted it…
re: #148 HappyWarrior
Right. With the exception of McCain, there were few who called the birther bs nonsense. Most did the weasel thing of not denying it outright but there were plenty of people like Joe.
McCain got booed for calling people out on it, nobody else in the Party wanted to risk making that mistake
re: #154 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
McCain got booed for calling people out on it, nobody else in the Party wanted to risk making that mistake
Correct which is why most of them took the Romney route of cowardice.
Can’t wait to hear about the deficit once a Democrat is elected…
White House officials eyeing payroll tax cut in effort to reverse weakening economy
Americans pay payroll taxes on income up to $132,900, so cutting the payroll tax has remained a popular idea for many lawmakers seeking to deliver savings for middle-income earners and not the wealthiest Americans. But payroll tax cuts can also add dramatically to the deficit and - depending on how they are designed - pull billions of dollars away from Social Security and Medicare.
Trump and top aides have spent the past few days trying to convince the public that the economy is strong and that fears about a recession are misguided. But White House officials quietly have begun scrambling for new ideas to reverse public concerns and boost business confidence.
washingtonpost.com
re: #147 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
Heck, I still recall duck-and-cover drills
I remember the one time we did a drill in case “something happened” and we needed to be taken home by a teacher. I was five. I wasn’t much older when I figured out what it was about (shadow of the Cuban Missile Crisis). But it was decades before I figured out we would be nuclear chaff if Port Chicago or Benicia got nuked.
re: #132 Belafon
Yep. I’ve said this before: Every door at my elementary school opened to the outside. We never had shooter drills. I’m just a little bit older than she is, having been born in November, 1969.
Where’d you go to school? In PA, yeah, we had a bunch of doors, but none of the rooms in either my grade school nor my high school opened to the outside. They opened into hallways. Good thing, too, especially in mid-winter. It was often below freezing!
When I first saw that here in California - school rooms only opening to the outdoors - it was a bit of a shock.
re: #128 sagehen
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 19 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
She’s thinking about the monthly fire drill.
re: #147 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
Heck, I still recall duck-and-cover drills
We had them in California through the 90s because of earthquakes.
Oh, yeah - and when I was in grade school (1963-1970), there was a fallout shelter sign on the place. And we conducted Fire Drills and “Air Raid Drills”, where we all went out into the hall and leaned against the wall covering out heads with our arms.
hope that this makes your day a bit better
(Jaimee Monk FB) pic.twitter.com/BQq5vUO9uH— Humor And Animals (@humorandanimals) August 19, 2019
re: #159 Cheechako
She’s thinking about the monthly fire drill.
Nowadays, unfortunately, updated to a monthly live-fire drill…
re: #156 Kilroy was here
Can’t wait to hear about the deficit once a Democrat is elected…
White House officials eyeing payroll tax cut in effort to reverse weakening economy
Americans pay payroll taxes on income up to $132,900, so cutting the payroll tax has remained a popular idea for many lawmakers seeking to deliver savings for middle-income earners and not the wealthiest Americans. But payroll tax cuts can also add dramatically to the deficit and - depending on how they are designed - pull billions of dollars away from Social Security and Medicare.Trump and top aides have spent the past few days trying to convince the public that the economy is strong and that fears about a recession are misguided. But White House officials quietly have begun scrambling for new ideas to reverse public concerns and boost business confidence.
washingtonpost.com
I don’t remember this particular gambit helping much during either the Bush or Obama Administrations.
“No True Scotsman” pushed Birtherism, apparently.
ben’s game here is he is defining “republican figure” to exclude pretty much anyone who wasn’t a high-ranking republican lawmaker. 8 years of right-wing media attacking obama as illegitimate—including shapiro himself—doesn’t count https://t.co/RBdoObgUB8
— b-boy bouiebaisse (@jbouie) August 19, 2019
re: #158 Blind Frog Belly White
Where’d you go to school? In PA, yeah, we had a bunch of doors, but none of the rooms in either my grade school nor my high school opened to the outside. They opened into hallways. Good thing, too, especially in mid-winter. It was often below freezing!
When I first saw that here in California - school rooms only opening to the outdoors - it was a bit of a shock.
I honestly can’t even imagine how they make it work, logistics-wise. Especially for rooms on the opposite side of the building from the courtyard, or does everything open inward but outdoors? And are the lockers exposed to the elements too?
Gonna call it a day. Have a good one, Lizards.
re: #100 Charles Johnson
So Stephen Miller is saying he the Robot Chicken from Cartoon Network?
re: #165 Blind Frog Belly White
“No True Scotsman” pushed Birtherism, apparently.
[Embedded content]
He wasn’t fringe at all. Republican candidates loved courting his support. Ben’s a lying fraud.
re: #150 Feline Fearless Leader
And we’ve had a couple of shootings where the murderers triggered fire alarms to get the people outside and thus gathered and in a place where they were much easier to shoot.
This was actually the game plan for the Columbine shooters. They rigged pipe bombs to go off in the cafeteria, the hope being the explosions would trigger the fire alarm and they could pick students off as they rushed outside.
Fortunately, Klebold and Harris were shitty bomb makers and the bombs never went off, so they went back inside the school and starting shooting people.
re: #164 KGxvi
I don’t remember this particular gambit helping much during either the Bush or Obama Administrations.
Trump’s “Best economy in the history of our country” requires a payroll tax cut and a 1% drop in the Fed interest rate + quantitative easing to avoid collapse, apparently.
re: #169 HappyWarrior
He wasn’t fringe at all. Republican candidates loved courting his support. Ben’s a lying fraud.
He threatened to run in 2012.
re: #27 DangerMan
“He’s an odious little grifter and it’s time for him to go.”
— Fox News host Steve Hilton, quoted by The Hill, on National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre.
i swear before i read the cite, i thought it was referring to trump
It’s a twofer. Applies to both Trump and LaPierre.
re: #170 Eclectic Cyborg
This was actually the game plan for the Columbine shooters. They rigged pipe bombs to go off in the cafeteria, the hope being the explosions would trigger the fire alarm and they could pick students off as they rushed outside.
Fortunately, Klebold and Harris were shitty bomb makers and the bombs never went off, so they went back inside the school and starting shooting people.
Not just the fire alarm. The bombs they made should have had sufficient force to tear out the load-bearing walls in the cafeteria, so they weren’t just intended as a distraction. These were no mere dry-ice bombs, which were a common nuisance in Colorado high schools at the time.
re: #166 Chrysicat
I honestly can’t even imagine how they make it work, logistics-wise. Especially for rooms on the opposite side of the building from the courtyard, or does everything open inward but outdoors? And are the lockers exposed to the elements too?
The Younger Boy’s High School had some doors that open into hallways, and some that open into courtyards. His grade school, they all open into courtyards. Same with the Middle School.
re: #171 Blind Frog Belly White
Trump’s “Best economy in the history of our country” requires a payroll tax cut and a 1% drop in the Fed interest rate + quantitative easing to avoid collapse, apparently.
The dirty little secret is that almost every time the economy is running well, it’s running on thin ice
BREAKING: Facebook admits the Trump campaign is violating its rules, takes down numerous ads targeting women
Facebook only took action after an inquiry about the ads from Popular Information https://t.co/FkQ0sKiBtJ— Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) August 19, 2019
Perhaps more importantly, Facebook is not enforcing other rules, including its rule prohibiting false and misleading content.
Facebook is allowing the Trump campaign to run an ad falsely claiming that Democrats are trying to repeal the 2nd Amendment https://t.co/FkQ0sKiBtJ— Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) August 19, 2019
re: #176 KGxvi
The dirty little secret is that almost every time the economy is running well, it’s running on thin ice
Media vita in morte sumus.
re: #175 Blind Frog Belly White
The Younger Boy’s High School had some doors that open into hallways, and some that open into courtyards. His grade school, they all open into courtyards. Same with the Middle School.
My elementary school had 2 doors in each class room. One opened to the parking lot and one opened to the playground.
In junior high pretty much all the classrooms were inside buildings.
In high school we had a mix. There were classic classrooms inside buildings, but we also had portable buildings that all opened to the outside. We had also taken over an elementary school across the street, so all those classrooms opened to the outside. Also, we only had lockers my freshman and sophomore years (they took them out because we had more students than lockers, but didn’t bother giving us home and classroom books) which were all outside as well.
re: #176 KGxvi
The dirty little secret is that almost every time the economy is running well, it’s running on thin ice
Exactly. It’s a very delicate, interconnected system, no more sturdy than a house of cards. All it takes is one or two to drop to bring the whole thing down (see also: Subprime mortgage crisis).
re: #162 Mescalero09
[Embedded content]
Ha ha. So wait the dude says, “first cousin, oh ma gawd”; then she says “and a Nazi!” to some backbeat and the doggo gives them that smile….
The scariest thing in our elementary school was the boiler room.
re: #176 KGxvi
The dirty little secret is that almost every time the economy is running well, it’s running on thin ice
Our lax fiscal oversight laws make it possible for banks and corporations to hide their red figures until they crash and burn. That was certainly the case in 2008, when banks stopped loaning money to each other because they all knew that they were hiding enormous losses and only declaring a fraction of them.
Their logic being “We make $10 billion in losses but are only showing $1.5 billion…those guys are declaring $4 billion in losses, how deep are they really in the hole?”
And we have done almost nothing to correct this cardinal flaw in our financial and accounting systems.
re: #184 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
Our lax fiscal oversight laws make it possible for banks and corporations to hide their red figures until they crash and burn. That was certainly the case in 2008, when banks stopped loaning money to each other because they all knew that they were hiding enormous losses and only declaring a fraction of them.
Their logic being “We make $10 billion in losses but are only showing $1.5 billion…those guys are declaring $4 billion in losses, how deep are they really in the hole?”
And we have done almost nothing to correct this cardinal flaw in our financial and accounting systems.
What do you mean? We made all the big banks even bigger! Surely that will prevent the banks from ever imploding again!
re: #158 Blind Frog Belly White
Where’d you go to school? In PA, yeah, we had a bunch of doors, but none of the rooms in either my grade school nor my high school opened to the outside. They opened into hallways. Good thing, too, especially in mid-winter. It was often below freezing!
When I first saw that here in California - school rooms only opening to the outdoors - it was a bit of a shock.
I’m from Abilene, TX. It could get cold in the winter, but you didn’t have to walk very far between classrooms. The school was kind of old, and on the poor side of town. It’s closed now, but you can look for Anson Jones elementary in Abilene and find the occasional picture.
Confused woman jumps aboard sinking ship.
Ex-Undocumented Immigrant Running For Congress As A Pro-Trump Republican
Whitney Williams is running for Congress against U.S. Representative Haley Stevens. Although Williams came to America illegally, she now supports a pro-Trump, anti-immigration agenda, according to Michigan local news site M Live.
Williams came to the U.S. illegally from Taiwan when she was ten-years-old. She lived in America illegally for 16 years before becoming a citizen in 2013 after marrying her American husband.
re: #166 Chrysicat
I honestly can’t even imagine how they make it work, logistics-wise. Especially for rooms on the opposite side of the building from the courtyard, or does everything open inward but outdoors? And are the lockers exposed to the elements too?
The lockers were in the classrooms, and you went to your home room if you needed something. The school consisted of three rows of classrooms, plus a cafeteria.
re: #181 Eclectic Cyborg
Exactly. It’s a very delicate, interconnected system, no more sturdy than a house of cards. All it takes is one or two to drop to bring the whole thing down (see also: Subprime mortgage crisis).
But, you know, it’s easy to forget given the depth of the crash in 2008 and the length of the subsequent expansion, but recession/expansion/recession/expansion is how the economy goes. Since I became an adult, there have been 5 cycles. This is the longest expansion, but also it was preceded by the deepest recession. It’s how it works. The swings used to be a lot more violent, before the Fed started regulating them.
re: #187 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
Confused woman jumps aboard sinking ship.
Ex-Undocumented Immigrant Running For Congress As A Pro-Trump Republican
Good Lord. At least most of these idiots are only figuratively “pulling up the ladder they used” as they were at least “not illegal” themselves. That’s a different kind of ass.
re: #128 sagehen
SHE’S LYING.
Joni Ernst was born in 1970; she was 29 when Columbine happened. No way did she ever have to deal with active shooter drills when she was a kid. She’s also too old to have gone through “duck & cover” drills, they stopped doing that before she entered school.
(edited to correct my math error)
She said “all types of drills,” not “all types of shooting drills.”
In Iowa you absolutely would go through school drills: fire drills, tornado drills, &c.
She was trying to conflate with an equivocation fallacy those types of drills with so-called active shooter drills.
re: #188 Belafon
The lockers were in the classrooms, and you went to your home room if you needed something. The school consisted of three rows of classrooms, plus a cafeteria.
Those sound like miserable passing-period logistics, but then again I occasionally had two classes on the opposite end of the building from my locker in sophomore and junior years, too.
The story of Donald Trump’s feud with his one true nemesis: Windmills
President Trump truly, emphatically doesn’t like windmills.
He doesn’t like them the way the British feel about the French, the way Aaron Burr felt about Hamilton, the way everyone feels about the New England Patriots.
Except the president’s persistent nemesis is inanimate.
On Tuesday, at a petrochemical complex in natural gas-rich western Pennsylvania, the president was, once again, howling at the wind.
He ranted about “big windmills” that “destroy everybody’s property values, kill all the birds.” They’re unreliable, he claimed, darkening people’s homes. “And then, all of a sudden, it stops; the wind and the televisions go off,” he added. “And your wives and husbands say, ‘Darling, I want to watch Donald Trump on television tonight. But the wind stopped blowing and I can’t watch. There’s no electricity in the house, darling.’ “
re: #192 Chrysicat
Those sound like miserable passing-period logistics, but then again I occasionally had two classes on the opposite end of the building from my locker in sophomore and junior years, too.
In our high school, we were encouraged to take all our morning books from our lockers after Home Room in the morning, then swap for the afternoon books after lunch.
Backpacks were non-existent, and only nerds carried book bags.
re: #88 Belafon
It seems that Joni Ernst is having some trouble answering questions:
[Embedded content]
re: #104 Belafon
Ernst also tries to talk about a lack of counselors, but doesn’t seem to be acknowledging being part of the reason there are fewer.
Ernst is also likely full of crap
“This is a very, very difficult time, and we have gone through many of these,” Ernst began. “I remember going through all types of drills as a child growing up.”
She is almost 7 years younger than me. And, I don’t recall doing ‘Duck and Cover’ drills past the 2nd grade. Only thing she likely ever did was damn fire drills and possibly tornado drills. That is nothing like active shooter drills
re: #187 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
Confused woman jumps aboard sinking ship.
Ex-Undocumented Immigrant Running For Congress As A Pro-Trump Republican
Remember, Asians are not the BAD kind of immigrant, to most MAGAts. Why, they’re almost white!
re: #193 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
Yeah, because when the wind stops blowing through the Altamont pass and the wind turbines stop turning, the whole Bay Area goes dark.
Kill me. Kill me now.re: #196 Blind Frog Belly White
Remember, Asians are not the BAD kind of immigrant, to most MAGAts. Why, they’re almost white!
Especially if you can get one in the mail.
re: #198 Belafon
Especially if you can get one in the mail.
Beautiful Asian Women Seek Friendship, Marriage!
Next to
I Was A 98 Pound Weakling!
and
X-Ray Glasses!!!
re: #196 Blind Frog Belly White
Remember, Asians are not the BAD kind of immigrant, to most MAGAts. Why, they’re almost white!
the more affluent MAGA crowd have significant problems with Asian’s over representation in good colleges
re: #139 Citizen K
Good god, Ben is such a shitty weasel. And yet he keeps getting treated like some great prodigal scion of conservatism.
I have never seen a great prodigal scion of conservatism in my fifty-nine years. Not one. Or any other great thinker on conservatism either.
re: #189 Blind Frog Belly White
But, you know, it’s easy to forget given the depth of the crash in 2008 and the length of the subsequent expansion, but recession/expansion/recession/expansion is how the economy goes. Since I became an adult, there have been 5 cycles. This is the longest expansion, but also it was preceded by the deepest recession. It’s how it works. The swings used to be a lot more violent, before the Fed started regulating them.
I recall recessions in the early 90s, the early 2000s and then of course the great recession. We’ve been in a growth period for about 7 years now, which is certainly getting long in the tooth. I’d be shocked to not a see a new recession in the next several years time.
re: #181 Eclectic Cyborg
Exactly. It’s a very delicate, interconnected system, no more sturdy than a house of cards. All it takes is one or two to drop to bring the whole thing down (see also: Subprime mortgage crisis).
because it is based on maximum profitability and not on stability or sustainability
re: #203 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
because it is based on maximum profitability and not on stability or sustainability
This is, I think, a byproduct of treating capital gains as a different category of income from wages. It creates an incentive structure for corporate executives (many of whom have stock options or are otherwise invested in the company) to increase the short term gains while paying little heed to the long term ramifications. That is also the reason why, I think, that privately held companies operate so much differently than publicly traded ones
re: #193 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
“And your wives and husbands say, ‘Darling, I want to watch Donald Trump on television tonight.
hahahahahahahaha
re: #156 Kilroy was here
The Kansas Economic Miracle applied to the whole country.
This goes along with that letter several senators (including mine) signed to Steve Mnuchin saying he should reduce corporate tax rates to 0% (not understanding corporate tax rates, taxes in general, government in general since the Treasury Secretary does not have that authority, &c).
Fortunately the House is in Democratic hands, so any change to tax rates lowering them more are dead-on-arrival.
re: #202 Eclectic Cyborg
I recall recessions in the early 90s, the early 2000s and then of course the great recession. We’ve been in a growth period for about 7 years now, which is certainly getting long in the tooth. I’d be shocked to not a see a new recession in the next several years time.
Ten years, actually. Since June 2009, per NBER, the ones who determine the peaks and troughs - retrospectively, of course! It took about 6 months for it to start to hit the unemployment rate, in early 2010.
Remembering families who never received JUSTICE.#NotPastKneeling#SayTheirNames#SeanBell#ShukriAli#DeborahDanner#LaquanMcdonald#KeithLamontScott#PaulOneal#RekiaBoyd#AltonSterling#ChristianTaylor#TamirRice#MyaHall#TommyYancy#OscarGrantpic.twitter.com/5QlEFlcaP9
— Bishop Talbert Swan (@TalbertSwan) August 19, 2019
Susan Sarandon is trending on Twitter.
And what is is second place right now?
The human cannot stop laughing at all these Chick-fil-A vs. Popeye’s vs. Boston Market tweets and all I want is for them to go get us some chicken… pic.twitter.com/jmvACvpomE
— “Mad Cat” Cattis (@GeneralCattis) August 19, 2019
Not just Hong Kong accounts. Among the accounts Twitter says are linked to China is @LibertyLionNews.
Its bio: “Conservative News from the USA and Abroad. #Catholic Defender of the Constitution of the United States. #Qanon #MAGA #BUILDTHEWALL #TRUMP #2A #1A”
Profile pic: pic.twitter.com/FMkh3QczZR— Donie O’Sullivan (@donie) August 19, 2019
Tonight there are a few dozen more young college-educated voters in my area of operation than there were this morning. There will be more tomorrow. And next week.
re: #204 KGxvi
This is, I think, a byproduct of treating capital gains as a different category of income from wages. It creates an incentive structure for corporate executives (many of whom have stock options or are otherwise invested in the company) to increase the short term gains while paying little heed to the long term ramifications. That is also the reason why, I think, that privately held companies operate so much differently than publicly traded ones
Remember that limited liability corporations exist because we have created a body of laws to allow them to limit their losses to the amount that is invested in them. That also encourages investors to suck as much profit out of them as they can while minimizing investments.
They are legal persons, but unlike living, breathing people, they exist only because we allow them to exist in that form.
No amount. He’s a coward.
How many RTs over 10K does this need before @benshapiro dares to respond? Maybe Ben Shapiro can think of this like a “debate me” challenge with @AOC
— Matt Lipton (@mattliptoncomic) August 16, 2019
Look At This Lying Liar:
The average household has seen their income go up by more than $5,000, wages are rising at their fastest pace in an almost decade—and, most important, they’re rising fastest for our blue-collar workers. Our economy is thriving and Americans are winning! 🇺🇸
— Vice President Mike Pence (@VP) August 19, 2019
re: #178 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
And people will still make excuses for why they need to remain on Facebook: Stay in contact with relatives (because photographs, telephone calls, and letters have become obsolete and services like Skype don’t exist), I curate my feed to keep out political stuff (but Facebook adverts can’t be kept out).
At some point, silence (or excuse making) becomes complicity.
re: #196 Blind Frog Belly White
Remember, Asians are not the BAD kind of immigrant, to most MAGAts. Why, they’re almost white!
Let’s not go anywhere near the sexist fantasies that the fascists have about submissive Asian women…. < bleah! >
re: #216 Anymouse 🌹🎃
And people will still make excuses for why they need to remain on Facebook: Stay in contact with relatives (because photographs, telephone calls, and letters have become obsolete and services like Skype don’t exist), I curate my feed to keep out political stuff (but Facebook adverts can’t be kept out).
At some point, silence (or excuse making) becomes complicity.
Tough beans. A huge amount of my life is connected by the Book of Faces in ways that cannot be duplicated. I like it and I want it and I think we will find a way out of this. Meanwhile, I love all of my 2,700 “friends.”
re: #216 Anymouse 🌹🎃
And people will still make excuses for why they need to remain on Facebook: Stay in contact with relatives (because photographs, telephone calls, and letters have become obsolete and services like Skype don’t exist), I curate my feed to keep out political stuff (but Facebook adverts can’t be kept out).
At some point, silence (or excuse making) becomes complicity.
I generally keep out of politics and even block people who get too carried away with the stuff
And yeah, contact with far-flung friends and relatives, and it is good for organizing and announcing gigs and sessions, which is what brought me there in the first place ten years ago.
But in general, I post nothing there unless I am okay with the notion that the whole world might see it
re: #180 KGxvi
My elementary school had 2 doors in each class room. One opened to the parking lot and one opened to the playground.
In junior high pretty much all the classrooms were inside buildings.
In high school we had a mix. There were classic classrooms inside buildings, but we also had portable buildings that all opened to the outside. We had also taken over an elementary school across the street, so all those classrooms opened to the outside. Also, we only had lockers my freshman and sophomore years (they took them out because we had more students than lockers, but didn’t bother giving us home and classroom books) which were all outside as well.
Except the school I went to in Brazil and the white-segregated kindergarten and first grade I went to in Maryland, all schools had classrooms opening on hallways and no exit to the outside. Michigan is pretty cold.
It is cheaper to design buildings which have no hallways though (no wasted space for hallways).
re: #220 Anymouse 🌹🎃
Except the school I went to in Brazil and the white-segregated kindergarten and first grade I went to in Maryland, all schools had classrooms opening on hallways and no exit to the outside. Michigan is pretty cold.
I do not recall any classrooms that exited directly outside in Gary, Indiana in the 60’s and 70’s. Neither do I recall any mass shootings, despite the burgeoning crime rate there.
If only Eric Garner complied with police he would still be alive today.
— Saladino for Congress (@JoeySalads) August 19, 2019
F*ck you, you insect!
re: #222 DodgerFan1988
If only Eric Garner complied with police he would still be alive today.
Since when is there a death penalty for “disobeying the police”?
Lunch today: A package of Knorr mushroom-flavoured noodles (we don’t buy Knorr products unless they are on close-out sales because $$$) with a can of mushrooms added to add some mushroom flavour.
re: #223 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
Since when is there a death penalty for “disobeying the police”?
If you’re not a conservative.
re: #187 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
Confused woman jumps aboard sinking ship.
Ex-Undocumented Immigrant Running For Congress As A Pro-Trump Republican
She should thank Obama that she’s a citizen then, correct?
re: #210 Joe Bacon 🌹
Susan Sarandon is trending on Twitter.
And what is is second place right now?
[Embedded content]
Never underestimate the power of cats of the internet.
You will fit right in with the rest of the “pro life” republicans who have no empathy.
— yntbe (@yntbe) August 19, 2019
re: #215 The Pie Overlord!
Look At This Lying Liar:
[Embedded content]
$5000????
What the fuckety fuck?
My tax refund went down by $300 this past year.
re: #205 jaunte
“And your wives and husbands say, ‘Darling, I want to watch Donald Trump on television tonight.
hahahahahahahaha
It would never occur to them that it might be a sign from God.
So @gofundme is letting fascists raise funds for the NYPD cop who choked #EricGarner to death. pic.twitter.com/5EssM0Cap5
— Ash J (@AshAgony) August 19, 2019
Here’s a @GoFundMe donor comparing Pantaleo, the killer of #EricGarner to Jesus Christ. pic.twitter.com/PdhSDpHgFN
— rafael (@rafaelshimunov) August 19, 2019
Conservatives donating to Daniel Pantaleo, the murderer who killed Eric Garner.
The Armed Forces Service Medal is the non-combat parallel of the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal which is normally awarded for combat operations and other combat support missions.
The AFSM may be awarded to service members who, on or after June 1, 1992:
- Participate, or have participated, as members of U.S. military units, in a designated U.S. military operation deemed to be a significant activity.
- Encounter no foreign armed opposition or imminent hostile action.
Troops Who Deployed to the US-Mexico Border Are Getting a Medal https://t.co/PFQSAblhXv
re: #218 7-y (Expectation of Great Things in Due Course)
Tough beans. A huge amount of my life is connected by the Book of Faces in ways that cannot be duplicated. I like it and I want it and I think we will find a way out of this. Meanwhile, I love all of my 2,700 “friends.”
Mine is organised through E-mail lists, running a Yahoo Group’s forum on behalf of an international organisation, telephone calls, letters, postcards, &c.
I don’t have 2,700 people in my E-mail list, but I do have a few hundred.
re: #219 Wendell Zurkowitz ((slave to the waffle light))
I generally keep out of politics and even block people who get too carried away with the stuff
And yeah, contact with far-flung friends and relatives, and it is good for organizing and announcing gigs and sessions, which is what brought me there in the first place ten years ago.
But in general, I post nothing there unless I am okay with the notion that the whole world might see it
I stay in contact with far-flung friends and relatives through letters and telephone calls (and Skype for my son).
Back when I was performing in Florida and Georgia, I announced performances through E-mail (the only people on the list were people who put themselves on the list, not people Faceborg shoved at me).
I am not on my computer all the time, but my telephone will ring twenty-four hours a day if someone needs to get ahold of me. My answering machine will record it if I am not at home.
I don’t understand the loyalty to a company which clearly promotes fascism in the name of profit.
When I was directly exposed to Wal*Mart’s cruel employee practices in Oklahoma from my dying neighbour (long story), I quit doing business with that company and never looked back. The only power I have with a corporation is how I choose to spend my money. Facebook and Twitter are no different, which is why I never signed up for them.
The state tried to make me sign up for Twitter when I became the village public information officer. I said “no.” Funny that, the town nor the state did not remove me from my post.
re: #232 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
The Armed Forces Service Medal is the non-combat parallel of the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal which is normally awarded for combat operations and other combat support missions.
The AFSM may be awarded to service members who, on or after June 1, 1992:
[Embedded content]
I’d be embarrassed to wear that if I was in the military.
re: #218 7-y (Expectation of Great Things in Due Course)
Tough beans. A huge amount of my life is connected by the Book of Faces in ways that cannot be duplicated. I like it and I want it and I think we will find a way out of this. Meanwhile, I love all of my 2,700 “friends.”
If that’s not a joke… That’s really sad.
re: #216 Anymouse 🌹🎃
And people will still make excuses for why they need to remain on Facebook: Stay in contact with relatives (because photographs, telephone calls, and letters have become obsolete and services like Skype don’t exist), I curate my feed to keep out political stuff (but Facebook adverts can’t be kept out).
At some point, silence (or excuse making) becomes complicity.
I really do not understand what this huge brouhaha is all about.
Neither Facebook nor Twitter make a dime off of me.
I never click on advertisements in either place, much less even look at them in passing on the rare occasions they show up.
And I still write actual letters that I put in actual envelopes that I stick on an actual postage stamp.
And I have an old fashioned landline and *GASP* make actual telephone calls from time to time.
JFC, the purity tests just get so tiresome.
— J Neo Marvin (@JNeoMarvin) August 19, 2019
re: #232 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
The Armed Forces Service Medal is the non-combat parallel of the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal which is normally awarded for combat operations and other combat support missions.
The AFSM may be awarded to service members who, on or after June 1, 1992:
[Embedded content]
re: #234 MsJ
I’d be embarrassed to wear that if I was in the military.
To be fair, the medal was awarded when Bush sent National Guard troops to the border during Operation Jump Start 2006-08
re: #234 MsJ
I’d be embarrassed to wear that if I was in the military.
Unfortunately in dress uniform you are out-of-uniform (and subject to sanction) if you do not wear all the medals and ribbons you are awarded.
You can be embarrassed all you like, but you will wear it.
I’m embarrassed that the DOD is caving so easily to Pumpkin Pinochet’s demands. I’m pretty sure someone in the White House who never was in the military thought this up (cough, Stephen Miller).
re: #236 gocart mozart
[Embedded content]You can’t name a single major elected Republican official during Obama’s presidency who challenged the legitimacy of his presidency.
Are there any major elected Democratic official challenging the legitimacy of Trump’s presidency? It would make my day. Carter’s statement was nice, but he hasn’t been any kind of official for a number of decades.
Any candidates who receive massive, illegal help from a hostile foreign government should have their legitimacy challenged. Especially when the hostile government informs them that they are going to receive this illegal help and they don’t call the FBI.
A Payroll tax cut? WTF?? What short-sighted bosco bullshit is this?
re: #242 Dave In Austin
A Payroll tax cut? WTF?? What short-sighted bosco bullshit is this?
Another big surprise for taxpayers at filing time when withholding is just not quite enough to cover the bill…
re: #237 Backwoods_Sleuth
I really do not understand what this huge brouhaha is all about.
Neither Facebook nor Twitter make a dime off of me.
I never click on advertisements in either place, much less even look at them in passing on the rare occasions they show up.And I still write actual letters that I put in actual envelopes that I stick on an actual postage stamp.
And I have an old fashioned landline and *GASP* make actual telephone calls from time to time.JFC, the purity tests just get so tiresome.
I don’t know about Twitter, but Facebook sells personal information. That has been documented over and over again. So they make money off you.
The most recent case they didn’t sell it, they gave it away so they can get more data on you.
Facebook Didn’t Sell Your Data; It Gave It Away (The Atlantic, December 19, 2018).
In exchange for even more data about you from Amazon, Netflix, Spotify, Microsoft, and others
As for a purity test, well, I don’t do business with fascists or the fascist-curious. That’s kind of a bright line with me. Not all purity tests are bad. I don’t do business with people who have “liberal hunting license” stickers on their cars either.
This is probably my most important French Bulldog duet tweet so far 🔊
📹: https://t.co/Dy9mpqncBT pic.twitter.com/jPZ0830WTh— Paul Bronks (@SlenderSherbet) August 19, 2019
re: #244 Anymouse 🌹🎃
I don’t know about Twitter, but Facebook sells personal information. That has been documented over and over again. So they make money off you.
The most recent case they didn’t sell it, they gave it away so they can get more data on you.
Facebook Didn’t Sell Your Data; It Gave It Away (The Atlantic, December 19, 2018).
As for a purity test, well, I don’t do business with fascists or the fascist-curious. That’s kind of a bright line with me. Not all purity tests are bad. I don’t do business with people who have “liberal hunting license” stickers on their cars either.
Well, if Facebook “sold” my information, it was worthless.
FB doesn’t have my phone number, my address, my birthdate….nothing.
The Secret Origins of Birtherism bullspotting.com
TIMELINE
Feb. 29, 2008:
- Dave N posts a legal hypothetical about Obama’s birth on the law blog The Volokh Conspiracy, asking what would be the legal implications if Obama had been born in Kenya and then immediately brought by his mother to the U.S.March 1, 2008:
- ‘FARS’ posts at FreeRepublic that he heard a rumor that Obama was born overseas, and was brought immediately by his mother to the U.S. and registered as a Hawaiian birth.March 4, 2008:
- ‘Alan Peters’ posts on his blog Ruthless Roundup that Obama was allegedly born in Kenya but registered as a Hawaiian birth.April 3-4, 2008:
- ‘Alan Peters’ reposts the viral “Obama Laundry List of Lies” created by the website The Audacity of Hypocrisy, and edits it to add the Kenyan birth rumor.April 20, 2008:
- After being reposted on various other websites starting at least as early as April 11, Alan Peters’ version of the Laundry List is posted on the blog Wake Up America, where the Kenyan birth rumor is actively discussed in the comments.April 21, 2008:
- An e-mail inquiring about a rumor that Obama was secretly born in Kenya is posted to the snopes.com message board.June 3, 2008:
- Obama clinches the Democratic nomination for President.June 9, 2008:
- National Review’s Jim Geraghty cites the Snopes post when suggesting that Obama could debunk rumors of a Kenyan birth by releasing his birth certificate.June 10, 2008:
- Skepticism over Obama’s birthplace and demands for his birth certificate receive their first stories at websites like Atlas Shrugs and WorldNetDaily, which would go on to become some of the biggest cheerleaders for Birtherism.June 12, 2008:
- The Obama campaign releases a scan of Obama’s Hawaiian birth certificate on its fightthesmears.com website.- Loren Collins is an Atlanta attorney and the author of Bullspotting: Finding Facts in the Age of Misinformation.
re: #246 Backwoods_Sleuth
They’ve got my birthday. And that’s it. I don’t even use my real name on Facebook.
CNN is reporting that Epstein signed a will two days before his death. He leaves it all to his brother.
Court papers list assets of about $577 million. Court papers indicate Epstein’s brother, Mark, is the only heir.
I hope his brother collects nothing.
Looks like I’m destined to be marked as complicit with evilness.
Oh well.
re: #246 Backwoods_Sleuth
Well, if Facebook “sold” my information, it was worthless.
FB doesn’t have my phone number, my address, my birthdate….nothing.
My problem with Facebook is that it’s absolutely evil.
Proud Boys members convicted of assault for NYC brawl with Antifa https://t.co/0MoLlywMH0 pic.twitter.com/31BAUo2fKa
— CBS News (@CBSNews) August 19, 2019
re: #246 Backwoods_Sleuth
Well, if Facebook “sold” my information, it was worthless.
FB doesn’t have my phone number, my address, my birthdate….nothing.
They have your IP. Unless you’re like me where your IP is seven hundred miles away, there is a lot they can build from that. (That’s why I get targeted adverts on YouTube for businesses in Jefferson City, Missouri.)
What is an IP address and what can it reveal about you? (Business Insider, 2015).
They cite the case of a Canadian government office to find out just what sorts of things could be found with just an IP address. Turns out, it’s a lot.
There has been a lot of talk about Facebook rodent-copulation by foreign actors. How do you suppose they did that?
Back to that Atlantic article above:
Microsoft’s search engine, Bing, got Facebook users’ friends, whether or not the users agreed to grant that access. Netflix and Spotify got access to users’ messages. Amazon got names and contact information. And, of course, Facebook got things in return. The Times states that Facebook used data from other companies, including Amazon, in its “People You May Know” feature, which has long attracted attention for its mysterious suggestions.
But while the story recalls the explosive Cambridge Analytica episode, it’s much more mundane. These were not bad actors, but merely actors playing exactly the role that Facebook wanted them to play. The goals of these integrations were not nefarious, at least from what we currently know, even if the idea that Spotify’s engineers would have access to your Facebook message data is probably not intuitive to most people.
When people say “privacy is dead” in reference to the Internet, this is what they mean. They do not care enough about their privacy to protect it.
My IP (whenever it shows up as looking for my location) is a hundred miles or more away from TheBackwoods.
They have no freaking clue where I live.
And I really do not care.
re: #240 Anymouse 🌹🎃
Unfortunately in dress uniform you are out-of-uniform (and subject to sanction) if you do not wear all the medals and ribbons you are awarded.
You can be embarrassed all you like, but you will wear it.
I’m embarrassed that the DOD is caving so easily to Pumpkin Pinochet’s demands. I’m pretty sure someone in the White House who never was in the military thought this up (cough, Stephen Miller).
That is not necessarily so.
There is no requirement in the US Army to wear all awards and badges in any uniform
re: #254 Backwoods_Sleuth
Looks like I am, too.
Hardly. You know I don’t think that.
But Facebook? Evil. Out and out 666 evil.
re: #258 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
That is not necessarily so.
There is no requirement in the US Army to wear all awards and badges in any uniform
I would add that organizations can require the wear of unit citations, as long as the decorations are provided for free.
I never wore my Air Assault badge the entire time I was in the 101st, because they ordered me to attend the course
re: #244 Anymouse 🌹🎃
I don’t know about Twitter, but Facebook sells personal information. That has been documented over and over again. So they make money off you.
The most recent case they didn’t sell it, they gave it away so they can get more data on you.
Facebook Didn’t Sell Your Data; It Gave It Away (The Atlantic, December 19, 2018).
As for a purity test, well, I don’t do business with fascists or the fascist-curious. That’s kind of a bright line with me. Not all purity tests are bad. I don’t do business with people who have “liberal hunting license” stickers on their cars either.
Half your village plus two voter for a Nazi to replace you on the village council. According to you, only eight people in your village voted for Hillary Clinton. You do business with fascists and fascist-enablers every day. You make sure their water is drinkable and meets government standards, and you continue to do volunteer work for your community.
And many of your friendly village fascists know your name and where you live, and you’ve expressed worry about being unsafe in your current surroundings on numerous occasions.
If you’ve subscribed to or joined any online service, your personal information has been collected and sold and cross-referenced many times over. That genie is long out of the bottle.
Trump’s proud boys. What in absolute fuck are they doing? pic.twitter.com/KXsf35ThQ5
— Max Howroute▫️ (@howroute) August 19, 2019
This was just a couple of days ago.
Seriously, anyone still using Facebook deserves what they get. #DeleteFacebook like your life depends on it. https://t.co/5nbXDTlCk2
— MsJoanne (@MsJoanne) August 16, 2019
re: #257 Backwoods_Sleuth
WHOA! Mine’s 400 miles away!
re: #256 Joe Bacon 🌹
I got tired of being cooped up and I went to the new Eleven City Deli in Los Angeles and had an open face Reuben!
[Embedded content]
Didn’t it fall off the plate, turned like that?
///
re: #259 MsJ
Hardly. You know I don’t think that.
But Facebook? Evil. Out and out 666 evil.
I am complicit because I will not leave FB.
So it has been decreed…
Hey, even my iPhone swooned when I took the pic!
Oh, it was so so good!
re: #262 gocart mozart
[Embedded content]
Mmmm… Smell those supreme beings, what all maleness should be?
🙄🙄🙄🙄
There’s an excellent graphic novel series, “The Books of Magic,” wherein a young wizard is taken over by a cynical little demon. The wizard lives in a false delusion; the demon has him believing that while he lives in a cardboard box in an alley, that it’s actually a mansion with a wine cellar.
I think about that a lot these days.
If the economy goes into recession, don’t expect it to have a major impact on Trump’s already awful reelect numbers.
Trump will blame a media & elite conspiracy… and his voters will believe him. https://t.co/8u577Oi1wD https://t.co/Qvl0lQ0L89 pic.twitter.com/1TPyapDZ36— Rachel “The Doc” Bitecofer 📈🔭🗿💪 (@RachelBitecofer) August 19, 2019
re: #262 gocart mozart
jeepers, couldn’t they play D&D or join a frat?
re: #268 MsJ
Mmmm… Smell those supreme beings, what all maleness should be?
🙄🙄🙄🙄
Eau de Olde Spice?😏
re: #222 DodgerFan1988
[Embedded content]
F*ck you, you insect!
If Eric Garner had been white, the police would have bought cigarettes off of him and then told him the best places to sell.
— (((IntheNumbers))) (@ItsNumbersMan) August 19, 2019
re: #258 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
That is not necessarily so.
There is no requirement in the US Army to wear all awards and badges in any uniform
Thank you for setting me straight on that. I went digging around the graveyard which is Army Regulations, and came up with this.
I imagine the Navy is similar, but I’m not going to dig around the Navy Regulations, which could sink a battleship if put on it in print form.
Chapter 22
Wear of Decorations, Service Medals, Badges, Unit Awards, and Appurtenances
22-1. General
This chapter covers decorations, service medals, badges, unit awards and appurtenances, both U.S. and foreign,
authorized for wear on Army uniforms. The term “award” is an all-inclusive term, covering any decoration, service
medal, badge, ribbon, or appurtenance bestowed on an individual or unit. The term “ribbon” is an all-inclusive term
covering that portion of the suspension ribbon of a service medal or decoration that is worn instead of the service
medal or decoration.
22-2. Authorization
a. Commanders may require the wear of authorized awards on the following occasions:
(1) Parades, reviews, inspections, and funerals.
(2) Ceremonial and social occasions.
b. Unless directed by a commander IAW paragraph 22-2(a), authorized awards are worn at the option of the wearer,
when not prohibited, during normal duty hours. Personnel also may wear authorized awards on appropriate uniforms
when off duty. Personnel are encouraged to wear authorized awards on the service, dress, and mess uniforms.
c. Soldiers may wear authorized awards on the Class B version of the service uniform during duty hours and when
off duty, at their option.
22-3. When wearing awards is prohibited
Wearing awards is prohibited in the following circumstances:
a. On any uniform other than those authorized in this regulation. (See 18 USC 704 for the penalty for unauthorized
wear of the uniform.)
b. When serving a sentence of confinement.
c. When wearing civilian clothing, except for civilian awards, lapel buttons, or rosettes intended for wear with
civilian clothing. Soldiers may wear miniature medals on formal civilian attire at formal social functions, when wearing
the Army uniform is inappropriate or not authorized.
re: #269 Khal Wimpo (the extinguisher of tiki torches)
There’s an excellent graphic novel series, “The Books of Magic,” wherein a young wizard is taken over by a cynical little demon. The wizard lives in a false delusion; the demon has him believing that while he lives in a cardboard box in an alley, that it’s actually a mansion with a wine cellar.
I think about that a lot these days.
[Embedded content]
[Embedded content]
Been saying this but Trump has a lower polling ceiling than most but a higher floor than most too.
I love twitter:
Florida man opens front door; kinkajou runs in, bites him https://t.co/q3A8c1ngT2 pic.twitter.com/jEFVAc3zZS
— Yahoo News (@YahooNews) August 19, 2019
I’m sure this went swimmingly.
Spoke to my two good friends, Prime Minister Modi of India, and Prime Minister Khan of Pakistan, regarding Trade, Strategic Partnerships and, most importantly, for India and Pakistan to work towards reducing tensions in Kashmir. A tough situation, but good conversations!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 19, 2019
Spoke to my two good friends, Prime Minister Modi of India, and Prime Minister Khan of Pakistan, regarding Trade, Strategic Partnerships and, most importantly, for India and Pakistan to work towards reducing tensions in Kashmir. A tough situation, but good conversations!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 19, 2019
Narrator’s Voice: They both believe trump is a moron.
re: #269 Khal Wimpo (the extinguisher of tiki torches)
There’s an excellent graphic novel series, “The Books of Magic,” wherein a young wizard is taken over by a cynical little demon. The wizard lives in a false delusion; the demon has him believing that while he lives in a cardboard box in an alley, that it’s actually a mansion with a wine cellar.
I think about that a lot these days.
[Embedded content]
[Embedded content]
This was something most people were predicting way back in ‘17, that whatever promises he failed to meet would be blamed on somebody else by ‘20. In fact, I’ll predict now that we will be in the midst of a full-blown recession by next November…and MAGAts will be going around, swearing up and down that the economy has never been stronger and anybody who says otherwise is part of a “conspiracy.”
Emptiness overtakes, motionless, still, silent. Seize us.
Drag us into nothingness. pic.twitter.com/lEgrXV1pbP— Black Metal Cats (@evilbmcats) August 19, 2019
re: #276 teleskiguy
I’m sure this went swimmingly.
[Embedded content]
He’s bringing world leaders together…in agreeing that he’s an utter idiot.
A TOUGH SITUATION, GREAT CONVERSATIONS, BIGLY!
re: #281 teleskiguy
A TOUGH SITUATION, GREAT CONVERSATIONS, BIGLY!
He always does this. Says nothing with his word salads.
I wonder if they discussed hair styles.
Great discussion with Prime Minister @BorisJohnson today. We talked about Brexit and how we can move rapidly on a US-UK free trade deal. I look forward to meeting with Boris this weekend, at the @G7, in France!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 19, 2019
Unfortunately we got a crop of future Proud Boys caught in the act…
High school students in southern California appeared to give the Nazi salute in disturbing video footage taken at a sports team awards ceremony.
A video purportedly shows around 10 members of the boys’ water polo team at Pacifica high school in Garden Grove giving the salute while facing a figure at a lectern who is saluting and singing.
According to the Daily Beast, which published the video, the incident occurred before an awards ceremony late last year. The website reported that the song is an obscure Nazi marching song from the second world war.
The video was reportedly shared on Instagram by a student, who allegedly also posted lyrics to the song in his bio on the social network which he later removed.
re: #279 Backwoods_Sleuth
There are some pretty downer Twitter accounts.
There are more people alive now than have ever died since humanity began which means that when you die you’ll be even more lonely, because there is no afterlife and you’ll just shut off like a shitty broken computer and bask in a solitudinal blackness for eternity
Enjoy Arby’s— Nihilist Arby’s (@nihilist_arbys) August 16, 2019
Newt Gingrich Slams ‘New York Times’ 1619 Project As Shameless Abolitionist Propaganda https://t.co/IYe1ieACNG pic.twitter.com/3oPsJPIexA
— The Onion (@TheOnion) August 19, 2019
You cannot be serious. We only rate dogs. Please don’t send bananas. It makes our job so much more difficult. Thank you… 13/10 pic.twitter.com/A6VccWxQPN
— WeRateDogs™ (@dog_rates) August 20, 2019
Hold up. I thought “Christians” abhor lying.
And this is a fucking lie a mile long. Let me stick to facts for ppl in my area. Coal country WV. Coal Mines are shutting down left and right. Poor ppl have actually gotten poorer under Trump. NO 1 has seen that happen. Bc it’s a LIE.— 💙 Koko ✊✊🏽✊🏾💙 (@Kokomothegreat) August 19, 2019
“He is not someone who used to be a Republican,” says Susan Sarandon while introducing Bernie Sanders at an ice cream social in Iowa, talking about how he’s fought for the same issues for years.
She doesn’t name names, but Elizabeth Warren was formerly a registered Republican. pic.twitter.com/3R2hR2aRLw— Holly Otterbein (@hollyotterbein) August 19, 2019
and Bernie isn’t a Democrat, so what’s your point Susan?
What. The. Fuck.
I promise not to do this to Greenland! pic.twitter.com/03DdyVU6HA
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 20, 2019
BREAKING: El Paso Walmart shooter reportedly on suicide watch in jail https://t.co/Q4zdPNwght
— News Breaking LIVE (@NewsBreaking) August 19, 2019
re: #290 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
and Bernie isn’t a Democrat, so what’s your point Susan?
All I need to know about Susan is she supported Edwards over HRC and Obama in 2008. Edwards by far had the most hawkish stance on Iraq. Susan never misses a chance to shit on qualified women.
re: #291 teleskiguy
What. The. Fuck.
[Embedded content]
Ladies and Gentlemen, the President of the United States.
I went to the guinea pig hashtag on Twitter and it’s being swarmed by anti-vaxxers. They’re spouting nonsense that vaccines are tested on guinea pigs, so guinea pig owners should avoid vaccines.
a) I thought Twitter said they would get rid of anti-vaxxers? (That’s right, they lied.)
b) Human vaccines aren’t tested on guinea pigs.
chicken wars
… y’all good? https://t.co/lPaTFXfnyP
— Popeyes Chicken (@PopeyesChicken) August 19, 2019
re: #237 Backwoods_Sleuth
I use Facebook for communication with my son on the autism spectrum. Because that’s how he’s comfortable communicating what is going on so I don’t worry. Like right now he’s with a carload of fellow dudes in Nashville seeing Iron Maiden. Instead of texting and calling me in front of his buddies, he can post things there and I know that he’s fine. I see no other online way to do that that works for him. And I know I’m not the only one who has a similar thing happening with their older kids on the spectrum. So it works and I am not asking him to figure out something else.
re: #283 teleskiguy
I wonder if they discussed hair styles.
[Embedded content]
Unfortunately for Boris and Natasha, Nancy is already on record as putting the kibosh on any US/UK deal if Brexit violates the Good Friday Agreement, which is what Boris intends to do whether or not the EU agrees to it.
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 20, 2019
re: #290 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
and Bernie isn’t a Democrat, so what’s your point Susan?
Oh, he’s ran as a Democrat in the past…and then kicked the party in the nuts once he won the nomination by refusing to accept and instead running as an “independent,” thus neutering the VI DNC with regularity.
So goddamned embarrassed to be a citizen of the United States.
— Charlie Vogel, aka His Teleness the Charlie Lama (@teleskiguy) August 20, 2019
re: #291 teleskiguy
What. The. Fuck.
[Embedded content]
Seems that, like so much else with Donny, all the babbling about mental illness was more projection…
re: #298 A Mom Anon
I use Facebook for communication with my son on the autism spectrum. Because that’s how he’s comfortable communicating what is going on so I don’t worry. Like right now he’s with a carload of fellow dudes in Nashville seeing Iron Maiden. Instead of texting and calling me in front of his buddies, he can post things there and I know that he’s fine. I see no other online way to do that that works for him. And I know I’m not the only one who has a similar thing happening with their older kids on the spectrum. So it works and I am not asking him to figure out something else.
I lurked on this argument because my feelings are known by now but FB helps me as well. I have a huge extended family including some who live overseas. FB for all its warts keeps that possible and without it I never would have met my cousins last summer and you know through being friends with me on FB how much that trip meant to me.
re: #304 Targetpractice
Seems that, like so much else with Donny, all the babbling about mental illness was more projection…
Yeah I hear him talk about mental illness and the phrase physician heal thyself applies.
WSJ just RT’d, guess i can say goodbye to any hope i had in finding out what sex is like,
The two Sunday moods pic.twitter.com/ceIw819XL4
— Officer Edith (@OfficerEdith) August 18, 2019
no, this is a different land hippo. when one gets adopted we’re on to the next
— Officer Edith (@OfficerEdith) August 19, 2019
Somewhere in Hell’s 4th subbasement, Richard Nixon looks on at Donny’s tweets and rejoices, as he no longer looks like the nuttiest fucker to ever hold the office.
re: #297 Backwoods_Sleuth
chicken wars
LOL
I want @ChurchsChicken to jump in on this so bad #teamdarkmeat pic.twitter.com/uifdFsyLL8
— ☆ Reject Superstar ☆ (@rejectsuprstar) August 19, 2019
Flavor this good speaks for itself. 😏 pic.twitter.com/OWrxcGzmcs
— Church’s Chicken (@ChurchsChicken) August 19, 2019
re: #309 Targetpractice
Somewhere in Hell’s 4th subbasement, Richard Nixon looks on at Donny’s tweets and rejoices, as he no longer looks like the nuttiest fucker to ever hold the office.
He’s like a Frankenstein’s monster of the worst traits of his Republican predecessors.
This won’t be the last awkward Downing Street U-turn of the Johnson era…
(Pic @richardgaisford) pic.twitter.com/wHRBwSygDM— Larry the Cat, Esq. (@Number10cat) August 19, 2019
See, if he wasn’t president and a guy who had a “modeling” company that imported Eastern European teenagers and locking them into a company-store economy before leaning on them to do escorting, that might be slightly funny.
But in context, it means that he won’t do it to Greenland because Goldland will be a open-slag pit mine next to a permanent Centralia-like coal mine fire. And possibly everything concave will be a hog lagoon until, XHIBIT-like there’s a hog lagoon in somebody’s hog lagoon…
…next to the failed casino.
A couple problems with Trump’s tweet about Google and 2016 votes being “manipulated”: 1) He’s wrongly describing a study, which doesn’t allege manipulation of anything including votes. 2) The study itself has major flaws.
My fact check: https://t.co/Y0PzdgELeh— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) August 20, 2019
The year is 2092. No one elects Prime Ministers anymore, corrupt racists conspire & pick among themselves. A fat daddy’s boy & a caretaker lead the main political parties. Both sides hell bent on destruction. The UK disintegrates and votes have no meani…wait…The year is 2019…
— Stansaid Airport (@StansaidAirport) August 20, 2019
To requests on #IMS detection beyond #CTBT, data in, or near the path of potential plume from the explosion are being analyzed . We’re also addressing w/station operators technical problems experienced at two neighboring stations. All data are available to our Member States. https://t.co/pHL4WrHU23 pic.twitter.com/9aO5cQTlls
— Lassina Zerbo (@SinaZerbo) August 18, 2019
re: #314 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
Again, we’re reminded that the media cannot say the word “lie” no matter how obvious it is.
re: #305 HappyWarrior
If you drive anywhere, even in an electric car, you are beholden to mega corporations for oil as fuel, lubricants, plastics and etc. You can not be 100% green and drive anything to anywhere.
Facebook is no different. Nor is Twitter. Neither company is anything good. But if you wish to accomplish something, sometimes you have to dance with that devil.
Now have some sympathy and some tea because puritopia doesn’t exist. Instead we do the best we can wrestling with our choice of devil.
Fact check:
Both @Jim_Jordan & @newtgingrich tweeted that left wing journalists want a recession to hurt Trump.
So I searched Nexis, Google, Bing, etc.
Number of articles & transcripts found? Zero.
They’re lying.— David Cay Johnston (@DavidCayJ) August 19, 2019
re: #319 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
We don’t need a recession to get rid of Trump. He’s just going to add one more thing to the list.
re: #314 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
The study had random people rate Google results for bias. Then, extrapolating from the author’s work in other countries, it estimated how many 2016 votes could potentially be affected by such bias. No US voter was tested to see how their views had actually been changed by search.
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) August 20, 2019
re: #318 William Lewis
If you drive anywhere, even in an electric car, you are beholden to mega corporations for oil as fuel, lubricants, plastics and etc. You can not be 100% green and drive anything to anywhere.
Facebook is no different. Nor is Twitter. Neither company is anything good. But if you wish to accomplish something, sometimes you have to dance with that devil.
Now have some sympathy and some tea because puritopia doesn’t exist. Instead we do the best we can wrestling with our choice of devil.
We all make do with the set of circumstances we have. When I joined FB, it wasn’t even available to all universities. It was and still is a quick way to get in touch with people.
Denmark offers to buy Kentucky, but Moscow Mitch informs them it’s already been sold.
— Scoot (@ImpeachmentHour) August 19, 2019
Imagine that.Branson store owner, who said rebel flag doesn’t represent racism, has ties to KKK
just off camera: her brothers killing all the wild things for sport https://t.co/b0pvkABRLD
— shauna (@goldengateblond) August 18, 2019
re: #325 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
Imagine that.Branson store owner, who said rebel flag doesn’t represent racism, has ties to KKK
[Embedded content]
Could be worse. She might have posed in one of those rebel bikinis (though obviously not the one in the photo.)
Four years old but yes
re: #326 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
As I said, after her Dad, she is the most loathesome Trump of all.
when the burger does not come with fries pic.twitter.com/S05g3Nv1vn
— darth™ (@darth) August 19, 2019
when u see the fries pic.twitter.com/fG966fvcnE
— darth™ (@darth) August 19, 2019
re: #325 Shiplord Kirel, Friend of Moose and Squirrel
Imagine that.Branson store owner, who said rebel flag doesn’t represent racism, has ties to KKK
[Embedded content]
Could be worse. She might have posed in one of those rebel bikinis (though obviously not the one in the photo.)
Don’t tell me…… Her name is Dixie.
I’ll say something about Facebook. A little over a week ago I posted this to my Facebook page.
My posts on this tire fire of a website have been depressing as of late. Well, bad things have happened in the month of August, and I don’t want the memory of those who are not with us anymore to fade. And things like opioid addiction and suicide have affected me directly in the very recent past. I myself have been suicidal, requiring law enforcement to do a welfare check on me… last August.
August is a weird month, is what I’m saying, I guess. The month my mother was born. The month Brendan Bayliss from Umphrey’s McGee was born. The month Jerry Garcia was born, and died. The month the atomic bombs were dropped on Japan. The month World War One started…
The responses were amazing.
I am proud to say that you are a friend. Very human and able to take a punch.
[…]
They are ALL wierd months brother, but without wierd months, what would we have. We put our heads down and toil through the murk and mire, to arrive on the other side, stronger, more resolved to succeed. You are a treasure upon this earth. My life is better because I know you. We can not appreciate all that is amazing about this journey, without suffering its disappointments. It takes heat to forge steel. Love you my friend.
[…]
August isn’t the best month here either. Hugs 🤗 and keep fighting dude. You’re loved.
[…]
I met you a long time ago, haven’t seen you in a long time and still think about you and love you regardless of the physical distance. Just the other day, someone asked about Gondie Boy <3. The demons in your head are mean, be nice to yourself by getting out of your own head. Get outside and move, the simple visual change helps. I know, I have dealt with anxiety/depression all my life. You are too tough, love you Charlie.
[…]
Your awesomeness on 9/12/01 is my go to story when recalling college! Stay up buddy. We should meet at a show or something
[…]
Howdy crazy guy!! We miss ya! 😉🧘🏻♂️
[…]
Charlie, good and bad happens everyday. We must try to find joy in whatever we can. No ones life is perfect, everyone deals with something. Know you have a friend here that cares God bless!
[…]
Love you like a brother after that fantastic voyage . It definitely changed my perspective on rock and roll. We will not stop rocking!
[…]
Thanks for posting. Sometimes in life you go through things that are not to plan - your experience as you continue your journey, and honesty like this, will only serve to make the rest of us stronger and better. I trust your mind and strength of character old friend.
Whatever that is, it’s not evil.
Personal announcement. I swear by Macs now, I’ll never buy another PC ever again. Oy!
We’re working to make sure that all patients can still get the health care they need. Contact your local health center to find out how much a service costs and ask if there are other ways to get your care covered: https://t.co/5IpdUDD8p0
— Planned Parenthood (@PPFA) August 19, 2019
The most important thing: Congress can take action to right this wrong. Make your voice heard to ensure that patients can continue to get the care they need. Stand with Planned Parenthood — we stand with you. Take action: https://t.co/B0PJH3GrLl #ProtectX #StandWithPP pic.twitter.com/nGIgB0NB2c
— Planned Parenthood (@PPFA) August 19, 2019
re: #332 teleskiguy
Personal announcement. I swear by Macs now, I’ll never buy another PC ever again. Oy!
re: #326 Backwoods_Sleuth
probably why she ended with the ellipsis
— 𝘞𝘉 𝘠𝘰𝘶𝘯𝘨 🍕🐀 (@FormerDirtDart) August 20, 2019
re: #322 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
And…
One of the more baffling aspects to this research is that no indication is made about how the searches were conducted. Google’s search results are specific to users, and there’s no indication in the summary (mentions of using incognito mode, for example) that any effort was made to return unweighed results from the search engine. Nor is there information provided about who participated in the study. Collecting results from a group of well-to-do city dwellers, for example, might help explain any “bias.”
This is more problematic because while the research points to thousands of search results that were analyzed, only 95 people actually provided responses to the study. Meaning if the results were driven by the identities of those individuals, the variation in the pool of results was actually 95. Oh, and of that group? Only 21 were undecided. If the 2.6 million figure derives from that group alone, the value of that figure is almost nil.
re: #319 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
Bill Maher has said he’d like a recession to hurt Trump; but I can’t imagine anyone ever calling Bill Maher a “journalist”.
This could also explain Mike Cernovich’s urge to delete his tweets. Here, he admits he paid $5,000 to transport people to one of the Proud Boys’ violent “free speech rallies” (street brawls) in Berkeley in April 2017.
pic.twitter.com/SeG0ue2K5e — Caroline Orr (@RVAwonk) October 16, 2018
Russian steel and aluminum flowing into the country. American steel and aluminum disappearing https://t.co/2Vs31Lx3CT
— Scott Stedman (@ScottMStedman) August 20, 2019
Doesn’t matter. They will still blame their job loss on “illegals” and vote Republicans everytime.
You’re literally doing this because you were offended https://t.co/yvhcL6dQnR
— the unstoppable huggernaut (@jesseltaylor) August 20, 2019
.@IlhanMN: “What I tell @RashidaTlaib all the time is, you don’t ever allow people to enjoy your tears. There are so many people invested in our pain, in our struggle, in seeing us broken”… this is phenomenal pic.twitter.com/GrXy0eAAfd
— Michael Bueckert (@mbueckert) August 19, 2019
re: #318 William Lewis
If you drive anywhere, even in an electric car, you are beholden to mega corporations for oil as fuel, lubricants, plastics and etc. You can not be 100% green and drive anything to anywhere.
Facebook is no different. Nor is Twitter. Neither company is anything good. But if you wish to accomplish something, sometimes you have to dance with that devil.
Now have some sympathy and some tea because puritopia doesn’t exist. Instead we do the best we can wrestling with our choice of devil.
Except Facebook and Twitter are not necessary. I don’t drive Facebook to the store or Twitter to the water lab. I suppose i could use a bicycle, but those are sixteen and sixty miles away respectively. And bicycle manufacture also requires using fossil fuels to create a bicycle.
Until such time as we have alternative transportation methods, I’m pretty much stuck with a car and gasoline. I can however combine trips to reduce gasoline usage, &c. “100% green” is a red herring since no technology, even the Stone Age, is 100% green.
Sure there’s funny stuff on Twitter and I’ll occasionally post some of it here when I run across it. I don’t need an account for that. (Facebook accounts frequently lock out people without Facebook accounts, so I assume they have nothing to say to me.)
Bright lights of Manhattan from ISS. pic.twitter.com/nExWFzkL1e
— Andrew Rader (@marsrader) August 20, 2019
re: #340 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
Because wearing the flag on fucking footwear is totally respectful.
re: #332 teleskiguy
Personal announcement. I swear by Macs now, I’ll never buy another PC ever again. Oy!
I’ve gone back and forth. They’re a tool. for some things a OSX is the right tool, for some things Windows is the right tool and for some things Linux is the right tool, and on rare occasions a chromebook may even be the right tool. What I find people doing is comparing their experience on a $2000 Mac with $600 PC and deciding Macs are better.
re: #345 Weaselone
Because wearing the flag on fucking footwear is totally respectful.
How come Tomi didn’t enlist instead of doing what she did which was shill for Glenn Beck?
Everyone is ripping on this when a major party nominee for President in 2016 advocated taking all of Iraq’s oil. But yeah, this is wackier. https://t.co/VEbuV6rUWx
— paul mcleary (@paulmcleary) August 20, 2019
re: #332 teleskiguy
Personal announcement. I swear by Macs now, I’ll never buy another PC ever again. Oy!
re: #342 gocart mozart
Wingnuts weighing in on that thread with “Jew haters” and such … remind me again who is it who have been planning or actually shooting up synagogues?
re: #346 danarchy
Most PCs I’ve owned definitely cost more than $600.
re: #350 Anymouse 🌹🎃
Wingnuts weighing in on that thread with “Jew haters” and such … remind me again who is it who have been planning or actually shooting up synagogues?
Because “Jew Haters” always join Jews in prayer
Rashida Tlaib joins Shabbat service in Detroit park after canceled Israel trip https://t.co/ODAPIlnBiJ via @jtanews #TheResistance #Resist #NeverAgainIsNow pic.twitter.com/AB7VMdWiuA
— Pie Overlord (@Pie_Overlord) August 19, 2019
re: #350 Anymouse 🌹🎃
Wingnuts weighing in on that thread with “Jew haters” and such … remind me again who is it who have been planning or actually shooting up synagogues?
People who had no problem with Pat Robertson being giddy that Bibi’s predecessor had a stroke. Eventually Israel will elect someone that won’t be beloved by our Fundies and their Antisemitic masks will fall off.
Please delete your account and go away. https://t.co/Gbxhg5BsOj
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 20, 2019
Are there actually people who don’t realize what a scammer the Mooch is? I am aghast.
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) August 20, 2019
re: #345 Weaselone
Because wearing the flag on fucking footwear is totally respectful.
Something US Flag Code prohibition of using the flag as apparel
re: #349 The Pie Overlord!
This induced a genuine belly laugh. Thanks!
re: #352 The Pie Overlord!
Because “Jew Haters” always join Jews in prayer
[Embedded content]
Acting like the only issue Jews care about is Israel is a form of Antisemitism imo.
Something I saw at my parents house this weekend.
So my mother got a Happy Birthday postcard from her sister. It had this picture on it. L to R: my mother Katherine, my grandfather Mike, dog Silver, my grandmother Marion, my aunt Mary Pat, and my great grandmother Eva’s dog Panda. Eva most likely took the picture, early 1950s. pic.twitter.com/ZBJs2DR1sF
— Charlie Vogel, aka His Teleness the Charlie Lama (@teleskiguy) August 20, 2019
I never met Mike, died before I was born. Including this one I’ve maybe seen a half dozen pictures of my grandfather.
re: #352 The Pie Overlord!
Because “Jew Haters” always join Jews in prayer
Yup.
To wingnuts as I can see it, people (even Jews) who don’t support the Israeli government are “no true Jews” (similar to the Christian trope).
Courtesy of Haze Grey Cruise Lines, I’ve been to Israel several times. Everyone I met there (including an accidental trip to a kibbutz on a bus which left me stranded there) was nice to me, whether Jewish, Muslim, or Christian. (Folks at the kibbutz gave me a ride back to Tel Aviv.)
In every country I’ve been people have been nice. Governments don’t really reflect “nice.”
re: #358 teleskiguy
Something I saw at my parents house this weekend.
[Embedded content]
I never met Mike, died before I was born. Including this one I’ve maybe seen a half dozen pictures of my grandfather.
I’m getting my niece into old photos. Her favorites are the ones of my parents at their wedding. I never knew my father’s father. Always a bit of a disappointment but I’ve learned more about him from a grandchild’s perspective in recent years from my older cousins. What kinda dog was Panda? Cute name.
re: #343 Anymouse 🌹🎃
Oh, I forgot. Only you are correct and able to determine what is needed by everyone. It must be hard to be that perfect in puritopia; I couldn’t say since I live in this imperfect world instead.
This kind of collective narcissism is a piss-poor substitute for meaningful, adult patriotism, and by denying the moral complexity of history, it does way more to degrade than to preserve the best things about America. 2/2
— Christopher Federico (@ChrisPolPsych) August 19, 2019
re: #305 HappyWarrior
Sorry it took me awhile to get back to you, life called. But yes, I was thinking of you when I wrote that too. There’s been several of my kid’s friends on the spectrum that do similar things via Facebook because direct conversations can cause anxiety triggers and communication issues, body language and so on. Plus, if you make a mistake, you can correct it before you hit send. Facebook irritates the shit outta me, but it has a place in my life, for now anyways.
re: #360 HappyWarrior
It’s weird. When my grandmother Marion died Mary Pat took all the photos and family keepsakes, left my mother with very little. I guess she’s still mad my mother left the Catholic Church at age 18 and hightailed it as quick as she could to Denver when she was 20 (they grew up in Sioux Falls, SD, where that picture was taken). My mother was actually a little shocked that her sister sent her this postcard with this picture on it. Families are weird, man.
re: #361 William Lewis
Oh, I forgot. Only you are correct and able to determine what is needed by everyone. It must be hard to be that perfect in puritopia; I couldn’t say since I live in this imperfect world instead.
The world just couldn’t make any contact at all before Facebook and Twitter came along. /s
So “I don’t want to support white supremacist fascist enablers” becomes “puritopia.”
Most people in the USA own cell phones, from which they can access Facebook or Twitter, or they could punch in a telephone number and talk directly. They could send an E-mail if they want to send a message to a bunch of people at a time.
I really don’t understand how this is a “purotopia.” One thing I can note though is since almost no one around here is on Facebook or Twitter, they didn’t get to mainline Russian propaganda from those sites (though they got it from FOX).
re: #363 A Mom Anon
Sorry it took me awhile to get back to you, life called. But yes, I was thinking of you when I wrote that too. There’s been several of my kid’s friends on the spectrum that do similar things via Facebook because direct conversations can cause anxiety triggers and communication issues, body language and so on. Plus, if you make a mistake, you can correct it before you hit send. Facebook irritates the shit outta me, but it has a place in my life, for now anyways.
Yeah chat clients help me communicate better and find my voice better. I’m nowhere near as articulate speaking in real life but with this sort of thing, I can think and better articulate. TBH I see Facebook like I do other media, it can be abused and used well. One of the things I’m most proud of is my family history group. I’ve connected descendants of my Great Grandfather’s siblings and him himself and we’re creating a legacy for the future. I couldn’t have done that w/o FB. I mean if one doesn’t want to use it, cool. I don’t tweet out of choice but that’s fine.
Over the weekend, Sinclair stations across the country promoted “news” stories about the Trump campaign selling new Keep America Great hats. pic.twitter.com/1JRhSaSiy2
— Trump Fundraising Emails (@TrumpEmail) August 19, 2019
At least one station, @KUTV2News in #SaltLakeCity, linked directly to the Trump Campaign’s online store. pic.twitter.com/lhBo9mDOO3
— Trump Fundraising Emails (@TrumpEmail) August 19, 2019
re: #360 HappyWarrior
Oh, and Panda? No idea what kind of dog that is. But now I know why my mother calls my younger sister Panda. Heh! Origin story for everything!
re: #365 teleskiguy
It’s weird. When my grandmother Marion died Mary Pat took all the photos and family keepsakes, left my mother with very little. I guess she’s still mad my mother left the Catholic Church at age 18 and hightailed it as quick as she could to Denver when she was 20 (they grew up in Sioux Falls, SD, where that picture was taken). My mother was actually a little shocked that her sister sent her this postcard with this picture on it. Families are weird, man.
Yeah they are. My other grandfather had a brother who left the family and went west. I’m hoping to find someone who knew him but that’s increasingly unlikely.
dismantled. hosted. whatever. https://t.co/bJaugzOlju
— dell cameron (@dellcam) August 20, 2019
re: #367 HappyWarrior
Yeah chat clients help me communicate better and find my voice better. I’m nowhere near as articulate speaking in real life but with this sort of thing, I can think and better articulate. TBH I see Facebook like I do other media, it can be abused and used well. One of the things I’m most proud of is my family history group. I’ve connected descendants of my Great Grandfather’s siblings and him himself and we’re creating a legacy for the future. I couldn’t have done that w/o FB. I mean if one doesn’t want to use it, cool. I don’t tweet out of choice but that’s fine.
My wife did a similar thing with her family by setting up a Website. That’s connected a whole bunch of people in her family.
I’m going to leave off the Facebook thing for now. Some people are going to use it, and some aren’t. Those of us who won’t use it on principle seem to be living in a “puritopia.”
I suppose I’m in a “puritopia” since I won’t shop at Wal*Mart either.
Behind the hide bar, the reason I won’t shop at Wal*Mart (caution for a story about death):
When my wife and I lived in Ponca City, Oklahoma, our next-door neighbours were a Tonkawa native family. In that house was a grandfather, his daughter, and one six-year-old granddaughter.
The daughter worked at Wal*Mart on night shift. My wife and I made it clear if the granddaughter ever needed any help she could come and ask for it day or night, as her grandfather was dying.
One morning at about 2AM he died. The girl came over to ask for help.
We first called the hospice their family was using, then I called the local Wal*Mart to speak to her mother. That store told me I was not permitted to speak to workers during their shift, and I had to call the Bentonville, Ark. office to have them give permission to let her off work to deal with her child and dead father lying in her house.
I called the number in Bentonville they gave me, and their answer was basically, tough shit for her. You’ve got her daughter, you deal with it.
Her mother didn’t find out her father had died until she came home in the morning, while her daughter was a nervous wreck at our house. His body was taken out later that morning.
The Tonkawa Nation invited my wife and I to his traditional native funeral, as we’d stood up for one of their members (the granddaughter) when she needed help.
So, Wal*Mart doesn’t care if one of their worker’s parents literally dies while they are on the job, but I should overlook that because “lower prices” or I am a puritopian. Yeah, naw.
re: #332 teleskiguy
Personal announcement. I swear by Macs now, I’ll never buy another PC ever again. Oy!
Welcome to the clan!
re: #372 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
yes officer i did set that gazebo on fire, but to be fair, i also then doused it with water
— dell cameron (@dellcam) August 20, 2019
re: #376 Anymouse 🌹🎃
[Embedded content]
I can see why that take is amusing, and Facebook has a lot to answer for, but in this case, unless workers actually participated in the set up, this would be akin to blaming the phone company for people planning a bank heist.
re: #344 Backwoods_Sleuth
[Embedded content]
Anybody remember the West Wing episode with the south-on-top maps? And CJ was freaked out by it?
This picture freaks me out too.
It’s got southeast at the top, north pointing to the lower left corner…
(but I can see my building! cool!)
For all the talk about how the hateful pricks use social media and FB, I would like to contend as someone who regularly looks and sometimes posts on the SPLC feed that the counters to those use it too.
Crestor (Cardiovascular disease)
🇺🇸 $216
🇩🇪 $41
🇨🇦 $32
🇬🇧 $26
🇳🇴 $20
🇫🇷 $20
🇦🇹 $9
Humira (Arthritis)
🇺🇸 $3.4K
🇩🇪 $1.7K
🇦🇹 $1.2K
🇨🇦 $1.2K
🇬🇧 $1.2K
🇫🇷 $1K
🇳🇴 $900
Sovaldi (Hepatitis C)
🇺🇸 $30K
🇩🇪 $17K
🇬🇧 $17K
🇫🇷 $16K
🇨🇦 $15K
🇳🇴 $13K
We can keep going.— Public Citizen (@Public_Citizen) August 16, 2019
re: #378 sagehen
Anybody remember the West Wing episode with the south-on-top maps? And CJ was freaked out by it?
This picture freaks me out too.
It’s got southeast at the top, north pointing to the lower left corner…
(but I can see my building! cool!)
If they’d only rotated the ISS in the proper direction. //
re: #374 Anymouse 🌹🎃
My wife did a similar thing with her family by setting up a Website. That’s connected a whole bunch of people in her family.
I’m going to leave off the Facebook thing for now. Some people are going to use it, and some aren’t. Those of us who won’t use it on principle seem to be living in a “puritopia.”
I suppose I’m in a “puritopia” since I won’t shop at Wal*Mart either.
Behind the hide bar, the reason I won’t shop at Wal*Mart (caution for a story about death):
[Embedded content]
Okay, your wife has some web development skills. I can’t develop== my own website and getting your own website costs some money to first buy the url. I don’t have that in both skills or time. FB allowed me to set me up my group for free. Ultimately yeah it’s a choice. And FWIW I didn’t say you were living in a puritopia so you can stop acting like I was the one who said you were. I think you need to understand that for many people in my generation and even others that platforms like FB are vital to how we communicate. I still use the Phone too but as I said, I’m able to slow down and articulate my thoughts better on social media plaforms I can’t do that on the phone.
re: #364 Belafon
I like the idea of adult patriotism.
I do too: but looking at the comment thread on the NYTMag’s Twitter for the 1619 Project, we’re still quite a ways away from getting there. Outside of the n-word, virtually every racist stereotype and trite canard was tossed out by one commenter or another. And almost all of the negative commentary on the Project seemed to take it for granted that it’s sole purpose was to “tear America down”. Like, they apparently believe, every other attempt to examine the racial history of this country in any sort of objective manner. Either that, or presenting a (bogus) case for “reparations”.
re: #383 Jay C
I do too: but looking at the comment thread on the NYTMag’s Twitter for the 1619 Project, we’re still quite a ways away from getting there. Outside of the n-word, virtually every racist stereotype and trite canard was tossed out by one commenter or another. And almost all of the negative commentary on the Project seemed to take it for granted that it’s sole purpose was to “tear America down”. Like, they apparently believe, every other attempt to examine the racial history of this country in any sort of objective manner. Either that, or presenting a (bogus) case for “reparations”.
There really is no escaping the legacy of slavery in our country. I just am amazed at the elaborate lengths white people go to deny it. We fought a long Civil War over it. It defintiely caused Jim Crow. It shaped our culture too. In fact until the abolition of slavery in 1865 more presidents than not owned slaves including 8 of the first ten- the only two who did not were the Adams father and son.
re: #374 Anymouse 🌹🎃
My wife did a similar thing with her family by setting up a Website. That’s connected a whole bunch of people in her family.
I’m going to leave off the Facebook thing for now. Some people are going to use it, and some aren’t. Those of us who won’t use it on principle seem to be living in a “puritopia.”
I suppose I’m in a “puritopia” since I won’t shop at Wal*Mart either.
Behind the hide bar, the reason I won’t shop at Wal*Mart (caution for a story about death):
[Embedded content]
Again, your personal experiences are not universal.
My brother worked for Wal-Mart for almost eight years, before quitting in disgust at the incompetence and malfeasance of his local management and corporate office in Bentonville.
When our father died in January 2015, I had absolutely no problem reaching him at work. I sent a message through Facebook Messenger that he read on his smartphone at work. He took several days off work and flew from New Mexico to Chesapeake for the funeral.
I never had a problem with being allowed to talk to my brother while he was at work, or his immediate supervisors or the cashiers he oversaw as CSM or the security staff.
I did get my brother sent to the corporate reeducation room when I bluntly said, in a conversation about an employee who had moved on that the store he had moved on to “was union.”
After that, I would hum “Look for the union label” when passing through the clothing section while waiting for him to get off work.
When passing through the grocery aisles and seeing empty shelves, I would adopt stereotypical Russian accent and mock “Soviet Walmart.”
re: #348 FormerDirtDart 🍕🐀
Wow that’s good news you should let Marianne Williamson from two days ago know!https://t.co/1kZ3igh8Y7
— iJeb! (@Jebisamess2020) August 19, 2019
re: #385 A Three Hour Tour
Again, your personal experiences are not universal.
My brother worked for Wal-Mart for almost eight years, before quitting in disgust at the incompetence and malfeasance of his local management and corporate office in Bentonville.
When our father died in January 2015, I had absolutely no problem reaching him at work. I sent a message through Facebook Messenger that he read on his smartphone at work. Took several days off work and flew from New Mexico to Chesapeake for the funeral.
I never had a problem with being allowed to talk to my brother while he was at work, or his immediate ssupervisors or the cashiers he oversaw as CSM or the security staff.
I did get my brother sent to the corporate reeducation room when I bluntly said, in a conversation about an employee who has moved on that the store he had moved on to “was union.”
After that, I would hum “Look for the union label” when passing through the clothing section while waiting for him to get off work.
When passing through the grocery aisles and seeing empty shelves, I would adopt stereotypical Russian accent and mock “Soviet Walmart.”
That’s true, no one’s anecdotes apply to everyone.
Your anecdote doesn’t trump mine however. A dead man in the next house, his granddaughter in my house, and the corporate headquarters of Wal*Mart saying “tough shit” was all I needed, and I’ve never spent a penny there since.
I can’t say about your particular situation with your brother, but as a supervisor I imagine he had more latitude than a stockroom worker.
Does anyone use ham radio to communicate with their relatives?
re: #355 Anymouse 🌹🎃
Something US Flag Code prohibition of using the flag as apparel
Usual excuse is that it’s not made out of an actual US flag so it doesn’t violate the code an is in fact a display of patriotism and love of country.
re: #388 Belafon
Does anyone use ham radio to communicate with their relatives?
Ouija board :). And the occasional dream.
Dollhouse
(Photo: Poenitere) pic.twitter.com/LWzfPtnCml— 41 Strange (@41Strange) August 20, 2019
re: #388 Belafon
Does anyone use ham radio to communicate with their relatives?
LOL. I use it to communicate with other people, but no one in my family other than me has a ham license.
re: #387 Anymouse 🌹🎃
That’s true, no one’s anecdotes apply to everyone.
Your anecdote doesn’t trump mine however. A dead man in the next house, his granddaughter in my house, and the corporate headquarters of Wal*Mart saying “tough shit” was all I needed, and I’ve never spent a penny there since.
I can’t say about your particular situation with your brother, but as a supervisor I imagine he had more latitude than a stockroom worker.
I could talk to him (and did) when he was an unloader and pallette mover, too.
Local stores are often run by two-bit petty morons, and corporate in Bentonville by inbred idiots.
re: #389 Weaselone
Usual excuse is that it’s not made out of an actual US flag so it doesn’t violate the code an is in fact a display of patriotism and love of country.
And they are either uninformed about that, or plain lying.
4 U.S. Code § 8. Respect for flag
(j) No part of the flag should ever be used as a costume or athletic uniform. However, a flag patch may be affixed to the uniform of military personnel, firemen, policemen, and members of patriotic organizations. The flag represents a living country and is itself considered a living thing. Therefore, the lapel flag pin being a replica, should be worn on the left lapel near the heart.
A flag patch would also be considered under the Flag Code as representative of a living country. There is no place in the Flag Code which says “shoes are fine.”
re: #389 Weaselone
Usual excuse is that it’s not made out of an actual US flag so it doesn’t violate the code an is in fact a display of patriotism and love of country.
That’s not why she’s displaying it.
re: #366 Anymouse 🌹🎃
So “I don’t want to support white supremacist fascist enablers” becomes “puritopia.”
Most people in the USA own cell phones, from which they can access Facebook or Twitter, or they could punch in a telephone number and talk directly. They could send an E-mail if they want to send a message to a bunch of people at a time.
.
So white supremacists use cell phones and email too. Should email hosting platforms like gmail, yahoo, outlook etc scan emails for white supremacist content? They already index it all for search purposes and to filter spam. How much harder would it be to filter objectionable racist content? Do you refuse to use all web services because they may also benefit people you don’t like?
US Fires INF-Busting Missile, First Test Since Treaty Signed (goes to Breaking Defense)
The test puts the nail in the coffin of the INF Treaty, which the US withdrew from earlier this month.
WASHINGTON: The US took its first post-INF shot just 17 days after the America pulled out of the arms control treaty, launching a Tomahawk Land Attack Cruise Missile from a California island.
The missile flew more than 500 kilometers, according to a defense official, marking the first time since 1987 that the US has demonstrated the capability to launch a ground-based cruise missile between 500 and 5,000 kilometers — ranges previously banned by the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty with Russia. With the treaty’s Aug. 2 demise, the cruise missile launch is now fair game. The missile launched from San Nicolas island in Southern California, flew 500 kilometers and struck back near where It launched.
The fact that the Navy/SCO test was able to hit a land target, as opposed to falling in the sea, shows at least some work had been done previously on the Tomahawk variant in order to get it in the air just 16 days after the US pulled out of the 32 year-old INF treaty.
(more)
re: #400 Anymouse 🌹🎃
US Fires INF-Busting Missile, First Test Since Treaty Signed (goes to Breaking Defense)
The test puts the nail in the coffin of the INF Treaty, which the US withdrew from earlier this month.
(more)
The misslile doesn’t care if it’s launched from air, sea, or land. Navigation and targeting are the same.
I don’t understand this. I claim Trump is the bastard child of a nazi and this is somehow an attack on “Christians”?
What does this person have against Christians to say such a thing? https://t.co/q5AkT4SZ7U
— Protect children and animalsⓋ formerly Teresa (@StudentOfDrA) August 20, 2019
What. Is. This. Shit.
Nobody ever heard of this dope until he met me. He only lasted 11 days! pic.twitter.com/RzX3zjXzga
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 20, 2019
re: #402 gocart mozart
I don’t understand this. I claim Trump is the bastard child of a nazi and this is somehow an attack on “Christians”?
[Embedded content]
You went after Trump therefore you hate Christians. They really have this delusion Trump is a Christian.
re: #402 gocart mozart
I don’t understand this. I claim Trump is the bastard child of a nazi and this is somehow an attack on “Christians”?
The faith must be defended not only against blasphemy and apostasy, but humour as well.
The sequence is a) God selected Donald Trump to lead the country (not the voters). The Bible directs Christians to support their leaders (we’ll skip the obvious hypocrisy of not supporting Barack Obama).
b) Anyone who attacks God’s anointed leader is therefore attacking the faith itself.
You see this all the time if you engage in counter-apologetics. Attacking some Protestant preacher for sexual assaults or paying off so-called pool boys is “attacking Christianity.” Objecting to a position stated in the Bible (slavery is good, and here’s the rules for it) is “attacking Christianity.”
You made the mistake of making a joke about God’s anointed leader. That is blasphemy to a large portion of Christians (and not just fundamentalists).
Stupidest fuckin’ president, ever, in the history of the United States.
re: #402 gocart mozart
Maybe his body, but I don’t really know much about his spouse.
— (((IntheNumbers))) (@ItsNumbersMan) August 20, 2019
re: #406 teleskiguy
Stupidest fuckin’ president, ever, in the history of the United States.
He’s one of the most stupid people I’ve ever seen period.
re: #402 gocart mozart
I don’t understand this. I claim Trump is the bastard child of a nazi and this is somehow an attack on “Christians”?
[Embedded content]
Chances are its a bad faith reading, trying to assume the position of victimhood and thus rendering your perspective—even if you’re joking—invalid.
But it also represents that [Christian = Trump supporter] because the tweet author counts themselves as both and cannot conceive of either group separately because they have fused those identities to their ego in unhealthy ways. As such “Christian” as used simply does not mean “Christian” in any dictionary sense, and is effectively a synonym for “people like me, that are a priori Good and Right because they are like me, and those people uncritically support Trump and you are not allowed to laugh at him.”
So while it’s a dismissal, it’s also a tell.
re: #402 gocart mozart
I don’t understand this. I claim Trump is the bastard child of a nazi and this is somehow an attack on “Christians”?
[Embedded content]
She retweets Michael Tracy. Case closed.
I went to a town hall for Rep. Sherrill (D-NJ) tonight. In response to a question about dark money, she said, “There is something wrong when we don’t know who’s funding our election system.” Someone yelled “RUSSIA!” The crowd hooted in approval. Your occasional brain rot update
— Michael Tracey (@mtracey) August 20, 2019
re: #410 I Would Prefer Not To
She retweets Michael Tracy. Case closed.
[Embedded content]
It really is something how the Greenwaldian left goes all out to deny the Russian shit but then again they like being willing ratfucks for Vlad since they’re morons. I don’t trust their judgment at all.
re: #409 The Ghost of a Flea
It also conflates “what I believe” with “who I am.”
If I assert I am a Christian because I believe the claims of the Bible, then anyone who challenges the claims of the book are making a proxy attack on me (not what I believe).
If I believe Trump was sent by God, and someone challenges that, then it is a proxy attack on the believer (not the belief).
In exit polling, nearly all Christian denominations supported Trump, not just fundamentalist ones. Jews, Muslims, Hindus, atheists, &c mostly did not, but all of us together are a minority which could not overcome Christian Trump supporters.
A YouTuber named DarkMatter2525 did a video about this phenomenon of believers turning “what they believe” into “who they are,” and why a challenge to the belief is perceived as an attack on the person.
I can’t name the number of people who have told me “without my faith in God I would be lost” or other similar statements.
re: #412 Anymouse 🌹🎃
What interests me is the opposite: that people transmute who they are—the inchoate wants, skewed perspectives, and gut level prejudices—into what they nominally believe—the language and framing of an ideology they view as legitimate and true. Hence people who really believe in God, but God conveniently tells them that what they want is always okay.
My running crude statement about the cults line cross is the blatancy—“God wants me to fuck your wife, Bob”—with which the authority holders attach holy legitimacy to their whims…but the same process is available to and occurs within organized religion frameworks where there’s no cult of personality, and laity can and do participate in the process of hollowing out what is supposedly holy and True, and filling the empty skin with completely pedestrian lust and venality that they will now treat as holy and True.
Which I honestly think explains US right wing evangelical Christianity to a T.
re: #358 teleskiguy
This photograph is amazeballs to me. My mother is the closest human to the camera. My mother turns 72 in three days.
— Charlie Vogel, aka His Teleness the Charlie Lama (@teleskiguy) August 20, 2019