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  • in reply to: I admit it. I’ve become a cynic #115057
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    Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters has his own take on the ‘situation’ fwiw:

    in reply to: I admit it. I’ve become a cynic #115051
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    There are two qualities I detest in people. Cynicism and a sense of being elite. I now have both.

    We are at a figurative civil war the only difference being we are not-as yet-shooting guns at our enemies. Donald Trump is not the problem. There will always be someone like him who appeals to a populist movement like the tea party. In the past we’ve been able to circumvent the issue (i.e. Ross Perot, etc)So how did we get to where we are now? At its core is this: Intelligent people have slowed down and stopped having kids. Ignorant people have increased their birth rates.

    I don’t see a way out.

    ==========

    Well, i dont think you are cynical enough.

    Could ‘selfishnness’ be as big a problem as ‘ignorance’?
    What if one huge bloc is mainly ‘ignorant’ and the other is mainly ‘selfish’ ?

    And yes, ‘How did it get this way’ is always a good question. It didnt just happen over night.

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    in reply to: Mark Doran blog #115021
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    in reply to: My wife & I are grandparents #115012
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    Excellent.

    Plant a walnut.

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    “A thing which I regret, and which I will try to remedy some time, is that I have never in my life planted a walnut. Nobody does plant them nowadays—when you see a walnut it is almost invariably an old tree. If you plant a walnut you are planting it for your grandchildren, and who cares a damn for his grandchildren?”
    ― George Orwell

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    NLR:https://newleftreview.org/issues/II122/articles/mike-davis-in-a-plague-year
    Mike Davis, of New Left Review.
    April 5

    The Monster Enters
    “…..It’s disappointing that in the primary debates, neither Sanders nor Warren highlighted Big Pharma’s abdication of the research and development of new antibiotics and antivirals. Of the eighteen largest pharmaceutical companies, fifteen have totally abandoned the field. Heart medicines, addictive tranquilizers and treatments for male impotence are profit leaders, not the defences against hospital infections, emergent diseases and traditional tropical killers. A universal vaccine for influenza—that is to say, a vaccine that targets the immutable parts of the virus’s surface proteins—has been a possibility for decades, but never profitable enough to be a priority.

    As the antibiotic revolution is rolled back, old diseases will reappear alongside novel infections, and hospitals will become charnel houses. Even Trump can opportunistically rail against absurd prescription costs, but to combat this scenario we need a programme to break up drug monopolies and provide for the public production of lifeline medicines. (This used to be the case: during wwii the us Army enlisted Jonas Salk and other researchers to develop the first flu vaccine.) As I wrote fifteen years ago in The Monster at Our Door:

    Access to lifeline medicines, including vaccines, antibiotics and antivirals, should be a human right, universally available at no cost. If markets can’t provide incentives to cheaply produce such drugs, then governments and non-profits should take responsibility for their manufacture and distribution . . . The survival of the poor must at all times be accounted a higher priority than the profits of Big Pharma.

    The current pandemic expands the argument: capitalist globalization now appears to be biologically unsustainable in the absence of a truly international public-health infrastructure. But such an infrastructure will never exist until social movements break the power of Big Pharma and for-profit healthcare. This requires an independent socialist design for human survival that goes beyond an updated New Deal. Since the days of Occupy, socialists have put the struggle against income and wealth inequality on Page One: a great achievement to be sure. But now we must take the next step of advocating social ownership and the democratization of economic power, with the healthcare and pharmaceutical industries as immediate targets.

    The left must also make an honest evaluation of our political and moral weaknesses. As excited as I have been about the leftward evolution of a new generation and the return of the word ‘socialism’ to political discourse, there’s a disturbing element of national solipsism in the us progressive movement that is symmetrical with the new nationalism. We tend to talk only about the American working class and American radical history (perhaps forgetting that Debs was an internationalist to the core), in what sometimes veers close to a left version of America Firstism. In addressing the pandemic, then, socialists should stress the urgency of international solidarism at every possible occasion. Concretely, we need to agitate our progressive friends and their political idols to demand a massive scaling up of the production of test kits, protective supplies and lifeline drugs for free distribution to poor countries. It’s up to us to ensure that Medicare for All becomes foreign as well as domestic policy.

    San Diego, 5 April 2020

    in reply to: tweets … 5/12 thru 5/17 #114954
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    Joe Buck says Fox Sports will add crowd noise and virtual fans during NFL broadcasts this season
    — Sports Illustrated >

    ==================

    Except when the Bengals are playing,
    then they will add a laugh-trac.

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    i’m glad that my mask has the old Rams helmet on it…..

    ===============

    Indeed. I’ve left instructions that should i need a ventilator, it has to use the old-school, blue and white helmet emblem.

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    in reply to: virus news … (+ some dark humor) #114883
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    ————–
    China to test ENTIRE POPULATION of Wuhan for Covid-19 after disease reemerges

    Chinese authorities plan to test all of Wuhan’s 11 million residents for Covid-19 in a little over a week. After more than a month without newly-recorded cases, the disease has suddenly reappeared in the city.

    All districts in the city were ordered to submit a plan on how they will conduct testing of all residents in their areas within 10 days, local media reported, citing a document from the authorities. The officials were told to prioritize the testing of vulnerable groups and places like residential compounds.

    The measure was announced as a response to the six new locally-transmitted cases that were recorded in Wuhan on Sunday and Monday, after no infections were registered for 35 consecutive days in the central Hubei Province, where Wuhan is the capital. All six new patients were living in the same compound.

    RT:https://www.rt.com/news/488416-wuhan-mass-testing-china/

    in reply to: virus news … (+ some dark humor) #114882
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    Just an odd little snippet:https://www.bmj.com/content/368/bmj.m810/rr-0
    Rapid Response:
    Flu shots and the risk of coronavirus infections

    John Watkins is right; we need to think beyond containment, but he overlooks the possibility that seasonal flu shots are potential contributors to the current outbreak. (BMJ 2020;398:m810—February 28)….A randomized placebo-controlled trial in children showed that flu shots increased fivefold the risk of acute respiratory infections caused by a group of noninfluenza viruses, including coronaviruses. (Cowling et al, Clin Infect Dis 2012;54:1778) From Table 3, vaccine recipients had 20 noninfluenza virus-positive ARIs and 19 virus-negative ARIs; non-recipients had 3 noninfluenza virus-positive ARIs and 14 virus-negative ARIs. These figures yield an odds ratio of 4.91 (CI 1.04 to8.14).

    Such an observation may seem counterintuitive, but it is possible that influenza vaccines alter our immune systems non-specifically to increase susceptibility to other infections; this has been observed with DTP and other vaccines. (Benn et al, Trends in Immunology, May 2013) There are other immune mechanisms that might also explain the observation.

    To investigate this possibility, a case-control study is in order as we study and care for the victims of covid-19. Influenza vaccines have become sacred cows in some quarters, but they shouldn’t be.

    ALLAN S. CUNNINGHAM 2 March 2020

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    Interesting. I was just thinking to myself that the mask thing is probably useless.

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    in reply to: Noam on Covid and “lesser of 2 evils” #114859
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    I think that was the best version of what he’s been saying for decades. Makes a ton of sense.

    But i think its a little light on just how all this left-activism is going to move the Dems to the left — if the dems think leftists will always just fall in line and vote Dem.

    And what headway has been made on Imperialism? None, that i can see.

    I prefer the Krystal Ball approach, of demanding concessions before just falling in line. Or somethin like that.

    Post-modern Amerika. Its like a living, red and blue Guernica painting.

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    in reply to: how bad was Woodrow Wilson #114809
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    Wilson is in this one, too. I had no idea Birth Of A Nation made so much money. It made Gazillions back in 1915 or so.

    in reply to: Iceland Bans Sociopaths From Government #114794
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    Okay. So. Dead serious. I have been thinking for YEARS that preventing sociopaths from working in the government is the ONLY hope for humanity, and I just thought it was logistically impossible to do. I am very interested in this…

    But this is seriously the only hope.

    ======================

    Well, what about at the other end of things. Why would people VOTE for sociopaths? They dont have to.

    The problem is way bigger than sociopaths at the top, right.

    Non-Sociopath-People PUT them at the top.

    I dunno. Its a Bio-Pathic system, zooey. It got that way, in a slow, step-by-step process of
    advancing-technological-steps,
    and advancing-corporate-ization-steps (ie, moving away from socialist ideas, toward capitalist ideas).

    How could you eliminate sociopaths from a bio-pathic system?

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    in reply to: Basil #114753
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    ————
    Sacred Plant of Eternal Love and Healing: The Mythology and Magic of Basil
    basil:https://www.ancient-origins.net/history-ancient-traditions/sacred-plant-eternal-love-and-healing-mythology-and-magic-basil-009395

    …Ancient Superstitions Regarding Basil

    The name derives from the Greek “basilikos”, which means “herb worthy of a king”, as mentioned by the Greek philosopher and botanist Theophrastus, in the 3rd century BC. Basil seems to have originated in India and was brought to the West by the merchants of spices; the Egyptians, the Greeks and the Romans were already aware of its flavors and healing properties.

    The Greeks and Romans believed that, to grow a healthy seedling, it was necessary to sow it, accompanying the operation with insults and curses, but to speak of the basil more seriously was the Roman writer Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella, who explains how the basil is a plant to sow in abundance “after the Ides of May until the summer solstice”. Among the Romans it was considered a magical and sacred plant to Venus, like many other fragrant herbs, to be harvested following precise rituals.

    ….Tears of love

    In the Middle Ages, in order to collect basil, one had to first purify the right hand, washing it in three different springs, then using an oak branch and wearing white linen clothes. In Boccaccio’s Decameron we find one of the strangest love stories that has as its protagonist the basil plant. Boccaccio in V Novella, IV day, tells the story of Elisabetta da Messina who buried the head of her beloved Lorenzo, barbarously murdered by her jealous brothers, in a large vase of basil, which she watered every day with tears.

    ….The history of pesto

    Historically basil arrived in Liguria in the second half of the eleventh and early twelfth century and especially in Genoa following the enterprises of the Genoese commander Guglielmo Embriaco, known as Head of Chainmail. The leader kept on one of his galleys his real secret entrusted to Captain Bartolomeo Decotto. The captain experimented with the therapeutic characteristics of the basil when he was in Palestine during the crusades and returning to Genoa he brought some bags of seeds with him. A true legend was born. At first it was said that the basil leaves were only used as a medicine, but then when working with the pestle to obtain ointments, it happened that someone thought it well to add olive oil to use as a cream for skin irritations. It is said that accidentally the sauce fell on bread and … pesto was born!

    Legends and superstitions have always accompanied the history of spices, but curiously some survived right until the 1800s. It is said that some English people living in India roamed regularly with a wooden necklace of basil to neutralize the electrical impulses, keeping away the lightning, as claimed by the Hindu religion. In the same period, but only in the eclipses, basil was also eaten and placed in water reserves to prevent contamination.

    in reply to: Basil #114740
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    Thank gods I didn’t listen to you and run out and plant some! My back deck is covered in ice. We had rain and then a freeze last night. Do you know what a freeze does to Basil? DO YOU??

    Anyway, yes. We still have pesto in the freezer from last year’s crop. I’m moving my seed in the ground date to May 21st because of this freakishly cold spring.

    ======================

    Yeah, i had a bunch of pots out on my patio. I had to bring many of them inside. But I didnt have room for all of them.

    So, i had to decide which plants lived, and which plants died. I’m a God. God of Plants. The decider.

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    in reply to: Mr. Science, whats your take on vitamin D? #114720
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    fwiw:

    Vitamin d:https://aru.ac.uk/news/vitamin-d-linked-to-low-virus-death-rate-study

    published: 7 May 2020 at 13:16
    Image of the COVID-19 virus

    New COVID-19 research finds relationship in data from 20 European countries

    A new study has found an association between low average levels of vitamin D and high numbers of COVID-19 cases and mortality rates across 20 European countries.

    The research, led by Dr Lee Smith of Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) and Mr Petre Cristian Ilie, lead urologist of Queen Elizabeth Hospital King’s Lynn NHS Foundation Trust, is published in the journal Aging Clinical and Experimental Research.

    Previous observational studies have reported an association between low levels of vitamin D and susceptibility to acute respiratory tract infections. Vitamin D modulates the response of white blood cells, preventing them from releasing too many inflammatory cytokines. The COVID-19 virus is known to cause an excess of pro-inflammatory cytokines.

    Italy and Spain have both experienced high COVID-19 mortality rates, and the new study shows that both countries have lower average vitamin D levels than most northern European countries. This is partly because people in southern Europe, particularly the elderly, avoid strong sun, while skin pigmentation also reduces natural vitamin D synthesis.

    The highest average levels of vitamin D are found in northern Europe, due to the consumption of cod liver oil and vitamin D supplements, and possibly less sun avoidance. Scandinavian nations are among the countries with the lowest number of COVID-19 cases and mortality rates per head of population in Europe.

    Dr Lee Smith, Reader in Physical Activity and Public Health at Anglia Ruskin University, said:
    “We found a significant crude relationship between average vitamin D levels and the number COVID-19 cases, and particularly COVID-19 mortality rates, per head of population across the 20 European countries.

    “Vitamin D has been shown to protect against acute respiratory infections, and older adults, the group most deficient in vitamin D, are also the ones most seriously affected by COVID-19.

    “A previous study found that 75% of people in institutions, such as hospitals and care homes, were severely deficient in vitamin D. We suggest it would be advisable to perform dedicated studies looking at vitamin D levels in COVID-19 patients with different degrees of disease severity.”

    Mr Petre Cristian Ilie, lead urologist of Queen Elizabeth Hospital King’s Lynn NHS Foundation Trust, said:
    “Our study does have limitations however, not least because the number of cases in each country is affected by the number of tests performed, as well as the different measures taken by each country to prevent the spread of infection. Finally, and importantly, one must remember correlation does not necessarily mean causation.”

    in reply to: US is Officially a Totalitarian Regime #114696
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    …Michael Flynn.

    Somehow my post got through before I finished it. Guess i pushed a wrong button someplace.

    You just wonder how Robert Mueller must be feeling right now. All that time and effort spent. Maybe he knew all along this would be the result.

    ==================

    America is a ‘totalitarian regime’ ?

    Now, who is the cynic? 🙂

    Anyway, yeah, its beyond words. About half the voters love Trump though, apparently.

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    in reply to: US is Officially a Totalitarian Regime #114678
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    …Michael Flynn.

    in reply to: Hey Nittany…a science issue #114651
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    I have been intrigued by the idea of “rewilding” my yard for a few years. Lawns are a problem because grass just doesn’t support a lot of insect diversity. The issue is local ordinances surrounding lawn appearance, height, etc.

    ————

    Any opinion on this:

    “Native bees are more efficient pollinators, having a 91 to 72 percent advantage over honey bees…..We’ve been duped by ‘save the bee’ campaigns that show images of European honey bees or graphics of honeycomb. We don’t really need honey bees in North America for pollination. The primary group that needs honey bees is an industrial agriculture system that has come to depend on them; this insect species is one more cog in the industrialization of life that minimizes and destroys ecosystems for profit. We put great stress on these bees, shipping them around the nation, treating them like machine parts with dollar values as their primary worth.”
    ― Benjamin Vogt, A New Garden Ethic: Cultivating Defiant Compassion for an Uncertain Future

    “Ultimately, every garden is an ideology.”
    ― Benjamin Vogt, A New Garden Ethic: Cultivating Defiant Compassion for an Uncertain Future

    in reply to: This is why Corporate America loves Trump. #114639
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    The Rising does indeed pick on the Reps, BT 🙂

    in reply to: signs, comics, memes, & other visual aids #114638
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    in reply to: when can the NFL start again #114611
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    It would be surreal to watch an NFL game without fans in the stadium. It would be a real disadvantage to teams that seem to rely on crowd noise like the Seahawks and Saints, so I’m all for it.

    ===============

    And it would be an advantage to teams like the Rams who have…ya know…LA fans.

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    in reply to: when can the NFL start again #114610
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    Joe Curley@vcsjoecurley
    Vikings QB Kirk Cousins calls playing without fans a potential ‘breath of fresh air’

    ===================

    LoL

    in reply to: Read books, post Quotes #114600
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    I should do that, WV.

    Lately, I’ve been borrowing e-books….

    ===============

    Hell yeah.

    A lot of folks dont have time to read a whole book — but just the right Quote…

    I have a good time trying to limit myself to a handful of quotes. Its a game. Can i sum up the book in a handful of quotes. Just to help someone get the main idea of the author….etc.

    Goodreads is a good spot for em. Mainstreamers there. But smart mainstreamers. English majors. Liberals. Etc. Probly dont see many radical quotes.

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    in reply to: Julia Salazar #114495
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    Salazar got the Bernie treatment from the Corporate-Capitalists.
    Unlike Bernie, she managed to win, anyway.

    Jacobin:https://jacobinmag.com/2018/09/julia-salazar-state-senate-dilan-media

    “….
    ……..Like many people in an increasingly complex world, Salazar has a complex life story. Her first attempt to tell it to the public — a public that’s conditioned to consume identity and biography in soundbites, despite soundbites’ inadequacy to the task — had some inconsistencies. Salazar and her campaign made some mistakes. But the politically interesting story here isn’t those inconsistencies. It’s the exceptional ardor with which her opponents seized on them.

    A thorough investigation into the source of the smears against Salazar is in order. They were surely coordinated; after all, many wealthy and well-connected people backed Dilan and had a vested interest in Salazar’s defeat, and they know how to contact reporters. As Ben Beckett noted, “One aggressive anti-Salazar journalist publicly acknowledged he was tipped about at least one salacious story.” There’s likely more where that came from.

    But whatever their specific provenance, the scrutiny Salazar was subjected to was completely unprecedented in a state senatorial race. News outlets questioned her faith and her identity —but that was just the beginning. They speculated on the contents of deleted twitter accounts from her college years, and rifled through her family’s decades-old mortgage applications and funeral notices. They called her mother and brother repeatedly and leveraged their recollections of a multifaceted family story, geographically diffuse and of mixed-class character, against her own.

    They dredged up claims made against Salazar by the ex-wife of a family friend when she was nineteen years old — claims which were found to be fraudulent in a lawsuit Salazar filed against her accuser, leading to a monetary settlement in her favor — and circulated them in the national and even the international press. A Colombian genealogist looked into centuries of her family history; reporters used the genealogy to interrogate her claim to Jewishness. And by planning to run a story identifying her as a victim of sexual assault without her consent, they compelled her to discuss a highly traumatic personal experience before an uncharacteristically wide and unexpectedly hostile audience.

    Julia Salazar was clearly a threat to somebody, or many somebodies, and they threw everything they had at her. As a result she received more news attention than any state senatorial candidate in American history, the vast majority of it biased negatively against her. And it didn’t work.

    The smear campaign was an attempt to distract from the political distinctions between a democratic socialist candidate and a corporate centrist one. Salazar refused to let those distinctions fade into the background. Throughout the controversy, Salazar endeavored to retrain the focus on the political conflict between her and her opponent, and to characterize it as a proxy for a greater conflict between the working majority and the elite minority who control New York politics.

    “I am not running on my identity. I’m running on my record, as a health care and housing activist, a criminal legal reform advocate, [and] a dedicated union member,” she said the first time she was obliged to make a statement about the media controversy. “Now we are talking about these baseless accusations,” she said the second time, “rather than how to protect affordable housing or win universal health care — issues my opponent has refused to champion and address as a State Senator and throughout this race.”

    All the while Salazar, her campaign, and her dedicated volunteers — a large share from the Democratic Socialists of America, of which Salazar is also a member, but also from community organizations like Make the Road and New York Communities for Change — knocked doors tirelessly in an effort to expose as many people as possible to her political vision.

    That vision was of a New York for the many, organized to sustain not just the survival but the flourishing of ordinary people: those who don’t own productive assets, don’t trade on Wall Street, don’t have an impressive real estate portfolio, but do constitute the vast majority of the populace, create all of society’s wealth with their labor, and have every right to expect their fair share.

    With profit-driven landlords, developers, and speculators sending housing prices through the roof, with the private health insurance industry denying countless life-saving procedures and forcing millions into medical debt, with educational opportunities slipping away as public schools succumb to privatization and college tuition balloons, and with wages stagnating and workers losing their ability to fight for better conditions and pay, people are fed up.

    They’re sick of the pro-corporate status quo, ready for change, and not nearly as vulnerable as perhaps they once were to scandal-mongering. They want to talk about how to make housing affordable, how to get necessary medication without going bankrupt, how to get the training and education they need to get a good job, and how to make sure that job stays good in an era of eroding worker protections and economic unpredictability. They don’t want to talk about what a candidate may or may not have tweeted in college. They want a new economy that works for working people.

    And whatever else people may say about her, Salazar clearly stands for workers. In a stunning illustration of the principle, a paid Dilan canvasser stood up at Salazar’s victory party on Thursday night in Brooklyn and described how he ended up voting for Salazar, because politicians “need to fuckin’ listen.”

    All told, Salazar received over twenty thousand votes — nearly three times the number of votes Dilan won with in 2014 and 2016. The stunner is not just that she won, it’s that she did so by bringing thousands of people into the political process. And you can bet those people weren’t the 1 percent…..” see link

    in reply to: Profiling #114484
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    I would run from both the scary groups.

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    in reply to: virus news … (+ some dark humor) #114471
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    in reply to: tweets & things … 5/1 thru 5/4 #114470
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    Enh. I wish Hall-of-Famers would not go all Diva
    just because some rookie is wearing their old number.
    Like, Being in the Hall of Fame isnt enough?

    Let the rookies wear yer number. Get over it.

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    in reply to: tweets … 4/27 & 4/30 #114441
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    in reply to: Michael Moore’s new film getting bashed by libs #114440
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    Overpopulation.

    The simple fact is there’s way too many people. There are over 7 billion hairless monkeys flinging feces out there today…

    =======================

    Look, If you dont like it here….

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Viewing 30 posts - 4,051 through 4,080 (of 12,325 total)