Friday, April 03, 2015

FRIDAY 'ROUND-THE-HORN.


One of the funniest things by two of the funniest people of all time.

•    It is axiomatic that Jonah Goldberg can make anything worse, and the Indiana RFRA case is no exception. Here he shows evidence of having been crammed with some libertarian revisionism: Goldberg argues that the pre-"clarification" RFRA was not like Jim Crow because Jim Crow was really about economic oppression -- because everything is! -- and had nothing to do with anything so gauche as violent prejudice against a despised minority, and still less to do with political power:
Of course, the more infamous Jim Crow laws were aimed at barring blacks from being able to vote. But there was a pernicious logic to such efforts. Denying blacks the vote, even in states where they were the majority of citizens, guaranteed that they couldn’t overturn racist state economic regulations. 
In fact, says Goldberg, Confederate businesses loved serving black people, but because a flood of emancipated black workers caused a labor shortage (forget it, he's on a roll), both blacks and black-loving shopkeepers were Jim Crowed into submission not by the Klan nor by the White Leagues, but by Big Business -- you know, the people conservatives worshiped as gods until Tim Cook said he was gay. "Ultimately," says Goldberg, "the federal government had to use just coercion to crush unjust state-government coercion," without mentioning that his own magazine was against that "just coercion" every step of the way; they affect to feel sorry about that now, and one would like to think that they'll apologize for their absurd attitude toward gays fifty years from now (if they and the nation last so long), but alas, Goldberg shows that they haven't really learned a thing:
In Indiana, the most vocal and arguably the most powerful voices against even the perception of anti-gay discrimination have come from the business community. And, one suspects, there are plenty of people in the wedding-planning industry eager for such business. 
We could impose a fine on recalcitrant religious wedding photographers. But the market already does that, every time they turn away paying customers.
They still think Title II is an injustice and don't want it applied to anyone else.

•  One Bob & Ray thing isn't enough: Enjoy this bit -- first four minutes of this clip from the Letterman show, but the rest is okay too -- in which "Barry Campbell" talks about his disastrous opening in the play "The Tender T-Bone."

•    From the Weird Reaction file: You may have seen the fascinating story of a suitcase full of photos, receipts, and diary entries chronicling a German businessman's extra-marital affair forty-five years ago that has been revived as a gallery show. Most of us find it interesting or creepy or a spur to reflection. Ole Perfesser Instapundit, however, reacts thusly:
IT WASN’T AN AFFAIR, it was performance art. Bow down and don’t criticize, philistines!
Most of the time I think Reynolds is just putting it on for the rubes, but sometimes it seems he really is that weird mix of Babbitt and Nathan Bedford Forrest he plays on the internet.

•    Speaking of the arts, I went over to Acculturated to take in the latest by Mark Judge, or Mark Gauvreau Judge or Gark Jauvreau Mudge or whatever he calls himself these days. He's sighing over a 1954 Sports Illustrated cover showing a pretty girl in a modest one-piece bathing suit largely obscured by sea spray. As you may have guessed, this inspires a meditation on how much sexier things were before sideboob.
More than fifty years later, the Pamela Nelson photo ignites my passion more than anything that is in the hyped, recently published 2015 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition. The photographs in the new swimsuit issue are dull. The poses are clichéd, similar, and the models look like cyborgs. There is the arching-back pose. The bedroom-eyes-on-the-beach shot. The backside shot (or shots). Did I mention the arching-back pose?

In our culture today, pornography has excelled at titillating the masses, but is poor at capturing the soul. And no matter what our sex-drenched society tells us, sex is sexier when the soul is involved.
Every single one of the poses named above comes with a link, so Acculturated readers can decide whether they want to beat off to contemporary or vintage pin-ups -- which I guess is how some people measure cultural seriousness. Chacun à son gout is very very true...

•    Still speaking of the arts, this is from a report on wingnut intellectual George Nash's speech to the Philadelphia Society last month:
“Many conservatives, of course, including many in this room, are laboring valiantly and effectively in the realm of cultural renewal,” Nash said. “But as a historian I am constrained to note that the ‘progressives’ in this country continue to predominate in the production of culture, and in the manufacture and distribution of prestige among our cultural elites. As long as this imbalance continues, the fate of post-Reagan conservatism will be problematic.”
Do remember this, dear reader: You may think of novels, plays, ballet, music, etc. as works of art that illuminate the human condition, but to the great minds of the conservative movement they are merely widgets in "the manufacture and distribution of prestige among our cultural elites." Their policies are inhuman, that is, because they don't really relate to humanity.

257 comments:

  1. redoubtagain11:08 AM

    I want Goldberg to Google "black codes", and then get back to me.

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  2. both blacks and black-loving shopkeepers were Jim Crowed into submission
    not by the Klan nor by the White Leagues, but by Big BusinessVenn Diagram fail, Jonah.

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  3. I feel like that whole Jonah piece could be summed up with "Citation needed," but let's take a closer look at the hilarious ways in which he tries to apply contemporary libertarian dogma to a completely different world. Also, this one's going to be long.

    Plantation owners, long-accustomed to free labor from people who were not free, suddenly faced a dilemma: Now they had to pay for it. Thanks to competition and a labor shortage, wages rose. Plantation owners hated competing for workers, so they tried to form cartels.

    Pbpbpb. Well, someone slept through Econ 101, because that's not how cartels work. Conventionally, they are tied to geography (i.e. natural resources), but I have heard some discussion over "labor cartels" forming for workers with specialized skills. But that doesn't entail simply not hiring people (much as libertarians seem to think that's an option), but rather not competing with each other over their existing workforce. That's what that big group of tech firms got caught doing a while back - agreeing not to poach each other's employees so they could short them on wages. Or am I to believe that plantation owners employed headhunters to steal sharecroppers away from their neighbors?

    But it didn’t work. Economic incentives were too great, and black wages kept rising as slaveholders-turned-employers bid against one another across state lines.

    "Across state lines" is, of course, a litany that faux libertarians have been singing ever since the Dread Lord Obama tried to oppress us all with low-cost health care. I'll set aside how effective this would even be pre-mass communication. These days I can't even set up a lousy data entry job because the employers refuse to talk to anyone who's not living in the state when the ad goes out, but never mind that. All this just puts this image in my head of a plantation owner sifting through CVs and having HR give a series of grueling entry interviews.

    And of course, all of this is ignorning the "labor shortage" that would only happen if a significant portion of freed slaves dropped out of the labor force, presumably to write poetry or become bloggers.

    There’s a reason that the NAACP’s first major Supreme Court victory in 1917 hinged on economic liberty, arguing that residential segregation violated property rights.

    If anyone here wants to explain to Jonah the history civil rights organizations achieving their means by petitioning on grounds other than civil right, then go for it. I'm done.

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  4. Reality doesn't matter when you can think up some scenario that fits with your world view. Then you simply offer that as the real history and you've got yourself proof. Just because you can conceive of it happening doesn't make it true, this needs to be beaten into the brains of conservative "thinkers" over and over again.

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  5. M. Krebs11:31 AM

    Bob and Ray! Yes!

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  6. dstatton11:33 AM

    Wow. That Bob & Ray routine really nailed Jonah, didn't it?


    My favorite is The Slow Talkers of America. I'm laughing just thinking about it.

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  7. Economic incentives were too great, and black wages kept rising as slaveholders-turned-employers bid against one another across state lines.

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  8. that was my first exposure. i must have more.

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  9. timb11711:44 AM

    New today, instead of just mangling prose, Jonah Goldberg mangles Reconstruction history. Jim Crow, as he keep citing it, didn't happen until the 1890's. The black codes which preceded it ended in 1866 when congress reacted by passing legislation prohibiting them. The idea that freed slaves caused Jim Crow is so dumb that it could only occur to a publication which yesterday published an author who referred to public accommodation laws as "a legal fiction' which "effectively ended private property."

    PS John Derbyshire, a lonely boy named Jonah turns his eyes upon you

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  10. i love how his description of the post-civil war labor market sounds exactly like it's right out of milton friedman's "freedom to choose"

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  11. Jonah's been doing this amazing liberals-started-Jim-Crow shtik for years:

    one of Jim Crow's greatest evils was its intrusion on the property rights of whites. Jim Crow wasn't merely some "Southern tradition" undone by heroic good government. Jim Crow laws were imposed by government. And they banned white businessmen from serving blacks (Plessy vs. Ferguson, which enshrined "separate but equal" in the Constitution for another six decades, was largely about how blacks could be treated on railroads). (Goldberg at Townhall, May 2010)

    Link chez moi.

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  12. catclub12:02 PM

    Also the zoo where the animals stare back.

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  13. Teacher's comments:

    Yes, Mr. Goldberg, the Jim Crow laws were laws. I hope that for your next paper, you'll go a little deeper than definitions. D+

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  14. coozledad12:06 PM

    I'll be god damned.

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  15. catclub12:07 PM

    "flood of emancipated black workers caused a labor shortage (forget it, he's on a roll)"


    I would guess he meant a flood OUT of the region. Of course, many things about Goldberg are assbackwards. I am not testing those mangos to find out.

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  16. Can't help but notice that the WP page, attempting to explain why former slaves didn't work as much, offered this quote:

    In the view of one contemporary economist, freed people exhibited this “noncapitalist behavior” because the condition of being owned had "shielded the slaves from the market economy" and they were therefore unable to perform "careful calculation of economic opportunities."

    So if you were wondering where Jonah got this...now you know.

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  17. Gromet12:22 PM

    In Indiana, the most vocal and arguably the most powerful voices against
    even the perception of anti-gay discrimination have come from the
    business community.



    I'm confused. Does this mean Tim Cook is a hero for using business to stand up against something wrong? Or does it mean... some other thing?

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  18. "one would like to think that they'll apologize for their absurd attitude toward gays fifty years from now."



    50 years from now they'll say "Liberals were the real anti gay bigots" and cite the fact hat Clinton signed DADT and the Defense of Marriage Act as proof. That is not snark but a real prediction.

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  19. No, he's what the heroic defenders of lunch-counter-owner civil rights used to call "a outside agitator".

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  20. I assume if you look hard enough Jonah's already said it.

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  21. BigHank5312:38 PM

    Goodness, you're in for a treat. They were brilliant.

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  22. But there was a pernicious logic to such efforts. Denying blacks the
    vote, even in states where they were the majority of citizens,
    guaranteed that they couldn’t overturn racist state economic
    regulations.


    Oh, well, then. Carry on!



    (I would ask if he thinks these things through at all, but we all know the answer to that one.)

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  23. John Wesley Hardin12:40 PM

    Maybe, if there's any left after He's done with Jonah.

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  24. Well, seeing that human rights aren't an issue (since neers ain't human), what other rights could possibly be at issue? Plus, property rights trump all others, because shut up.

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  25. redoubtagain12:44 PM

    Black people scare him, so anything he writes about Reconstruction history is designed with that in mind. Also, he needs reminding of which party surrendered Reconstruction to win a Presidential election.

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  26. All this just puts this image in my head of a plantation owner sifting
    through CVs and having HR give a series of grueling entry interviews.


    Which is all the more hilarious when you take into consideration the fact that those people "being hired" were in many cases functionally illiterate because they had never been allowed to learn to read or write.

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  27. the condition of being owned had "shielded the slaves from the market
    economy" and they were therefore unable to perform "careful calculation
    of economic opportunities."


    Words fail me, and there's nobody around to punch, so let me just say "NNNNNNNNNNGGHGHGGHHHHHHFUCK!"

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  28. Gromet1:07 PM

    Ohhh, I see -- if you're not from a place, you can't have an opinion on the place. Sorta related, reminds me of the time a guy told me he'd personally said the same things the Dixie Chicks said, but he found them unforgivable because they said it "on foreign soil."

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  29. haha does he cite himself?

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  30. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person1:14 PM

    So basically, if you're wondering what on Earth he's gonna say next, you can stop because he already has.

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  31. Clinton is going to be the Robert byrd of gay rights.

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  32. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person1:19 PM

    y Ballou here, and I approve this comment.

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  33. IT WASN’T AN AFFAIR, it was performance art. Bow down and don’t criticize, philistines!

    Hey guys, did you know that art can be things other than paintings? And that some artists are transgressive on purpose? I mean, modern art, amirite?

    ...Seriously though, this kind of "lost and found art" is very interesting from an anthropological perspective, in that it gives us a glimpse into an aspect of human life that is seldom observed or considered. Our public library is currently running an exhibit of things they've found in returned books over the years, and it's very interesting. Perhaps you've found something like this yourself - I certainly have. I once opened an old book of Chinese poetry and found a postcard describing a party. Another time, I flipped open a book of New Yorker cartoons to discover a very detailed sketch of a bridge and street. It's this capturing of the human moment, these artifacts of the inner life. Exhibits like this are a comparatively non-intrusive (as opposed to candid street photography, for example) means of observing life, and in doing so learning something about the human experience.

    But I suppose Mr. Harem of Robowhores isn't interested in anything that subtle.

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  34. Brother Yam1:24 PM

    So if you were wondering where Jonah some poor intern got this...now you know.

    Fixx0red for great justice...

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  35. In Texas, "politics stops at Oklahoma's edge."

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  36. That would ruin his perfect record of never citing anyone.

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  37. sharculese1:34 PM

    Judge and Reynolds come at it from opposite ends of the spectrum, but they certainly can agree on one thing - a libido isn't something to have and enjoy, it's a thing to be worked at and nurtured lest anyone thing you were a queer.

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  38. Horndoggery is a stern taskmaster.

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  39. sharculese1:39 PM

    Say what you will about Jonah- that he's a dullard, that he's a ignoramus, that he's a terrible humorist, that he's never had a job his mommy didn't buy him. But I'll tell you what, the boy has gumption. Most winger wordsmiths would look at the task of making Jim Crow all about how it hurt white people and say, 'no, that's a bridge too far,' but not Jonah. In his total and enthusiastic ignorance of history, economics, and the mere basics of human interaction a perverse genius ferments.

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  40. being owned had "shielded the slaves...
    My printer had the same problem when I set it free! Stupid thing had no idea where to get ink cartridges, let alone install them. It came crawling back to me.

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  41. Like a virus that doesn't (can't) mutate?

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  42. I came across a youtube site that worked hard to PROVE all the ancient Egyptians were white. Never mind carvings and paintings and common sense... it was so virulent and stupid I only stayed about 30 seconds. I was worried for my computers' health.

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  43. It means Tim Cook is a "Jim-Crower"!

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  44. coozledad1:54 PM

    In our culture today, pornography has excelled at titillating the masses, but is poor at capturing the soul.

    Depends on what you mean by "soul".

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  45. Someone misunderstands what the hell porn is all about.

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  46. BigHank532:08 PM

    Well, Mark Judge doesn't know much about the SI Swimsuit Issue, does he? Back in 2013, Business Insider did a little analysis of that once-a-year special, and figured out that once you added in all the calendars and posters and Playstation games and iPhone apps, that property was worth somewhere around a billion dollars a year. It's undoubtedly more now.

    Have any of you ever worked on a fashion shoot? They cost as much as a day's worth of shooting a major movie, and for the same reason. The talent.Their hair and makeup staff. The wardrobe manager. The photographer and two assistants. Lighting. Food catering. Trailers. Forty thousand watts of generators. Security. Security for the damn ocean, because nobody wants to look past the model's hair and see a dolt on a jetski. What it costs to fly 15-30 people to Spain or Hawaii or Thailand.



    Yeah, the photos all look like cyborgs and they all use the same poses, because that's what people want. Somewhere in the bowels of Time, Inc. there's a guy with a giant database that proves it. Go whine at him about how the free market done you wrong, Mark.

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  47. Brother Yam2:09 PM

    Shielding the child-like innocence of the darkies from the cruelty of economics is just another bale in the White Man's Burden. The ungrateful wretches just had to leave the Eden of the plantation, didn't they?

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  48. Our safety inspector has issued an explosion warning: Please don't use Jonah and ferments in the same paragraph. Excess gas hazard.

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  49. Ah yes the good old days when men appreciated real beauty and respected modesty. They never went outside the marriage seeking sex, and treated their wives as queens. Then those dumb sluts went and put on bikinis and ruined America

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  50. edward baptist recently published his rather wonderful book of the economic dynamics of the decades leading up to the civil war largely to correct the narrative that american slavery was an exceptional period in the history of american capital development: this notion that slavery existed outside of the growth of the nation and creation of american capitalism, something that both well-heeled ignoramuses like jonah and a number of "even the liberal.." liberals buy into.

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  51. I thought the market was driven by rational human interest, and the natural order, unencumbered by the tyrannical government, not something you had to learn

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  52. After all, adultery was totally unknown before the Sixties!

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  53. fish's methods are unsound....WAIT WHAT HAVE YOU DONE WITH fish???
    ~

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  54. It's that damned rock n roll

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  55. coozledad2:22 PM

    He's just pretending he hasn't seen any nun fetishism.

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  56. Shorter Doughy Pantload:

    http://badasspetz.com/images/IAmFartacusdogteeshirts.jpeg
    ~

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  57. European porn has a weird nun thing going on, and I've never really understood it, which I suppose means I don't live in a Catholic dominated country.

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  58. coozledad2:29 PM

    I think goes back to Leo X. Or at least Marianne Faithful.

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  59. DocAmazing2:29 PM

    Mark Judge has never heard of Bettie Page, or of Dita Van Teese, or of burlesque?

    Guy needs to get out more.

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  60. susanoftexas2:31 PM

    Reynolds says they are called Philistines but since they choose tradition and authority over revolution and human charity they are giving the name to themselves.

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  61. John Wesley Hardin2:31 PM

    "pornography has excelled at titillating the masses, but is poor at capturing the soul" And I suspect our man Mark has done all the research necessary to arrive at this conclusion.

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  62. coozledad2:33 PM

    To quote MST3K, "They're going to need the guys with the dustpan helmets."

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  63. The upcut textualized!!

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  64. John Wesley Hardin2:35 PM

    Reminds me of Jr. High: "What kind of meat does a priest eat on Friday?" "None."

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  65. John Wesley Hardin2:37 PM

    Television tells me it was invented by Madison Ave. advertisers.

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  66. Hey, give the man a break - he had to make it through all 40 volumes of "Black Back Door Deliveries" before his deadline!

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  67. LittlePig2:39 PM

    Woo woo woo...

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  68. duh of course they were white i saw a documentary on this

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  69. And as long as we're talking about the culture manufacturing industry, I'd like to shamelessly promote myself. After 75+ rejections, I've decided to be stupid and try once again to sell my books by myself. This one's The Fabulist and it represents two wasted years of my wretched life.

    The main reason I'm doing this is that I'm going to take an extended trip to help someone through a custody dispute, and I hoped to raise a few bucks. However, The Fabulist is pay-what-you-want, including zero, and I invite you to take advantage of that and pay zero. Seriously, I won't be offended - I'm far more offended by the many people who went to that page, saw the $0.00 minimum price tag, and said "Eh, still too much." So yeah, get it for free, then tell all your friends that it was awesome. Because it is, I swear.

    I'd feel dirty doing this, but as Mr. Nash so ably pointed out, we must all aid in the domination of the prestige distribution apparatus.

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  70. LittlePig2:42 PM

    Mr. Harem of Robowhores

    What, no blackjack?

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  71. susanoftexas2:43 PM

    Wrong Dustin Hoffman movie. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight_Cowboy

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  72. susanoftexas2:45 PM

    Wait, aliens are white??

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  73. coozledad2:46 PM

    the ‘progressives’ in this country continue to predominate in the production of culture, and in the manufacture and distribution of prestige among our cultural elites.

    They're going to love my new novel, The Summer of The $4,000 Kitchen Aid Food Processor

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  74. LittlePig2:47 PM

    I"m getting a weird mash-up of the 'I am Sparticus!' scene with the campfire beans scene in Blazing Saddles.

    Or it could just be a feed from NRO.

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  75. Ellis_Weiner2:51 PM

    OK, here's my new insight: For years now I've been impressed by my own observation that, on the right, "politics has become religion" (assertions of faith without proof or in the presence of disproof; sacred figures above criticism; assertion of tenets even as authority figures violate them, etc.)

    Fine. But inadequate. Now, the religion has become a cult. What matters is no longer how-to-live-via-the-rules-of-the-faith, but how-to-perpetuate-the-faith-PERIOD. Reagan is their LRH. And, just as Scientology in official practice has nothing to do with how actually to live, but how to maintain order within the church, so conservatism has nothing to do with defending ostensibly "conservative" principles or--perish the thought--improving actual people's actual lives. Rather, it concerns itself with attacking its supposed enemy and defending "conservatism."

    We allude to this when we talk about "the bubble" or "the echo-chamber." The Republican Party isn't a political party. It's a power-grabbing racket entirely concerned with its own ability to get and keep power, for the financial benefit of its hierarchy.

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  76. I've linked both those references today.

    http://wonkette.com/581693/harry-reid-invited-to-celebrate-retirement-with-hookers-will-have-to-bring-his-own-blow#comment-1944012927

    I'm pretty sure it's because the Lizard People are controlling our brain waves.
    ~

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  77. Ellis_Weiner2:57 PM

    Obligatory:

    http://www.wussu.com/poems/plam.htm

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  78. LittlePig2:59 PM

    Boy howdy Chris Elliot sure takes after his dad, doesn't he? (yep, Bob Elliot).

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  79. coozledad3:00 PM

    Hot damn Shep-Sut!

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  80. Guy needs to rent a higher quality of smut.

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  81. Ellis_Weiner3:02 PM

    Someone is also unaware of when he sounds like parody of a clueless toff. "Perhaps I'm very old-fashioned, but I find myself more titillated by any random page of D.H. Lawrence than by a shelf full of Mud Shark Monthlies."

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  82. LittlePig3:03 PM

    My dive into Southern genealogy (my own) quickly provided STRONG evidence to the contrary.

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  83. He prefers his fetish objects to have been dead for a hundred yrs.

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  84. LittlePig3:05 PM

    Somebody's been reading Leather Nun stories...

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  85. What's so bad about adultery? You're not supposed to do it w/ children.


    Huh? Oh ....

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  86. LittlePig3:06 PM

    Reminds me of a saying of my dad's:"she's a nun, she don't want none".

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  87. LittlePig3:07 PM

    "You've taken your first step into a larger world."

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  88. LittlePig3:08 PM

    ...insert sad trombone sound here...

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  89. Now THAT'S perverted.

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  90. LittlePig3:11 PM

    Never heard of a topsoil fetish. Whoo wee that would be cold!

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  91. The Gay was invented by Charles Nelson Reilly. This is a true fact.

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  92. DocAmazing3:21 PM

    I thought it was Paul Lynde?

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  93. LittlePig3:22 PM

    Circle gets the square!

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  94. Maybe it was a collaboration. YOU KNOW HOW THEY ARE

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  95. Kree jaffa! Rin nok!

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  96. montag23:30 PM

    It's helpful in understanding this slavery/capitalism dynamic by noting that capitalists have since time immemorial tried to reduce labor costs to as close to zero as possible, and slavery, therefore, is just the most efficient means of doing so, with the added benefit that labor is not just converted to capital, but that since slaves are bought and sold, and particularly, reproduce, they become capital, as well. Even after the end of slavery, virtual indenture has been the goal. (Sandwich makers being required to sign binding non-compete agreements, anyone?)

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  97. Guy needs to get out more.No, no he doesn't.

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  98. "Chunky Asses?"

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  99. and baptist very explicitly makes this point, again and again--the traces of american slavery not only linger in the sprawling and complex racial challenges the us continues to face even today, but also in labor law and economic analyses, at every level of governance.

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  100. Don't you mean "jack of color", you LIBERAL RACIST?

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  101. He's sighing over a 1954 Sports Illustrated cover showing a pretty girl
    in a modest one-piece bathing suit largely obscured by sea spray.Oh, for ... Lissen, Marky Mark of the Fuckwit Bunch, even the Sears catalog went further than that, and that's a goddamned mid-century cliche.

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  102. Ha hrm, I do personally think one-piece suits are sexier than bikinis, but you don't see me making a bullshit political argument over it.

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  103. So, let's see, these drooling reactionary psychopaths have spent the week shrieking about the wickedness of Teh Ghey, and now they're complaining that the masses are too turned on by pictures of nearly-naked women? I'd say, "Make up your minds," but this assumes facts not in evidence.

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  104. The world at large is a bleak and dead place, a landscape of ruins where the names of the survivors have lost all meaning.

    Oh, the Reagan years.

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  105. Eh, different strokes for different folks.

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  106. Which takes on a whole new meaning in this context.

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  107. Possibly it's "HOW DARE YOU PERVS GET HORNY ON EASTER WEEKEND", but maybe that's giving them too much credit.

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  108. "All of this porn is really terrible and boring and bad for the soul.
    And I know this cause I watch it constantly."

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  109. So instead of two cans and some wire, their faith-o-meter is made with two wetsuits and a dildo?

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  110. All joking aside this specific argument--that the should be working poor don't understand capitalist culture and the necessity of market work--was made all the time in the colonial era w/r/t to indigenes all over the world and especially w/r/t our own native american population. Quite a lot of ink and blood was spilled figuring out a way to force people to produce for the market using the individual, patriarchal, family as the model. In order to do this 1) land law was appropriated and rewritten, 2) high cash taxes were instituted, 3) children were taken from their families and their languages/tribal culture were destroyed, 4) government agencies sent out information and support for "family farms" and "ranches" on a western model rather than on an indigenous, communitarian model, and etc..etc...etc...

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  111. BigHank533:54 PM

    Oh, great: heh-indeedy curated porn.

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  112. JennOfArk3:55 PM

    I'm still trying to wrap my head around how a flood of emancipated workers caused a labor shortage. The Great Migration didn't begin until decades later; most emancipated slaves stayed on the land where they had been enslaved or near it. In fact, the reason for Jim Crow and institutionalized racism in the South had far more to do with a labor surplus; as emancipated slaves competed with poor whites for the few jobs available, the white political structure consolidated power by promising poor whites that restrictions would be imposed upon blacks to limit their ability to compete for the little employment opportunity that existed.


    That the labor surplus was in large part the result of crippling economic sanctions imposed upon the states of the former Confederacy by the victorious Union - sanctions that largely stayed in place until the beginning of WWII - doesn't mitigate the fact that Loadpants got the situation entirely ass-backwards.

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  113. Fascinating! Wish I could see it. In a similar vein, if by that we mean the discovery of a lost world, I recently ordered a book by a guy who was in Nepal for 30 years (ten on either side of my time in Nepal) and who was consistently taking beautiful pictures. I'm kicking myself for not having taken more pictures--though film was expensive, I was on a tight budget, and I didn't have access to or skill enough to develop my film myself and I had to send it out of my village to be developed so I couldn't see what I'd gotten except every six months or so. But my point is that there are many lost worlds that at the time we think someone is recording, or someone is exploring. But that may not be the case.

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  114. Isn't it more "I find myself titillated by stuff that would have seemed titillating to my younger self, not this modern trash?"

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  115. montag23:59 PM

    "... black wages kept rising...."

    I think I see where Der Pantload went flying off the rails.

    This seems to fly in the face of a whole lotta evidence to the contrary, both then and now. The Wobblies probably generated as much animosity among the elite for being virtually the only labor union defending the equal rights of black and female workers as they did for their militancy. And it wasn't accident that agricultural workers were initially excluded from Social Security, in order to get Southern politicians to sign on to the legislation. The closest thing to slavery is an underclass, and in the view of the elite, who better to fill that role than minorities? And until individual groups built enough political clout to have some economic security and education, they were all the same--Irish, Chinese, blacks, Poles--all were relegated to the underclass.

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  116. redoubtagain4:11 PM

    At base? Harem van Robowhore is jealous. Instead of getting away with it in Germany like Gunter K. (and Charles Lindbergh), he's stuck in East Jesus, Tennessee with Dr. Mrs. Old Shrew Professor.

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  117. montag24:11 PM

    I want to buy this comment a yeasty beverage.

    ReplyDelete
  118. The History channel should do a show about how Hitler was a space alien and how this was all foretold by Nostradamus. Cover all the bases.

    ReplyDelete
  119. you have forgotten the loch ness monster base, so -1

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  120. And because I'm in an arty kind of mood today, here's a scan of that sketch. It really just fell out of a New Yorker collection that I found in the lounge of a Shanghai hostel. The artist didn't sign it, and I'm not sure where it was drawn (it doesn't look like the Bund).

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  121. Aren't they the same person?

    ReplyDelete
  122. Fluttbucker4:42 PM

    "Stop worrying, Vir. I can handle Mr. Morden."

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  123. smut clyde4:42 PM

    More than fifty years later, the Pamela Nelson photo ignites my passion
    Way too much information.

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  124. smut clyde4:44 PM

    The world at large is a bleak and dead place, a landscape of ruins where the names of the survivors have lost all meaning.

    Ruins true refuge long last towards which so many false time out of mind. All sides endlessness earth sky as one no sound no stir. Grey face two pale blue little body heart beating only up right. Blacked out fallen open four walls over backwards true refuge issueless.

    Scattered ruins same grey as the sand ash grey true refuge. Four square all light sheer white blank planes all gone from mind. Never was but grey air timeless no sound figment the passing light. No sound no stir ash grey sky mirrored earth mirrored sky. Never but this changelessness dream the passing hour.

    He will curse God again as in the blessed days face to the open sky the passing deluge. Little body grey face features slit and little holes two pale blue. Blank mind.

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  125. smut clyde4:47 PM

    Humid over humus.

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  126. smut clyde4:48 PM

    The Cleopatras were the Ptolemaic dynasty, so Macedonian Greek.

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  127. smut clyde4:51 PM

    things they've found in returned books over the years, and it's very interesting

    So that's where my bacon got to.

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  128. Rugosa4:52 PM

    I once found a poem of mine in a book - I had taken the same book out years before. (It wasn't a very good poem.)

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  129. dstatton4:59 PM

    Even for Jonah, that's amazingly inane, and he gets paid for these keen insights.

    ReplyDelete
  130. dstatton5:00 PM

    The business community was neither the most vocal nor the most powerful. He's really full of shit, isn't he?

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  131. satch5:03 PM

    Chris Tomlinson, author of "Tomlinson Hill" and a descendant of Texas slaveowners made the point in his book that freed slaves who went back to the plantations as sharecroppers often fared worse economically that they had under slavery, since they had to provide food, clothing, and shelter for themselves, and if a crop failed, they were SOL. Either way, capitalism failed blacks miserably. Of course, their lives improved when the Lochner Decision gave workers the power of "Freedom of Contract" to bargain individually as equals with big corporations and agribusinesses, thereby making unions unnecessary (LOL).

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  132. Yes, I don't think of (sneer) them as ancient Egyptians,

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  133. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person5:08 PM

    even the perception of anti-gay discrimination

    Perception. Hmmm. Well, within the first 48 hours, a pissant pizzeria volunteered, apropos of nothing, that they wouldn't cater a gay wedding, so yeah, we perceived that. I suppose this is the quantum nature of bigotry in the wingnut mind. As long as no gay wedding pizza order was refused, and no discrimination physically occurred, it remained potential bigotry. The pizza box is not known to be empty, so shut up. liebrulz!

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  134. satch5:09 PM

    "pornography has excelled at titillating the masses, but is poor at capturing the soul"


    Hey... I'll take a .500 batting average any day of the week.

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  135. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person5:13 PM

    We could impose a fine on recalcitrant religious wedding photographers.
    But the market already does that, every time they turn away paying
    customers.


    In a just world, maybe. In this one, a branch of the market is rewarding Memories Pizza with closing in on a cool million bucks. Oh, and those of us who wonder at the timing of all this are now Pizza Truthers...

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  136. montag25:15 PM

    “Many conservatives, of course, including many in this room, are
    laboring valiantly and effectively in the realm of cultural renewal,”
    Nash said.


    I.e., "I see many fans of 'Triumph des Willens' here today, and I implore you all to continue our campaign against degenerate art."

    “But as a historian I am constrained to note that the
    ‘progressives’ in this country continue to predominate in the production
    of culture, and in the manufacture and distribution of prestige among
    our cultural elites."


    I.e., "We are boring, I admit, but who among us does not believe that "Father Knows Best" and "Amos and Andy" and "The Lawrence Welk Show" were at the pinnacle of Kultur in this great nation, and that Cecil B. DeMille was an artistic genius among geniuses? And we would again be culturally dominant (in the most 1950s sense of the word) if those little snot-nosed shits weren't able to get SBA loans for the manufacture and distribution of prestige."

    "As long as this imbalance continues, the fate of
    post-Reagan conservatism will be problematic.”

    I.e., "Because, as we all know well, Reagan was an artiste of the first order, and as such, could not be anything but a champion of conservatism, and a proponent of bringing order and structure to the arts, eliminating deviants from its ranks, and purifying the nation's soul. In short, we must never waver in our quest to establish the bland, the starchy, the mindless, the authoritarian, the conformist and the mediocre as the standards by which we conservatives--and the nation--are judged. Without Reaganist Art, our homeland will be problematic."

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  137. J Neo Marvin5:16 PM

    Oh, you cut-up!

    ReplyDelete
  138. satch5:17 PM

    The Pissant Pizzeria has managed to turn bigotry into a viable business model:

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-indiana-pizzeria-gay-weddings-20150402-story.h

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  139. ...the manufacture and distribution of prestige among our cultural elites.



    Oh God--now that the right has discovered Bourdieu, they'll never shut up about it.

    ReplyDelete
  140. BigHank535:21 PM

    Beats working for a living. Once you have your self-respect amputated.

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  141. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person5:22 PM

    There's a Playstation game of the swimsuit issue? What do you do, virtually undress and re-dress 'em or something?
    Ah. Google tells me it's an hour-long 3D "making of" movie, which is a relief. I guess.

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  142. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person5:24 PM

    Yeah, but it's fapping 1000...

    ReplyDelete
  143. M. Krebs5:29 PM

    His hair is a bird.

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  144. BigHank535:29 PM

    Given the terabytes of pornography available over any broadband connection, I'm at a loss to understand why someone would pay actual money to look at cheesecake that's arguably even less realistic. One does have to concede that the modern megacorporation will leave no avenue unexploited when maximizing revenue.

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  145. Meanie-meanie, tickle a person5:55 PM

    And the white power structure kept it that was as long after Emancipation as they could.

    ReplyDelete
  146. I once found a poem of mine in a book
    I had taken the same book out years before
    It wasn't a very good poem



    (This is a pretty good poem.)

    ReplyDelete
  147. smut clyde6:07 PM

    Plantation owners... suddenly faced a dilemma: Now they had to pay for it.
    NRO: Where word meanings go to die.

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  148. smut clyde6:08 PM

    Looks more like somewhere in Mitteleuropa.

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  149. smut clyde6:10 PM

    "pornography [...] is poor at capturing the soul"

    You need a very special camera for that.
    Let me show you my collection. I keep them in jars.

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  150. JennOfArk6:29 PM

    If they could show him driving a big rig across the frozen tundra to a pawn shop, then all the bases would be covered.

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  151. JennOfArk6:32 PM

    Or go with the shorter: "man who owes his career to a cumstain."


    That never gets old.

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  152. tigrismus6:46 PM

    production of culture, and in the manufacture and distribution of prestige among our cultural elites.

    PRODUCTION FOR USE!

    ReplyDelete
  153. ColBatGuano7:28 PM

    There you go, using facts and logic in your argument. No National Review position for you.

    ReplyDelete
  154. I'd rather have a bottled Ptolemy than a frontal lobotomy!

    ReplyDelete
  155. Gromet7:41 PM

    They must really hate Tom Cotton in Texas.

    ReplyDelete
  156. Whoa, TL; DR. Remember, smut, when writing comments, lessness is moreness.

    ReplyDelete
  157. I really doubt that this was a plan on behalf of the Memories Pizza people. I think they stumbled into it with the help of much cannier people, like the people at the Blaze, who figured they could easily drum up a lot of air play/interest for their mouth breathing viewers with an insta-jerry lewis style telethon. "You can call in with a few dollars--or turn your eyes away from the suffering of the Pizza Martyrs."


    I, myself, am comforted by my belief system. "No one ever went broke underestimating the stupidity of the american public." Its a simple faith, but mine own.

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  158. Well--labor surplus was the result of the fact that the free land opening to the west was being shut off to black farmers. White people were flooding west and taking up land which was one reason that servant, in the north east, were imported from other countries. [Everyone with any gumption went and moved west to take up a farm (after moving north to New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine in the 18th century), and then people were absorbed into the nascent northern factories. But they, too, weren't employing southern blacks.]

    For a very interesting take on these issues during and immiediatly after the civil war I just read a fascinating book "The Sea Captain's Wife." http://www.amazon.com/Sea-Captains-Wife-Nineteenth-Century/dp/039333029X/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1417193507&sr=1-2&keywords=the+sea+captain%27s+wifeIt is the true story of an american born, white, lowell mill girl who went south and lived in the confederacy with her husband during the war, returned an impoverished widow after the war, worked in the mills and doing hard labor after the war and thenmarried a Caymanian Black Sea Captain/ship owner and moved down to the Caymans with him. I recommend it very highly.



    My point here is that moving and homesteading were American (white) traditions--any account of the post war period which assumes that black labor was fixed in place has to reckon with how normal migration-for-land-and-labor was prevented for the newly freed black population.

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  159. Its not sea spray ok, Mark? You are old enough now to...er...grasp that...


    I mean, let me come in again.

    ReplyDelete
  160. This comment has hairy palms and is going to go blind.

    ReplyDelete
  161. But when reading smut, more is more.

    ReplyDelete
  162. smut clyde8:16 PM

    After the negative critical reception for 'Film', Sam Beckett opted to release his later p0rn movies under a pseudonym.

    ReplyDelete
  163. JennOfArk8:18 PM

    Yes, all of which goes to pointing out the wrongness of Der Pantload's claim of a Southern labor shortage.

    ReplyDelete
  164. mortimer20008:22 PM

    Shorter Mike Judge: I certainly wouldn't want to touch those sour boobs.

    ReplyDelete
  165. mortimer20008:32 PM

    Public service announcement: Tonight the Fox News Channel is running Killing Jesus, based on the book by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard, and starring Kelsey Grammer as King Herod.
    *SPOILER ALERT*
    The title character doesn't make it.

    ReplyDelete
  166. smut clyde8:47 PM

    And such large servings too!

    ReplyDelete
  167. PersonaAuGratin8:48 PM

    Specifically (per the Comcast blurb): "A fictionalized retelling of the life and death of Jesus Christ..."



    Hmmmmmm.....

    ReplyDelete
  168. M. Krebs8:53 PM

    A week or so one of the other brethren (can't remember which one now) made a nobel attempt at wrestling the championship belt away from Jonah. I remarked at the time that Jonah was going to have to up his game in order to keep that belt. And sure enough, Jonah comes through like the champion he is.

    ReplyDelete
  169. M. Krebs9:12 PM

    Well, when the slave-owners lost their labor force, they were fucked, because none of the lazy-ass crackers could remember how to work. One can easily see the residue of this all over the south to this very day.

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  170. More than fifty years later, the Pamela Nelson photo ignites my passion
    more than anything that is in the hyped, recently published 2015 Sports
    Illustrated Swimsuit Edition


    There's a common observation that the "golden age of science fiction" is twelve. I'd posit that there's a golden age of girlie pictures too- while it varies, it's probably about fourteen, before a kid is able to find real porn. Basically, he's really just telling us about what he was beating off to when he was young, dumb, and full of cum (he's now old, dumb, and full of bile), rather than making an honest assessment of cheesecake.

    Either that or he has a little rubber swimming cap fetish.

    P.S. The golden age of science fiction and the golden age of girlie pics often overlaps. I am sure that others would agree.

    P.P.S. For the record, the sexiest SI swimsuit issue cover model was Paulina Pozrikova. Why? Because it was the golden age.

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  171. Ppppffffftttttt, he gets better.

    ReplyDelete
  172. M. Krebs9:25 PM

    That's a pretty clever marketing ploy. Many of the shut-ins who see it will want to buy multiple copies of the DVD to give to their grandkids. They can get their Christmas shopping done early! Oh, and graduation is coming up, too.

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  173. AGoodQuestion9:29 PM

    Denying blacks the vote, even in states where they were the majority of citizens, guaranteed that they couldn’t overturn racist state economic regulations.


    Jonah would like to remind us that nothing like this is happening now, that the right of citizens to vote is held sacred by everyone, and that he's only sweating so much because it's hot dammit.

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  174. AGoodQuestion9:38 PM

    Jonah, with his insistence that postbellum sharecroppers were for a time economic superstars who could name their own price, is a black hole of ignorance from which nothing can escape.

    ReplyDelete
  175. AGoodQuestion9:50 PM

    Stern taskmaster seeks harsh mistress; serious replies only.

    ReplyDelete
  176. M. Krebs9:54 PM

    Postmodernist.

    ReplyDelete
  177. BigHank5310:00 PM

    Yeah, but not before the will is read and a bunch of his shady friends skate out of town with his stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  178. BigHank5310:05 PM

    It will be very interesting to see how much of that money actually makes it from donors through the Blaze griftbox and eventually to those poor self-pitying idiots. "Oh, we'd be happy to serve a gay couple here in the restaurant but catering a gay wedding would be too much!"

    They must think their God's even dumber than they are if he'll fall for that one.

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  179. M. Krebs10:15 PM

    I don't get it. Who's soul is supposed to get captured? The watcher or the watchee?

    ReplyDelete
  180. Also:
    Cruz's Campaign Ads To Debut During Fox's 'Killing Jesus' Easter WeekendAnd because I hate everyone, the advert itself.

    ReplyDelete
  181. BigHank5310:41 PM

    I think it may be Kowloon.

    ReplyDelete
  182. BigHank5310:46 PM

    "We're sorry, but this round of damnation has been overbooked. If your damnation plans are flexible, please come to the ticket counter and we'll give you a $200 voucher good towards any future damnation within the next year. However, you will need to spend the next three days in Hoboken. It won't be eternity; you'll just think it is."

    I been flying too much lately.

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  183. BigHank5310:50 PM

    Have you seen Zardoz? "The penis is evil, the gun is good"--that piece of shit? Okay: Mark Judge is dumber than that movie.

    ReplyDelete
  184. montag210:52 PM

    Oh, I'm sure we could make it even more inclusive, say, Hitler driving across the tundra to pawn a secret text proving the existence of the Illuminati and the Elders of Zion, then using the money to front a tag-team cage match between the Kardashians and Britney Spears and Paris Hilton, and then using the proceeds to do an investigative documentary on chemtrails and HAARP, culminating with a promotional tour on Art Bell's Coast-to-Coast and the Alex Jones Show and certain frequencies in the shortwave band, where he reveals the truth about the Nazis' reverse-engineering of UFO technology and how Sarah Palin is the result of a genetic experiment undertaken by Josef Mengele in Paraguay in the 1950s.

    Ain't America grand?

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  185. No matter how crisp it may be, do not use it as a bookmark.

    ReplyDelete
  186. BigHank5311:01 PM

    TAKE MY MONEY NOW!!!

    ReplyDelete
  187. billcinsd11:15 PM

    who doesn't love a good burlesque

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZxnEoFKGzw&list=PLBEB2B64703CF5046

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  188. That's Bolshoy Moskvoretsky Bridge, with the Kremlin in the background. (If you Google for "bolshoy moskvoretsky," you should be able to see a view of the bridge that shows that circular feature and the matching towers.)

    ReplyDelete
  189. AngryWarthogBreath11:21 PM

    Kirlian photography porn never really took off.

    ReplyDelete
  190. IYKWIMAITYD.

    ReplyDelete
  191. AGoodQuestion11:31 PM

    (At the end of vol. 39) "Dang, nothing but hard-ons. Oh well, one more chance to capture the soul."

    ReplyDelete
  192. AGoodQuestion11:33 PM

    I always knew Sideshow Bob had something to do with it.

    ReplyDelete
  193. AGoodQuestion11:37 PM

    Relevant, somehow.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ACGClMQeV4M

    ReplyDelete
  194. AGoodQuestion11:47 PM

    Sherry Jackson did make a sexy android on Star Trek TOS. How old was the Ole Perfesser when he saw that episode?

    ReplyDelete
  195. They have to remove all that "love your neighbor", "judge not", "don't pray in public like the hypocrites", and "give to the poor" shit to make it adhere to the Right-Wing Narrative.

    ReplyDelete
  196. I don't think he'd go for her, she looked too human. I think he was whacking it to R2D2.

    ReplyDelete