A Glibertarians Exclusive: The Painter I

by | Feb 6, 2023 | Fiction | 158 comments

A Glibertarians Exclusive:  The Painter I

Beelitz, Germany – 1919

It was less than a year since the Great War ended.  It would have been so easy for the young man to have slipped away to anger, to dissolution, to join the unrest that swept Germany.  In the horror of the trenches, he had almost forgotten his pre-war fascination with painting, but his patron had not; while the young man was serving in a Bavarian regiment, while he was being awarded the Iron Cross First Class, while he was being wounded, being gassed, someone had been patiently tracking down and purchasing all the paintings the young man had produced before the war.  He had heard of the collector third hand, from his sister, from his mother, and from his few remaining acquaintances in Austria.

Then, once the Armistice was in place, while the young man was still recovering from the gas attack, the buyer of the paintings had tracked him down in the hospital in Beelitz.  The young man had been lying in his bed, soaking in anger and self-pity, when the gray-haired, portly man in what looked to be an expensive suit walked in and took a chair next to the young man’s bed.

“My name,” the older man had told him, “Is Avram Goldberg.”

The younger man gave his name.  He regarded the older man suspiciously.  “Why are you here?”

Goldberg produced a large brown envelope and handed it to the recovering soldier.  “Look at these.”

‘These’ turned out to be a series of photographs.  The young soldier, squinting through the remaining visual haze remaining from his gas exposure, nevertheless identified the subject of the photographs.  “These are my paintings,” he said in some amazement.  “You are the one who has been buying them.”

“I am.  You have a rare gift, young man,” Goldberg said.  “Since 1915, I have purchased every one of your paintings that I was able to locate.”

“Why?”

“Because I am a German,” Goldberg pointed out.  “Because Mein Herr, you show the beautiful side of Germany and Austria so well.  During the recent… unpleasantness, the world came only to see Germany as a military power, and the Kaiser as a warmonger.  You show the other side of Germany – the culture, the architecture, the daily life in the towns and cities.  I want to promote that.  The war is lost.  Germany must move forward now.  To do that, I am willing to underwrite you as an artist.  You will need not worry about expenses, about food or shelter, or supplies.  I will provide that.  I will promote your career.  I have contacts all over Europe.  I can easily do all of that.”

The young soldier leaned back against his pillow.  “You want me to present Germany’s best face to the world?”

“Yes,” Goldberg said.

“I must think on this,” the soldier demurred.

“I will return tomorrow.”

***

Munich, six months later:

The Pinakothek was Munich’s premiere museum of art.  The young man who was hurrying through the crowded morning streets of Munich towards that museum, the young man whose patron had set up this exhibit of his work, still couldn’t quite believe how quickly his fortunes had reversed.

The Pinakothek was still closed when he arrived.  A knock on the door brought a sleepy-looking clerk, who peeked out at the young man.

“Who are you?” the clerk demanded.  “What do you want?”

Herr Goldberg has organized an exhibit of my paintings here today.”

The clerk pulled out a scrap of paper and consulted it.  “Your name?”

“Adolf Hitler.”

Ach.  Yes.  Here you are.  The painter.”  The clerk held the door open.  “Come in.  Herr Goldberg is waiting for you.”

The venue was impressive.  The results of the exhibition were rather more so, and Adolf came away from the day with several commissions, including one from the Lord Mayor of Munich, Eduard Schmid.  “It’s hard to believe,” Adolf told his patron at the end of the day.

“Indeed,” Goldberg replied.  “You have done very well.  It does not hurt that you have a certain… charisma, when speaking to groups of your attendees.  You have a knack for gaining and holding their attention.”

Adolf considered that for a moment.

“Now,” Goldberg went on, “Let us discuss moving you onto a larger stage.”

Adolf looked at the older man.  He blinked; his head was still spinning with the figures, the amount of money involved in the commissions he had just agreed to.  “What larger stage?”

“Europe.  To start with.  Here,” Goldberg handed Adolf another brown envelope.

Adolf opened the envelope.  Inside were train tickets to…

“Rome?”

“Indeed.  It is one of Europe’s major cultural centers.  We will have at least two exhibitions in Rome.  I have already found and leased a studio there for you.  I can meet these expenses for a year, perhaps eighteen months.  Judging from today’s performance, I am confident you will be quite well-off on your own effort by then.”

Adolf nodded, his expression serious and determined.  “I will.”

“May I give you one piece of advice?”

“Of course.”

“Do something about the mustache.  Either grow it out properly or shave it off.  You look as though you were growing a toothbrush on your lip.”

“I will consider it.”

Two weeks later found him in Rome – and clean-shaven. Previously, Adolf had only experienced German food, culture, and history.  Staying in Rome was a new experience.  History surrounded him, and he had taken up an informal study of the Roman Empire, inspired by visits to local sites and fueled by reading what books he could find on the Roman Emperors.

Evening, and Adolf was hurrying to an appointment.  A local businessman, one who claimed descent from a famous Italian artist, had retained Adolf to paint a portrait of his twin nieces.  Adolf had not previously done a personal portrait, but the businessman had readily agreed to the figure Adolf had named.  He had, in effect, made Adolf an offer that was too good to refuse.

The nieces had a room somewhere near the historic Spanish Steps.  Adolf was running late for his appointment to start sketching the twins, so now he was hurrying through a damp, chilly evening.

Since that first exhibition in Munich, Adolf felt as though he had hurried everywhere.  I have no time to do my own work, he reminded himself.  To paint what I want to paint.  To show what I want to show.  Goldberg said he wanted me to show the better side of Germany.  How am I doing that by painting a rich Italian’s nieces?

Soon, he thought.  Soon.  I’m making money with these tasks.  My name is becoming known across Europe.  One day I will be known as the one who showed the world the pride and the beauty of Germany and the German people.  He smiled, slightly, as he hurried through the drizzling rain.  Maybe these Italian twins will even realize the glory of Germany. 

***

Oh, the streets of Rome are filled with rubble.
Ancient footprints are everywhere.
You can almost think that you’re seein’ double,
On a cold, dark night on the Spanish Stairs.
Got to hurry on back to my hotel room,
Where I’ve got me a date with Botticelli’s niece.
She promised that she’d be right there with me,
When I paint my masterpiece.

About The Author

Animal

Animal

Semi-notorious local political gadfly and general pain in the ass. I’m firmly convinced that the Earth and all its inhabitants were placed here for my personal amusement and entertainment, and I comport myself accordingly. Vote Animal/STEVE SMITH 2024!

158 Comments

  1. MikeS

    This is going to be fun!

    • Sean

      I think you meant glorious.

      • juris imprudent

        It will go much further.

      • WTF

        LOL – originally read that as “It will go much fuhrer.”

      • juris imprudent

        Naturalich

    • SDF-7

      Maybe a bit of a struggle…

      • juris imprudent

        A race that only goes to the purest.

  2. Tundra

    Wild.

    In a hundred tries I don’t think I could have ended up there. Bravo!

    • WTF

      Yeah, I am loving this already, can’t wait to see where it goes.
      Thanks Animal!

  3. WTF

    Interesting concept – instead of “kill Hitler”, it’s “let’s push Hitler in a different direction”. Although I get the feeling that it won’t play out as advantageously as we we might at first anticipate…

    • The Other Kevin

      This is intriguing, like all of Animal’s work. I have zero idea where it’s going. But I can’t wait to find out.

    • juris imprudent

      You still think someone will end up stabbed in the back?

      • WTF

        By the Juden, no doubt.

    • Rat on a train

      Whoever rejected Hitler’s early endeavors has much to answer for! The parents also share blame for naming him Adolf. Albert Hitler would never do such evil.

      • Tundra

        Biff Hitler even less so.

      • R.J.

        This should be great. Maybe it delays the inevitable, he ends up with bad reviews in the paper and invades Poland.

    • robc

      I saw immediately where this was going but I assume you can’t fuck around with history and he just ends up leveraging his art career and his “charisma” to end up in the same place.

      But I am interested to see where Animal takes it, I could be entirely wrong. And it will be super interesting even if I am right.

  4. The Other Kevin

    Are the days of patrons over? All I can think of is government grants and crowdsourcing like Patreon.

    • pistoffnick

      Sugardaddies.com

    • WTF

      Government grants are better, because the patrons don’t always fund the “correct” art.

      • MikeS

        +1 crucifix in jar of urine

      • WTF

        So courage. Much brave.

    • Sensei

      Maiko (Kyoto) and Geisha (Tokyo and elsewhere) are usually supported by wealthy clients.

      They buy them clothing and accessories, sometimes living expenses and will take them out for essentially a date to break up their work. Think of that as the way you’d visit your daughter in college and pay to take her and her roommate (here apprentice) out to dinner to get break.

    • WTF

      Malen macht frei!

    • Tundra

      Neat! Although I wouldn’t do much exploring without a respirator. Yikes.

    • The Hyperbole

      I’m always amazed when people let buildings like that deteriorate, those railings and banisters alone would cost a fortune today, I can see how at some point maintenance and repairs might get to expensive to keep up but at least salvage those usable parts.

      • Tundra

        The only reason I can think of is some legal issues (ownership, for instance). Or maybe people are just dopey.

        Back during the ’08 crash my buddy and I bought a few houses. One we went through had the shitty copper pipes ripped out, but the thieves left the gorgeous old radiators with massive copper fittings.

      • Pope Jimbo

        No one has ever been able to do anything with the Fergus Falls Funny Farm. Very cool building. We got to go on a field trip there as kids. It seemed very nice to us, but we weren’t let anywhere near the patients.

        My dad had a lot of clients admitted there and had to go visit them every so often (to see if they had gotten better and could be sent to a real prison). He called it the scariest/most depressing place on earth.

        One of the things I had heard through the hometown grapevine was that being on the Historical Register basically made it impossible to fix up for a reasonable amount of money.

      • Fourscore

        Even as a kid we were threatened to be sent there or St Cloud or Stillwater is we didn’t straighten up, depending where we were on the spectrum.

      • Fatty Bolger

        Don’t know about this case, but often there is a moratorium in place, and TPTB spend years considering what to do about the place while it slowly decays.

  5. Drake

    The moustache was like the tattoos vets get or the hats some wear. It shows you were there. (trimmed that short so it wouldn’t interfere with a gas mask)

    • Not Adahn

      Speaking of moustaches, remember Dr. McNinja and the concept of “The Mustache of Authority?” The dude from RRR had the archetypical example.

    • Rebel Scum

      Seismologist Tyler Metcalf explains what’s likely to happen now:

      The big #earthquakes in #Turkey have likely led to destabilization of fault lines across the world. There could be many earthquakes in many areas across the world over the next few to several days. One, a Magnitude ~4.2 just hit Buffalo, NY.

      Hm. I thought the next phase of The Great Reset was a cyber attack.

    • Rat on a train

      If only they built as well as the Champlain Towers.

    • Pope Jimbo

      We visited relatives two years after the big earthquake in Kobe and the place still looked like a disaster area. If the Japanese can’t completely clean up after a big quake in two years, I can’t imagine what the recovery in Turkey will be like.

      Yes, I am saying that the Japanese are superior when it comes to big time infrastructure shit like this.

      • Tundra

        Turkey and Syria. And we’ve still got those retarded sanctions for Syria.

      • WTF

        “What’s a leppo?”

      • Gender Traitor

        “Wasn’t that the ‘black sheep’ Marx Brother the others never spoke of?”

      • R.J.

        *Golf Clap

      • Sensei

        The one in 1995?

      • Pope Jimbo

        Yup. That would be the one. My brother in law made out like a bandit. He ran a company that made cables (electrical, coax, etc). Kobe laid a shit ton of cabling as they were fixing things up. He couldn’t make enough cable for them.

  6. juris imprudent

    Whoever made the comment about no US managers in Premier League was wrong, Armas taking over as caretaker. Welcome to England!

    • robc

      Leeds eh?

      He gets to start with a home-and-home with Man Utd this week.

      • robc

        And then a “6 pointer” with Everton after that.

      • juris imprudent

        That’s a weird bit of scheduling.

      • robc

        I think Wed game is a reschedule of a cancelled game, but yeah, weird.

      • juris imprudent

        Can’t believe there are Leeds supporters that want Bielsa back. They should get him just to teach them a lesson.

      • robc

        He turned down Everton because he wouldn’t start in January. I assume same applies to Leeds.

        He has never started a job mid-season, he wants to start with a full summer of training.

  7. Tundra

    Why, yes!

    Yes I do!

    (One of the best Twitter follows)

  8. Fourscore

    Thanks Animal

    I’m seeing a great future for another young painter that spent a little time in the military and is already well connected.

  9. SDF-7

    Gorram it… now I’ve got to go look up Mussolini and see if he had two nieces… I mean, the Don Corleone reference was funny, but having Der Maler working with Il Duce would be the sort of sneaky twist Animal would do…

    • SDF-7

      Well.. not that I can find with a cursory search, but most “family” articles are more about him sleeping around than anything else.

    • juris imprudent

      Painter meets journalist… much hijinks ensue.

    • WTF

      It looks like Benito Mussolini had two nieces, one by his brother and one by his sister from what I could find quickly.

    • Rat on a train

      Yes. Rosina through brother Arnaldo and Rosetta through sister Edvige.

      • Tundra

        …his twin nieces.

        Animal is watching us in amusement.

      • Animal

        <— Walks away, looking skyward and whistling

      • Ted S.

        Bears can whistle?

      • Rat on a train

        Boys Nieces from Brazil?

    • kinnath

      Below That

      • Tundra

        Lol. Perfect.

      • MikeS

        I was going through my Twitter feed for the first time in a long time and saw one from Bob Menery. You ever seen him? Super funny shit.

      • Tundra

        No, I haven’t, but that was hysterical!

        “White men CAN jump!”

    • MikeS

      What a Jabroni.

    • Tundra

      Good article. Thanks!

    • CPRM

      We’ve also been HERE before.

  10. UnCivilServant

    I keep debating making the investment in an airbrush, but keep arguing with myself over not wanting to ruin my active projects with practice…

    *glances at giant pile of shame taking over living room*

    • R.J.

      You get those Zardoz miniatures yet? Make that pile a little bigger…

    • Gender Traitor

      Find a bag of cheap plastic toy soldiers for practice?

      • UnCivilServant

        The “Pile of Shame” is a hobby term for a hoard of plastic that has not been used/worked/completed. I have whole armies worth of plastic I have not used for anything that can serve as test pieces. (Especially since there are a bunch of boxed sets with two different factions in them)

  11. CPRM

    This story reminds me of Max, a John Cusack movie about an art dealer and Hitler.

  12. Rebel Scum

    I can continue not shopping here.

    Major European grocery chain Lidl will seek to reduce the amount of meat products sold in its stores in favour of “alternative” protein sources to promote the global green agenda.

    Lidl’s purchasing director for the German market, Christoph Graf, said this week at a Berlin ‘Green Week’ event that the discount supermarket retailer will seek to move away from selling meat because “there is no second planet”.

    In comments reported by the German newspaper Der Spiegel, the grocery executive said that in order to meet the demands of a global population, meat consumption in the West needs to be reduced.

    While Graf claimed that the decision to phase out meat should not be seen as an attempt to dictate how customers live their lives, he said that he hopes that he can “motivate” shoppers to purchase more plant-based protein options.

    • Sean

      LOL. I look forward to their failure.

    • Scruffyy Nerfherder

      And yet, their filets are quite reasonably priced in the USA.

      • EvilSheldon

        I have no real problem with Europeans voluntarily starving themselves.

    • Drake

      I’m near several and have never been inside. I prefer Lowes Grocery stores. They have a meat-smoker in the parking lot and the Bear Den with the Sip-N-Shop. The grocery carts are conveniently equipped with cup-holders for your beer

    • Dr Mossy Lawn

      The local butchers go “ja gut”

    • Tundra

      Brilliant, really. They can sit on the sofa, drink beer and claim to have destroyed Baltimore. No one could prove them wrong!

      • Drake

        Call it a win and move on.

    • R.J.

      No mention of the couple’s co-conspirator, known to the only by the code name “Fred Baron Icarus.”

      • SDF-7

        G. Gordon Louie.

    • EvilSheldon

      Is it just the forshortening in the scary Atomwaffen mask pic, or is funboy there like 5’4″?

  13. robodruid

    Speaking of chickens and eggs.
    I use the Big “V” 20% protein egg ration. about 2 years ago it was $18/ 50 lb bag.
    Its now $24.

    • Tundra

      30 percent is a decent jump. How many chickens do you have?

      • robodruid

        Last year was rough. I lost 50 + to heat, sickness, predators….

        about 75 right now, another 20 growing in house/dedicated room. Baby Chicks just starting to show up in Oklahoma.

      • Tundra

        Yikes! That’s a bunch.

        So you go through a few bags, then? Are they able to forage the rest of the year?

      • robodruid

        It was a lot, i made a mistake and killed 30 in the heat…..

        I just bought 8 bags.
        I will be planting some Kentucky red clover, black oil sunflower to let them forage.
        I need them to eat the grasshoppers as well. Last year was difficult.

    • Not Adahn

      Re: inferior animal feed…

      It’s been a while, but my first job out of college was for the Office of the Texas State Chemist – Feed and Fertilizer Control Service. Think FDA, but TX and animals.

      I don’t know about the state you live in, but when I was there, the label confirmation analyses we ran were hard core. Far more rigorous, controlled, traceable and tamper-resistance than any crime lab. When you go after a big agribusiness for not living up to the CoA, you’ve got to be perfect, because they (unlike criminal defendants) have excellent lawyers.

      • robodruid

        Ahhh the days of Kjedahl analysis of waste and wastewater.

  14. The Other Kevin

    I don’t know if anyone else got the joke, but this headline is on Fox: “Biden sets a new grim record as Americans feel the pain of inflation”

  15. Gender Traitor

    I’m starting to suspect Atkins is putting less beef in their Beef Merlot. And the broccoli is more stems than florets. 🤨

    • The Other Kevin

      Shrinkflation continues unabated.

      • B.P.

        My latest shrinkflation suspicion: Companies are making the plastic in packaging thinner, so when you try to pull apart the top of a resealable package, the resealing thinger stays closed and the plastic shreds.

      • SDF-7

        I thought they were just cheaping out on the glue for those — because the resealer lately always just separates from the other side of the package entirely, rendering it worthless.

    • Tundra

      I made these last night.

      Enough for a few days and no Atkins shrinkflation bullshit!

    • EvilSheldon

      I hope that no one was surprised by the idea of a spy drone being equipped with a self-destruct mechanism…

      • Gender Traitor

        ::starts to whistle Mission: Impossible theme::

      • Scruffyy Nerfherder

        *inserttomcruisehere*

      • Drake

        I read enough Cold War spy novels not to be surprised. All the spy satellites are similarly equipped (according to Tom Clancy and Robert Ludlum).

      • R.J.

        How would you even know when it was shot down with a missile? It’s in fragments now. It wasn’t all that big.

      • Ownbestenemy

        no no..the article quotes some AF general saying it was 200 ft tall and as large as an airliner. Which, I guess 3 busses back to back is about the length 737-600. That isn’t tiny

      • EvilSheldon

        Neither is the warhead in an AIM-9X. It’s supposed to create a big cloud of fragments, more than anything else.

    • Scruffyy Nerfherder

      An F-22 from Langley AFB fired one Sidewinder missile at this one.

      Its overflight over the US “was of intelligence value to us.”

      OFFS

      • Tundra

        Whatever. It went from wildfires (OMG!) to debris field (OMG!) to intelligence value. There is something weird going on, but it ain’t what we are being fed.

        Stoke that China war boner, boys!

      • Scruffyy Nerfherder

        Oh, and don’t talk about the Naftali Bennett revelations:

        https://news.antiwar.com/2023/02/05/former-israeli-pm-bennett-says-us-blocked-his-attempts-at-a-russia-ukraine-peace-deal/

        Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said in an interview posted to his YouTube channel on Saturday that the US and its Western allies “blocked” his efforts of mediating between Russia and Ukraine to bring an end to the war in its early days.

        On March 4, 2022, Bennett traveled to Russia to meet with President Vladimir Putin. In the interview, he detailed his mediation at the time between Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, which he said he coordinated with the US, France, Germany, and the UK.

        Bennett said that both sides agreed to major concessions during his mediation effort. For the Russian side, he said they dropped “denazification” as a requirement for a ceasefire. Bennett defined “denazification” as the removal of Zelensky. During his meeting in Moscow with Putin, Bennett said the Russian leader guaranteed that he wouldn’t try to kill Zelensky.

        The other concession Russia made, according to Bennett, is that it wouldn’t seek the disarmament of Ukraine. For the Ukrainian side, Zelensky “renounced” that he would seek NATO membership, which Bennett said was the “reason” for Russia’s invasion.

        But ultimately, the Western leaders opposed Bennet’s efforts. “I’ll say this in the broad sense. I think there was a legitimate decision by the West to keep striking Putin and not [negotiate],” Bennett said.

        When asked if the Western powers “blocked” the mediation efforts, Bennet said, “Basically, yes. They blocked it, and I thought they were wrong.”

      • Tundra

        Interesting. I read this morning some speculation that certain asswipes wanted to scuttle the trip because they didn’t want Blinken to de-escalate the situation with China.

        Either way, he wasn’t going and this gave them a solid out.

      • Rebel Scum

        China doesn’t respect Blinken at all. No matter what is going on I think we are being lied to.

      • Scruffyy Nerfherder

        Who would? He’s a walking, talking sack of shit.

      • Ted S.

        And yet you’d think if it really were just a weather balloon that strayed off course, China would have notified the US and the information would have become public somehow.

    • Drake

      Thought they would use a gun on the balloon itself instead of a missile on the payload. Doesn’t matter if the above mentioned self-destruct mechanism was real. An F-15 can certainly get high enough.

      • Rat on a train

        Was the balloon above the ceiling of the jet? Most military aircraft max out around 50,000 feet.

      • EvilSheldon

        ‘Twas. The entire point of this kind of surveillance balloon is high altitude, low observability, minimal energy for station-keeping. The fact that it got low enough to shoot down, makes me suspect that it was malfunctioning.

      • Rebel Scum

        50-65,000 feet. I have seen variation of 60-65 for the Eagle and Raptor. So they can get close enough. Even if the balloon was higher a longer range missile would suffice.

      • SDF-7

        Yeah, I have to assume they have this covered technology wise.

      • Rebel Scum

        I haven’t seen that one before. Neat.

      • Drake

        F-15 is 60k+ easy. One with nothing on the wing mounts made it over 100k.

      • Ownbestenemy

        I don’t think it has the flight surfaces to maneuver at those heights, though it is thought the F-22 can. 60K and above aerodynamics get a bit different as the air thins out.

      • Sensei

        An article I read noted that Canada shot up a runaway weather balloon and it took six days to descend.

        So perhaps they wanted to be sure given this result.

  16. Rat on a train

    AMC will start charging more for the seats most desired by moviegoers

    America’s largest movie chain announced that the prices of a ticket will now be based on seat location: Seats in the front will be cheaper while those in the middle will cost more. The three-tier ticket pricing initiative, called Sightline at AMC, will roll out at all of its roughly 1,000 movie theaters by the end of the year. It will be in effect for showings after 4 p.m.

    I can continue not going.

    • SDF-7

      Yup… that’s going to be my plan as well. Way to buck the “watch the movie at home” trend there, AMC.

    • Sean

      LOL. Great plan, guys!!!!!

    • The Other Kevin

      I just went to a theater that had heated recliners and a bar in the lobby. Tickets were the same price. Nice knowing you, AMC.

    • Scruffyy Nerfherder

      ”I think the top line is, are we wasting money?” said Harriet Richardson, BART’s inspector general, referring to the audit. “Especially when you consider where BART is financially, are we spending money unnecessarily for things that have no measurable outcome?”

      They’re so far gone that they don’t even realize that’s their purpose for existing, Unaccountable spending is the goal.

      • JaimeRoberto (carnitas/spicy salsa)

        Are we wasting money?

        Are we the baddies?

        Does a bear shit in the woods?

      • Animal

        Does a bear shit in the woods?

        Can confirm.

  17. Scruffyy Nerfherder

    The end of NATO appears to be in sight:

    https://news.antiwar.com/2023/02/05/germany-open-to-theories-that-a-western-country-attacked-nord-stream-pipelines/

    The Times of London reported Thursday that Germany is “open” to theories that a Western country attacked the Nord Stream pipelines in an attempt to blame the incident on Russia.

    The Times report reads: “The German investigation is thought to have made little progress so far, with officials having yet to uncover any compelling evidence. However, The Times understands that they remain open to theories that a western state carried out the bombing with the aim of blaming it on Russia.”

    • Tundra

      I would have preferred the breakup sans WWIII, though.

      • Scruffyy Nerfherder

        I think it’s going to be Great Depression 2 European Boogaloo

      • Tundra

        Energy or money collapse first?

      • Scruffyy Nerfherder

        Money. Lagarde panicked last week. I think the walls are closing in on the ECB.

        That of course creates an energy crisis as well. Europe is screwed.

  18. SDF-7

    Oh for fuck’s sake.

    Way to make small-l libertarians look even more like libertine weirdos, dumbass.

    • Tundra

      Didn’t the dude running against Masters in AZ do the same damn thing? Why do the freaks take all the good names?

      If people ask, I’m a Meat-based Glib. Fuck libertarian.

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