Saturday Morning Road Trip Links

by | Nov 13, 2021 | Daily Links | 261 comments

SP and I are unusual in that we can be cooped up in a car and motel rooms for eight grueling days and not kill each other. But we did get our mission done, and as a side bit of fun, got to see mexican sharpshooter and eat at a very Lebanese restaurant. We’ll be home tonight, with luck. And with a pile of wine.

Tales From The Woke, left over from last week: One of our staff rushed in, and with breathless panic announced that the night before (Halloween), there had been a group of people dressed as Klansmen spotted walking around campus. Several of the other staff gathered around, gasped, and all agreed how horrible this was and that something needed to be done about it IMMEDIATELY. They turn to look at me for affirmation. Rather than say the obvious (“You’re in a firmly left wing Northeastern town with a highly woke vastly international student population and a long history of abolitionism. If you took all the actual Klansmen among the 330 million population in the US, you MIGHT be able to fill a high school auditorium. Do you remember Jesse Smollett or the blanket-walk of shame incident from Oberlin? What do you think the chances are that this actually happened? Zero?”), I nodded gravely and merely asked, “Did you actually see this?” “No, but the school sent out an email that they take this seriously and they’re investigating it!” Oh, OK.

My hope is that some years down the road, this lad (an actually nice kid but… delicate) will remember that simple question and have an Aha! moment.

Hope, not expect.

Birthdays today include an interesting guy who was hungry, hungry; the true hero of the Civil War; a brother who was a better actor but a worse shot; a guy who presciently wrote, “I used to think meanly of the plumber, but how he shines beside the politician!”; a liberal from when that term actually meant something; a guy who was a total bastard, but our total bastard; star of one of only two exceptions to my rule of “all movies that end in a number will suck”; a guy who elevated trolling into fine performance art; one of the last of the honest TV journalists; a guy whose career jumped the shark; a bullet we dodged; proof that success in Hollywood demands brainlessness; and yet more proof, a guy far dumber yet more successful than his erstwhile partner.

Anyway, here’s some Links.

 

PANIC HARDER!!!

 

Following the tradition of my first wife, who was an enforcer for the Lady Badgers.

 

Team Blue, totally not antisemitic.

 

“I have bad news and worse news.” Nonetheless, she’s our next president, because Team Red is even more moronic.

 

Our fine educational system. Delicate flowers too tired to do their job.

 

Dude, you’re not Catholic.

 

Sullivan gets it right. Now, Andy, try applying the same thing to your virulent anti-Israel ranting.

 

Old Guy Music is a sieve. A minority of you will have ever experienced this. A minority of the minority will remember the name of the band. And a minority of those will know the actual identity of the band.

About The Author

Old Man With Candy

Old Man With Candy

Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me. Wait, wrong book, I'll find something else.

261 Comments

  1. Stinky Wizzleteats

    “she’s our next president”
    Maybe but there are a couple halfway decent Republican governors who could mop the floor with her if they can just get Trump to hang back.

    • Old Man With Candy

      They won’t. The personality cult is strong here.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        I think he’ll do the kingmaker thing but his ego might get the better of him. He could designate whoever and be vindicated if they won and could blame it on them if they lost. He has been making noise about running again but he’s also bullshitting half the time he opens his mouth.

      • juris imprudent

        Half the time? Oh, he’s breathing, eating or drinking the other half.

      • Chafed

        Bingo.

      • DEG

        He will run. His ego won’t let him do anything else.

    • Sean

      I don’t see CommaLa being elected. There’s not enough fortification in the world.

      • Grumbletarian

        After seeing Biden get 81 million votes, I won’t underestimate the productivity of Team Blue ballot factories.

      • juris imprudent

        Do you ever stop to consider how many of those 81 million were absolutely nothing but get-rid-of-Trump votes?

      • juris imprudent

        As though no real human has a distaste for Trump; TDS is the bizarre affliction of a tiny fragment of America. Everyone else just LOVES him.

      • Chafed

        Exactly this. The only Team Blue wins in 2024 is if Trump runs.

      • Loveconstitution1789

        If Trump or a fighter like him doesnt run, America loses.

        I still laugh when people on here mention hating Trump. I guess I missed the reason why he was a bad president.

      • Homple

        There were plenty of get-rid-of-Trump votes. The lingering question is, how many of those votes were cast by real live citizens qualified to vote.

      • juris imprudent

        Every single one of the 81 million was to get rid of Trump. I can’t imagine any outside of Delaware that were cast with enthusiasm for Joe.

      • creech

        A couple of Delawareans I know thought he was an asshole. But he was their asshole.

      • Homple

        I agree. I’m only curious how many of those votes were cast by people qualified to vote and how many were manufactured.

      • R C Dean

        The lingering question is, how many of those were single votes were verifiably cast by real live citizens qualified to vote.

    • rhywun

      Yeah, I don’t think she’s our next president unless she becomes a placeholder before 2024. No way she wins an election.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        -placeholder before 2024
        Yeah, wait until shortly after the midterms. Biden’s going to be moved aside or they’ll try at least.

      • Homple

        Elections ain’t what they used to be. Maybe they never were.

  2. Ted S.

    a very Lebanese restaurant.

    So Lebanese they didn’t have any electricity?

    • Old Man With Candy

      They even had hookahs.

      The diners around us were almost 100% Arab. I checked my food carefully.

      • Ted S.

        Did you foreign types say “Way oh, way oh”?

      • Mojeaux

        +1 ringtone.

      • Ghostpatzer

        They even had hookahs.

        Excellent. I enjoy relaxing with a twenty dollar hookah after a good meal.

  3. Rebel Scum

    Why does the FBI think the Jews want a race war?

  4. Ted S.

    a brother who was a better actor but a worse shot;

    Prince of Players is an interesting little movie, although I think the last time it was in the FXM rotation, it was panned-and-scanned. 🙁

  5. Ted S.

    star of one of only two exceptions to my rule of “all movies that end in a number will suck”;

    The other being the original version of The Taking of Pelham 1,2,3? Or Dinner at Eight?

    • Gender Traitor

      Or The Magnificent Seven?

    • Ted S.

      And if you want the number not to be a reference to time, try Edmund Gwenn as a quantitative easer in Mister 880. A lot of people would also go for The Magnificent Seven, even though it’s not an original.

    • rhywun

      the original version of The Taking of Pelham 1,2,3

      It ought to be. That movie is fantastic.

      • Ted S.

        Billy Wilder’s One, Two, Three is another good one.

      • Zwak, sensual panzer

        It isn’t a bad book either.

      • l0b0t

        There was a terrible remake in the mid-’90s. A made for TV treat starring Edward James Olmos, Vincent D’Onofrio, and Donnie Wahlberg. It makes the John Travolta remake look rather good.

      • rhywun

        I haven’t seen that one but the later one was awful.

    • rhywun

      Saturn 3

      • rhywun

        Ah, good choice.

      • Zwak, sensual panzer

        Oooff… Now that is how you set up a vid for us.

        Well done, sir.

      • Jerms

        I worked in the Bronx with a guy who could have been Vincent Gallos identical twin. Single fireman with those looks—needless to say the guy was crushing it and probably still is.

      • l0b0t

        Yeah, you right! When the truck full of on-duty FDNY rolls up to the grocery store and they start wandering the aisles in their tight t-shirts and giant turn out pants, you can see the ladies positively swoon.

    • l0b0t

      Surf II, you philistines!

    • EvilSheldon

      I know I keep bringing up Apollo 13, but…

    • l0b0t

      Ooh… Stalag 17

  6. Jerms

    I like the neanderthal girls in that video. Going to check pornhub to see if that is a category.

  7. Sensei

    Author of ultra-Orthodox ‘Kids Speak’ series accused of raping minors

    I guess he didn’t realize that “kids WILL speak”.

  8. westernsloper

    I didn’t know the song or the band but I liked it.

  9. Rebel Scum

    Kamala Harris — a 2024 problem for Biden and the Democrats

    She garnered zero delegates in the primary and is generally dislikeable. Idk who thought she was a good idea as vp.

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      I thought it was kind of hunny that Jimmy Kimmel was saying her popularity is low because of racism. The freaking Democrats wouldn’t vote for her either, they voted for Biden mostly despite her. She has all the shrillness and ruthlessness of Hillary without the intelligence and it shows.

      • rhywun

        I don’t pay the slightest attention to what that idiot has to say but that seems stupid even for him.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        I pay a little bit of attention because I’m a Carolla fan and find it interesting that they still get along.

    • juris imprudent

      Maybe someone really close to Biden looked at her as insurance, just like Obama looked at Joe. You know, get rid of me and this is who you’re stuck with.

      • Suthenboy

        That is always the case with VP’s.
        What I find amazing is that someone thought Poopie Joe, Obama’s life insurance policy, was a good choice for president.

      • juris imprudent

        He does look better than the current alternative, no? The system works!

      • creech

        Didn’t see Joe as Obama’s “life insurance policy.” If the fear was that white supremacists would assassinate Obama, then having a white v.p. would be the icing on their cake.

  10. Ted S.

    my first wife, who was an enforcer

    A licky boom boom down.

  11. Rebel Scum

    Administrators acknowledge the last-minute schedule changes are forcing parents to scramble their own plans, and it’s the latest obstacle for students trying to make up missed learning following widespread pandemic school closures. Experts say missing more school means some kids, particularly those from low-income families, will fall even further behind their peers.

    Remove your kids from public school and buy them online courses. Perhaps a neighbor can observe and monitor several children if most parents are unable to do so because of work. Stop feeding the “education” racket.

  12. Rebel Scum

    Dude, you’re not Catholic.

    Of course. Catholic priests diddle little boys.

  13. Sensei

    From yesterday.

    Man who flew to space last month with William Shatner dies in Cessna plane crash…

    I sent this to a fellow libertarian friend who is a private pilot. He had two things to say – Thread winner: “He shouldn’t have worn red” and that the other person in the aircraft was Tom Fischer, owner of Fischer Aviation flight school. He’d used the school to regain currency. He noted that he like the staff, but that they didn’t spend a nickel more than they needed to on the equipment. His example was that one of the aircraft he flew was so old that shoulder belts weren’t required and they had no desire to go to the expense of retrofitting it.

    • db

      This case involving a semi-famous person notwithstanding, there is a tendency to report airplane crashes more frequently and with seemingly more urgency than other accidents like automobile crashes. Certainly it is because of the relative novelty and infrequency of air crashes (even though the risk is higher for air crashes, many more cars crash daily than airplanes); it is the relative rarity and unfamiliarity that makes people pay attention.

    • db

      I’d say it’s pretty common for some training orgs to maintain an older fleet. Properly maintained, that’s not a problem–airplanes can last a very long time given proper care.

      Our local flight schools contract with the county community college and have an agreement that all their aircraft must be no older than 15 or 20 years, so the training fleet at our airport is relatively fresh.

      • Sensei

        I used to work for firm that adjusted aviation claims. What I find amazing is just how “open” even densely populated areas are. Usually people on the ground aren’t injured are killed.

        I have no issue with older aircraft flying. Given the stagnation in certificated aircraft in GA the first and last versions Cessna 172 ain’t that much different. Hence the popularity of “experimental” aircraft.

        His point was more for something as basic as shoulder belts you might want to go beyond and above the minimums. And my friend has flown lots of experimental aircraft and ultralights so he understands what risk you deal with depending on the aircraft. For something like a 172 such a “modification” seems reasonable.

      • Not an Economist

        Properly maintained, that’s not a problem–airplanes can last a very long time given proper care.

        That is accurate. Most private aircraft accidents are caused by the pilots.

        As far as the difference between the first and latest 172 being very similar. I’m not so sure. There are a decent amount of structural changes. The engines is fairly different and the new 172s have a glass cockpit. The 172 has been flying a long time — first flight in 1955.

        I agree with doing more than the minimum. Anything related to safety probably should be done. And shoulder belts are a safety modification.

      • Contrarian P

        Sure, the newer 172 models have some nice upgrades from previous, including a nicer interior, all LED lighting, and a glass cockpit. They come with a Lycoming IO-360 engine that cranks out 180hp, giving it a cruise speed around 120 knots and good climb performance. It’s a nice plane.

        It’s also $415,000 for the base model.

  14. db

    Old Guy Music is a sieve.

    I’m sure it’ll have everyone ro-tapping their feet in no time.

  15. Rebel Scum

    When All The Media Narratives Collapse
    In case after case, the US MSM just keeps getting it wrong.

    I don’t think they are getting it wrong. I was able to piece together what happened with KR by scouring the internet for every bit of video I could find the next day. And the likes of CNN/MSNBC/etc. are still lying about what observably/apparently happened and about testimony in the trial. It is deliberate. They want rioting, violence and chaos.

    • Sean

      ⬆ ?

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      Violence leads to viewership. The only thing that’s worse than how mendacious they are is the incuriosity of their audiences. They want to be lied to, reality be damned.

      • juris imprudent

        “Are you not entertained!”

      • Mojeaux

        +1 If it bleeds, it leads.

  16. Ted S.

    A minority of the minority will remember the name of the band.

    They also sang this song.

    • rhywun

      That does seem to be his hobby horse. He wears a custom mask with that slogan on it. ? Well, for the cameras.

  17. CPRM

    If Halloween is about dressing up as something scary, Klan hoods should be all the rage in these college towns at Halloween.

    • Loveconstitution1789

      Democrats dont like to be reminded that the KKk was started by democrats.

  18. The Late P Brooks

    “Life is haaaaard,” says schoolteacher Barbie.

  19. The Late P Brooks

    Every time I see Kamala Harris I hear the Wicked Witch music from The Wizard of Oz.

    • Rebel Scum

      The new additions also include “whipped into shape,” which PARC says can evoke “imagery of enslavement and torture.”

      I guess this is hate speech.

      A new collection of “violent idioms about animals” contains “more than one way to skin a cat,” “killing two birds with one stone” and “beating a dead horse.”

      “These expressions normalize violence against animals,” the PARC says.

      Better choices, respectively, are “multiple ways to accomplish the task,” “feeding two birds with one seed; taking care of two things at once” and “refusing to let something go,” it says.

      You understand that sayings are just sayings right?

      I’m not modifying my language to suit the delicate sensibilities of these woketarded cuntes.

      • juris imprudent

        Some day some one is just going to have to beat some sense into those idiots.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Apropos

        https://phys.org/news/2020-07-history-ideological-purity-spirals-rarely.html

        Living within a purity spiral defined Puritan society. Dress became simple. Luxury was forbidden. Christmas was cancelled. And discipline became a social watchword. Marriage and patriarchy within the household were sacred. Children were given first names such as “Unless-Jesus-Christ-Had-Died-For-Thee-Thou-Hadst-Been-Damned”.

        The “saints” competed to show their godliness. Those who did not accept the new culture were condemned. It was said of beggars, for example, that “the curse of God pursueth them” because they had abandoned family life. A new tyranny replaced the old.

        Looking back from the 18th-century, many feared new waves of Puritans seeking to enforce their moral codes upon an unwilling society, bringing public violence and political upheaval. It was natural for the historian Edward Gibbon to note during the anti-Catholic Gordon Riots of June 1780 that “forty thousand Puritans such as they might be in the time of Cromwell have started out of their graves”.

      • Suthenboy

        Such a brave new world!
        Brave is good, right?

      • Toxteth O'Grady

        Brave Sir Robin?

  20. The Late P Brooks

    What if in 2024 Harris is the incumbent president either through an unspeakable event or because Biden resigns for “health reasons” to give Harris an electoral advantage? Anything can happen between now and 2024.

    An unspeakable event like being droned by Afghan refugees?

    • Raven Nation

      Not one of their better weeks IMO

  21. The Late P Brooks

    Finally, it appears the American people are just not that into Harris. She rubs many voters the wrong way — branded as an uninspiring leftist and weak leader — although she’s credited with a historical gender and race breakthrough.

    The straw that broke Affirmative Action’s back?

    Haha, just kidding.

    • rhywun

      she’s credited

      That’s an interesting way to put it, given what actually happened.

      • Trigger Hippie

        Credit, gifted due to a senile asshat painting his entire political party into a corner,…

        Tomatoes.

      • Chafed

        Apparently you can be “credited” for just showing up.

      • Gender Traitor

        Like public education?

      • Mojeaux

        My kid bombed his freshman year on Zoom. I thought, “No problem, we can just hold him back a year and he can repeat it.”

        That’s a big fat nope. They don’t allow that. He can make up courses in the summer, but there is no other mechanism for getting them put back together again.

  22. The Late P Brooks

    It’s as if the more Donald Trump accused the MSM of being “fake news” the more assiduously they tried to prove him right.

    Fucking cause and effect- how does it work?

    I’ll try to press on.

    • Yusef drives a Kia

      I like it!

  23. Trigger Hippie

    Poll: I’m well aware of the inherent folly of “time travel assassination” to make the future a better place. That being said, if one was forced to do such an act and decided to kill someone within the last two hundred years solely based on the legacy of the death and misery their philosophy inflicted upon the world over the long term, who would you kill first?

    Mao
    Stalin
    Hitler
    Paul Ehrlich
    Marx?

    …Paul Ehlrich just might place as a solid third.

    • Sensei

      I’ll take a page from scruff the other day…

      Candy Lightner

      • Trigger Hippie

        While I’m not exactly a fan of her either that seems like a bit of a stretch if we’re talking sheer numbers.

    • Trigger Hippie

      …this was in response to the Guardian Climate Change article.

      • Ghostpatzer

        If we’re talking Climate Change, I’ll take Nicolaus Otto.

      • Trigger Hippie

        Just in general. I mentioned Ehrlich because a good deal of his ideas are based on his belief that humankind isn’t capable of adapting to whatever environment it may or may not create for itself.

        Imply the inability to innovative and adapt, then apply that to ridiculous predictions about how quickly the environment will change…

        Profit and human suffering!

    • juris imprudent

      If you’re going to limit me to the last 200 years, Woodrow Wilson. But if my window is more open, Rousseau and Plato.

      That said, I don’t doubt that my altered timeline would end up all that different – not the same incidents, but the same behavior just arising in different people. It’s humans that are the problem.

      • l0b0t

        We are, at heart, pattern-seeking/tool-making, tribal apes with a very strong in-group preference. IMO, this trends to conflict and tyranny over the long term regardless of the individual actors involved. Humans gonna human.

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        Everything goes back to Plato, dammit

        But Rousseau was an asshole extraordinaire and spawned the post-Enlightenment, or whatever you want to call it.

      • Trigger Hippie

        ‘That said, I don’t doubt that my altered timeline would end up all that different – not the same incidents, but the same behavior just arising in different people. It’s humans that are the problem.’

        ^

        The ideas expressed by the people I mentioned didn’t occur in a vaccum.

      • juris imprudent

        Which is why I’d go back to the sources of those ideas.

      • PieInTheSky

        , Woodrow Wilson – this was my first though but I am one of the weirdos that think if US was completely neutral in ww2 there is a smaaaaal chance things could have turned out some way when communism did not come about

      • Gustave Lytton

        *looks up which side Romania was on during WWII*…

      • Sean

        Both. Then my people had to flee Romania. Some of which ended up slaves in Russian work camps after the war.

        *throws down victim card*

    • rhywun

      Embrace the power of ‘and’.

      • Trigger Hippie

        Heh.

  24. The Late P Brooks

    one of the aircraft he flew was so old that shoulder belts weren’t required and they had no desire to go to the expense of retrofitting it.

    Was this an aerobatic plane? I can see the need for a shoulder harness if you are or can be inverted, But otherwise?

    I’m just curious, not niggling.

    • Sensei

      No.

      Just the idea that during turbulence it is one less thing to distract the pilot.

    • tripacer

      I have a 70 year old plane that didn’t come with shoulder harness when I bought it. I installed them because I don’t want to eat dashboard if I flip the plane over on landing. They do very little to help in turbulence, the lap belt does that.

      • Contrarian P

        I really don’t understand anyone that doesn’t want to fit a shoulder restraint onto an aircraft. In an impact without a shoulder belt, you are going to slam into the panel or the yoke face first. It’s not like seatbelts are expensive, particularly when you compare them to everything else in aviation.

  25. The Late P Brooks

    “My Heroes in the Media Have Let Me Down, by A Sullivan”

    Welcome to Earth, dummy.

  26. The Late P Brooks

    Paging Andrew Sullivan

    Rittenhouse claims he was acting in self-defense when he fired all of the shots. His guilt will turn on the reasonableness of his conduct that night. Apparently, it never occurred to him that in a country that has experienced mass shootings on a regular basis, on a night when there was chaos in the streets, someone might mistake him for an active shooter and try to stop him.

    Honest? Honest as the day is long.

    • Rebel Scum

      An active shooter…running away…before any shots were fired…?

      That’s some mighty fine logic-ing.

    • rhywun

      To be fair, anyone holding a gun “might be mistaken for an active shooter” in their book.

  27. The Late P Brooks

    Just the idea that during turbulence it is one less thing to distract the pilot.

    Ah. Thx.

  28. PieInTheSky

    @OMWC if around, a local store took the interesting initiative of contacting vineyards and bottling wine under their own label. Which is not a bad idea. One of them is from the grape Mondeuse Noire bottled in France AOP Bugey . Know anything of this grape?

    • Old Man With Candy

      Spud and I always referred to Mondeuse as “a mean little wine for mean little people.”

  29. The Late P Brooks

    In this case, Rittenhouse can argue that even if he provoked others to attack him by openly carrying his semi-automatic rifle at a mob scene, he was still able to use deadly force under Wisconsin law because he reasonably believed he had no other alternatives at those moments to avoid death or great bodily harm.

    I, uh…

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      If you get assaulted by a leftie your only acceptable option is to assume a fetal position and hope they don’t kill you.

      • juris imprudent

        You should remain in your house and paint lamb’s blood on the door frame and pray they pass over you.

      • rhywun

        Or a BLM sign.

      • Zwak, sensual panzer

        Workers of the World, Unite.

        Or, as it is now, a Black Lives Matter sign in your window.

      • Zwak, sensual panzer

        Wow, I really need to refresh more often.

    • PieInTheSky

      when I see someone armed my first thought it to try to punch them

      • juris imprudent

        Guns seem to have a very strange effect on some folks.

      • Trigger Hippie

        You must have a helluva time being around law enforcement.

  30. The Late P Brooks

    Call me crazy, but it seems to me the object of openly arming yourself is to DETER people from attacking you.

    I know, I know…

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      I know that every time I see a guy with a firearm I want to fuck around and find out.

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      If that first guy wasn’t self-defense then nothing is. The dude was a goddamn insane and violent lunatic.

      • l0b0t

        Noe of which made it in front of the jury because the defense was so bad on cross-examining that fellow’s fiancé.

  31. Q Continuum

    “Now, imagine a 2024 election between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. It would be MAD[…]Our nation deserves better.”

    Are you kidding? This would be the most entertaining campaign *evah*! We deserve this kind of comedy!

  32. juris imprudent

    Oh, and since it has not yet been said,

    DOS A CERO!!!

    Everything you can expect in a US-Mexico game, including the incompetent referreeing by a Central American.

    • Q Continuum

      FOOK YAH

      And Canada wins again? We’re in an alternate reality.

    • rhywun

      I said it last night 😛

      But yeah, the Yanks were actually sort of decent. Now watch them lose to Panama or whoever is next.

      • Lady Z

        Seguin and I went to a local pub for dinner last night, which turns out to be the USA Soccer fan club home base. The place was packed and I was surprised by how much I enjoyed watching that game.

      • juris imprudent

        Jamaica is next, and yes, if we go down there expecting them to roll over we’ll get our asses handed to us.

  33. Q Continuum

    “‘Stretched too thin’: With staff ‘exhausted,’ schools cancel class or return to remote learning”

    Gimme a fucking break. You got used to babysitting distracted kids on Zoom while sitting around in your bathrobe and getting oral sex off camera, and now you don’t want to go back to doing real work.

    Then again, I encourage this kind of shit as much as possible. The past year and a half has given government schooling a gut-shot, keep this up and you’ll finish it off completely. You dipshits should see what happened in Loudon County as a shot across the bow but you’re too stupid to realize that the MILFs are in revolt nationwide.

  34. The Late P Brooks

    Like all convictions, this one is an uphill battle for the prosecution. The government must prove each element of each offense beyond a reasonable doubt. But this one is an even steeper climb because the government also bears the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Rittenhouse was not acting in self-defense. That means a tie goes to the defendant.

    This is the price we pay for a system that is built on the notion that it is better that 10 guilty defendants go free than one innocent defendant be convicted.

    The prosecution is also unable to argue that the jury should be concerned about the precedential value of an acquittal. Precedents are for judges to worry about, not juries, which are bound to decide the case before them based on the facts and the law. You will not hear the prosecutor make the argument that an acquittal of Rittenhouse would spark others to engage in vigilante justice, even though it would. People like the defendants who participated in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol are watching. So are people like those who allegedly plotted to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in retaliation for her executive orders in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. An acquittal would further embolden them to take the law into their own hands. Rittenhouse would become the poster boy for gun enthusiasts who advocate for open carry of semi-automatic weapons in public places. But you won’t hear about any of that in this trial because it might prejudice the outcome for Rittenhouse.

    This is the price we pay for a system built on the notion that it is better that 10 guilty defendants go free than one innocent defendant be convicted. In our criminal justice system, all defendants accused of a crime, including those we find repugnant, are entitled to due process. Prosecutors understand the legal protections that defendants enjoy, and they embrace the responsibility of meeting their burden of proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Holy shit.

    • Q Continuum

      “This is the price we pay for a system that is built on the notion that it is better that 10 guilty defendants go free than one innocent defendant be convicted.”

      I thought the Left was against the carceral state/prison-industrial complex? Oh wait no, only for their political allies; their political enemies can be shipped to camps tomorrow.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        They want differential enforcement and that’s it: free reign for them and the hammer for their enemies. Hell, look at what’s going on with Brannon for further confirmation.

      • Zwak, sensual panzer

        They want Top. Men. to make each and every decision, based on whatever that minute’s progressive stack configuration is.

    • rhywun

      “the price we pay”

      Wow.

      Never change, MSNBCCP.

    • Rebel Scum

      Wtf did I just read?

      “I wonder how many irrelevant, dishonest and mendacious connections can I make in a single paragraph.”

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      Prosecutors understand the legal protections that defendants enjoy, and they embrace the responsibility of meeting their burden of proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

      Spoken like a true socon.

    • R C Dean

      But this one is an even steeper climb because the government also bears the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Rittenhouse was not acting in self-defense.

      Pretty sure that’s wrong. Self-defense is an affirmative defense that the defendant must prove with the preponderance of evidence. There’s some variation around the edges, and I haven’t specifically checked Virginia law, but I would be very surprised if if Virginia requires the prosecution to provide beyond a reasonable doubt that there was no self-defense.

      • UnCivilServant

        I’m going to defer to Branca’s analysis over at Legal Insurrection Here. His language also says that the state needs to disprove self defense beyond a reasonable doubt, and goes into detail on the elements that could be used to do so.

      • R C Dean

        Color me very surprised, then.

        And, goddamit, why do I keep crossing up Wisconsin and Virginia?

      • EvilSheldon

        I’m not exactly sure where Branca is getting the ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’ thing for the state. It may be something particular to Wisconsin law. Normally the standard for claiming self-defense is, as Mr. Dean says, the preponderance of the evidence.

        Be careful with Andrew Branca’s analyses – while he’s a smart and capable lawyer who has done some pioneering work in the self defense field, he’s also a hardcore doctrinaire conservative who, IMO, sometimes lets his politics overrun his good sense. That said, Branca’s book The Law of Self Defense is required reading for any private citizen who carries a gun.

      • Gender Traitor

        Virginia?

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      He can’t keep his lies straight to save his life, the guy’s just a straight up moron.

    • Q Continuum

      So he perjured himself? Sweet. Go arrest is ass.

      Too bad the fucking video evidence confirms your original testimony.

      Rittenhouse missed the opportunity to create another good Commie. Sad.

    • juris imprudent

      He can lie all he wants to the media. Stupid people that think that is more meaningful than sworn testimony deserve to be fooled – right up against the wall.

  35. Q Continuum

    “a third testimony alleged that Walder regularly raped a 20-year-old woman, his therapy patient, on a regular basis.”

    Wrong kind of therapy dood.

  36. Scruffy Nerfherder

    Enjoy a song written almost 50 years ago and is solid proof that the quality of musical output is currently in the shitter by comparison, both technically and artistically.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RCnzDy2tSk0

    And props to the vocalist for doing a hell of a job impersonating Gabriel, because that is not an easy thing.

    • The Hyperbole

      Is the singer like seven foot tall or is that guitarist a dwarf?

      • Scruffy Nerfherder

        I think Sylvan is a pretty big dude.

  37. Steve

    The Great Resignation

    This has been building longer than COVID. The county I work in has been steadily losing teachers and support staff and the pandemic just gives the media something to blame that doesn’t include an educational system incapable of meeting the increasing demand of advocates and legislatures. My personal hypothesis is that the current mobile computing and social media society is affecting brain development in a way that is incompatible with the reality of life in the United States. Regardless of the cause, I work with an increasing number of young teachers who have no emotional resilience and adolescent students who truly don’t have the skills needed for effective social reciprocity and problem solving.

    Elementary school is a whole different beast. I could write a series of posts about how much time I spend with violent six year olds.

    • Q Continuum

      “I could write a series of posts about how much time I spend with violent six year olds”

      Please do. As I can only assume from your post that you are a teacher (or administrator), I would love to see posts describing what you see and what you think is to blame.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        I spent some time subbing years ago when I was in between jobs. I tried to get high school jobs but sometimes had to go to middle and elementary. So not much experience, but I’ve got some stories.

        I remember one psychotic kid in elementary school who was out of control and unhinged. After trying for the upteenth time to get him settled down, he handed me a card to read. The card said something along the lines of “When [name] presents this card, he is indicating he needs time to calm down and is immediately allowed to leave the classroom.” The teacher’s aide confirmed it was legit. Very odd.

        I spent time in decent high schools/middle schools and others that were inner city ghetto. They put me on hall duty in one high school during my free period. I sat in a chair next to a couple security guards and was supposed to ask students to see their hall passes. I don’t know why the guards couldn’t do it themselves, but I suppose the admin didn’t want me getting a break. Anyway, I’ll never forget starting to ask one kid, about 16 years old, for his hallpass when the guards told me to stop and nodded to the kid to keep going. They told me after the guy walked by that there were certain students who were never asked for anything because the guards have families and don’t want any visits at home from the gangs. Reminded me a bit of the post office scene in Goodfellas. These were big dudes, could have been linebackers, who were terrified.

      • rhywun

        I don’t know why the guards couldn’t do it themselves

        “not in my job description”

      • Mojeaux

        I could make a shit-ton of cash with just my BA if I were willing to teach in a Kansas City public school. You just have to show you’re working on your teaching certificate (which they will pay for) and then master’s.

      • Steve

        I lead a small team of behavior support staff that serves all of the schools in my county. Basically, I’m the person who writes the individual plans, like the one you mentioned for those break cards, and helps schools put those plans into effect.

        There’s a lot more to it, but the classroom teachers know me as the behavior guy.

    • EvilSheldon

      …no emotional resilience…

      This, so much this.

    • Mojeaux

      current mobile computing and social media society is affecting brain development in a way that is incompatible with the reality of life

      Yes.

      I have a whole article’s worth of thoughts on this, but it requires me to bare more of my personal life than I’m comfortable with.

  38. Q Continuum

    “The news is a perilous business. It’s perilous because the first draft of history is almost always somewhat wrong”

    The problem being, because the vast majority of corporate media are liars and propagandists, it’s never “somewhat” wrong; it’s *utterly and completely false*. The title of the article says it all: the media is not supposed to be in the business of crafting narratives. They are supposed to be *reporters* who *report* facts, not twist them to fit predetermined, politically-driven outcomes.

    • creech

      Trouble is reporters are not supposed to be detectives too. Cop chief says “XYZ” then reporter is supposed to report his quote accurately. Reporter should seek out other views, of course, but can’t be expected to investigate the truth of every claim. Journalists go deeper into stories, asking followup questions when things appear to be covered up but, again,
      every story can’t be not reported until all facts are known.

  39. LCDR_Fish

    About to go get some more bleach for my cleaning project behind the fridge – See Fri morning links thread (and hopefully a tyvek suit and respirator). Any other recommendations?

    Assume normal strength mix is safe/strong enough – 1/3 cup per gallon of water?

    Thanks

    I’ll post pics when I finish – hopefully that’ll give a good idea of what’s needed next.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      It’s more than sufficient. Mold is typically only really dangerous after you form an allergic reaction to it. It’s common for guys who do remediation work as they get exposed over and over, but uncommon unless you’ve been breathing the spores for a while.

      The biggest thing is removing the material that has the fungus growing on it and removing the moisture source. No humidity, no mold growth.

      As a remediation guy told me once, “I could completely sterilize this house, but then you would open the door and it would have been pointless.”

      Just treat and remove the conditions for growth.

  40. The Late P Brooks

    A glimmer of sanity?

    A Louisiana-based federal appeals court on Friday extended a stay against the Biden administration’s vaccine-or-test requirement for private businesses, finding that the states and businesses challenging the rule “show a great likelihood of success on the merits.”

    “A stay is firmly in the public interest. From economic uncertainty to workplace strife, the mere specter of the Mandate has contributed to untold economic upheaval in recent months,” wrote Fifth Circuit Judge Kurt Engelhardt.

    The order from a three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals instructs the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration to “take no steps to implement or enforce” the requirement, under which workers at businesses with more than 100 employees would have to be vaccinated or tested weekly for Covid-19.

    The Biden administration is likely to appeal the panel’s decision to the full court.

    Engelhardt was appointed to the bench by former President Donald Trump. The other two members of the panel, Judge Kyle Duncan and Judge Edith Jones, were appointed by Trump and former President Ronald Reagan, respectively.

    Those damn Trumpista judges, spoiling Noble Joe’s desperate attempts to save America from extinction.

    Also, OSHA hasn’t had much need to enforce anything. The “private businesses” are scurrying busily about, doing the dirty work on their own.

    • rhywun

      Also, OSHA hasn’t had much need to enforce anything. The “private businesses” are scurrying busily about, doing the dirty work on their own.

      Yeah, that’s fucking troubling.

    • Gustave Lytton

      Read the entire stay. Said it last night, even if upheld and the final ruling is similar, it opens the door widely to state level vax mandates.

      • Urthona

        I don’t think there’s any question states can have vaccine mandates.

      • Gustave Lytton

        Not if Jacobsen is swallowed wholesale. Guess states can go back to sterilizing imbeciles as well. Starting with the judiciary.

      • rhywun

        Executively or legislatively mandated?

      • Urthona

        Any level of government can institute a vaccine mandate law in this style. You’re not gonna ever win that one.

        This has nothing to do with that.

        This has to do with deliberately bypassing the system for actually creating those laws.

      • R C Dean

        I think there’s a very serious question about whether states can force people to participate in medical experiments by taking experimental drugs.

      • Urthona

        Eh. You know the arguments they will make. By its nature, government is inherently tyrannical and always will be.

        It’s just more useful if some sort of normal system of checks and balances has to be overcome.

        It’s a lot more to difficult for any legislature to pass through a vaccinate mandate/company rule when it’s trending below water and actual legislators who can be voted out need to work hard and fight amongst themselves, etc, etc.

        So much so that I predict it almost never happens in even in the bluest of states. It’s only exclusively being done by b.s. executive nonsense everywhere.

      • Gustave Lytton

        So much so that I predict it almost never happens in even in the bluest of states.

        Having seen the sort of unpopular nonsense that gets passed, particularly recently, I do not think this is much of a barrier at all. Or how public opinion can be manipulated to support this sort of thing. It’s only a short hop from restaurant mandates to a general mandate and jurisdictions have shown themselves quite willing to do it.

        Forced medical interventions of free citizens are wrong.

      • Loveconstitution1789

        Americans have allowed govt to get away with powers not granted by respective federal/state constitutions.

        2nd amendment says peoples right to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed but Americans allowed background checks without a constitutional amendment. Under the 14th amendment, states cant restrict keeping and bearing Arms either.

        Americans just need to tell govt workers to fuck off and no. No you cant force me to wear a mask or get a vaccine.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        I think there’s a very serious question about whether states can force people to take drugsparticipate in medical experiments by taking experimental drugs.

        The problem with going the experimental route is that the State is just going to argue that efficacy and risks are well established and not experimental.

      • R C Dean

        The vaccines themselves are still experimental. Even if you buy the Pfizer “equivalency” do-si-do, its only been “approved” for old and high-risk people. Requiring anyone outside those groups to take it means you are requiring that they take an experimental drug.

        Now, this line of attack is contingent, as the FDA at some point will be pressured into approving the vaccines and boosters. But at the moment, its accurate and highlights just how monstrous this is.

      • R C Dean

        I must have been crossing up the FDA approval with the CDC recommendations.

      • Urthona

        Good point.

      • Gender Traitor

        Where can you get Comirnaty?

      • R C Dean

        Where can you get Comirnaty?

        Not in the US.

      • Gender Traitor

        Not in the US.

        That’s what I thought.

      • Loveconstitution1789

        States dont have plenary powers. No state that I know of has a constitutional provision allowing forced medical procedures.

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      JFC

      That’s an instant libel award. How stupid are they?

      • rhywun

        How stupid are they?

        I assume that is a rhetorical question.

      • JaimeRoberto (shama/lama/ding dong)

        It was probably posted by a 20-something know-nothing who has bought into the narrative in charge of their Twitter feed.

  41. trshmnstr the terrible

    The public interest is also served by maintaining our constitutional structure and maintaining the liberty of individuals to make intensely personal decisions according to their own convictions—even, or perhaps PARTICULARLY, when those decisions frustrate government officials

    -5th circuit

    • Scruffy Nerfherder

      So the Constitution isn’t completely dead, just mostly.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        I think it supports the two cultures theory. The US is two cultures that have diverged to the point that they can no longer coexist under one flag.

      • Q Continuum

        Florida is leading the way on that by telling the FedGov to shove their filthy lucre where the sun don’t shine on the OSHA crap. If that is allow to play out and other states follow suit then there may be a way to keep things from completely falling apart.

  42. Rebel Scum

    And nothing else will happen.

    The FBI raided Project Veritas on a pretext and is now leaking their privileged communications to the New York Times

  43. Homple

    “My hope is that some years down the road, this lad (an actually nice kid but… delicate) will remember that simple question and have an Aha! moment.”

    His Aha! moment will come some night when a Morlock butchers him for supper.

  44. The Late P Brooks

    Engelhardt agreed that the rules’ opponents had standing to sue in the Fifth Circuit writing that: “The Mandate imposes a financial burden upon them by deputizing their participation in OSHA’s regulatory scheme, exposes them to severe financial risk if they refuse or fail to comply, and threatens to decimate their workforces (and business prospects) by forcing unwilling employees to take their shots, take their tests, or hit the road.”

    Engelhardt also agreed with their claims that the requirement exceeds OSHA’s power to police workplaces and the federal government’s authority under the Commerce Clause, among other arguments.

    The vaccine-or-test requirement was implemented as an emergency temporary standard. OSHA can issue such standards if it determines “that employees are exposed to grave danger from exposure to substances or agents determined to be toxic or physically harmful or from new hazards,” and that the rule is “necessary” to protect workers from that danger.

    The administration told the court earlier this week that OSHA had acted within its authority and that a stay of the requirement “would likely cost dozens or even hundreds of lives per day.”

    Hundreds of lives.

    Every

    single

    day.

    All because some Trumpalo judge wants to pretend he knows more about public health than the President.

    Thank god we have an honest and unbiased media to tell us what to think.

    • Q Continuum

      “would likely cost dozens or even hundreds of lives per day”

      LOL

      I wish I could make these kind of unfalsifiable claims in my everyday life and have people take me seriously.

      “Hey boss, by not giving me a 50% raise, you’re costing millions in profit per day!”

  45. The Late P Brooks

    even, or perhaps PARTICULARLY, when those decisions frustrate government officials

    OMFG treason! Insurrectionist rhetoric!

  46. Q Continuum

    “NOW that I’m living as a man, I want to start having sex but am clueless about how to do it. I’m a 36-year-old trans man and had surgery to create a penis. The problem is, I don’t think it’s big enough to have sex with”

    Ask for a refund?

    “I don’t want to start a relationship with anyone before I’ve worked out how to have sex[…]To be honest, I wasn’t any good at relationships when I was female.”

    Maybe some introspection and therapy would have been more effective than bolting on a tiny pseudo-penis? Oh well, horse, door, barn, etc. Also completely glossing over the fact that to have sex with someone, you need to find someone willing to have sex with you; something I anticipate you may have a bit of trouble with.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/dear-deidre/16714600/want-sex-but-i-dont-know-how/

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      NOW that I’m living as a man, I want to start having sex but am clueless about how to do it.

      It’s kinda an instinct thing. All men have it programmed into their DN….. Ohhhhh, nevermind.

    • Trigger Hippie

      ‘I want to start having sex but am clueless about how to do it.’

      When a woman and a woman with a surgically enhanced clit-dong love each other very much…

      • Loveconstitution1789

        Women can scissor..men shouldnt want scissors anywhere near their schlongs.

    • Sean

      I can’t fap to this. ?

  47. The Late P Brooks

    To be honest, I wasn’t any good at relationships when I was female.

    I think…

    Oh, never mind.

  48. Tundra

    Good morning, Old Man!

    I’m glad your trip is winding up and that no murder has been committed.

    Old guy music is great! I do remember that song, but had no idea who it was and what they would become. Good selection!

    What’s everyone doing today?

    • Yusef drives a Kia

      Sister and I are doing Thanksgiving today, So Yusef is baking Goodies for the Family, Pies and cheesecake, yum!

    • The Hyperbole

      I was going to clean out the van and straighten up the workshop but it’s cold and snowy and I’m a little hungover so I’m going to go down to the bar when they open in a few minutes and order a double bacon cheeseburger and a bowl of chili.

      • l0b0t

        What a perfect lunch. I may or may not have been a little tipsy when I went to the Polish grocery last night, so I just got to eat some surprises – a breaded croquette made of a mixture of pork and veal, and some sort of high fat pork sausage that starts with a “z”.

      • Mojeaux

        breaded croquette made of a mixture of pork and vea

        *drool*

      • l0b0t

        Flavorwise it was delicious, but the texture was too uniform for my taste; I prefer a much coarser grind for this sort of thing. This one was like Underwood Deviled Ham Spread and crushed rather than sliced. Still, with some spicy yellow mustard, it was yummy.

      • Mojeaux

        Underwood Deviled Ham Spread

        Hmmm, hard pass.

        I’m not a fan of deviled ham. My mom even used to make a deviled bologna salad (poor people food). I do have two tuna salad recipes I love (one I use on toast with cheese and the other I use as a dip for Wheat Thins).

        Unless somebody puts something in front of me I would’ve never thought to try (hello, La Bodega and my bestie who taught me the tuna salad #2 recipe), I don’t get adventurous.

        When I cook, I do my plain-Jane standbys, spaghetti sauce, stroganoff, meatloaf, creamed chicken, pork chops…stuff like that. Or I bake. I bake when I’m content and feeling financially secure and/or accomplished. I’ve been baking a lot lately.

      • l0b0t

        “I bake when I’m content and feeling financially secure and/or accomplished. I’ve been baking a lot lately.”

        Hearing that makes my heart swell with love and admiration; you deserve it.

        As for the ham spread, I just meant the croquette was of a similar texture, almost a paste.

      • Mojeaux

        Thanks, l0b0t, and likewise, I’m hopeful for your future.

  49. The Late P Brooks

    Victim of circumstances

    Prices of everyday items have surged during the pandemic, thanks to a toxic combination of staffing shortages and supply chain woes. The rising prices are souring the national mood and taking a political toll on President Biden.

    ——-

    Energy prices are among the biggest drivers of inflation. Rink is paying almost 50% more for gasoline now than she did a year ago, and 28% more for the natural gas that she uses to heat her house.

    ——-

    “Before, you’d go to the store and if you had $100, you could buy four bags of groceries and be happy,” says Nick Apodiakos. “Now, you’re lucky to get a bag. Milk, orange juice, eggs. Plus the oil for the house, the water bills. It’s just crazy. It’s so much money. How is somebody supposed to survive?”

    Both the White House and the Federal Reserve have described this inflationary spike as a temporary byproduct of the pandemic, which has snarled supply chains and kept a lot of people out of work.

    Like the pandemic, though, price hikes don’t appear to be going away any time soon.

    “I think we’re going to see inflation get worse before it gets better,” says Sarah House, an economist with Wells Fargo.

    It’s like the tides. A force of nature. It just happens. You can’t control it.

    • Trigger Hippie

      “Now, you’re lucky to get a bag. Milk, orange juice, eggs. Plus the oil for the house, the water bills. It’s just crazy. It’s so much money. How is somebody supposed to survive?”

      Oil for the house?…gas?

      Wear more layers.
      Cut back on water.
      Beans.
      Rice.
      Flour.
      Bread.
      …The price of eggs has increased but they’re still pretty damn cheap. At least where I’m at.

      Point being: I’m not shitting on the fact that the price of food or energy has increased. I’m working poor/working class. Believe me, I feel it. All I’m saying is it isn’t that damn hard to “survive”. You could dumpster dive and feed a family of four, or have just a little less access to entertainment or resources if you really needed to.

      What many of us consider essential are just luxuries… I’m not trying to say Lowered Expectations should be welcome or accepted, just saying many people still living today have had far less to work with and still managed to survive.

  50. The Late P Brooks

    Inflation is no longer confined to a few, pandemic-plagued categories such as lumber or used cars. Upward pressure on prices is spreading throughout the economy.

    “There’s nowhere for consumers to hide,” House says. “It suggests inflation is going to be stickier.”

    Unanticipated.

    Inexplicable.

    • Urthona

      Remember when Biden said no serious economist thought inflation was real?

      • Rat on a train

        To be fair, I doubt Biden knows of any serious economists.

  51. The Late P Brooks

    I am currently outside Blackfoot, Idaho, sitting in my Airstream which is parked inside my new(ly rented) shop. I towed it down here with the Suburban I resurrected last fall; other than the ~6mpg fuel consumption, it was smooth and pretty painless. I spent the night here last night, instead of in a hotel.

    There is significant work to be done, but the concept is sound (assuming my landlord does not have any strenuous objections).

    I trailered the 914 down a couple of days ago, and today I will go back to Montana for another car.

    • Mojeaux

      Yay! Mission almost accomplished.

  52. The Late P Brooks

    All of this is weighing on Americans’ attitudes. A survey by the University of Michigan released Friday shows people are as gloomy about the economy as they’ve been in a decade. One out of four people said their living standards had fallen this month because of inflation.

    That presents a serious political liability for Biden, whose approval ratings on the economy have fallen below 40%.

    If we’re not careful, all those stupid whiners are going to vote for a republican, next time. We have to curate the narrative and lower their expectations.

    Don’t they know we appreciate their sacrifice?

    *By which we mean, “We will happily sacrifice them in service of out political goals.”

    • Urthona

      I swear the only concern now is how this impacts Democrats.

      And, btw, that poll bump that was supposed to happen from passing the Biden trillion dollar+ bill? Didn’t happen.

      These people so very much overestimate how much they are loved and respected.

      • rhywun

        I think with Trump still living in their heads, they can’t conceive of any opposition that isn’t Trump or Trump-like and therefore they think they have the 1,000-year Reich they’ve longed for.

      • Urthona

        The irony is Donald Trump is just what happens when a Republican behaves like a Democrat.

        I think that’s another one of the reasons they can’t handle him and his off the cuff and stubborn emotional appeals that are just like what Democrats do. The Democrat party even had to put in special rules to avoid getting characters like Trump nominated because that is exactly the type of person they gravitate toward. It’s just that a Democrat would be saying shit like “everyone deserves a living wage” instead of “we need a wall”.

  53. Rat on a train

    I found Jackfruit at Publix! That is all.

    • Toxteth O'Grady

      raw?

      • Rat on a train

        Whole fruit, 14 pounds.

    • Drake

      Interesting. In Sri Lanka that stuff was everywhere. The challenge is picking the ripe ones before the fruit bats get to it.

  54. JaimeRoberto (shama/lama/ding dong)

    Gee, I wonder if that article on tired teachers was coordinated with the teachers unions.

  55. The Late P Brooks

    Yay! Mission almost accomplished.

    Excelsior!

  56. R.J.

    I have mixed feelings. Tubi is launching a Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers cartoon on November 14th.

  57. The Late P Brooks

    Never saw it coming

    Since the earliest days of the pandemic, there has been one collective goal for bringing it to an end: achieving herd immunity. That’s when so many people are immune to a virus that it runs out of potential hosts to infect, causing an outbreak to sputter out.

    Many Americans embraced the novel farmyard phrase, and with it, the projection that once 70% to 80% or 85% of the population was vaccinated against COVID-19, the virus would go away and the pandemic would be over.

    Now the herd is restless. And experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have set aside herd immunity as a national goal.

    The prospects for meeting a clear herd-immunity target are “very complicated,” said Dr. Jefferson Jones, a medical officer on the CDC’s COVID-19 Epidemiology Task Force.

    “Thinking that we’ll be able to achieve some kind of threshold where there’ll be no more transmission of infections may not be possible,” Jones acknowledged last week to members of a panel that advises the CDC on vaccines.

    The wheels on those goalposts are going to need new tires.

    • whiz

      Well, the vaccine was supposed to be one way to achieve herd immunity, but it doesn’t make you immune, so…

  58. The Late P Brooks

    I bake when I’m content and feeling financially secure and/or accomplished. I’ve been baking a lot lately.

    [okay sign emoji]

  59. Rat on a train

    People came buy today to verify voting for the 2020 election. Asked us to verify who voted, when and how.