Why hasn’t somebody made a Flintstones Hybrid? Gas+Electric like usual but add some pedals so passengers can help charge the batteries.
WiFi is super picey at Heathrow. AT&T sent me a text to say they’d want Jared’s…
WiFi is super picey at Heathrow. AT&T sent me a text to say they’d want Jared’s fattened liver if I used the data roaming. Must. Tweet. #LHR
A candlelight vigil will be held at MJ’s fan club. Members who can’t attend should ask…
A candlelight vigil will be held at MJ’s fan club. Members who can’t attend should ask their warden to play Billie Jean at lights out.
Outrage
I like this? indefensible kid, but I could make a career out of explaining how wrong he is some of the time:
Sometimes when we back down from our positions in the face of outrage, we do more harm than good. For a start, we send to the world this message: outrage is a currency that can buy you out of seeing things you don’t like.
A comedian on television says something ‘offensive’. A viewer is outraged and complains to the station. The station censures the comedian and issues an apology. In this series of events, the only possible result is that the viewer (and the person who learns from the viewer’s experience) is given an incentive to display outrage in the future.
This leads almost inexorably to the situation that we now find ourselves in, where people think democracy is just about getting the greatest number of shrill voices to scream the same things you scream. It’s a kind of democracy, but so, in a way, is a pitchfork-and-torch-wielding mob.
What does any of that have to do with democracy? A TV station isn’t an arm of the government. An angry viewer isn’t a police officer. A comedian isn’t a politician. There isn’t a single democratic or even government institution in the story. This is about commerce.
Part of the problem is that he’s framing the issue wrong – let’s start over. An employee of a television station says something. A customer of the television station tells them that what he heard isn’t the kind of thing he wanted to pay for. The station apologizes, tells their employee to knock it off, and the customer realizes that more than being some voiceless? automaton? stuck listening to whatever dreck the station broadcasts, actually has a right to complain about the programming their viewership supports.
That’s not a problem – that’s the system working.
Let’s try it another way: you go into McDonald’s and try to order some Chicken McNuggets. The cashier looks at you like you’re stupid and says, “What did you say? Hey, I think this guy’s from Australia or some shit – he talks funny! We don’t have any shrimp on the barby, and no, I don’t want to see your knife. Learn to speak English, Crocodile Humper Dundee. Now what the hell do you want?”
You, being a paying customer, call over the manager and complain. The manager, realizing that for every person who complains there are 10 more who just resolve never to come back, yells at the pimple-faced kid with the attitude, promises you that you won’t hear any more of that shit, and gives you some free cookies. PROBLEM SOLVED.
Now go eat your cookies.
A point to note.
In case anyone thinks I’m trying to bait them when I make somewhat serious posts such as the past few – I’m not. I’m just making an attempt to get my thoughts on certain issues clearer, and putting them out in public is a pretty good way for me, at least, to do that. One thing it does is expose my views enough so that other people can point out how my thinking is inconsistent, ill-informed, or just plain addle-headed.
And clearly the best way to do that is to have 30 teenage tumbleheads hitting <3.
Analyze my dream: I disturbed a pair of ostriches who were eating a dead 10ft spider behind a…
Analyze my dream: I disturbed a pair of ostriches who were eating a dead 10ft spider behind a restaurant, they attacked me and I woke up.
Books? Sure. But it turns out that you can’t judge a bar by its cover. Or a bed, for that matter. I’m not sure about bands.
“The Air Force fears that the dominance of U.S. airpower has been so complete for so long that it is…”
“The Air Force fears that the dominance of U.S. airpower has been so complete for so long that it is taken for granted. The ability of the United States to own the skies over any battlefield has transformed the way we fight. The last American soldier killed on the ground by an enemy air attack died in Korea, on April 15, 1953.”

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