
Although in 1968, I’m sure no one saw anything wrong in it.

Once a legitimate blog. Now just a collection of memes 'n menz.

Although in 1968, I’m sure no one saw anything wrong in it.



Conservatives are still talking about how Ocasio-Cortez spent $300 of her own money at a hair salon, but we never found out who paid $200,000 of Brent Kavanaugh’s mysterious credit card debt.
And how the hell does one run up $200K in credit card debt?!

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Not just coddled; but normalized and legitimized by calling this stupidity and ignorance “alternative viewpoints.”







Love her or hate her, you gotta admit that Miss Elektra’s trip to the Library was fuckin’ awesome.
From James Fallows at The Atlantic:
…But now we’ve had something we didn’t see so clearly during the campaign. These are episodes of what would be called outright lunacy, if they occurred in any other setting: An actually consequential rift with a small but important NATO ally, arising from the idea that the U.S. would “buy Greenland.” Trump’s self-description as “the Chosen One,” and his embrace of a supporter’s description of him as the “second coming of God” and the “King of Israel.” His logorrhea, drift, and fantastical claims in public rallies, and his flashes of belligerence at the slightest challenge in question sessions on the White House lawn. His utter lack of affect or empathy when personally meeting the most recent shooting victims, in Dayton and El Paso. His reduction of any event, whatsoever, into what people are saying about him.
Obviously I have no standing to say what medical pattern we are seeing, and where exactly it might lead. But just from life I know this:
Yet now such a person is in charge not of one nuclear-missile submarine but all of them—and the bombers and ICBMs, and diplomatic military agreements, and the countless other ramifications of executive power.
If Donald Trump were in virtually any other position of responsibility, action would already be under way to remove him from that role. The board at a public company would have replaced him outright or arranged a discreet shift out of power. (Of course, he would never have gotten this far in a large public corporation.) The chain-of-command in the Navy or at an airline or in the hospital would at least call a time-out, and check his fitness, before putting him back on the bridge, or in the cockpit, or in the operating room. (Of course, he would never have gotten this far as a military officer, or a pilot, or a doctor.)
There are two exceptions. One is a purely family-run business, like the firm in which Trump spent his entire previous career. And the other is the U.S. presidency, where he will remain, despite more and more-manifest Queeg-like unfitness, as long as the GOP Senate stands with him.
(Why the Senate? Because the two constitutional means for removing a president, impeachment and the 25th Amendment, both ultimately require two thirds support from the Senate. Under the 25th Amendment, a majority of the Cabinet can remove a president—but if the president disagrees, he can retain the office unless two thirds of both the House and Senate vote against him, an even tougher standard than with impeachment. Once again it all comes back to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.)
Donald Trump is who we knew him to be. But now he’s worse. The GOP Senate continues to show us what it is.
Such open displays of firearms – particularly an assault weapon – is but one dramatic Body Language example of male overcompensatory behavior. A profound affectation, it screams, "I am not comfortable in my masculinity" and "I am a beta male who desperately wants to be an alpha." pic.twitter.com/jpmSdsXrUc
— DrJackBrown ???? (@DrGJackBrown) August 6, 2019










From John Pavlovitz:
This is your first time being here, being a human.
You are in the middle of a day you’ve never been to, in a life you’ve never lived—which means the learning curve every morning is massive.
Show yourself some grace for the mistakes you make, the times you drop the ball, and for the wounds that never seem to heal. There isn’t anything you can do, other than the best that you can do.
It is an unprecedented act of courage simply to wake up in the morning and to brave the difficulties of the day, to fight like hell to get it right, and to get up the next morning and commit to doing it all over again. That’s where the victory is.
Being a person of compassion while surrounded by so much cruelty, loving relentlessly in the face of so much hatred, and choosing to care when apathy would be the less invasive path—these are superhuman endeavors that you’ve chosen, so be gentle with yourself.
This life is not for the faint of heart.
There isn’t much about it that is easy.
Congratulations on getting up and living.
Yes, being human is hard—but you are being it beautifully.