This just in: DNC slated to be just as boring as the RNC.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Conventions, Thought of the day | Leave a comment »
This just in: DNC slated to be just as boring as the RNC.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Conventions, Thought of the day | Leave a comment »
So there’s this guy, Grover Norquist. He shouldn’t be important and he’s never done anything worthwhile with his life, but for whatever reason, he got a bunch of Republicans to sign some inane tax pledge. Then, as everyone knew would happen, spending kept going. You see, Americans want low taxes, but they also like their government programs (especially all those retiring Teabaggers who have no idea what they’re talking about). Naturally, these two things can’t work together for terribly long. So now we see ourselves in a bit of a mess.
So remind me: Who the hell is Grover Norquist and why is anyone still listening to him?
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Grover Norquist, Thought of the day | 1 Comment »
I’ve only ever been to five weddings (at least as far as I remember) and I think it’s pretty clear cut: Buffets are where it’s at. It’s cheaper for the bride and groom (or their parents, as the case may be), plus the food is always just way better and with way more choices.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Thought of the day, Weddings | Leave a comment »
I was looking through some old weight lifting books that once belonged to my grandfather when I came across an exercise I had written about in the past. At the time I called it the cleave and jerk. It turns out it as an alternate name:
I believe “one arm power jerk” is probably a more accurate name, but either way works. Of course, it’s all somewhat moot since this is a fairly old fashioned lift. In fact, aside from that excerpt/image coming from a book originally published in 1963, I was once doing this exercise when, just after I set the dumbbell down, an older gentlemen by the name of Ralph asked me if I had learned it from my grandfather. I asked if he had had the honor of knowing the man, but he said no. He just knew that there was no way I had learned it from a high school coach or any modern trainer.
On another note, here is a picture I found of my grandfather doing a similar exercise:
Again, this is only similar to the description above. The one arm power jerk involves an extended press of the bar as opposed to the resting of the upper arm on the ribcage. I’m not even sure if that’s safe. (I estimate there to be about 90 lbs in discs with the bar likely weighing 15 or 20 for a total of 105-110 lbs.)
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Cleave and jerk, One arm power jerk, Weight lifting | Leave a comment »
I recently saw a poll showing that some crazy percentage of Republicans – 67% – believe abortion is okay in instances of rape. That’s hilariously inconsistent with the argument that a fetus is a full-fledged human life and thus deserving of protection. What the hell argument distinguishes between a fetus conceived via consensual sex versus one conceived via rape?
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Abortion, Thought of the day | 5 Comments »
As we’ve learned over the past few years from Republicans, corporations are people. You see, any time people get together to do things, they have the same rights as individuals. It makes one wonder how we’re allowed to regulate any business at all. But that’s another topic for another day. You see, while corporations have been given person-status because they are no more than collections of people, some members of the GOP apparently don’t think that the states are also collections of people:
In 1913, the 17th Amendment was passed to override part of Article 1, Section 3, of the Constitution, which designated that state legislatures, not the people, select two people per state to serve as senators…
Today, [Pete] Hoekstra and some other GOP members couch the argument of a 17th Amendment repeal in the concept of giving states back their full rights under the Constitution.
The Roll Call article lists four other GOP members who’ve made remarks about repealing the amendment since 2010: Representatives Jeff Flake and Todd Akin, Indiana state treasurer Richard Mourdock, and Senator Mike Lee.
Mourdock, a Senate candidate in Indiana, said earlier this year that the 17th Amendment hurts the states.
“The House of Representatives was there to represent the people. The Senate was there to represent the states,” Mourdock said in February.
Got that? The House is there to represent the people. In contrast, the Senate is there to represent something that is not the people. Specifically, it is there to represent the states. You know. Those things that aren’t people. Because only corporations are people.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Jeff Flake, Pete Hoekstra, Richard Mourdock, Todd Akin | 1 Comment »
Paul Ryan and other Republicans have been saying that President Obama is incredibly partisan and has changed the atmosphere in Washington more than anyone in recent memory. When asked if they thought it was really fucking stupid and a sign of an inability to ever compromise to sign a statement pledging to never raise taxes, blank faces filled the room.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Republicans are shitbags, Thought of the day | Leave a comment »
Here is a sunken boat near Antarctica. I presume it sank soon after Nate‘s mother boarded it (which, incidentally, was presumably shortly before the crew boarded her).
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Nate's mother, Sunken boat | Leave a comment »
It wasn’t so much the excitement of the actual landing on Mars that got the public going – though, hey, it was exciting. No, instead I think it was the passion and vigor of the scientists behind the landing.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Passion, Thought of the day | Leave a comment »
Remember that asshole dad from a few months ago? He tried to teach his daughter the value of a dollar by idiotically destroying wealth with a bullet through a laptop before telling everyone on the Internet that the child he supposedly loves is lazy and ungrateful – then he told her she needs to get a job. (Who wouldn’t want to hire her now, amirite?) I presume once the camera was off he attempted to show her the need for hard work by having his maid clean up his mess. It was all pretty pathetic, illogical, counter-productive, and was little more than a display of immaturity from someone who is having a hard time dealing with being a parent in the first place. Yet everyone loved it. There’s something about saying “fuck you” to young people that gives people their jollies. I presume some of it is frustration, some of it jealousy, some of it arrogance, but who knows. People love being dicks when dealing with youth. Just read what Northland College principal John Tapene said:
It starts out okay – there’s plenty to do and there’s value in acquiring skills and basic work experience – but it goes downhill quickly. It’s true that no town owes its teen population any entertainment (though it is probably in its interest), and parents aren’t obligated to provide their kids with fun (though the goods ones will play sports and games and activities with their children), but then we get into some horseshit. How is it that no ones owes teenagers anything yet they owe the world everything they can provide? “Sit down, shut the fuck up, do what I say, and like it. And if you dissent at all, then fuck you more, you fucking cry baby!” That doesn’t even begin to make sense.
I think the point Tapene wanted to make was that people as past their prime as he is don’t have the same great potential teenagers do. He wanted to inspire. The only problem is that he couldn’t resist insulting his audience by being a general dick. It’s sort of like what I did in the first sentence of this paragraph where I took a dig at Tapene for his age. The difference is that I’m not trying to inspire him.
But, hey, maybe there’s more to this story. Tapene weighs in further:
However, the tragic truth is that, who is going to teach the young person to cook, to start a lawn mower, to study productively, to wash windows and so on. Instead we adults prefer to push them to one side and tell them to ‘entertain themselves’.
Not only is he a bit of an asshole, he’s an incoherent asshole. “Get out there and find something to do, kids! We don’t owe you shit! By the way, my fellow adults, don’t we owe them something?” Surely there’s an explanation for this overt contradiction? Perhaps:
I think this statement speaks not so much of a youth issue but a call for adult role models to stand up, to teach, lead and demonstrate, to live and lead radically a life fueled by a kingdom vision. Where we all use our talents and time to bring heaven to earth, to partner in God’s mission of the restoration of His creation unto Himself.
Oh. He’s a Christian. That doesn’t explain the assholery, but I at least understand the lack of consistency.
I really wish people would stop spreading these shitty memes.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: John Tapene, Northland, Northland College, Teenagers | 2 Comments »