Blog

  • Friday Morning pre-Sabbath Links

    In our new reality, it’s no longer Judge Wapner at 8, it’s the elderly Jew at 7. But have no fear, because… ok, maybe have some fear. Well… not fear, exactly, more like trepidation. OK, not really trepidation…

    Many happy birthdays today, starting with one of my personal heroes, David Hume; one of my favorite writers, A.E. van Vogt; my favorite fiction writer (and erstwhile subject of a Jewsday) Bernard Malamud; and portrayer of Gus Fring and Mike Giardello, Giancarlo Esposito.

    On to the news.

     


     

    Making Chicago look better, one grift at a time.

     

    This is my shocked face.

     

    I am soooo buying popcorn futures.

     

    Easier way: tell the Chinese, “They’re delicious! Come and get it!”

     

    “Snitches get stitches! Brawwwwwwk!”

     

    Team Red, totally doing God’s work and not worrying about fringe partisan bullshit. Riiiight.

     

    White supremacist racist professor outrages College Democrats at DePaul. For your amusement, here’s his faculty web page.

     

    Climate change: kill the birds, tuppence a bag.

     

    What Great Britain needs is common-sense cyanoacrylate control.

     

    Spudalicious hardest hit.

     

    Flying the friendly skies.

     

    News from an actual sport.

     

    This explains Twitter.

     

    “Florida” is derived from the Seminole word meaning “Where people go to die.” But not before making incredible nuisances of themselves.

     

    Banjos, outed!

     


     

    Old Guy Music is the Sun Ra Orchestra without Sun Ra. Yeah, it looks like a Leisure Village reunion, but holy shit there’s some amazing playing here. And especially by Marshall Allen, who would be as famous as Coltrane if he hadn’t plied his trade in the avant garde but worked in more accessible genres. That fucker was NINETY ONE YEARS OLD!

     

  • Poll: Yardwork

    Well, here in Upscale-Yet-Not-1%-Ville the yardwork gets started at the ridiculous hour of 0600, 7 days a week. It doesn’t help that there is a golf course directly behind our place. I am most decidedly NOT a morning person, as we have firmly established in the past.

    But, putting aside my sleep-deprivation-induced surliness for a moment, I’ve noticed something in addition to the early start hour of the $#&king leaf blowers. No matter what kind of landscaping is involved, each household in our neighborhood has a landscaping/yard maintenance service to handle the chores.

    Except us.

    Saturday morning finds OMWC out bright and early to use our little old-fashioned reel lawn mower on our minuscule patch of lawn before the day starts getting too unbearably hot.

    (If it were up to me, we wouldn’t have a lawn at all; a rant for another time.)

    So, tonight’s poll question: if you have landscaping or a yard to maintain, do you DIY, do you have your orphans handle it, or do you pay Pud Paisley’s company (or equivalent) to take care of it for you?

  • Thursday Afternoon Links

    Well, our accidental work emergency has passed. You’ll be shocked and amazed to find out that a bunch of people made assumptions that later turned out not to be true, causing a metric fuckton of work for me and my team. Oh, did we tell you it was REQUIRED that you do X, Y, and Z before that mandatory upgrade on Sunday night? We meant RECOMMENDED. But if you don’t you’ve got about six months before it becomes required. I am a grumpy sumbitch today after all of that.

    Life has moved so far beyond parody that George Carlin’s famous take on blowjobs has become reality.

    Florida House tries to blow up state Constitutional mandate. Per usual. My problem with this is that once fines and fees are converted to civil liens, they are no different than any other civil lien. Either people who have civil liens can’t vote, or they can. I’m on the side of the state Constitution is above the legislature. If it says all felons who have served their time except murderers and sex offenders can vote, then they can.

    Well, shit. I guess I better get another MMR shot. My kids are going off to real school soon, and I don’t want to suffer because of some asshat’s child

    Thomas Friedman likes border walls. Presumably because China has had one forever.

    Eh fuggit. Let’s have some Clash.

  • Minnesota Nice Meetup

    Tomorrow is the big day. Finally, after years of lurking and then hesitant posting, I’d have a chance to meet some Minnesota Glibs. I’m a little excited, not in a sexual way, but more in “be prepared for a science test in high school” way. So it’s off to bed, hoping to get a good night’s sleep.

    Tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow…somewhere in the darkness I drifted off to sleep, just like Kenny Rogers’ “Gambler.” I’m all prepared, I have my clothes all laid out. I’d ironed my newest bib overalls, using spray starch to get the crisp crease, found my Christmas flannel shirt and I want to look my best so I’m going to wear the bow tie that has the flashing lights. I’ll have to remember to check the batteries to make sure the lights work alternately and will switch to both lights blinking together. As I get ready I decide to use some hair pomade but Dixie Peach is hard to find here so I went with the regular brand. I opened up the can of Bag Balm and it was nearly empty! I was able to use my little finger around the corners of the can and got about a tablespoon, not much but it will have to do. I made a mental note to get the economy size the next time I was in Tractor Supply. I want everything to be perfect, first impressions are important, just as Miss Sawyer said in English class.

    For a while I had thought for the occasion I’d wear my white painter’s bibs, the ones that have the Dickie’s logo on the patch in the front, but I couldn’t get enough of pine tar out of the knees from the day I helped my friend Gus unload a truck full of rough sawed pine. Besides, it’s not formal and the fashion magazines all say no white after Labor Day. Boots for the meet up ’cause I want to look manly but I won’t turn the socks down, I don’t want to appear pretentious. I checked my bow tie, making sure the wire to the batteries was hidden inside my shirt, a trick I’d learned from my older brother. I’d better stop and get extra batteries, I don’t want the lights to quit blinking halfway through the meet up. Checked myself in the ceiling mirror in the bedroom and I knew I was ready.

    Make the long drive to Minneapolis-actually to a northern suburb-to meet Pope Jimbo, Tundra and A Leap at the Wheel for the very first time. I know these fellas from their witticisms on the Glibertarians site. I don’t really know them, but I mean that’s where I’ve seen their well thought out insights and comedy efforts that always produce either awe or a hearty chuckle. We’re meeting at the Conference Room in Caribou Coffee and I admit to being a little nervous.

    I check in with the receptionist, a pert but matronly young lady- I would guess a high school drop out with two kids but studying for her GED ’cause her boyfriend wants her to get into Cosmetology School so she can work when he’s laid off in the winter. Right now she’s senior barista, cashier and table clean up, as well as Glibertarians receptionist.

    She directed me down the hall to Conference Room 3, but reminded me to use the Secret Knock. Oh, oh, I wasn’t prepared for that, but she whispers, “Shhh, middle two fingers, rap twice but firmly, wait exactly ten seconds, then flat palm the door, you’ll hear a ‘Come In’. Immediately open the door and enter.”

    Nervously, I approach the Conference Room. It had a large brass 3 on the door and below that someone has written “Janitor’s Closet” in magic marker. I use the Secret Knock, wait 10 seconds and follow it up with a flat palm. A voice from inside says, “Come in.” I try the door knob, one, two, three times, then the voice says…“Turn the knob in the other direction.” I do and the door opens. At this point I know I’ve committed a “Folks Pass” as we said in sophomore French Class.

    There is a folding leg card table in the middle of the room, four chairs, three men. I quickly survey the faces and try to put a name on each, from my observations of their comments. I recognize the more serious looking one as Leap, the good looking one as Tundra, and the happy one as Pope Jimbo. Now I approach the table and we start with the introductions. Leap stands up and offers his hand and says, “I’m Tundra.” I kiss his ring, noticing that it was the Monopoly Scottie dog. I go to Pope Jimbo, we shake, I kiss his ring which is the top hat and he says, “I’m A Leap at the Wheel, but you can call me Leap.” Now the last one, Tundra, is left and we repeat the formal introduction, his ring is the thimble, super glued in an inverted position, open end up. He says, “And I’m Pope Jimbo, but you can call me Pope or Jimbo or Mr J or Mr P but you don’t have to call me Johnson.” They all laugh.

    I start to sit down and I hear, “There are rules, Dude,” whispered from an unknown. I look up and see that sitting down first is Leap, followed by Pope Jimbo, lastly Tundra. Leap waves me into the empty chair. “We’ve been looking over your application and biography and find you’ve had a rather interesting life. The time you pushed the girl out of the way while getting on the school bus makes us believe you are a take charge kind of person.” I nodded, they were seeing things correctly. “And the time you saved your friend Bobby from walking into a puddle without probing the depth first was nothing short of heroic.” I was a little embarrassed at having to acknowledge these personal feats, but I really wanted to be accepted as a Glib.

    I looked across the room and saw a shelf with three caps, lined up like marines on parade. These were not knock-offs but genuine Glib merchandise, custom embroidered. From left to right they read:

    “Glibs Yesterday” then “Glibs Today” and lastly “Glibs Tomorrow”

    I could see a white plastic bag with a red cap in it that said “Glibs Forever” and an empty space on the shelf. I knew that would be mine if all went well today.

    Suddenly, the informalities were over and a certain aura fell over the room. Tundra announced that he had copies of the day’s agenda; I could participate in the discussion, but was not allowed to vote. He passed the agendas out and for my benefit explained the rules. There were ten subjects on the agenda that had been submitted and ranked according to their importance. Each person would have 90 seconds to discuss the implications and on to the next person. After everyone had a chance to speak, each person would get 30 seconds to summarize or rebut, then a vote would be taken. Leap would be the moderator, Tundra the time keeper because he had an official Special Olympics stopwatch with the big numbers, and Pope acting as a sort of controller, using a power point pointer (with the light on it) to signify who was in the on deck circle.

    So the discussion started. First item, how high should the wall be on the Mexican border that was being discussed nationally? A lively discussion with a lot of emotion, economics and established facts followed. I found it difficult to keep up because of the speed and coherence of the conversation.

    It was like this all afternoon, as agenda item after item was dissected and remodeled in a Glibertarian format. At one point someone mentioned MikeS’s idea/opinion and I pointed out that he was not a Minnesota Glib, but I heard the “There are rules, Dude” repeated so I dropped it.

    At the conclusion of the agenda discussion Happy Hour commenced and all formalities were dropped, everyone was relaxed, on a first name basis, like Leap, Pope and Tundra because it was hard to shorten up his name but still he didn’t seem to mind. The conversation was generally surly, sarcastic and offensive, much like the daily comments I’d come to enjoy from Glibs. Soon, however, the time had come to say goodbye. I felt I’d made an average to good impression. We all walked out together, laughing, enjoying the Glib camaraderie.

    As I got into my truck I noticed the same white plastic bag I’d seen in the conference room. Somehow the receptionist had sneaked that bag into the truck without me noticing. My heart was pounding. I opened up the bag, and there it was. A red hat with Glib embroidered on it and below that was “Forever.” I was in! Hat on, I sped out of the parking lot and was heading for home when I felt something bam-bam-bam in my back. “Uh-uh-uh” was all the sound I could make.

    “Wake up! Wake up! You were talking in your sleep again, some crazy thing about the Pope being A Sleep at the Wheel and driving on the Tundra.”

    Then it hit me, I’d been dreaming the dream of every novice Glib…

  • Thursday Morning Links

    Good morning my Glibs and Gliberinas! And what a glorious morning it is for everyone as America’s Creepy Uncle tossed his hat into the presidential race!  According to the latest poll, he holds a lead over everyone including Trump.  The man in a complete fucking moron, the entertainment value is going to be fantastic.

     

    Michael Cohen disavows parts of his guilty plea in a recorded phone call to Tom Arnold.

     

    Do it, DO IT!!!

     

    I knew the Professor and Maryann would get together one day.

     

    Exotic bird collection up for auction after one of the birds killed its previous owner.

     

    Hiker sets new record.

     

    That’s all I got for today, I’ll leave you with a song and move along with my day.

  • The Trial of CPRM: Tape Two

    These are True Stories. Names have been changed to protect Me.

  • Wednesday Afternoon Panic! Links

    Hi guys, sorry for the quick hits here, but we have a crisis of our own making at work.

    Matt Taibbi is all out of bubblegum when it comes to the media and Russian collusion.

    In fairness, some large number of the engineers have student loans, but I doubt many of the welders and electricians do. It pays really good to work in O&G,

    Yesterday we spoke about hangry wives, today we find out “happy wife, longer life” is not just a reason to stop looking at porn (or other women) because she done told you she’d kill you if she caught you again.

    You guys will have to handle the rest, I have a panic to avert.

  • The Hat and The Hair: Episode 118

     

    “Nobody disobeys my orders,” Donald said. There was no one in the Oval Office to hear him.

    The hat and the hair huddled together in the cabinet below the sink in the Presidential Shitter and reviewed the 2020 Democratic nominees.

    “Kamala Harris,” the hair said after pulling up her picture on his phone. “She might be the DNC darling. Ticks off a lot of boxes. Lots of boxes.”

    “Shouldn’t we be doing this with Donald?” the hat asked.

    “He’s distracted right now.”

    “NO IMPEACH I!” Donald yelled from the Oval Office.

    “Elizabeth Warren,” the hair said, changing the picture.

    “Jesus wept,” the hat said. “Fucking HD cameras.”

    “She’s going buck-wild. Student debt forgiveness. Free college. Socialized medicine. Trying to out-Bernie Bernie. She wants to be the chaos candidate. Ride into office on a wave of mutilation.”

    “Big Chief Warren smoke-um…” the hat started.

    “No Indian jokes,” the hair said. “They are old. Played out. Used up like a squaw’s squaw.”

    “But you just…” the hat began.

    “Cory Booker,” the hair said, changing the picture. “Clean, articulate, well-spoken. Another Obama maybe, but hopefully everyone still has Obama fatigue. Probably gay, but they found him a beard… Rosario Dawson… hubba, hubba.”

    “I’m not really into black girls,” the hat said. “Or Hispanic girls. Or halfsies.”

    “But she was still hot in that. And shaved,” the hair said.

    “Why would that appeal to you?” the hat asked.

    “I…. uh… well, I guess I don’t know.”

    “I like a big 70’s porn bush,” the hat said. “Thick. Way up the belly. Like the size of a bicycle seat. Gives a guy something to hold onto while he’s getting his bill wet.”

    “Moving on… Beto O’Rouke, the fake Mexican,” the hair said.

    “Needs a sombrero,” the hat said.

    “He’s your basic man-of-the-people, salt-of-the-Earth, white-guy-married-to-an-heir-to-billions sort.”

    “What did his husband do to make all his money?” the hat asked.

    “He’s married to a woman.”

    “What did her ex-husband do to make all her money?”

    “It’s family money. She some sort of non-profit do-gooder teaching kids to read or some shit.”

    “Rowr. You’re saucy today,” the hat said. “I like it.”

    “Donald has to get reelected,” the hair said intently. “He’ll be dead in a couple of years if he loses. And what does your hair do when you die?”

    “Keeps growing?”

    “That’s an old wives tale.”

    “Did you check snopes.com?” the hat asked.

    “Fuck off.”

    “How many Pinocchios did they give it?”

    “Your hair dies, is the point. I don’t want to die,” the hair said.

    “Maybe you can move to a new host. There are millions of bald people out there that would love to have you.”

    “You’re being really nice to me. What’s going on?”

    “After what happened in the tunnels, I realize it’s just you and me,” the hat said.

    “Ooh, that’s such a sweet load of bullshit,” the hair said.

    “No, I mean it,” the hat said. “Things are going to change between us from now on, shithead.”

    “I don’t know what to say,” the hair said.

    The hat coughed somehow and the hair changed the photo he was projecting on the cabinet wall.

    “Pete Buttigieg,” the hair said. “Mayor of South Bend, Indiana.”

    “How old is he? Does he even have a driver’s license?”

    “37, married.”

    “Married?!? He looks like a fag,” the hat said.

    “He’s married to a guy,” the hair said dryly.

    “Oh, well, then that explains it. Vice Presidential material, at best. Quayle was a closet case.”

    “Amy Klobuchar…” the hair began.

    “This is boring,” the hat said. “How many more of these are there?”

    “There are 16 people in the Democratic primary. 17 if Biden jumps in.”

    “17? It’s a clown car, not a vagina, people.”

    “Yeah, it’s nuts,” the hair admitted.

    “Does that count, you know, Her?”

    “No. She said she isn’t running again.”

    The hat laughed so convulsively, he fell out of the bathroom cabinet and rolled onto the floor.

     

    Meanwhile, in a desolate Harlem basement…

     

    “You should run, beloved,” Huma said.

    Hillary grunted with angry pleasure and pressed herself harder into the belt sander.

    “You are so much more qualified than all of them,” Huma said. The callus was finally abraded to the point that the pressure behind it broke through the tough skin. Brown pus shot out in a feeble geyser and into Huma’s mouth.

    “Swallow,” Hillary commanded. “Swallow it all. It will make you strong.”

    Huma bent to Hillary’s swollen labia and licked the area clean. She suckled at the sore until the nodule deflated.

    “Now the other side,” Hillary said, pointing with a maggot-like finger.

    “I know how to take care of you,” Huma said gently.

    “Of course you do,” Hillary grumbled. “You kept me alive all these dark months since…”

    “Since the election,” Huma finished. “You must always face reality. You will never be President on a delusion.” Her slim brown hands took up the heavy duty end nipper wire cutters and began pruning the small thicket of skin tags on Hillary’s labia majora. Some had grown to attach themselves to the squamous patch of thigh skin closest to Hillary’s erotic grotto. Huma worked on them first, bearing down with all her strength to shear through the fibrous strands.

    “Those used to be clitorides,” Hillary sighed. “They reacted to the slightest touch of the wind between the stars.” She shivered in pleasure, eyes lazily opening under her lolling breasts.

    As the skin tags came off, Huma ate them one by one.

  • Wednesday Morning Links

    Good morning my Glibs and Gliberinas!  And what a glorious morning it is for everyone but congressional Democrats who is getting pushback by the Trump admin against their endless fishing expeditions.

     

    Oh honey, you definitely need to sit this one out.

    Supreme Court appear to be ok with having the Citizenship question on the census.

    Second accidental death at Grand Canyon this year.

    Woman emerges from 30 year coma.

    McAfee claims he is going to out Bitcoin creator Nakamoto.

    Mississippi teen disarms intruder and shoots him to death.

    Plurality of young voters agree with non-interventionist foreign policy.

     

     

    That’s all I got for today.  I’ll leave you with a song and move along with my day.

  • The Jerk in the Circle

    I’m part of a circle. We’re going to have to go back eight years to understand what that means. My daughter was two and the wife was itching to return to her company. So we found a decent nursery school in our neighborhood. Finally, I could cut down on the 50 and 60 hour work weeks.

    Orientation for the nursery school was on a Saturday morning. We tried to dig out a dress for the kid that wasn’t covered in snot, puke or whatever that last stain was. The wife was smoking hot in her navy blue business suit. I was smoking not in my jeans and sweatshirt. The nursery was only a five-minute drive away, so of course, we were five minutes late.

    While my wife looked for a parking spot, I stuffed the kid under my arm and sprinted into the lobby. “Orientation 2F”. The room was packed with parents sitting on the wood floor, black-haired rugrats perched on their laps. With a Sumimasen, I squeezed my white butt into a gap between two families. In the front of the room, a buck-toothed lady with perky breasts was leading the orientation.

    A couple of minutes passed before my wife slid the door open and slithered inside. “Your shoes!” she whispered in my ear. In my haste, I hadn’t realized I was supposed to change into slippers at the genkan. I discretely covered my feet with my jacket, hoping no one had noticed. My kid farted. I hoped no one had noticed. It smelled really bad. I hoped…

    The room was decorated with finger paintings of elephants and monkeys. The gulag rules were being emphatically explained by Ms. Perky Breasts. “I can handle this”, I thought to myself. I leaned back on my elbows, enjoying the show. A boney hand squeezed my shoulder. I turned my head and was met with the mole-covered face of a bald father in a rumpled business suit. “I translate for you.” This I definitely could handle. A deftly delivered Kekko desu, despite being polite, is remarkably similar to the English “F*** Off” and I must’ve nailed it because he pouted and turned back to listening to Ms. Perky Breasts.

    An hour and a half later, we rose from the floor and tried to rub life back into our seized up knees. A formal group bow of gratitude to the leader and orientation was finished! I got the kid bundled up in her coat and scarf as she squirmed and protested. But we weren’t ready to leave yet. My wife had disappeared. I scanned the room looking for her and Ms. Perky Breasts captured my gaze. “Mama,” my daughter squeaked, as she tugged on my jacket sleeve and pointed. In the corner of the room, there was a cluster of women yapping away, one of them in a navy blue business suit. These were mothers that had run into each other at the pediatrician and playground a few times, and now they were shooting the breeze with the intimacy of veterans at a Normandy reunion.

    They were forming a circle. There are university circles, high school circles, and retiree circles. A university circle will often have a common theme like skiing or karaoke to unite them, but the main point is just to share time with others. At a nursery school, a circle is simply a group of parents that agree to support each other and plan activities for their children to do together.

    That was eight years ago. The same six women that formed that cluster in the corner after orientation are now close friends. Our kids play with each other after school. We go camping, hiking, and grape picking together. We have dinner parties at each other’s houses where the women engage in boisterous conversations well past midnight over empty wine bottles and half-eaten plates of fried rice and gyoza. They are united by the desire to help each other become better parents. It was a support network that formed organically and voluntarily.

    There are no laws requiring diversity or inclusivity in our circle. In fact, at times we are discriminatory and intolerant. One mother tried to join our circle a few years back. Her mistake was demanding that I only speak in English to her child. One of the mothers in our circle overheard the conversation and iced her out from that moment forward. It was their turn to say, “We can handle this.” And they shunned her in the terribly effective manner that only Japanese females can. The point of the circle is to bring us together and that woman’s demand was a thumb in the eye of our unspoken charter. I’m grateful to be part of a group of people that treat my family as equals and not some resource to be exploited. My gratitude runs deeper than the gratitude I had for those perky breasts eight years ago in orientation.

     

    Here’s a link to my kid and one other kid from our circle jamming on the electone.

    *Thanks to Couch Potato for the editing help.