I’m A Strong Dog
Display of a link in this facility does not indicate approval of content ~ The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia ~ Georgia’s Dangerous Rush to Execution ~ In FTM testosterone therapy, testosterone (often called “T” for short) can be administered into the body in a number of ways. ~ A Study of Effect of Deodorant and Axillary Hair on Testosterone Absorption in Healthy Participants We’d welcome your feedback! Thank you for visiting our website. You have been selected to participate in a brief customer satisfaction survey to let us know how we can improve your experience.The survey is designed to measure your entire experience, please look for it at the conclusion of your visit. ~ Speak Up: Responding to Everyday Bigotry ~ We need an old-school approach to Richard Spencer ~ Don’t trust no n***a no. ~ Religious cats arguing ~ story idea godwins law part two how calling any idiot you don’t like a nazi is a joke how any discussion goes to hell when kkk and white supremacy is mentioned ~ Shootout mannequin challenge leads to gun, marijuana arrests ~ Gun-wielding Alabama Mannequin Challenge leads to 2 arrests; weapons and drugs seized ~ canton dental ~ Dorothea Lange’s Censored Photographs of FDR’s Japanese Concentration Camps ~ Dorothea Lange and the Japanese-American Internment ~ Censored Photos From Inside U.S. Japanese Concentration Camps ~ How telling the truth became racebaiting. ~ The Blind Spots of Liberalism ~ Colonel Harry G. Summers, Jr. ~ Gillian Welch returns to “Revival”: “We felt like Martians” ~ another facebook shitfest about race ~ Fake Buddha Quotes ~ 25 Mostly Fake Buddha Quotes That May or May Not Change Your Life ~ 15 Easy Things You Can Do That Will Help When You Feel Like Shit ~ Alyssa Wright and Elijah Ramoutar ~ Nicholas Smarr and Jody Smith ~ Dorothea Lange – An American Odyssey ~ Eudora Welty job application ~ Are You a U.S. History Expert? ~ Dontavis Montgomery ~ How Trump Could Finally Win the War on Terror ~ i’m a strong dog but sometimes i want someone to take my paw and say everything will be all right ~ @WernerTwertzog “It is better to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission.” –An unknown person who was fired for not asking for permission. @chamblee54 The original saying was “easier to ask for permission” confusing easier for better is an issue for another thinking ~ Comments are reviewed and, in some cases, edited before posting. Not all comments are posted. Chances of a comment being posted are increased if the comment is polite, accurate, grammatical, and substantive or newsworthy. The Sun does not accept comments referring to individuals by only their first names or by nicknames and in the case of most public officials requires, on first reference, a title, such as President Obama or Secretary Clinton. Second references to individuals and public officials require in most cases an honorific, such as Mr. Obama or Mrs. Clinton. Comments adhering to these style points stand a better chance of being posted. ~ Next time, I will check the address before I leave. They are no longer just off N. Highland. ~ The next time someone tries to drag you into a facebook mudbath, say “I see your comment. I prefer not to reply” ~ A lady on the Dick Cavett show talked about the concept of actors putting on masks to play a part. To her, people in everyday life wear masks all the time. The theater was where an actor took off the mask, to give a performance of reality. ~ I used to leave the North Avenue marta station at 7am, and walk north on West Peachtree Street. Sun Trust Plaza was behind me, and the IBM building was in front of me. ~ One of the ways @ChrisCrocker dealt with unwanted (?) fame was making porno movies. Lets hope that DJT does not do this. BTW, @ChrisCrocker lives in Tennessee. Does anyone know him? ~ I learned something today. I read a story, about a combination of deodorant and testosterone called Pitronex. I googled the ingredients, and learned that the medical term for armpit hair is axillary. The spell check suggestion for axillary is Hillary. You can’t make this stuff up. ~ @postcrunk getting enraged by something, growing passionate about it, becoming apathetic toward it, and forgetting it all in a single 24hour news cycle ~ My dentist is so so, but her office is five minutes away. You win some you lose some. ~ Strategic Communication The late Colonel Harry Summers liked to tell a tale familiar to many who served in Vietnam. In April 1975, after the war was over, the colonel was in a delegation dispatched to Hanoi. In the airport, he got into a conversation with a North Vietnamese colonel named Tu who spoke some English and, as soldiers do, they began to talk shop. After a while, Colonel Summers said: “You know, you never defeated us on the battlefield.” Colonel Tu thought about that for a minute, then replied: “That may be so. But it is also irrelevant.” ~ It took fifty four years, but the heat shield finally killed #johnglenn ~ The dentist I use now is *ok*. The good news is the five minute drive. ~ Just do it before January 20. Obamacare covers butt hurt. ~ “However many holy words you read, however many you speak, what good will they do you if you do not act on upon them?” ~ @existentialcoms Philosophy is important because without it we could never know whether or not it was possible to know if you really know anything. ~ The page you requested cannot be displayed right now. It may be temporarily unavailable, the link you clicked on may be broken or expired, or you may not have permission to view this page. ~ Thank you for the notice. TTTT, I was debating whether, or not, to make the OTP drive. ~ The Washington Post does not need to be talking about critical thinking. ~ why was d lange censored while ansel adams was not? ~ The ego and the super ego walked into a bar. The bartender asked to see their id. ~ @dailyzen Labeling the world to make yourself comfortable is the most popular form of ignorance among ‘intelligent people’. ~ Think of how much fun First Lady Melania Trump is going to be. Just say no is officially obsolete ~ 1-“The KKK” has dozens of chapters. Many are secret societies, which would not publicly endorse a politician. To say that this one newspaper represents the KKK is a lie. 2- What I heard before the election is “the KKK endorses Donald Trump” This is not the same thing as saying a KKK newspaper endorses DJT. 3- It is fascinating how the population accepted, without question, the notion that the KKK endorsed DJT. Nothing negative you said about DJT was too far fetched. This hurt the Democrats credibility. People do not like to be lied to. ~ Additionally, Ancona believes Murray’s fundraising effort is a scam, because technically, members of the Klan cannot speak with the media, let alone solicit their help with raising donations. All members sign an agreement that forbids conversations with the press. Only highly vetted officials interact with reporters, and even then, interviews are rare.” ~ @jswilliams1962 When you see #DickVanDyke trending you figure he either died or Trump nominated him for Secretary of State ~ pictures today are from The Library of Congress. ~ selah
Flannery O’Connor
With one day before it was due, PG finished reading Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor , by Brad Gooch. The author is a professor of English at William Patterson University in New Jersey. He spares no citations, to show where he gets his information. This is a repost.
Chamblee54 has written before about Miss O’Connor , and repeated the post a year later. There is a radio broadcast of a Flannery O’Connor lecture. (The Georgia accent of Miss O’Connor is much commented on in the book. To PG, it is just another lady speaking.)
Mary Flannery O’Connor was born March 25, 1925 in Savannah GA. The local legend is that she was conceived in the shadow of St. John the Baptist Cathedral, a massive facility on Lafayette Square. Her family did leave nearby, and her first school was just a few steps away. This is also a metaphor for the role of the Catholic Church in her life. Mary Flannery was intensely Catholic, and immersed in the scholarship of the church. This learning was a large part of her life. How she got from daily mass, to writing stories about Southern Grotesque, is one mystery at the heart of Flannery O’Connor.
Ed O’Connor doted on his daughter, but had to take a job in Atlanta to earn a living. His wife Regina and daughter Mary Flannery moved with him, to a house behind Christ The King Cathedral. Mr. O’Connor’s health was already fading, and Mother and Daughter moved in with family in Milledgeville. Ed O’Connor died, of Lupus Erythematosus, on February 1, 1941.
Mary Flannery went to college in Milledgeville, and on to the Iowa Writer’s Workshop. She dealt with cold weather, went to Mass every day, and wrote. She was invited to live at an artists colony called Yaddo, in upstate New York. She lived for a while with Robert and Sally Fitzgerald in Connecticut, all while working on her first novel, “Wise Blood”. In 1950, she was going home to Milledgeville for Christmas, and had been feeling poorly. She went to the hometown doctor, who thought at first that the problem was rheumatoid arthritis. The illness of Flannery O’Connor was Lupus Erythematosus.
Miss O’Connor spent much of that winter in hospitals, until drugs were found that could help. She moved, with her mother, to a family farm outside Milledgeville, which she renamed Andalusia. She entered a phase of her life, with the Lupus in relative remission, and the drugs firing her creative fires, where she wrote the short stories that made her famous.
Another thing happened when she was recuperating. Flannery was reading the Florida “Market Bulletin”, and saw an ad for “peafowl”, at sixty five dollars a pair. She ordered a pair, and they soon arrived via Railway Express. This was the start of the peacocks at Andalusia, a part of the legend.
During this period of farm life and writing, Flannery had several friends and correspondents. There was the “Bible Salesmen”, Erik Langkjaer, who was probably the closest thing Flannery had to a boyfriend. Another was Betty Hester, who exchanged hundreds of letters with Miss O’Connor. This took place under the stern eye of Regina O’Connor, the no nonsense mother-caregiver of Flannery. (Mr. Gooch says that Betty Hester committed suicide in 1998. That would be consistent with PG stumbling onto an estate sale of Miss Hester in that time frame.)
The book of short stories came out, and Flannery O’Connor became famous. She was also dependent on crutches, and living with a stern mother. There were lectures out of town, and a few diverse personalities who became her friends. She went to Mass every day, and collected books by Catholic scholars. Flannery was excited by the changes in the church started by Pope John XXIII, and in some ways could be considered a liberal. (She supported Civil Rights, in severe contrast to her mother.)
In 1958, Flannery O’Connor went to Europe, including a trip to the Springs at Lourdes. Her cousin Katie Semmes (the daughter of Captain John Flannery, CSA) pushed Flannery hard to go to the springs, to see if it would help the Lupus. Flannery was reluctant…” I am one of those people who could die for his religion sooner than take a bath for it“. When the day for the visit came, Flannery took a token dip in the waters. Her condition did improve, briefly. (It is worth speculating here about the nature of Flannery’s belief, which was apparently more intellectual than emotional. Could it be that, if she was more persuaded by the mystical, emotional side of the church, and taken the healing waters more seriously, that she might have been cured?)
At some point in this story, her second novel came out, and the illness blossomed. Much of 1964 was spent in hospitals, and she got worse and worse. On August 3, 1964, Mary Flannery O’Connor died,
PG remembers the first time the name Flannery O’Connor sank in. He was visiting some friends, in a little house across from the federal prison.
Rick(?) was the buddy of a character known as Harry Bowers. PG was never sure what Harry’s real name was. One night, Rick was talking about Southern Gothic writers, and he said that Flannery O’Connor was just plain weird. ”Who else would have a bible salesman show up at a farm, take the girl up into a hayloft, unscrew her wooden leg and leave her there? Weird.”
Flannery O’Connor was recently the subject of a biography written by Brad Gooch. The book is getting a bit of publicity. Apparently, the Milledgeville resident was a piece of work.
PG read some reviews of this biography, and found a collection of short stories at the library. The book included ” Good Country People”, the tale about the bible salesman. Apparently, this story was inspired by a real life incident. (Miss O’Connor had lupus the last fifteen years of her life. She used crutches.) And yes, it is weird. Not like hollywood , but in the way of rural Georgia.
Some of the reviews try to deal with her attitudes about Black people. On a certain level, she is a racist. She uses the n word freely, and her black characters are not inspiring people. The thing is, the white characters are hardly any better, and in some cases much worse.
The stories are well crafted, with vivid descriptions of people and places. The reader floats along with the flow of the story, until he realizes that Grandma has made a mistake on a road trip. The house she got her son to look for is in Tennessee, not Georgia. She makes him drive the family car into a ditch. Some drifting killers come by. Grandma asks one if he prays, while his partner is shooting her grandchildren. Weird.
In another story, a drifter happens upon a pair of women in the country. The daughter is thirty years old, is deaf, and has never spoken a word. The drifter teaches her to say bird and sugarpie. The mother gives him fifteen dollars for a honeymoon, if he will marry her. He takes the fifteen dollars and leaves her asleep in a roadside diner.
There was a yard sale one Saturday afternoon. It was in a house off Lavista Road, between Briarcliff and Cheshire Bridge. The house had apparently not been painted in the last forty years. Thousands and thousands of paperback books were on the shelves. The lady taking the money said that the lady who lived there was the friend, and correspondent of, the “Milledgeville writer” Flannery O’Connor. This is apparently Betty Hester, who is mentioned in many of the biography reviews.
PG told the estate sale lady that she should be careful how she said that. There used to be a large mental hospital in Milledgeville, and the name is synonymous in Georgia with mental illness. The estate sale lady had never heard that.
This is a repost. Pictures are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”. It was written like James Joyce. An earlier edition of this post had comments.
Fr. J. December 10, 2009 at 3:00 pm I am glad you take an interest in Flannery, but to say baldly that she is a racist is to very much misunderstand her. For another view on Flannery and race, you might want to read her short story, “Everything that Rises Must Converge.”
chamblee54 December 10, 2009 at 3:17 pm “On a certain level, she is a racist.” That is not the same as “baldly” labeling her a racist. (And I have a full head of hair, thank you). As a native Georgian, I am aware of the many layers of nuance in race relations. I feel that the paragraph on race in the above feature is accurate.
Ansel Adams And Dorothea Lange
The facebook feed has recently had links to a story, Dorothea Lange’s Censored Photographs of FDR’s Japanese Concentration Camps. Miss Lange was the photographer of the iconic Migrant Mother. After Pearl Harbor, Miss Lange took a job with the War Relocation Authority, documenting the “relocation” of Japanese-Americans to interment camps. The photographs did not please the authorities. They were censored, and only appeared recently.
Ansel Adams also took photographs at the Manzanar, California, camp. In the current stories, he is literally a footnote: quotes were used from a book about his photography. Why is Dorothea Lange receiving attention, while Ansel Adams is ignored?
One answer is that Miss Lange was hired early on, and shows the harsh reality of relocation. “On July 30, 1942, the WRA laid her off “without prejudice,” adding that the cause was “completion of work…. the WRA impounded the majority of her photographs of Manzanar and the forced detentions, and later deposited 800 image from the series in the National Archives without announcement.”
“After Lange’s departure, Manzanar’s director Ralph Merritt visited renowned environmentalist and landscape photographer Ansel Adams and suggested he document the camp — Merritt and Adams were friends from the Sierra Club. Lange, also friends with Adams, encouraged him to take the job. (Coincidentally Adams printed “Migrant Mother” for her ) …Ansel Adams made several trips to Manzanar between October 1943 and July 1944 for this new personal project, and, as Alinder writes, he was primed to try the kind of documentary photography regularly practiced by Dorothea Lange and the Farm Security Administration that he had earlier shunned. Unlike Lange, a white woman who had been viewed with suspicion by her subjects, Adams was welcomed by the incarcerees, even greeted as a celebrity in a cultural community that had a deep appreciation of nature — many incarcerees at Manzanar literally opened their doors to him dressed in their finest clothes. … By 1943, Manzanar’s incarcarees had had time to settle in and enjoy the fruits of their collective work. In less than ideal surroundings, they had collectively built their own post office, town hall, library, auditorium, co-op store system, police station, jail, cemetery with memorial, published their own newspaper (the ironically named the Manzanar Free Press, which was regularly censored by the military), and even their own YMCA.”
“As for Lange, looking at the historical record, it appears that she was treated differently from the other WRA photographers. She was discouraged from talking to the incarcerees, was constantly followed by a censor, and faced harassment. She was refused access to areas after being given clearance, and she was often hounded over phone charges and receipts. … After being discharged, Lange expressed in letters her dismay that her work was ineffective in helping the people she documented. Her assistant Christina Clausen later noted the ferocity of this body of work also marked the beginning of the photographer’s bleeding gastric ulcers. Lange was unable to work for a number of years after her harrowing experience at Manzanar. She died from esophageal cancer in 1965.”
“In 1944, Adams’s photographs were published as a book, “Born Free and Equal: The Story of Loyal Japanese Americans,” and shown at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Nativists took offense. They saw Adams’s work as a slur on the war effort. He was a “Jap lover.” This quote is from a 2016 article, Let’s be honest, Ansel Adams’s images of a WWII internment camp are propaganda
“Adams visited Manzanar to take photos in 1943 at the request of camp director Ralph Merritt, who was a personal friend. “They don’t look quite as dusty and quite as forbidding as Dorothea Lange’s photos … Indeed, the place that looks barren and depressing in Lange’s pictures manages to look beautiful in Adams’. You get little sense that it was even a detention center, in part because Adams, like other photographers, was not allowed to shoot the guard towers or barbed wire…
There are scenes from a baseball game, kids walking to school, a gathering outside a chapel. Lots of smiles, too, and portraits of camp residents cropped so close, you can see every blemish and stray hair. In Adams’ vision, Manzanar comes off as a place where Japanese-Americans, dignified, resilient and optimistic in spite of their circumstances, built a temporary community in the desert.
(Skirball Cultural Center director Robert) Kirschner said that if Adams’ photos appear to sugarcoat the indignities of life in an internment camp, it is because he did not see himself as a social activist the way Lange did. Still, Kirscher says, Adams was challenging internment in his own way, by depicting its victims as patriotic, law-abiding Americans. Unlike Lange, Adams was given permission to publish his photos. Before the war ended, he did so in a book called “Born Free and Equal: The Story of Loyal Japanese Americans,” in which he warned about the dangers of letting wartime hysteria justify depriving U.S. citizens of their freedom.”
The NPR article mentions a third Manzanar photographer. “Before World War II, Toyo Miyatake had a photo studio in Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo. When he learned he would be interned at Manzanar, he asked a carpenter to build him a wooden box with a hole carved out at one end to accommodate a lens. He turned this box into a makeshift camera that he snuck around the camp, as his grandson Alan Miyatake explains in the video below, which is featured in the exhibit.
Fearful of being discovered, Miyatake at first only took pictures at dusk or dawn, usually without people in them. Camp director Merritt eventually caught Miyatake, but instead of punishing him, allowed him to take pictures openly. Miyatake later became the camp’s official photographer.”
Pictures for today’s feature are from The Library of Congress. These are pictures that Ansel Adams took at Manzanar. They have been posted at chamblee54 before. The ladies in the bridge game are Aiko Hamaguchi, Chiye Yamanaki, Catherine Yamaguchi, and Kazoko Nagahama.
Judy Roasting On An Open Fire
SFFILK (Not his real name) passes along a story about Mel Tormé. It seems like Mr.Tormé was eating a leisurely breakfast at a food court in Los Angeles, and a quartet appeared singing Christmas songs. They wound up performing “The Christmas Song” for co- author Tormé … and the singers had no idea who he was. It is a good story, better told in the link. (The link no longer works.) This is a repost, with pictures from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.
According to the inerrant Wikipedia, Mr. Tormé collaborated with Robert Wells, until they had a falling out. One afternoon, on the hottest day of July in 1945, Mr.Tormé went to visit Mr.Wells, and saw the first four lines of “The Christmas Song” (including “Chestnuts roasting on an open fire, Jack Frost nipping at your nose”). The lines were on a note pad, and the two agreed to beat the heat of summer by completing the song. Supposedly, Mr. Tormé did not like the song very much. After three divorces, he probably didn’t see many of the royalties.
Mel Tormé was the music director of the ill fated “Judy Garland Show” in the early sixties. He wrote a book about it… The Other Side of the Rainbow: With Judy Garland on the Dawn Patrol . The story is that Miss Garland would get blasted, call Mr.Tormé in the middle of the night, and pour out her troubles. (This review is much less sympathetic towards Mr. Tormé.) While the show did not last longer, there are some great youtube clips left over.
Combination Of Deodorant And Testosterone
PG is reading Razor Girl, by Carl Hiaasen. The unpronounceable one specializes is Florida crime stories. Criminals are mustache twirling dastardly. Damsels dwell in fallen angel distress. Lawmen are a citizen complaint away from being criminals. Mr. H, a newspaper dude, says he never makes up anything, but waters down the technicolor reality.
Which brings us to Pitrolux®. This is a combination of deodorant and testosterone. The “refreshing juniper scent” caused teenage girls to steal it out of daddy’s medicine cabinet, and grow beards. Is Pitrolux® a real product? If you google “combination of deodorant and testosterone,” you might find out. Do you know what TMI means?
ClinicalTrials.gov scores with A Study of Effect of Deodorant and Axillary Hair on Testosterone Absorption in Healthy Participants. “This study will evaluate the effect of deodorant and antiperspirant use and the presence of underarm hair on the absorption of testosterone. Each participant in this study will receive 6 single doses of 30 milligrams (mg) testosterone applied as a solution to each underarm. … Deodorant spray applied to unshaved axillae. At least 2 minutes wait time. Then, single 30 mg dose of testosterone applied topically to each axilla…”
The Journal of Sexual Medicine gets down and dirty with “Effect of Deodorant and Antiperspirant Use and Presence or Absence of Axillary Hair on Absorption of Testosterone 2% Solution Applied to Men’s Axillae.” … PG did not know that axillary hair is the stuff that grows under your arms. He never axed about it…. The spell check suggestion for axillary is Hillary.
Conclusions: “Absorption of testosterone 2% solution was unaffected by use of deodorant/antiperspirant or by the presence or absence of axillary hair. Testosterone solution was generally well tolerated…. Key Words: Antiperspirant, Bioequivalence, Deodorant, Pharmacokinetics, Testosterone Solution, Hypogonadism”
A reasonable person might ask, why would anyone want to study the effect of deodorant on absorption of testosterone? It seems as though this is one of the methods used by female-to-male transpeople. “In FTM testosterone therapy, testosterone (often called “T” for short) can be administered into the body in a number of ways. … Esterification of testosterone is done in order to improve the solubility of testosterone in oil, which in turn slows the release of the testosterone from the site where it enters the body.”
Does High Testosterone in Women Increase Body Odor? “Offensive body odor can cause embarrassment and self-consciousness in women. … There is no “normal” amount or smell for body odor … Although men generally have higher testosterone levels than women, women actually have more sweat glands than men.”
10 Best Deodorants and Antiperspirants for Men is an article at BEARDOHOLIC. Right Guard, longtime foe of macho B.O., did not make the top ten. None of the ten deodorants reviewed contains testosterone. Pictures today are from The Library of Congress. These men fought in the War Between the States. This was before the invention of modern deodorant.
Godwin’s Law








Godwin’s Law has become an internet staple. “As an online discussion continues, the probability of a reference or comparison to Hitler or Nazis approaches 1.” Mike Godwin created this rule around 1990, when Saddam Hussein was the official next Hitler.
GL filled a need, and has flourished. GL is also misused, as when people say GL has been “proved” or “violated.” Mr. Godwin does not “personally believe all rational discourse has ended when Nazis or the Holocaust are invoked.” GL hopefully sparks critical thinking, and enables people to see through the smoky rhetoric. Maybe, if you act appropriately, you can put out the fire that causes that smoke.
The Washington Post published the article cited above. Recently, a Post reporter found an article praising Donald Trump in The Crusader. This is a 12 page newspaper, published in Harrison, Arkansas. It calls itself “The official Newspaper of The Knights Party.”
Once the Post got wind of this, it morphed into KKK’s official newspaper supports Donald Trump for president. This chestnut got into the national political discussion, where it was accepted without question. The KKK endorses Donald Trump!!! Surely, he is the next Hitler. Orange hair has replaced the little mustache. The national pearl clutching grew so intense that the pearls fell off the string.
Mr. Godwin made a mistake. “It’s still true, of course, that the worst thing you can say about your opponents, in our culture, is that they’re like Hitler or the Nazis.” No, the worst thing you can say about someone today is that they are RACIST. The scarlet R is a damaging charge. Those accused are guilty until proven innocent. The fact that many say RACISM as a thoughtless reflex action does not diminish the power. Some would say that Mr. Godwin’s assertion that the Nazi label is the worst possible insult… that it is worse than saying RACIST … that this statement itself is RACIST.
Maybe this is an extension of Godwin’s Law. As any discussion of american life progresses, the likelihood of invoking the KKK, and the R word, increases. Many see Hitler comparisons as the end of rationality in a discussion. What do white sheet jokes say about the person making the charge?
While researching this post, I dug up an article, Racism In America Is Over. The feature was published December 30, 2008. A charismatic son-of-a-white-mother had just been elected POTUS. The salient quote is more true today than ever: “When decrying racism opens no door and teaches no skill, it becomes a schoolroom tattletale affair. It is unworthy of all of us: “He’s just a racist” intoned like “nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah!””
Twitter hosted a recent exchange. It refers to a comment made by the ex-wife of Steve Bannon, during a divorce. @carlreiner “I, a Jew, was willing to give Trump a chance til I heard his cheif of staff say he’d not allow his kids to go to a school if Jews attended.” @hausmuva “translation: I was willing to empower whiteness/white supremacy until I learned that I may not be considered white in the white imagination.” Maybe this twitteration can be included in a future edition of Reductio ad hitlerum : Une théorie du point Godwin.
Maybe it is time to calm down the name calling… be it Der Führer or Grand Dragon … and get down to the hard work of getting along with each other. Pictures today are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.






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Psych Recording
Display of a link in this forum does not indicate approval of content ~ Dontavious Chancy ~ Marquez Montgomery ~ 8 Steps Toward Building Indispensability (Instead of Disposability) Culture ~ 23 Hours of H.P. Lovecraft Stories: Hear Readings & Dramatizations of “The Call of Cthulhu,” “The Shadow Over Innsmouth,” & Other Weird Tales ~ Too Much Stigma, Not Enough Persuasion It’s bad enough that liberals toss around charges of racism with more abandon than we should, but it’s far worse if we start calling every sign of racial animus—big or small, accidental or deliberate—white supremacy. I can hardly imagine a better way of proving to the non-liberal community that we’re all a bunch of out-of-touch nutbars who are going to label everyone and everything we don’t like as racist.” ~ Lawyers: Executing Georgia inmate would be unconstitutional ~ Lucian Piane calls RuPaul the ‘N’ word in racist Twitter rant ~ @BlakeTheSequel @kat_blaque GIRL. I have gotten into it with soooo many people over RuPaul’s coonery w/regards to Lucien Piane. I got put in Facebook jail! ~ Language Matters If You’re Trying to Persuade a Trump Voter ~ Comedian Ricky Smith claims black Olive Garden waitress told him she ‘doesn’t like serving blacks’ ~ @Rickonia Just got asked to leave @olivegarden because we asked for a new server because our server said she doesn’t like serving blacks… ~ @kuznation @Kno I’ll I’m saying is as far as we know this guy is sitting at home making up a story everybody is a news reporter today looking for fame (((Morgana Rae))) ~ @morganarae @kuznation @Kno As far as we know, you’re sitting at home with a white hood over your head. ~ two daughters ~ larry sinclair ~ ~ @chescaleigh I’m not offended by ppl calling me Franny, but i think it’s telling that randoms online use in an attempt to speak down to me @JayShabazz ~ stalingrad ~ switched at birth ~ On Colin Kaepernick, Nate Parker, and allegiance to Black women. ~ Baltimore police release video of fatal stabbing on Pulaski Highway ~ Paper Forced to Close Comments On Mall Of America’s First Black Santa Thanks to Racism ~ ‘Santa is WHITE. BOYCOTT Mall of America’: Online racists are having a meltdown over mall’s black Santa ~ Laquisha Reynolds ~ Police: Man shot, killed by woman in northwest Atlanta ~ did the demonization of @realDonaldTrump backfire? spell check suggestions: demonetization, demobilization, demoralization, democratization ~ Like reading recommendations? Subscribe to the Riot Rundown, and we’ll send you curated lists of what to read on Book Riot. ~ in my day, i liked marijuana, beer, and LSD Most of that is over now These days i might smoke a bit every six months or so, and get so wasted i don’t know what to do i don’t regret it, but i don’t miss it much either ~ Congratulations. You completed a Trump rant without using the word racist. The obsession with Mr. Trump’s racial attitudes has distracted from concern about more damaging issues. ~ @WernerTwertzog I have a cat: From time to time, I change his name. He does not care. He know that identity Is a human construct And is content Just being. ~ With the electoral college system, the only vote that counts is the state electoral votes. Your individual vote means almost nothing. If you live in Georgia, you voted for Donald Trump. ~ The comment about kids going to school with jews is hearsay from Mr. Bannon’s ex- wife. He denies saying that. As to the second comment… there is nothing good to be said about ~ Could Mr. Trump be secretly gay? What is he trying to cover up with the “grab’m by the pussy” talk, and the conspicuous womanizing? What did Roy Cohn teach him? DJT may be a closet case, which is the most dangerous kind of homophobe. Having Roy Cohn as a mentor is a, pardon the pun, red flag. ~ Brookhaven and the old fourth ward are very, very different. This area has been mostly white, with a handful of non whites, since Camp Gordon was built during World War One. Before that it was mostly woods. The street I am on was built in 1954. It is a bunch of 900 sq ft houses, that sold for roughly the same amount as one year of taxes on these monstrosities. The neighborhood never was block busted. What is happening here is not gentrification. The big new houses drive up the property values, which is only a benefit if you sell out. This increase in property values drives up taxes, which is a major problem now. The inconvenience of construction is temporary. Hopefully, we will get good neighbors when this is over. ~ Is Hillary a cuckette? ~ There is some method involving fasting, drinking olive oil, and something else. It will cause the body to eliminate them. I don’t remember the details, but google might have information. ~ Washington Post started story that the KKK endorsed DJT based on one newspaper of one chapter why do people believe them? ~ We need a word that rhymes with glissen ~ I recently went to @spkheller, with my twitter account @chamblee54. I got the following message: You are blocked from following @spkheller and viewing @spkheller’s Tweets. I have never sent you a message on twitter. And I am blocked. This does not make any sense. I enjoy Tell The Bartender. I was going to send you a compliment on your last episode. And you slap me in the face. I don’t know what the problem is. If you have the time, I would be curious what the problem is. Are you using one of those services, that block everyone on a list? This really sucks. Luther Mckinnon aka Chamblee54 ~ tellthebartenderpodcast@gmail.com ~ PSYCH RECORDING ~ You are blocked from following @BGDblog and viewing @BGDblog’s Tweets ~ #OddThingsToBeProudAbout blocked by @BDGblog without having visited the page ~ @AnnCoulter Ann Coulter Retweeted Mickey Kaus Sounds like the big sell-out is coming. Oh well. The voters did what we could. If Trump sells out, it’s not our fault. ~ @facebookrehab ~ Pictures today are from The Library of Congress. ~ selah





































































































































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