Don't forget, blatant Irish jingoism and anti-protestant rhetoric but banned one of the sites most controversial and divisive figures because he was from a different sect of the religion that he grew up with. As ER would say; Do you wan to see my penis.
I actually read a very good essay on the bus this morning (here's where my prediction of it all ending with me boring people comes to play), of which I'll paste only the relevant section. (BTW this will offend Toby, as he is a member of several oppressed groups) (ST will give it a "LOL - didn't read") WHO ARE THE âOPPRESSEDâ? In this regime of group egalitarianism, it becomes particularly important to take oneâs place in the ranks of the oppressed rather than the oppressors. Who, then, are the oppressed? It is difficult to determine, since new groups of oppressed are being discovered all the time. One almost longs for the good old days of classic Marxism, when there was only one âoppressed classââthe proletariatâand one or at most a very few classes of oppressors: the capitalists or bourgeois, plus sometimes the âfeudal landlordsâ or perhaps the petit bourgeoisie. But now, as the ranks of the oppressed and therefore the groups specially privileged by society and the State keep multiplying, and the ranks of the oppressors keep dwindling, the problem of income and wealth egalitarianism reappears and is redoubled. For more and greater varieties of groups are continually being added to the parasitic burden weighing upon an ever-dwindling supply of oppressors. And since it is obviously worth everyoneâs while to leave the ranks of the oppressors and move over to the oppressed, pressure groups will increasingly succeed in doing soâso long as this dysfunctional ideology continues to flourish. Specifically, achieving the label of Officially Oppressed entitles one to share in an endless flow of benefitsâin money, status, and prestigeâfrom the hapless oppressors, who are made to feel guilty forevermore, even as they are forced to sustain and expand the endless flow. It is not surprising that attaining oppressed status takes a great deal of pressure and organization. As Joseph Sobran wittily puts it: âit takes a lot of clout to be a victim.â Eventually, if trends continue the result must be the twin death of parasite and host alike, and an end to any flourishing economy or civilization. There are virtually an infinite number of groups or âclassesâ in society: the class of people named Smith, the class of men over six feet tall, the class of bald people, and so on. Which of these groups may find themselves among the âoppressedâ? Who knows? It is easy to invent a new oppressed group. I might come up with a study, for example, demonstrating that the class of people named âDoeâ have an average income, wealth, or status lower than that of other names. I could then coin a hypothesis that people named Doe have been discriminated against because their names âJohn Doeâ and âJane Doeâ have been âstereotypedâ as associated with faceless anonymity, and presto, we have one more group who is able to leave the burdened ranks of the oppressors and join the happy ranks of the oppressed. A political theorist friend of mine thought he could coin a satiric Oppressed Group: Short People, Who Suffer From Heightism. I informed him that he was seriously anticipated two decades ago, again demonstrating the impossibility of parodying the current ideology. I noted in an article almost twenty years ago, written shortly after this essay, that Professor Saul D. Feldman, a sociologist at Case-Western Reserve, and himself a distinguished short, had at last brought science to bear on the age-old oppression of the shorts by the talls. Feldman reported that out of recent University of Pittsburgh graduating seniors, those 6 feet 2 inches and taller received an average starting salary 12.4 percent higher than graduates under 6 feet, and that a marketing professor at Eastern Michigan University had quizzed 140 business recruiters about their preferences between two hypothetical, equally qualified applicants for the job of salesman. One of the hypothetical salesmen was to be 6 feet 1 inch, the other 5 feet 5 inches. The recruiters answered as follows: 27 percent expressed the politically correct no preference; 1 percent would hire the short man; and no less than 72 percent would hire the tallie. In addition to this clear-cut oppression of talls over shorts, Feldman pointed out that women notoriously prefer tall over short men. He might have pointed out, too, that Alan Ladd could only play the romantic lead in movies produced by bigoted Hollywood moguls by standing on a hidden box, and that even the great character actor Sydney Greenstreet was invariably shot upward from a low-placed camera to make him appear much taller than he was. (The Hollywood studio heads were generally short themselves, but were betraying their short comrades by pandering to the pro-tall culture.) Feldman also perceptively pointed to the antishort prejudice that pervades our language: in such phrases as people being âshort-sighted, shortchanged, short-circuited, and short in cash.â He added that among the two major party candidates for president, the taller is almost invariably elected.8 I went on in my article to call for a short liberation movement to end short oppression, and asked: where are the short corporation leaders, the short bankers, the short senators and presidents?9,10 I asked for short pride, short institutes, short history courses, short quotas everywhere, and for shorts to stop internalizing the age-old propaganda of our tall culture that shorts are genetically or culturally inferior. (Look at Napoleon!) Short people, arise! You have nothing to lose but your elevator shoes. I ended by assuring the tallies that we were not antitall, and that we welcome progressive, guilt-ridden talls as pro-short sympathizers and auxiliaries in our movement. If my own consciousness had been sufficiently raised at the time, I would have, of course, added a demand that the talls compensate the shorts for umpteen thousand years of tall tyranny. Rothbard, Murray N. (2010-08-11). Egalitarianism as a Revolt against Nature (Kindle Locations 3863-3870).
Today's Bono Award goes to ST. Toby could have won one too but he's already earned the Bono Lifetime Achievement Award.
How to Copy and Paste Selecting What You Want to CopyUsing Keyboard ShortcutsRight-ClickingUsing Menu OptionsDragging and DroppingCopying With the Office ClipboardCopying on Mobile Devices Edited by Alison King, Brigitta M., Battlecruser9292, Versageek and 58 others The Copy and Paste functions are some of the most important fundamentals to master for manipulating objects on a computer. Once these skills become second nature, tasks like revising documents, managing files, and sharing images will become much less of a hassle. This guide will show you all of the ways you can copy and paste files and text, regardless of your operating system or skill level. Method 1 of 7: Selecting What You Want to Copy 1Highlight text. Text is one of the most common objects that gets copied, and is essential for document editing and other word processing tasks. You can click and drag to select specific sections of text, or press ^ Ctrl+A (PC) or ⌘ Cmd+A (OS X) to select all of the text on a document or page. 2Select files on your computer. If you want to copy a file on your computer to move around, simply click on it to select it. You can click and drag a selection box around multiple files to select all of them. Hold the ^ Ctrl (⌘ Cmd) key and click individual files to select multiple files that aren't located next to each other. To select a range of files, click the first one, then hold ⇧ Shift and click the last one. All of the files in between will be selected. 3Right-click images on websites. If you are trying to copy an image from a website, you don't need to select it. Instead, right-click it to start the copy process. See the Right-Click section for more details. Method 2 of 7: Using Keyboard Shortcuts 1Press the “Copy” keyboard shortcut. This will copy everything that you have selected. The original file(s) or text will stay in the original location. You can only copy one selection at a time; if you copy something else before pasting, it will overwrite the first copy. The “Copy” shortcut for each operating system is: Windows and Linux: ^ Ctrl+C Mac OS X: ⌘ Command+C If you don’t want to leave a copy in the original location, use the Cut command instead. This will remove the original file or text when you paste it in a new location. The keyboard shortcuts are: Windows and Linux: ^ Ctrl+X Mac OS X: ⌘ Command+X You cannot cut from locations that you are not allowed to change the content, such as websites or CDs. 2Navigate to where you want to paste. If you are pasting text, place the cursor where you want to the text to be pasted. If you are pasting files, open the location of where you want to paste. Make sure that the window you are pasting into has focus. 3Press the “Paste” keyboard shortcut. This will paste everything you had previously copied into the location you have active. You can Paste the copied material multiple times. The “Paste” shortcut for each operating system is: Windows and Linux: ^ Ctrl+V Mac OS X: ⌘ Command+V Method 3 of 7: Right-Clicking 1Right-click on something you have selected. If you are using a one-button mouse with Mac OS X, press ^ Control and click to open the right-click menu. If you have multiple files selected, right-click on any of them. If you have a large amount of text selected, right-click on any portion of the highlighted text. Copy and Paste Step 3 Version 2.jpg 2Select Copy from the menu. This will copy whatever you have selected, while leaving the original copy in the original location. If copying an image from a website, select “Copy Image” from the menu. If you don’t want to leave a copy in the original location, select Cut instead. This will remove the original file or text when you paste it in a new location. You cannot cut from locations that you are not allowed to change the content, such as websites or CDs. Copy and Paste Step 4 Version 2.jpg 3Right-click where you want to paste. If you are pasting text, place the cursor where you want to the text to be pasted. If you are pasting files, open the location of where you want to paste. Copy and Paste Step 5 Version 2.jpg
I have often wondered how it is that the darkies are hopeless at the Javelin. I mean all that throwing of spears.