Skipjack
Skipjack
Skipjack

I'm sure if there's a viable sexual-harassment case, Gloria Allred will be along shortly.

The great thing about these gifs is that they also work as reaction shots to the egregious errors in the article itself, not just the extinction of the black rhino.

Join the conga-line of outrage. Just don't expect to see a response, a correction, or an acknowledgement.

It sure doesn't look like much fun having to dress like a Republican congresswoman.

Great observation.

Well that caps off a clean sweep: not a single observation in the article makes a bit of sense now.

Great point. The site "rhino-economics.com" has some excellent, detailed information on the Asian market(s) for rhino horn, which drives all this nonsense killing.

"So much of this is due to shitty poaching by Westerners" is a statement wholly unsupported by critical/economic analyses of the poaching market.

"We buried mammy in the family cemetery" has an insider's touch.

"We'll end up here again..."

They solved one isolated problem whilst creating a much bigger one, it seems to me.

I would guess NYT coverage of sports tracks fairly closely with the size of the domestic markets for those sports.

"I can pretty much guarantee you that if cheerleading started out as an activity done by men, it would've been recognized as a sport years ago."

This strategy is awesome, and seems to have caught on with a large number of commentators recently.

To the extent that it had me on the floor laughing, it's possible something may have gone over my head.

Next time you're in Tokyo, be sure to explain to Japanese people they're "East Asians" and that you're ready to help them resist exotic narratives.

Cho came from Dodai's original piece- havent seen any downthread cites to improve things. OK re the other distinctions.

Good answer - appreciate it.

"Sweetheart"? Ease up on the sexual harassment, eh?

The tens of thousands of families in Asia who had their teenaged daughters taken away to Imperial Japanese rape camps might differ w/you on the "colonial power" question.