TheReturnofFavreandInches
Favre & Inches
TheReturnofFavreandInches

Just so we're clear what you're arguing: you don't know fuck-all about fascism or governmental medical policy. Seriously, do some basic fucking research on what actually constitutes fascism before you open your mouth and say something stupid. "Medical fascism" isn't a term and it doesn't mean anything, it's a nonsense

I think now that people see the material effects of this belief system, folks aren't viewing it as some sort of kooky but benign worldview anymore. This isn't some sort of "I believe if I rub crystals against my genitals during the first equinox I will become more fertile" new-age bullshit where you laugh at your

And the explanation for that rise in autism, the simplest one that is the standing embodiment of Occam's Razor, is that doctors simply became better at diagnosing it. No mass conspiracy, no shadowy suppression of the truth, just a better understanding of autism, incorporating more syndromes in the autism spectrum, and

This is humorous, but in all seriousness, states need to follow the example of Mississippi and West Virginia (the only time in history this will be uttered, ever) and not allow any exemptions on vaccinations for your child to be admitted into schools. Not religious, not personal, not "I follow the doctrine of Mrs. Jay

Regional Sports Networks are your main culprit here. It's been discussed on this site before, but RSN's constantly need content to fill airtime and more games do that beautifully; besides the game itself, you've got the pre and postgame shows as well. Moreover, since teams all have their own cable deals, it's not easy

"Wow, I hadn't considered that making shots might be better than missing them"

You conveniently left out drafting Rajon Rondo at #21, who was a cornerstone to making the Big 3 click and still got them a first-rounder in return. In any case, I'm not saying Ainge is some sort of managerial paragon, but that he's one of many, many examples cited by folks here and elsewhere on these threads of teams

how about judging him based on his moves, that "anyone could've made":

Hinkie, and his strategy, embody the absolute worst of the empiricist/analytics movement in sports and society in general. He's a snake oil salesman, repackaging an old, tired strategy of intentionally losing a bunch of games while paring payroll down to the bone as some sort of revolutionary new thought by gathering

Yes, they are. By pretty much every metric, in fact. And their rebuilding effort isn't reliant on some raw big men with leg injuries to get healthy and good, to luck their way into a superstar in the draft, or to pray that some big-time free agent will sign with them. They're doing a smart rebuilding effort by giving

I like how you set out arguing that his moves are uniquely genius, and then go on to defend the Embiid pick with "There's no GM in the league..." which validates Burneko's central argument. The thesis is pretty simple; perhaps if you didn't resort to a knee-jerk reaction of "but but...second rounders!" you could've

You didn't even bother to read the article, did you? Because if you did, you'd realize that wasn't even the point.

You're wrong, Albert. Sam Hinkie is a goddamn genius. Only he has been able to amass a below 20% win percentage and yet still garner fawning media coverage and legions of braying, defensive commenters every time his master plan is even remotely questioned. Only he has been able to monkeyfart his way to multiple

That's my point. Franken had to spend the entire campaign convincing Minnesotans that he wasn't going to be a political wiseass, but an actual politician who would do things for the state and could handle the sort of nuts-and-bolts tasks that are expected (constituency services, directing federal funds to the state,

For all the people that keep pointing to Franken as an example of why Stewart could succeed, please do your homework and realize the comparison is not the same:

The Mavs, Warriors, Rays, and Dodgers all come to mind of new owners coming in and turning things around. The Arizona Cardinals and Blackhawks are examples of an old asshole owner dying and being replaced by a more competent son. Hell, even the Rams won a title with Georgia Frontiere as an owner.

This is extremely depressing, and unfortunately seems to be a recurring pattern of behavior in so many areas of society. Jerry Sandusky, for example, ran a children's charity, said all the right things about taking care of underprivileged youth, and turned out to be a child molester. Even on a micro level, it's not

because you've never purchased a suit before in your life? Or don't own any pants, shoes, and dress shirts that weren't found at the bargain bin at Wal-Mart?

Unless you don a burlap sack every day, you already make your clothing decisions based on that very criterion, if even on a subconscious level, on a daily basis.

Has there ever been a point when Western dress wear was tailored to its local climes? The Founding Fathers all wore heavy wool suits and wigs when it was humid as hell during the summer, same as the shit royalty wore in ye olde times. Formal dress wear isn't and was never intended to be climate functional,