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Thomas R
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I found the younger stuff more interesting too. I think that's a pretty common impression.

I have! I missed it at first, but then decided to catch up through On Demand. I think I was caught up last week even. I've liked it.

Today is the final episode of Genius. More below.

That dog had rabies. It was both going to die anyway, rabies is invariably fatal (okay there's a procedure involving putting someone in like a coma that works on occasion, but it didn't exist then and I doubt they would go through that effort for a dog when its chance of success I think is under 50%.), and potentially

Even then he's already back to under 50% at Rasmussen anyway.

"Stop stop he's already dead"

So you want to declare an entire region of the country, one a high percent of America's black population is in, bad or lacking in charm?

Nikki Haley is a Republican and she took down Confederate flags.

"It still leaves the question of what’s so charming about a plantation in the first place"

Tim Kaine. He had a debate appearance that was said to be unlike him, and pretty annoying according to many not just conservative old me, then went back to relative obscurity I guess.

At the time winning California wasn't unusual for a Republican. Reagan had been their Governor and California even went for Ford.

Maybe it's a party where it has one or two famous people and everyone else is kind of blah? Like the LePens have some kind of following, but maybe people are like "who?" when it comes to others they have.

It was good for a Republican of the last 25 years, but as mentioned not really a landslide in the electoral college. Obama received more electoral votes last election. Bush in 2004 received about 20 less than Trump in 2016. Trump won Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and a district in Maine while Bush in 2004 didn't.

Also cute the poll he cites has

I occasionally check his Twitter out of curiosity and saw that. I didn't actually know enough about Rasmussen to judge, but it sounded pretty misleading.

Somehow Kids who Kill, unfortunately, briefly made me think "when babies attack." But actually it looks like real and sad stories. (I remember that redheaded one.)

Sometimes something is mainstream for a reason. Rejecting the idea that the Earth is hollow and inside it are powerful telepathic beings is mainstream. It is also the most sensible conclusion. Or for an example with current conspiracies HIV causing AIDS is mainstream because the medical and scientific evidence

As I first was on science fiction forums I've seen a variety of libertarians. Science fiction has its own libertarian award after all.

He probably has some kind of talent, but so?

I've said something like this too. He really isn't like Milo, who had a much smaller audience and was able to "play the victim" due to Berkeley. Plus he made it clear he didn't care for the interview, which sounded like a good sign though I've not seen it to judge.