jakuiper01
BrewCrew82
jakuiper01

Guess we know what Raysism is up to these days...

Speaking as a native Wisconsinite and a pedant, neither Kraft or Velveeta are actually “cheese”, they’re “pasteurized processed cheese food”.

funnier because velveeta is in fact wrapped (lined) in a silver wrapper thing.

This is the worst take. And I’m pretty sure those first few were Eastern European fascists in the 1930's.

This list couldn’t be more wrong.

They could have at least made the sweater red and white.

Why on earth would you go Polish over Italian? Italian has so much more going on. Mmmm give me one of them bad boys on a hoggie roll with some peppers and onions.

Good luck trying to get people to listen to common sense.

While it still doesn’t justify hitting them, women that spit on and/or hit men because they know any non-piece of shit WON’T hit them are total fucking assholes...

Muslim ban? I didn’t realize Indonesia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Egypt, and Nigeria were on the list. Those countries account for over 50% of the World Muslim population. The proposed ban included Syria, Libya, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Iran. Those countries account for less than 10% of the World Muslim

This remark appears in desperate need of some context:

I think Mushnik is doing what a lot of people do - conflating the facts with what he thinks happened. In other words, he’s remembering things that didn’t happen. Eyewitnesses do it all the time with real time events, and its easy to get caught up in it.

If you lived and/or worked in New York City at that time, I give you a pass on anything you said on 9/11, or for a few days immediately after. You just had two fucking buildings dropped on you. You get a pass because tensions were high, you didn’t know what was coming next, and it was a terrifying place to be. I get

Looks like nothing. Much worse was said on 9/12, and “questioning the loyalties of American citizens” is a pretty negative way of looking at those comments. They’re right. Our freedom and relatively open immigration policies (and not everyone in the country legally is a citizen, obviously) inevitably cause the country

These guys are tools sure, but I’m not sure how I feel about this. Context is important. It’s easy to sit here 16 years later and judge what they said, but we are looking at it with the benefit of hindsight. They, like everyone, we’re scared, confused, and worried. Nationalism was at an all time high. I’m sure most

I would counter that when you consider that “Love it or leave it!” was the prevailing sentiment of a large chunk of the country shortly after the attacks and during the Iraq War, this seems far less insane.

Wow so this was nothing huh?

It’s not that insane. This is the kind of nationalistic fervor many of us were swept up in following the attacks. It’s wrongheaded but that’s where a lot of our heads were at the time.

Francesa: If it came down to sacrificing the United States or Israel, you’d sacrifice the United States?

“Upon reflection,” you say?