The *best* kind of work life. I prefer my excitement to not jeopardize my ability to make rent.
The *best* kind of work life. I prefer my excitement to not jeopardize my ability to make rent.
If you're in Atlanta, you don't get to homer the Warriors too. If you took that hit, it was suffering you signed up for.
Ok, we *want* details.
Wait, this about the interoffice thing or actually sh*tting where you eat?
Do you know this guy? I'm just trying to figure out what kind of asshat thinks "NWA shirt at a police convention"-level provocation is a good idea *at his job*.
He looks like Dos Equis recast "The Most Interesting Man In The World".
Just ask a Golden State fan…
FFS, he's not just testing you, he's straight-up asking for someone to attack him. And in your office? Like, he's not some rando who wandered into a public space where you work, but an actual coworker? Pray to God you never have to deal with this twit in person. My condolences.
Nay. All the nay.
Where are you located? Doing that outside MA is not a good look for anyone.
"Good for them though for being sensitive to the history of it all and potential backlash."
And this is beyond ironic to me, because the entire history of prosperity in the U.S. has been about people moving to where the opportunity was.
Except his promotion of the "free exchange of ideas" only helped to advance the ideological vacuum that Milo is/was. The fact that Milo's takedown came not from the left or over his neofascism, but instead from disgruntled paleoconservatives dredging up years-old pedophilia comments tells me that Maher's brand of…
Yeah, but when you're lifting single elements to put on a shirt, it pays to skip the ones with racist associations.
At least during the Cold War, there genuinely was a world power looking to undermine the U.S. however it could. How anyone can look at the rag-tag, ever-shifting group of radical Islamists that oppose the U.S. now and consider them a remotely comparable threat boggles me.
More the show, just that it has had far more exposure than the comic. The scene and the snippet referenced on the shirt are essentially the same in both the comic and the show.
Do you think this rhyme being used by Negan in the comic was intended to call back to the racist version of the rhyme? I think it was mostly intended to juxtapose a monster deciding who to kill with a kid's game - in context, the unintended subtext of making Negan racist is just a "sure, why not."
So, is it any good? I could see this being either really valuable or really…not.
I don't think the intent was racist at all, but combining that rhyme with an image of bloody violence is pretty tasteless. Sticking by it wouldn't necessarily make them racist, but it would make them a**holes, so I'm encouraged that they withdrew it when it was pointed out.
Thanks for re-posting, I don't think I could dredge up the original before my browser committed seppuku.