mmmbrainsy
MmmBrainsy
mmmbrainsy

That doesn’t happen already? I mean, without the penalty on the defensive player, as evidenced by the game last night. Multiple instances of targeting going unpenalized and the best offensive player not remembering the end of the game?

To say that OBJ is a bad person because he lost his cool once on a football field when playing against a player that makes it his business to get away with unnecessary roughness is absurd. I’ll give you that he shouldn’t have tried to level Norman. The rest is complete garbage.

There’s a huge line between intimidating someone and trying to concuss them. Those two aren’t even worlds apart, they’re entire dimensions apart.

Have you ever played football? Honestly asking because you seem to think wideouts play patty cake with DBs.

I guess your username is apt, here. Dunham used him as a prop in a story, while casting aspersions about how he regards the world and the people around him. Of course you can still tell stories about real people, of course you can’t censor a person’s self-deprecation, but none of that means that you are immune to the

Yes, he can, but not without consequence. People who often crow about the Fist Amendment think that it also protects them from anything that happens as a result of exercising free speech, such as boycotts, or general criticism.

Being nice to people involves anonymously ridiculing along racist lines? Damn, with friends like you, who needs enemies?

Hair is a remarkably important icon for black culture in America. When Don Imus talked about “nappy-headed hoes”, part of the reason that was so offensive was that hair has been a cultural touchstone for the black community, and using it as a cudgel to bludgeon black people is abhorrent when you look at the context.

I’m so glad that a white Northeasterner living in one of the most racist places in the country decided he needed to weigh in on what impacts people of color. Truly, his is a viewpoint that was sorely needed and missing from this dialogue.

I drove through Madison once and picked up a 6-pack of their lager. It was pretty damn good. Not life changing, but it was than Schlotz or whatever the fuck they macro brew in Milwaukee.

I love this response.

Here’s my position: this is America. Kaepernick can say whatever the fuck he wants, however he wants to say it, especially if it’s surrounding a very relevant issue. All these other shitbags looking down their nose at him for doing the most American thing ever, exercising his right to speak truth to power, are, in

I’m genuinely curious, do you even know what you’re talking about?

It’s a good thing the drivers themselves don’t engineer and build the cars, then. They leave that to...y’know...scientists.

You know as well as I do that that refrain (“if you don’t like it...”) never left the public discourse around politics. We’ve entered a Nixonian wet dream wherein anything any American does while invoking Uncle Sam becomes the right and most perfect thing to do. We know no sense of shame for our failures and mistakes.

I love the track pants. Perfect form, in 1998.

You forgot about Magnetbox.

That guy is Waluigi. I, however, am a pedant that plays video games.

Man, it must really be comforting to be that simple.