I have finesse! I have finesse coming out of my bottom!

Anya ,'Showtime'


Natter 37: Oddly Enough, We've Had This Conversation Before.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Gudanov - Jul 25, 2005 7:33:14 am PDT #2622 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

Not really, because people taste really, really good.

Oh right, I forgot who I was talking to.


§ ita § - Jul 25, 2005 7:35:39 am PDT #2623 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I think they should name the local resident so we can point and scoff at them:

Oscar-winning actress Julia Roberts shocked residents of Santa Monica, California when she was spotted driving through the coastal town with out of date license plates. The Erin Brockovich star, who owns a home in nearby Venice, ran various errands around Santa Monica yesterday, without her husband Danny Moder or their baby twins Hazel and Phinnaeus by her side. And while she could boast that she was doing her part for the environment by carrying out her chores in an eco-friendly silver Toyota Prius, onlookers couldn't help but notice that her plates clearly displayed an April 2005 expiry date. A local resident scoffs, "It's ridiculous! While I understand it's quite normal to be a few days late, three months is just crazy. If an everyday person with a 9-5 can remember to get it done within a timely fashion, a movie star with a staff to help remind her certainly should be able to." According to California law, a driver whose registration is expired by more than a month but less than a year is liable to pay an extra 60 per cent on top of the standard registration fee.

Not least of all because I had my car paid up on time, but the tags didn't go on for about three months because I kept getting distracted. And, hey! More money for the government, from someone who has bundles.

Mostly, though, who the fuck cares enough to stare at anyone's tags, much less talk to a reporter about it unless it's their job?


-t - Jul 25, 2005 7:38:40 am PDT #2624 of 10002
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I just noticed yesterday that my tags expired May 05. Now I feel all trendy.


Kathy A - Jul 25, 2005 7:42:09 am PDT #2625 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

It looks like the red blob has eaten Oak Park.

I hope my cat was tasty.

Happy birthday, vw!!


bon bon - Jul 25, 2005 7:43:10 am PDT #2626 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

You get the idea that because slavery's in the Constitution, they think it should never have been outlawed. They are conservatives' conservatives, opposed to anything that smacks of change.

Really? You think originalists are secret slavery supporters? Come on. Since it was outlawed by constitutional amendment, I don't think they have a problem with it, but I'll ask. No, wait. No, I don't think I need to do that.

I don't like secret societies, and The Federalist Society comes pretty damn close. I don't mind organizations that get together to discuss topics, but the FS appears to exist to crush opposition. And it's become an odd-boys' network. Membership in it seems to be de rigeur for an appointment.

How are they secret? How do they exist to crush opposition? It's a law school group! They get speakers, hold parties for conservative judges and lawyers. And of course membership is de rigeur for appointment from a conservative to a legal post-- it's the pre-eminent conservative lawyer's society! It's a Republican bona fide!

Yes, at law school the conservative students migrated to the FS, but the moderate ones then migrated away.

I just don't know where the evidence for this is.

The upshot is, of course Roberts has an association with the group. It's not Skull & Bones, for god's sake, it's the conservative lawyer's group, and he's a conservative lawyer. Of course they have connections to every other conservative legal group (IHS, Cato, the Republican party), just as the ACLU would have connections to various liberal groups. Some people are more conservative than others, some are libertarians and some are nuts. But that doesn't make them all nuts, it's just a freaking networking opportunity.


Sparky1 - Jul 25, 2005 7:48:10 am PDT #2627 of 10002
Librarian Warlord

If he was in the Federalist Society in Law School, then looking back at what that group did while he was there might be interesting.

When I was in law school, (10 years ago) our Federalist Society members devoted themselves to making sure their paper/newsletter always had a cartoon which somehow featured topless women.


Volans - Jul 25, 2005 7:51:12 am PDT #2628 of 10002
move out and draw fire

Yes, at law school the conservative students migrated to the FS, but the moderate ones then migrated away.

I just don't know where the evidence for this is.

OK, at *my* law school.


Gudanov - Jul 25, 2005 7:56:02 am PDT #2629 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

I just noticed yesterday that my tags expired May 05. Now I feel all trendy.

So procrastination is trendy now? That's awesome, now I can be trendy by putting off becoming more trendy.


-t - Jul 25, 2005 7:58:21 am PDT #2630 of 10002
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Is it still procrastinating if I didn't realize I was supposed to do something, or only if I knowingly put it off?

I think I'm allergic to work. I was fine all weekend. I come in to the office today and my sinuses are killing me. QED


sarameg - Jul 25, 2005 8:00:53 am PDT #2631 of 10002

I drove around with NC plates for a whole 4 months even though I was supposed to get MD plates within 60 days or something. I'm sure my neighbors were terribly scandalized. Even worse, my DL was from NM! I was overly stated!