And almost sixty-five percent of that was actual compliment. Is that a personal best?

Xander ,'End of Days'


Natter 66: Get Your Kicks.  

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


§ ita § - May 21, 2010 3:46:38 am PDT #815 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Looks from Wikipedia that code blue and red are about the only universal hospital codes, and few seem to have a code for lockdown. UCLA certainly didn't.


flea - May 21, 2010 3:49:11 am PDT #816 of 30001
information libertarian

Lovely headline on the Olympic mascots: Really, London? Twitter Reacts in Horror to 2012 Olympic Mascots [link]

We are not alone!


Tom Scola - May 21, 2010 3:50:49 am PDT #817 of 30001
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

"The blue guy put his assless chaps on backwards"

Hah!


msbelle - May 21, 2010 4:16:32 am PDT #818 of 30001
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

That is hilarious. they are freaky.

FRIDAY!!!


sarameg - May 21, 2010 4:16:34 am PDT #819 of 30001

Grrr. I'm thinking that if you are out for a class 3 days, you don't telecommute the remaining 2. I'm at the end of my rope here.


Jesse - May 21, 2010 4:20:18 am PDT #820 of 30001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Was there anything you had that you never thought you'd eat, but loved it?

I did love the marrow, which I was having for the first time. I was less crazy about the sweetbreads, which I was also having for the first time. Other than that, everything was pretty normal, if a wide range. Of the 10 courses, I think 5 were seafood? So that's probably not a good choice for you. There was farfalle with a wild boar ragu that was to die for. The "big" course was lamb three ways, of which I was really only crazy about the regular slice of meat. But I was also fairly full by then! I definitely want to go back and sit at the bar for the burger.


msbelle - May 21, 2010 4:20:21 am PDT #821 of 30001
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

I forgot to mention a couple of things in the hurly burly crazy new schedule of my life:

1) mac DID get his iPod back (I emailed the teachers and they talked to the boys).

2) my new fridge was delivered yesterday and fits great in the space.

3) I have exciting food use to report, but that will have to wait for a minute.


brenda m - May 21, 2010 4:25:52 am PDT #822 of 30001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

On Rand Paul, I like what Amanda Marcotte has to say. [link]

I’m sure Matt thinks he’s being pretty hard on Rand Paul by invoking the term “white supremacy” in his post, but he makes the same mistake that Dave Weigel does in rushing to reassure people that Rand Paul isn’t a racist so much as a hard core ideologue, and that surely his support of segregation is offered more in sorrow than in glee. This view ignores some pretty damning evidence about Paul’s history and associations, but it also ignores the fact that “principled” libertarians who woefully say that they unfortunately have to promote racist policies against their own moral compass will abandon that principled libertarianism when it breaks in favor of reproductive rights. “Principled” libertarianism only seems up to making those “hard” choices if oppressed people have to suffer the consequences. Which is why I object to this line of thinking:

The point to make about Paul, however, is that what he suffers from here is an excess of honesty and ideological rigor not an unusual degree of racism.

The abortion question alone makes it clear that Paul doesn’t have an excess of ideological rigor, or even a bounty of it.

Adam Serwer is also compelling on this subject: [link]

Paul would never face the actual "hard part" of his vision of freedom, because it would never interfere with his own life, liberty, or pursuit of happiness. Rand Paul would not have been turned away from a lunch counter, be refused a home, a job, or denied a loan, or told to sit in the black car of a train because of his skin color, or because of the skin color of his spouse. Paul thinks there is something "hard" about defending the kind of discrimination he would have never, ever faced. Paul's free-market fundamentalism is being expressed after decades of social transformation that the Civil Rights Act helped create, and so the hell of segregation is but a mere abstraction, difficult to remember and easy to dismiss as belonging only to its time. It's much easier now to say that "the market would handle it." But it didn't, and it wouldn't.

In short, I think that yes, he is a sexist, racist tool and his "principled beliefs" don't hold up past the most surface level of examination.


Nora Deirdre - May 21, 2010 4:33:13 am PDT #823 of 30001
I’m responsible for my own happiness? I can’t even be responsible for my own breakfast! (Bojack Horseman)

Mmmm, Craigie! I swear tasting menus completely changed the way I think about food.

Oddly enough, I've never been to Craigie though. Next time I'm in town, maybe. How much is the tasting menu, Jesse?


flea - May 21, 2010 4:40:02 am PDT #824 of 30001
information libertarian

I read RuPaul instead of Rand Paul at the start of brenda's post. Now just picture that for a second. Made me grin.