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Published Letters: 79
Editor's Choice: 5

Monday, September 28, 2009 10:50 PM
Original article: Has "Mad Men" gone mad?

@Captain Wentworth

Interesting comments, most shows do portray people as more open and confrontational than they are in real life. It helps move the story along. As for the smoking and drinking, the show is not real-time, and I assume that there are moments when the characters are just sitting around doing their work, no smoke or drink in hand (or maybe using the bathroom, even). Then again, Don's driving down the road with glass in hand seems too much even for the 60's. You think the writers are 'Trailer Park Boys' fans?

Friday, October 2, 2009 09:23 PM
Original article: Comcast's old media mistake

Don't tell anyone...

I did what some people here recommend: I ditched cable, hooked my laptop up to my tv (it had a cracked screen anyway), got a wireless keyboard and mouse, and never looked back. Instead of cable, I pay for the fastest internet tier (still way cheaper), and Netflix, which has a decent collection of movies for streaming. There are plenty of sites with more content than I have free time anyway. I do selfishly hope that most people don't catch on for a while, when they do bandwidth usage will probably go up and so will internet prices.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 07:55 PM

Y R U SO ^TITE?

have u no lulz? LOL, 2 much. Oh, yeah, we all use semicolons ;-)

Saturday, October 24, 2009 03:24 PM

Good Argument for Decriminalization

1. Pot is a mild recreational drug, harmless or close to, and nonaddictive.

2. Meth is a harmful, destructive, highly addictive drug that ruins lives.

3. The cops, drug agencies, courts, jails, etc. only have so much money.

4. Every last dollar spent on pot prohibition while there is at least one meth user out there is a criminal waste of money. Unless someone walks into a police station and surrenders with a joint in their mouth, ALL police/prosecution efforts should be aimed at meth and the other hard drugs.

This argument really should convince even hardcore drug warriors if they have any grasp on reality.

Sunday, November 8, 2009 01:01 PM

The funny thing is...

I remarked about this during the election, that most Democrats agree with Dennis Kucinich on domestic policy and Ron Paul on foreign policy. Neither of these candidates were taken seriously because of the way the two parties are run and our election process. This is yet another area where Americans are at odds with their leaders, who do the opposite of the will of the people. It won't get fixed until we have serious structural changes and real election reform. A start would be forcing broadcast networks to give candidates hours of free time to state their case as a condition of their monopoly license, and codifying in law what's becoming obvious, that a campaign contribution is nothing more than a bribe.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009 07:43 AM

The jig is up..

For those of you saying that the guy with the bag of money couldn't have done any better negotiating with the guys who were out of money, how about this: The Fed announces that they have a pool of money that is 50% of the total amount of swaps owed. They announce that they will accept reasonable offers on a first-come, first-serve basis, but once the money's gone, it's gone. So a bank would have an incentive to offer, say, a 20% haircut instead of a ridiculous 2%, to get more of the money before the other banks. The fact that the Fed didn't play hardball just shows you what a sham the whole Fed 'regulation' scheme is. The Fed works for the banks, not us.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009 09:25 PM
Original article: Yes, it's Obama's war now

No Excuses

America had 2 genuine antiwar choices this time around, Kucinich for the Democrats and Ron Paul for the Republicans. Obama never pretended that he was going to pull out of Afganistan. We only have ourselves to blame.

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