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Justice in Mustard
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 +2Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

Oh yes, I have heard that a lot before. If people continue to exercise their right though, the more resistance to it being taken away. So everybody should vote and strip these people of even the faintest idea that they will somehow be able to get enough power to disenfranchise the citizen.

Also, brush your teeth, call your mother, and for God’s sake, tuck your shirt in.

 +3Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

Missed opportunities…! I mourn them.

 +3Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

Upvote for Teddy Fuckin’ Roosevelt a.k.a. the Real Motherfucking Batman.

 +17Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

A’ight, if that’s how you want to play it. It’s also everybody’s right to be an asshole. I am all about the rights today.

 +23Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

All I did was campaign for people to vote. I didn’t say vote for this candidate or that party. I just said, “Please exercise your right to vote.”

I’m a history grad student. I have read a lot about how people in power constantly fight to disenfranchise those who don’t understand what their rights mean to them. I know people who, every time voter rights come up, argue that there should be tests to limit who can vote. These are smart people, who are and hang out with your future leaders, politicians, presidents.

Exercising your right to vote is a fundamental duty in our country and is one of the very few ways we can express our will clearly and plainly. Giving up that voice and refusing that duty means that you are giving up one of the natural rights you have as a citizen of this country. If you do not vote, if you do not have a voice, if you do not do your duty, then what does citizenship even mean?

At the very least, please reevaluate what voting really means.

 +9Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

Dammit. #1 is supposed to say “weren’t” doing a good job. My kingdom for a five minute edit option!

 +28Posted on Nov 3rd, 2010 | re: Today We Are All Keith Olbermann (154 comments)

A few good things for the downtrodden to keep in mind:

1. A lot of liberals who were voted out where voted out because they were doing a good job. While they may have been replaced by a lot of people who have questionable aims, elected officials should earn reelection. Rotating out the bad is good for democracy.

2. While Republicans made huge gains, they were able to stop the Horsemen of the Apocalypse a.k.a. the Tea Party from a number more meaningful than a handful.

3. The Democrats have had to cater to Blue Dogs and have had problems with party discipline in Congress. Now Republicans have their own version – the Tea Party – to deal with. Opposition to Democrats did not make Republicans safe even in victory.

4. Obama is still president, and even if Congress manages to do something batshit crazy like repeal health reform or abolish the Civil Rights act or whatever, the president can still veto. At the very least, the most heinous legislation will not pass.

5. The absolute imperative of bipartisanship to get anything passed will insure that all sides have to compromise, and that progressive legislators will still have a voice in legislation as part of their party.

6. As has been seen in the last two years, a party with a minority in either house can wield its power almost more effectively than the majority.

7. Videogum will be here to help you keep your sanity.

Bonus: Boehner’s last name looks like Boner.

 +3Posted on Oct 22nd, 2010 | re: Join The Race For The Cure For WHITE Breast Cancer (154 comments)

I should clarify that in both cases of the Klan rally and the governor annoucning Confederate History Month, the Confederate flag was an important symbol and was being used to advance a certain agenda with harmful or dishonest intentions and aims.

 +2Posted on Oct 22nd, 2010 | re: Join The Race For The Cure For WHITE Breast Cancer (154 comments)

I agree that’s it’s good we’re even talking about it, Friday.

I’m a Southerner too (though barely – I’m from Arkansas, and am currently in Mississippi in grad school), and thoughtful commemoration of those who died with an eye to the flaws of the ideals they were fighting for is something that I can accept. But we cannot deny that many of those commemorate the Civil War with ill will towards their American brothers and sisters of all creeds and colors.

Since I’ve been in Mississippi, I have seen the Klan rally at a football tailgate because they were going to do away with our mascot. I have listened to the governor proclaim that slavery had nothing to do with the Civil War as he announced April as Confederate History Month. There are people who are recklessly embracing the Confederate battle flag without understanding what it meant and means, and, it is mostly because of these people, that the Confederate flag is so maligned.

I agree that we should be more evenly minded when it comes to talking about the Confederate flag, but we all have to remember that while the adults are having a grown-up discussion, there are others who are holding on to the flag as a symbol and manifestation of some very misanthropic ideals.

 0Posted on Oct 22nd, 2010 | re: Join The Race For The Cure For WHITE Breast Cancer (154 comments)

I love this .gif more than life.

 +13Posted on Oct 21st, 2010 | re: Look Like This!: Glee (68 comments)

I’m pretty sure the youngest person on the Glee cast is Chris Colfer, and I think he just turned 20.

In general, I’m not a fan of people dressing like hyper-sexualized teenagers because it’s capital C Creepy^n, where “n” is the difference between actual age and a rough definition of “teenager.”

 +7Posted on Oct 21st, 2010 | re: Look Like This!: Glee (68 comments)

Major upvote love for the avatar.

I can’t watch the clip because I break out in hives whenever I hear Bill O’Reilly’s voice.

 0Posted on Oct 14th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E04: For Our Duet We’re Gonna Do It (77 comments)

I thought it was pretty cute and fun. It did not offend my sensibilities, but I can totally see why it would have bugged the shit out of anyone else.

 0Posted on Oct 14th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E04: For Our Duet We’re Gonna Do It (77 comments)

That’s a whoops he’s gonna regret.

 0Posted on Oct 13th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E04: For Our Duet We’re Gonna Do It (77 comments)

If by “sad” moments, you are excluding when Schue finds out about Teri’s (Terri? Terry?) fake pregnancy, then we are in agreement.

 +20Posted on Oct 13th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E04: For Our Duet We’re Gonna Do It (77 comments)

I’m glad that they finally confronted the whole issue with Kurt getting away with being such a CreepyGay(tm). I understand why people would be offended that his dad tells him that he’s just going to have to be lonely for a while, but the opposite – allowing Kurt to hit on straight dudes and to try and fuck his would-be stepbrother in some weird fantasy and just excusing it – is not okay at all.

At this point, Burt is the role model, not Kurt. He’s flawed and he does a lot of things he shouldn’t. But Burt actually cares about his son and is trying to give structure to his life, rather than letting him hit all over straight guys and then say “WELP, THAT’S A GAY FOR YOU.”

In short, I am pleased.

 +8Posted on Oct 13th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E04: For Our Duet We’re Gonna Do It (77 comments)

Is an “s” at the end of a word that already has “s” automatically turn the “ss” into a “z”? Honest question here.

 +1Posted on Oct 13th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E04: For Our Duet We’re Gonna Do It (77 comments)

They were ten pounds of fun in a one pound bag in Oxford. So glad I got to see them!

 +1Posted on Oct 8th, 2010 | re: Glee S02E03: “Hi, The Lord!!!”—West Coast Homosexuals (63 comments)

I did not like this episode at all, guys. :( I know it’s Glee, but it just felt so shallow. Also: Why does Mercedes have to be the magical negro who can bring religion to the white (gay) man? I think I was so annoyed with the episode by that point that I probably started reading too much into it, but Cheesus. I did love “One of Us,” though. It was a good version, and I think it hinted at how the episode could have gone if it had been better.

Glee needs to start pulling itself together. Also: Give me my Michael Jackson episode. Stat.

 +1Posted on Oct 1st, 2010 | re: Law & Order: SVU Captures Videogame Players Perfectly (86 comments)

I am SO SAD that I missed this! Because, people, have you SEEN that crazy “Russian Love Poem” episode? At one point, Mariska Hargitay asks the wife of a man who was murdered tied up in his S&M gear while having an affair, “Do you know who would have raped your husband with a banana?” BECAUSE HE WAS ALLERGIC, YOU SEE.

Seriously, that shit is on Netflix Instant. Watch it.

 0Posted on Sep 23rd, 2010 | re: GLEE S02E01: Fuckin’ Finally (52 comments)

YES. I thought they were going for the Tanaka-in-Drag moment for about half of the show. I kept going back and forth between “there’s no way that’s Tanaka” and “maybe it’s Hollywood magic!”

Who’s billed as playing Coach Bieste, anyway?

 +24Posted on Jun 21st, 2010 | re: The Videogum Movie Club: Toy Story 3 (122 comments)

I thought the movie was awesome. I cried twice, once during the inferno “let’s-hold-hands” scene, and once during the ending.

It was so bittersweet because I grew up along with Andy. I was a little older than he when the series started and a bit older than Andy when it ended. It was hard on me because I remember those emotions of parting with toys and parting with loved ones when I left for grad school, weep, wail, and sorrow, etc. etc.

LOVED the Ken Doll.

 +7Posted on Jun 9th, 2010 | re: Glee S01E22: Crying Doesn’t Burn Calories Like Laughing Does, Fattiez (68 comments)

The episode wasn’t perfect. I felt like a two hour episode (or maybe a 1.5 hour episode?) would have helped out in the rushed story line department. As it was, it kind of felt like Variety Hour.

I was a little irked that the stage for next season wasn’t really set. There are only two things I know we can look forward to, and only one of them is from content in the actual show:

1) Rachel and Finn will have to have a conflict about her lying about not being a virgin and his lying about being one.

2) According to interviews with either the cast or the people behind the show (can’t remember which), Kurt will have a boyfriend.

Annnnnnnd that’s what we’ve got.

Love the Journey medley, though. Just wish the show had given us more to go on as we go for 23.4 years waiting on Season 2.

 +1Posted on Jun 9th, 2010 | re: Glee S01E22: Crying Doesn’t Burn Calories Like Laughing Does, Fattiez (68 comments)

I have been toe-tapping to that mashup all day long. It was expertly done.