Reheated (124)
Because some things do bear repeating, a few items from the archives:
On Calvin and Hobbes – and progressive journalists who find it “problematic.”
By which I mean, it was once possible to stumble across lengthy articles on niche pop-culture subjects, often written with an affectionate expertise. Now, however, it’s difficult to differentiate one contributor from another. The content doesn’t read as if anyone in particular wrote it. It’s flavourless, uniform in its politics and ideological assumptions – both pointedly announced – and uniform in its tone. It might as well be generated by an algorithm.
I suppose that’s what makes the Calvin and Hobbes article grimly funny, in a disappointing modernity kind of way. If you poke through Mr Shayo’s other, numerous contributions, the tone, such as it is, is much the same. There’s no obvious personality – no sense of any particular person having written it – no sense of mischief, and no discernible wit. Mr Shayo is, however, capable of making entirely contradictory claims, on the very same subject, mere days apart.
For instance, in the article quoted above, Mr Shayo worries that the absence of smartphones and GPS tracking devices may be “baffling for young readers,” and he bemoans how the strip “doesn’t have any modern technology.” And yet we’re told – days later – that, “the lack of technological influence makes the strip read as a timeless work.” “It always feels that it’s something that could still happen today… the absence of technology is hardly notable.”
Likewise, Mr Shayo insists that “ending Calvin and Hobbes is exactly what saved it,” and praises the strip’s creator, Bill Watterson, for refusing to license spin-offs, adaptations, and potentially lucrative merchandise, thereby “living up to the ideals that the strip… championed.” “Ending the strip,” we’re told, “was a good decision” and “there is no reason to tarnish that legacy by adding more to an already concluded work.”
While, one week earlier, “Calvin and Hobbes needs to be an animated show.” Because “an adaptation or continuation is essential.”
Let’s Do It, But In A Way That’s Less Likely To Work.
In which we poke through the Parenting pages of the Guardian.
Providing the sperm. A joyous and maternal turn of phrase.
Also of note, the idea of wanting a baby, but with only a third or a quarter of the responsibility. A kind of low-commitment parenting.
Bodes well.
Readers are invited to ponder the appeal, for any gentleman with fatherhood in mind, of effectively becoming a sperm donor who is also expected to perform household chores, for many years, and to pay child maintenance. In a sexless relationship with random lesbians who may find him barely tolerable, a necessary complication.
But this, it seems, is how one “redefines the family unit completely.” It’s “the ideal parenting setup.”
Cross-dressing man issues orders to women.
On the non-random nature of who you are.
The newborn me was a result of a particular lineage, of choices made by specific individuals and the genes of those individuals – who can of course say the same thing about themselves. To imply that anyone’s birth is a random thing, as if it could have happened anywhere, at any time, as if the particulars were immaterial, is, it seems to me, a little odd. Indeed, arse-backwards.
And I doubt that many parents see the birth of their child as some random occurrence, unmoored from any context or preceding events. I’d imagine it wouldn’t seem random at all.
Unless you imagine a queue of souls waiting to spawn in some small but arbitrary body on a continent chosen by the spin of a wheel. Or cosmic bingo balls.
For those craving more, this is a pretty good place to start.
Consider this an open thread. Share ye links and bicker.
Oh, and a reminder that this rickety barge is kept afloat by the buttons below.





There can’t be too many dogs. However, there can be too many radical Islamists. And Commie bastards.
Always more dogs.
Always more dogs.
the “diversity problem” is one of too much diversity.
That’s a switch from “aspiring rap ‘musician’ “.
Just how many baronesses does England have laying about?
Unserious Country, Part Deux.
Any is too many.
“[…] exploiting the death of the refugee for the purposes of trying to spread division.”
George Floyd was a refugee?
Clapham has been enriched…
When carbon dioxide loses its punch . . .
The price of a lordship?
April Fool!
This is the day upon which we are reminded of what we are on the other
three hundred and sixty-four. — Mark Twain, Pudd’nhead Wilson’s Calendar
Some more than others.
In the recurring series regarding dumb, stupid, worthless “conservatives”.
https://thefederalist.com/2026/03/30/republicans-would-rather-cede-power-to-democrats-than-their-own-voters/
C’mon, Eric. Don’t hold back. Tell us how you really feel.
Vigorously put, but not entirely wrong.
I spent last Saturday with 50-60 dogs. Every one was a,good boy or a good girl. Except Vodka. Lazy, very lazy.
Heh.
I do, as a rule, find dogs agreeable, especially big dogs. I’m definitely a dog person. Though I tend to encounter well-behaved dogs owned by neighbours or family members. Except for that one time at a family party some years ago, when I found myself with a precariously balanced dessert in each hand – not both for me, you understand – and with a horny cockapoo attached, firmly, to one leg. Gyrating.
I think that’s the worst I’ve suffered, dog-wise. So not too traumatising, in the great scheme of things.
And several attendees did find the scene entertaining.
Cats, on the other hand, are a mystery to me. I like them aesthetically. I like the look of them. And the dumpy, short-legged variety are cartoonishly appealing. But I can’t read their minds.
Dogs are generally just happy to be on the team, but cats – who knows? They’re capable of seemingly random malice and there’s always a suspicion that, if it amused them, they might try to kill you in your sleep.
Also, allergies.
Perhaps not the flex you think.
Well, for most of them, they have more in common with each other than they do with the people who voted them in.
That is true of most members of the ruling class–politicians, academics, etc.
The professor has deleted his Twitter/X account…or been banned. Most likely the former.
“My name is Taqiyya Khan”
Timing.
Shouldn’t the “day of visibility” be April 1 instead of March 31?
Enrichment:
This is a very common problem.
A few solutions come to mind, but none are acceptable to liberals.
Skiing is an EXPENSIVE sport. I grew up at the foot of Utah’s Wasatch mountains, which contain truckloads of ski resorts, but because my dad was a prof at a state college, there was no way we could afford to go even once, let alone take up the sport for real.
Even if you rent your equipment, everything else is expensive: the lift passes, the skiwear, the aprés ski. Even getting up to the resorts can be expensive because you need 4WD in bad weather. Our family sedans and station wagons would never have made it.
It has jack-all to do with color or even culture. “Have been historically excluded” is such a weaselly phrase.
I guess people of colour have been historically excluded from polo and raising racehorses, too. BIGOTS!
See also, the traumatising shortage of brown-skinned rock-climbing instructors.
Oh and Black Women Complain About Lack Of Black Women In Place Black Women Seldom Visit.
And so, we enter a world in which remembering to take a coat is deemed a noteworthy achievement, a basis for applause. Because magic blackness.
And this shameless conceit is wheeled out every few months with very minor variations.
From the second link:
And this is the standard. Every time. “You must believe these things for which I won’t – or can’t – provide even a shred of convincing evidence.”
Instead, we get endless waffle about “unpredictable weather” and the alleged political radicalism of taking selfies.
In, lest we forget, the New York Times.
Except for that one time at a family party some years ago, when I found myself with a precariously balanced dessert in each hand – not both for me, you understand – and with a horny cockapoo attached, firmly, to one leg. Gyrating.
A groom at a wedding I photographed had a similar problem. And the dog was his new wife’s.
[ Has traumatising flashback. ]
Libturd goes there:
De Paul university student spits on ICE agent.
Defense lawyer: it falls under the “broad gamut of freedom of expression.”
A malicious lie calculated to spawn pernicious “remedies”.
Recall how the Art Institute of Chicago fired all its unpaid volunteer docents because they were too white, replacing them with paid “persons of color”. Never mind that the fired docents, mostly older well-to-do white women, volunteered because they loved art and knew a great deal even before they were hired and had the spare time. Never mind that their “diverse” replacements knew far less and required far more training to reach levels of knowledge lower than the people they replaced The AIC cared about race than about art and knowledge.
Creation.
The flinging of poo accelerates.
“You guys must be the new neighbors”
High trust society vs. low trust society:
Creation.
That’s funny, I really like origami mode
Via 1440. Couldn’t find a direct link to this summary:
15%. If lazy, whiny “conservatives” would get off their lazy, whiny asses and vote…or even speak up…a lot of the BS that lazy, whiny “conservatives” bitch about wouldn’t be happening.
Succinct.
Only six?
Wait, what?
It’s just occurred to me it’s been several hours – possibly even a whole day – since we’ve had one of those Thing That Never Happens doodads.
We must put that right.
Cross-filed under ‘Misunderstanding’.
“Be myself,” he says.
Because his real, authentic, inner self is a slutty, rough-looking maid, apparently.
As our host would say –you’d never tire of it.