The Grenade

By the time I had to put dinner on the stove this evening, I was thinking a lot about what’s maybe the best line in the late, lamented television show Terriers, when Gretchen tells her interfering and uninformed ex-husband Hank, “You’re the live grenade in my life.”

Life On Dead Dog Farm

Of all the people in the world, the best and the worst are drawn to a dead dog, and most turn away. Only those with the purest of heart can feel its pain—and somewhere in between, the rest of us struggle.

Rabble Rousing

Several days ago Claire Willett noted that among the elite their elite “status cuts across all other demographic and ideological markers”, adding that the elite versus the rabble “is so much more important to them as a line of demarcation than any vector of ideology or belief or politics”. All of which, of course, was prompted by the mainstream hagiographic response to the death of a nazi.

Don’t Trade Your Original Voice

Somewhat to be expected when you repopulate your RSS reader with blogs after months of abstaining from attention paid to the blogosphere, as the links come in you end up reading a lot of blog posts about blogging, because whatever else this, that, or the other blogger posts about they’re nearly always also t some point blogging about blogging.

Boil Me, Mash Me, Stick Me In A Stew

The first thing that struck me about this research on gender was the person who supplied her gender as “meh”, because I once toyed with listing my pronouns as “meh/meh” but I was afraid people would misconstrue it as a pointed, wrongheaded criticism of providing your pronouns.

Other Recent Posts

On This Day

Recently Read Links (RSS)

monsters

Some Dogs Can Learn New Linguistic Tricks

The shift away from minimalism (I like shirts)

What to do if you spot ICE in your community

Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions

Charlie Kirk, Redeemed: A Political Class Finds Its Lost Cause

Disconnecting from Discord

Seeking quiet in busy cities

Slow social media

The words we use to talk about nature are disappearing. Here’s why that matters.

Find More Blogs