people got very, very, very angry and still are. but i thought it was a salient discussion because as a black person, i think of race as being something i can see. so i see you and i know what race you are, and the discussion was about how i felt about that. i felt that it was really more about man s inhumanity to man. real quickly, mr. rosenburg, do you think that made it worse or what do you think of that? so i think that there was elsewhere in that same segment she said this was about white people attacking other white people and that was particularly aligned that troubled a lot of jewish people because in the european conception of race, the nazis were the master race and the jews were a lower race and they did not consider themselves of the same race at all and it wasn t like the same people, they all look the same.
The tactics currently being deployed by Big Pharma and governments all around the world to "save lives" from the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) are similar to those concocted by Adolph [.]
THE GHOULISH URGE to pile on more content, more inanity, more everything all at once, now! came from an unusual subject recently: Maus, by Art Spiegelman. For those of you tuned out to the outrage cycle or just wisely ignoring all news until a blinding flash of light makes equals of us all, in January the McMinn County, Tennessee, Board of Education voted unanimously to remove from the eighth-grade curriculum Spiegelman’s comic book memoir of his parents’ life before, during, and after Auschwitz. The principal objections: a few damns and one naked corpse. The subtext: fear, a dash of anti-Semitism,