1.) Such an absurd thing to say, but ‘toon perfect here.
2.) Dad’s facial expression combined with what his reply is just soooo ’50s, isn’t it?
3.) Very interesting and unexpected.
4.) “Maybe…”
6.) “Honey, keep on experimenting, then ask me again later.”
7.) I’d just like to know how those dishes got sooo piled up like that. Mom’s hair has me worried.
8.) “That’s right! So here ya go start digging!”
9.) “Mary Lou, stop it right now! Get your butt out from under that bed, he’s a respectable young man. This is what I get with a daughter that never experienced the tough times of the Depression and World War II! NOW, young lady! Chop chop!”
February 8 marked the silver anniversary of an iconic early manifesto defending the Internet as a space where personal liberties and social cooperation might flourish free of political control .
by Joel Schlosberg
February 8 marks the silver anniversary of an iconic early manifesto defending the Internet as a space where personal liberties and social cooperation might flourish free of political control … just in time. John Perry Barlow emailed “A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace” from the World Economic Forum the day Bill Clinton signed into law restraints on free expression via the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
Barlow couldn’t have foreseen that on February 2, 2021, The New York Times would print a call for incoming President Joe Biden to appoint a “reality czar” to verify online information. He did predict that national administrative substitutes for “parental responsibilities” would fail to contain “the virus of liberty” in “a world that will soon be blanketed in bit-bearing media.”
Sherman and Herr in The National Interest: Finding a foreign policy for the internet atlanticcouncil.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from atlanticcouncil.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
February 8 marked the silver anniversary of an iconic early manifesto defending the Internet as a space where personal liberties and social cooperation might flourish free of political control .