(no subject)
Mar. 2nd, 2017 02:59 pmPeople's benefit of the doubt extended to both Trump's intelligence and awfulness seems to spring back up at the speed of mown grass in June. I get that. It's like when an unmedicated schizophrenic person talks to you and you try to reconstruct what they said later. Whatever you come up with will be less crazy, because all blanks left by decayed or unprocessed details can only be filled in by a non-crazy person's impression of crazy.
Another analogy: grading. Sometimes you get an essay so bad that after pointing out five problems you've forgotten ten others of similar magnitude - thus end up giving the paper a higher grade than it deserved (though still no doubt a very low one).
For this reason someone should market posters covered with fine print about all the awful and stupid things he's done. Like those one-page full Shakespeare plays they used to sell. Or maybe a spinning globe with continents replaced by distinct areas of clusterfuck (Russia, sexual assaults, major self-contradictions, scams, ignorance of basic facts about the planet or government etc.). The globe could have live flames at the top.
Another analogy: grading. Sometimes you get an essay so bad that after pointing out five problems you've forgotten ten others of similar magnitude - thus end up giving the paper a higher grade than it deserved (though still no doubt a very low one).
For this reason someone should market posters covered with fine print about all the awful and stupid things he's done. Like those one-page full Shakespeare plays they used to sell. Or maybe a spinning globe with continents replaced by distinct areas of clusterfuck (Russia, sexual assaults, major self-contradictions, scams, ignorance of basic facts about the planet or government etc.). The globe could have live flames at the top.