« Why We Need Not Envy China | Main | The "You Suck" Headline of the Week »

November 4, 2011

"Since those "Occupy" morons tend to believe that national borders are meaningless anachronisms...

that should be eradicated posthaste
(memetic entanglement of logically unrelated concepts is truly an amazing phenomenon), I am surprised that it took this long for anyone else to realize that there is no reason that their beloved redistribution should stop within the meaningless borders of one nation, no matter how wealthy, when there are billions of far hungrier mouths, including little Miguelito, N'Dugu and Ping, out there crying for equality. -- The Fourth Checkraise: El mundo unido jamás será vencido

Posted by gerardvanderleun at November 4, 2011 11:54 AM. This is an entry on the sideblog of American Digest: Check it out.

Your Say

Glad to see you are back up, hopefully gleaning more similar quotes from my posts over the past week.

I have been linking to "Treason of the Intellectuals, Vol 3" and "Why Intellectuals Love Marx" so many times before that I have to ask: is this the first time you read them? Because both of these great essays deserve to be spread for the widest possible audience.

Posted by: Ilkka Kokkarinen at November 4, 2011 12:38 PM

Powerline's Scott Johnson works as a vice perdisent of a bank that I have accounts at, TCF Bank, and spends a lot of his time blogging during business hours. What a bunch of slothful creeps those attack dogs are. I'm gradually pulling all my money out of that sorry bank.I forgot .. what again are the powerliar's complaining about?

Posted by: Luntu at February 13, 2012 1:54 PM

Powerline's Scott Johnson works as a vice perdisent of a bank that I have accounts at, TCF Bank, and spends a lot of his time blogging during business hours. What a bunch of slothful creeps those attack dogs are. I'm gradually pulling all my money out of that sorry bank.I forgot .. what again are the powerliar's complaining about?

Posted by: Luntu at February 13, 2012 1:56 PM

Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)