Minggu, 27 Februari 2011

Clipping blog

Clipping blog


Clearing the Browser Tabs – Hashtag Game Sunday Edition

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 03:10 AM PST

If you use Twitter, even a little bit, you’ll have seen a hashtag game. What happens is that someone puts out a tweet, hopefully funny, based on a theme that’s made plain by a hashtag (#FirstDraftMovieTitles, #NorrisFacts, #BadSequels, etc.). If the hashtag and the joke are good, and sometimes if they’re not, a few other people will pick up the theme, and some of their followers will do the same. Pretty soon, Twitter is afire with dozens, if not hundreds of tweets all working on the same joke. Most times, if you catch one early, you can find a lot of funny on your timeline. Eventually, the game peters out as folks run out of funny ideas and start to repeat each other. But while it lasts, a hashtag game is one of the best things that can happen on Twitter, at least to my reckoning.

I tell you this because last night, the #LiberalMovies hashtag (thanks to my buddy Andrew Lawton) took off. You can see how the jokes progressed here and, if you scroll down far enough, you’ll see a few of mine. I caught it late int he game, so the quality wasn’t all that high and there was a lot of noise to signal, but there are some gems in there.

And now, links!

 

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You Can’t Teach Them If They Won’t Learn

Posted: 26 Feb 2011 12:33 PM PST

Everything I dislike about left-wing protesters can be found in this video by Ann Althouse and her husband.

Here’s the set-up. Ann and Meade, who have been covering the teachers’ union protests in Madison, WI this week, found that one group had stuck a bunch of their posters and signs on the back of a war memorial in the Capitol Rotunda. They had also stacked several piles of leaflets and handouts against the memorial, which honors Wisconsinites who died in World War II (I believe). They confronted the protesters, pretty mildly in my opinion, and asked them to move their display because it was disrespectful. What they got was a bucket full of confusion, rationalizations, and plain old ignorance.


Eventually, they found someone who, after some explanation, understood what they had done and more or less agreed to move the display. I’m skeptical that they moved anything since no one with the group even knew what the memorial was until it was explained to them and felt any shame about what they had done once they learned.

Much of what I felt when I watched the video was summed up nicely by Dave in Texas at Ace’s place.

Additional thoughts, about how the left fails to get the point. Every one of us who is like minded, even with our finer point squabbles, each and every one of us.. when we see a name on a wall.. we get it. We think about a missing father, brother, some mother’s son.. someone’s brother or sister lost..someone who gave their last… and the suffering of the ones who loved them, who had to take that blow.

That’s what a memorial is for. And to see idiots who have no comprehension for that, it doesn’t just disappoint, it inflames.

That’s what they don’t understand.

I’m struck by the irony that, as a protest for teachers, these young skulls full of progressive propaganda, who have spent their whole lives being “educated” seem impermeable to actual instruction about history and etiquette. Then again, when the fundamental foundation of the ideology they’ve been taught is “the ends justify the means”, why should they listen?

(via Michelle Malkin’s Twitter feed)

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