Foster Zygote
Dental Floss Tycoon
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2006
- Messages
- 22,102
And "Conservative Match"? That's a joke, right?
I guess they're desperate for some lovin'. All that sexual morality makes 'em lonely.
Steven
And "Conservative Match"? That's a joke, right?
And "Conservative Match"? That's a joke, right?
Dog Boots said:What are they trying to do!? Why on Earth should that not be people's of business? Do they fear that if a good conservative should get a democratic better half, then he or she will convert? Are they that insecure?
...It's an ad for a dating site, what's the big deal?
I think it's the imperative "Stop dating liberals!" (which could be interpreted as a command) that's the most disconcerting.
Most advertising contains imperatives:
"Sign up today!"
"Lose weight now!"
"Just do it!"
"Do the Dew!"
I dare not look. What position is the Necronomicon on it?But the list of Ann Coulters favorite books to curl up with left me no doubt as to the bias of this site.
I dare not look. What position is the Necronomicon on it?
... ON THE LIST, that is.
Marx and Engels would not have been very pleased with themselves if they knew what their ideas would lead to.
Their list of Ten Books Every Student Should Read In College had me chuckling.
Interesting that the most recent book on that list was penned in 1835. Talk about a conservative viewpoint!
Which is why I wrote earlier:How is it that it's okay for The Bible to be misused for 2000 years to cause untold misery around the globe, yet the Kinsey Report (which quite frankly I've never heard of) gets shafted into number 4 slot as a bad bad book?
Regarding the Kinsey Report(s), at least some self-appointed protectors of public morality have taken the stance that Kinsey "fathered" (Moreover, it is difficult to see how a book can, short of being ingested or used as a cudgel, be considered literally harmful. The ideas a book espouses can only be harmful to a particular ideology and then only if that ideology is hard to defend to begin with. That is not to say that such books as make up the list in question can't be roped in as a motivator in pursuit of some agenda, goal or ideal. But note that such efforts almost without fail boil down to exploiting ignorance by pretending to inform - i.e. the book, rather than reasoned enquiry, is the source of applicable wisdom. In this view, there is one particular book conspicuously absent from the list.
In fact, it should occupy first place.
And imagine being halfway through a date that seems to be going well, when your date discovers that you voted for or support _______, and is appalled and wants nothing further to do with you.
There's a "Democrat Match", too. (Or something like that. I forget the exact name.)
Personally, I think that anybody who makes politics a deal-breaker is a tool.