see what we have wrought
― imago, Friday, 15 July 2016 09:16 (nine years ago)
FWIW I was alive in the nineteen-seventies. Plenty of things sucked mightily then too. Some of the same things, some different things. Peace out y'all.
― rhymes with month (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 15 July 2016 12:23 (nine years ago)
http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/640x360/legacy/clip/p007n14v.jpg
― PLPeni (Noodle Vague), Friday, 15 July 2016 12:27 (nine years ago)
40-50 years ago (and less), the kinds of US police shootings we've been enraged by of late would've been buried in the newspapers if they were noted at all.
― helpless before THRILLARY (Dr Morbius), Friday, 15 July 2016 12:28 (nine years ago)
you all are not understanding this thread
― lag∞n, Friday, 15 July 2016 16:25 (nine years ago)
no we do, we're trying to change it.
― helpless before THRILLARY (Dr Morbius), Friday, 15 July 2016 19:45 (nine years ago)
there was a time you could open a newspaper and not have to read about african-american men murdered by police
simpler times
― jim in vancouver, Friday, 15 July 2016 19:59 (nine years ago)
you had a thread called "society is in the gutter" and people knew what it was for
― ǂbait (seandalai), Saturday, 16 July 2016 15:29 (nine years ago)
Now youve said it, sean, now you have it
― poor fiddy-less albion (darraghmac), Saturday, 16 July 2016 15:38 (nine years ago)
we used to appreciate threads - we didn't have many but we read them every day
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Saturday, 16 July 2016 20:18 (nine years ago)
the threads were threads and thats all there was to it, now days... pokeman
― lag∞n, Sunday, 17 July 2016 18:13 (nine years ago)
would be nice if people caught some values along with those pokes.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Sunday, 17 July 2016 23:01 (nine years ago)
Gutter catch 'em all, I say.
― five memes that i can hardly stand to view (Doctor Casino), Monday, 18 July 2016 00:16 (nine years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/7JeV84g.png
― pplains, Monday, 18 July 2016 01:10 (nine years ago)
I was killing some time in the staff room, as you do, and started reading a Dean R Koontz thriller called Dragon Tears. This was on page 2.
http://i.imgur.com/mZg02p5.jpg?1
― Neil S, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 14:50 (nine years ago)
the use of "no doubt" is key.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Tuesday, 16 August 2016 15:13 (nine years ago)
tbf Koontz might have been on to something with the "bad-tempered, evil minded trolls" bit
― Neil S, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 15:16 (nine years ago)
in my day a troll was someone who would happily stay under his bridge, now it's all Twitter this, Facebook that
― Neil S, Tuesday, 16 August 2016 15:17 (nine years ago)
mankind? more like ManUNkind if you ask me
https://metallica.com/blog/news/429181/hardwired-to-self-destruct-available-november-18-2
― Neil S, Thursday, 18 August 2016 21:16 (nine years ago)
http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-doomed-mouse-utopia-that-inspired-the-rats-of-nimh
i condensed it for those who don't want to read the full article:
In 1947, to keep a close eye on his charges, Calhoun constructed a quarter-acre "rat city" behind his house, and filled it with breeding pairs. He expected to be able to house 5,000 rats there but over the two years he observed the city, the population never exceeded 150. At that point, the rats became too stressed to reproduce. They started acting weirdly, rolling dirt into balls rather than digging normal tunnels. They hissed and fought.[...]Most frightening are the parallels he draws between rodent and human society. "I shall largely speak of mice," he begins, "but my thoughts are on man." Both species, he explains, are vulnerable to two types of death—that of the spirit and that of the body. Even though he had removed physical threats, doing so had forced the residents of Universe 25 into a spiritually unhealthy situation, full of crowding, overstimulation, and contact with various mouse strangers. To a society experiencing the rapid growth of cities—and reacting, in various ways, quite poorly—this story seemed familiar. Senators brought it up in meetings. It showed up in science fiction and comic books. Even Tom Wolfe, never lost for description, used Calhounian terms to describe New York City, calling all of Gotham a "behavioral sink."Convinced that he had found a real problem, Calhoun quickly began using his mouse models to try and fix it. If mice and humans weren't afforded enough physical space, he thought, perhaps they could make up for it with conceptual space—creativity, artistry, and the type of community not built around social hierarchies. His later Universes were designed to be spiritually as well as physically utopic, with rodent interactions carefully controlled to maximize happiness (he was particularly fascinated by some early rats who had created an innovative form of tunneling, where they rolled dirt into balls). He extrapolated this, too, to human concerns, becoming an early supporter of environmental design and H.G. Wells's hypothetical "World Brain," an international information network that was a clear precursor to the internet.[...]But there was one person who paid attention to his more optimistic experiments, a writer named Robert C. O'Brien. In the late '60s, O'Brien allegedly visited Calhoun's lab, met the man trying to build a true and creative rat paradise, and took note of the Frisbee on the door, the scientists' own attempt "to help when things got too stressful," as Calhoun put it. Soon after, O'Brien wrote Ms. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH—a story about rats who, having escaped from a lab full of blundering humans, attempt to build their own utopia. Next time, maybe we should put the rats in charge.
[...]
Most frightening are the parallels he draws between rodent and human society. "I shall largely speak of mice," he begins, "but my thoughts are on man." Both species, he explains, are vulnerable to two types of death—that of the spirit and that of the body. Even though he had removed physical threats, doing so had forced the residents of Universe 25 into a spiritually unhealthy situation, full of crowding, overstimulation, and contact with various mouse strangers. To a society experiencing the rapid growth of cities—and reacting, in various ways, quite poorly—this story seemed familiar. Senators brought it up in meetings. It showed up in science fiction and comic books. Even Tom Wolfe, never lost for description, used Calhounian terms to describe New York City, calling all of Gotham a "behavioral sink."
Convinced that he had found a real problem, Calhoun quickly began using his mouse models to try and fix it. If mice and humans weren't afforded enough physical space, he thought, perhaps they could make up for it with conceptual space—creativity, artistry, and the type of community not built around social hierarchies. His later Universes were designed to be spiritually as well as physically utopic, with rodent interactions carefully controlled to maximize happiness (he was particularly fascinated by some early rats who had created an innovative form of tunneling, where they rolled dirt into balls). He extrapolated this, too, to human concerns, becoming an early supporter of environmental design and H.G. Wells's hypothetical "World Brain," an international information network that was a clear precursor to the internet.
But there was one person who paid attention to his more optimistic experiments, a writer named Robert C. O'Brien. In the late '60s, O'Brien allegedly visited Calhoun's lab, met the man trying to build a true and creative rat paradise, and took note of the Frisbee on the door, the scientists' own attempt "to help when things got too stressful," as Calhoun put it. Soon after, O'Brien wrote Ms. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH—a story about rats who, having escaped from a lab full of blundering humans, attempt to build their own utopia. Next time, maybe we should put the rats in charge.
― F♯ A♯ (∞), Thursday, 15 September 2016 17:18 (nine years ago)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvIpdKUWgAAlJau.jpg
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Thursday, 20 October 2016 07:56 (nine years ago)
excellent use of the rhetorical question there, A+
― Neil S, Thursday, 20 October 2016 08:08 (nine years ago)
"even 20 years ago an ambulance would have been called"
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Thursday, 20 October 2016 09:39 (nine years ago)
'would of' surely?
― Patti Labelle is in here with her high but mediocre singing voice. (Tom D.), Thursday, 20 October 2016 09:59 (nine years ago)
Lowering taxes to makes lower paid jobs more worthwhile would of helped this indolent gent get `back on his feet'
― the kids are alt right (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 October 2016 10:20 (nine years ago)
that's amazing. garda you have to get some submissions into these 'have your say' newspaper things, it's a natural forum for reports from the gutter.
― Roberto Spiralli, Thursday, 20 October 2016 11:15 (nine years ago)
struggling to accept that that isn't garda's work tbh
― r|t|c, Thursday, 20 October 2016 11:33 (nine years ago)
dunno if i could conjure up something this crazy - i can't stop thinking about it.
like it is on so many levels fascinating and horrible.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Thursday, 20 October 2016 11:36 (nine years ago)
Ou sont les negligence d'autrefois
― the kids are alt right (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 October 2016 11:41 (nine years ago)
Whom shall be the one to call the ambulance? Not I.
― Lennon, Elvis, Hendrix etc (dog latin), Thursday, 20 October 2016 11:54 (nine years ago)
these days no ambulance attends the gutter, occasionally a battered uber will pass driven by a rat with a gold tooth
― estela, Thursday, 20 October 2016 12:14 (nine years ago)
Akeem Diko OTM. Leicester's title win was remarkable.
― wingless yurp (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 20 October 2016 12:37 (nine years ago)
lol estela
― I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Thursday, 20 October 2016 23:19 (nine years ago)
lol x2!
― calzino, Thursday, 20 October 2016 23:38 (nine years ago)
https://twitter.com/MxJackMonroe/status/790591668256997376
― Neil S, Tuesday, 25 October 2016 13:12 (nine years ago)
Probably more annoying are his kids who are always shouting MUMMY CAN YOU HELP ME at loud volumes and kicking footballs against the face.
― Millions of species Faye Dunaway (Tom D.), Tuesday, 25 October 2016 13:16 (nine years ago)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Cvn0X1uW8AAbAKl.jpg:large
― Neil S, Tuesday, 25 October 2016 15:16 (nine years ago)
As long as the UK allows a large percentage of its young men to leave school, in a half [or less ] educated state, then the country will not prosper. My Victorian grandfather valued knowledge for its own sake---[he having left a village school aged 10]. Why today have the youth made hero's of the kickers of balls rather than the builders of bridges?Why is getting drunk regarded as fun and not an illustration of ignorance? Why are nerds, hated at school? Nerds are more likely to be the future than the ignorant and stupid!
we used to not kick a ball in the street.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 3 February 2017 10:27 (nine years ago)
My Victorian grandfather
LOL
― Eats like Elvis, shits like De Niro (Tom D.), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:00 (nine years ago)
Why today have the youth made hero's of the kickers of balls
so this fuckin' loser can neither kick a ball nor properly grasp the fundamentals of the english language eh
ripe fodder for the soylent green factories of post-brexit britain imo
― for sale: steve bannon waifu pillow (heavily soiled) (bizarro gazzara), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:04 (nine years ago)
Nerds are more likely to be the future than the ignorant and stupid!
ya, about that...
― Houston John (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:06 (nine years ago)
Why is getting drunk regarded as fun and not an illustration of ignorance?
yes, no intelligent person has ever been a big boozer.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:12 (nine years ago)
This guy hates Churchill I suppose?
― Eats like Elvis, shits like De Niro (Tom D.), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:23 (nine years ago)
A busy bloke is this David Vinterhttps://profile.theguardian.com/user/id/2472083?page=1
― nashwan, Friday, 3 February 2017 11:30 (nine years ago)
tbf to the lad he claims to be over 80 and has 955 pages of comments in three years
― nashwan, Friday, 3 February 2017 11:32 (nine years ago)
My father, missing WW1, by a week, went self employed at 19, and worked 7 days per week for 50 years, and only ever one holiday.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:35 (nine years ago)
So we know all about his dad and grandad, I bet he was a complete waster himself though.
― Eats like Elvis, shits like De Niro (Tom D.), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:41 (nine years ago)
he spends all his time on CIF so that'a a given
― Neil S, Friday, 3 February 2017 11:43 (nine years ago)
feeling like i need to up my ilx posting game tbh, no way i'm gonna be beaten by an octogenarian. i fought in the irc wars of the mid-90s ffs
― for sale: steve bannon waifu pillow (heavily soiled) (bizarro gazzara), Friday, 3 February 2017 11:47 (nine years ago)
This is the rest of my day sorted thank you.
― nashwan, Friday, 3 February 2017 11:47 (nine years ago)