University Professor Censored Over… ‘Firefly’ Poster?
by Adam Baldwin and Liberty ChickThe First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is one of America’s most sacred freedoms and our public universities often among its staunchest defenders. But at the University of Wisconsin-Stout (UWS), it seems this sacred freedom is in the eye of the beholder.
UWS theater professor Dr. James Miller is relatively new to the short-lived, now cult hit TV series “Firefly.” Some of his students are loyal fans and asked Dr. Miller to check it out for himself. He liked it enough to hang a Firefly poster on his office door. Given its remote location in the theater wing, where mostly only theater students would see it, who would have expected the poster to cause such a firestorm?
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) reports:
On September 12, 2011, Professor Miller posted on his office door an image of Nathan Fillion in Joss Whedon’s sci-fi series Firefly and a line from an episode: “You don’t know me, son, so let me explain this to you once: If I ever kill you, you’ll be awake. You’ll be facing me. And you’ll be armed.” On September 16, UWS Chief of Police Lisa A. Walter notified Miller that she had removed the poster because it “refer[s] to killing.” After Miller replied, “respect my first amendment rights,” Walter wrote that “the poster can be interpreted as a threat.” Walter also threatened Miller with criminal charges: “If you choose to repost the article or something similar to it, it will be removed and you could face charges of disorderly conduct.”
In response to Walter’s censorship, Miller placed a new poster on his office door on the 16th. The poster read “Warning: Fascism” and mocked, “Fascism can cause blunt head trauma and/or violent death. Keep fascism away from children and pets.”
Walter escalated the absurdity. On September 20, she wrote that this poster, too, had been censored because it “depicts violence and mentions violence and death” and was expected to “be constituted as a threat.” She added that UWS’s “threat assessment team,” in consultation with the university general counsel’s office, had made the decision. College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences Interim Dean Raymond Hayes then scheduled a meeting with Miller about “the concerns raised by the campus threat assessment team.”
The university has since canceled the meeting as of last Friday, but it hasn’t backed off its position.
Sorensen, however, dug a deeper hole. Together with Provost Julie Furst-Bowe and Vice Chancellor Ed Nieskes, Sorensen defended UWS’s censorship in an email to all faculty and staff on September 27. The three administrators wrote that “the posters in question constituted an implied threat of violence. That is why they were removed.”
To understand the importance of this as a First Amendment issue, one needs to closely examine what happened. A university’s Chief of Police/Parking Enforcement Officer, ignorant of the context of the quote, took it upon herself to remove not one but two posters without ever asking their context or purpose. The professor honestly expected his First Amendment rights would not be infringed, but the school’s Chancellor cowered behind bureaucratic zero tolerance policies and did just that.
Whether or not you agree with how the professor responded, the police chief clearly overreacted to something she misinterpreted. You can read the full exchange of those emails at FIRE. Nothing about the poster of a fictional TV Space Captain is intended to “cause others to fear for their safety”; in fact, it is the opposite of a threat.
Dr. Miller sent the administration the relevant clip from Firefly’s pilot episode Serenity. The context of the quote is an homage to fair play and a code of honor that obviously prefers non-violence.
This is precisely the issue with freedom of speech; words are subjective and can be interpreted differently by separate individuals. Sometimes this is done unintentionally, sometimes with malice, which is why the act of deciding what’s NOT free speech is ripe for abuse. The UWS administration’s stated desire to “promote a campus environment that is free from threats of any kind—both direct and implied” may be well-meaning, but its meaning amounts to nothing. How does one set a universal standard to determine what is an implied threat or in what context speech may “refer to violence and/or harm”? As Dr. Miller pointed out in his email response to police chief Lisa Walter, would this also apply to “a poster from Hamlet? Or a news clipping about Hockey players that commit violent murder?”
When asked if he knew of any other examples of such posters or signs on campus, Dr. Miller replied that while he wasn’t aware of any prior attempts at censorship, a “Kill Bill” poster from the popular Quentin Tarantino film was prevalent on campus earlier in the year. Some quick research finds the poster was actually a parody of the Kill Bill movie, as part of a campus-wide protest held in February against Governor Scott Walker’s budget bill.
Oddly enough, police chief Walter was not at all concerned with the reference to killing or to the weapon of violence depicted in those posters. In fact, she was quoted in this article at the time as being rather complimentary of the activities.
“The neat part of working in a university is that folks get to have their voices heard, and we try to make sure that it’s done in a manner that’s orderly and doesn’t disrupt the rest of the operations too much,” she said.
Walter also pointed out that the university’s union officers are not included in the exemption Walker provided to other law enforcement officers, firefighters and the State Patrol.
“He did not exempt UW police, Capitol police and, I believe, DNR wardens,” she said. “They will lose their ability to negotiate and have a union negotiate other work-related — other than salary. If the bill goes through, they will be without a contract — and without a union — on March 15.”
Is this because the police chief was not only overseeing security at the protest but also voicing her vested political interest in the highly controversial issue at hand? It seems clear that she was immersed in the context of that poster.
Words are subjective, indeed.
American Universities and colleges today are now, by design, overwhelmingly leftist in their belief systems and political activities. Students and faculty alike frequently glorify monstrous leftists like Mao Tse-tung and Che Guevara. To some, they are socialist revolutionary heroes, while to others their image alone is testimony of mass murder and oppression.
When Ward Churchill was fired from his job as Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2007 for engaging in research misconduct, scholars insisted that Churchill was singled out for his political views, most notably his statements about 9/11 in which he “referred to the ‘technocrats’ working at the World Trade Center as ‘little Eichmanns.‘” There continues to be an outpouring of support for Churchill from the academic community, many of whom have stressed that Academic Freedom must be staunchly defended.
Whither tolerance and intellectual diversity?
The University of Wisconsin-Madison was recently ordered by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to pay nearly $500,000 in legal costs to a student group that claimed its First Amendment rights were violated when the student government rejected a portion of its funds because they were earmarked for religious worship. Badger Catholic, a student Catholic group that conducts various religious and spiritual activities on and off campus, sued the university, which claimed that funding some of the group’s activities would “amount to an illegal endorsement of religion.” The Appeals Court disagreed with the University and the Supreme Court recently declined to hear the case. It’s been hailed as a victory for freedom of speech and religious expression on college campuses. $500K was lost because, rather than protecting the fundamental rights of its students, the school chose to discriminate against their activities purely because of the group’s religious beliefs.
While the flap over the Firefly poster may seem trivial, it is anything but. This incident and UWS’s ego-driven, bureaucratic response provides a teachable moment. It should make us pause and think about how easily our freedoms can erode, in the arbitrary name of protecting others’ feelings.
It’s one thing to ensure that students and faculty are physically safe, but when we surrender to the Wordsmiths what may or may not offend someone or make them uncomfortable, we are helping to pave our own Road to Hell.
“Sure as I know anything, I know this – they will try again. Maybe on another world, maybe on this very ground swept clean. A year from now, ten? They’ll swing back to the belief that they can make people… better. And I do not hold to that. So no more runnin’. I aim to misbehave.” – Mal Reynolds, Captain: Space Boat Serenity







Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?
117 Comments
Freedom of speech, and the free-flow of ideas are anathema to the University brainwashing experience.
As a test, Professor Miller should now put up a poster of Che Guevara. We all know now that he was a cold-blooded killer, knocking off supposed opponents without trial. How would the police chief respond then?
This professor got off easy. Imagine if he'd been actively promoting conservative ideas. You'd have never heard the end of the outrage.
Ah, academia, thought back to my days on campus and I can't help but remember how much of a fantasy life it was. Just do exactly what they want you to and you'll always find freedom and utopia! Which means for the rest of us who practice reality, we will find struggle and warfare, becoming targets whether we care to or not.
There are a lot of conservative groups that operate against the will of campus thought police and in direct line of their ire. One great way to provide a glaring example of their biased application of free speech "allowances" is to take a liberal posting, such as that Kill The Bill poster, mimic it exactly except turn it into a conservative message. And then to watch as the posters are torn down and speak out when the conservatives who posted them are penalized. Wish I knew in college what I know now, would have been a lot more of a rabble rouser, that's for sure.
It seems now that the themes that were explored in "Firefly" and then "Serenity" are more pertinent now than ever. The themes explored are not new. George Orwell also warned us with his novel "1984".
Universities with thier Speech Codes, P.C., and all the other ways language has been distorted have brought George Orwells warnings to life in frightening fashion. We are living in the age of Big Brother and Newspeak. The MSM is the Bureau of Truth and it looks as if Holders Justice Dept. is trying to become the Thought Police.
Orwell had warned of Governemnt that was allowed to control every aspect of our lives and Josh Whedon explored what it would be like for Free men who whould not give up thier Freedom to live in such a system. I believe it was "River" in "Serenity" who said it best, "Some people just like to meddle."
spinal,
Fingers crossed, I'm lighting a candle and saying a Rosary this morning — we've been forced to go all-in with A.J. tonight…
"Threat assessment team" you HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME!
And make it so that it's actually promoting violence, unlike the Firefly poster. Perhaps include a quote like this: "Hatred as the central element of our struggle! Hatred that is intransigent…hatred so violent that it propels a human being beyond his natural limitations, making him violent and cold-blooded killing machine." I'm willing to bet that a Che poster with that quote would be met with support and praise.
The real nproblem is that they are not kidding.
Hi Adam. Good to see you fighting the good fight. Can't wait for the start of Chuck. One of the most enjoyable parts of the week.
Regards
John
This is what I like. A spreading allergy to large bureaucratic organizations with 'threat assessment' committees. These institutions thrive as parasites on public funds to enforce a political correctness that is both mind numbing and self-serving. Tell me, did we get to the moon or win WWII because we were 'safe' or because we had a collective determination to achieve something bigger than feel good dogma? So, it it offends the progressive (liberal is too good of a word for them) kooks, push back twice as hard.
Reading the e-mail exchange just showed how an idiot can dig his own grave with his tongue. Seriously, in the course of a couple e-mails in which the officer was nothing but respectful, the professor called her a facist and a truncheon wielding, gun carrying NRA member (while he of course is a dedicated pacifist who speaks Latin).
This reminds me kind of the arrest of Henry Louis Gates in that it was wrong, but it probably wouldn't have happened if the professor had been a little more civil.
I'm with ya brotha, sure would like to see some production out of Tex, and A-Rod, it's officially almost too late.
That exemplifies "political correctness" – truth and allowed speech are whatever "we say it is".
Professor Miller sounds like my kind of Professor -
I wouldn't put money on that bet.
But it would be funny if he did that, the idiots would have to fight their desire to agree and pat him on the back for having the correct 'opinion' while still trying to 'appear' that they are actually even handed only now that the spot light is being shined on them. Either way they would hate it.
He'll have to take it court to win. Universities are no free speech zone unless pressed. I remember a Stossel episode where there is a law fund setup to help fight against free speech abuse by universities. They take all sides liberal or conservative. Going to their website:
http://thefire.org/torch
It looks as if they have already taken up this cause.
And not one of the idiots would have a single speck of common sense at all.
The actor that played Capt. Mal is Nathan Fillion. Mr. Fillion if I am correct is gay. Why does the Univ. of Wisconsin hate gay people?
That said, my university had a couple of freespeech zones. and you had to have a permit to use it.
This is my main problem with progressives: No discussion, I'm right! Tea parties are racists, yet Wall Street druggies are speaking truth to power, so no discussion! Global warming science is done, no debate allowed. If their views are so "right", how come they don't seem able to survive open debate?
I don't mind a (wo)man holding stupid views, as long as we as a society are allowed to shine a light to them. Be a whole lot less "Gunrunner" and "Solyandras" if that was the case.
There is no such thing as Freedom of Speech anymore, especially in the University setting, where you have Ultra Liberal indoctrination. They don't want to have any ideology, debate or opinion other than the opinion of the agenda to be presented. Things like this do not bode well for our Nation as a whole. Fall in line with what we want you to believe or be re-educated, if we cannot re-educate you, we will just terminate you….Welcome to the beginning of 1984…
Perhaps his next poster should be Jayne saying "Let's be bad guys".
The concept of not to be meddled with, is hard to understand by those anally fixated by rules they feel do not apply to their sensibilities.
The fact that the UWS 'threat assessment team' 1. sanctioned the confiscation of Miller's property 2. condoned censorship by supporting the removal of the posters (especially the Fascism poster) 3. used a university police officer to enforce ideological conformity 4. reflexively used its bureaucratic power in an attempt to intimidate Miller is all the proof one needs that academic progressives/fascists just don't get irony.
It doesn't matter to his acting or to the quality of the show, but Mr. Fillion is not gay. Sean Maher, who played Dr. Simon Tam and who is the other actor in the scene the quote references, did recently come out although he has been in a long term relationship with his partner.
Mr. Fillion is, however, Canadian.
The professor was quick to pull the fascist trump card.
As we learn more about this professor, I won't be surprised to find he is someone not to be celebrated.
It doesn't make his case any less valid.
well there goes my snarky argument.
but i will replace it with: Why does the Univ. of Wisconsin hate Canadians? Why is their threat assessment team populated by jingoistic xenophobes?
Indeed! Free the Canucks, eh!
Don't they know that all the best Canadians come to the United States seeking a better life for themselves and thier children. Why are they anti-Immigrant? Don't they know that these Canadian immigrants take acting jobs that regular Americans won't do?
Good show FireFly…..Mal is a stand up guy with principles, polar opposite of police chief Walter…whom could be viewed as an Alliance flunky.
Everyone knows you don't mess with Firefly.
LOVE that poster.
You're G-D right….
and that's the difference between conservatives & liberals. we defend individuals according to consistent principles. the left picks & chooses only those positions/causes/groups that prop up their beliefs.
note the frequent "Credit Where It's Due" columns on the Bigs, which applaud liberal media outlets for occasionally doing the right thing.
"I aim to misbehave"
Awesome, just an awesome line…..
my sentiments, exactly.
And yet, these people undoubtedly cheer every abortion experienced by any student at the school; the most violent and reprehensible act on planet Earth! There are so many examples of "wrong will be called right, and right, wrong" these days that it's impossible to keep count.
Does that mean they can't have any pro-choice posters or rallys? Doesn't it expressly encourage the violent murder of babies?
Smart choice Adam. Mandy would be my go-to-girl too for this publication.
Hey Adam, please tell me you are sending this prof. a TON of autographed posters!
"These are stone killers, little man. They ain't cuddly like me."
"See, Vera? Dress yourself up you get taken out somewhere fun."
"Yeah well, what you plan and what takes place ain't ever exactly been similar."
"I'll kill a man in a fair fight. Or if I think he's gonna start a fair fight. Or if he bothers me. Or if there's a woman. Or if I'm gettin' paid. Mostly when I'm gettin' paid."
SHall I go on?
Why yes. Yes they do.
I find this truly hard to believe. You know this by observation, or participation?
I guess Professor Miller can't display the "Don't Threat On Me" or "Join, or Die" flag because it depicts animal dis-cruelty and dis-memberment.
Quite frankly, even without the benefit of the video clip, the meaning of the quote is plain — Expect fair play and a fair warning in your dealings with me; no double-crosses or sneakiness here.
It is regrettable and unsettling that the university administration didn't give Professor Miller that assurance of fair play, but sent their Brown-coated chief rent-a-cop to their dirty work in the name of their campus threat assessment team, which sound creepily like a second cousin to Obamacare death panels a.ka. bureaucrats stepping off the pages of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451.
Thank you, Adam Baldwin and Liberty Chick, for this latest example of group think on our campuses of higher learning.
Casey gets all the best lines
"You know what the chain of command is? It's the chain I go get and beat you with until you understand who's in ruttin' command here."
The sign by the little free speech zone said a permit is necessary. So, by observation.
Adam, you should write one of these a week. Unless you already are, then you should up your output to twice a week.
"Did you say explode?? I don't wanna explode!"
Thank you Mandy and Adam for a first-rate, informative article
For those of you who don't know me, I am a staunch supporter of the Constitution and I sometimes get a little longwinded when talking about things I am passionate about. A little passion sometimes goes a long way, and in this case a little too long and I am over words for this space with my comments. So, if you all don't mind (or even if you do) my comments are posted in my blog: http://bbumh.blogspot.com/2011/10/comment-on-univ...
I'll bet he has a steady supply of patchouli….
I love the last one, its the reason I liked Jane.
Stupid situation, and the chief is the real fascist whacko, but…hate to say it, the professor's office is on University property. At the end of the day doesn't the person who owns the property get to decide what goes on the walls? More importantly, would a poster of Kirk & Spock with drawn phasers also been yanked, because that would REALLY be an outrage! (no, I never did get into Firefly)
From Yngblkcons: "the professor called her a facist and a truncheon wielding, gun carrying NRA member (while he of course is a dedicated pacifist who speaks Latin)."
This is definitely NOT my kind of professor even though he has a case.
I use "I'll be in my bunk" all the time.
Describing any university as"the corner of no and where."
The university is a public institution. It belongs to the people of Wisconsin, not to a particular person.
I find it particularly interesting that the University responded to a perceived threat by issuing an unambiguous threat.
My professor had a picture of George Bush as Dr. Evil prominently displayed. Later my college had a poster 'Global Warming is Real and Caused by Humans'. I actually ripped that one down myself, and I got in big trouble for denying free speech…
All free speech is created equal. But some is created more equal then others it seems.
I don't think Che gets enough credit as the greatest tee shirt salesman in the world. Sure he was a psychotic homicidal maniac, of course he murdered people for fun, but that shouldn't take away from his merchandizing and sales ability. Well, maybe the merchandizing what with him being dead at the time and all. It's like Hitler, no one ever says he was a great artist (what? he wasn't a great artist? oh, ) OK, never mind.
>sarc
In fact, our best TV space captains — Reynolds and Kirk — have been played by hardworking Canadians.
I've given up on those two. I'm hoping Granderson and Cano can lead the charge. And Burnett might surprise everyone. He's looked a lot sharper recently. Plus I'll bet he's tired of the pen. What does the Detroit starter look like tonight? Good, bad or indifferent?
Whedon may be a giant lib but he has a great ear for dialog. "Time for some thrilling heroics!".
if Hitler was correctly categorized as leftwing (Nazi = Natl Socialist), do you think the left would embrace him? i think we both know the fact that Der Fuhrer was so beyond the pale is why there's been a 70 yr campaign to disassociate him from the left and an intellectually dishonest effort to paint him as a creature of the right.
"They ain't cuddly like me" Shakespeare on his best day couldn't have improved on that.
"“Sure as I know anything, I know this – they will try again. Maybe on another world, maybe on this very ground swept clean. A year from now, ten? They’ll swing back to the belief that they can make people… better. And I do not hold to that. So no more runnin’. I aim to misbehave.” – Mal Reynolds, Captain: Space Boat Serenity"
I aim to misbehave as well.
;-D
"As we learn more about this professor, I won't be surprised to find he is someone not to be celebrated.
It doesn't make his case any less valid."
Well said. In the end, he may not be "on our side", but that's when the First Amendment kicks in. I may not agree with everything he says, but I will fight to the death for his right to say it.
Not only that, but apparently he has a great ear for "classical liberalism". If he's that much of a lib and can write and produce and direct a show that promotes values that conservatives and libertarians alike can get behind, he's the most talented guy in Hollywood!
Could he be a closet libertarian perhaps?
When this story first came to light, it looked to me like a case of zero tolerance run amuk: someone used a word on a list of "bad words" and that can't be allowed. How unexpected that Gov. Walker's struggle with #WIUnions could be depicted with one of those same words without impunity.
You'd think that the apparently left-leaning, freedom-squelching administration would love Mal and his crew, that ragtag bunch who rise up to redistribute the wealth of the Alliance among those less fortunate. Other than missing the point entirely…Chief Walter and others would first need to investigate the context of the quote, research the situation, and apply critical thinking skills.
I miss Firefly all over again.
He should have stuck with the Firefly theme and put up a pro-Alliance propaganda poster. I guarantee the faculty/academic community would have approved of it, making the irony all the richer.
"we're not telling people what to think…..we're just trying to show them how."
Well said…but the university has some right over employees, no? Otherwise someone could come to work with no pants on and claim it's their right to do so.
I hope most folk here remember the old playground retort, 'Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me'. To ban a poster of an icon of popular culture with one of the character's quotes is…nuts. What next? Tom bashing Jerry [or vice versa] over the head gets banned? The entire 'Monty Python' output? Maybe we can censor Ahmed the dead terrorist [after all, he says, 'I'll keeel you!']. Maybe we can excise the magnificent fighting words of Sir Winston Churchill during WWII? Or these, 'We should be too big to take offense and too noble to give it'. I trust everyone knows who said that
[P.S. Abe Lincoln]
I'm not sure how much water that hypothesis holds. There is no question that simply putting up a poster is among the expressions guaranteed by the First Amendment. Whether refusing to wear pants is so is more academic. It is clearly not an expression of any idea that can be gleaned from the act itself, unless the meaning is simply "we shouldn't have to wear pants," a meaning which few people would ratify.
The Ninth Amendment reserves to the people those rights not enumerated in the rest of the Constitution, but there is no right that "the people" would claim to go pantless. I would agree that the institution has a responsibility to enforce certain standards, but I would argue that in a public university, where property rights are not primary, the standards should be the prevailing social standards, what the Supreme Court has called "community standards." These, I am sure even in Wisconsin, do not include leaving home without your pants, and if the standards of the community include the rejection of free speech, the university still is not free to abrogate the Constitution.
Firefly is the best TV series ever, and I want that poster.
People like RealPaul give me some hope in this sordid world! Wish I could give you more than +1
Tsk, tsk, tsk….Cap'n Mal causing problems again. Too bad Joss couldn't have another season or two of Firefly so we could get a closer look at what Amerika…uh, er….fascism looks like.
I loved that show….There was so many subtle things in it that are so relevant to human nature and how we percieve each other ….and ourselves….I also like his other show that got canned too early…Dollhouse…The exploration of identity hits me in my philosophy bone….
You're still right…I was just trying to lure you into an intelligent discussion that involved the phrase, "wearing pants."
Well played.
It's Gorram….LOL…Shiny….
If he is, good luck getting him to admit it in public….
The episode where they capture an Alliance agent and Jane is gonna torture him is classic. Jane gets all upset when the guy spills his guts before he gets to use his knife on him.
Adam Baldwin was perfect, the whole cast was perfect. I miss that show.
Good point. I doubt the majority of his fans would be found on BH. More likely HP.
Without a doubt he struck the right cord on Firefly. How he did it is the question. Was he mimicing someone else's values or are they his deep down.
What a great show.
I hope that the legislators take that $500K out of the regents and administrators salaries.
There is no justice in the world.
If there were, Firefly would still be in production and going strong and all those stupid "reality" shows would have long ago faded into well-deserved obscurity.
Yeah, I know that has nothing to do with the topic currently being discussed, but it needed to be said.
Yeah, I agree with that.
I don't know about that. I mean, I get the distinct feeling that shows like Buffy and Angel and Firefly were not necessarily that popular among the HP set.
I don't see how you mimic those values and do such a good job at portraying them.
But I don't have any evidence either way. It's just something I mull over sometimes.
excellent use of strawman logic. Sometimes you must fight fire with fire…. it is the only thing they understand.
"And I was gonna get me an ear".
Alright now, let's look at the dark side of our terrible Firefly grief. What if Obama promised to force Fox, Whedon and the whole cast and crew to restart production if we agree to re-elect him. Would you sell your soul that way to bring back the show (and Wash and Book!)?
Luckily we'll never be faced with that awful choice. Because it's well known that I am a weak, weak man
Oh man, that's an evil question….
Wash and Book would have to come back, that's non-negotiable. And more Reavers, what's better than space zombies??
I know what you mean, Tex & ARod have become automatic outs, but if our Yanks have any hope of winning, we need some production out of them. I'll give ARod a pass, sorta, since he's been injured most of the year, but Tex has been invisible.
I don't know anything about Detroit's starter for tonight, except his ERA is kinda high, IMHO.
I certainly agree with that sentiment
Well..to be honest, that is just what I was thinking….I would love to see more episodes of Firefly. The Science Channel has recognized the value of the show..they have rerun all the episodes a couple times and in order.
Che Guevara a cold-blooded killer? That can't be true. Guevara was just a community organizer. He also frequently wore berets.
finally breaktime….just enough time to make this!
http://i79.photobucket.com/albums/j147/mugen_28/E...
finally breaktime….just enough time to make this!
http://i79.photobucket.com/albums/j147/mugen_28/E...
Great piece Adam and Liberty. Keep fightin'!
If anyone is surprised by this they have been sleeping for the past 20 years. The surprise is how people like Lisa can both talk and think on the same day. She needs to remember, talk on odd days and think on even.
So many are under complete and utter deception and they don't know it.
Of course it's non-negotiable. Would I sell my soul to the devil for anything less than heaven on earth?
Exactly. There's a certain schadenfreuede in seeing a liberal professor get snagged in the speech codes which liberals have imposed on university campuses, but in the end, free speech is free speech.
Besides, Firefly is a cool show.
Yeah, that's been a big hole in the lineup.
A buddy of mine just e-mailed me to say that he figures A.J. will need 7 runs (I think that's a fair estimate), so A-Rod and Tex had better get busy.
You must be logged in to post a comment.