Frazz by Jef Mallett for February 20, 2012

  1. Missing large
    Havelock_Vetinari  about 13 years ago

    Always look for the loopholes. The fine makings of a good lawyer.

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    ReneTray  about 13 years ago

    A long time ago for I.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    furrykef  about 13 years ago

    ā€œFor Iā€? Somebody needs to go back to school then ;)

     •  Reply
  4. Obie
    tagteam  about 13 years ago

    texters lose the ability to spell correctly

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    RonaldDavis  about 13 years ago

    Heā€™s not dodging work. It is much easier to find information about a U.S.A. president than about an average corporate president.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    RonaldDavis  about 13 years ago

    I think all commodities are fungible by definition.

     •  Reply
  7. Screenshot 2025 01 16 at 3.19.02 pm
    Sportymonk  about 13 years ago

    Who was the president between James K. Polk and Zachary Taylor?

    Yes this is one but it is skirting a very fine line. I knew the answer and had one customer at Borders who asked me. We got the answer from different source which confirms the validity of it. Mine is from a poster on presidents and he got it from ā€œThe Big List of Presidentsā€ or something like that.

    Quote, ā€œSenator David Rice Atchison of Missouri served as president for the 24 hours between the expiration of Polkā€™s term on March 4, 1849 and Taylorā€™s inauguration on March 5th . (Taylor refused to take the oath of office on March 4th, which fell on a Sunday.) Atchison signed a few official documents, but spent, most of his one-day term sleeping.ā€

     •  Reply
  8. Image
    Olddog1  about 13 years ago

    Ronald Davis: No therā€™re not. You donā€™t borrow sugar and return bacon or coffee unless you agree on an exchange price, which can change quickly. Cash is fungible. You borrow $5 and you can return 5 $1s

     •  Reply
  9. Pearshape full
    PSTone  about 13 years ago
    How about a paper on John Hanson, the first President of the United States? Check it out. The Postal Service even honored him during the Bicentennialā€”on a post card.
     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    Vlad Taltos  about 13 years ago

    How about Joe Biden, who was arguably president between noon on 1/20/09, when GW Bush automatically ceased to be president, and 12:05 pm, when Obama took the oath of office? (They squeezed in Bidenā€™s oath of office as VP sometime around 11:55 but then had one more musical performance.)

     •  Reply
  11. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 13 years ago

    If weā€™re going to nitpick, letā€™s at least be complete and precise.

    ā€œThe United States governmentā€ existed under the Articles of Confederation, but in a different form. John Hanson was the first President of Congress elected under the provisions of the Articles, so it isnā€™t absurd to consider him the ā€œfirst President of the United States.ā€

    (By the way, neither John Hancock nor John Hanson was the first President of the Continental Congress; that was Petyon Randolph. But John Hancock held the office when independence was declared.)

    ā€œThe president was not only a presiding officer. As a delegate, he had power to vote and to serve on committeesā€¦He was in effect the administrative head of stateā€¦As Congressā€™s social functionary, the president was its undisputed first memberā€¦the ceremonial head of state, and, indeed, foreshadowed the high tone set by President Washington under the federal Constitution.ā€ ā€“ Historian Richard B. Morris

    George Washington himself referred to the office as ā€œthe most important seat in the United Statesā€.

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    tigre1  about 13 years ago

    Anybody figure what the stock ticker symbol for ā€˜Fungible Commodities Incā€™ would be? It MIGHT have fun in it.

     •  Reply
  13. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 13 years ago

    ā€œOr Millard Filmore, or Cal Coolidge, neither of whom ever did anything of sufficient interest to warrant a grade school report in the first place.

    Hey, at least Fillmore got a Junior High School named after him on ā€œThe Brady Bunch.ā€ Thatā€™s worth remembering.

    F! F! F-I-L!L! L! L-M-O!O! O! O-R-E!FILLMORE JUNIOR HIGH!!!

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    sonorhC  about 13 years ago

    OK, I canā€™t just let this go. There is no logical argument by which one could claim that David Rice Atchison was ever President of the United States. The whole notion rests on the argument that, since Taylor had not yet taken the oath of office, he was not yet technically President. The problem is that Atchison never took the oath of office, either, so if thatā€™s a requirement to be President, then he fails the requirement, too. You can argue that Taylor became President a day before he took the oath, or you can argue that for that one day, there was no President at all, but thereā€™s no logical way to argue that there was a President, and it was Atchison.Likewise, itā€™s sketchy to claim John Hanson as a President of the United States, since by that same argument, you would end up concluding that Joseph Biden is the current President of the United States. Hanson was the President of the Congress of the United States, just as Biden is the President of the Senate of the United States. The office of ā€œPresident of the United Statesā€, analogous to the office that Obama currently holds, did not exist at that time.

     •  Reply
  15. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 13 years ago

    ā€œThere were I think about 12 presidents before Washington, he was the first Pres after the Constitution was made. So the otheres are mere footnotes in history.ā€

    Well, we consider the United States to have been ā€œbornā€ in 1776, but our current Constitution wasnā€™t ratified until 1787. Apart from a general understanding that there was a war to fight, those are sort of the ā€œmissing yearsā€ of formative U.S. history. What you consider ā€œfootnotesā€ a historian might consider ā€œwoefully underacknowledged.ā€ That you donā€™t know anything about it doesnā€™t make it ā€œnot worth knowing.ā€

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    monawarner  about 13 years ago

    Iā€™ll probably never need to use it, but I thank you all for the opportunity to learn something new.

     •  Reply
  17. Zaktani
    PkfanD66  about 13 years ago

    No. But theyā€™re sometimes told to.

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    beady.el  about 13 years ago

    @c001 ā€“ Yes, but generally the reports are allowed be critical of their chosen subject ā€” they arenā€™t required to be laudatory.

     •  Reply
  19. 11 06 126
    Varnes  about 13 years ago

    Thatā€™s true, beady.el, I know a kid who got an A on a paper that was very critical of Andrew Jacksonā€™s treatment of the Indiansā€¦.And not just the Trail of Tearsā€¦.He actually betrayed Indian friends who had fought with him. Nasty dudeā€¦.

     •  Reply
  20. Avatar1 65
    Snoopy_Fan  about 13 years ago

    I stand corrected. John Hanson was a President of the Continental Congress under the Articles of Confederation. (1779) However, his role was largely ceremonial and lacked any executive real authority such as that later given under the Constitution. As no federal government existed yet, he could only truly be called the President of the Continental Congress, NOT President of the United States.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    Demonick  about 13 years ago

    I really like Caulfieldā€™s character but sometimesā€¦Heā€™s just an annoying little smart@$$.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    childe_of_pan  almost 8 years ago

    BIGPUMA: I am trying not to respond to every crotchety old fart thing you say (and I donā€™t care how old you are, youā€™re still a crochety old fart) because these are postings from five years before Iā€™m reading them. All the same I wish (vainly, Iā€™m sure) that you would take you personal vendetta against Mallett, along with your seemingly endless campaign to prove your moral superiority over everyone who disagrees with you, somewhere else.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frazz