Michelle Z Provencher's Profile
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- over 3 years ago on Candorville
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over 3 years ago
on Candorville
Not really getting this one, either. Itâs a somewhat unfamiliar strip and English is not my first language.
IF âthe bossâ emailed, writing in part, âNo need to come in ever.â WHY is she there? Alternately, IF she knew it was this Dick Fink person impersonating the boss, why is she feigning ignorance about why he came in also? âWhatâre you doing here?â
Obviously, she knew the email was a forgery sent to insure that everyone else stayed home, so Mr. Fink would have her alone at the office, so again, WHY is she there? Heâs either just a creep who imagines if he clears the field-the office-that he has a chance with her OR he wants her alone for more nefarious purposes.
Her need to be passive-aggressive with this guy, "He wrote âtooâ instead of âtoâ, just like you always do." when she KNOWS it was him and knows why heâs there, just seems pointless. Beyond the opportunity of being a bit of a douche herself. Also, quite possibly highly unsafe, he seems âoffâ.
Allowing yourself to be alone with those guys who have no chance, but are still pining away for you, hoping they can change your mind, is a situation fraught with potential danger. (Speaking from some experience here.)
Apologies for possibly reading too much into this and for the long comment but at the least while heâs weird, sheâs kind of a b****.
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over 3 years ago
on Candorville
Pardon me, please, but Iâm going to be pedantic here: âWhat?âŚNoâŚWhat I saidâŚGeorge Bernard Shaw said WHAT I SAID.â
George Bernard Shaw most definitely did NOT say what you said, guy in comic. YOU said what he said-IF GBS ever said it. He would have said it before you. You donât take credit, even in a comic or among friends, for a thought or statement that in theory has demonstrably been thought or stated WELL before you were alive.
It also comes off as a bit pretentious to not just say what you want without attribution, as if, imagining that if someone with more heft said it that makes it more likely that your companion will take notice of your thought and intellectual prowess by virtue of the alleged quote. Unless youâre an Oxford Don, just say what youâre thinking, no need to impress us with your bona fides.
Again, apologies for being that person.
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over 3 years ago
on Candorville
Canât tell if the lady is THAT clueless and thatâs the joke or itâs that the guy knows how delusional she and her âLive and let liveâ Nonsense rings hollow but canât tell her or what.
If you remember other peopleâs foibles, itâs likely that they DO bother you. And I like to try on that rising intonation, question at the end of every sentence thing every now and then. Itâs kind of funny to watch the responses? Like, is this bothering you or are you just silently deciding Iâm some airhead? Totally, because of this one minor quirk? :D
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over 4 years ago
on Dilbert Classics
All of the hairstyles in Dilbert are hideous! :D
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over 4 years ago
on Dilbert Classics
What exactly is the difference between a slave and a âcitizenâ of a Bronze Age culture in which the leader-a pharaoh in this case-is acknowledged as a God, one with a big âG,â the infallible kind?
Seriously, this seems like a distinction without a difference. I suspect that these citizens were, at best, indentured servants, commanded by their God-King, whom they could NOT question, were provided some form of shelter and were fed but thatâs about it.
Exactly HOW, from the perspective of a citizen of a 21st Century Democracy, were they any different from slaves? (Not trying to be an a**, just not really buying this new gospel of Egyptian History.)
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over 4 years ago
on Dilbert Classics
Really? Donald Trump said that not paying taxes showed that he was smart. CLEARLY implying that only idiots pay and support their own country. Let the suckers, I mean his supporters pay, I guess. Then, he tried to deny saying it. On the same broadcast, of the same debate. Dear Donnie lies so much even he canât keep track. Who doesnât know what day of the week it is? How about you spare us your âcleverâ political observations?
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over 4 years ago
on Dilbert Classics
Thank you.
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over 4 years ago
on The Meaning of Lila
Has this childâs name been mentioned in the actual comic? And I mean THIS time, not one of the apparently many other times this has been rerun.
Iâm new, so I only know the childâs name from comments from old veterans but if the name has not been given in the comicâs reality WHY should Lila know who this brat is?!
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over 6 years ago
on C'est la Vie
Well, your authority and personal experience, vast though it may be, is not complete then. You are wrong. All you seem to have is a bias against the French, which doesnât make you an authority, just a troll.
âIn truth, Iâm not a huge fan of our leap into space. Itâs a neat trick, but I have sympathy with those (in 1969 and today) who feel the minds and money could be put to better use elsewhere.â
Better use elsewhereâŚWhere? the U.S. Military budget, for instance, in 1969 was 85 Billion Dollars. NASAâs was about 4 Billion. The annual DoD Budget for 2010 was 738 Billion. 752B in 2011, 725B in 2012, 679B in 2013, 647B in 2014 and 633B in 2015. (It was back up to 731B in 2019.) (Total, 4,174 Billion for those 6 years.) NASAâs was 19 Billion in 2010, 17B in 2011, 19B in 2012, 20B in 2013, 20B in 2014 and 21B in 2015. (Total 116 Billion for those 6 years.) Are your comments about resources being put to better use as trenchant when speaking of the military? You, The U.S., spend MORE on ways to kill people who are or were no threat until they were attacked by your military in TEN DAYS at the DoD than is spent ALL YEAR by NASA.
The people who know-or should know-the amount, the pittance, that has been expended in space exploration and yet still âthinkâ that all the side benefits, that accrued from the developments in science and technology that fueled space exploration, havenât repaid that original expenditure just seem ignorant. REALLY ignorant. Itâs not dissimilar to the fools who imagine that foreign aid is a huge portion of your federal governmentâs budget. âPast research has shown that Americans think we spend about a quarter of the national budget on foreign aid. In reality, foreign aid spending is a drop in the budgetary bucket.â Itâs around 1% of the annual budget. Not dissimilar to NASAâs budget, which is even smaller at about 0.5% of the budget.
You seem in earnest but this just seems to be proof that mere earnestness isnât so important after all. (A little Oscar Wilde reference there, since making literary references seems the thing to do here.) No offense, but you seem to be completely at sea on this.