The Vanderbilt Sit-In
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Shadow-boxing with themselves.
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Shadow-boxing with themselves.
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
Shadow-boxing with themselves.
Seen in the comments: "If Vanderbilt has a 7% acceptance rate, imagine the level of brain dead neo-Nazi drama queens in their reject pile."
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
Shadow-boxing with themselves.
Seen in the comments: "If Vanderbilt has a 7% acceptance rate, imagine the level of brain dead neo-Nazi drama queens in their reject pile."
@George-K said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
Shadow-boxing with themselves.
Seen in the comments: "If Vanderbilt has a 7% acceptance rate, imagine the level of brain dead neo-Nazi drama queens in their reject pile."
I don't think that tracks. They screen for it.
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I have to wonder how someone can stand around and watch such idiotic speeches. It makes you appreciate people who can actually form sentences and have logical coherent thoughts. I watched about 5 minutes of that speech and it was a combination of how the conditions were "evil" and devoid of "humanity" and how "jail was better" and how they are surrounded by nicest most caring friends you could meet and "let me tell you about my experience" (cue selfish story) and other remarks that were awkwardly ad-libbed because it felt like the first time the person had communicated outside of typed social media in 5 years.
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These people fantasize about their Selma moment and their chance to make a speech in the great tradition of the civil rights speeches they learned about in grade school. I remember the "leader" of the CHAZ rebellion in Seattle and the speeches she attempted to give. Two things were obvious. She wanted to sound like a grownup activist making important speeches about the social issues of the day, and she was an abject mediocrity who couldn't form complete thoughts or sentences. All of this stuff tends towards cosplay.
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I have to wonder how someone can stand around and watch such idiotic speeches. It makes you appreciate people who can actually form sentences and have logical coherent thoughts. I watched about 5 minutes of that speech and it was a combination of how the conditions were "evil" and devoid of "humanity" and how "jail was better" and how they are surrounded by nicest most caring friends you could meet and "let me tell you about my experience" (cue selfish story) and other remarks that were awkwardly ad-libbed because it felt like the first time the person had communicated outside of typed social media in 5 years.
@89th said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
I have to wonder how someone can stand around and watch such idiotic speeches.
Look in the mirror. You're part of corporate America, too.
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@89th said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
Why do you think I work remotely?
I don't think I could make it in an office. The way those people live and conduct themselves, it's a wonder they don't just put fluoxetine in the drinking water.
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@89th said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
Why do you think I work remotely?
I don't think I could make it in an office. The way those people live and conduct themselves, it's a wonder they don't just put fluoxetine in the drinking water.
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
it's a wonder they don't just put fluoxetine in the drinking water.
They don't?
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
it's a wonder they don't just put fluoxetine in the drinking water.
They don't?
@George-K said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
@Aqua-Letifer said in The Vanderbilt Sit-In:
it's a wonder they don't just put fluoxetine in the drinking water.
They don't?
They definitely do not and they should. Crazy bastards.