I have no desire to read your clownish posts. If there was a mute button available to block all of your posts I would have done it years ago. You bring nothing of value and merely use your extended vocabulary to troll those who have opinions that differ from yours.
You have no desire to read my clownish posts, but here you are reading them, and replying to them, and rehashing ones I wrote six months ago, which evidently you have cataloged. That doesn't seem like a very - caution: big word coming - efficacious way of ignoring me.
It's not a mater of playing the victim card or achieving the moral high ground it's simply a matter of being a decent human and to have the insight to realize you're a member of an online community here. Realizing that you're not more important then any other poster or reader here
"You're not more important then any other poster or reader here," says the guy who wants me banned because he finds my posts personally offensive. Do you see the irony?
it would be common decency to try to avoid insulting or disrespecting.
Yeah well, I never claimed to be decent. On the contrary, I freely admit to being an unpleasant misanthropic as
shole. But you know what? Insulting people is fun. Disrespecting people and institutions is fun. Iconoclasm and contrarianism are fun. Try it some time.
Calling Tony a mentally challenged person or using a Vietnamese ethnic slur is not only disrespectful to the person you're arguing with but could be trigger words that bring up negative emotions
Trigger words? Have you heaven forfend been micro aggressed? Maybe go have a lie down on the divan and I'll bring you a coloring book.
Trigger words and micro aggressions and safe spaces are post modern fa
ggotries designed to confer victimhood on people who would otherwise have to take responsibilities for their own decisions and failures.
for other users of this service that Dave allows us to use for free. You stepped on my shoes when making light of cancer survivors which brought to mind difficult personal feelings of a younger brother who struggled through that.
You citing your difficult personal feelings, this is you not playing the victim card I assume.
Story: I was living with my brother when my father died young of cancer - he had the misfortune of not being a cancer survivor - lo these many years ago. I'd come home from a gig at I don't know probably 5 AM after a long night of whore mongering and debauchery and after a bit the phone started ringing and it rang and rang and finally he answered it because I certainly wasn't getting up and after a few minutes he came in and shook me awake and said "we lost dad" and without missing a beat I said "did you look behind the refrigerator." It was a funny cancer joke then and it's a funny cancer joke now.
I know Tony has said it before but you're the classic definition of a keyboard tough guy. You wouldnt dare say something like that to my face because I'm probably 40 years your junior and I'd run circles around you.
Citing Tony does not help your case, because Tony's, well, you know. And anyway Tony's wrong. I'm not a tough guy: I'm a typist. I don't have the theme from Rocky playing in the background, I'm not shadowing boxing between posts and wearing dirty sweats (okay I am wearing dirty sweats but you get the point). The fact is I wouldn't say "something like that" to your face because we'd never be in the same room together, because I'm very particular about with whom I drink. And the fact is that if we were in the room together I might very well say something like that, assuming that "that" is a reference to cancer or god forbid an off color joke that might trigger a microaggression. And if I did dare to you'd what? Punch me in the face like a real life tough guy? That sir, does not sound like "common decency." Quite the contrary, it sounds to me like you're mentally ill.