"Official" Thread The Political / Election Quotes, Video, and Meme Thread!

...I might even be an asshole sometimes. But one thing I'm quite certain I'm not... is stupid. Sometimes I wish I was! Life would be easier in many ways. Or at least simpler.
Just sometimes? :unsure: :LOL: BTDT... ;) Someone will say to me "You're such an asshole sometimes!" And my reply is "Just sometimes? I mustn't be doing it right, then..." :cool:

The problem with stupid people is they are too stupid to realize they are so stupid. This will only make sense to a smart person... :D
 
Here's the bad news for the not so smart: AI is soon going to make you worthless. If you don't know how to design or actually make anything, you are going to find it difficult to earn a living.

Anybody remember years ago when they said we are converting to a service economy? Service will increasingly be provided by machines. Here's the condensed version of my endangered species list:

Baristas
Fast food workers
Retail clerks
Marketers
Copywriters
Salespeople
Office Managers
Customer Service Reps
Financial Analysts
Bookkeepers
Tax Accountants
Bank Clerks
Car Salespeople
Cab/Rideshare drivers
Farm workers (harvesters)
Flight attendants and gate staff
Prison guard
Delivery driver


If you cant make or fix something, you will have a problem.
 
Funny.... AND sad. I think your theory of why he called is likely spot-on.

I cannot help but laugh vigorously when someone calls me "stupid." I might be a lot of things. I might even be an asshole sometimes. But one thing I'm quite certain I'm not... is stupid. Sometimes I wish I was! Life would be easier in many ways. Or at least simpler.
Oh no no no…John Wayne said: life is tough, it’s tougher if you’re stupid
 
John Wayne said: life is tough, it’s tougher if you’re stupid
Oh, I'm familiar with that quote. But look around. Our society has cultivated stupid people and coddled them. Stupidity is rewarded now. The tables have turned on John Wayne's assertion.
 
Meanwhile, people are waking-up. But they have been intentionally dumbed-down to a simple dependent worker bee status. Generations incrementally so. God forbid one can think for themselves.
 
Oh, I'm familiar with that quote. But look around. Our society has cultivated stupid people and coddled them. Stupidity is rewarded now. The tables have turned on John Wayne's assertion.
Experienced this just today.
I manage the air quality monitors used for hot work and confined space entry at work.
One of the plant services guys comes in and requests a monitor. I ask where it will be used, so if it doesn't get returned I know where to look for it.
He says they need it for the lunch room. I say, you're doing hot work in the lunch room at lunch time?
The lunch room has microwaves, but no kitchen facilities.

It turns out some Gen X engineer decided they needed a hot work permit (which requires air monitoring) to cook hamburgers!!
Keep in mind that we have food trucks on site daily which use propane to cook. No hot work permit required for them.
I'm assuming someone brought either an electric skillet, or a George Foreman, as they would probably not approve a BBQ grill outside the back door. (I'll find out tomorrow)

And God forbid you say "Common Sense" as a response to "How do you know how to do this?"
I was told to my face we can't use common sense by a swinging dick from corporate. Even though the trainer at the training class I had to attend as a result said "Basically, we just use common sense when inspecting this."
So I spent all day in a class to learn how to use the skill set I already had.
5 years later it was determined I forgot everything I knew about the subject, even though I perform these very inspections monthly, and they scheduled "refresher training". Another 8 hour class, of which, only the last 20 minutes pertained to what I do.

I liken this to telling someone that even though you drive your car everyday, you need to take an 8 hour Driver's Ed training program. :rolleyes:
 
It turns out some Gen X engineer decided they needed a hot work permit (which requires air monitoring) to cook hamburgers!!
Probably a veiled attack on meat eaters by a vegan.

I totally respect someone's decision to never eat anything with a face. No problem. I have vegan friends who are cool about it. It's the few who get in your face about vegan that I have no patience with. I make an effort to get under their skin when they start that shit. First I tell them they don't look well. Second, I mention that it must be doubly tough to be vegan and gay in a world full of meat and straight people. Even if they aren't gay I say it anyway. One time, that got the guy really mad and he asked if I was trying to pick a fight with him. I said no. I would never pick on someone who appeared to be starving to death. Then I ordered a ribeye - rare. Barely cooked and bloody.
 
Oh no no no…John Wayne said: life is tough, it’s tougher if you’re stupid
Pardon the thread drift here, but while that phrase has been attributed to John Wayne and I too had been told it was a John Wayne quote. However, while trying to verify that for use in a critique I was writing for work, my research showed I'd been misled! According to Quote Investigator, there's no evidence John Wayne crafted that phrase or said in a movie, the earliest and strongest match of that phrase appeared in the 1971 novel The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins, which was made into the 1973 movie by the same name, featuring Robert Mitchum as the main character "Eddie Coyle." However, the character never utters that phrase in the movie. There are various other similar versions of the phrase, since then (see here for details). Here's an excerpt from that page:

In 1995 John Wayne received credit for an instance using “hard” within the signature block of a message distributed via the Usenet discussion system:[ref] 1995 April 11, Usenet discussion message, Newsgroup: comp.lang.c, From: Ron Collins @thor.tu.hac.com, Subject: Re: Shareware ANSI compatible C compiler. (Google Groups Search; Accessed January 17, 2018) link [/ref]

“Life’s hard, then you die” — Dempsey & Makepeace
“Life’s hard; it’s harder if you’re stupid” — John Wayne
In conclusion, QI believes that George V. Higgins deserves credit for this saying because it appeared in his 1971 novel. A close variant was included in the 1973 screenplay of the book, and the line was delivered by the actor Steven Keats. Instances of the phrase have been attributed to Robert Mitchum by 1978 and to John Wayne by 1987. But these linkages were late and poorly supported. Red Foxx used the saying in 1991 after it was already in circulation.
 
Probably a veiled attack on meat eaters by a vegan.

I totally respect someone's decision to never eat anything with a face. No problem. I have vegan friends who are cool about it. It's the few who get in your face about vegan that I have no patience with. I make an effort to get under their skin when they start that shit. First I tell them they don't look well. Second, I mention that it must be doubly tough to be vegan and gay in a world full of meat and straight people. Even if they aren't gay I say it anyway. One time, that got the guy really mad and he asked if I was trying to pick a fight with him. I said no. I would never pick on someone who appeared to be starving to death. Then I ordered a ribeye - rare. Barely cooked and bloody.
I treat the "in your face" vegans with similar disdain, too and make a point of pointing to my incisors saying, "I'm definitely a carnivore!" The vegans that are cool about it (like my mom) get my respect, but just like a virtue signalling EV driver, vegan assholes get no respect from me!
 
Pardon the thread drift here, but while that phrase has been attributed to John Wayne and I too had been told it was a John Wayne quote. However, while trying to verify that for use in a critique I was writing for work, my research showed I'd been misled! According to Quote Investigator, there's no evidence John Wayne crafted that phrase or said in a movie, the earliest and strongest match of that phrase appeared in the 1971 novel The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins, which was made into the 1973 movie by the same name, featuring Robert Mitchum as the main character "Eddie Coyle." However, the character never utters that phrase in the movie. There are various other similar versions of the phrase, since then (see here for details). Here's an excerpt from that page:
Yes, this is true.
I to tried to run this quote down as being a JW quote, but it wasn't to be.
But it is in the JW style, and most JW fans believe it to be a movie quote.
So just like the Joseph Goebbels quote about repeating a lie often enough and it will be believed as the truth, this line is believed to be a JW quote. In this case, it is not sinister like Goebbels intended, but a reflection of reality.
 
Yes, this is true.
I to tried to run this quote down as being a JW quote, but it wasn't to be.
But it is in the JW style, and most JW fans believe it to be a movie quote.
So just like the Joseph Goebbels quote about repeating a lie often enough and it will be believed as the truth, this line is believed to be a JW quote. In this case, it is not sinister like Goebbels intended, but a reflection of reality.
I've little doubt that John Wayne had thoughts similar to what he's often [mis]credited with saying, even if there's no evidence he actually did! It just sounds so much like something he would have said!
 
Point being that quote is spot-on. Geez....
 
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Quotes are often not attributed correctly. I believe one reason for that is that our heroes and the wise recognize wisdom and repeat it. It's poetry. Some of the most brilliant quotes and observations we value today were probably first uttered by our cave dwelling ancestors.

For example, "Where there's smoke there's fire" has a literal and metaphorical meaning. The first one of us to realize this was probably named Unk and he looked like this:

Screenshot 2024-09-25 at 2.43.11 AM.png
 
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Quotes are often not attributed correctly. I believe one reason for that is that our heroes and the wise recognize wisdom and repeat it. It's poetry. Some of the most brilliant quotes and observations we value today were probably first uttered by our cave dwelling ancestors.

For example, "Where there's smoke there's fire" has a literal and metaphorical meaning. The first one of us to realize this was probably named Unk and he looked like this:

View attachment 23879
I'm usually a stickler for details. Drives people nuts. Like so many email circulars that float around with great points but the origin was never real (and often comes with a guilt-ridden pressure for you to pass it on to all your friends) Pisses me off. Truth needs ZERO embellishment or falsehood to bolster it...all it does is cheapen it and discredit the truth.

One of the most curious things that Jesus said was "but wisdom is vindicated by her children"....meaning the 'offspring' will either vindicate and support, or show it for the sham it is.

Anyways, I should have just posted the quote itself and left the origin off, as it seems the focus became on the errant source, vs the truth of the quote itself.....managing navel lint.. And pls understand my wife and I are both coming out of a nasty flu bug. If it seems I'm more intolerant than usual, it's likely so.
 
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