A daily dose of philosophical food for your noodle... bacon for your brain!

Saturday, April 10, 2004

Women as a Force of Civilization

By Diana Hsieh

Really, you have to wonder what kind of person this guy was before his wife died:

:"Red" Rountree insists he's had a good life, an odd statement coming from a 92-year-old now serving a 12-year sentence for robbing a Texas bank. Mr. Rountree told the Associated Press that he stopped behaving after his wife died in 1986--hanging out with the wrong sort, taking to drink, experimenting with drugs and, eventually, robbing banks. He knocked over his first at age 86, in Mississippi, and a year later became the oldest inmate in Florida's prison system when he was convicted of robbing another in Pensacola. But he makes no apologies. "You want to know why I rob banks?" he asked the AP. "It's fun. I feel good, awful good. I feel good for sometimes days, for sometimes hours."


Sheesh. And from the same page, more abuse of anti-trust laws:

At the University of Wisconsin, where protesters once blew up the Army Math Research Center, a new generation of activists has filed a complaint in state court accusing two-dozen local drinking establishments of violating antitrust laws by collectively agreeing to eliminate their Friday- and Saturday-night drink specials. The bar owners told the Chronicle of Higher Education that they were simply responding to a call from the university to help cut down on student binge drinking. A lawyer for the tavern league told the paper: "When you combine a student with imagination with a lawyer with time on his hands, this is what you get."


I say that this is an "abuse" of anti-trust, but really, much like with heroine, there is no such thing as wise use.

Comment Rules

Rule #1: You are welcome to state your own views in these comments, as well as to criticize opposing views and arguments. Vulgar, nasty, and otherwise uncivilized comments will be deleted.

Rule #2: These comments are not a forum for discussion of any and all topics. Please stay roughly on-topic.

You can use some HTML tags in your comments -- such as <b>, <i>, and <a>.

Back to TOP