Obama's Global Tax

I think I'll raise a petition to stop womens sufferage!

The Man Show with Jimmy Kimel and Adam Corolla did a bit like that.
The dimheads thought they were signing a petition to end women's suffering and only 1 picked up on that they wanted her to sign a petition to take away her right to vote.
It was hilarious!
 
The Man Show with Jimmy Kimel and Adam Corolla did a bit like that.
The dimheads thought they were signing a petition to end women's suffering and only 1 picked up on that they wanted her to sign a petition to take away her right to vote.
It was hilarious!
Agreed. That was one of the many shining moments of that now-unfortunately-cancelled show. I also liked the gravy episode.
 
The Man Show with Jimmy Kimel and Adam Corolla did a bit like that.
The dimheads thought they were signing a petition to end women's suffering and only 1 picked up on that they wanted her to sign a petition to take away her right to vote.
It was hilarious!


Yep! You got the reference! It was in fact their 1st episode that had the Stop Woman's Sufferage petition.

Great show!
 
Yep! You got the reference! It was in fact their 1st episode that had the Stop Woman's Sufferage petition.

Great show!

Didn't see it on comedy central first run but got all 4 seasons on DVD.
Love the Juggies and the Girls on Trampolines!
 
Thought this was pretty good.

MSDSWoman.jpg
 
Found this most amusing whatever your views on Darwin
may be.

Darwin on marriage: Wife 'better than a dog'

FIELD MUSEUM | But scientist lamented he'd have 'less money for books'

June 13, 2007
BY ANDREW HERRMANN Staff Reporter/aherrmann@suntimes.com
Charles Darwin was an analytical fellow when developing his theory of evolution.

So too, it appears, when it came to thinking about love.
» Click to enlarge image
Charles Darwin and his wife, Emma Wedgwood Darwin.
(American Museum of Natural History)


A new Field Museum exhibit on him opening Friday includes his notes on the pros and cons of marrying.

Ultimately the allure of a "nice soft wife on a sofa with a good fire" won out over his concerns of missing out on "conversation of clever men at clubs." He married his first cousin, Emma Wedgwood, in 1839 when both were 30. The couple had 10 children and remained together until Darwin's death in 1882.
It was a tough call, though, given his balance sheet he titled "Marry Not Marry." Under the positives of having a wife, his list included:
• "Constant companion (and friend in old age.)"
• "Object to be beloved and played with -- better than a dog, anyhow."
• "Someone to take care of house."
• "Music and female chit-chat."
• "Good for one's health."
• "Children (if it Please God.)"
Darwin's potential negatives also included:
• "Less money for books."
• "Terrible loss of time."
• Erosion of "freedom to go where one likes."
• "Forced to visit relatives and bend in every trifle."
• "Expense of children."
• "Anxiety ... responsibility." Still, a wife, he would later observe, was "that most interesting specimen in the whole series of vertebrate animals." Wrote Darwin: "There is many a happy slave."
 

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