14 thoughts on “When it’s too late to stop fascism, according to Stefan Zweig”
Interesting article.
I must admit that I found the punctuation in one sentence awkward, although on re-reading I did note the subtleties of the em-dash and en-dash: I read it originally as '- their eerily synchronized drilling and spanking -'.
Anybody else hear Agent Orange bloviating this morning to the sheriffs about how the appellate-court judges were against him because they are from out west?
Interesting article.
I must admit that I found the punctuation in one sentence awkward, although on re-reading I did note the subtleties of the em-dash and en-dash: I read it originally as '- their eerily synchronized drilling and spanking -'.
Also, interesting use of umlaut in preëmptively.
New Yorker house style. http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the…
Translated, from the English, by Harold Ross.
You wonder how US Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preët Bharara feels about that.
Wonkette did it first! Must credit Wonkette!
you really have to know how to coördinate proper use of umlauts.
And I didn't know? I feel so naïve…
Wow.
Anybody else hear Agent Orange bloviating this morning to the sheriffs about how the appellate-court judges were against him because they are from out west?
why else would they hate him? All of us from the NYC area love him!
…
*oukes*
He's Plate 3, page 24 in my Peterson's Field Guide to Bullshit Artists of the NJ-NY Metropolitan Area, 2nd. ed.
I regret not spitting at him when I lived within spitting distance of him.
He'd just blame it on [Canada City.]
The town that my alma mater is located in, New Brunfuss, NJ, was occupied by the Brits during the war of 1812.