Some situations (apparently) require lots of rules. Other situations involve fewer rules, such as bankruptcy proceedings, in which the first rule is that there are no rules -- merely guidelines, loosely enforced.
Amid the caterwauling and contrivance, the closures and confusion and the cover-up, the convincing apprehension and curiously hopeful signals concerning control and dissent with respect to the G-20 event that will be conducted in Pittsburgh next month, there currently exists just one rule (apparently a difficult one for yinzers to apprehend):
The rules are not The Rules until Vic Walczak and Donetta Ambrose say so.
UPDATE: I suggest you buy as many Who albums as you can, beginning with Who's Next and Quadrophenia . . . and Tommy and Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy . . . and The Who By Numbers and The Kids Are Alright . . . and . . . hell, just watch this and all will become clear:
This is Good-Bye - For Now
2 weeks ago
3 comments:
Ah, the detours... okay 5:15 for sure, but what on earth does boris the spider have to do with the golly gee twenty?
Did you read the Trib article today about the possible lawsuit? I took the fact that Vic wasn't mentioned as a sign that maybe it's not all it's cracked up to be.
Why the Who? A nod for the headline: Meet the new boss . . . same as the old boss
Much as I like 5:15, the song I listen to first on the soundtrack (remastered by Entwistle, accentuated bass) is The Real Me. Might be the best bass performance I've encountered.
I haven't read the Trib article, and don't expect to be greatly interested in the litigation until Walczak files his documents. (If Mike Healey files something, I'd pay attention to that, too.)
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