Chuck Norris has died

(variety.com)

603 points | by mp3il 6 hours ago ago

288 comments

  • willio58 5 hours ago ago

    There was a period of like 2 years when I was a kid where chuck Norris jokes were all the rage on the playground and I made an iPhone app that listed them all.

    Jokes like “Chuck Norris is able to slam a revolving door.”

    Anyway, I “built” this stupid app when I was like 13, copy-pasted like 300 jokes in there and a random one would show every time you tapped the screen.

    Chuck Norris’s estate blocked the app from going live. I wish I had printed that rejection out and framed it.

    • MBCook 5 hours ago ago

      It was so funny how that whole thing happened.

      For the first time in over a decade he was suddenly relevant in a way. People remembered he existed, and they were playing off his tough guy image.

      And what did he do? Try and shut it down and start suing people. Stupid.

      It took him a couple of years to come around to it. If it wasn’t for those jokes would he be remembered anywhere as well? Or would he be a much more obscure celebrity by now?

      • petcat 5 hours ago ago

        > would he be remembered anywhere as well?

        You underestimate how popular Walker, Texas Ranger was. It wasn't pulling ratings like Seinfeld, ER, or Friends, but it was a solid primetime staple for almost a decade.

        I never watched it myself, but the 50+ demo loved it.

        • PoignardAzur 5 hours ago ago

          Maybe for people in the US. Internationally? I haven't watched a single episode of WTR, I don't know anyone who has, but everyone knows who Chuck Norris was.

          • amarant 10 minutes ago ago

            I'm Swedish and I was only vaguely aware Chuck Norris even had a career outside the jokes.

          • flagos10 5 hours ago ago

            In France, it was popular enough that everybody knew Texas ranger before the Chuck Norris jokes.

            • trizoza 39 minutes ago ago

              Same in Slovakia

            • johnisgood 4 hours ago ago

              Same in Hungary.

          • davidw 3 hours ago ago

            Seinfeld wasn't at all well known in Italy when I lived there, but WTR was.

          • czbond 3 hours ago ago

            As a gent born and raised in Texas, and has never seen the show - I am pleasantly surprised to see these comments about how popular WTR was internationally. If I had been asked to bet, I would have lost money on this one.

            • MBCook 2 minutes ago ago

              Yeah. As an American I would’ve absolutely never guessed it was that popular.

            • pafje 37 minutes ago ago

              As others have said, WTR is very well-known in France while most people have never heard of Seinfeld.

              Same with Dallas and The Dukes of Hazzard.

            • pessimizer an hour ago ago

              I've got the impression that the big US exports are ones that play into big American stereotypes, e.g WTR, Baywatch, Friends. Not even that they see these shows and get programmed with these stereotypes, but that they have these stereotypes (Texas, California, NYC) and shows like this feed their imaginations and give them detail.

              Exported media is weird. Like the huge proportion of British/BBC output (usually period, but also often detective in a way redolent of Christie) that is made primarily for export to foreign consumers who think of British upper-class culture as aspirational.

          • buran77 an hour ago ago

            > Maybe for people in the US. Internationally?

            It was big internationally. But the jokes made Norris known to a whole different generation than the one watching WTR.

          • rmonvfer 3 hours ago ago

            I loved WTR as a child in Spain! (This was like 15 years ago tho)

          • Anonyneko 3 hours ago ago

            It was extremely popular in Russian-speaking areas in the late 90s.

          • harperlee 3 hours ago ago

            In Spain it was on the TV also for like a decade, and everybody knows who he is. Also in France.

          • chistev 3 hours ago ago

            Haven't watched it and first time hearing about it too. But I knew who Chuck Norris was.

          • debo_ 4 hours ago ago

            I watched it all the time in Canada.

            • tadfisher 3 hours ago ago

              Lies. Everyone knows The Red Green Show is the only television program legally allowed in Canada.

          • pingou 5 hours ago ago

            It was quite popular in France.

          • beAbU 4 hours ago ago

            Huuuuuuuuge in South Africa.

        • TheGRS an hour ago ago

          Personally I was at a prime age watching a lot of Conan O'Brien's Late Night show and one of his best skits was the Walker Texas Ranger Lever. They would pick the most ridiculous clips from the show and just run them out of context. IIRC Chuck Norris even showed up on the show one time to give him a "stern talking to". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpIEyn9G6_8

          Also, he fought Bruce Lee! One of my favorite face-offs ever filmed, esp in the martial arts movie genre. Not many actors who could say that. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NlTyJhbTxxo&pp=ygUZY2h1Y2sgb...

        • beAbU 4 hours ago ago

          Any person from South Africa from that era will have a certain tv announcement permanently etched in their memories. It goes something like:

          "Friday night is action night with Walker Texas Ranger"

        • calmbonsai 3 hours ago ago

          Somehow, I don't think he'll be remembered for Karate Kommandos ;) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bK6hb602588

        • BrandoElFollito an hour ago ago

          Never heard about this series in France. I discovered him through the jokes. I am 55

        • UncleOxidant 3 hours ago ago

          The only time I ever saw Walker,Texas Ranger was when I was living in Italy for a few months in the aughts. It was dubbed in Italian. Apparently it was popular there.

        • rayiner 5 hours ago ago

          I loved that show! I was a teenager. Peak 1990s.

        • MBCook 5 hours ago ago

          And he would be known by those people. I remember him being famous in the 90s.

          Would the people who grew up in the early 2000s, or especially 2010s, know much of anything about him?

          I mean how much do younger people know about Scott Baio or the Corys or Candice Bergen these days?

          • ben7799 5 hours ago ago

            You might be able to argue he was a bigger star than any of them.

            His career lasted far longer. He had big movie appearances for 30 years, none of those people accomplished that.

            Norris' first movie role was in 1968, first big credited appearance was 1972, Walker Texas Ranger finished in 2001.

            • allturtles an hour ago ago

              > You might be able to argue he was a bigger star than any of them.

              I think that's a hard argument to make.

              Candace Bergen's career was just as long. Her first movie role was 1966, she was nominated for an Oscar in 1979, and she was on a popular sitcom from 1988 to 1998 that won her five Emmies and attracted national commentary after criticism from the Vice President.

              I was a kid in the 80s and 90s and to me even then Chuck Norris was a B-movie self-parody joke character. He was not an A-list "action star" in the sense that Schwarzenneger, Stallone, or even Van Damme were.

          • spencerflem 5 hours ago ago

            Haha haven’t heard of either of those but I do know that when Chuck Norris does pushups he pushes the Earth down

          • kakacik 5 hours ago ago

            The dude was a badass, 6 time undefeated karate world champion (!!!), created his own variant of karate mixed with korean martial arts, was a good friend with Bruce Lee and that scene in Colloseum - probably the coolest thing I saw as a kid growing up behind iron curtain... not many actors can have such a resume on top of their acting career.

            Those who cared would/will know him regardless. But obviously those people would be relatively few and far apart.

            • smartmic 4 hours ago ago

              An immense amount of time, dedication and talent must have went into all those achievements. This requires mastery of body and mind at an exceptional level. Putting aside all jokes and acting roles, the martials arts is where he earned my full respect and that will also stick in my memory about him.

            • beAbU 4 hours ago ago

              He had is own line of denims, with extra stretchy crotches. Makes roundhouse kicking baddies in the face easier.

      • beAbU 4 hours ago ago

        Chuck Norris made a Chuck Norris joke in one of the Expendable movies, and for that I'm willing to forgive all his indiscretions.

        • tracker1 3 hours ago ago

          That is hands down one of my ATF scenes in any movie. Expendables 2 was IMO just about the most "fun" movie I've ever seen as well. It wasn't great cinema, or a specific classic.. but it was fun. I have similar feelings about Gremlins 2 as well. We need more fun movies, but too many people seem to have not been issued a sense of humor these days.

          • beAbU 2 hours ago ago

            X1 is also great imo. Just the perfect blend of action, self awareness and cheese.

        • tim333 3 hours ago ago
      • amelius 3 hours ago ago

        > And what did he do? Try and shut it down and start suing people. Stupid.

        Isn't that an obligation when you own a trademark? That you sue people, or else you may lose the trademark?

        • fooqux 3 hours ago ago

          > Isn't that an obligation when you own a trademark? That you sue people, or else you may lose the trademark?

          It's not quite as cut and dry as you suggest. Besides, in which way was a trademark being violated? Last I knew merely talking about and referencing a celebrity by name was not a trademark violation.

      • block_dagger 17 minutes ago ago

        If it weren’t…subjunctive mood. Sorry, it’s Pedantic Friday in my small world.

      • romanhn 4 hours ago ago

        Found out about his passing from my teenage kids. They knew him as some legendary tough guy based solely on the jokes, but had no idea who he actually was. To be fair, looking at some other comments here about his political and personal leanings, I didn't know who he actually was either.

      • chirau 2 hours ago ago

        Chuck Norris was and is still an international sensation. Chuck Norris is right up there with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jean Claude Van Damme.

        His round kick, Walker Texas Ranger and his fight with Bruce Lee. In Africa, to this day, some TV channels still play his stuff.

      • observationist 4 hours ago ago

        His proximity to Bruce Lee earned him more or less permanent kung fu cinema fame. Walker,Texas Ranger and other work he did definitely boosted it, but the memes clinched it.

      • seba_dos1 5 hours ago ago

        This post certainly wouldn't be here right now.

      • dfxm12 5 hours ago ago

        Maybe not as well, but between the "Walker gave me aids" clip and Conan's Walker Texas Ranger lever, he'd still have been known well enough.

        • MBCook 5 hours ago ago

          Oh good point.

        • khazhoux 4 hours ago ago

          The quote is “Walker says I have AIDS”

      • basisword 3 hours ago ago

        >> If it wasn’t for those jokes would he be remembered anywhere as well?

        You’re assuming the jokes make people dive deeper. In reality I know the jokes and didn’t have a clue who he was and never cared enough to find out. The reality is the probably didn’t make much of a difference to how well he or his work was actually known.

        • MBCook 3 hours ago ago

          No, I didn’t mean it that way. I meant they wouldn’t even know the name.

          Not that they actually know about him past the tough guy persona of the jokes.

    • psadauskas 3 hours ago ago

      The Ruby gem "Faker" is used for generating fake data for testing, like legit-looking names, emails, phone numbers, lorum ipsum text, etc. About 10 years ago I was working on a messaging app, and wanted some real messages to see in the UI while I was developing it. One of the best engineering decisions I've made in my career was to pick the Chuck Norris Facts generator for the messages, so every time I re-seeded my local db or looked at a review app on staging, I was greeted by two fake people sending a half-dozen Chuck Norris facts to each other.

      https://github.com/faker-ruby/faker/blob/main/lib/locales/en...

    • alias_neo 5 hours ago ago

      I'm pretty sure they were all the rage when _I_ was at school, but that was long before the iPhone.

      I'm curious on what grounds they blocked the app.

      • PurpleRamen 5 hours ago ago

        > I'm curious on what grounds they blocked the app.

        The app probably used his pictures or his name, which are easy candidates for copyright or trademark-claims.

      • willio58 3 hours ago ago

        Mentioned below in a few comments but it was on the grounds of using his name/likeness.

      • bananaflag 5 hours ago ago

        (Not the parent poster) I found out about them in 2008-2009, and they were quite popular online and offline.

      • dfxm12 5 hours ago ago

        If you're curious, maybe you can look into Chuck's lawsuit against Penguin's book of Chuck Norris facts. He would eventually "co-author" his own book. The obvious guess here is trademark infringement (over use of Chuck's name/likeness) and/or copyright (if some of these facts were lifted from his book).

        • alias_neo 4 hours ago ago

          Interesting. I get the likeness thing, but surely one could publish jokes about anyone they wish and that would be satire or fair use or something?

          Facts and copyright is an interesting one, because I'm surprised a fact can be copyrighted, unless it's the wording specifically.

          • dfxm12 4 hours ago ago

            For better or worse, in the US you can pretty much sue anyone for anything. A court certainly requires more evidence to declare liability than Apple would to remove an app.

            As far as copywriting facts, are you really under the impression that Chuck Norris is the only man who can factually slam a revolving door? :)

    • incanus77 40 minutes ago ago

      I knew of "Walker, Texas Ranger" but the jokes definitely kept him relevant to my generation (age: 49) for a resurgent period of time.

      The only one I remember offhand:

      "Chuck Norris doesn't do pushups, he pushes the world down."

    • HarHarVeryFunny an hour ago ago

      Jeff Dean got his Chuck Norris app published by Chuck Norris.

    • QuiEgo 4 hours ago ago

      The expendables had a scene that was basically the meme in live action, highly recommend. It’s all over YouTube.

      • gljiva 3 hours ago ago

        That scene makes the movie one of the few 10/10 movies in my opinion. It's perfect for the target audience.

        Seeing my dad, who grew up on these actors' action flicks, laugh himself to tears when Chuck Norris appears is one of my favourite memories.

    • dstroot 5 hours ago ago

      John Wick wears Chuck Norris pajamas. RIP to a legend.

    • AdmiralAsshat 5 hours ago ago

      Was this before or after Mike Huckabee started publicly offering Chuck Norris as his solution to "border security" on the campaign trail?

    • dilawar 4 hours ago ago

      In India, we have Rajni (Rajnikanth) jokes that keep increasing in number and are still pretty popular...

      I remember reading 'The Vinci Code' in college which was very popular those days and getting a SMS from a friend almost the same day, "Rajnikanth gave Monalisa that smile!".

    • Cthulhu_ 5 hours ago ago

      I'm still enjoying the Nolan jokes / memes, but in a weird way because of course, via https://www.reddit.com/r/CroppedNorrisJokes/

    • Lukas_Skywalker 3 hours ago ago

      I did something similar when Microsoft gave away Windows Phones for every app published on the app store. I used the Chuck Norris API though. The one I used is sadly no longer available (I think it was called CNDB). But there's a new one: https://api.chucknorris.io

    • tracker1 3 hours ago ago

      Only God could defeat Chuck Norris.

      • ithkuil 2 hours ago ago

        Well, that remains to be seen

    • beAbU 4 hours ago ago

      I printed out all the jokes on my dad's home office printer and sold copies at school. This was pre smartphones.

    • eddyzh 2 hours ago ago

      In had one app like that from Cydia Loved it.

    • make_it_sure 4 hours ago ago

      i created a Facebook App that did something similar, it posted random jokes on your wall

      This was like 2005-2006

    • Cpoll 4 hours ago ago

      Having been near the epicenter, I recall that Vin Diesel jokes (same format) pre-dated Chuck Norris ones. I always found it a shame that the Chuck Norris ones caught on; Vin Diesel is, imo, a better role model.

      I bet Vin wouldn't have blocked your app.

    • mindslight 3 hours ago ago

      > Chuck Norris’s estate blocked the app from going live. I wish I had printed that rejection out and framed it.

      Seeing the youthful spirit run headfirst into the corprocracy of locked down devices and app stores is depressing. Twenty years ago you would have made a webapp or flash animation, most likely avoided scrutiny and not even been shaken down. Thirty years ago you would have made a QBasic program and floppy/email/dcc it to your friends, completely illegible to the corprocracy. But these days simply trying to publish through the common channels, and you're immediately subject to restrictions made for businesses.

  • huhkerrf 6 hours ago ago

    Death had to take Chuck Norris sleeping, for if he had been awake, there would have been a fight.

    • ndsipa_pomu 2 hours ago ago

      Chuck Norris never slept, he just waited

    • thiagoharry 3 hours ago ago

      And yet death was defeated. And with that, Chuck Norris took up its mantle.

    • wnevets 5 hours ago ago

      they were better when they were Vin Diesel jokes.

      • fullshark 5 hours ago ago

        The Vin Diesel jokes I remember had an absurd quality to them beyond "He's really tough." One I recall fondly was "Vin Diesel writes Donkey Kong Fan Fiction."

      • huhtenberg 5 hours ago ago

        Chuck Norris jokes were making rounds well before Vin Diesel was even born.

        • cthalupa 3 hours ago ago

          The Chuck Norris fact page that really kicked this all off started as a Vin Diesel fact page.

          Most of the original funny Chuck Norris facts were from the original Vin Diesel ones.

          • wnevets 12 minutes ago ago

            The kids today don't know their internet lore. smh.

        • wnevets 4 hours ago ago

          Is this a joke?

    • moralestapia 5 hours ago ago

      Haha, good one.

      I will have to steal this one for my upcoming valedictorian speech.

      The crowd is going to love it.

      • AdmiralAsshat 5 hours ago ago

        I believe it's stolen from a quote said about Teddy Roosevelt

        https://markloveshistory.com/2018/01/06/death-had-to-take-ro...

      • plasticsoprano 5 hours ago ago

        Except is was said by Vice President Thomas R. Marshall upon Theodore Roosevelt’s death and co-opted as a Chuck Norris joke.

        • chungy 3 hours ago ago

          Teddy Roosevelt was the Chuck Norris of his day. It is appropriate.

          • SebastianSosa 24 minutes ago ago

            All due respect, no comparison, teddy is a real legend not just cinema. Lets not conflate the two. Much love to chuck though.

          • GolfPopper 3 hours ago ago

            I think that comparison is quite unfair to Teddy, and overly flattering to Chuck Norris.

            Historian, sheriff, war hero, governor, explorer, and a successful President who reshaped America largely for the better. While Roosevelt was human, he led a life that very few have ever matched.

            That said, the line does fit them both.

            • projektfu an hour ago ago

              Literally saved Football.

        • ohjeez 5 hours ago ago

          It's a kickass obituary, no matter the subject!

          • moralestapia 5 hours ago ago

            I agree!

            It is funny because you usually think of Death as something inevitable and people just accept it but then ... some of these guys put up a fight. Mega-LMAO!

  • canucker2016 5 hours ago ago

    from his instagram for his last birthday ( https://www.instagram.com/p/DVtiSHbETbX/ )

      I don’t age. I level up.
    
      I’m 86 today! Nothing like some playful action on a sunny day to make you feel young. I’m grateful for another year, good health and the chance to keep doing what I love. Thank you all for being the best fans in the world. Your support through the years has meant more to me than you’ll ever know.
    
      God Bless,
      Chuck Norris
    • arkaic 4 hours ago ago

      Literally 10 days ago

  • forinti 6 hours ago ago

    He was supposed to die last year, but death took a while to muster the courage to call him.

    • blitzar 3 hours ago ago

      Death once had a near-Chuck experience

  • teeray an hour ago ago

    Jokes aside, this octogenarian was living his golden years enviably. He was summiting peaks last fall, doing 500 lb barbell curls, and still sparring in his birthday video just 10 days ago. We’ve all gotta go sometime, but the way Chuck Norris went out was the way I’d want to go—able to do it all right up until the end. He was a lot of folks’ childhood hero, but that title is freshly renewed in my eyes. I have new inspiration in my fitness endeavors going forward.

    • maerF0x0 39 minutes ago ago

      > 500 lb barbell curls

      ?

  • halcdev 6 hours ago ago

    He finally defeated life

    • freedomben 6 hours ago ago

      While normally making jokes after a person's death would be socially questionable, in this case Chuck Norris himself loved the Chuck Norris jokes. For me at least, a good sense of humor is maybe the most endearing personality trait. RIP

      • mft_ 5 hours ago ago

        Fundamentally, I'd argue that very little should ever be unreasonable or out of bounds to make jokes about; what is important is that it's good humour.

        Case in point: https://theonion.com/hijackers-surprised-to-find-selves-in-h...

        And, as you say, in Chuck Norris' case, it's virtually obligatory.

        • freedomben 5 hours ago ago

          > Fundamentally, I'd argue that very little should ever be unreasonable or out of bounds to make jokes about; what is important is that it's good humour.

          On a personal level, I couldn't agree more. I do hope that culturally we get to that point at some time :-)

      • blueflow 5 hours ago ago

        Giving people reason to laugh while you are old and dying is a superpower. I wish i will have it, too.

  • bnchrch 5 hours ago ago

    I can only assume Chuck has decided to relieve the grim reaper of his duties, leaving us all here to meet our own end not with a scythe but a roundhouse kick.

    • 5555624 5 hours ago ago

      Shades of Piers Anthony's "On a Pale Horse," Death showed up to take Chuck Norris and Chuck killed him, taking his place.

      • ourmandave 5 hours ago ago

        I loved that series, until the last book. Maybe the novelty had worn off.

        It's been a long time since I read it, but didn't the current Death decide to retire and pass the role on?

  • Goofy_Coyote 5 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris once slapped Pi so hard it became rational for a moment.

    RIP dude, we’d continue the jokes, may your soul laughs as hard as we do.

    Chuck Norris once bet 42 is a prime. He won.

    • domador 4 hours ago ago

      Sorry, but these Chuck Norris jokes are more like Bruce Schneier facts: https://www.schneierfacts.com/

      • ndsipa_pomu 2 hours ago ago

        I used to love the Schneierfacts, I mean I still do, but I used to as well.

        They were obviously a bit more niche, but that made them funnier to my mind.

        > For Bruce Schneier, all zeros of the Riemann zeta function are trivial.

  • WithinReason 6 hours ago ago

    I'm sure he'll get better soon

  • vladde 5 hours ago ago

    one of my favorite stack overflow questions: Why does HTML think “chucknorris” is a color?

    https://stackoverflow.com/q/8318911

    • bityard 4 hours ago ago

      I came to the conclusion a long time ago that early browser developers must have really been on quite a lot of drugs.

      • m463 an hour ago ago

        And the beast shall come forth surrounded by a roiling cloud of vengeance. The house of the unbelievers shall be razed and they shall be scorched to the earth. Their tags shall blink until the end of days. — from The Book of Mozilla, 12:10

    • ChrisArchitect 5 hours ago ago

      Some recent discussion on that one a couple Advents ago:

      https://htmhell.dev/adventcalendar/2024/20/ (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42468318)

  • uwemaurer 2 hours ago ago

    17 years ago we launched the first "Chuck Norris Facts" app for Android (March 2009). It was a big success until end of 2010 when Chuck Norris sent his lawyers after us to get the app removed from the Android market. Chuck Norris won, we took the app down

  • k6hkUZtLUM 3 hours ago ago

    I remember trade chat (/2) in wow on the Medivh server would often turn into Chuck Norris jokes. There were always about how bad ass Chuck was. How tough and impossibly manly.

    One of my favorites.

    Chuck Norris jumped into a lake. Chuck Norris didn't get wet. The lake got Chucked.

    • encom 2 hours ago ago

      Trade chat (like /b/) was never great, but one of the first WoW addons I developed was designed to filter out garbage like this, and make idling with your guildies in Ironforge tolerable.

      It's funny for a while, in measured amounts, and then it becomes tiresome.

      • mewse-hn an hour ago ago

        Anal [Thunderfury, Blessed Blade of the Windseeker]

  • delichon 5 hours ago ago

    I fear the crime wave as the thugs hear about this and take the streets back. Be careful out there people.

  • Beijinger 5 hours ago ago

    From Reddit: "I heard that the opening 27 minutes of Saving Private Ryan were loosely based on a game of dodgeball played by Chuck Norris in 2nd grade." ;-)

  • donohoe 24 minutes ago ago

    Chuck Norris doesn't upvote on Hacker News. His presence alone sends posts to the front page. No more.

  • reactordev 5 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris didn’t die, we simply phased out of his reality.

  • simpaticoder 5 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris (and Michael Landon) were golden age role models for young men. Strong but thoughtful, firm but compassionate, and deeply principled but also practical. Yes, these were acting roles but they picked those roles for a reason. Rest in peace, Chuck.

    • ceejayoz 5 hours ago ago

      "Deeply principled" really doesn't describe Obama birther conspiracists.

    • angoragoats 4 hours ago ago

      Chuck Norris was no role model, unless you want your young men to grow up as fascist Christian nationalist homophobes.

      • sirbutters 3 hours ago ago

        It's depressing your comment is being shadowed. You'd think the HN crowd would be more intellectual. Chuck Norris did have shitty views.

        • thuridas 2 hours ago ago

          And it is not as if he was great at acting or as martial artist.

          Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan were in a completely different league.

        • angoragoats 2 hours ago ago

          I’m used to it by now, but thanks.

    • amjnsx 5 hours ago ago

      He was openly maga and a homophobe and a transphobe. I wouldn’t consider these qualities for a role model.

      • sschueller 5 hours ago ago

        Many like myself did not know this as a kid in the 80s-90s. Some of the movies he made like "sidekicks" left a positive impression at that age.

        • nazgulsenpai 4 hours ago ago

          In the 80s-90s his positions would have aligned fine with the center left.

          • rootusrootus 3 hours ago ago

            Some of them, perhaps. I don't think the center left would ever have been into the birther conspiracy.

            • nazgulsenpai 3 hours ago ago

              There were conspiracy theories in the 80s and 90s too.

              • sanktanglia 2 hours ago ago

                There is a huge difference between general conspiracy theories and the birther lie which was more racist astroturfing than a legitimate conspiracy

          • EnPissant 4 hours ago ago

            Forget the 80s-90s - Even California passed prop 8 in 2008.

      • delabay 4 hours ago ago

        Save it for reddit

      • DennisP 5 hours ago ago

        GP said "these were acting roles." They were talking about the characters, not the actors behind them.

        • LetsGetTechnicl 5 hours ago ago

          But then he said he "picked them for a reason" implying that he chose those characters based on the characteristics he shared with them

          • DennisP 4 hours ago ago

            Whatever the reason, it wasn't because his characters were "openly maga and a homophobe and a transphobe," because they weren't. Bruce Lee movies and Texas Ranger didn't address those issues at all.

            And in spite of his flaws, it's possible that he had some good qualities as well, or at least aspired to them. So maybe those other qualities were what he looked for in the characters he played.

            • LetsGetTechnicl 4 hours ago ago

              Doesn't seem like he aspired all that hard, since instead of expressing empathy for people who weren't like him, he continued to be a bigot in nearly every aspect. But sure, if you were a white cis straight guy I'm sure he was perfectly kind.

      • mindslight 4 hours ago ago

        You either die a hero, or you live long enough to become a Faceboot psychosis villain. It's basically the politics version of "Why is everything so cold?"

      • raw_anon_1111 5 hours ago ago

        I think you forget that Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act and put in the policy of “Don’t ask don’t tell” and Obama supported it originally.

        Of course they both had a change of heart- was it true change or they saw the direction of the political winds? Who knows?

        I don’t know Chuck Norris’s views on LGBT. But if he was a self proclaimed “born again Christian” and a rabid Trump supporter, I can only guess. But I no more expect people who were insulted by what he said (which I personally don’t know) to give him more grace or reverence than I do is a Black man who couldn’t give two shits about a dead racist podcaster.

        Other people no more need to “contextualize” homophobia than I feel a need to “contextualize” the racism of a dead podcaster.

        • ceejayoz 4 hours ago ago

          > put in the policy of “Don’t ask don’t tell”

          DADT was a significant improvement over the status quo of "we ask, you tell, and then you get dishonorably discharged". Considering it evidence of homophobia is revisionism. Did it go far enough? No. Was it a good step towards where we wanted to go? Yes.

          • raw_anon_1111 4 hours ago ago

            And the Defense of Marriage Act?

            • ceejayoz 4 hours ago ago

              > It passed both houses of Congress by large, veto-proof majorities. Support was bipartisan, though about a third of the Democratic caucus in both the House and Senate opposed it. Clinton criticized DOMA as "divisive and unnecessary".

              Sure doesn't seem like a Clinton issue?

              • raw_anon_1111 4 hours ago ago

                Again he still signed it. It’s like Susan Collins who always has “serious misgivings” about things that her fellow Republicans do and then votes the party line anyway trying to stay in her party’s good graces while at the same time not pissing off her liberal constituents

                • ceejayoz 4 hours ago ago

                  > Again he still signed it.

                  It was gonna be law either way; signing it removed a political weapon from the folks pushing its passage. Arguing this is something Clinton did to gay people is counterfactual.

                  • raw_anon_1111 4 hours ago ago

                    That’s a really poor excuse to sign on to something that you disagree with. I would not sign a petition for making the “Confederacy Day” law if I lived in Mississippi just because it would become law anyway. You have to stand for something.

                    Would you think it was okay if Tim Scott signed such a law just so his fellow Republicans couldn’t hold it against him in the primary? Well actually I wouldn’t be surprised if he did…

                    • ceejayoz 4 hours ago ago

                      > That’s a really poor excuse to sign on to something that you disagree with.

                      It's a pragmatic excuse.

                      Not signing changes nothing; clear statements that it's bad law; avoid giving the assholes pushing it more likelihood of winning the next election.

                      • raw_anon_1111 3 hours ago ago

                        A clear statement of it being a bad law is not signing it. Should he not do anything that would give assholes an excuse to argue with him?

                        Am I suppose to be okay if he signed a law overturning “Brown vs Board of Education” because it would become law anyway?

                        Was the fact that he signed off on executing a mentally retarded man because it would show he was “tough on crime” just him being “pragmatic”?

                        https://jacobin.com/2016/11/bill-clinton-rickey-rector-death...

                        Getting back on topic, I don’t get to praise Chuck Norris because of his anti-racism stances but then dismiss his stances against non straight people.

      • phishin 4 hours ago ago

        Imagine basing your entire opinion on a man about how they feel about that other man.

        • ryandrake 4 hours ago ago

          Imagine having a lot of people you once admired and looked up to as role models, from actors all the way to even your parents, suddenly all within a decade or so take their masks off and reveal that they are actually villains.

          • saintfire 4 hours ago ago

            Is it revelatory that human beings having a quality you admire aren't the ideal person you projected them to be?

            I'd reckon you'd be hard pressed to find a single person that matches every quality/belief you imagined them to have.

            • ryandrake 3 hours ago ago

              I don’t think this is about nit picking some small detail that causes them to fail a quality/belief checklist. It’s not like finding out your hero picks his nose or doesn’t like chocolate ice cream. When someone goes mask-off as MAGA, they are revealing fundamental core beliefs and values that totally flip the kind of person you might have thought they were.

              I have friends and family who I never thought had a hateful, cruel, or belligerent bone in their bodies, suddenly start acting like totally different people, in the span of a few years. This isn’t me holding them to some purity checklist!

              • parrellel 3 hours ago ago

                "Good People" suddenly going all in on racist rants and hard-core misogyny is never going to stop being disturbing.

                Some of them taught me how to behave!? Did they just not believe any of those things?

                MAGA is a horrifying movement.

              • Applejinx 2 hours ago ago

                It's an object lesson on how certain historical things happened. We go, oh no how could those people have all been inhuman monsters? If only we understood what made them like that.

                And the monkey's paw curls…

              • mindslight 3 hours ago ago

                Agreed. Additionally, when someone says something latently bigoted or hateful, it's easy to just let it slide because we all have our failings and societal progress is slow. Whereas maggotry is about openly embracing those failings, taking on additional types of failings from other people, and then socially validating it all as a purported political movement. But the only real thing tying it together is frustration with the world culminating in lashing out, which is why when they get into power there are no actual constructive policies in any political framework [0]. (apart from lining the preachers' pockets of course, and now apparently a holy war)

                nit: I wouldn't call it "mask off" though, as if it's been there the whole time. I'd say it's more like there is tiny a kernel of that (and let's be honest, who doesn't have this in some form or another?), combined with a lack of willpower and critical thinking, that causes them into give in to the siren song of easy answers from mass-personalized propaganda.

                [0] ancap and religious fundamentalism are the only frameworks I've been able to find that fit the maggot movement, and they're not particularly constructive.

            • fhdkweig 3 hours ago ago

              Fred Rogers was the same kind, thoughtful person in everyday life as he was when he acted on his show. You can watch the congressional tapes of him testifying on increased funding to PBS and also testifying on not making VCRs illegal.

        • cthalupa 3 hours ago ago

          I stopped being a Chuck Norris fan when I learned he was a frequent contributor to WorldNetDaily, that he actively campaigned against gay marriage, and that he advocated for the theory that Obama was not born in America and saying shit like 'Electing Obama will plunge America into a thousand years of darkness.'

          Him liking Trump was a symptom of his regressive, homophobic, and racist beliefs.

      • encom 3 hours ago ago

        Incomprehensible levels of based.

      • rishabhaiover 4 hours ago ago

        A kind person with humility would never say this.

  • Noe2097 5 hours ago ago

    It's a trick; he will come back unscathed in the next episode.

  • looneysquash 6 hours ago ago

    There's not a body inside Chuck Norris's casket, there's just a fist.

  • vardump 5 hours ago ago

    So I guess Chuck Norris has now keys for the Pearly Gates and is the one who gets to pick the heavenly club members. I'm sure roundhouse kicks are somehow part of the process.

    Why do I feel like an era has ended...

    Rest in peace.

  • ekropotin 5 hours ago ago

    Clickbait. He is not dead, he just decided to retire from the world of mortals.

  • ncrtower 15 minutes ago ago

    So many commenters here are, or choose to be, completely obvlivious to the fact that Chuck Norris was a racist little man who decried Obama becoming president, supported Trump through both campaigns, and openly hated muslims and gay people.

    Yeah, really tough guy.

    • tmountain 4 minutes ago ago

      Yeah, I was pretty bummed with how Chuck Norris and Hulk Hogan turned out in the end.

  • nasaeclipse 41 minutes ago ago

    Chuck Norris didn't die. He simply moved to a parallel Earth that needed him.

  • whizzter 6 hours ago ago

    The Grim Reaper wished that Chuck Norris had only come to play chess with him!

  • neurocline 6 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris dominated WoW Barrens chat back in the day. It was kind of weird and amazing at the same time.

  • esher 4 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris counted to infinity. Twice.

  • northlondoner 4 hours ago ago

    He was a hero in tech and science as well. I recall during my PhD studies, we always create new memes on our field that Chuck can finish things in no time. In loving memory of Chuck Norris.

  • SeanDav 4 hours ago ago

    The earth was too scared to have him on it anymore...

  • dbacar 2 hours ago ago

    I even remember the times he was not vintage yet, but the real thing. Maybe even watched his famous fight scene with Bruce Lee on the cheap cinemas back in the day. Good days. RIP .

  • seydor 6 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris let him win

  • Insanity 5 hours ago ago

    Oh wow, coincidentally I watched a Chuck Norris film recently with my (90 year old) grandmother, which resulted in me diving down a bunch of Chuck Norris memes for the first time in more than a decade.

    RIP

  • NoSalt an hour ago ago

    What in the Hell could possibly take down Chuck Norris??? We are all DOOMED!!!

  • rootusrootus 5 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris does not go to heaven, heaven comes to him.

  • Scotrix an hour ago ago

    Chuck Norris doesn’t die.

  • brailsafe an hour ago ago

    Anyone remember barrens chat?

  • jonplackett 6 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris doesn’t die. Death gets Chuck Norris.

  • markus_zhang 5 hours ago ago

    Oh this guy is a legend. Did he do anything with tech peripherally? I hope we can put up a dark top for him as an exception.

    • krapp 5 hours ago ago

      Not even every important influential person in tech gets the black bar. You think an actor who is mostly known for low-effort internet memes and pretending to be a cowboy on tv deserves it?

      • kstrauser 5 hours ago ago

        I guess it’s a generational thing, because I shouldn’t actually be surprised that someone would know so very little about Chuck Norris.

        • krapp 5 hours ago ago

          He wa an actor, he starred in cheesy action films and tv. He pretended to get beaten up by Bruce Lee one time.

          He was a typical pro-gun anti-abortion homophobic and racist MAGA Christian conservative.

          There are lots of tedious memes about him.

          There, I summed up literally everything worth knowing about him, and none of it is worthy of discussion here.

          • supern0va 4 hours ago ago

            >He was a typical pro-gun anti-abortion homophobic and racist MAGA Christian conservative.

            Sure, but let's be real: people here are hardly mourning the man himself, so much as a few ideas of him from media they loved, and the cultural impact of Chuck Norris memes from their childhood and such.

            He's not around anymore to bolster any hateful messages. Let people have a moment of nostalgia for memories watching him roundhouse kick bad guys with their grandma, or dumb Chuck Norris memes on the playground. That's what people remember.

          • excalibur 5 hours ago ago

            You must be fun at parties.

            • krapp 5 hours ago ago

              Unlike Chuck Norris I'm the life of the party.

      • markus_zhang 5 hours ago ago

        nvm just a thought.

  • philipallstar 6 hours ago ago

    An absolute class act of a human. Life well lived.

    • bovermyer 6 hours ago ago

      He had some pretty awful views that he was pretty loud about, especially later in life. He also cheated on his wife at one point.

      However, so as not to speak (purely) ill of the dead, I will say that he was an accomplished martial artist with a prolific film career.

      • lich_king 5 hours ago ago

        > He had some pretty awful views that he was pretty loud about, especially later in life. He also cheated on his wife at one point.

        In 1961, in his early 20s. You get ~80 years on this planet to make mistakes and have views that some other people will dislike. If these are the worst things we can accuse him of, while acknowledging all his charitable work, I'd say he fared OK compared to many other role models we have.

      • sys32768 6 hours ago ago

        To be fair, you probably have some views some people think are pretty awful.

        • bovermyer 5 hours ago ago

          Oh, for sure. MAGA types think some of my views are absolutely abhorrent. I'm pretty sure there are a few cultures that would kill me for my views.

          Just because they hate me, though, doesn't mean I can't disagree with their position.

        • praptak 5 hours ago ago

          I don't see how this matters. Whoever thinks I'm horrible is 100% allowed to say this after I'm dead.

          • claytongulick 5 hours ago ago

            Or, another option is that we could all give grace to others, even (especially) if they disagree with us.

            • ericwood 5 hours ago ago

              There's disagreement then there's being an outspoken supporter of systematically trying to strip rights away from others because of your religious beliefs. It's much deeper than having differing views on fiscal policy.

            • ericjmorey 4 hours ago ago

              Who are you granting grace to? Who are you denying it to?

              We know the answers to these questions for Norris.

            • ahhhhnoooo 5 hours ago ago

              Disagree? I think it's safe to say that someone who campaigned to ban same sex marriage is more than just disagreeing. He's trying to ruin millions of lives.

              He was an Obama birther conspiracist.

              He thought gays shouldn't be allowed to join Boy Scouts.

              He was a big supporter of Netanyahu.

              This aren't things that are even remotely in the same ballpark as disagreement. If someone is using their celebrity status to cause harm to millions or tens of millions, I think we can say a few unkind words about them when they go.

            • miltonlost 5 hours ago ago

              Don't give grace to racists who spout birther conspiracy theories. Don't give grace to homophobes.

        • bbkane 5 hours ago ago

          Me 5 years ago did. I agree with all my views today. Who knows about me 5 years from now

        • LightBug1 4 hours ago ago

          There's a solid difference between 'awful' and just plain 'dumb'.

      • moscoe 5 hours ago ago

        If I can quote Chael Sonnen, I’d like to say ”you absolutely suck!”

      • RIMR 5 hours ago ago

        "Don't speak ill of the dead"?

        How about "Don't be a bad person when you're alive"?

        • bovermyer 5 hours ago ago

          Something I was brought up to believe was that you shouldn't speak ill of the recently deceased. A courtesy to those in mourning.

          I struggle with that rule sometimes.

        • claytongulick 5 hours ago ago

          Great advice. Do you follow it?

          Is there one way to be a good person?

          Does being a good person also mean agreeing with your politics?

          • ahhhhnoooo 5 hours ago ago

            There are good people whose politics I disagree with. If you are using your celebrity status to cause harm to millions on the international stage, systematically attempting to strip their rights, I think it's fair to say they weren't a good person.

    • Findecanor 5 hours ago ago

      My dad was a film reporter in the late '70s/early '80s, and told me that Chuck Norris had been one of the friendliest celebrities he had ever met.

      My dad had some antiquated views himself too. People can have/be both, I suppose.

    • gotofritz 3 hours ago ago

      "Class act" is doing a lot of lifting there

    • taco_emoji 5 hours ago ago

      Yeah, his support of the Obama "birther" conspiracy was super classy.

    • RIMR 5 hours ago ago

      What exactly made him a "class act"?

      Was it the part where he wanted public schools to force the Bible on everyone's children, regardless of their family's faith?

      Or was it the part where he attacked the Boy Scouts for lifting their ban on gay members, because he broadly hates the LGBTQ+ community?

      Or, likewise, when he staunchly supported Prop 8, because he felt that the government should enforce strict "traditional family values", and deny consenting adults he doesn't like to marry each other?

      Or was it when he said that a Black president would bring "1000 years of darkness"?

      Or was it when he said that Muslims were going to destroy America with Sharia law, merely for existing?

      Or was it the part where he supported aggressive ICE action against anyone perceived to be foreign?

      Just trying to understand how someone this despicable deserves the compliment you gave him. The only good version of Chuck Norris I know about is the pretend version from memes.

      • titzer 5 hours ago ago

        > Or was it when he said that a Black president would bring "1000 years of darkness"?

        I looked this one up. It's true. He's been going out of his way to be a political firebrand and claiming milquetoast Democrats are Satan for decades. It wasn't some offhand comment when cornered on stage. He's pushed white christian nationalism hard for quite some time.

        Sad, because it was so unnecessary, divisive, and crazy--a black mark on his legacy.

        • huhkerrf 5 hours ago ago

          But it's not true the way GP phrased it. Norris did not say if a black man was elected then there would be 1000 years of darkness, he said it about a specific man who happens to be black. It's silly, but unless you're claiming that black politicians get special exemptions, his race is immaterial to this quote.

          • ericjmorey 4 hours ago ago

            If you look at the wider context, it's harder to deny the racism.

      • MBCook 5 hours ago ago

        Nah. The part where his name was relevant again because of the jokes and he started the eating and suing people over it.

      • claytongulick 5 hours ago ago

        It was the part where he didn't say things like this about other people.

        • myko an hour ago ago

          Looked it up and he did say these things, pretty shocking how racist he was. RIP, hope he finds peace in the afterlife and leaves the hate behind.

        • miltonlost 5 hours ago ago

          Except he did worse by his actions. And did say that about other people. Like Obama being born in Kenya. Dude was racist

      • bdangubic 5 hours ago ago

        this is class act for 1/2 of america

  • fiftyacorn 5 hours ago ago

    I grew up watching action films in the 80s and 90s. I always like Chuck Norris ones as they had a humour and ridiclousness about them

    Films like Missing in Action ,or delta force where the motorbike fires a rocket were just great at the time

    I get he had some funny views later in life - but the films were a laugh at the time

  • endriju 5 hours ago ago

    Wishing him speedy recovery! Legend

  • shdudns 4 hours ago ago

    @dang, given Norris' contributions to Internet culture - the memes - shouldn't he be honored with the black mourning ribbon?

    • ndsipa_pomu 2 hours ago ago

      He was known to be racist (at least in later life), so a black mourning ribbon wouldn't be appropriate.

  • figassis 5 hours ago ago

    This just means we're in a simulated universe. He's respawned elsewhere.

  • moron4hire 38 minutes ago ago

    My mother told me, "Chuck Norris passed today at 86" and my mind immediately went to, "I would never expect him to pass anyone on the sidewalk at any slower speed."

  • snerc 4 hours ago ago

    Walker told me I have AIDS https://youtu.be/pQZX0nzvMag

  • Archit3ch 5 hours ago ago

    He immediately asked the ferryman for a coin to get to the other side.

  • proxysna 5 hours ago ago

    I remember having a "Chuck" plugin installed on our Jenkins back in mid 2010's. Gave me a Chuckle every time i forgot it was there.

  • dnw 5 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris hasn’t died, he summoned the death. RIP.

  • racl101 4 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris decided to take the final sleep on his own. Death tried years ago, but Chuck didn't feel like it.

  • cwoolfe 3 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris died? I didn't think that was possible...

  • ferfumarma 3 hours ago ago
  • tchock23 5 hours ago ago

    First Wade Boggs and now this. Just awful.

  • calebelac 5 hours ago ago

    What a legend.

    I enjoyed reading the comments here. RIP.

  • northlondoner 4 hours ago ago

    The only person that can train LLMs with his mind.

  • aimanbenbaha 5 hours ago ago

    The Grim Reaper requested permissions from Chuck Norris to take his soul.

  • dark-star 3 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris didn't die -- Death just became Chuck Norris

    • theandrewbailey 13 minutes ago ago

      Death did not come for Chuck Norris. Chuck Norris came for Death.

  • boubacardiallo 5 hours ago ago

    My condolences, he was one of my favorite childhood actor :(

  • rwoerz 6 hours ago ago

    Death has Chucknorrised?

    • breve 6 hours ago ago

      Chuck Norris didn't have a near death experience, Death had an experience near him.

      • WesolyKubeczek 4 hours ago ago

        Commander Sam Vimes would like a word.

  • wvlia5 5 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris didn't die, Death chucknorried.

  • lschueller 5 hours ago ago

    Wouldn't be suprised, if he dies back and announces a film for next year.

    He made it that far in life, that even if you might disagree with him on all and everything, you would still like him.

  • npn 5 hours ago ago

    A part of internet dies with him. RIP.

  • throwaway29303 5 hours ago ago

    Godspeed. ;~;7

  • jongjong 3 hours ago ago

    The headline is incorrect. Chuck Norris didn't die, he transcended.

    Also, the grim reaper hasn't yet gathered the courage to tell him.

  • yawpitch 3 hours ago ago

    He hasn’t died, he’s just moved on to an eternity of roundhouse kicking Satan.

  • lhakedal 6 hours ago ago

    Death becomes Chuck Norris.

  • sourcecodeplz 6 hours ago ago

    RIP legend

  • arduanika 3 hours ago ago

    "Every man has two deaths, when he is buried in the ground and the last time someone says his name. In some ways men can be immortal."

    ― Chuck Norris

  • saltyoldman 3 hours ago ago

    He'll be missed. I basically grew up on his movies.

  • jiveturkey 3 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris doesn't die. He prepares himself for the next battle, with Jeff Dean.

  • raffael_de 5 hours ago ago

    he has become death.

  • Kye 4 hours ago ago

    He kicked it, but the consequences of his long-standing support of the march toward hatred and division linger on.

    The section on his Wikipedia page is helpfully succinct if you want to understand the basis of my not joining in the japes and jokes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Norris#Political_views

  • booleandilemma 6 hours ago ago

    I'm surprised Chuck Norris agreed to this.

  • westurner 6 hours ago ago

    Total Gym XLS has a 1-1.25" carriage bar for adding weight. 5gal bucket weights are the correct diameter to leave a gap between the weights and the floor.

    Chuck Norris facts: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Norris_facts

  • kyleee 6 hours ago ago

    How did he die?

    • hirako2000 6 hours ago ago

      Boredom, last enemy to defeat was life itself.

    • volkercraig 6 hours ago ago

      He was 86 years old

      • ekropotin 5 hours ago ago

        How do you know that? Scientists tried to measure Chuck Norris’ age. The number refused to exist.

  • LetsGetTechnicl 5 hours ago ago

    Honestly some of the most successful PR ever to paint a conservative religious bigoted homophobic freak as simply a meme of hyper-masculinity.

    • rdiddly 5 hours ago ago

      They're not that far apart, honestly.

      • LetsGetTechnicl 5 hours ago ago

        That's true. These days it seems the ideal conservative man is more like a caveman eating steak off the bone versus a thoughtful caring Atticus Finch type.

  • with_a_herring 5 hours ago ago

    The headline is inaccurate. Chuck Norris is alive and kicking in another dimension.

  • ramesh31 6 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris disagrees.

  • SV_BubbleTime 6 hours ago ago

    “We’d like to keep the circumstances private”

    Yes, but now I’m like, super suspicious.

    • bombcar 6 hours ago ago

      He was defeated by Mr Rogers in a blood-stained sweater. Understandable they're keeping that quiet.

      (Ok, ok, technically it was Gandalf the Gray and White, and Monty Python and the Holy Grail's Black Knight)

      • Rooster61 5 hours ago ago

        And Benito Musollini, and the Blue Meanie. And Cowboy Curtis and Jambi the Genie

        • jcranmer 2 hours ago ago

          And Robocop, Terminator, Captain Kirk and Darth Vader. Lo-Pan, Superman, every single Power Ranger.

          • stego-tech an hour ago ago

            And Bill S. Preston, Theodore Logan, Spock, The Rock, Doc Ock, and Hulk Hogan.

    • codingdave 6 hours ago ago

      There is nothing suspicious about a celebrity's family just wanting to deal with death in private.

      • bdcravens 6 hours ago ago

        You're probably right, but that's not the usual wording you hear. Of course, when grieving, proper proofreading may not be (nor should it be) at the top of anyone's list.

      • djeastm 5 hours ago ago

        They usually don't put it like that, though. It's usually just "please respect our privacy during this difficult time", etc.

  • rexpop 5 hours ago ago

    > Curbing violent crime is still more about what we do than it is about what government does. The answer is still more about nature’s law within us than it is about man’s law outside of us. — Chuck Norris, 2012

    What a load of horseshit. Government is "what we do." It's not imposed by alien pod-persons.

    And he opposed marriage equality. What a scumbag.

    • WesolyKubeczek 5 hours ago ago

      > What a load of horseshit. Government is "what we do." It's not imposed by alien pod-persons.

      On the other hand, when eventually the reckoning for this administration comes, would you welcome the idea of collective responsibility?

  • u1hcw9nx 4 hours ago ago

    Chuck Norris promising the USA will have 1,000 years of darkness if Obama wins in 2012 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ae9b-B_EQ0

  • polothesecond 5 hours ago ago

    Very cool thread. Middle school jokes and culture wars. I’m so glad we don’t allow political threads on here and can instead bask in the intellectual might of people talking about TV man the did/didn’t like.