• @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Making the world a better place by brutally murdering anyone who’s slightly misbehaving, one at a time.

    • @wjrii
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      277 months ago

      The strip feels like a Larry David wish fulfillment power fantasy. I can imagine it was pretty satisfying to people in growing, modernizing cities.

  • @Gradually_Adjusting
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    507 months ago

    I like these, I just wish there was a joke beyond “Everett attacks shitty dudes”

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      337 months ago

      It does seem to be his whole gimmick, lol

      I’ll see if I can find any that break the formula.

      • @[email protected]
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        87 months ago

        I wouldn’t expect there to be any since him attacking shitty people is a match for the comic’s title.

    • @[email protected]
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      327 months ago

      I am absolutely loving these for showing someone in the early 1900s was making art about how absolutely shitty people were.

      On the downside it is clear that society has learned nothing.

      • @Rednax
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        77 months ago

        Not just art. They were making memes. Every strip has the same structure: Everett makes a statement of common decency, some random dude disagrees, then Everett physically assault the random dude. This is literally a meme template, from the early 1900s.

        Question is: will the meme evolve in a similar fashion that we see modern memes evolve? Or does the fact that it has a single author prevent this natural evolution?

    • @samus12345
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      207 months ago

      There’s also a pun, since conflagration can also mean conflict.

      • kamenLady.
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        7 months ago

        Sometimes the pun’s more obvious

        • @samus12345
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          47 months ago

          Hm, is that a pun? The movie title happens to also be describing what’s happening in the frame, I think that’s another literary device.

    • @SkyezOpen
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      27 months ago

      Uhh, did this mean something different back then?

      • @tipicaldik
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        37 months ago

        Yes. I’m pretty sure he wasn’t implying homosexuality, but talking about general partying and gallivanting around, promiscuity, etc. I don’t think “gay” came to mostly mean homosexual until later in the 20th century. I believe Everett is just telling him he doesn’t want to hear him bragging about his immoral lifestyle or gossiping about someone else’s. There were a lot of prudes back then. That’s my take, anyways…

    • @samus12345
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      7 months ago

      Did men actually call their wives “wife” rather than their name?

      • ✺roguetrick✺
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        7 months ago

        I’ve heard it as late as the 2000s from boomers, so it’s not completely died out. Shit I’ve known people who aren’t Mike pence that called their spouse “mother” and “father”, though that’s usually only silent and greatest generation, so that’s largely gone.

      • kersploosh
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        47 months ago

        I know a guy who addresses his wife as Woman. It started as a joke and stuck. She loves it. When he needs to get her attention in a public place he just shouts, “Woman!” and she cheerfully responds. It gets great reactions from people who don’t know.

        • @samus12345
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          27 months ago

          As a joke I can see it, but unironically it’s pretty strange!