Cartoon Violence Is Going To Keep Rubbing Every Lamp It Finds
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Each week, the Comics Curmudgeon helps explain Today's Cartoons. Your elders and betters have no doubt been telling you for years that you need to "face reality" or "wake up to reality" or "join us in the reality-based community" or the like. But if you've successfully resisted these reality-focused jibes for this long, you no doubt believe something that we here at Cartoon Violence have held for years: that reality is deeply, deeply overrated, with its wars and suffering and white guys in dreadlocks spreading guerrilla marketing terror. This is one of the reasons we have retreated into the magical wonderland of cartoons, where the pen can bend time and space to its will to make a better world. In the political cartooning sphere, this power is mostly used to completely erase any facts that might undermine the cartoonist's political point; but sometimes instead it creates a brave new universe where reality takes a holiday and our greatest wishes are fulfilled. This week: political cartoonists dare to imagine awesomeness.
Cartoon Violence Is Going To Keep Rubbing Every Lamp It Finds
Cartoon Violence Is Going To Keep Rubbing…
Cartoon Violence Is Going To Keep Rubbing Every Lamp It Finds
Each week, the Comics Curmudgeon helps explain Today's Cartoons. Your elders and betters have no doubt been telling you for years that you need to "face reality" or "wake up to reality" or "join us in the reality-based community" or the like. But if you've successfully resisted these reality-focused jibes for this long, you no doubt believe something that we here at Cartoon Violence have held for years: that reality is deeply, deeply overrated, with its wars and suffering and white guys in dreadlocks spreading guerrilla marketing terror. This is one of the reasons we have retreated into the magical wonderland of cartoons, where the pen can bend time and space to its will to make a better world. In the political cartooning sphere, this power is mostly used to completely erase any facts that might undermine the cartoonist's political point; but sometimes instead it creates a brave new universe where reality takes a holiday and our greatest wishes are fulfilled. This week: political cartoonists dare to imagine awesomeness.