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GeneralGiap Free

Comics I Follow

Arlo and Janis

Arlo and Janis

By Jimmy Johnson
9 Chickweed Lane

9 Chickweed Lane

By Brooke McEldowney
Scary Gary

Scary Gary

By Mark Buford
The Knight Life

The Knight Life

By Keith Knight
La Cucaracha

La Cucaracha

By Lalo Alcaraz
Lio

Lio

By Mark Tatulli
Get Fuzzy

Get Fuzzy

By Darby Conley
Pearls Before Swine

Pearls Before Swine

By Stephan Pastis
Red and Rover

Red and Rover

By Brian Basset
Sylvia

Sylvia

By Nicole Hollander
Liberty Meadows

Liberty Meadows

By Frank Cho
Agnes

Agnes

By Tony Cochran
The Argyle Sweater

The Argyle Sweater

By Scott Hilburn
Calvin and Hobbes

Calvin and Hobbes

By Bill Watterson
Cow and Boy Classics

Cow and Boy Classics

By Mark Leiknes
C'est la Vie

C'est la Vie

By Jennifer Babcock
Cul de Sac

Cul de Sac

By Richard Thompson
B.C.

B.C.

By Mastroianni and Hart
Baldo

Baldo

By Hector D. Cantú and Carlos Castellanos
Ballard Street

Ballard Street

By Jerry Van Amerongen
Basic Instructions

Basic Instructions

By Scott Meyer
Bob the Squirrel

Bob the Squirrel

By Frank Page
The Boondocks

The Boondocks

By Aaron McGruder
Bound and Gagged

Bound and Gagged

By Dana Summers
The Dinette Set

The Dinette Set

By Julie Larson
The Elderberries

The Elderberries

By Corey Pandolph and Phil Frank and Joe Troise
F Minus

F Minus

By Tony Carrillo
Luann

Luann

By Greg Evans and Karen Evans
Lola

Lola

By Todd Clark
Grand Avenue

Grand Avenue

By Mike Thompson
Gasoline Alley

Gasoline Alley

By Jim Scancarelli
The Fusco Brothers

The Fusco Brothers

By J.C. Duffy
Frog Applause

Frog Applause

By Teresa Burritt
Frazz

Frazz

By Jef Mallett
Flo and Friends

Flo and Friends

By Jenny Campbell
The Flying McCoys

The Flying McCoys

By Glenn McCoy and Gary McCoy
Non Sequitur

Non Sequitur

By Wiley Miller
New Adventures of Queen Victoria

New Adventures of Queen Victoria

By Pab Sungenis
NEUROTICA

NEUROTICA

By Allison Garwood
The Norm Classics

The Norm Classics

By Michael Jantze
Nest Heads

Nest Heads

By John Allen
Off the Mark

Off the Mark

By Mark Parisi
The Other Coast

The Other Coast

By Adrian Raeside
Overboard

Overboard

By Chip Dunham
Pickles

Pickles

By Brian Crane
Pibgorn

Pibgorn

By Brooke McEldowney
Pooch Cafe

Pooch Cafe

By Paul Gilligan
Reality Check

Reality Check

By Dave Whamond
Rose is Rose

Rose is Rose

By Don Wimmer and Pat Brady
Rubes

Rubes

By Leigh Rubin
Rudy Park

Rudy Park

By Darrin Bell and Theron Heir
Shoe

Shoe

By Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly
Spot the Frog

Spot the Frog

By Mark Heath
Speed Bump

Speed Bump

By Dave Coverly
Stone Soup

Stone Soup

By Jan Eliot
Strange Brew

Strange Brew

By John Deering
Tom the Dancing Bug

Tom the Dancing Bug

By Ruben Bolling
Wizard of Id

Wizard of Id

By Parker and Hart
Working Daze

Working Daze

By John Zakour and Scott Roberts
W.T. Duck

W.T. Duck

By Aaron Johnson
In the Bleachers

In the Bleachers

By Ben Zaehringer
Doonesbury

Doonesbury

By Garry Trudeau
Daddy's Home

Daddy's Home

By Tony Rubino and Gary Markstein
Diamond Lil

Diamond Lil

By Brett Koth
Dick Tracy

Dick Tracy

By Mike Curtis and Charles Ettinger

Recent Comments

  1. over 12 years ago on Frog Applause

    BillThompson,

    Thanks so much. I’ve d/l’d the book (.pdf version much better than the Kindle version).

    I’m knowledgeable about much of the subject matter from study of the IWW and the slightly latter Palmer raids (Deportations of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman and hundreds of others). I would have been a Debs man and they locked him up.

    Thanks again,Giap

  2. over 12 years ago on Frog Applause

    More on McAdoo: [from Wikipedia]

    …McAdoo’s actions at the time were both bold and outrageous. The United States in 1914 was still a net debtor nation (i.e., Americans’ aggregate debt to foreigners was greater than foreigners’ aggregate debt to Americans). The nations of Europe and their financial institutions held far more in debt of the United States; of many of the states of the Union; and of American private institutions of all kinds, than investors in the United States held in the debt of Europe’s nations and institutions in all forms, both public and private.

    McAdoo kept the U.S. currency on the Gold Standard. He arranged the closing of the New York Stock Exchange for an unprecedented four months in 1914 to prevent Europeans from selling American securities and exchanging the proceeds for dollars, and then gold.

    Economist William L. Silber wrote that the wisdom and historical impact of this action cannot be overemphasized.10 McAdoo’s bold stroke, Silber writes, as a first consequence averted an immediate panic and collapse of the American financial and stock markets. But also, it laid the groundwork for an historic and decisive shift in the global balance of economic power, from Europe to the United States; a shift which occurred exactly at that time. More than this, McAdoo’s actions both saved the American economy and its future allies from economic defeat in the early stages of the war…

    And I thought I was well versed on world war one.

  3. over 12 years ago on Frog Applause

    “My ears turned red at that awful whisper”

    http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/adaccess_BH0986/

    [the answer is body odor]

  4. over 12 years ago on Frog Applause

    I took the large ovals to be the shadows of the surface tension of the water where the feet of the wasp are touching; that’s how the wasp is standing on water.

  5. over 12 years ago on La Cucaracha

    George Romney, Mitt’s father, born in Mexico.

  6. over 12 years ago on Frog Applause

    Utrecht Goitre photographs illustrate goiter, but also illustrate other diseases and conditions unrelated to iodine deficiency. There’s one I would guess to be leprosy (Hansen’s disease).

  7. almost 13 years ago on Tim Eagan

    “They will tax us 35% on our donations to the homeless shelter so…”

    Jesus, you need a better tax accountant.

  8. almost 13 years ago on Frog Applause

    http://comicsidontunderstand.com/wordpress/ CIDU Bill writes (Bill Bickel) writes for a newsletter “Crime – Justice & America” and has recently started linking from Comics I Don’t Understand to articles he’s written for CJ&A.