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Comics I Follow

9 to 5

9 to 5

By Harley Schwadron
B.C.

B.C.

By Mastroianni and Hart
Andy Capp

Andy Capp

By Reg Smythe
Bloom County

Bloom County

By Berkeley Breathed
Bo Nanas

Bo Nanas

By John Kovaleski
Bottom Liners

Bottom Liners

By Eric and Bill Teitelbaum
Bound and Gagged

Bound and Gagged

By Dana Summers
Broom Hilda

Broom Hilda

By Russell Myers
Calvin and Hobbes

Calvin and Hobbes

By Bill Watterson
Close to Home

Close to Home

By John McPherson
Compu-toon

Compu-toon

By Charles Boyce
Cornered

Cornered

By Mike Baldwin
Dick Tracy

Dick Tracy

By Mike Curtis and Charles Ettinger
Doonesbury

Doonesbury

By Garry Trudeau
For Better or For Worse

For Better or For Worse

By Lynn Johnston
FoxTrot

FoxTrot

By Bill Amend
Garfield

Garfield

By Jim Davis
Heathcliff

Heathcliff

By Peter Gallagher
In the Bleachers

In the Bleachers

By Ben Zaehringer
Loose Parts

Loose Parts

By Dave Blazek
The Middletons

The Middletons

By Dana Summers
Non Sequitur

Non Sequitur

By Wiley Miller
NEUROTICA

NEUROTICA

By Allison Garwood
Real Life Adventures

Real Life Adventures

By Gary Wise and Lance Aldrich
Rubes

Rubes

By Leigh Rubin
Shoe

Shoe

By Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly
Jen Sorensen

Jen Sorensen

Speed Bump

Speed Bump

By Dave Coverly
Strange Brew

Strange Brew

By John Deering
Tank McNamara

Tank McNamara

By Bill Hinds
Wizard of Id

Wizard of Id

By Parker and Hart
Ziggy

Ziggy

By Tom Wilson & Tom II
Lalo Alcaraz

Lalo Alcaraz

Nick Anderson

Nick Anderson

Chip Bok

Chip Bok

Matt Davies

Matt Davies

Walt Handelsman

Walt Handelsman

Mike Luckovich

Mike Luckovich

Jack Ohman

Jack Ohman

Pat Oliphant

Pat Oliphant

Dana Summers

Dana Summers

Tom Toles

Tom Toles

Steve Benson

Steve Benson

Jeff Danziger

Jeff Danziger

John Deering

John Deering

Bob Gorrell

Bob Gorrell

Clay Jones

Clay Jones

Steve Kelley

Steve Kelley

Jim Morin

Jim Morin

Joel Pett

Joel Pett

Ted Rall

Ted Rall

Drew Sheneman

Drew Sheneman

Gary Varvel

Gary Varvel

FoxTrot Classics

FoxTrot Classics

By Bill Amend
Peanuts

Peanuts

By Charles Schulz
Flo and Friends

Flo and Friends

By Jenny Campbell
Frank and Ernest

Frank and Ernest

By Thaves
Gil Thorp

Gil Thorp

By Henry Barajas and Rachel Merrill
Momma

Momma

By Mell Lazarus
Mutt & Jeff

Mutt & Jeff

By Bud Fisher
One Big Happy

One Big Happy

By Rick Detorie
Robert Ariail

Robert Ariail

Drabble

Drabble

By Kevin Fagan
Off the Mark

Off the Mark

By Mark Parisi

Recent Comments

  1. about 10 years ago on Real Life Adventures

    MUST HAVE SHOPPED AT KROGER.

  2. over 14 years ago on Doonesbury

    DOONESBURY, DON’T BE STUPID AND PAINT EVERYONE WITH THE SAME BRUSH: ESPECIALLY WHEN YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT.

    We do living history. That includes both sides of the Civil War. We do yankees and rebs. We also do World War 2 living history: field Armies, hospitals, Army Air Corp., etc.

    It takes a lot of money and time to give today’s generation just a little taste of what it was like for our forefathers.

    My last Civil War recreation was Picket’s Charge Gettysburg. We had exactly the same number of cannons, horses and people as in the original battle. It was unbelievable the force on that battle field. It gave me a real feeling of the courage of men on both sides.

    In our Southern Camp, we were mostly Democrats not right wing GOP. I’m a Federalist and strongly against States Rights. We had one Openly Gay member, and we discussed Gay rights around the camp fire. We had Black, White, British, and many European members. Just like in the actual war.

    None of us favored Slavery, nor would we fight to defend it.

    But, all of us would fight to stop Northern Invaders bent on burning our towns and homes to the ground. Stealing our land. Raping our women. Occupying our homes for 25 years, and reconstructing our country through thievery for 100 years!

    By the way: Slavery did not cause the Civil War!!

    It was greed by the North. They were the slavers. They went to Africa and kidnapped the Africans. They sold the South the Slaves so they could get the Cotton for their Mills. When the South got a better deal from Europe, the North did everything it could to stop it. Finally resorting to Proxy Abolitionist to free the slaves and ruin the South’s Cotton Business.

    Southern & Northern Men died by the hundreds of thousands for the Greedy Yankee New England Factory owners, and their Cotton Plantation partners. None of which actually fought in the war they created.

    AS IN ALL WARS, IT WAS ALL ABOUT MONEY!!