Retail Me Not

This is a great resource, especially when you are purchasing anything online. I always try to remember to check this site or do a basic Google search for coupon codes before completing any online order.

http://www.retailmenot.com/

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Article: Y’all’s Sprawl

Got to love this. Since moving north of the Mason-Dixon line and leaving the Appalachian mountains behind, I frequently get laughs regarding my usage of the word “y’all.” It belies what others perceive as a lack of Southern accent on my part, though that comes out more strongly when I’m tired and not enunciating words as well as I typically might.

Still, I have always had a particular fondness for “y’all,” and maintain that it does have a solid place in the English language. As this article mentions, it fills a void in English (slang aside) that awkwardly uses the word “you” as both plural and singular.

Article: Y’all’s sprawl. Linguists study the spread of a Southern term.

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Article: DiLorenzo Is Right About Lincoln

DiLorenzo Is Right!

DiLorenzo Is Right About Lincoln
Article by Walter E. Williams

As DiLorenzo documents – contrary to conventional wisdom, books about Lincoln, and the lessons taught in schools and colleges – the War between the States was not fought to end slavery; Even if it were, a natural question arises: Why was a costly war fought to end it? African slavery existed in many parts of the Western world, but it did not take warfare to end it. Dozens of countries, including the territorial possessions of the British, French, Portuguese, and Spanish, ended slavery peacefully during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Countries such as Venezuela and Colombia experienced conflict because slave emancipation was simply a ruse for revolutionaries who were seeking state power and were not motivated by emancipation per se.

Abraham Lincoln’s direct statements indicated his support for slavery; He defended slave owners’ right to own their property, saying that “when they remind us of their constitutional rights [to own slaves], I acknowledge them, not grudgingly but fully and fairly; and I would give them any legislation for the claiming of their fugitives” (in indicating support for the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850).

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