Blowback

Blowback

A clean, well-lit place to vent

Please feel free to contribute to this frequently-updated forum, which posts selected commentary on our favorite comic strip. If you'd like your critique to be posted, please note that civility, if not approbation, counts. Click here to submit a comment.

  • SENSITIVE ISSUES

    Isaiah | MINNESOTA | April 08, 2013

    I usually enjoy most your strips, but yesterday's I found particularly inappropriate, offensive and unnecessary. Civil rights, slavery and racial mistreatment I do not see as appropriate to joke about. These are very sensitive issues. I showed it to my dad and he agreed. I do not support using humor as was used in this strip, and find it quite offensive. I will no longer look at Doonesbury the same way, or think of at the same standard. Sorry.

  • TRIPLE PLAY

    Jamie | Jackson, MS (dammit) | April 08, 2013

    I love the efficiency. A triple play of negative stereotypes! Yesterday's strip not only depicted white Mississippians as racist, but black men as ignorant and Hispanics as in-the-field only! Good hustle, GBT. Roland's employer would be proud.

  • SNAFU

    Shooshie Roberts | Dallas, TX | April 07, 2013

    I was wondering how Mississippi's 13th Amendment SNAFU got past GBT. I should have known he would not let it go without a comment. This is about the best take I've seen on it. There's just not much funny about that situation, yet Trudeau managed to make me laugh. To commend Mississippi on rectifying their 148 years of ignominy, on paper at least, I've bought pages of stamps from the Post Office, whose offerings this month have been the Emancipation Proclamation and Rosa Parks. I intend to put those on every letter that goes to Mississippi.

  • LATE

    Rev. Dr. Bob Faser | Hobart, AUSTRALIA | April 07, 2013

    Living in Australia, I hear some U.S. news but not all. I hadn't heard about Mississippi finally ratifying the 13th Amendment until today's strip. Better late than never, I suppose.

  • WOW!

    Esther Lee Davenport | Culleoka, TN | April 05, 2013

    Often I wish we readers could express wonder and excitement over the strips that touch us the most, via some kind of ongoing poll. It's frustrating to not have a way to say "Wow!" Maybe the answer to just to do this. Thanks for your work!

  • ZONKER

    Polly G. | Herndon, VA | April 05, 2013

    I sure hope someone tells Zonker that firing union organizers is an unfair labor practice!

  • SPEAKING OF UNIONS

    Janet | Washington, ME | April 05, 2013

    Speaking of unions, after Zonker moves to Colorado he may find this story useful.

  • JOIN

    Joe Torre | Pittsford, NY | April 04, 2013

    Zonk should join a union! Perhaps this one.

  • WILDCAT STRIKE

    Nancy Jane Moore | Austin, TX | April 04, 2013

    I see that some fast food workers in NYC are doing a wildcat strike. I wonder if they were inspired by the current series or if it is just serendipity.

  • GOOD CHEER

    Barbara Brower | Portland, OR | April 04, 2013

    Nobody else in my life has provided more good cheer than Garry Trudeau. I love my children, but they've only been around 20 and 25 years, respectively. I've got a great natal family, and they are and were (the late ones) funny, but in terms of 43 years of day-after-day joy... it's Doonesbury.

  • BRINGING TO LIGHT

    Ella | USA | April 04, 2013

    Thank you so much for bringing to light the hardworking people who have jobs that pay poverty wages. I wonder how many people realize that most medical transcriptionists (the people who transcribe and proofread all the medical reports that are generated by physician dictation in offices, clinics and hospitals), who used to be paid generously for their service and given excellent benefits, now work for poverty wages.

    With the arrival of speech recognition systems, even the most experienced and extraordinarily fast typists (many of whom are single mothers, single older women and people with disabilities) are lucky to make $20,000 a year if they work for any of the large transcription corporations in the United States and Canada. As a transcriptionist with 20 years experience who can works at above average speed, it is a struggle to make $10,000 a year as a supplement to my Social Security income of $10,000 a year. Transcription is paid by the line. We are pieceworkers who work at home. If our fingers aren't on the keyboard, we are not paid for our time. We are not paid when the transcription company's equipment fails. We are not paid when we stop typing to look up the names of new drugs and medical equipment. My meager medical benefits require a $100 co-pay to see a medical specialist.

    The pool of experienced transcriptionists who are willing to continue providing their service is shrinking, and the quality of our medical records is suffering as a result. I am fortunate to have the opportunity to work at all at my age, but I have no doubt that I am being exploited along with many others in poverty wage jobs.

  • TEACHER

    J.D. | Hawthorne, NEVADA | April 03, 2013

    Speaking of bad situations, I am a teacher. In Nevada, if you work for the state, when you retire and apply for your pension 2/3 of your Social Security benefits will then permanently disappear due to some sort of 'windfall profit' legislation. I earned my Social Security, but will never see most of it. Even if you move to another state after retiring, this rule holds. Because of this law I will be reduced to poverty after retirement -- which wouldn't happen if I received all of my Social Security benefits. Only a few states in the union have this 'windfall' law. Our union is constantly trying to undo this crazy law but having no success in this Republican-governed state, which is also a 'Right-to-Work' (forever) state. I did not know of this law when I moved here or I would not have.

  • UH OH

    Jerry Horn | Mill Valley, CA | April 03, 2013

    Uh oh. Are B.D. and Boopsie headed for the rocks?

  • EARTH TO ZONK

    Ed Cherlin | Columbus, IN | April 02, 2013

    Earth to Zonk: It is worse in right-to-work-and-not-get-paid states like Indiana, and will continue to be until Democrats vote their numbers nationwide. Before the election I wrote about it on Daily Kos.

  • B.D. AND ZONKER

    Edward C. | Denver, CO | April 01, 2013

    B.D. and Zonker! Thirty-eight years since it started for me, it's so cool to still have them in my life.

  • GOOD TO SEE

    Allie | Prague, CZECH REPUBLIC | March 31, 2013

    It's good to see I'm not the only mother that lives to embarrass her children. Lucky for my kids we didn't have video camera access back then. Not that this stops me.

  • LEO AND ALEX

    Pat Goudey O'Brien | Warren, VT | March 31, 2013

    Ah, I just love those two. GBT draws Leo as such an awesome, complex, and inherently decent person. But one with a huge dollop of 'fun' in his soul. Leo's relationship with Alex and their interplay is so much fun to contemplate. I keep thinking one has to be at least a bit of a really, really nice person to create such characters. They could not come from the mind of a mean person, even if the mind they do come from is also capable of creating Duke. Thanks to Garry for such fun people to spend time with on a quiet Sunday morning in late March.

  • GET OUT HERE, ZONK!

    N. Fraz | Woodland Park, CO | March 30, 2013

    Interestingly, "Kevin Colorado Springs" makes sense! The Springs has embraced medical marijuana as a terrific source of tax revenue. There are dozens of dispensaries within the city limits. I'm not a card-carrying "member," but I appreciate that the revenue it has generated allowed the city to re-open public toilets and re-install trash cans within the city parks and trails system; yes, those amenities were gone for a time. Get out here, Zonk! KCS is welcome in the Springs!

  • SMILE

    Jan Cunningham, | New Haven, CT | March 29, 2013

    Frame three today: I've never seen B.D. smile. And this hint of a smile -- alert self interest, drawn with so little information between upper lip and nose, but conveying perfectly the lack of information in B.D.'s character; eyebrows tilted in unexpected pleasure. It's amazing.

  • DIATRIBES

    Jason Thorn | Phoenix, AZ | March 29, 2013

    Zonker, B.D. had to listen to all of your game-derailing diatribes when you were on the team. And now you complain when he actually enjoys the conversation?