1/11/2017

"I Vape for a Reason", or "Did that Bear Fellate Hitler?"



Hello my best, beautiful, brave, breastie, bestie buddies! My lovely fans that follow and dote on my every word, thought and action! How the fuck are ya'll? Its colder than Santas dick right now, and I found myself thinking on the concept of procrastination.

Procrastination is an awful concept in theory, but lets not forget; In theory, COMMUNISM WORKS. So I think its important that we look at procrastination in a fair and balanced way Don't you? Were not filthy commies are we? (Bless Glorious Leader).

Procrastination has gotten a bad rap over the years, and I suppose its no wonder. When you see what dedicated men, women, and others have accomplished with their hard work it can make the concept look kinda shitty. Imagine if you'd never picked up that video game, drank that first beer  or masturbated. Literally THOUSANDS of hours wasted!

But I must ask you this... What if Hitler was a pot head? Do you think he would have killed nearly as many Jews and untermensch? Not likely! I actually address this concept in a film mock-up Ive been working on, for 15 years. It involves a time travelling piece of key-lime pie, and a grizzly bear that formally belonged to Adolf Hitler. They have zany misadventures through time, all while really getting to know the people that matter most: Themselves.

But I digress....

What if Jesus was really proactive? There are some scholars that believe that Jesus may have actually been more of a leader of a rebellion with very little magic powers, than any sort of Savior. More of a person to fit prophesies that the Jewish mystics at the time so loved to make (Aslan, R (2013)  Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth). What would have happened in that case? Would we be seeing a world-wide Jewish state? Fondly remembering Jesus for the blood-thirsty warlord he was?
I actually address this concept in a book Ive been working on for the last 15 years. It involves a time travelling Nazi and a grizzly bear, that formerly belonged to Jesus of Nazareth.

But again, I digress.

I suppose what I'm really getting at, is that sometimes its ok to smoke a joint and play video games for 12 hours. Or get a little drunk for a month or so. But its important to have limits! I actually address this in a comic Ive been working on. Its about a time Travelling Jesus chasing a time travelling Hitler through time. And also there's a piece of talking key-lime pie.

I have to go now. My planet needs me.

Donkeyzrahite

1/09/2017

The Empress and Her New Clothes Are F-king Retarded", or "I Hate Myself and Everyone Else. Build a Wall!"



G'day faithful readers. Just knowing you're out there, reading my words, lapping up my delicious thoughts like the adorable pup-pups you are, gives me strength. Remember: I love you, and J loves you.

I feel like I need to address some things. It would seem my last post raised some serious questions from some of my fans, old and new alike! And if there's one thing that truly brings me joy, it is educating my brothers and sisters and whatever the fuck you people identify as. (Remember, just send me a list of your preferred pronouns, and I will be sure to start addressing my beautiful little snowflakes as they require!!!)

So lets get to it!

Dr.  Jeffrey Kang from Detroit writes... "Yo! Welcome back to the blog-o-sphere my man! We missed you! I gotsa axe though, why did you sign your new past as Ezrahite AKA Donkeycum? Dat shit be craycray!"

Thank you for the question Dr. Kang, and its a good one, to be sure. You see during the decade long absence from the Internet, I went through some changes. I grew a little, I died a little, and yes, I was reborn a little! Long story short, the moniker was gifted to me by a shaman in Korea (All praise glorious leader). Its quite the tale, and I may share it with you all someday, should you like! But for now, don't be too concerned and just enjoy the new reality that is... Ezrahite AKA Donkeycum.

Next email is from dogscatman_6969: "It is wonderful to see you again dear friend Ezrahite. I am ashamed to write trly did not realize how much I missed you until roughly the 4th year without an update. I hope you can forgive me, and may I ask, why wasnt the J-man posting on the blog in your absense? Is it true hes going to be doing a podcast with you soon? PRAISE BE IN HIS NAME!"

I need to get serious for a second here dogscatman_6969. What I did, leaving you all for that long? That was unforgivable.
I know it. You know it. The Universal Overmind knows it. But I gotta say, and I feel you already know this, you should feel absolutely awful that it took you 4 years to notice I stopped updating.
Get your shit together dogscatman_6969.

Finally my last letter is from Cremefresh. Creme asks, "y do this?"

I assume Mr. Fresh is asking about why I am back. Why now? Perhaps hes interested in why I want to start a podcast? For reference Cremefresh, please try to be a little more articulate with your next question! But I am a man of the people, and I shall do my best to answer it! For starters, I do this, because I HAVE do it. Since Arigold Huffman died in that cursed year of our lord 2016, there has not been a real voice of Truth on the Internet. Its a fact, you can look it up. The voice of the people MUST be heard! Too many blowhards and tyrants trying to lead the people, when all they truly care about is sacrificing children to the dark god Moloch and grabbin women in right in the pussy. The people need better Mr. Fresh! The people DESERVE better!

I thank you for your time, and I'm glad that I was able to answer some of your inquiries. Please feel free to comment or email me with your questions. This is a movement by the people, for the people and also with Jesus. Hes around here too.

Take care my lovelies!

Donkeycum AKA Ezrahite

1/07/2017

"The Man Comes Around", or "This Ain't Yo Mommas Safe Space!"




Hello faithful readers! It has been almost a decade, but it feels like yesterday! I sincerely hope you all are doing well, and don't worry, Joel will return soon!

I am amazed and grateful hat blogger.com kept my blog up in my absence, but now the time has come, dear reader, to launch my sizable intellect and will into new domains. New ventures. New dimensions. New psychospheres! That's right dear friends, Ezrahite is starting a podcast!

Now I know what you're thinking, "But Ezrahite, isn't that pissing into an ocean of piss?" And faithful reader, you'd be correct if you weren't so damn wrong! You see, the pungent aroma of my piss is more than enough to stand out in this awful cesspool or opinions, and contrivances. I promise.

That's not even the best news though, believe it nor not! The REAL news, is who is co-hosting my podcast with me! Non other than our Man with the Plan... The Magic Jesus!

ETA is still out, but get excited my dear brothers and sisters and xe's and they's!!! The mans come around!

In Love and Light,

Ezrahite AKA Donkeycum

1/18/2007

"11:11" or "And Vernon Spake"


Im back folks, and in force, even! It's been long time coming, so I hope Im still getting traffic, I mean, that whole Joel Stein thing WAS a pretty big jerkaround, but I gotta tell you, Jesus leaving me low and wet didnt exactly help my mentality, you know? But Im good spirits and Im ready to run the hell outta this site.

Well spiritual evolution is something that each of are experiencing in some way every day. Wether it be the 11:11 phenomenon or growth in ways that you'd probably forgotten you even have! Well folks as our consciousness evolves this is all just natural. Our global psyche is going through puberty as it were. Growing and raising to High vibrations of energy! Heaven states people. Now a lot of you faithful viewers may be angered and confused by these statements. I would suggest you do the research yourself and suck it up, because its coming whether we want it to or not. Poppa Bears made the decision and Nothing Can Oppose Pure Will.

Todays link will help you on your journey to Truth. Truth, friends, ISNT relative. There are facts, that even science is rules by. Logic and conscious thought itself are all part of a grander thing. A pure entity that we are all a part of. A entity of love and understanding. A father/mother/Source people! And its good.

Well Im really thinking I need to restructure this site. Its just not cutting it for me anymore, it needs to be bigger, better and... better. Yes. Thats it.

Well in any case Im out, busy day today. Peace fam.

1/16/2007

"Part 7 of Our 39 Series"


Wel lsorry I havent updated lately folks. My keyboards been down for a couple days, btu faithful contributor and friend of the site Rem has saved my ass yet again. And he's been getting me drunk lately, so hes Gold baby.

Well Ive actually been getting tired of this JOel Stein stuff, so I think I may go back to the old format soon. You know.. the format where I ramble on and on while showcasing bizarre web-sites. If I have any readers still, its on the way. So kudos baby. I'll see you on the other side.

Rushing To Judgment
Monday, Dec. 08, 2003 By JOEL STEIN

I like conservatives. I like the way they feel about unions, globalization, farm subsidies, helmet laws, states' rights, animal rights, affirmative action, the environment, free trade and Ted Kennedy. I also like the way their women dye their hair really blond and flare their nostrils when they're angry. But the reason I can't get down with the conservatives, despite my libertarian leanings, is their absolutism. Rush Limbaugh has long been rabidly antidrug, saying all users should be locked away. Yet when he came back on the air after just five weeks of rehab for addiction to some drug I'm actually too conservative to have even heard of, he suddenly believed the liberal doctrine that addicts are victims of a disease who can be cured only through the help of others. If Rush accidentally kisses a man on the lips, he's going to switch on gay marriage and have no show left.

Even though the criminal investigation into Limbaugh's pill purchases may explain his current position, I don't have a problem with his hypocrisy. My problem is that Rush is wrong twice, swinging all the way from punitive to forgiving. Drug use is incredibly nuanced and confusing — even alcohol required two constitutional amendments and a fight between "Tastes great" and "Less filling" that has never been adequately settled. Limbaugh used to portray all drugs as equal, whether they were painkillers or marijuana or heroin — which is not only stupid but also a really poor business plan if you're considering becoming a dealer. I had never tried marijuana until a friend left me some lovely brownies a few years ago, and not once since that experience have I been nervous about spiraling into harder drugs, unless there's a pusher with cocaine Rice Krispies Treats.

But to suggest any distinctions — that the use of some drugs should be legal while others require counseling and still others imprisonment — isn't acceptable in the conservative community. Gray isn't welcome on any subject in the land of Rush. I found that out the hard way this summer when I filled in as the host of the Mike Gallagher Show, a conservative radio show with 2.5 million weekly listeners, broadcast on 175 stations. The listeners didn't seem to like me very much. This was only partially because I was really bad at it. Basically, they thought I was a liberal, even though I didn't say one liberal thing. I had invited a member of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on to talk about cockfighting, of which I'm an advocate. Yet just having the PETA woman on the show made listeners think I was a liberal. A caller said the PETA rep was a terrorist, which I agreed with, since the organization totally disrupted last year's Victoria's Secret fashion show. Then he said she was the same as Osama bin Laden. I questioned that, mostly because PETA hasn't killed anyone. He said that all terrorists were equal and that parsing out evil made me a sympathizer. I questioned his epistemology, at which point he called me a "stupid liberal kike," which caused the switchboard guy to hang up on him. That switchboard guy ruined all the fun.

Even though I filled in for Gallagher for only one day, while Treason author Ann Coulter subbed for two, I got three times as many emails from listeners about my show as she did about hers — nearly 900. That made me really happy until I found out they were almost all negative. "A conservative can spot a liberal a mile away. You are, or you ain't," Gallagher told me. "It's not just an ideology or a philosophy. We have an ability to cut to the chase. Black and white isn't a bad thing. Liberals gravitate toward the gray to muddy the waters, to muddle people's thinking. I had a liberal on the air today defend Michael Jackson." I almost made the liberal mistake of defending the guy who defended Michael Jackson.

When I sat down to host the show, playing with all the dials until I realized the producer had wisely taken away all my powers, I was startled by the intro. It was a quote from Al Pacino in The Recruit — which not only scared me but also impressed me with the willingness of Gallagher's research department to sit through the film. Pacino yells, "We believe in good and evil. And we choose good. We believe in right and wrong. And we choose right. Our cause is just. Our enemies everywhere. They're all around us." That's when I knew that I wasn't one of them, that I believe everything is a continuum, that the real world is filled with gradations of good and evil, asceticism and pornography, sobriety and addiction. Denying that seems a dangerous path to self-righteousness. Plus it's kind of boring.

So if I'm forced to choose, I guess Gallagher's listeners are right, that deep down I'm somehow a liberal, regardless of where I stand on the issues. Not only because I like the grays but also because declaring myself liberal will increase my chances of getting a newspaper op-ed column.

1/13/2007

"Part 6 Of 39 Baby"

Rushing To Judgment
Monday, Dec. 08, 2003 By JOEL STEIN

I like conservatives. I like the way they feel about unions, globalization, farm subsidies, helmet laws, states' rights, animal rights, affirmative action, the environment, free trade and Ted Kennedy. I also like the way their women dye their hair really blond and flare their nostrils when they're angry. But the reason I can't get down with the conservatives, despite my libertarian leanings, is their absolutism. Rush Limbaugh has long been rabidly antidrug, saying all users should be locked away. Yet when he came back on the air after just five weeks of rehab for addiction to some drug I'm actually too conservative to have even heard of, he suddenly believed the liberal doctrine that addicts are victims of a disease who can be cured only through the help of others. If Rush accidentally kisses a man on the lips, he's going to switch on gay marriage and have no show left.

Even though the criminal investigation into Limbaugh's pill purchases may explain his current position, I don't have a problem with his hypocrisy. My problem is that Rush is wrong twice, swinging all the way from punitive to forgiving. Drug use is incredibly nuanced and confusing — even alcohol required two constitutional amendments and a fight between "Tastes great" and "Less filling" that has never been adequately settled. Limbaugh used to portray all drugs as equal, whether they were painkillers or marijuana or heroin — which is not only stupid but also a really poor business plan if you're considering becoming a dealer. I had never tried marijuana until a friend left me some lovely brownies a few years ago, and not once since that experience have I been nervous about spiraling into harder drugs, unless there's a pusher with cocaine Rice Krispies Treats.

But to suggest any distinctions — that the use of some drugs should be legal while others require counseling and still others imprisonment — isn't acceptable in the conservative community. Gray isn't welcome on any subject in the land of Rush. I found that out the hard way this summer when I filled in as the host of the Mike Gallagher Show, a conservative radio show with 2.5 million weekly listeners, broadcast on 175 stations. The listeners didn't seem to like me very much. This was only partially because I was really bad at it. Basically, they thought I was a liberal, even though I didn't say one liberal thing. I had invited a member of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on to talk about cockfighting, of which I'm an advocate. Yet just having the PETA woman on the show made listeners think I was a liberal. A caller said the PETA rep was a terrorist, which I agreed with, since the organization totally disrupted last year's Victoria's Secret fashion show. Then he said she was the same as Osama bin Laden. I questioned that, mostly because PETA hasn't killed anyone. He said that all terrorists were equal and that parsing out evil made me a sympathizer. I questioned his epistemology, at which point he called me a "stupid liberal kike," which caused the switchboard guy to hang up on him. That switchboard guy ruined all the fun.

Even though I filled in for Gallagher for only one day, while Treason author Ann Coulter subbed for two, I got three times as many emails from listeners about my show as she did about hers — nearly 900. That made me really happy until I found out they were almost all negative. "A conservative can spot a liberal a mile away. You are, or you ain't," Gallagher told me. "It's not just an ideology or a philosophy. We have an ability to cut to the chase. Black and white isn't a bad thing. Liberals gravitate toward the gray to muddy the waters, to muddle people's thinking. I had a liberal on the air today defend Michael Jackson." I almost made the liberal mistake of defending the guy who defended Michael Jackson.

When I sat down to host the show, playing with all the dials until I realized the producer had wisely taken away all my powers, I was startled by the intro. It was a quote from Al Pacino in The Recruit — which not only scared me but also impressed me with the willingness of Gallagher's research department to sit through the film. Pacino yells, "We believe in good and evil. And we choose good. We believe in right and wrong. And we choose right. Our cause is just. Our enemies everywhere. They're all around us." That's when I knew that I wasn't one of them, that I believe everything is a continuum, that the real world is filled with gradations of good and evil, asceticism and pornography, sobriety and addiction. Denying that seems a dangerous path to self-righteousness. Plus it's kind of boring.

So if I'm forced to choose, I guess Gallagher's listeners are right, that deep down I'm somehow a liberal, regardless of where I stand on the issues. Not only because I like the grays but also because declaring myself liberal will increase my chances of getting a newspaper op-ed column.

"Part 6 Of 30 Baby"

Rushing To Judgment
Monday, Dec. 08, 2003 By JOEL STEIN

I like conservatives. I like the way they feel about unions, globalization, farm subsidies, helmet laws, states' rights, animal rights, affirmative action, the environment, free trade and Ted Kennedy. I also like the way their women dye their hair really blond and flare their nostrils when they're angry. But the reason I can't get down with the conservatives, despite my libertarian leanings, is their absolutism. Rush Limbaugh has long been rabidly antidrug, saying all users should be locked away. Yet when he came back on the air after just five weeks of rehab for addiction to some drug I'm actually too conservative to have even heard of, he suddenly believed the liberal doctrine that addicts are victims of a disease who can be cured only through the help of others. If Rush accidentally kisses a man on the lips, he's going to switch on gay marriage and have no show left.

Even though the criminal investigation into Limbaugh's pill purchases may explain his current position, I don't have a problem with his hypocrisy. My problem is that Rush is wrong twice, swinging all the way from punitive to forgiving. Drug use is incredibly nuanced and confusing — even alcohol required two constitutional amendments and a fight between "Tastes great" and "Less filling" that has never been adequately settled. Limbaugh used to portray all drugs as equal, whether they were painkillers or marijuana or heroin — which is not only stupid but also a really poor business plan if you're considering becoming a dealer. I had never tried marijuana until a friend left me some lovely brownies a few years ago, and not once since that experience have I been nervous about spiraling into harder drugs, unless there's a pusher with cocaine Rice Krispies Treats.

But to suggest any distinctions — that the use of some drugs should be legal while others require counseling and still others imprisonment — isn't acceptable in the conservative community. Gray isn't welcome on any subject in the land of Rush. I found that out the hard way this summer when I filled in as the host of the Mike Gallagher Show, a conservative radio show with 2.5 million weekly listeners, broadcast on 175 stations. The listeners didn't seem to like me very much. This was only partially because I was really bad at it. Basically, they thought I was a liberal, even though I didn't say one liberal thing. I had invited a member of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on to talk about cockfighting, of which I'm an advocate. Yet just having the PETA woman on the show made listeners think I was a liberal. A caller said the PETA rep was a terrorist, which I agreed with, since the organization totally disrupted last year's Victoria's Secret fashion show. Then he said she was the same as Osama bin Laden. I questioned that, mostly because PETA hasn't killed anyone. He said that all terrorists were equal and that parsing out evil made me a sympathizer. I questioned his epistemology, at which point he called me a "stupid liberal kike," which caused the switchboard guy to hang up on him. That switchboard guy ruined all the fun.

Even though I filled in for Gallagher for only one day, while Treason author Ann Coulter subbed for two, I got three times as many emails from listeners about my show as she did about hers — nearly 900. That made me really happy until I found out they were almost all negative. "A conservative can spot a liberal a mile away. You are, or you ain't," Gallagher told me. "It's not just an ideology or a philosophy. We have an ability to cut to the chase. Black and white isn't a bad thing. Liberals gravitate toward the gray to muddy the waters, to muddle people's thinking. I had a liberal on the air today defend Michael Jackson." I almost made the liberal mistake of defending the guy who defended Michael Jackson.

When I sat down to host the show, playing with all the dials until I realized the producer had wisely taken away all my powers, I was startled by the intro. It was a quote from Al Pacino in The Recruit — which not only scared me but also impressed me with the willingness of Gallagher's research department to sit through the film. Pacino yells, "We believe in good and evil. And we choose good. We believe in right and wrong. And we choose right. Our cause is just. Our enemies everywhere. They're all around us." That's when I knew that I wasn't one of them, that I believe everything is a continuum, that the real world is filled with gradations of good and evil, asceticism and pornography, sobriety and addiction. Denying that seems a dangerous path to self-righteousness. Plus it's kind of boring.

So if I'm forced to choose, I guess Gallagher's listeners are right, that deep down I'm somehow a liberal, regardless of where I stand on the issues. Not only because I like the grays but also because declaring myself liberal will increase my chances of getting a newspaper op-ed column.