Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt
This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is dfbomb with a comment about the insane charges being brought against adults who assist students during anti-ICE protests:
These fucking assholes terrorized our schools.
They approached our people observing schools during morning and afternoon drop offs, pretending to be locals. We saw through them.
They staged next to Liam’s school just to be intimidating. They staged at my kid’s school.
These fucking ICE roared through the back alleys of family neighborhoods at 50mph with garages less than 6 inches on either side of their giant rented SUV mirrors, which had stolen license plates on them. They did this to try to lose observers.
They terrorized Roosevelt school after Renee was shot, just to assert dominance after the shooting in the neighborhood.
Fuck ICE. Charge me you assholes. See you in court where I tell the stories of how ICE agents have threatened, beaten and harassed my neighbors and I. The stories of how they cried in their coffees each morning because their feelings were hurt everyone hated their NAZI bullshit.
Mike, I wonder if Ken White would take the case if I managed to be perp-walked with middle fingers akimbo?
Fuck ICE. Fuck this ethnic cleansing and flex of power in defense of ethnic cleansing.
NAZI PUNKS: FUCK OFF.
In second place, it’s Rocky with a reply to a comment that aimed to dismiss expert opinions on age verification technology on the basis of some dubious claims about expert opinions on past issues:
Which experts? Have you actually educated yourself on what happened and when?
This is the sequence of events:
1. Hunter Biden (unverified) drops off a laptop for repair
2. No one comes to pick up the laptop for months
3. The owner of the repair shop starts tinkering with the laptop and pieces together a copy of the hard drive
4. The owner peruses the content, then tries to fob it off to various republicans
5. The owner also sends a copy to the FBI
6. A copy of the drive is passed around among Republicans and gets altered and modified several times
7. It finally ends up with Rudy Giuliani who sends a copy to the New York Post
8. NYP posts a story about the contents but no one at the paper wants to put their name on the byline
9. Links to the NYP story is posted on social media
10. Some links to the story is then removed on social media under the rule “hacked material”
11. A bunch of butthurt idiots scream censorship because surfing to the NYP article is impossible, only links on social media can work!
12. Social media companies walk back the decision to remove links.
13. After a lot wailing and gnashing copies of the drive eventually ends up with people that has knowledge of computer forensics
14. All examinations of the copies say some of the content appear to be authentic but there are signs of tampering and other content added, but no one can determine if the drive actually comes from a laptop owned by Hunter Biden
15. Mac Isaac, the repair shop owner, finally approaches CBS News with a “clean copy” because he didn’t like lies being flung around about the “Hunter Biden Laptop”. This drive is examined by a reputable third party which determines that the drive in all likelihood comes from a laptop owned by Hunter Biden
16. That’s it.So these 51 experts you mentioned, did they examine the clean copy or the tampered copies?
“Hundreds of doctors and scientists wrote that covid obviously came from bats in a wet market“
No, what most said was that the virus in all likelihood came from bats that spread it to other animals which in turn ended up in the wet market. Do you understand the concept of zoonotic spillover and how bats are often carriers of very nasty viruses.
“But lol, no one cares about “letters from experts”. They probably never did, but they SURE AF don’t now.“
Willful stupidity is ignoring what knowledgeable people say. The right course of action is to listen, then actually determine if what they say is correct which may require people to learn new things that can contradict their beliefs. The latter makes the lotus eaters uncomfortable, because the apathy of belief is such a comfort in a complicated world.
For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we’ve got a pair of comments about the dangers of losing Section 230, both replying to claims that 230 is just a gift to the internet giants. First, it’s MrWilson responding to the idea that startups competing in the social media space is already impossible:
You seem stuck in a perspective that the purpose of every social media platform is to become as popular as Facebook has been at its peak. Alternative platforms are often niche ones that aren’t interested in becoming that popular and statistically can’t because their target audience either isn’t large or doesn’t grow much.
They deserve to survive despite your lack of imagination in how these attacks could affect them.
Next, it’s blakestacey on the protections more generally:
The law doesn’t just apply to billion-dollar companies. It protects Wikipedia. It protects Bluesky. It protects Dreamwidth. It protects individual Mastodon instances. It protects TechDirt. It protects personal blogs. It protects you.
Acting as though the Internet is synonymous with two or three giant corporations is an excellent way to get laws and rulings that only giant corporations have the resources to survive. Zuckerberg, Musk and the Ellison family win, while you and I lose.
Over on the funny side, our first place winner is HT Pythons with a comment about Trump’s defamation lawsuit against Rupert Murdoch being tossed out:
Into The Pit
What is your name?
- Donald Trump
What is your quest?
- To seek $10 billion dollars
What is the definition of actual malice?
- Huh? I don’t know that. (whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa…..)
In second place, it’s Pixelation proposing a new multi-purpose maxim:
“For every human problem there is a Trump solution — one that is direct, obvious, and wrong.”
For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with one more comment from Pixelation, this time about RFK Jr.’s recently-announced podcast:
He should name his podcast, As The Worm Turns.
Finally, it’s Strawb with a comment on our post about the Trump phone, in which we referred to Trump’s organization as “fraud-prone”:
Which, in this case, would make them the fraud-phone Trump organization.
That’s all for this week, folks!








whoops - thanks for catching that, it's fixed now!
Hi John - sorry if there was any confusion in the checkout process, but you definitely don't need to create a PayPal account! In your cart you should see two checkout buttons, the second one is for PayPal but the first one (the regular checkout button) will allow you to proceed without creating any kind of account
Yup, still available!
can't move it I'm afraid - though I can delete it if you like and you can repost! In the mean time, I'll link to where I assume it was supposed to go: https://www.techdirt.com/2025/11/14/nut-huggers-apparel-plans-to-battle-back-against-bullshit-buc-ees-bullying/
Fixed that too, thanks
yeah sorry about that - fixed now!
whoops, there was an error in the link - fixed now! thanks
Yeah we were blown away by the quality of so many entries this year!
whoops, correct, thanks! fixed
I don't think this is because he "can't admit he made a mistake" - I think it is because this is exactly what he wants, and he wants everyone to know that he will do it to anyone he pleases.
Though it's a broad rhetorical stroke and not really comparable to the acute diagnosis of these specific government actions as kidnapping, I don't actually have much problem with calling taxation theft if that's really what you want to do - knock yourself out But while there are many hopeful visions of a stateless future that I will happily or even eagerly entertain, I strongly suspect that they don't line up very well with yours Stephan
The administration's position is that as soon as these men first arrived at CECOT, America washed its hands of the whole thing and it no longer has anything to do with them. The purpose of demanding a statement from someone with personal knowledge of Garcia's current whereabouts is to establish whether and to what degree the DHS has in fact continued any active monitoring of these people, and to find individual officials who can be held responsible for fulfilling the court order to facilitate their return The purpose of evading that demand is to avoid answering that question, and avoid giving the court anyone to hold responsible But we do know that many of these men made it to CECOT (as there are photos of several of them being held there), and El Salvador says it is proudly holding all 238 of them, and at the moment there's just no particular reason to believe this isn't the case.
At the moment, there is every reason to believe all 238 of these men are being held in CECOT in El Salvador
It's not uncommon for the court to give the government lawyers leeway - but nothing about this situation is common. I think at the very least she could have done what Garcia's lawyers asked: order an official with personal knowledge of his whereabouts to appear before the court. And if it were up to me, order that to happen today.
And all of this happening just after they openly defied her order this morning when they missed the deadline for their response by half an hour
I don't think this administration is actually hellbent on saving money. I think they are hellbent on allocating money and spending any extra money required to finish their project of transforming America into an outright fascist state.
I am not optimistic at all, but this is a real human's life we're talking about - a human being with family that is fighting for his return. You don't get to just flatly declare him as as-good-as-dead.
Noted. Bye forever! 👋
It's still coming at some point, just been very busy
Traffic has been high, which means both more comments and more people voting on them!