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The Times offers an overview from our college basketball expert (no implied-sarcasm quotation marks) Pete Thamel, or wisdom from the guy who won our office pool last year.
(His theories, of course, are in his tone — in the sarcasm that implies "this is only to be expected, given the way things are").
These bullies rarely exist, and when they do, geeks love to deal with them personally by suggesting the bully's simian similarities (ie, suggesting the bully is proof evolution CAN go backwards), calling them a humanitarian (it means a human but implies something else), or through sarcasm, at which geeks are trademark masters.
You may have thought sarcasm got its bad rep through being mindless and one-note (somebody saying the opposite of what they mean in either an incongruously exuberant voice, or a completely monotone one, in order to imply that something or somebody is stupid), but it's actually because sarcasm is evil.
Peter Schwartz implies.
Always imply.
Or sarcasm.
But it drips with sarcasm, and sarcasm is opinion.
And sarcasm with a wink isn't sarcasm.
I contain my sarcasm.
(That's sarcasm, folks).
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