Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for December 02, 2020

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    I Mad Am I  over 3 years ago

    My niece went to the store for me today. She called to confirm a product. She told me that TP has a limit of how many packages you can buy… and there was only one kind. Most pain relief was missing. A cat food… she was spooked – she over stocked!!! Christmas Lockdown is looking like the same all over again – Drained Shelves!!!

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    sirbadger  over 3 years ago

    40 years ago, I used to see ads for placebos in adult magazines.

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    mr_sherman Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I’ll be waiting to read the comments about who’s buying them.

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    mattro65  over 3 years ago

    I’ll wager one of my children that there’s a huge number of people who are nescient about the word nescience.

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    anymouse77  over 3 years ago

    nescient (adjective): lacking knowledge; ignorant

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    HidariMak1  over 3 years ago

    Placebos these days is called homeopathy. Take an item that is not related to what it supposedly treats, dilute that item entirely out of existence, and then claim that diluting it even further somehow makes it more powerful. But somehow, homeopathy remains a multi-billion dollar market, annually.

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    Alabama Al  over 3 years ago

    Until I looked it up, I was nescient about the word “nescient.”

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    Dennis Nichols  over 3 years ago

    Excellent.

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    Concretionist  over 3 years ago

    Not every day I learn a new word from the comics. Though Wiley is among the more likely to cause that.

    (ne: Non; scient: knowledge)

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    feverjr Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Hey, which extra-strength placebo does QAnon recommend?

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    Imagine  over 3 years ago

    Nescience is bliss.

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    braindead Premium Member over 3 years ago

    They should be sending their money to Trump instead of buying placebos.

    These days, maybe it should be pronounced nay – science.

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    Yontrop  over 3 years ago

    There was a serious medical study done on placebos as pain relievers. Half the group were given a “sugar pill” and the other half nothing. The placebo was effective in many people in reducing the pain they felt, but had no impact on range of motion. Makes you think.

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    DamnHappyChappy  over 3 years ago

    Nescience definition, lack of knowledge; ignorance……. I was uncertain too.

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    keenanthelibrarian  over 3 years ago

    “Forgive them, Lord, for they know not what they do”.

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    artmer  over 3 years ago

    I love how a long press on the word nescient brings a popup and “google” is a choice. Ya gotta love android sometimes.

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    rugeirn  over 3 years ago

    Our concept of the market for this doesn’t have to be limited to the clueless. There’s research out there that shows that placebos work even when people know they are placebos.

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    Dobby53 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Double daily discounts if you show your Parler Card.

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    Lawrence.S  over 3 years ago

    Yeah, just try getting real pain relievers. I’ve heard this story from others, but know it from my wife. She has a couple chronic conditions and will have pain the rest of her life. Was getting prescriptions that had opioids. She didn’t abuse them, for more than ten years. We moved. New doctors are afraid to prescribe pain medication that’s effective for fear she’ll abuse it and tell her she has to live with pain because they won’t help chronically suffering patients. Its the Hippocratic Oath, guys, not the Hypocritic Oath. (Stories I’ve heard include 89 year old woman in wheelchair with worse pain than my wife’s, but they won’t prescribe effective pain medicine for fear it will shorten her life.) … Sorry for the rant.

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    dflak  over 3 years ago

    And now you know the secret of Trump’s success – he’s tapped into the nation’s inexhaustible supply of ignorance.

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    jessie d. Premium Member over 3 years ago

    One can assume those who had to lookup “nescient” fit right into that hugely group.

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    bbenoit  over 3 years ago

    I remember an interview Diane Ream did, with an author whos name I forget, where she asked him if he though his use of “big” words might seem condescending to those less literate. His answer, “not at all, it would be condescending for me to assume my audience ignorant”.

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    WGillete  over 3 years ago

    It’s also the market that fuels Trump’s hopes and dreams.

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    LKrueger41  over 3 years ago

    “Nescience”? Eschew obfuscation.

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    Kaputnik  over 3 years ago

    Well, it certainly explains the result of the election.

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    morningglory73 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Sigh….’tis true.

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    Redd Panda  over 3 years ago

    I use the word “nescient” all the time. I are smart.

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    david_42  over 3 years ago

    I’ll see your nescient and raise you an indignorance.

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    vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I wish I had a dime for everyone who has to Google “nescient”.

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    dot-the-I  over 3 years ago

    Captain Eddie won the pharmacy’s supplier subcontract on his boat’s name alone.

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    YulanaLow  over 3 years ago

    I have learned a new word.

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    sandpiper  over 3 years ago

    As a wise man once said, Life ain’t no easy gig. You gotta find your beat

    When the placebos wear off and users find the situation has not changed, perhaps they will realize there is only one resolution to a mental funk. Stand up, step up, and get on with life. Possibilities still exist. Find something, anything to get your mind and body in action, work on it until it is complete, then find something else. Yes, I know it isn’t easy, but it is an answer to gloom. Been the answer for generations, still is.

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    Jefano Premium Member over 3 years ago

    A useful distinction is sometimes made between “nescience” (happening not to know something a person in your position really couldn’t be expected to know) and “ignorance” (culpably not knowing something a person in your position really ought to know, or ought to have taken the responsibility to find out). Arguably Wiley ought to have used the word “ignorance” here, but then we wouldn’t all have had so much fun undoing our nescience about “nescience”!

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    Thomas R. Williams  over 3 years ago

    No nous is bad news.

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    Nate England  over 3 years ago

    That’s also the aisle where they keep the masks…

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    Michael G.  over 3 years ago

    Oh, I dunno …

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    cracker65  over 3 years ago

    Wiley teaching new words.

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    95  over 3 years ago

    Once called a Junior-High Gym teacher an incipient troglodyte and got a gentle smile and nod. Still don’t know if he understood the implication.

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    moderateisntleft  over 3 years ago

    You could apply that to the News stand as well.

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    mistercatworks  over 3 years ago

    “Anecdotally tested”

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    smartgrr  over 3 years ago

    I had to look it up.

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    swenbu Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Love all the comments Wiley elicited here!!

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    willie_mctell  over 3 years ago

    The OTC drug section has been a prime source of placebos. These days the herbal section seems to have taken over. Have you been to Whole Foods?

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    anomalous4  over 3 years ago

    Where’s the section for homeopathic placebos? 8-)

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    zenguyuno  over 3 years ago

    I was nescient concerning nescience, but no longer.

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    mpolo11 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I need the gluten free.

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    T Smith  over 3 years ago

    Have you got any gluten-free, free-range placebos?

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    cleokaya  over 3 years ago

    Hospital nurses are frustrated because many patients refuse to believe that they have Covid. Up until their dying moment they believe Covid is fake and they are sick with something else.

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    jimchronister2016  over 3 years ago

    As usual your right on Wiley. Thank you, love your cartoon.

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    jandaloft  over 3 years ago

    There’s a pill for that!

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    erniejpdx  over 3 years ago

    A lifetime as a writer and editor and I never ran across that word. Thanks!

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    unjags  over 3 years ago

    Ignorant- someone that is uniformed. Stupid- someone that is informed but just can’t comprehend. It is amazing how many knowledgable and sophisticated people are stupid.

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    librarian4hire  over 3 years ago

    The “organic, non-GMO placebos” are three times the price of the other placebos.

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    Redd Panda  over 3 years ago

    I’ll betcha Mr. Miller has a thesaurus on his desk.

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    SrTechWriter  over 3 years ago

    Here is a thought. I stumbled across this article:

    https://theweek.com/articles/951759/parents-warned-internet-break-brains-broke-theirs-instead?utm_source=pocket-newtab

    … and copied out this quote:

    “There is so much content on the internet, and so much of it is bad. It is blasting in your face relentlessly. To navigate it well — to discern truth and lies, to parse one’s own emotional and reflexive responses, to summon the mental energy to pay attention to credibility and incentives and the small, almost indescribable cues that might indicate whether a piece of content is to be trusted — is very difficult.”

    … which makes ultimate sense to me. It might be worth the while to go read the entire thing yourself.

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    opsono  over 3 years ago

    Ah, the homeopathic section.

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    The Brooklyn Accent  over 3 years ago

    Nescient? He was one of the Monkees, the guy with the wool hat.

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    JenSolo02  over 3 years ago

    I am the mother of two certified “highly gifted” young men; one is a field biologist and the other a nuclear engineer. My elder brother is a pediatric neurologist, my younger brother a PhD cognitive psychologist, working in AI with computers. I spent over 20 years in education, 19 as a teacher of gifted students… I had to look up “NESCIENT”; I’ve never seen it before!

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    bakana  over 3 years ago

    Don’t forget the market for Niche products like Jade Egg placebos.

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    JH&Cats  over 3 years ago

    There’s the motet “Nesciens mater virgo virum”: “The virgin mother, not knowing of man…” (or “virus”)

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