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Comics I Follow

Adam@Home

Adam@Home

By Rob Harrell
The Argyle Sweater

The Argyle Sweater

By Scott Hilburn
Ben

Ben

By Daniel Shelton
Birdbrains

Birdbrains

By Thom Bluemel
Bliss

Bliss

By Harry Bliss
Bob Gorrell

Bob Gorrell

Boomerangs

Boomerangs

By Jack Pullan
Bottom Liners

Bottom Liners

By Eric and Bill Teitelbaum
Brevity

Brevity

By Dan Thompson
Calvin and Hobbes

Calvin and Hobbes

By Bill Watterson
C'est la Vie

C'est la Vie

By Jennifer Babcock
Chuckle Bros

Chuckle Bros

By Brian and Ron Boychuk
Citizen Dog

Citizen Dog

By Mark O'Hare
The City

The City

By John Backderf
Clay Jones

Clay Jones

Cornered

Cornered

By Mike Baldwin
Cul de Sac

Cul de Sac

By Richard Thompson
Daddy's Home

Daddy's Home

By Tony Rubino and Gary Markstein
Domestic Abuse

Domestic Abuse

By Jeremy Lambros
The Doozies

The Doozies

By Tom Gammill
The Duplex

The Duplex

By Glenn McCoy
Eek!

Eek!

By Scott Nickel
Farcus

Farcus

By David Waisglass and Gordon Coulthart
Flo and Friends

Flo and Friends

By Jenny Campbell
The Flying McCoys

The Flying McCoys

By Glenn McCoy and Gary McCoy
F Minus

F Minus

By Tony Carrillo
For Better or For Worse

For Better or For Worse

By Lynn Johnston
FoxTrot

FoxTrot

By Bill Amend
Fred Basset

Fred Basset

By Alex Graham
Free Range

Free Range

By Bill Whitehead
Gasoline Alley

Gasoline Alley

By Jim Scancarelli
The Grizzwells

The Grizzwells

By Bill Schorr
Heart of the City

Heart of the City

By Steenz
Herman

Herman

By Jim Unger
In the Bleachers

In the Bleachers

By Ben Zaehringer
It's All About You

It's All About You

By Tony Murphy
Jeff Danziger

Jeff Danziger

Joel Pett

Joel Pett

Last Kiss

Last Kiss

By John Lustig
Liberty Meadows

Liberty Meadows

By Frank Cho
Lio

Lio

By Mark Tatulli
Lisa Benson

Lisa Benson

Loose Parts

Loose Parts

By Dave Blazek
The Meaning of Lila

The Meaning of Lila

By John Forgetta and L.A. Rose
The Middletons

The Middletons

By Dana Summers
Moderately Confused

Moderately Confused

By Jeff Stahler
Monty

Monty

By Jim Meddick
Mutt & Jeff

Mutt & Jeff

By Bud Fisher
Nest Heads

Nest Heads

By John Allen
Off the Mark

Off the Mark

By Mark Parisi
On A Claire Day

On A Claire Day

By Carla Ventresca and Henry Beckett
The Other Coast

The Other Coast

By Adrian Raeside
Pat Oliphant

Pat Oliphant

Pibgorn

Pibgorn

By Brooke McEldowney
Reality Check

Reality Check

By Dave Whamond
Real Life Adventures

Real Life Adventures

By Gary Wise and Lance Aldrich
Rose is Rose

Rose is Rose

By Don Wimmer and Pat Brady
Rubes

Rubes

By Leigh Rubin
Jen Sorensen

Jen Sorensen

Strange Brew

Strange Brew

By John Deering
Sylvia

Sylvia

By Nicole Hollander
Tiny Sepuku

Tiny Sepuku

By Ken Cursoe
Tom the Dancing Bug

Tom the Dancing Bug

By Ruben Bolling
Walt Handelsman

Walt Handelsman

Wizard of Id

Wizard of Id

By Parker and Hart
Working It Out

Working It Out

By Charlos Gary
Ziggy

Ziggy

By Tom Wilson & Tom II
Zack Hill

Zack Hill

By John Deering and John Newcombe
9 to 5

9 to 5

By Harley Schwadron
9 Chickweed Lane

9 Chickweed Lane

By Brooke McEldowney
Ripley's Believe It or Not

Ripley's Believe It or Not

By Ripley’s Believe It or Not!
Shoe

Shoe

By Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly

Recent Comments

  1. over 12 years ago on Tank McNamara

    Sports Jerk of the Year: Tim Thomas, Boston Bruins for snubbing the White House invitation to honor the Bruins as NHL champions. Tim is rude, confused, and too self important to attend an event to honor his own team.

  2. about 13 years ago on Ziggy

    Lots of confused comments today from pschearer et al. Regualtions have saved lives and made cars more efficient. If a manufacturer cheats by making parts smaller that’s the manufacturer’s fault, not the regulation’s fault. By the way, be thankful that the government drove manufacturers to add the following: headlights, brake lights, backup lights, windshield wipers, and unexposed gas tanks, to name just a few.

  3. about 13 years ago on Tom the Dancing Bug

    The for profit colleges are a joke. We used one of the big name for profit colleges at the last place I worked. Employees could sign up for courses and could even work on getting degrees from the college and our employer paid the tuition and books. Most of the people who went were average or below average workers but they all passed and many got A’s. Of course, they didn’t really learn anything. I got first hand accounts that showed teachers “helping” students with their tests and offering “extra credit” for little or no effort so that the number of passing students could be maintained. If the student did not get at least a C then they had to reimburse our employer for the tuition and books. And if too many students got grades below C then our employer would have terminated the contract with the for profit college. And the workers who graduated continued to be average or below average workers and none of them pursued jobs in their so-called new fields of expertise. Recently, Congress has threatened to cut Federal aid to these for profit colleges and the colleges have responded with a major advertising campaign showing how important they are to students getting new skills and jobs. Were you fooled by this advertising campaign? I would seriously question the skills of anybody who gets training or a degree from a for profit college. The cartoon does a great job describing the situation.

  4. about 13 years ago on Pat Oliphant

    Mr. Trump. You’re fired…

  5. about 13 years ago on Tim Eagan

    In addition to our current energy problems (coal and oil pollute and add to global warming; nuclear energy is uneconomical - you must store nuclear waste for 80,000 years, wind isn’t plentiful enough) we have the near-future problem: we are running out of oil worldwide and coal will follow quickly when the oil runs out. Nuclear fusion isn’t practical yet and may never be although it has fantastic potential. That leaves solar power. It’s too expensive now but when the cost of other fuels gets too high then solar will be the choice. There are already new homes being built that are energy neutral, that is, they produce as much energy as they use. That is the best long term solution for now; new construction practices and materials coupled with solar cells and geothermal systems for the home.

  6. about 13 years ago on Jen Sorensen

    The Koch Brothers are the biggest threat to our national security. Is anybody paying attention?

    Soon, there will be no unions and then, no voice for the American worker. Economic slavery will be complete.

    Why should business owners and elected officials have the only say in an enterprise’s or government’s operations? They don’t represent labor. Why is it proper for them to have a say and for labor to have no say?

  7. about 13 years ago on Tim Eagan

    Unions are the only organizations that support workers. Businesses and the government which is too often controlled by businesses do not ensure that employers will be fair to workers and that work environments will be safe. Once unions are gone, so will any voice held by workers. Sure, some unions are bad, but so are some businesses and some governments. Should we abolish businesses too? I for one am thankful that we are not required to work 16 hour days 7 days a week and that little children are forbidden to work in factories. It took unions to make those changes. Businesses opposed those changes.

  8. about 13 years ago on Tom the Dancing Bug

    Did you know? In Bush v Gore, the 5 justices who stopped the recount in Florida declared in their ruling that they were against states rights, a position that they strongly held in all their opinions prior to and after Bush v Gore? That the Bush v Gore ruling was the most activist ruling ever made by the Supreme Court and that the so-called “originalist” Scalia played an extremely activist role? Did you also know that Sandra Day O’Connor should have recused herself because there were at least 2 instances where she stated publicly that she wanted Bush to win and would fix it so that the outcome was correct? She wanted to retire but did not want to be replaced with a nominee from a democratic president. Wake up conservative dupes! Scalia and his thugs are fooling you.

  9. about 13 years ago on Pat Oliphant

    Reagan lucked out when he happened to be president when the USSR collapsed. His revisionists still try to give him credit for his luck. As for me, Reagan is a deadbeat who owes me money. Think he’ll ever pay his debt to me?

  10. over 13 years ago on Tom the Dancing Bug

    It’s really simple. Anti-government people murder people. Pro-government people do not murder people. Gun nuts murder people. Gun control advocates do not murder people.