Wednesday Morning Links

by | Sep 21, 2022 | Daily Links | 386 comments

24 chances to see this instead of 22? Sign me up!

Canada seems set to rethink its policy on a vaccination requirement to enter the country, just in time for the MLB playoffs. They should have been forced to play their games somewhere else, by the way. Bodily autonomy is more important than 81 home games. Next year’s F1 schedule has been released. And it’s a doozy.  I just hope Vegas doesn’t suck. And that’s it for sports.

Bring on the pain. But how much will there be? I’m tired of the half-measures. Make it a full point this time and get it over with.

This is great news. I wonder if Biden will take credit for it.

 They’re just going back to their roots, don’t worry. They’ll get fascism right this time.

More his speed.

Don’t of it, asshole. This lifestyle is not for you or people like you. You’re more of a Huffy kind of guy. But definitely do the “not having kids” part.

Haha, you dumb fuck. Enjoy your five minutes of fame…and months of misery. Move out of the cities, people.

Well, she’s right. This lady is a fucking racist and an asshole to boot. So they’ll probably give her a raise.

The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

Same as it ever was. Same as it ever was. Gee, I wonder which political party he’s a member of. Because the article doesn’t say.

Well, he died doing what he loved. No, seriously. It would appear that he actually did.

Well…he’s right. I know this decision will cause some pants-shitting, but not here. The law was a gross due process violation and needs to be stricken from the books.

Here you go, friends. These guys are still underrated. And here’s another gem. Such simple, great music. Enjoy it.

End enjoy this lovely Wednesday, dear friends.

About The Author

sloopyinca

sloopyinca

386 Comments

  1. Count Potato

    It’s more like the 70’s now.

    • SDF-7

      Except Carter wasn’t calling half the country terrorists and all, but yeah.

      And re: the front page pic…. ET looks like he’s about to do some Biden sniffing on pre-mods Michael there.

      • Count Potato

        And World War II was in the 40’s

        “EXCLUSIVE: America WILL retaliate with ‘a devastating strike’ against Russia’s Black Sea Fleet or bases in Crimea if Putin follows through on threat to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine, US Army’s former European commander warns”

        https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11234251/America-hit-Russias-military-devastating-strike-Putin-nukes-Ukraine-says-general.html

        “America keeps poking the dragon: Destroyer and Canadian frigate sail through Taiwan Strait to show China it is international waterway – after Biden said army will be sent if Beijing invades”

        https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11233859/US-destroyer-Canadian-frigate-sail-Taiwan-Strait-strength-China.html

      • Atanarjuat

        The US government is the biggest threat to humanity that exists currently.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        Unfortunately you are correct sir. Also, Putin didn’t threaten to use nukes in the Ukraine, at least under the implied context of the war in its current form, so what that war pig is saying is bullshit.

      • Fourscore

        “after Biden said army will be sent if Beijing invades”

        /unplugs telephone

      • Swiss Servator

        Hey, 4X20 – if I get called out of the Retired Reserve, I am going to drag you with me!

      • Gustave Lytton

        I’m on to you, you just want fresh honey in the officers mess.

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        And just as was predicted, the rhetoric on both sides is escalating and will continue to escalate as it spirals out of control. Particularly as a weak President is coming into an election and wants to shore up support.

        The Biden Administration doesn’t have anyone with enough political heft who can yell STOP and this is an existential issue for Russia. Let’s hope we get really lucky because right now it’s not looking good.

      • Swiss Servator

        Annexing Ukraine is an existential issue?

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        NATO in Ukraine is an existential issue for Russia.

      • Pat

        Losing face on a national stage and ceding sovereignty to supranational orgs after spending the last century as one half a superpower duopoly certainly is.

      • waffles

        I’m of two minds. First, calling tens of millions of Americans potential terroristic threats is something you do when you’re weak. It’s ridiculous, feckless leadership and hopefully most Americans will see through it. But in the back of my mind, maybe they plan to do something that will almost definitely activate a smaller number of radicalized Americans and this is just to prep us for the brutal clampdowns that will further radicalize more.

        I hope it’s just the former.

      • SDF-7

        With all the refocusing of the Fed agencies (especially DOJ) on “white supremacy domestic terrorism” I’ve definitely swung around to the view that they’re desperately poking at their political enemies, trying to get an incident that isn’t an obvious Feeble entrapment so they can spin up from their January 6 mode into full suppression. That will give them the uniparty they so desperately want (they think).

      • Rat on a train

        They need their Reichstag fire.

      • waffles

        The Ray Epps thing bothers me. Some part of the government really wanted 1/6 to be the killshot instead of the goof it ended up being.

      • Pat

        Precisely how we got McVeigh after the feds spent the entire 1980s and early 1990s doing the same thing. History has always rhymed, but the reflective distance of the echo is getting shorter and shorter.

      • Count Potato

        I don’t think 9/11 was an “inside job”. However, the more I hear about the Alex Jones trials, the more doubts I have about Sandy Hook.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        First, calling tens of millions of Americans potential terroristic threats is something you do when you’re weak. It’s ridiculous, feckless leadership and hopefully most Americans will see through it.

        I hear this repeated a lot but don’t see it at all. It seems more like a wishful sentiment than anything with historical backing. Labeling your domestic enemies as enemies of the state is something you do when your strong and are preparing to move against them. The Soviet Union, the Third Reich, the CCP, the Khmer Rouge, etc. all labeled millions of domestic citizens as enemies of the state and began systematically annihilating them from very real positions of strength. Nazi Germany only fell because of external forces and the other regimes lasted decades.

        Biden is weak and feckless but is nothing but a figurehead. The Swamp in DC is not. They’ve already begun purging the military and law enforcement of those who won’t follow orders. DC has been fortified by the military. Elections are openly rigged and those who question the integrity are routinely mocked. None of this weakness. It’s solidification of power.

      • waffles

        The first statement is my public facing one. The second is the part where I agree with you. Underestimating the federal desire to stamp out opposition seems foolish given your historical examples.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        20 years ago, even 10 years ago, I might have scoffed at anything the Feds did because I believe the American people would resist.

        The reaction to Covid wiped away any illusion about this that I still held. We (including myself) point to the Swamp as a bugaboo, but the sad truth is they actually do represent the interests of at least tens of millions of our fellow American citizens. Our neighbors, colleagues, and even family/friends who would not only cheer when their opposition is placed against the wall but would gladly even take part it the executions. Regardless of the federal government, this country will never be unified again. The rot is too deep and the divisions too wide. The only question in my mind is will it be a peaceful divorce or a violent purge.

      • Gustave Lytton

        And natural result to being placed against the wall, or threatened to, is to do the same to your opponents. Principles are dead, fuck the other guy lives.

      • Pat

        Same here. I thought I was already a pretty cynical prick, but the COVID hysteria made me realize I was cluelessly naive if anything. I told my mom when the “two weeks to flatten the curve” bullshit first started and toilet paper was as scarce as plutonium: “People will be compliant initially, but there’s no way in hell they are going to put up with this shit for more than another month or two. When their paychecks stop coming they’ll be out in the street asking for scalps.” The cavalry ain’t coming.

      • Gustave Lytton

        When their paychecks stop coming they’ll be out in the street asking for scalps.”

        Hence the need for bread and circuses. For the large part, paychecks (or payoffs) did not stop coming.

      • Pat

        Partly true, but let’s face it, those nanny state checks weren’t replacing an entire income for most people. They were in a blind panic like frightened children, and behaved accordingly.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        there’s no way in hell they are going to put up with this shit for more than another month or two

        I predicted riots by Memorial Day 2020. I got them shortly thereafter, but not for the reasons I expected.

        Count me as another person whose perspective has substantially shifted due to Covid. My wife’s perspective shifted much more drastically than mine, which is why we have been planning a relocation to a quiet corner of the country rather than staying in touch with a major metropolis. “People” are no longer a vapid, but generally harmless group to us. They are dangerous and stupid.

      • kinnath

        Dumb, dangerous, panicky animals

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        Solidification of power is how I see it too along with (hopefully misplaced) confidence.

    • waffles

      Were there WW3 vibes in the 70s? It seems like the prospect of a broader/longer war is all but certain. I hate it.

      • SDF-7

        Not that I remember — we had settled into a bit of a detente, iirc. Wasn’t until Reagan came in and spun up SDI that the media started their pants pooping about how we were driven to the brink of war.

        I mean, it wasn’t sunshine and roses — there was still an outside possibility and all, but it was pretty much simmering with proxy wars and no overt moves mode. But I was pretty young, 4×20 and others who were paying attention to the news instead of Space: 1999 will doubtless have more informed views. 😉

      • Fourscore

        We were so tired of VN that we just just wanted to be left alone and enjoy the NCO/Officers Clubs, Happy Hour. I was at Ft Hood, waiting for the Middle East, practicing desert operations. Took another 20 years before it became reality.

        People like me needed some quiet time

      • Rat on a train

        No. WW3 vibes didn’t hit until the Dems needed to scare voters in the 80s.

      • juris imprudent

        WW3 vibes didn’t hit until the Dems needed to scare voters in the 80s1964 Presidential election.

        +1 Daisy commercial

        Which was a pretty great fucking partisan flip given that it was FDR and Truman that gave us the start of the Cold War and JFK who damn near started WW3.

      • Rat on a train

        Which was a pretty great fucking partisan flip
        +1 Southern Strategy
        We have a plan to pass our negative legacy to our opponents.

      • Count Potato

        There were radical vibes in the 70’s. So many domestic bombings the press gave up on reporting all of them.

      • Pat

        Days of Rage: America’s Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence by Bryan Burrough is an interesting examination of that time period.

      • Fourscore

        Race Relations/drug problems, equal opportunity were the military headlines, post ’75.

      • Drake

        There were WW3 vibes all through the Cold War. The difference was that adults were in charge back then. Even Carter – a former Naval Officer who served on nuclear subs – was very careful to stay well away from that nightmare.

        Our current idiots are trying to give the imbecile in the Ukraine long-range missiles – which he’ll immediately use to hit civilian targets deep inside Russia.

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        👆👆👆

        They’re morons who think that the model UN they did in high school prepared them for the harsh reality of geopolitics. The US has gotten its way for so long that they can’t comprehend or accept compromise with a peer competitor.

    • Sean

      At least we’re still getting pretty decent cars…

      • Count Potato

        No, we’re not. There all over-regulated over-complicated crap.

        Oh, wait, that was sarcasm?

      • Sean

        Not sarcasm. They maybe over regulated, and overly complicated…but you can still get high horsepower ICE vehicles.

      • Pat

        Of course, it’ll cost you $36,000 for a base model, and all that horsepower is coming from a 3 cylinder double-supercharged aluminum engine strapped to a featherweight body that will be totaled in a minor fender bender due to fuel economy standards… Life’s a tradeoff.

      • Sensei

        Which has an evaporative emissions system with 25 trouble codes entirely made of plastic with a calculated life of exactly 1.25x the warranty period.

      • Count Potato

        “featherweight body ”

        Not anymore. Even a Lotus is overweight now.

      • Sensei

        The body in white’s non structural areas are the approximate thickness of aluminum foil. Elsewhere the body is high strength steel.

        This steel plus 25 electric motors and 10 airbags and 3 miles of electrical wire are part of the reason for the pork.

      • waffles

        I’m keeping my 93 miata forever. It’s so light! It’s my lotus “at home”.

      • waffles

        something something red barchetta

      • Count Potato

        Well, you can, but they lack style, mostly due to excessive safety regulations.

      • sloopyinca

        ::looks at driveway::

        I’m not so sure I agree.

    • Pope Jimbo

      We were way cooler about domestic bombings back in the ’70s.

      Weather’s attacks began three months later, and by 1971 protest bombings had spread across the country. In a single eighteen-month period during 1971 and 1972 the FBI counted an amazing 2,500 bombings on American soil, almost five a day. Because they were typically detonated late at night, few caused serious injury, leading to a kind of grudging public acceptance. The deadliest underground attack of the decade, in fact, killed all of four people, in the January 1975 bombing of a Wall Street restaurant. News accounts rarely carried any expression or indication of public outrage.

      Consider what happened when another Puerto Rican group detonated a small bomb in a Bronx cinema while a rapt crowd watched a movie called The Liberation of L.B. Jones. When police ordered everyone to leave, an NYPD spokesman complained, the audience angry refused, demanding to see the rest of the movie. When police insisted, “They about tore the place apart.”

      • SDF-7

        They apparently served as great resume fodder for university faculty job applications from what I can tell.

  2. Rat on a train

    I refuse to raise kids in a country that values f—ing guns over children’s lives
    How about where people value cars over children’s lives?

    • sloopyinca

      And dogs. Don’t forget the designer dogs he wants to “raise”.
      Still though, if him owning a couple vanity pets and a base Macan are the cost of him never reproducing, then it’s a small price to pay. Hell, I’ll donate to the gofundme if that’s what it takes to make it happen.

      • Rat on a train

        I want a binding contract.

  3. Count Potato

    “In a lengthy thread, the liberal activist said children are a luxury good affordable only by the few — “the new boats,” he called them.

    “Yes kids are nice but most people can’t afford them so it’s nice to have friends with one but not have one yourself. Pets are the affordable version of kids today for Millennials and Gen Z,” Mr. Hogg said.”

    It’s not like they are people or anything.

    • Pope Jimbo

      I wonder if he will wonder why for once no one is telling him how dumb his latest statement is?

      “You know, usually when I say something in the press I’m flooded with responses from people telling me how stupid I am. This time? Why if it isn’t crickets, it is people agreeing with me. That is strange”

    • Certified Public Asshat

      Pets are the affordable version of kids today for Millennials and Gen Z,” Mr. Hogg said.”

      Maybe, but kids last longer.

      • R.J.

        Pets aren’t going to look after you when you’re 80. They’ll just eat your corpse when you fall down and can’t get back ip.

    • EvilSheldon

      It’s like listening to Average Reddit User every time the little dweeb opens his mouth.

  4. Toxteth O'Grady

    GT, if you’re still there, I am overdue for chores and stuff, but this just occurred to me: what are you standing on? My tile kitchen would be hell if not for this: https://www.gelpro.com/

    • Gender Traitor

      Thanks! Don’t do TOO much standing around in one place, but if they make one with handles that I could roll up and carry around, that might help! (For all I know, kitchen floor is 70ish-year-old linoleum!)

  5. Atanarjuat

    “Also BIG reason I will never have kids in the US- I refuse to raise kids in a country that values f—ing guns over children’s lives,” he said.

    I’m not one to judge, but make damn sure you have cleared the chamber before using a firearm that way.

    • juris imprudent

      Well if he doesn’t, he won’t have to ever worry about having kids!

  6. Rat on a train

    Don’t they have a dedicated “Illinois politician” wing at the prison?

    • Swiss Servator

      Federal Tennis Prison, yes.

  7. Atanarjuat

    The higher prices mean that consumers are spending around $460 more per month on groceries than they were this time last year, according to Moody’s Analytics.

    Yikes. That’s higher than my entire grocery bill has ever been.

  8. Translucent Chum

    Move out of the cities, people.

    She has a dog? That’s almost cruel. I’m suprised she isn’t being slagged for it.

    • Sean

      You didn’t check the comments, did you?

      Someone should rescue that dog

      Someone call the SPCA

      They can do whatever they want, but to keep a dog in such a place is pure cruelty.

      • Toxteth O'Grady

        Didn’t watch, but I was hoping that was the boyfriend’s dog.

      • Translucent Chum

        The comments is where the crazy is. /looks around nervously…

    • KK the Porcine Pearl-Eater

      Huh.

  9. SDF-7

    Next year’s F1 schedule has been released.

    Hmmm… Vegas pricing… ugh. $100k? Figured it was mainly so Lewis and company can schmooze with the celebs, but holy hell. Not going to bother with that then.

    24 races — are they doing the restructuring to reduce shipping/logistics next year too or is that later? Seems like with that many races they’d need the shorter travel times just to get things ready.

    Bummer to see Circuit Paul Ricard dropped… I really love racing that track in the video games and find it more entertaining than the article implies. We knew Spa was staying at least for next year (they announced that agreement during the Belgian Grand Prix weekend, so no surprise there. Funny that I usually find China boring and that got added instead of France — but there’s got to be a lot of “follow the money” there. Probably means more pimping of Quanyu Zhou (or however you spell his name), who was okay in F2 but seems pretty “blah” in F1 to me.

    And gee… Monaco stayed. What a shock. I’m so, so surprised. No one ever would have seen that coming.

    Ok… enough F1 / sports ranting… back to the grousing about the other news links. 😉

    • sloopyinca

      Looks like a lot of double- and triple-headers next year but there are some long hauls in there (see how Canada is sandwiched).
      They need to abandon the pretense of being “green”. They’re not going to upset real racing fans in doing so.

      • waffles

        Racing is not green. How could it possibly be? Spectacular uses of energy should be celebrated imo.

  10. Count Potato

    “Brooklyn liberals form vigilante group called ‘Park Slope Panthers’ to patrol upmarket area after a homeless man killed a Golden Retriever by hitting it with a large stick and dousing it in urine

    ‘Do we want to organize a community safety patrol, and take our park back? Think what the Guardian Angels did to take back the subways in the 70s/early 80s,’ wrote Panthers organizer Kristian Nammack, 59, in a social media post organizing organizing the group, ‘We may also get to wear cool berets. I’m being serious.’

    But inside accounts from the Park Slope Panthers’ first meeting sound less like a group of residents rallying around defending their neighborhood, and more like a wokeness workshop too timid about offending anyone to get anything done.

    After the incident, Nammack, a financial consultant who was a member of the 2008 Occupy Wallstreet protests and describes his politics as ‘left of Lenin’, decided to organize the group to clean up the neighborhood.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11232823/Liberal-vigilantes-Park-Slope-residents-patrolling-Brooklyn-man-killed-Golden-Retriever.html

    • SDF-7

      something something government not providing security something something citizens step up to protect themselves.

      I expected more of this over the last couple of years, honestly — though it sounds like Left-Of-Lenin boy really should have found a group that had some idea of what they were doing. (I can’t criticize too much, because if I had to form a neighborhood watch I’d probably be equally incompetent…).

      • EvilSheldon

        Than a ‘financial consultant’ with ‘Left-of-Lenin’ politics? I highly doubt it.

    • Count Potato

      “About fifteen minutes after the meeting started, a trio of twenty-somethings in medical face masks and eyeglasses joined the group to say they weren’t ‘super into abiding by the structure that you’re setting up.’

      Another person, white, joined in and asked why the group was appropriating the name of the Black Panthers.

      Beyond agreeing on their name, the group also couldn’t seem to agree on what to do about the man who killed Moose, who had recently been seen chasing another woman and her dog yelling ‘Let’s see some action here!’ according to Common Sense.

      ‘So, it sounds like this person has been pushed out of an unimaginable amount of systems,’ said an attendee, adding that the man was likely ‘neurodivergent.’

      Another person – a white woman named Sky – chimed in to debate the very definition of crime.

      ‘Crime is an abstract term that means nothing in a lot of ways,’ she said. ‘The construct of crime has been so socially constructed to target black and poor people.'”

      • UnCivilServant

        ‘Crime is an abstract term that means nothing in a lot of ways,’ she said. ‘The construct of crime has been so socially constructed to target black and poor people.’”

        Stupid drivel by someone who’s clealry never been robbed or beaten.

      • UnCivilServant

        Oh, and as someone who has been – fuck you you stupid cunte, go take a long walk in the ghetto and experience your abstract term and social constructs.

      • R C Dean

        Comedy writers everywhere would be proud to have written that scene.

      • EvilSheldon

        Seriously. Are we sure this isn’t a joke site?

      • JaimeRoberto (carnitas/spicy salsa)

        I’m pretty sure Monty Python covered it decades ago.

    • Pat

      Tellingly, they don’t give a fuck about, say, Asians getting beat on by black gangbangers with impunity, or Jews getting assaulted in the streets by Palestinians and Palestinian sympathizers for no other reason than being Jewish. But hitting a loose dog with a stick and pissing on it? Start the revolution… once the committee meetings have been finalized and a BIPOC-majority leadership has been established, of course.

      • rhywun

        a BIPOC-majority leadership has been established

        Good luck finding that in Park Slope.

      • Lackadaisical

        Why? I thought it was also known as park slant, no?

      • rhywun

        I’ve never heard that.

        No, it’s like 99% white.

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      This is why when the strongman shows up, a large number of people will sign on for the security he offers. They’ll quietly outsource what they obviously can’t deal with themselves and they won’t care how he goes about doing it.

      • Gustave Lytton

        “I offered the world order! And rich Corinthian leather!”

    • Certified Public Asshat

      The Daily Mail article leaves out the best part. From the Bari Weiss version:

      Soon after, Nammack woke up to red graffiti on the sidewalk outside his front door:

      “Don’t be a cop, Kris.”

    • rhywun

      🤣😂

      It’s hard to believe so much insanity is just a couple miles north of me.

      For the love of all that is holy, please stay out of Bay Ridge you weirdoes. Stick your tiresome faux-commie fiefdom.

    • B.P.

      “To that a woman – also white – responded saying ‘Using the Panthers as your group’s name is kind of abhorrent to me. It feels antithetical to what the Black Panthers would stand for.'”

      This article was hilarious but left me wanting more. Fortunately the follow-up article was there.

      • whiz

        All those school teams named Panthers should be ashamed.

        I assume Panthers was chosen because of the alliteration. And because Panthers are fierce and neat animals.

  11. Pat

    This is great news.

    While it is absolutely good news, it should be tempered by the realization that a lot of the percentage increase in survival rates is merely short-term gains at the very end of a person’s life rather than anything approaching a cure. In some ways it can be just as difficult dealing with the treatment and the extra few months to couple of years that it can squeeze out of the end of a life than succumbing swiftly to the illness. I’m grateful for every extra moment that I got to have with my mom, owing entirely to an EGFR mutation-targeting drug that didn’t even exist 10 years ago. Nevertheless, she still died just shy of 2 years after diagnosis.

    • Fourscore

      At a certain point more days become meaningless. My Mom spent her last 10 months in a nursing home, coherent and lonely.

      • Pat

        Exactly. A lot depends on quality of life. We were very fortunate in that my mom’s medication had very little in the way of side effects so that she was able to live relatively normally until dying very suddenly, but there was certainly an element of stress involved with receiving treatment and anticipating what comes after. Medicine often measures success purely in terms of survival. Which isn’t wrong per se, but not always an unvarnished good either.

      • Fourscore

        Sometimes longer isn’t better.

        /Limps quietly away

      • Pat

        You are going to live forever and I refuse to believe otherwise.

  12. Pat

    Haha, you dumb fuck. Enjoy your five minutes of fame…and months of misery. Move out of the cities, people.

    Having what looks like about a 50 pound dog living there too. He must be happy.

    • Certified Public Asshat

      She does say she is not renewing the lease.

      • Toxteth O'Grady

        Because she misses L.A.?

  13. UnCivilServant

    Morning, Glibs.

    I would agree with the Texas judge safe for the problem where my state had an issue where they dumpviolent felons back on the streets while they’re still very violent ant prone to hurting people within days of release. Then again, given how they’ve gone and criminalized everything here, I’d probably benefit in the long run from such a ruling.

    • Drake

      I would agree too – if the punishment is adequate, then they have paid their debt and are citizens with all rights restored.

      I could go either way during the probation period as long as it does not run on for years.

    • Pat

      Indictment != conviction. Bring the evidence, get the conviction, and then ban them from owning or purchasing guns all you want. Just being indicted should never incur any penalty until conviction. Pre-trial detention can be used in cases where the accused is likely to pose a risk to public safety until trial. New York morons doing away with pre-trial detention and bail is their own unique fuckup that shouldn’t implicate the constitutional rights of everybody else.

      • UnCivilServant

        They also don’t keep them for long enough after conviction. I know it doesn’t get as much news as the pre trial murder sprees.

      • Swiss Servator

        Unique? IL is joining them come New Year’s Day…

      • Pat

        I was astonished that the moonbats in SF pushed back on that with the Chesa Boudin recall. There may be hope yet.

      • Swiss Servator

        Chicago is going to have to go back to the worst of the 1970s before they change anything in IL.

    • R.J.

      That’s what I was thinking too. It’s gotten to where jaywalking while wearing a Trump hat is a felony. The term has started to lose meaning.

  14. SDF-7

    ‘orning ‘ordles:

    Warm up round was okay… tried a couple of different seeds to try to span common letters and it wasn’t great but wasn’t bad. Keep thinking of trying Hype’s Mom… *cough* I mean Hype’s challenge, but nowhere close so just being happy with using it to wake the mind up.

    Daily Duotrigordle #203
    Guesses: 35/37
    Time: 06:47.94
    https://duotrigordle.com/

    Main event used the same words… and much less pleased with the results. Tolerable, but I wouldn’t say a particularly great day. I’m sure y’all will do better, you almost always do!

    Daily Quordle 240
    5️⃣8️⃣
    3️⃣7️⃣
    quordle.com

    • Cowboy

      Everythings coming up Milhouse! All my guesses worked first time with no whiffs today, which is the first time in a long time.

      Daily Quordle 240
      3️⃣6️⃣
      5️⃣4️⃣
      quordle.com

      • SDF-7

        Nicely done!

    • Pat

      Daily Quordle 240
      3️⃣8️⃣
      5️⃣9️⃣

      It started so well… too bad I had to waste 3 guesses on upper right. I had all the letters for bottom right right after I finished bottom left.

    • Grumbletarian

      Daily Quordle 240
      8️⃣6️⃣
      3️⃣7️⃣

      Tripped up on UR for a bit, but no Chumptown yet.

    • Tundra

      Daily Quordle 240
      8️⃣7️⃣
      5️⃣6️⃣

    • robc

      Daily Quordle 240
      4️⃣7️⃣
      3️⃣6️⃣
      quordle.com

    • db

      5 7
      3 8

    • Sean

      Daily Quordle 240
      4️⃣8️⃣
      6️⃣5️⃣
      quordle.com

    • whiz

      Daily Quordle 240
      4️⃣5️⃣
      6️⃣3️⃣

    • kinnath

      Daily Quordle 240
      3️⃣6️⃣
      5️⃣7️⃣
      quordle.com

    • SDF-7

      Showoffs. 😉 Good job, folks.

    • Grosspatzer

      Bah.

      Daily Quordle 240
      7️⃣9️⃣
      5️⃣6️⃣
      quordle.com

  15. Sensei

    Let’s double down!

    No Student Loan Borrower Left Behind

    One sign that President Biden’s student-loan cancellation isn’t playing well politically is the push by Democratic Senators to extend the write-off to parents who borrowed to pay for college for their children.

    • Rat on a train

      It costs money to send kids to K-12. When will parents with younger children get relief?

    • Certified Public Asshat

      Biden said pandemic is over, so what happens to his already weak justification for forgiving loans?

      • Grumbletarian

        When he said the pandemic was over, he wasn’t speaking with any authority.

        sin,
        The White House

      • Pope Jimbo

        It really is astounding how often the “White House” rescinds what Biden just said. Granted, most of the time it is an obvious gaffe that they are walking back, but other times – like the pandemic is over – it is something that is just a statement of the President’s feelings.

        A president who was really in charge would be firing a half dozen staffers a day after they tried walking back his policies. Or maybe Biden learned from Trump’s impeachment on the Ukraine phone call that you contradict the bureaucrat’s favored policies at your own peril.

      • db

        If the successive presidencies of Trump and Biden have taught us anything, it is that:

        1. The President doesn’t get to go against the Bureaucracy
        2. The Bureaucracy is owned and operated by Obama loyalists

  16. Pope Jimbo

    What is going on here? The Linx have some story about a 2 bit crook from Illinois? Where are the links to the story about indictments finally dropping in the huge Minnesoda food fraud case?

    Federal prosecutors charged 48 people Tuesday for their roles in the alleged embezzlement of more than $250 million from government programs intended to feed low-income families, in the largest case of COVID pandemic fraud in the nation.

    “Their goal was to make as much money for themselves as they could while falsely claiming to feed children during the pandemic,” Luger said. “Before long, it grew to become the largest pandemic fraud in the United States.”

    Luger said the suspects moved quickly and established meal sites and companies almost overnight. Defendants allegedly created fake food invoices to cover up the fraud, and false food sites sent kickbacks to Feeding Our Future employees who established fake LLCs to launder the money.

    “The defendants worked incredibly fast, stealing for themselves at a breakneck pace,” Luger said.

    Our poor new Somali neighbors! Ever since they came here all they heard was people saying “Think about the children”, so they did. And they figured out a great way to make children pay off and now they are in trouble?

    • Pope Jimbo

      It also irritates me that the Feds are making me stick to my principles. I’d love to do nothing but heap scorn on these fraudsters, but then then the Feds have to go and start using asset forfeiture against these assholes and making me defend their rights.

      To date, law enforcement has seized 60 bank accounts, 14 vehicles, and 45 pieces of property valued at more than $50 million.

      “We continue to find and seize property,” Luger said.

      Some examples of property subject to forfeiture in one indictment include:

      • eight pieces of property in Minnesota, Kentucky, and Ohio
      • seven cars, including a Porsche Macan and Tesla Model Y
      • bank accounts holding millions of dollars
      • miscellaneous electrical devices, jewelry, clothing, and accessories
      • a Louis Vuitton duffle bag seized from a 2021 Dodge Ram 1500.

      • waffles

        The article does not mention that they are Somalians.
        *looks at names and pictures*
        Oh.

      • Pope Jimbo

        This scandal broke months ago. The recent news is that indictments just dropped finally. Anyone paying attention already new that the fraud was being run by the nonprofits that our new Somali neighbors love to set up.

        It is interesting that the story named Mayor Frey’s aide Abdi Salah, but didn’t mention Ilhan Omar’s buddy Guhaad Hashi Said.

        We’ve been writing about Guhaad Hashi Said on Power Line for several years. We have previously identified him as Ilhan Omar’s enforcer. His picture shushing the Somali community is our thumbnail image for stories about Omar and now for this one involving Hashi himself. He is charged in the third of the six indictments: “Guhaad Hashi Said, 46, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, is charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Hashi ran a site under the name Advance Youth Athletic Development that falsely claimed to serve up to 5,000 meals a day.” He is a well-known thug. What a farce.

  17. Pat

    So the days are getting shorter here. It’s 5:45 AM and still not light out. The overnight temperatures are dipping into the 50s. I went for a walk at around 4:00 AM. The nice, crisp, early fall feeling in the air, a crystal clear sky full of stars, all the rest of the world in bed, no blasting stereos, no dogs barking, no power tools, no raw gas fumes, no roaring engines. For me, the tranquility at that hour is like heaven. I suspect it’s one of the reasons I’ve been a night owl all my life. Perhaps it’s because I’m rounding the bend into middle age, but that sweet serenity is about all I really want out of life. I’m with sloop, fuck the cities.

    • waffles

      I woke up at 6:25AM, still not quite light out. Took my dog out and heard a loud obnoxious motorcycle rip down an adjacent street.

      • Pat

        Yep, gotta get out before the morning traffic. I live right off of a highway, and it’s already jumping.

      • Pat

        And now the kennel is starting up. Time to fire up the background noise generator.

    • Rat on a train

      Except for some fire engines in the distance, this morning has been peaceful. The back door is open, letting in the sounds from passing birds, before it gets too hot. Next week this will be the norm with highs in the low 70s.

    • Animal

      AIn’t that the truth. Sunrise here is 0740 today, sunset at 2000. Supposed to be 48 and light rain, so typical for this time of year. Tourist season is wrapping up, so even the highway is quieter than it was a month ago.

      I’m the opposite of a night owl, but I generally walk over to the office to start my day between 0600 and 0615. It’s lovely right now at that hour; as you say, peaceful, crisp, silent.

      I lived in cities for almost forty years. I’d had more than enough of that.

      • Fourscore

        Me too, I worked in some bigger cities but when the opportunity came I headed for the bush. Well, as close to bush as available, “back home”. Now after 30 years it still feels good every morning. Visitors keep saying how quiet it is, except for the neighbors that we can hear shooting in the evenings.

        Country boy(s) can survive.

  18. Count Potato

    “Mark Zuckerberg’s fortune is slashed in half as Meta chief loses $71 BILLION this year after pivot into Metaverse: Share price plummets by 57% in a year

    Zuckerberg, 38, was worth $142 billion in September 2021 but his fortunes have dramatically fallen, and now he is worth a mere $56 billion”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11233743/Zuckerbergs-fortune-falls-71-billion-far-year-Facebook-founders-net-worth-halves.html

    I’m sure he’ll manage to get by somehow.

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      He’s still in the three comma club.

      • Sensei

        As long as he still has a car with doors that go up!

      • Brawndo

        Tres Comas

      • Pat

        An Oxford man, eh?

      • Rat on a train

        well played

    • JaimeRoberto (carnitas/spicy salsa)

      He’ll only be able to fortify half as many elections now.

  19. The Late P Brooks

    Environmentalists said the nationalization of Uniper should prompt the government to steer the company away from fossil fuels.

    Keep your eye on the ball, Greens. It doesn’t matter if people are freezing and the economy is in ruins, as long as your fanaticism is appeased.

    • juris imprudent

      Hair shirts for everyone!

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      Yes, that pisses me off.

    • Pope Jimbo

      As mad as you are today, I’m sure you will be just as happy in a week or so when the US Attorney who issued that clearly illegal subpoena is fired for violating people’s rights.

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        You’re a funny guy, Pope.

    • Pat

      Frankly, I was so excited to see that after what I think must be like 5 years, PJ Media has finally fixed their borked CSS that left unformatted hyperlinks across the top third of the page in place of a nav bar, that I almost forgot about the article.

    • Tundra

      I’m pretty much pissed off all the time, so this really doesn’t move the needle.

      Question: how do we make money from this?

    • rhywun

      More of Joe’s “protecting democracy” in action.

  20. DrOtto

    Regarding Nikki Haley’s name usage, when contacted for comment, Robert Francis O’Rourke had no comment.

  21. Drake

    Putin finally made his big speech. Looks like the negotiation door has been permanently closed and the Next Phase Of The War is about to start. After the referendums in the Donbas, attacks their will be attacks on Russia – and the Russian Army, not the local militias will take the lead.

    • R C Dean

      Putin is going to formalize the conquest and annexation of Donbas. And no, its not a “liberation” – when you keep what your army has taken, its a conquest. And no, I will give no validity to a vote held under Russian guns.

      So Putin moves conscripts into Ukraine. Many of the units recently pushed out of northern Ukraine were Russian professional soldiers, not local militia, so I don’t think this is an increase in the quality of Russian forces. Still, Russia has always believed quantity has a quality all its own, so I’m guessing this will revert to a grind on the Donbas border. Which suits the WEFfers just fine. We’ll see how it plays out in Russia.

      • juris imprudent

        Problem is, Russia doesn’t have the demographics to support quantity as it once did.

      • Drake

        They’ve been at war with the Ukrainian government since the 2014 coup. I don’t think any election shenanigans will be needed.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        Patrick Lancaster posted some pretty damning video interviews with villagers in the Donbas. Kiev has been deliberately shelling villages and killing unarmed civilians there for the past 7 years. In every interview, he asks the villagers for clarification which side has been killing the residents, and the answer is always Ukraine.

        Maybe Lancaster is on Russia’s payroll and it’s all staged propaganda. If not, it provides an insightful first-hand account of the situation actually experienced by the Donbas residents.

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        Reminds me quite a bit of Andy Ngo’s work.

  22. I. B. McGinty

    “Look inside a NYC woman’s 80-square-foot, $650-per-month apartment”

    My workbench is 40 square feet. Will she pay $325 to live on it?

    • Fourscore

      Be careful what you wish for, IB. Better to get a van and park it down by the river and list it as a rental property in a quiet neighborhood

      • I. B. McGinty

        🤔

    • Certified Public Asshat

      You rascal.

    • Pope Jimbo

      I’d rent it to her for $250, but retain the right to drill anytime you want.

      • I. B. McGinty

        You’d be the tenon to her mortise?

      • Pope Jimbo

        I’M NO TURTLE FUCKER!!!

        Wait, wait, wait…. Oh, mortise. Nevermind.

  23. Lafe Long

    Greetings Glibbies,

    I feel bad about missing Sensei’s 3D printing posts, I could’ve just sent the ready-to-print .stl or gcode file. D’oh!

    What else did I miss?

    • waffles

      The man, believed to be in his 70s, sustained burns on large parts of his body but was conscious and told police that he set himself on fire after pouring oil over himself, Kyodo News agency reported.

      Bet he wishes he was dead. Burns hurt so much. Worst pain I’ve ever.

      • Sensei

        My understanding is once you burn through the nerves less pain, but the infection rate and possibility of death increase exponentially.

      • waffles

        Yep.

        3rd degree = no pain
        2nd degree = incredible searing pain

        Getting to 3rd degree without substantial 2nd is rare and limited to people caught in structure fires. Given this man’s age, recovery will be difficult.

  24. Tundra

    Good morning, Sloop!

    Germany nationalizes country’s biggest gas importer Uniper

    It’s like they only have a single playbook.

    “ran a free, community hot tub from his Essex Street home for nearly 50 years.”

    Yeah, no. My OCD wouldn’t even allow me to get in the hot tub at the gym. Gross.

    The Femmes are one of my favorite bands. Hard to explain how amazing they were when they first started touring the upper midwest. Great memories!

  25. Stinky Wizzleteats

    Why nationalize a gas importer when the issue is Russia closing the spicket in response to German government policy?

    • Pope Jimbo

      closing the spicket

      Racist?

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      Because Russia didn’t actually turn off the spigots, yet.

      Russia is demanding payment in rubles and refusing to abide by price caps, but they’re willing to pump gas. Germany shut down Nord Stream 2 at the terminal, and is holding some parts for Nord Stream 1 in order to get it back up and running fully. Russia may be exaggerating the problems caused by the missing parts, but Germany is stalling the process in any case.

      https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/German-Gas-Buyers-Resume-Nominations-For-Nord-Stream-1-Supply.html

      Gazprom shut down Nord Stream 1 after it said it had found an oil leak at a compressor station. It also said it was waiting for Siemens Energy to repair compressor station equipment and deliver turbines that the Russian company says are stranded in Germany because of EU sanctions.

      Siemens Energy, for its part, says an oil leak is an easily fixable problem that should not prevent the operation of the pipeline and that the turbines are ready to be shipped to Russia. There is currently only one turbine remaining at the Portovaya compressor station at Nord Stream 1, which Gazprom says is the reason for reduced flows and more frequent halts for maintenance work.

      Meanwhile, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin suggested that Europe needs to lift sanctions on Nord Stream 2 to get more gas from Russia.

      “The bottom line is, if you have an urge, if it’s so hard for you, just lift the sanctions on Nord Stream 2, which is 55 billion cubic meters of gas per year, just push the button and everything will get going,” Putin said at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Uzbekistan.

      “Ready”, but not shipped.

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        My point is that the EU is fucking itself. The governments are waging economic warfare on their own people and blaming Putin for it.

      • Tundra

        It’s a pretense for spurring NATO to action.

        “Remember the Maine!”

      • Semi-Spartan Dad

        ^this. From Putin’s speech the other day to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. More Kremlin propaganda? Or a reasoned analysis that anyone here might say about the green energy and the bizarre war against fossil fuels?

        The energy crisis in Europe did not begin with the start of Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine, in Donbass; it actually started much earlier, a year before or even earlier. As strange as it may seem, it started with the green agenda.

        To pursue momentary political considerations, they chose to completely close down the hydrocarbon energy programmes in their countries. Banks stopped extending loans, …

        Now, we see that prices, say, for natural gas in the United States have risen and production is growing, but not as fast as they would like it to – and the reason is that banks are afraid to issue loans.

        These are erroneous reference points in the green agenda, rushing things, and the green energy being unprepared to meet to the demand for huge energy resources to support economic and industrial growth. The economy is growing while the energy sector is shrinking. This is the first drastic mistake.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        Putin is what the prog-fascists were afraid Trump was. A based strongman outside the control of the US Deep State.

      • rhywun

        And the American government is waging economic and political warfare on its own people and blaming Trump for it.

        Funny how trends reverberate like that.

  26. Sensei

    This is really going to help Japan’s tourist industry.

    Japan weighs plan for ban on hotel guests without masks -media

    Japan’s government is considering allowing hotels to refuse entry to guests who do not wear masks and follow other measures to control infection during an outbreak, Fuji News Network said on Wednesday.

    • Gustave Lytton

      I’ve noticed more and more, while still a very small number, of Japanese not wearing masks in public places in YouTube videos and media. I guess the possibility of hordes of tourists deciding not to follow non binding requests is too much for some in the LDP.

      • Sensei

        According to my friend a few young people have had enough with the mask.

        However, the pressure to conform to social norms there is far higher than the west.

      • Gustave Lytton

        Of course!*

        I also see the (mostly likely don’t give a fuck anymore) ojiisans doing it, or some variation like a mask pulled under their nose/chin or pulling it down to speak or such.

        *Been watching Steve’s POV on YouTube and laughing my ass off at his coaxing his underpowered kei truck on Texas freeways. Anyways he has an early video about first going to Japan as a salariman and having a customer call him back and chew him out because he didn’t hang up the phone right.

      • Sensei

        I’ve seen a few of his videos.

  27. DrOtto

    Did David Hoggg just come out? I can see him now rolling around in his Boxster with a designer dogg in his lap. Also, he gets 3 g’s in his name because he is a bigger grifter than Boss Hogg.

    • Pope Jimbo

      Are you claiming that Hogg is a pillow biter?

      • Certified Public Asshat

        That would explain his failed pillow company.

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        Nobody wants a pre-bitten pillow.

      • DrOtto

        Sloopy wants to know if I am claiming the Boxster is a Porsche.

      • Sensei

        Does the 914 count? At least it was air cooled.

      • sloopyinca

        It most definitely is a Porsche.

        I got rid of my 991.1 2C by the way. Got a 991.1 GTS a few weeks ago. It was too good a deal to pass up. It’s freaking amazing. I love more horsepower. And I love having the last of the NA GTSs, which is the best of the 911s, in my book.

        Life is good.

  28. The Late P Brooks

    There is a cow in my back yard.

    • PieInTheSky

      fatphobic much? Sexist also. I am sure the nice lady is metabolically healthy

  29. waffles

    Regarding Russia’s partial mobilization. It seems there’s a split between people who believe Russia has been fighting with one hand tied behind their back and people who believe the end result will be the dissolution of Russia or at least Putin. I’m not sure what seems more likely but the latter feels like state propaganda so I’m inclined to be at least somewhat skeptical.

    • Stinky Wizzleteats

      The mobilization is a necessary legal step for calling up hordes of reservists who would be sufficient for holding territory that’s already been taken. That’s what bit them in the ass on the recent counteroffensive where they had so few people they basically had to bug out without a fight. It does look like the chance for a peace settlement is over but I doubt Putin or the Russian state is in serious jeopardy.

      • waffles

        If Ukraine can’t win and Russia can’t lose we may be well and truly fucked.

      • waffles

        Peace was an option. Now it isn’t. Disheartening.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        It was very early on. You can thank Boris Johnson who almost single-handedly torpedoed it for that.

    • Drake

      Western media loves to depict Putin as the boogie man. In reality, he’s a relative moderate in Russian politics. If he gets replaced, they’ll like his replacement a lot less.

      • Stinky Wizzleteats

        Yep, plenty of right and left wing Russian ultranationalists waiting in the wings who are champing at the bit to let the military completely off the leash.

    • PieInTheSky

      I assume everything is propaganda and we have no idea what is going on except the gas bill is gonna be a bitch this winter

  30. The Late P Brooks

    Imposing another massive hike would mark the central bank’s toughest policy move in its fight against inflation since the 1980s — another period of sky-high prices. It would also likely cause economic pain for millions of American businesses and households by pushing up the cost of borrowing for homes, cars and other loans.

    The Fed’s anticipated actions would increase the rate that banks charge each other for overnight borrowing to 3-3.25%, the highest since the 2008 global financial crisis.

    They didn’t learn their lesson then, why would anybody think it will be different this time?

    • Tundra

      Wasn’t the fed rate 20% or so back then? How is 3 or 4% gonna matter?

  31. The Late P Brooks

    “We must keep at it until the job is done,” he said at an August central bankers’ forum in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. “While higher interest rates, slower growth, and softer labor market conditions will bring down inflation, they will also bring some pain to households and businesses. These are the unfortunate costs of reducing inflation. But a failure to restore price stability would mean far greater pain,” he warned.

    The Fed is like an overindulgent parent bargaining with a spoiled-rotten child.

    “If you do this one thing for Mommy, and pretend to behave for just a little while, we can go back to having ice cream for breakfast every morning.”

    • Pope Jimbo

      Were the central bankers disappointed to discover that Jackson Hole was not a pit full of $20 bills?

    • waffles

      I’ve had ice cream for breakfast and quite frankly I don’t recommend it.

      • Tundra

        Cinnamon ice cream on a Belgian waffle was one of my favorite treats as a kid.

    • Drake

      They keep chasing the runaway spending / money printing with interest hikes but nobody wants to stop it.

  32. DEG

    /looks at feature image

    Joe Biden channeling ET every time he sniffs someone’s hair?

  33. The Other Kevin

    Oh that second song… chef’s kiss. One of those I forgot about, but still love and know all the words.

    • Tundra

      +1 candy-coated tongue

  34. The Late P Brooks

    Powell’s Jackson Hole comments also preceded new economic data that shows inflation, as measured by the latest Consumer Price Index report, is still elevated at 8.3% for the year ended in August. Moreover, the monthly reading from July to August showed that headline inflation crept up by 0.1%, when most economists expected it to slow. Core CPI, (which strips out volatile components like food and gas) rose twice as much as economists were expecting. That triggered a meltdown on Wall Street.

    They need a new set of conjuring bones, I reckon.

  35. waffles

    In Shangri-La there’s a circle of monks singing the story of the world and only they know how this is all going to end.

  36. PieInTheSky

    The Soho Forum
    @TheSohoForum
    It’s debate night in New York City! @WardHayesWilson
    and @hobeyoco
    will be debating the resolution:

    “It is imperative to eliminate nuclear weapons.”

    https://twitter.com/TheSohoForum/status/1571909804658163712

    this is a sily debate given we cannot eliminate nuclear weapons, so should has nothing to do with it

    • Not Adahn

      “imperative”

  37. The Late P Brooks

    Economists at brokerage Nomura Securities, for example, changed their forecast from 75 basis points to 100 basis points last week. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said he doesn’t think gradual increases in interest rates have been working to tamp down high prices: The Fed has hiked rates four times already this year, and inflation remains near 40-year highs, he pointed out.

    But it’s unlikely that the Federal Reserve will raise rates by a full percentage point. The consensus amongst economists and Wall Street analysts is still for a 75 basis point hike, with just 18% projecting the larger hike, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.

    I love how these Deep Thinkers maintain the fiction that the Fed can actually affect inflation while Biden & Co are doing their damndest to flood the economy with helicopter money.

  38. Swiss Servator

    “Jones III — the son of former Illinois Senate President Emil Jones Jr. — was charged via criminal information, which suggests he may plan to plead guilty.

    “The charges brought against my son, Emil Jones III, do not reflect the man he is,” Jones Jr said in a statement Tuesday. “Everyone knows he is an honest, hardworking legislator. I intend to fight with him and stand alongside him throughout this process.”

    The charges stem from a 2019 investigation that was blown open after an FBI raid on then-state senator Martin Sandoval’s offices. Since the raid at Sandoval’s offices, two Chicagoland area mayors — Oakbrook Terrace’s Tony Ragucci and Crestwood’s Louis Presta — have also been indicted and found guilty of charges in connection to information obtained during the Sandoval raid.”

    We’re going to need a bigger tennis prison…

  39. Pat

    Trans activism is homophobia in drag

    At the weekend, on a balmy autumn day in Burlington, Vermont, the civil war engulfing what used to be called the ‘gay-rights movement’ stepped up a gear. Seventy-four-year-old Fred Sargeant, one of the most venerable pioneers of gay rights, was surrounded by a jeering mob of trans activists, knocked to the ground, robbed and spat on. At a Pride march.

    Sargeant is one of the last survivors of the Stonewall riots – the uprising that gave birth to the modern gay-rights movement. The day after the first riot at the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village, New York, Sargeant and his boyfriend, Craig Rodwell, wrote a set of demands that became the Stonewall manifesto. They then went on to organise the first ever Pride in New York. If the gay movement were a monarchy, Fred would be what Buckingham Palace calls a ‘working royal’.

    Little good that did him at the weekend. Sargeant was repeatedly slapped on the head so hard that he had to go to hospital and have CAT scans. His attackers ignored the fact he walks with a cane, frail from a recent illness. There is a cruel irony to the fact that this happened at a Pride march – the very march that Fred and his comrades established to challenge violent homophobia. More striking still is that this was at the hands of trans activists, the very people who today claim to be the successors of the gay-rights movement.

    • creech

      This can’t be accurate. Everyone knows that Burlington is a hot-bed of KKK Amish white supremacist homophobes and MAGA extremists.

      • juris imprudent

        The more-oppressed must beat the less-oppressed to prove how oppressed they are!

  40. The Late P Brooks

    “It is imperative to eliminate nuclear weapons.”

    If things continue on their present course, we’re liable to see a noteworthy depletion of the nuclear weapons inventory.

    • Translucent Chum

      “We didn’t mean get rid of them by using them!”

    • Tundra

      I suspect “shitposting on Glibs” isn’t on his list.

    • SDF-7

      To crush your enemies, to see them driven before you and to hear the lamentation of the women.

    • Pat

      I’m surprised they even tried to cover it up after the fact, usually they just double down amid counter-accusations of racism, sexism, homophobia, and transphobia, followed by a flurry of SLAPP lawsuits.

      • trshmnstr the terrible

        They trial balloon the things they know aren’t burned into the collective ethos and they double down on the stuff that they know they have a critical mass of support on.

    • waffles

      The ritualistic castration of children is a common theme in decadent empires. It never lasts forever.

    • Lafe Long

      I hope they archived everything somewhere besides archive.org.. wouldn’t be surprised if archive.org “excludes” the stuff they deleted.

    • rhywun

      I was expecting the deplatforming of Matt Walsh.

      C’mon Twitter, catch up.

  41. PieInTheSky

    Southwest Airlines
    @SouthwestAir
    We teamed up with @guitarcenter
    to surprise a flight full of Customers flying out of Long Beach with a ukulele and a lesson. By the time they arrived in Honolulu they were pros.

    https://twitter.com/SouthwestAir/status/1572284484720168962

    • Tundra

      I believe that was Dante’s fourth circle.

    • SDF-7

      “Conan, what is the definition of hell on earth?”

    • Plisade

      What’s the definition of an eternal optimist? A ukulele player with a pager.

    • Cowboy

      Reminds me, I keep meaning to buy a ukelele. Would be something fun and easy to grab as a break between study/work compared to the acoustic. Plus when Cowpoke is old enough it’ll be a good 1st stringed instrument.

    • Seguin

      Every time I hear Nayib Bukele’s name, I want to call him Bukelele.

      • JaimeRoberto (carnitas/spicy salsa)

        That’s better than what I think of.

  42. The Late P Brooks

    What is the best morning routine?

    Sex and coffee.

    duh

    • Rebel Scum

      At the same time? Hot.

  43. Rebel Scum

    Cancer death rates continue to fall, driven by new treatments and improved screening

    Also every death is now a covid death.

  44. Pat

    Migrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard sue Florida for violating their rights

    Sept. 21 (UPI) — Lawyers representing migrants flown last week from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard have filed a class action lawsuit charging Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis with violating their clients’ civil rights by victimizing them in an illegal scheme that sought political gain.

    The lawsuit filed Tuesday by Lawyers for Civil Rights accuses the Republican governor and his administration of manipulating some 50 Venezuelan migrants lawfully in the United States with “false promises and misrepresentations” of housing, work and education to board two planes charted by DeSantis that flew them Wednesday to the Massachusetts island where they were “abandoned.”

    If these same attorneys had traveled into Mexico and volunteered their time to help the Venezuelans secure refugee status there, they might not have found themselves in the terrible predicament of having been forced to… voluntarily board a plane bound for a wealthy enclave that claims to love immigrants.

    • waffles

      Who gave them that idea?
      When you embarrass the left you are smacking a hornet’s nest of lawyers.

      • juris imprudent

        More like a nest of gnats with hornet pretensions.

    • Plisade

      “false promises and misrepresentations”

      Like maybe how the attorneys told the immigrants they’ll be independently wealthy after the lawsuit?

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      Immediately find a bunch of migrants that Biden flew around the country and get them to sue.

      There’s money to be made.

    • Certified Public Asshat

      “false promises and misrepresentations”

      The people who said they wanted us here don’t actually want us here!

  45. Rebel Scum

    The German government says it’s agreed to nationalize the country’s biggest natural gas importer, Uniper, expanding state intervention in the industry to prevent an energy shortage resulting from Russia’s war in Ukraine

    That’s not why you have a problem.

  46. PieInTheSky

    DeSantis Does The Unforgivable

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Juqe15zttRQ

    Tim Dillon cracks me up, though not as much as he cracks up his podcast producer Ben

    also is there actual wine made on martha’s vineyard?

  47. Rebel Scum

    Anything interesting come out of Putin’s latest address?

    • waffles

      War were (all but) declared.

      • db

        Wait, wasn’t there war already?

      • Rebel Scum

        “Special military operation” was the term previously used. So I guess now it is ‘war’ war.

      • Drake

        After the new Republics join the Russian federation, attacking them would be an act of war against Russia. Then the actual Russian army might show up instead of the local militia or bunch of Chechens.

      • waffles

        Sort of. Russia was still pretending this was some kind of limited engagement. Now it is taking steps to formally treat this as a war, including having the breakaway Ukrainian regions declare themselves as part of Russia. Biden and co will call it a sham. Maybe it is. But Russia wants to follow international law at least far enough to keep China, India, etc on board. This seems to me to be a serious point of no return kind of escalation.

        It will be interesting to see if we scale up into winter or the fuel-sabotage makes Europe scream for peace.

      • Swiss Servator

        “But Russia wants to follow international law at least far enough to keep China, India, etc on board.”

        That train left the station, derailed, rolled over and burned when they, you know, invaded Ukraine. You think India is going to applaud that, when the CCP has been nibbling at their part of Kashmir since the 1960s?

      • waffles

        India has not condemned Russia.

      • Homple

        Russia wants to follow international law as much as we do, which is not much.

  48. Tundra

    Russians Living in Estonia to Have Guns Forcibly Confiscated by the Government

    The headline might be a tad optimistic.

    Asked if she expected gun owners to comply, Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said it was “difficult for her to judge.”

    Ah, and what’s the extent of the threat?

    In total, only 629 registered gun owners will have to turn over their firearms.

    Europe, your experiment with young chick prime ministers should probably be shelved.

    • waffles

      629, hoo boy. I dove a little too deep into civil war 2 fear porn last night and it looks like the increased gun sales from the pandemic never really let up. It’d be damn near impossible to disarm Americans now.

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      They’re all Hillary clones. High on their own power, loathing the masses, and completely incompetent.

    • PieInTheSky

      at least you can have guns in estonia

      • Not Adahn

        Not if you’re a rooskie apparently.

      • Swiss Servator

        FDR smiles up from Hell?

    • Seguin

      Looks like Russian nationals…does this include Russian-speaking Estonian citizens? I know Russia has been using the doling out of passports and citizenship as part of their salami slice tactics for a while, at least since Abkhazia.

  49. The Late P Brooks

    NASA’s SLS leak check fill today has already failed. LH2 leak detected.

    Tell me again what a good idea it is to have hydrogen-fueled cars, and how it will be no big deal having hydrogen tanks all over town.

    • Pat

      Meh, lithium fires aren’t much better. I’m sure a lot of people were a little uneasy about having thousand gallon gasoline tanks every few miles at one point in time too. Life’s a risk. I suspect hydrogen refueling stations not operated by an incompetent government bureaucracy would probably end up with an acceptable safety record over the long run. Which isn’t to offer a defense of hydrogen vehicles or their practicality.

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      The current push is towards solid-state hydrogen storage in metal hydrides or metal-organic frameworks, thus eliminating the storage pressure problems.

      I don’t know where they are on cost-efficiency though.

      • R.J.

        Previously the only acceptable way was to store in a titanium lattice, which was stupid expensive. I can’t imagine it has improved much.

  50. PieInTheSky

    What the NBA Can Learn (and Take) from EuroBasket

    https://bleacherreport.com/articles/10042844-what-the-nba-can-learn-and-take-from-eurobasket

    “The pacing alone made the games more watchable than a lot of NBA regular-season affairs. The ball was moving up and down the floor like an ’80s NBA game, or almost like a soccer match. Things just sort of flowed, and that was true of every country in the field (at least relative to most NBA action).

    Part of that is the result of what New Orleans Pelicans executive vice president of basketball operations David Griffin told Bleacher Report is a “far more physical game.”

    FIBA officials let a lot more incidental contact slide, and all the players are clearly used to that. They have no issue playing through (or at least trying to play through) contact.”

    to be fair fouls are way to easy in the NBA

    “One way to draw a technical is by flopping, a rule that the NBA should adopt as soon as possible.

    Exaggerating, selling or straight-up faking contact has become customary within the league. You can’t watch a game without seeing it. And NBA stars are so used to getting certain calls that international competitions can throw off their rhythm.”

    true flopping is an issue

    “Speaking of unnecessary stoppages, FIBA’s use of college jump ball rules (the alternating possession arrow) speeds things up, too.

    A more liberal approach to rim protection also helps.

    “FIBA basket goaltending rules are better,” Philadelphia 76ers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey told Bleacher Report.

    It’s not hard to see why he thinks so. Goaltending can still be called when the ball is in the air and on its way down, but once it hits the rim, it’s live. That means a defender can knock it away from the hoop or an offensive player can help it in, regardless of whether it’s over the cylinder.”

    • Not Adahn

      “The pacing alone made the games more watchable … almost like a soccer match.

      Go.

      Fuck.

      Yourself.

    • robc

      or almost like a soccer match.

      Passing back to the keeper would cause an over and back violation.

      • PieInTheSky

        well it was about pace not everything that goes on during a football match. But due to the much smaller field the analogy is silly

      • robc

        soccer pace is much slower than even NBA basketball.

      • robc

        Speaking of rule changes, soccer should adopt one from lacrosse.

        3 non-keeper players from each side cannot cross the midline. That means you can defend with at most 8 players (7 plus goalie).

        I think for soccer, reducing it to two would even be okay. Then you can attack with at most 8 (plus goalie, if you dare), and defend with at most 8 plus goalie.

        It would open up the box and prevent parking the bus in front of the goal.

      • whiz

        My gripe with soccer is the stupid offsides rules. So what if a player is behind the defender, then gets passed to? Put in a blue line like hockey if you want to keep an offensive player from just parking outside the other team’s goal.

      • robc

        I played striker in HS. Toying with the offside trap is lots of fun. Sometimes you get called, but when you burn it, its you vs the keeper.

    • Grumbletarian

      “One way to draw a technical is by flopping, a rule that the NBA should adopt as soon as possible.

      Dear god, yes.

  51. The Late P Brooks
    • Tundra

      That was great!

      I had no idea that Rush Limbaugh played banjo.

  52. DEG

    “Although not exhaustive, the Court’s historical survey finds little evidence that … (the federal ban) — which prohibits those under felony indictment from obtaining a firearm — aligns with this Nation’s historical tradition.”

    🙂

  53. juris imprudent

    Hahaha, oh CNN, bless your heart.

    This volume of newcomers has put tremendous strain on New York’s already over-stretched shelter system. New York City is unique in that it is required to place every homeless New Yorker in a shelter bed every night, or face fines. But with 9,500 migrants currently in the shelter system, it has almost maxed out its capacity.

    • Pat

      CNN, putting the “special” in “special pleading”.

    • Nephilium

      New York City is unique in that it is required to place every homeless New Yorker in a shelter bed every night, or face fines.

      Not going to read the article, because… well… CNN. But who would the city need to pay fines to if they fail? Is there a state law that penalizes the city, or is it just the city paying itself to show they “care”?

      • Shiny Nerfherder

        We need more budget to pay the fines to ourselves.

      • PieInTheSky

        I assume the politicians/public workers who fail are fined this is the only way it makes sense

  54. The Late P Brooks

    Life’s a risk. I suspect hydrogen refueling stations not operated by an incompetent government bureaucracy would probably end up with an acceptable safety record over the long run. Which isn’t to offer a defense of hydrogen vehicles or their practicality.

    Except hydrogen is uniquely difficult to store and transport. Gasoline is actually pretty tame.

    • Pat

      I understand that it presents very unique challenges in distribution compared to gasoline, I’m just saying that if it were a financially viable prospect, the safety risks would probably end up mitigated into practical non-existence over the long-run by private actors. NASA just plainly isn’t very good at much of anything.

      • R.J.

        You are correct sir.

  55. Rebel Scum

    We’re doing what we’re doing and we’re doing it every day.

    Kamala Harris: “We invested an additional $12 billion into community banks, because we know community banks are in the community, and understand the needs and desires of that community as well as the talent and capacity of community.”

    Community.

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      I thought I was repetitive, given my propensity to repeat words repetitively in comments.

    • Nephilium

      /dresses up as a Drow elf

      /gets cancelled

      • Seguin

        That was one of the best episodes. As a former DM, I completely approved.

    • Translucent Chum

      Is she trying to one up Hemmingway (Ernest)?

    • juris imprudent

      Chik-fil-a says huh?

    • I. B. McGinty

      What do you mean by community? Black community? Racist!

  56. The Late P Brooks

    Community.

    Communitards.

  57. The Late P Brooks

    Let us have our war

    When national security adviser Jake Sullivan was asked at the Aspen Security Forum in July why Washington was not giving Ukraine the additional advanced weapons it urgently requested, he responded, “The president has said he is not willing to provide long-range missiles because, while it is needful to support and defend Ukraine, another key goal is to ensure that we do not end up … heading down the road towards a third world war.”

    It is not clear whether Sullivan was just following Biden’s lead in his apocalyptic rhetoric or whether he initially infected his boss with it. What is clear is that the Biden-Obama-Clinton group of foreign policy specialists has absorbed too well the risks of U.S. military intervention, such as in Iraq and Afghanistan. But they have failed to grasp the risks of nonintervention, as with Rwanda, Bosnia, Syria, Georgia, Ukraine and elsewhere.

    Just get it over with. Declare war on Russia and send in the Marines.

    • waffles

      The powers that be are really into war. Blood-soaked monsters.

      • juris imprudent

        I think this country needs to give them all the bloodshed they want – just not where they are expecting it.

      • db

        I was feeding my 3-week-old son the other day and I thought “to most politicians, this little boy is either a prop, a voter, an object of hate, or cannon fodder. To me he is priceless.”

        Politicans don’t care who they kill, maim, starve, or impoverish, as long as they get re-elected and get to sit in the power chair.

      • juris imprudent

        …sit in the power chair.

        It really ought to have a 10k volt connection, tripped by a random number of citizen complaints. Sure – go right ahead and have a seat!

    • Raven Nation

      Progressives: “the US should not be the world’s policeman. Until it should.”

  58. Certified Public Asshat

    National conservatism is repackaged authoritarianism and has little to do with constitutional or fiscal conservatism. The ideology fundamentally rejects individualism and property rights and thus has more in common with socialism than with libertarianism or classical liberalism.— Justin Amash (@justinamash) September 20, 2022

    Ok, I’m officially tapping out on this guy.

    • Tundra

      He sucks. Has sucked. Will suck again.

    • robc

      There are plenty of problems with Amash, but that one seems dead on right.

      • juris imprudent

        Yeah, of all the problems you could have with the guy – this is a strange one. Nationalist conservatives aren’t going to be very different from neo-cons.

      • Pat

        OK, I now suspect very much that we’re all working off very different definitions. The entire split between paleocons and neocons was largely that the neocons rejected nationalism and embraced globalism. I’m struggling to conceptualize how on earth nationalism is tied to neoconservatism in anyone’s mind.

      • juris imprudent

        I don’t believe I’ve heard one of them yet talk about withdrawing the U.S. military from our many overseas points of presence.

      • Pat

        Perhaps, but by the same token, their strongman dictator was also the first president we’ve had in half a century not to get us into any new shooting wars.

      • juris imprudent

        And every part of the establishment hated him for that.

      • Pat

        Right. I think maybe we’re getting to the issue here. The “natcons” aren’t the establishment GOP by any means. Here’s the speaker list from their latest conference. There’s plenty of people there I hate, but not many I’d describe as fundamentally rejecting private property, for example. Those are the people he’s shitting on with his statement – Ron DeSantis and Peter Thiel, not Mitch McConnell and Les Wexner. I’m not saying that Ron DeSantis and Peter Thiel are necessarily admirable, only that his criticism doesn’t make a lot of sense in that context.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        Maybe I am wrong, but I don’t think he is shitting on people like Liz Cheney in this statement, he is finger wagging at an MTG. Also, seems to maybe be a comment on the Martha’s Vineyard event.

        His comment is technically correct, but also not really telling us anything.

      • Pat

        I don’t think it’s even “technically correct”, unless my understanding of all these terms is wildly outside of the prevailing norm these days, in which case those terms have undergone extensive revisions in meaning very recently. Natcons aren’t against property rights and individualism just because they disagree with globally-managed trade.

    • EvilSheldon

      I mean, is he wrong?

      What exactly are the ‘National Conservatives’ doing right now that is so wonderful? Other than dipping their beaks into the Ukraine trough?

      • juris imprudent

        They own libs hurr-durr-hurr?

      • Pat

        Perhaps we’re all working off different definitions here. As I understood it, “national conservatism” is basically just bog standard American social and economic conservatism with a chauvinist element that had been discarded by the neocons when they skinsuited the movement in the ’70s. Basically what used to be called “paleoconservatism” before the neocon wing ran them out.

      • Seguin

        That’s the problem with a lot of these discussions centered around political “science” things. I never get a clear definition of anything, especially since Marxists love to change definitions on the fly.

        WTF does a neoliberal believe?

      • juris imprudent

        Every time someone says “the national good” my skin crawls; doesn’t matter if it is from the left or the right.

      • robc

        Amash is distinguishing between national conservatives and constitutional conservatives and fiscal conservatives.

        So this would be the big spending, tariff-raising, pro-war conservatives.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        He did quote tweet Bill Kristol a day before this tweet, so maybe that is what he meant. In which case, sorry I guess.

        Just seems odd, like who supports Bill Kristol and Liz Cheney at this point?

      • juris imprudent

        The Military-Industrial-Complex?

      • Pat

        So this would be the big spending, tariff-raising, pro-war conservatives.

        In other words, a mish-mash of unrelated policies he doesn’t like that he’s decided to ascribe to people he doesn’t like? We still haven’t nailed down a meaning here. What, in your guys’ minds, does “national conservative” mean? I thought it meant conservatives who embrace nationalism. And what you’re describing doesn’t sound very much like that, except for the tariff part. In point of fact, the people who seem to be excited about raising tariffs and closing trade seem much less interested in foreign wars and big spending than their globalist counterparts. I feel like I’m losing my mind a bit here. Help me out fellas.

      • Certified Public Asshat

        Ok thanks for continuing this. I laid the point down pretty quickly (I am a squishy asshat).

        Sorry to throw another term out, but the “America First” people to me are synonymous with national conservative. They are certainly not globalists and have not explicitly rejected individualism.

      • EvilSheldon

        Okay, I’ll accept that definition. My question still remains.

      • Pat

        If you accept that definition then I would answer your question in the affirmative: yes, he is wrong. For the very simple reason that nationalism as an ideology, and “national conservatism” as a particular expression thereof, does not inherently reject private property or individualism, and is no more inherently authoritarian than internationalism/globalism.

        And I would furthermore suggest that imputing internationalist military interventionism to what amounts to paleocons is a non-sequitur. The rift between the paleos and neos was largely centered around military interventionism, and the nationalists spent about 30 years being castigated as “fortress America” isolationists. We’re talking about fellas like Pat Buchanan and Taki Theodoracopulos. For whatever else you might want to malign them for – and there’s plenty of material there – being military adventurists could not be counted among them.

      • Pat

        I’d furthermore suggest that it’s a rather novel criticism coming from a faux-libertarian asshole who supports political prosecutions carried out by unaccountable domestic spy agencies and can’t be fucked to say an ill word against Chinese factories – some of them very similar to the kind that crank out the cheap, disposable tooling that built his family’s fortune and keep his trust fund checks in the mail – employing actual, no-shit slave labor. Perhaps pluck the fabricated FISA warrant out of your own before you go about calling anyone else an authoritarian there, Justin.

      • juris imprudent

        And I’m quote national-conservative-PRIME there.

      • Pat

        He rather explicitly rejects military intervention in that very article:

        Unlike with Taiwan, there is no risk of a direct military confrontation involving the United States. All it would take to improve the situation in Armenia is for Washington to rein in one of its newfound satrapies and act with a little more fairness in the region.

        His arch-nemesis from mainstream conservatism is David French, who recently penned this little number. That’s why I think the criticism is off-base and also rather ridiculous considering who Amash counts among his friends.

      • juris imprudent

        How nice for him to draw a distinction with Taiwan. The fact is we have zero national interest in Armenia other than his professed Christian brotherhood.

        That French is wrong is about as noteworthy as a stopped clock.

        Gosh, there just isn’t a lot of good options on the right side, anymore than on the left.

      • Pat

        I get the whole “both sides bad” thing is like a compulsion with libertarians, but I think there’s a meaningful distinction between saying America should withhold support for a regime that’s persecuting Christians and saying America should militarily intervene on behalf of the persecuted Christians. I don’t think the former could reasonably be said to constitute interventionism. If that’s as interventionist as the natcons get then they’d be a marked improvement over the establishment wing of the GOP or any wing of the Democratic Party.

        Which isn’t an endorsement of Sohrab Ahmari, merely to suggest that he’s not a warmonger. His ideas on domestic policy are far more troubling, IMO. Although admittedly I’m to a point where I really don’t give a single shit about libertarianism anymore and would reluctantly throw in with a guy like that when the alternative is either a group of psychopaths who are religiously devoted to the idea that white people are inherently defective and that 5 year old children should be able to decide to lop off their dick or tits before they’re legally allowed to sign a contract or get their ears pierced, or navel gazing libertarians who genuinely believe that a public school football coach saying a prayer on the field before a game is an equal expression of authoritarianism.

        I only brought in the David French comparison because of their famous feud a few years ago, and because the David French position is widely shared among the “respectable” Republicans and Democrats with whom Amash likes to rub shoulders and against whom he can’t muster a cross word.

      • Pat

        I also apologize for needlessly belaboring my point and being argumentative. I know comity is prized here in a way it wasn’t at the bad old site. It’s not personal in any way. I enjoy these types of lively discussions is all.

      • juris imprudent

        would reluctantly throw in with

        That is the politics of prison gangs. I’d rather blow up the prison than decide which of the gangs to join.

      • juris imprudent

        No personal offense taken – just a good discussion. It’s fair to insist on elaborating what makes national conservatism unattractive.

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      Amash is a weasel. Don’t forget that he was in on RussiaGate to the point of endorsing highly suspect activities on the part of the agencies.

  59. The Late P Brooks

    I understand that it presents very unique challenges in distribution compared to gasoline, I’m just saying that if it were a financially viable prospect, the safety risks would probably end up mitigated into practical non-existence over the long-run by private actors. NASA just plainly isn’t very good at much of anything.

    I get that, and I’m not trying to stir up a fight.

    I think hydrogen gas is a dead end; the benefits do not appear to me to outweigh the costs. I could be proven wrong. It has happened before.

    I stumbled across a couple of articles (planted, as I recall, by some startup trolling for venture capital) about using hydrogen in the form of liquid ammonia as fuel for internal combustion engines. I haven’t seen anything about it since.

    • Pat

      I believe we are in violent agreement on the issue overall. As I said, I hadn’t intended to defend hydrogen vehicles as a viable alternative, only to suggest that private actors would probably do a better job of managing the infrastructure for it than NASA. By now, I think hydrogen is pretty well dead anyway. The powers that be have decided the future is quarter million dollar a piece electric cars running on lithium batteries powered by 50 cent a kwh solar electricity.

      • Fatty Bolger

        The energy density of hydrogen makes it too tempting to give up on entirely. There’s still a lot of work going to efficiently create hydrogen from solar.

  60. Lackadaisical

    ‘Uniper, expanding state intervention in the industry to prevent an energy shortage resulting from Russia’s war in Ukraine’

    Now they’ll get shortages due to gross mismanagement instead, winning.

  61. The Late P Brooks

    Ok, I’m officially tapping out on this guy.

    Maybe I’m just not aware of the context, but I don’t see what’s especially objectionable about that. Is “national conservatism” code for “Trumpism”?

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      That’s how I took it. I don’t particularly disagree with him on that point, but given his previous thoughts, the subtext is him self-positioning on the prog-fascist/GOPe side of the cultural rift.

      • db

        Politics in America is reduced to selectively taking the statements of politicians out of context to either support or pillory them based on their overall position.

        Wait, did I say “reduced?” I’m guessing it’s been that way since at least the 1820s.

        What I mean is that it’s a farce, and that there’s no such thing as representative democracy in our time.

      • robc

        1820 is too late. The election of 1800, if not earlier.

    • robc

      I am with you, I see no problem with that Amash statement.

  62. The Late P Brooks

    Here’s something I just tripped over, in my head. How is it that the people who are all in on DEMOCRACY! can talk about populism as if it’s some sort of horrible scourge of totalitarianism?

    • trshmnstr the terrible

      Populism = those icky people over there getting their way
      Democracy = us getting our way

      • juris imprudent

        ^^^ THIS

  63. The Late P Brooks

    Who are the “national conservatives”?

    Chuck Grassley?

    Mitt Romney?

    Liz Cheney?

    Mitch McConnell?

    • SDF-7

      Yeah — that’s my question. (And why my response to the Amash quote is: Citation needed.)

      I don’t know offhand of anyone calling themselves a “National Conservative”. I don’t know as a result what any such creature would believe or espouse.

      If, as conjectured, it is code for “likes Trump” — then I don’t follow. Where exactly has been the dismissal of individual and/or property rights? Can’t be quibbling over free vs. fair trade. Shouldn’t be stuff like “Don’t groom kids, don’t force CRT down the throats of your employees / kids / government workers” — because I don’t see any of that as going against individual rights.

      I’m sure Trump himself has said some stupid crap about eminent domain or whatnot (because a) He’s Trump. His mouth runneth over. and b) He’s a real estate developer — of course he likes the idea of taking ‘unprofitable’ land and making some money off of it). But he’s wrong when he says stupid crap and I don’t think any of it has elevated to a political philosophy or ideology.

      Those of y’all agreeing with Amash care to clue us in on just who he’s talking about?

      • juris imprudent

        I don’t think any of it has elevated to a political philosophy or ideology.

        That’s what the national-conservative ‘movement’ is attempting to do – codify Trumpism; usually grafting on something about “the common good” and/or “we need more religion”. It is a fragment of the overall conservative world that wants to dominate the conservative agenda, and in doing so be quite willing to sacrifice the classical liberal values originally underlying what was to be ‘conserved’.

  64. The Late P Brooks

    Perhaps we’re all working off different definitions here. As I understood it, “national conservatism” is basically just bog standard American social and economic conservatism with a chauvinist element that had been discarded by the neocons when they skinsuited the movement in the ’70s. Basically what used to be called “paleoconservatism” before the neocon wing ran them out.

    Rockefeller Republicans?

    • juris imprudent

      Buchanan was, and is, as big an idiot as Sen. Graham; that and being Republican are all the two really have in common.

      • Pat

        I don’t disagree that Pat Buchanan is an asswipe – particularly for being an actual, genuine, no-shit Hitler apologist who unironically argued that Hitler had no interest in war or conquest and would have been satisfied with Poland if not for Western meddling. But if I had to pick one or the other to be in charge of the government, I’d pick Buchanan.

  65. creech

    Breaking news: the NY attorney general has just indicted Bill and Hillary Clinton, and the Clinton Foundation, for financial fraud, money laundering, influence peddling, and being disgusting people. Oh wait……..

    • Shiny Nerfherder

      I never got and lost a boner so fast.

      You suck, creech.

      • Mojeaux

        Ditto.

    • creech

      Sorry, I thought everyone here appreciated science fiction and fantasy writing.

  66. Pat

    Taco Bell to test meatless carne asada steak at several locations next month

    Sept. 21 (UPI) — Taco Bell is the newest mega restaurant chain to go for a meatless option for health-conscious customers, and will test that option at several Ohio locations next month.

    The chain announced on Wednesday that it will introduce plant-based carne asada steak from Beyond Meat at dozens of locations in Dayton, Ohio, beginning Oct. 13.

    My high school Spanish may be a bit rusty, but does “carne asada” still translate into English as “grilled meat”?

    • Lackadaisical

      Are they trying to say they used meat before, because I don’t buy it.

    • Pat

      Gives some level of credibility to the lizard people conspiracy theory.