This weekend is the official launch of summer in America. It does not feel like the first weekend of summer, but that is probably due to the weather. It has been cool and rainy here for most of spring. Even so, it is the start of the summer season. That means the A-list fabricators will be taking off, leaving the media mendacity to the second string for the next few months. The quality of lies will be low.
It will be interesting to see if the Trump admin maintains the pace. The last four months has been a whirlwind. This week we got the South Africa stuff, which is one of those things that no one thought possible six months ago. The Overton window is moving so quickly it is hard to keep up with it. Now that official Washington is heading off for the summer, it will be interesting to see if the admin takes a break
The other thing to watch for this summer is if the crazies get brought out of storage to riot somewhere. If you scan Bluesky, they are depressed. The money dried up and then the jobs dried up. Now they are left to trade scare stories to one another in the weird echo chamber that is Bluesky. If it is an Orange Man Summer, the fever swamp could be on suicide watch by August.
Normally there would not be a show this week, as the Friday before a holiday weekend is a good time for a break. I had some time to kill, so I threw something together that was light and not too taxing. It is a good time to relax and not think about the madness of this age, so the show is easy listening. I hope everyone has a wonderful Memorial Day weekend and thank you for reading and listening.
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This Week’s Show
Contents
- Intro
- A Bunch Of Stupid Questions
- Outro
Direct Download, The iTunes, iHeart Radio, RSS Feed
Full Show On Spreaker
Full Show On Rumble
Full Show On Odysee
Amazing how the usual suspects could claim the South African genocide claim was fake while Trump played the video with the ruling party bigwigs singing about killing the Boer.
I don’t know what to think about Memorial Day these days. There was an elderly couple flanking the entrance to a bp near where I live in the middle of nowhere. They had little flags and he had on his “thank me for my service “ hat. Dot indians operate and staff the Bp now so they benefitted from ww2 but will never thank whites. (btw the country joggers can’t stand Indians)anyway I wanted to ask them what that war gained us, if “us” can be defined as white Americans? But I just nodded and drove off, no point in… Read more »
I’ve been very critical, for years, of the pedestalization of the empire’s dupes (of whom I was one), and the effect this has had on the “veterans,” but that hat is a new low I haven’t yet encountered.
I still see many old veterans here, Vietnam era now. They often wear those hats which indicate which war, branch of service and dates. I don’t think much of it as I can understand that their period of time in the service was most likely the high point of their life’s achievement. I can’t get into that mindset, but I won’t belittle what pride they have in such. Getting old ain’t for sissies. Life’s hard enough as it is, then it’s over. Escape back into the past has its benefits.
I hadn’t had enough coffee yet and I thought he meant the hat literally said “Thank Me For My Service.” But the sentiment stands.
That’s the way it reads on my monitor. And anybody who goes around begging to be thanked has no honor.
Eh, I wouldn’t be so hard on him.
He wants to tell the story of his life, his youth, before it’s gone.
My generation pokes a lot of fun at the concept. We have hats that say “Atropian War Veteran.” Atropia is one of the fictional countries that the US uses in its training exercises because somebody somewhere decided it was uncouth to be straightforward and say that we’re conducting a simulated war game against Russia, China, or some miserable third world dumpsterfire of a country. I go to the American Legion every other week or so (I only ever “deployed” to Atropia and Donovia and therefore cannot go to the VFW, were they have my preferred Yuengling on tap) and enjoy… Read more »
Oh my God you have Yuengling. After Phillies broadcasts I so want one. What does it taste like?
A long time ago Chuck Barry was one of the first celebrity sponsors of Yuengling. Even wrote a song about the brew called “My Yuengling.”
If you can find a Viennese style lager, it’s a lot like that. Crisp and malty with caramel notes and a hint of sweetness. They have a pretty wide distribution network including a brewery in Florida and another in Texas besides the PA one. Sam Adams Boston Lager is similar in style (and slightly better), but not nearly as affordable and the owners of Yuengling endorsed Trump in 2016 where as Jim Koch pulled out of the Boston St. Patrick’s Day parade because they wouldn’t let the sodomites have a float. It’s just called “lager” in PA and it tastes… Read more »
Used to drink the stuff from bottles, then it started giving me wicked hangovers. This is 20+ years ago. The kegs are still great, as you say. I figure they stopped bottling it in PA.
Always favored the porter, black and tan ain’t bad, Lord Chesterfield… they made a pilsner a couple of years ago I quite enjoyed, can’t find it anymore, not that I’m looking too hard.
As a drinker, weaned on Yuengling. Good memories!
Yuengling Premium was their pilsner designed to compete with the “big 3.” They also made a golden pilsner that had a little more depth in flavor. The only ones you can get out of state reliably are the traditional, the black-and-tan (a combination of their premium and their porter), their seasonal Oktoberfest, and “Flights” which is beer-flavored water designed to compete with White Claw. They made an India Pale Lager a while back that was alright as well.
Right. That golden pilsner, good suff!
Coors beer is what it tastes like, at least in spirit. Great when it’s the forbidden fruit. Rather average when you can get it all the time.
They’re the only guys who speak your dialect, who share the memories. Nobody else gets what you’re talking about. It must feel like coming home.
you Make an interesting point I never thought about. I suppose it does reflect nostalgia. I could be wrong but I don’t see any operation desert storm hats. I have seen those on the sides of trucks and in a stretched way, there was still some sense that America was a good place even 20 years ago. I don’t see how anyone thinks that now but I did have dinner with a family a few years ago whose 15 year old son wa need to join the military
For the Vietnam guys with their identifiable caps, just thank them and say
“Welcome Home.” They deserve that at the very least.
pedestalization. I’ll have to remember that one.
Every Memorial Day I think of the men who died, especially the ones who died thinking the fight was for something that it wasn’t. That said, I remember the “thank you for your service” stuff got spun up during the GWOT, and I’ve always thought it was cringe. It’s not about serving as muscle for an evil regime, even though that’s true, and the country we have now is a reflection of that. It’s because the military is, or at least was until it became a DEI enterprise, an incredible opportunity for so many who just needed an opportunity. It… Read more »
Well, you wonder why I always dress in black Why you never see Bright colors on my back And why does my appearance Seem to have a somber tone? Well, there’s a reason for the things That I have on I wear the black For the poor and the beaten down Livin’ in the hopeless Hungry side of town I wear it for the prisoner Who has long paid for his crime But is there because He’s a victim of the times I wear the black For those who’ve never read Or listened To the words that Jesus said About… Read more »
Yeah, Johnny Cash got on the antiWhite “woke train” early. That’s really what inspired the song. The song. did not fit him or his persona. It was an embarrassment (IMHO) and better forgotten.
I like “When the man comes around” better. Great song.
“Cocaine Blues”
my favorite of his. thorogood does an excellent version.
Since it’s become an all-volunteer force, the US military has essentially become the largest and best-equipped mercenary force on the planet. Almost everybody who joins does so for opportunity. Education benefits, a pension (even the new one is 40%), a VA-backed home loan, being able to earn money while accruing no debt (assuming you avoid the skeezy dealership selling Camaros at 30% APR just outside the gates of the base), and other benefits make the military pretty lucrative. If you’re smart, you can buy a house everywhere you get stationed at and rent it when you move so somebody else… Read more »
Yes, and the vast majority of them don’t go anywhere near combat. While watching sportsball I see ads for those “military only” credit unions and they depict grillers and people living normal middle class lives. Now, obviously, it’s an ad, but they are trying to sell to military people and wouldn’t depict something that didn’t exist.
If the military wasn’t a great deal for normal White guys post-GWOT then Obama and Brandon wouldn’t have tried to destroy it with diversity.
USAA and Navy Federal Credit are other great benefits for service members. I swear I’m not advertising…I left over COVID and can’t recommend any white man join an organization that would do that to somebody. COVID was the last desperate push to get rid of the enlisted and junior officers that the ripple effect of 8 years after the Obama purges couldn’t. It largely worked. Obama’s legacy is still alive and well. He purged a lot of generals. Congress picks generals, but generals, through their ratings and evaluations, pick colonels. The colonels that Obama-approved generals promoted were awful. And who… Read more »
Many of our current, so-called “Veterans”never saw battle, stayed holed up in an air-conditioned barracks in Dhahran or Manila playing video games, but they’re always ready to claim that 10% veterans discount at Home Depot, or ask for a price break at your local Walmart. I knew an annoying 40-something who volunteered to play soldier for two years at a time of peace, only to bug out with early retirement on a reduced, but still generous, pension. My gut says that, if his so-called “service” was so important, then his early leave was a shirking of his “duty,” and it… Read more »
Same story as Command Sergeant Major Tim Walz, who decided to retire and duck out of a deployment to Iraq.
I know a guy in the army. He’s a professional violist. He did get injured in a way. He was walking in dc and got “knock-out-gamed” with brass knuckles.
Well, DC is a war zone in it’s own way.
A buddy of mine couldn’t get a job after law school. Joined up and became a JAG. Asked him what the majority of the cases he tried were, Rape was his answer. He also has political ambitions, so you know, never hurts to have served uncle sam
It would be interesting to see the race of those rapists. But then again, I think we already know.
The Japanese and Korean governments know damn well. A couple of Marines got rolled up last month for Rape in Okinawa. You already know what they look like. There is, of course, the “regret sex” epidemic where a woman is happy to behave like a whore (she’s mentally unbalanced to the point where she entered a man’s profession, after all), but unhappy to be thought of as one. In the Army we referred to them as “barracks bunnies” and the Marines called them “wookies” or “wooks.” There are various reported origins for the Marine version stemming from “Woman Outside Of… Read more »
Devon Stack did a pretty good Blackpilled podcast on the problems in Okinawa about 3 or 4 weeks ago.
Just as Jefferson invisioned…
Vietnam looms with the “Thank you for your service” stuff.
Soldiers are supposed to follow orders and not question, so I don’t much hold them accountable. War is atrocious business. I imagine most who fight do or see unspeakable things. It’s the nature of the beast, and I imagine living with it is enough. At least that’s the impression I got from my grandfathers and vets I know.
Leadership can take the criticism and the false glory, and the rank and file can be left alone by a public that doesn’t get it (including me). IMO.
If they were drafted then yes, not accountable.
Voluntarily enlisted? Eat it.
I was drafted in the next to last year of the lotteries and was in Vietnam ’71 to ’72. That was the era of “Vietnamization” of the war effort, which meant turning most of our equipment over to the ARVN and expecting them to do the bulk of the fighting. I was assigned to an Army depot in Da Nang and usually describe my year there as not much worse that a crappy summer camp: bad food, warm beer, and humongous mosquitos. Nothing to brag about, in other words. I often wonder how many of my contemporaries who are still… Read more »
I think we’re all naive (or nihilistic) at that age.
I get sick of people who virtue signal that everybody should be somber, solemn, and possibly even miserable on Memorial Day in honor of the fallen. NPCs are going to be NPCs. To them, it’s a Monday they don’t have to show up to work and can cook out and enjoy a few beers, and I don’t really care. Getting mad at the public for lacking the decency and awareness of past generations is a pointless exercise. There are also a lot of Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Marines who would rather remember the good things about their friends who aren’t… Read more »
Haha then you won’t enjoy the lyrics i posted above 😉
Ok , onto chatgdp I go to ask about the origins of Memorial Day. My guess post ww1 at least if not ww2: wow, it’s worse than I thought: Memorial Day originated in the United States as a way to honor and remember military personnel who died in service to the country. Its roots go back to the aftermath of the Civil War, a conflict that claimed more American lives than any other, leading to the establishment of national cemeteries.Key points in its origin:Early Commemorations (1860s): Various towns and cities held springtime tributes to fallen soldiers, decorating graves with flowers… Read more »
Thoroughly depressing. But part of the battle is reasserting our vision of America. Veteran’s day is about every American man who died in defense of the nation, especially the ones who fought against the genocidal Indian tribes and the autocratic Yankee government. I’m also unwilling to spit on the memory of decent people who carried rifles in Europe during the World Wars, even if the cause was wrong. The wignats who demand you disown your WWI/II veteran ancestors are as wrong as the leftists who demand you disown your racist ancestors.
Yeah, I’ve become pretty ambivalent about it myself. My kid is a service academy grad and did genuine combat tours and could have died in that shithole for nothing. Nobody would have cared. The maudlin Gold Star and Memorial Day crap must ring pretty hollow if you lost your only kid over there just to fulfill Obama’s campaign promises. On the one hand I am very proud of my kid, on the other I am disgusted that every war this country has fought since 1812 has been a bullshit three-ring circus ginned up by the politicians and the defense contractors,… Read more »
The Mexican-American War was pretty meritorious. We were suffering from insurgent warfare from across the border and innocent American civilians were getting killed regularly by border-hopping Mexicans (some things haven’t changed). A lot of the greatest military minds and patriots of the Mexican American War went on to defend their country…as Confederate Soldiers.
It’s hard for me to be too harsh towards people who were young and thought they were fighting on the side of good. I used to have a “W’04” sticker on the back of my truck and contacted my congressman in regards to urging him to support the defense of Israel. That, and a lot of other obsolete and incorrect beliefs litter the roadside to where I am now. A lot of veterans wouldn’t have joined if they could have talked to their future self.
Which war did his service help win?
Usually players on losing teams don’t brag.
Roman triumphs were only for victorious armies that brought glory to Rome.
A few points for Memorial Day: 1) I can’t think of any American war that actually benefited the American people. I guess WWII short-term benefited the country economically as the rest of Europe was smashed. 2) If you know the Ron Kovic’s story, you know what can happen to the best and most idealistic/naive of American boys who enlist. No war I can think of was worth dying or getting maimed for. 3) While there are elite troops and I’m sure there is good training and learning that can be done, a VAST portion of our serving members and veterans… Read more »
I think there is a case to be made that WW2 created an enormous economic tailwind for the US from 1945 until 1973, give or take a few years.
Not only was the US the last economic powerhouse standing, the worst aspects of the managerialism that characterized the war effort and the immediate postwar economy hadn’t yet overshadowed the efficiency and coordination gains it provided. Chiefly because, instead of ideologues using the business to push some utopian social dream, it was (mostly) still being run by practical men with an eye on what works.
In many ways it was a heyday of engineering. Guys in white short sleeve shirts and ties, doing math with sliderules… or tinkering in their garage after work.
A show about nothing?
Is that like 36 years of useless Middle Eastern wars?
The proliferation of cameras and tracking has been an enormous price for little in return. The state has license plate cameras everywhere which photograph your license plate, reads the number and records where you are and which direction you were traveling and the time and date. They can reconstruct days of your life many months and probably years later. Now even the DOT is selling your data. You have to get a license or ID card to do anything, so they are forcing you to get it and then selling your data. How long is going to be before they… Read more »
Another fairly recent invention that imposes more costs than creates benefits is dirt blowers, a.k.a. leaf blowers. They generate deafening noise and air pollution, burn gasoline, and are not labor-saving devices; using one of those pieces of shit is no less taxing than using the old-fashioned rake and broom. I hate the dam’ things. Every morning on my walk to work I’m serenaded by the Dirt Blower Concerto in F-minor by Blose’ Gutierrez.
I was driving down the road a couple months ago and they were using blowers on a site on the street. From 3 blocks away I could see this giant dust cloud engulfing the road. Despite it being a beautiful early Spring day, I had to roll my windows up to prevent having to choke on this damn dust. Of course, it had to be on a section of the road where traffic backs up and moves slowly.
While I, too, detested the noise of leaf blowers (always wielded by mestizos) when I lived in the ‘burbs, I bless the tool’s existence now that I live in the middle of the forest. The first fall out here I raked . . . and raked and raked. We have tons of trees and just trying to keep the lawn clear left me with massive piles that could have filled my house many times over. And the battery operated blower we bought for the move didn’t cut it. I bought a gas-powered backpack husqvarna last summer ($280 then, $400 now)… Read more »
My house is surrounded by Bigleaf Maples. After years of raking them, putting them out for the yard waste pickup, or trying to make compost out of them, I’ve finally decided the best thing to do with the leafs is leave them in place, run over them with my mower, and let the shreds decompose over the winter. They’ve all broken down by this spring and have made a nice leaf mold mulch under the trees. But of course, this is a suburb of Seattle and my neighbor isn’t happy about my use of a gas-powered lawnmower. F’ him. It’s… Read more »
Husband tried that with the ZeroTurn. Just shredded the top layer. He tried burning some of the piles, but the bottom layers retained too much moisture. I don’t care if it kills some of the grass, but I don’t want it to leave just bare dirt and rocks. Ideally want the whole yard planted in clover.
Leaf blowers are just noisy brooms. They don’t remove debris. They merely move it from here to there.
That said, I love my Stihl backpack blower. I manage a property that has a large asphalt parking lot under old pines and cedars, and I couldn’t collect the weekly dander without one.
Well, shoot. I missed something.
What is the other thing the Poisoners specialize in?
The drugs, the psych drugs. The Poisoners created the Liberal crazies by drugging them into insanity. Note they went for the weak links- the women, and then the kids, so they could get the next generation.
They’ve been promoting Mother’s Little Helper since at least the 50s, and school drugs (such as Ritalin) since the 60s.
And who created psychiatry, by the way?
Remember the James Bond movie Thunderball? When the bad guys hijacked an RAF jet carrying nukes, flew it off somewhere and hid them, and then demanded ransom against threat of their use? It seems to me that the surveillance state has been promoted by people who were afraid of something like that, something that could threaten their power. Because they sure didn’t create it to go after ordinary crime.
That’s another aspect of the surveillance state. Despite the cameras being everywhere, they only use them when they want to use them. If Luigi had merely robbed the guy, no effort to catch him would have happened. If it hadn’t become a big international story, they would not have exerted the same amount of effort that they did use because it was a worldwide front page story. We have selective enforcement of laws that is so prevalent that it’s the norm. If Rae Rae and DiQuan are shooting at each other and blow out a bunch of windows, but nobody… Read more »
Surveillance makes crime textual. What you did is what’s in your report. Now your report is generated by a chatbot “aligned” to promote inclusion—of white men in prison, and of his enemies in power. A common news story lately is cities ending their contracts with ShotSpotter because its simple system of triangulating microphones is too primitive to ignore non-white crime. Our rulers don’t fear nukes, we’ve learned definitively. That decades-long show was for us. They don’t fear bioweapons, which they make stupidly and release recklessly. They don’t fear anything, I’d say, but they do hate normal people, and they hate… Read more »
They don’t fear nukes, bioweapons etc. as long as they are the ones who control them. But nukes weren’t the point of my post. Enterprising and ingenious individuals or organizations wishing to strike a blow at the regime were. As the regime is well aware it richly deserves to have done to it.
JZ-Even scarier are the new generative AI video tools that were just revealed.How do you defend yourself when the leviathan state is able to instantly synthesize perfect video of you committing all manner of crimes because they don’t like your politics?
There is not a right to self-defense in any jurisdiction in America. At best, what you have is an ‘Affirmative Defense” to shooting or murder laws. Much of it is based on who is the prosecutor. The laws are slimy. Most places have a law that says you have to have acted “reasonably” and the way a person of “average intelligence” would have acted in your place. What does this mean? Nothing. “Let the jury decide” is often the standard the prosecutor will use. Ask the McMichaels (Georgia), they will tell you all about it. Ask Michael Drejka (Florida), he’ll… Read more »
ORANGE MAN SUMMER
—Fug, I’d sleep in every day if waking up on time “solved world hunger”
When you brought up the very old person with the very young person question i thought of Bill Belicheck picking up the young woman in his elderly years and parading her around in public.
As a grandfather i find that kinda creepy but to some people they have no problem with it.
I’m not nearly as old as Belichick and there’s no way I could have anything in common with a 20-something. It’s all a bit creepy, but we’ve seen it in the supermarket tabloids forever.
I had an old boss who would leer at the pretty girl from the front office and talk about what he’d like to do to her.
“Bob, she’s young enough to be your daughter*
“Yeah, but she ain’t my daughter, hehe”
Generally speaking I agree that the Belichick thing is creepy, but that’s partly because she’s a bitch who treats him badly in public and disrespects him. But in the natural order of things, when a woman is in her natural place, she needs to be younger than her man but also deferential to him and his status. Grover Cleveland married a 19-year old who bore him three kids when he was in the White House (I think he was 52). Aristotle argued that the ideal ages for marriage were 36 for the male, and 18 for the female. A man… Read more »
The chiefmost complainers about male-female age gaps in romantic pursuits are aged women who are angry at competition they can compete with. There’s a reason European women were in favor of importing infinite fighting-age rapists from the Global South but refused to accept young Ukrainian women as refugees. That said, trophy wives are typically their own problems and wise men avoid them. 5-10 years is a decent age gap. The man’s typically out of the “apprenticeship” phase of his career and can provide a stable house. The woman’s young enough to keep him enticed until his urges start to subside… Read more »
Let Kelsey Grammer be our model for the average man with his 4+ marriages and 7 kids to about 5 different women (some of which were not his wives).
At least I now have an idea who was buying all those Trump NFTs and trading cards.
Nothing wrong with enjoying the view.
I was going to say of belichik that it is unbecoming, but otherwise not a big deal.
However, imagining a hypothetical daughter or granddaughter in that situation makes me reconsider.
Jerry Reed was a renaissance man: picker, grinner, actor, bootlegger, bare knucke fighter, and bass fisherman.
A reggler Marsilio Ficino with spurs.
Reed was one of the very few guys that Atkins gave the CGP designation, Certified Guitar Player, So the master himself recognized just how good Reed was.
R
jerry reed was the real mccoy. he spent part of his childhood in orphanages and foster homes. One of his most famous songs was “she got the gold mine , I got the shaft” about divorce. he was married to his wife for his entire adult life, and never divorced.
I’m goin’ through the big D and don’t mean Dallas/
I can’t believe what the judge had to tell us/
I got the Jeep, she got the palace/
I’m goin’ through the big D and don’t mean Dallas.
“When you’re hot you’re hot!”
All I can say is it sure feels like summer out in my neck of the western deserts – 100 temps cranking up, little to no rain and wildfire season getting a good head start. Otherwise, everything is awesome!
Gaia Mother is displeased because of cow farts, or something.
Here’s a little something to rile up your ire– The eight-page “Colorado Wildlife and Biodiversity Protection Act” seeks to create the Wildlife and Ecosystem Conservation Commission (WECC). Astonishingly, the WECC would consist of nine appointed members, with the petition strictly stipulating that no member can have any financial ties to agriculture, energy, or development. The petition then goes on to (laughably) assert that these supposed “elite” members – without “financial ties” – will be appointed by universities, environmental groups, and policy institutes. Naturally, this commission will have total control over agriculture, energy, and all future development in Colorado. Deal with the… Read more »
Here in Washington State, the single subject rule is only enforced after an initiative is passed that the ruling elites don’t like.
Not here on the shores of Lake Erie. It’s in the upper 40’s today, overcast and windy after two days of solid rain and cool temps. This is the kind of weather we’d normally have in early April.
I’d be much obliged if you’d transship a load of that weather southwest a couple thousand miles.
Similar here in Chicago. I wore a down puffy yesterday just to walk Lincoln Park. It’s been continually overcast and chilly. Glad I decided not to grow tomatoes this year. Happy holiday to all non-bots here.
Greg Nikolic AI is not gonna like that.
Yep. Here in the Southwest, rain is scarce and drought is picking up. 30 years now and counting. Basically, we’ll have 4 months of not gong outside between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m., and I don’t live in the urban area proper. In the city it will be 10-15 hotter.
We must be naybers.
Really enjoyed this one, CZ.
So, I often wonder: were the 1980s great because of Reagan, economic prosperity and all that post-Carter euphoria, or were they great because I was in my twenties and life was nothing but upward trajectory both personally and professionally?
It’s a real question. Now that I’m in my sixties, maybe I can’t evaluate our situation. Maybe there are young people in their twenties who are living kickass lives, as I did in the eighties. I hope so.
The topic of today’s post is thorny questions that provoke thoughtful analysis. And it’s implied that the recipient will somehow benefit from this exercise. But in reality, the responses are likely to be highly varied and unique to a particular person’s life history and experience. Once upon a time, effective answers to these types of questions evolved over time and eventually became known as local wisdom. And it was the duty of all townspeople to spread this wisdom throughout the community. No one had to invent an answer and hope for the best.
Somewhat counterintuitively, the story of Abraham and Isaac was not about God demanding the sacrifice. It was about Abraham believing in the resurrection of the dead in his time and place. Isaac was born from a woman who, at the time, was far too old to conceive. One miracle creates the basis for the belief in a second, in accordance to the promise. Note also that the incident was a dry run and partial illustration of the cross. You would think more Christians would be aware of, and defer to, Paul’s commentary on the topic whenever it comes up –… Read more »
Only on topic as far as “stupid questions” go but – but doesn’t this also happen with cars driven by OFEs and former Yankees managers? Self-Driving Tesla Suddenly Swerves Off the Road and Crashes
It will be a long hot Summer. Another Summer of Love. Bluesky may be quiet, but the crazies are not. The playbook is a repeat of 2020: riots, violence, culminating with an attempt to storm the White House and remove Trump and Vance “by any means necessary” the way they tried (but failed) last time. Trouble is that Trump’s team knows this and is ready, and has very significant backing most particularly the Military Industrial Complex which wants to on-shore manufacturing and a loyal and skilled manufacturing labor force. China’s failure in space which has no margin for Chinesium is… Read more »
Z: “The other thing to watch for this summer is if the crazies get brought out of storage to riot somewhere. If you scan Bluesky, they are depressed. The money dried up and then the jobs dried up. Now they are left to trade scare stories to one another in the weird echo chamber that is Bluesky.”
One does have to wonder how much of the insanity is congenital, versus how much of it is simply low rent psycho-sociological prostitution on the part of the sh!tlibs.
Non-partisan whores who sell their ostensibly partisan allegiances to the highest bidders?
A guy with a star of david pendant right behind her. What are the odds?
He’s got his people’s pursed lips thing too
/pol/ just served up the following image.
Opposite Nosferatu, is this Jonathan Greenblatt?
Thanks in advance.
I remember this broad making the rounds more than a decade ago. She also prominently wears a star of david and was making her living as a “magician” in Vegas, if memory serves correctly. No doubt she did the disappearing trick on many a hot dog.
He’s probably getting ready to offer her a porn contract.
Those are so fake. Natural breasts are terrible looking.
I’ll never get tired of saying it: all our problems are white mens responsibility; it’s us who keep allowing this crap. It’s the whole, just leave me alone with my tv dinner and steel belted radials and my tube. I’ll mind my business you mind yours. That’s how we get your daughters going on naked bike demonstrations and noggers openly telling us they are still seeking payback for slavery “
Oh well shits just gonna have tuh play out I guess!
So strange how I was just thinking about this. In detail. Now, of course women are the font of all evil and such, but… Who told us this? Who has a book filled with example after example of what utterly atrocious creatures they are? Surely such a book is objective. Who tells us that this must be some scheme cooked up solely by women, suddenly and for no reason at all? In fact, who graced us with Critical Theory? And Civil Rights? And Affirmative Action? And then snaked their way into colleges…and then pushed, pushed, pushed women into college, so… Read more »
Happily I have sufficient resentment to spread over both women and happy merchants. Each problem population needs to be dealt with in its own way.
Alzaebo: I guess our gals just decided one day with nobody PROMPTING them.
At the following link, there’s a fascinating new A.I. vidya, concerning the question of “PROMPTS”.
Note that you’ll need to click on the loudspeaker button, so as to force “X” to provide the audio for the vidya [otherwise you won’t hear anything]:
https://x.com/HashemGhaili/status/1925332319604257203
It’s a fascinating glance into the scarier aspects of “Prompting”.
I’m shocked that she’s not tatted nor pierced. She just needs a little direction. There’s your tradwife, fellas
They may not be real, but they are pretty spectacular.
Those are real, make no mistake.
I’d have to examine the merchandise closely, you know, just to make absolutely sure…
I had a friend who would often say, Are those real, doctor?
“They’re real big.”
The only alternative promising a swift fix involves violence against the state, and state-adjacent actors, and all that entails. A dicey proposition. Low odds of success. And regardless, the state apparatus is designed specifically to prevent leaders from coming up, and killing off those that do arise. Organization is a big challenge. Lots of normal ‘griller’ white guys hate this regime, but aren’t going to throw their lives away to save AINO.
Collapse is going to fix this. If whites still exist they’ll survive better than the others. Best we can hope for.
Probably right about being fake, but come on, even with a top on she’d be a looker.
Perky! Looks a little cold, though.
The cold tends to make ’em perkier.