Daily Shaarli

All links of one day in a single page.

August 19, 2024

Hall of Flame!

At one time or another most MF and LF operators have had an accident with their antenna systems where fire was involved. As a member of this club, I can say that its never fun when something burns up as it usually happens in a difficult to reach and repair location. Below are images from a few members of this hallowed club. Check back regularly as I expect the offerings to grow over time.

WHOOPS: 2024 Democrat Platform Contains Numerous Embarrassing Moments for Kamala Harris – RedState
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The 2024 Democratic Party platform has been released, and it's basically what you'd expect. Marked by a laundry list of far-left priorities, it mentions Donald Trump over one hundred times.

As RedState reported, it's also full of misleading nonsense, such as claiming that Democrats are "rebuilding" America's broadband network despite their $42 billion allocation not producing anything thus far. Naturally, the "very fine people" hoax got a mention too.

In their haste to proclaim how bad the orange man is, though, the writers of the document missed something. Guess who is mentioned as the nominee multiple times? //

you'd think someone could have read over the Democratic Party's own platform before pushing it out with Biden still in the lead position. Well, you'd think that until you remember these are the same people who have run the federal government into the ground. Competency isn't exactly their strong suit.

NEW: House Judiciary Report Shows Joe Biden Committed Multiple Impeachable Offenses – RedState
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The 291-page report lays out several impeachable offenses on the part of Joe Biden and the substantial evidence supporting each. First and foremost, the report addresses the multiple instances of influence peddling by Biden family members — with Joe Biden's knowledge and assent. Additionally, the report addresses Biden's mishandling of classified information (as detailed in Special Counsel Robert Hur's report). Finally, the report sets out Biden's obstruction of Congress and of the criminal investigation into his son, Hunter.

Below are the impeachment inquiry's key findings as set forth in the report:

With Nuclear Instead of Renewables, California & Germany Would Already Have 100% Clean Electricity
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Joe Swyers
2 hours ago edited
"the cost to Germans for being forced to rely on alternative energy sources is estimated to be $1 million per day."

Germans need to build over a hundred nuclear power plants to replace that 110,000,000,000 cubic meters per year of natural gas all four Nordstream pipelines could transport.
35,300 BTU per cubic meter
110,000,000,000 cubic meters per year
3,883,000,000,000,000 BTU per year
3,412 BTU per KWH
1,137,995,510,149 KWH
8,760 hours per year
129,908,163 KW
130 GW
1 GW average per nuclear power plant
130 Nuclear Power Plants needed by Germany.

France has 18 power plants with 56 operable reactors.
Germany will need ten times that number by the time they actually get them built and bring them online.
Better get cracking -- atoms, that is.

mopani Joe Swyers
3 minutes ago edited
If Germany had spent $580 billion on nuclear power instead of Energiewiend green energy they would have the cheapest, most reliable, lowest carbon footprint energy in the world.

With Nuclear Instead of Renewables, California and Germany Would Already Have 100 percent Clean Electricity
https://environmentalprogress.org/big-news/2018/9/11/california-and-germany-decarbonization-with-alternative-energy-investments //

California and Germany could have mostly or completely decarbonized their electricity sectors had their investments in renewables been diverted instead to new nuclear, a new Environmental Progress analysis finds.

In 2017, Germany generated 37 percent of its electricity from non-carbon sources.[1] In pursuing the Energiewende, Germany will have invested $580 billion in renewable energy and storage by 2025.

If Germany had invested in nuclear instead, it could have built 46 1.6 GW EPR reactors at the $12.5 billion per reactor cost of the U.K.’s Hinkley Point C. German companies assisted with the design of the EPR and the reactor was explicitly planned to meet the strictest European regulations.

In this scenario, EP assumes that a Germany pursuing nuclear power would maintain the same level of nuclear generation as it produced annually before implementing its nuclear phase-out in 2011, about 133 TWh per year.

With 46 EPRs operating at 90 percent capacity factor, Germany could first eliminate all coal, gas, and biomass electricity, then make up for today’s 150 terawatt-hours per year of wind and solar from its renewables investment, all while exporting 100 terawatt-hours of electricity to its neighbors (double 2017’s actual exports). Finally, with the remaining 133 terawatt-hours, Germany could decarbonize its entire light vehicle fleet including all 45 million of its passenger vehicles.[2]

Clever: Israel Uses Phone Call to Lure, Delete Hezbollah Leader – RedState
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Israel lured out an elusive Hezbollah commander with a mysterious phone call moments before launching the deadly airstrike that would kill him and cause the terror group to vow revenge, according to a new report.

Fuad Shukr, who had evaded even the US for four decades, was killed on July 30 when he received a phone call in the southern Beirut neighborhood of Dahiyeh, a Hezbollah official told the Wall Street Journal.

The evening call instructed the Hezbollah commander to go up to the seventh floor of his building, with an Israel missile slamming into the complex at around 7 p.m., killing him, his family and injuring 70 others, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. //

It would be interesting to know just what was said to Fuad Shukr in that phone call: "We'd like to talk to you about your car's extended warranty. Would you mind just stepping up to the seventh floor so we may send you a renewal package? Yes, just stand by that window on the southwest corner." Whatever the message was, Shukr listened, resulting in the worst and shortest day of his life. //

RedDog_FLA
4 hours ago
Can you hear me now? //

anon-ojix
3 hours ago
Don't they aspire to martyrdom?

UpChuck.Liberals anon-ojix
an hour ago
Yes, but it's weird, they complain when their life long desire is met.

DNC Premiering Their 'Molech Mobile' Shows How Much They Hate Life and Despise Black Voters – RedState
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But it seems the Democrats are tone-deaf and have doubled down on their message to Blacks. That message: DIE. Allowing Planned Parenthood to roll out a "mobile health center" that offers free vasectomies and abortions in a city where Black deaths are at their highest is beyond savage, it's downright cold-blooded. To date in Chicago, there have been 353 homicide deaths, a majority of them young, Black males. But this is the Democrat Party, folks. Using vibes and tokenism as window dressing that they care about Blacks while they advocate for policies and positions that turn the dial of death to 11. //

Planned Parenthood Great Rivers
@ppgreatrivers
🧵 All free vasectomy and medication abortions are filled for our mobile health clinic in Chicago. Check back soon — we will share the interest form link again if we have cancellations.
Last edited
7:36 AM · Aug 18, 2024

In Chicago, where Black residents make up about 29% of the population, Black women disproportionately account for over 40% of abortions in Cook County. This raises important questions about why Planned Parenthood and the DNC might specifically target this community offering free abortions.

Molech would be proud.

There is no better way to give Blacks the middle finger than to offer up more ways to extinguish themselves. It is clear: Democrats hate life. Anyone who has abortion 13 times in their party platform but not one mention of God has no regard for the creator of Life or his creation, especially the Black ones. Democrats have shown time and again through their policies, and now they are just blatantly throwing the message in the faces of Black voters. We got the illegal vote now. Shut up and DIE.

Music database - Piano Concerto In C Major - Radio Swiss Classic
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Piano Concerto In C Major

1. Allegro maestoso, quasi fantasia
2. Intermezzo (Adagio)
3. Presto

Eduard Franck

White House Provides Unfortunate Money Quote for Kamala Harris As She Distances Herself From Joe Biden – RedState
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Trump War Room

@TrumpWarRoom
·
Follow
White House Comms Director Ben LaBolt: "Vice President Harris has been the governing partner for every key decision that the president has made in his term in office."

In case you were still wondering if Kamala owns the broken economy, broken border, and broken world.

9:24 AM · Aug 19, 2024

Not to mention the deadly Afghanistan withdrawal debacle. Remember, she was allegedly the "last person in the room" on the withdrawal discussions though one senior military official suggested, "She never gave a sense for where she was on it."

The Uncivilized World Is Ready to Spill Out of Chicago – RedState
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During his conversation with Donald Trump on X, Elon Musk said something incredibly poignant, and it was probably the greatest line of the night.

"I think we're at a fork in the road of the destiny of civilization," he said.

A short line, but it really encompasses the stake. //

The Democrats believe they have the keys to Utopia and all they need to do is get to the door, but too many things block the path. The truth is, they don't have the keys. They suffer from the same hubris that every entity throughout time has had, dating all the way back to Lucifer, that they could "fix" creation. All they do in the attempt to literally play God is bring down chaos, destruction, and suffering. //

cecross
an hour ago
Keys to Utopia? No. They hold the keys to Sodom and Gomorrah. //

Cafeblue32
40 minutes ago
The democrat left replaced critical thinking, reason and logic with opinions and feelings that can be much more easily manipulated. They found power in grievance, and whoever is the most aggrieved gets the power. Remember not long ago trans dudes were clubbing people who "deadnamed" or "misgendered" them. Before that it was antifa and pisswed off BLM folks clubbing people on the street. Now it's kaffiyes clubbing yarmulkas.

When you have abandoned reason and logic, you have lost the ability to debate your ideas and persuade people to see your position. You have only emotion left to govern you. When everyone's emotions are on 11 and all screaming victimhood, it isn't long before they turn on one another and start eliminating one another. Violence is all that remains to express emotions after the voices go hoarse.

“You guys have no idea how painful it is to … be forced to watch it all unravel”
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“You guys have no idea how painful it is to … be forced to watch it all unravel”
Captured my feelings: “You guys have no idea how painful it is to have been young during the absolute peak era of the greatest empire in human history and now be forced to watch it all unravel. The saddest part is that we are doing it to ourselves.” (Peachy Keenan on X)

Posted by William A. Jacobson
Saturday, August 17, 2024 at 08:30pm
99 Comments
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https://twitter.com/stillgray/status/1289512762733785088
On June 25, 2024, I wrote about tweets I saw from Gad Saad, “The West has committed the greatest self-immolation in human history”:

“When the leaders hate their civilization more than their enemies do, the civilization is doomed. Never before has history witnessed such a gargantuan self-inflicted death of a civilization that was an existential light in an otherwise world of historical darkness.”

Remember: War is coming to every corner in the West. It might take 5 days, 5 years, or 50 years but it’s coming. The West has committed the greatest self-immolation in human history. Save this post.

I just saw another series of tweets from an account Peachy Keenan along the same lines, but to me more personal:

You guys have no idea how painful it is to have been young during the absolute peak era of the greatest empire in human history and now be forced to watch it all unravel.

The saddest part is that we are doing it to ourselves.

Absolutely agonizing experience. Like watching the most beautiful person you know slowly mutilate themselves.

The reason everyone on Earth wants to move here is because if you squint your eyes, this country still basically “looks” the same, is still powerful, etc.

But we are running on the fumes of the past.

Paradise is no longer paradise after the barbarians rape, burn, and pillage everything not nailed down. And I’m talking about the barbarians in DC, not the ones galloping over the border.

I feel that sadness frequently.

To have grown up in the late 60s and 70s in hindsight was the best fortune I ever had. I wrote about it when I attended my high school reunion a few years ago, My ’70s Show Revisited – 40th High School Reunion [warning, image of me in a leisure suit, NSFW]:

No high school experience is perfect, but Roslyn and Roslyn High School in the 1970s were great places to grow up….

The Vietnam war wound down just as I was entering high school, and the draft would be abolished just before I would have to enter. Selective service registration was not yet in place, so we were in that gap.

What I most remember was the freedom of movement. “Be home for dinner” was about all the parental monitoring we had. We hitchhiked, hung out at Jones Beach and the Roslyn Duck Pond, and once we got wheels, pretty much roamed around unencumbered.

We didn’t have personal computers (those were just a few years away) though some of my classmates were early tinkerers who went on to great success in computer science. We also didn’t have cell phones — those were more than a few years away, so we weren’t constantly monitored. Thankfully, we also didn’t have social media. Whatever normal cliquish and catty behavior took place wasn’t amplified as it is now.

That’s not to say we didn’t have the usual growing pains, including in high school. But all in all it was a great time and place.

I wish I had the answer to stop the unraveling.

Some replies to the Peachy Keenan tweet, a lot of them seem to be from Gen X-ers, not late stage Boomers like me:

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99 Comments Education, Gad Saad, Higher Education, Immigration
Comments

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6 0rhhardin | August 17, 2024 at 8:38 pm
I take it as more opportunities for irony, satire and the like. Unfortunately 1/3 of the population has no sense of humor and they vote.

Avoid sarcasm though. The humor form of adolescents. And women (“something is wrong and you have to figure out what it is because I can’t be bothered”).

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0 0rhhardin in reply to rhhardin. | August 17, 2024 at 8:41 pm
Need a book like “US Politics and the Rise of Cosmic Irony.”

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0 0Thane_Eichenauer in reply to rhhardin. | August 17, 2024 at 10:12 pm
Read The Wall Speaks by Jerr.
http://TheWallSpeaks.com

@jerr_rrej
·
Jan 12
Here is a list of things that men think are masculine but are feminine:

  1. Anger
  2. Machismo
  3. Lack of sexual restraint
  4. “Bravery” in showing emotion
  5. Sarcasm

https://x.com/jerr_rrej/status/1745881175443275975

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0 24rabid wombat | August 17, 2024 at 8:39 pm
Someone recently went through a life defining moment rose and said:

‘Fight, fight, fight’

Your choice, fight or roll over and die.

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0 14LukeHandCool | August 17, 2024 at 8:43 pm
I’m the same age as you, Bill, and I saw that tweet earlier today and it hit me the same way, too. It was a great time to grow up (except for 1970s fashion).

Our second grandchild was born on Tuesday, and I worry about the world our grandchildren will live in.

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0 6William A. Jacobson in reply to LukeHandCool. | August 17, 2024 at 8:54 pm
Congratulations! You are catching up to me.

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0 1LukeHandCool in reply to William A. Jacobson. | August 18, 2024 at 12:56 am
I don’t think we’ll ever catch up to you. You had a real baby boom going on in your family!

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0 8Paddy M in reply to LukeHandCool. | August 17, 2024 at 9:07 pm
Maybe conservatives should’ve worked to actually conserve something in the last 30 years.

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0 10ChrisPeters in reply to Paddy M. | August 18, 2024 at 12:22 am
Conservatives did. The problem was that they were under attack from both the Democrats AND the RINO’s.

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0 3rhhardin | August 17, 2024 at 8:53 pm
Western culture is actually being preserved by East Asians (Korea, Japan, China), if you follow classical music on YouTube. They abandon their traditional music and take up excellence in Western classical music owing to its intellectual content. Here four Koreans, e.g., that came up the other day, set to the cool second movement of Debussy’s quartet in g minor.

https://youtu.be/5VMQuHMq8QQ?t=382

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0 0JRaeL in reply to rhhardin. | August 18, 2024 at 12:15 am
Thanks for the link. There are some dang fine Japanese shred guitarists as well. If you also like Western music in a different direction.

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0 1JRaeL in reply to rhhardin. | August 18, 2024 at 12:20 am
Christian imagery and themes are also quiet prevalent in Anime. Which I suppose could be another example of Western culture being preserved by East Asians.

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0 0Dimsdale in reply to rhhardin. | August 18, 2024 at 12:05 pm
My child is in the local high school band, showing enough aptitude to advance to first trumpet after a year of playing.

Then we saw some videos of Japanese high school bands. Simply. Amazing.

And why? They practice, they study. The high school “band” members at her high school are simply trying to get out of gym. Honestly, there are about five members that are good, the rest are a joke. They could be good, but have no desire to do so.

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0 8JohnSmith100 | August 17, 2024 at 9:05 pm
For me growing up was 50s and 60s, I launched my first business in 69. I remember a time when gas was 25 cents a gallon, by 72 I was making and wasting $50 K a year, and lost all of it by 73. Yet I was able to bounce back in a few years.

Those opportunities do not exist today. It is far more difficult to rise above wage slavery.

I am thinking about Soro’s MO, and that he and others are profiting from undermining economies.

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0 3alaskabob in reply to JohnSmith100. | August 17, 2024 at 10:30 pm
50’s and 60’s for me also. Even though times turned tough in the mid=60’s for my Dad and me…. still great times to be alive. There was purpose to and for living. Simpson-Masoli was a major hit. Congress promised only one time… right.

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0 12SRF | August 17, 2024 at 9:06 pm
Yes, it’s unraveling. Our government and societal relationships look like a mash up of late Imperial Rome and a middle school student council. I am a bit older than most of the commenters here. Born in 51 in Ohio, when Detroit was the richest city in the country, and the Great Lakes region was not yet the Rust Belt. Draft lottery #31 in ’69 upon HS graduation, so I was going regardless. Was fortunate enough to get into the Military Academy and spent until 2000 in the Army, probably at the pinnacle of American economic and military and societal power, despite our internal problems. Watched and participated as the Army rebuilt itself after VN — found mission, people, equipment, doctrine, training necessary to establish the best Army in the world. Other services rebuilt and looked ahead as well. Military and other institutions could get things done. Despite the rot beginning in education, US education was the envy of the world and provided innovation, perspective, and the ability to set priorities and also say, “no.” Periodic outbursts across society were largely contained and addressed — sometimes not in the most effective or efficient way. Much less vitriol and parties weren’t completely captured by their respective radical fringes. We had the luxury of being the world’s super/hyper power, but we took it for granted and figured that there was nothing constant that we could not change. Big mistake in perspective on the world. Now and in the future we are going to pay for it. We better learn to recite “Ozymandias.”

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0 2Close The Fed in reply to SRF. | August 17, 2024 at 9:54 pm
The fringes are agitated enough to save us. The moderates are useless.

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0 3Paddy M in reply to Close The Fed. | August 17, 2024 at 10:09 pm
Moderates are definitely useless and have ushered in the current insanity.

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0 2Fuzzy Slippers in reply to Paddy M. | August 17, 2024 at 10:28 pm
I get your point, but if the moderates weren’t moderate, they’d land on one side or the other. Then what?

0 11Paddy M in reply to Fuzzy Slippers. | August 17, 2024 at 10:43 pm
Got me, Fuzzy. If moderates continually vote for communists, then they aren’t really moderate. Harris just proposed price controls and “””moderates””” are still up in the air.

2 4gonzotx in reply to Fuzzy Slippers. | August 18, 2024 at 4:43 am
If you consider yourself a “moderate “ in todays world,

Your just ignorant

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0 12JRaeL in reply to SRF. | August 18, 2024 at 12:31 am
I was telling my daughter today that it used to be that when you were graduated from high-school you were ready to start the adult part of your life. The choices being find full time work, join the military, or college, get married or a combination of those. Now it appears to me that many younger people are in a state of perpetual adolescence. The current state of the economy only makes it harder to leave that. Ask yourself what happens when there are no more grown ups. Political charlatans like Harris find pickings easy enough while there are still some adults to expose them. In a world of teen angst, petulance, and demand for instant gratification they get to become gods.

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0 3Dimsdale in reply to JRaeL. | August 18, 2024 at 12:11 pm
And even more sadly, the faculties of the universities are staffed by people that have no or very little practical experience in the real world. They have been, and remain, perpetual adolescents, asking the government (their parents) for handouts so they can continue their “research” and propagandizing the skulls full of mush that come before them in mandatory “core” classes.

I was stunned when I was in the belly of the beast, a local state college. And this was when “political correctness” was the worst problem we had.

On a more happy note, many of the students I engage are most definitely conservatives.

Maybe there is still hope.

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0 0AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to SRF. | August 18, 2024 at 8:11 am
🫡

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0 9Andy | August 17, 2024 at 9:09 pm
I do. I do exactly.

All fleeing the west coast know exactly what it is like.

Saying goodbye to family and friends who either inwardly or outwardly know say they would like to flee too….

The saddest part is seeing it destroyed by lickspittles who are confused on which bathroom to use. Morons whose weaponized stupidity has emptied the jails and turned vibrant cities into open air drug markets.

In high school- they would bus us to the Seattle Science Center and then Pike Place Market and let us run around unsupervised for 4 hours about twice a year 10th, 11th, 12th grade. I wouldn’t set foot w/in 60 miles of that space now.

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0 7AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to Andy. | August 18, 2024 at 8:14 am
“Morons whose weaponized stupidity has emptied the jails”

Those morons are just making space for those of us who will not comply.

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0 11jimincalif | August 17, 2024 at 9:12 pm
Born in ‘58 here and I feel the same way. I weep for my four children, but especially my four grandchildren. Even if by some miracle Trump wins and the deep state does not succeed in assassinating him, it’s just a bump in the road on our path of self destruction. I am looking at my copy of the Declaration of Independence hanging on my wall. Every day I see it and marvel at what the signers of that document did. I wonder what I should do to honor their legacy. I just don’t know. That was a unique inflection point in human history. Can it happen again? Can we make it happen again? If so, how?

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0 5Close The Fed in reply to jimincalif. | August 17, 2024 at 9:55 pm
Get involved. And start creating social groups with the like-minded. And I don’t mean online.

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0 5AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to jimincalif. | August 18, 2024 at 8:23 am
Please remember. Only about 3% of the population participated in the successful fight for our independence.

About 10% of the population fought during the civil war to maintain the republic and free slaves (among other things).

An equally small percentage of Russians participated in their October Revolution.

We have a choice. We can fight to maintain independence, or we can let others fight for our subjugation.

I prefer to fight to maintain what our forefathers bequeathed us.

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0 5Hodge | August 17, 2024 at 9:19 pm
Who is John Galt?

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0 4Paddy M in reply to Hodge. | August 17, 2024 at 9:42 pm
Good question. Conservative, Inc. would deem John Galt as untoward. We know that much.

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0 3henrybowman in reply to Hodge. | August 17, 2024 at 9:52 pm
The real question is: where?

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1 5CommoChief in reply to henrybowman. | August 18, 2024 at 5:59 am
The spirit of Galt; independence, self reliance and individual responsibility is probably within the many small hobby farms with their own well, stocked ponds, gardens, orchards and so on. Lots of folks trending in this direction all over the place. One thing is for sure, if your neighbors are voting in a monolithic d/prog gov’t every election cycle then you ain’t anywhere near the ‘Gulch’ and should probably begin figuring out an alternative.

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0 9RetLEODoc | August 17, 2024 at 9:47 pm
I also share your thoughts and emotions about the decline of our country and our culture. I remember and tell my children and grandchildren that my high school economics teacher told us that our generation was lucky to live at the peak of American power and influence as it was inevitable that after our generation the decline would come. He seemed overly pessimistic to the young students seeing the world of the late 60s but if anything, he may not have been pessimistic enough.

He likened it to family businesses where the first generation started and built the business, the second grew it and strengthened it, the third generation consolidated it and the next generations lived off the business and let it collapse and die.

Watching a culture and country that was built by the sweat and at times blood of our ancestors get reduced by the greed for power and wealth of the current ruling class is painful. I will soon be leaving the stage of this drama but I too fear for the future that my children and grandchildren will inherit.

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0 1Dimsdale in reply to RetLEODoc. | August 18, 2024 at 12:17 pm
From “the dismal science” to the “pragmatic science.”

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0 4healthguyfsu | August 17, 2024 at 9:47 pm
I’m not sure if Barbarians have the capacity to be corrupt and collude in such devastatingly treasonous methods.

I think Peachy is discrediting the nobility of Barbarians by comparing them to DC vermin.

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0 10PrincetonAl | August 17, 2024 at 10:12 pm
GenX growing up under Reagan yeah this does capture what we feel.

Pissing away the greatest country and gift in the world for stupidity.

We best Communism only to be losing to a mutated form of it that the dying Soviet Union infected us with.

It’s going to be a long road back and that’s if we are lucky and work hard.

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0 0Dimsdale in reply to PrincetonAl. | August 18, 2024 at 12:18 pm
“Marching Morons” here we come…

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0 12jb4 | August 17, 2024 at 10:27 pm
I am old as s**t and grew up in the 1950’s. IMO the period after Korea and before the JFK assassination and the Vietnam War was the best.
– No hot wars.
– A public school education in NY City was excellent. Young children walked to and from school by themselves.
– No crime to speak of. No big deal for a kid to walk alone to a neighborhood candy store.
– Most families could afford a home and a mother did not have to work.
– Moral values were strong, families routinely practiced their religion and ate dinner together.
– The TV was an exciting, miraculous invention, in a society not consumed by electronic and social media. People still read books.
– In the winter nothing beat walking to the neighborhood pond with your friends and going iceskating.
– The music of the era was fabulous.
Ah, nostalgia. However, on substance, I think no later period had all of these items. In particular, I think the 3 assassinations in the 1960’s – JFK, RFK, MLK – the Vietnam War and the terrible inflation of the 1970’s changed the country permanently. For example, I purchased my home in 1984, when mortgage rates were 13%. Gone were the days when a home could be bought on one income and most mothers did not have to work.

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0 6AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to jb4. | August 18, 2024 at 8:29 am
True.

But even today, young people bemoan the fact that rising prices and inflation place buying a house out of their reach.

Yet, they want to vote for the very people who caused inflation, who forced two income families, and who now want to have price controls.

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0 3Patriot Dan | August 17, 2024 at 10:30 pm
Professor,

I know we are in seemingly, unprecedented, times but I have great hope and expectation because of the Lord Jesus Christ in my life:
“If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable” (1 Corinthians 15:19, KJV).

It appears as though the next eleven months will have their difficulties, but I expect we and the nations will weather them for the better.

On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand

My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness
I dare not trust the sweetest frame
But wholly lean on Jesus’ name
On Christ the solid rock I stand
All other ground is sinking sand
All other ground is sinking sand

When darkness veils His lovely face
I’ll rest on His unchanging grace
In every high and stormy day
My anchor holds within the veil
On Christ the solid rock I stand
All other ground is sinking sand
All other ground is sinking sand
, , ,
Source: Musixmatch
Songwriters: Traditional / Terry Butler
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand lyrics © Mercy/vineyard Publishing

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0 2The Gentle Grizzly in reply to Patriot Dan. | August 18, 2024 at 8:40 am
Some will be in church, praying.

Others will be fighting the battles that need fighting.

We all will make our choices.

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0 5TrickyRicky in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 8:54 am
Sorry, not a binary choice. I expect many in the battles will be praying as well.

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0 1The Gentle Grizzly in reply to TrickyRicky. | August 18, 2024 at 11:17 am
True.

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0 0Dimsdale in reply to TrickyRicky. | August 18, 2024 at 12:19 pm
Many because we are in the foxholes right now…

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4 5rhhardin | August 17, 2024 at 10:34 pm
The cause is news as a profit center instead of a loss leader to contribute to the prestige of the network. As a profit center they found their 24/7 audience with Jessica in the Well, namely soap opera women. Instead of reading daily about Liz and Richard in the tabloid, they follow the news.

It’s an entertainment choice, and it’s calling itself news, which makes the audience feel even better.

Women prioritize feelings (hence soap opera’s attraction), and men prioritize structure (avoidance of perverse consequences). The Founding Fathers were structure guys, not feelings guys. The female end of the Supreme Court is feelings. (So guys are better at running big systems and women are better at small systems like neighborhoods and households. Stereotype is the too-strict father.)

Hence the collapse of everything through feminization. Amy Wax has a milder diagnosis – the rules of the nursery and kindergarten brought to the academy – but it goes deeper. Feelings attracts eyeballs of women and you can sell those eyeballs to advertisers. Democrats just supply soap opera in return for votes, in a sort of business arrangement with the media.

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0 5jb4 in reply to rhhardin. | August 18, 2024 at 10:20 am
Interesting perspective. I fault the MSM far more directly and have considered them the primary danger for years. By aligning themselves with the Democratic Party and its values, they have abandoned what I regard as a major value of journalism and the media, to bring accountability to Society. IMO if the light of day had been shined on Biden and Harris, Biden’s incipient dementia in 2020 would have kept him from running and Harris’ obvious incompetence would have disqualified her. What this Society lacks is accountability, from the shoplifter in CA, to the Trans in women’s locker rooms and sports, to the politicians at the top. What is not “right”, really isn’t right. Period. No excuses.

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0 0Dimsdale in reply to jb4. | August 18, 2024 at 12:20 pm
Conservative = independence; leftiam = dependence.

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0 0Dimsdale in reply to Dimsdale. | August 18, 2024 at 12:20 pm
Leftism.

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0 12Ghostrider | August 17, 2024 at 11:17 pm
How did America get here?

The other evening, a friend told me that he realized that nothing works in America these days. He is right.

This same guy has a severe medical issue but not an emergency. His specialist can’t see him until December.

When you call to get a prescription refilled, you have to listen to a message offering you the opportunity to go online or speak Spanish, then another telling you to call 911 if it is an emergency.

Our president is nowhere to be found, and the vice president is too dumb to sit for even a softball interview.

The FBI can only solve crimes committed by conservatives. The Secret Service is incompetent.

It recently took the post office two weeks to mail a card to a nephew who lives 4 hours away.

My bank did away with its drive-thru, and inside, there is one teller and long lines.

Doctors’ receptionists are often surly and unhelpful.

Every business has a phone tree, and if you finally reach someone, you can’t understand their heavily accented English.

And on and on and on.

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0 10steves59 in reply to Ghostrider. | August 17, 2024 at 11:35 pm
^^^^ I came here to say exactly this. I’ve taken to saying whenever I have the misfortune of conversing with a “Liberal” that “nothing is built, nothing is back, nothing is better.”
Everywhere we turn in society and business there is incompetence, and when the government is involved it is often malicious incompetence. Rule of law has been dumped in favor of rule by men (remember, we fought a revolution for rule of law). If you are a conservative, you are deplatformed, demonetized, depersoned, and eventually defenestrated.
And sadly this is all being done from within.
I’m waiting for that John Conner figure that will rise up and lead us in the fight against the DemocratLefty machine. I hope it’s soon, I don’t have a lot of time to wait.

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1 7AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to steves59. | August 18, 2024 at 8:34 am
“I’m waiting for that John Conner figure that will rise up and lead us in the fight against the DemocratLefty machine.”

He’s here, but most don’t recognize him. The left just tried to assassinate him.

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0 2steves59 in reply to AF_Chief_Master_Sgt. | August 18, 2024 at 9:18 am
I’d like to think you’re right, but unlike Conner, Trump still thinks he can defeat the Left from within the system. I no longer think that’s possible.

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0 14JRaeL in reply to Ghostrider. | August 18, 2024 at 12:07 am
Nothing brings out my longing for a rotary phone like hearing the words “Please listen carefully as our menu options may have changed.”

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0 1The Gentle Grizzly in reply to JRaeL. | August 18, 2024 at 8:36 am
And… I know of ONE instance where the menu options DID change. My primary care doctor office.

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0 4MDP in reply to Ghostrider. | August 18, 2024 at 12:46 am
We have something that is called a modern high efficiency washing machine that seems to not be able to get all of the load wet, let alone actually wash things clean with
Confidence. Someone in a office removed from the process thinks they know better than those who have been doing it for decades, whatever the “it” is.
The irony, thinking they were wise they became fools.

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0 0jb4 in reply to MDP. | August 18, 2024 at 10:26 am
Just wait ’til they bring that washing machine to prices of the items you buy.

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0 1Dimsdale in reply to MDP. | August 18, 2024 at 12:27 pm
The AI in the new machines will tell you the clothes aren’t dirty enough, and to wear them again.

I have a 30 year old washing machine, a basic Kenmore (remember them?). When my new LG had an electrical issue, I just swapped it in and it worked perfectly. Maybe I should sell the LG….

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0 2LibraryGryffon in reply to Ghostrider. | August 18, 2024 at 8:00 am
At least your nephew got the card. A customer at one of my jobs lost her son in 2022. He lived out of state. His ashes were being shipped to her and the post office lost them. Legally, they are the only people allowed to ship cremated remains.

I opted to pick up our cat’s remains at the vet hospital. If the USPS can lose a person, I don’t trust them with my pet either.

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0 1The Gentle Grizzly in reply to Ghostrider. | August 18, 2024 at 8:38 am
“When you call to get a prescription refilled, you have to listen to a message offering you the opportunity to go online or speak Spanish, then another telling you to call 911 if it is an emergency.”

When you go to the pharmacy to buy an “over the counter” decongestant you have to show a government ID and sign the mommy-may-I book before you can get the medicine. Even though the m3th cooks have gone on to other ingredients Uncle still thinks ephedrine ingredients need record keeping.

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0 1Dimsdale in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 12:28 pm
The same ID nobody can seem to scrounge up when it is time to vote?

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0 0rhhardin in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 3:07 pm
There are directions online somewhere for the chemical procedure to turn meth back into Sudafed.

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0 1rhhardin in reply to rhhardin. | August 18, 2024 at 3:15 pm
I used to buy 1000 phenylpropanolamine pills for $10.00 on a veterinary prescription (the drug store just handed over the whole unopened bottle). Used in treating urinary incontinence in female dogs along with DES. Both pills now banned apparently. I think the former went into Sudafed as an ingredient. Not only cold sufferers suffering.

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0 0Edward in reply to Ghostrider. | August 18, 2024 at 11:03 am
Amen. I find one area where government actually does something right (amazing, right?). When I need a script refilled from the VA I can go to the on-line My Health Vet website, select refill prescriptions, click on the med(s) box(es) and click “submit”. No phone tree, no speaking with a surly receptionist, just quick and easy refills mailed out.

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0 0henrybowman in reply to Edward. | August 18, 2024 at 7:37 pm
Now compare this with paying your Medicare premium.

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0 5JRaeL | August 18, 2024 at 12:05 am
Reading the comments I have to remind myself that the Fall happened in Paradise not outside of it.

No generation is spared the consequence of living in a fallen world. I doubt there has been a single time when some group of believers did not take the news of the day as proof the Apocalypse was at hand.

Are current events and societal changes accelerating the loss of paradise? Yep. Can it be slowed down? In patches, maybe. Overall, not a chance. Too many people yearn for that bone strewn path to Utopia. I know many will disagree but I believe we have left the battlefield and are now under siege. That means creating smaller worlds for yourself and your loved ones. It involves taking on a fortress mentality. While trying not to abandon charity, hope, and faith. That’s tricky.

I too grew up with more freedom. Some good, some bad. But at least I had the chance to learn the difference.

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0 3MDP in reply to JRaeL. | August 18, 2024 at 12:41 am
I find it interesting that Daniel is told that at the time of the end there will be vast amounts of information and that people will travel all over with abandon… those things are true of our time as never before.
If we seek to save our lives we will lose them, if we lose our lives for His sake we will find them. The original Israel was told to be careful when they grew rich not to forget the Lord their God… the culture largely has jettisoned Him wholesale and thinking we were wise we became fools.
I saw an ad today about how Harris has a history of being a tough prosecutor and will take on the border and the fentanyl problem….as if she hasn’t been part of the enabling of the same crisis, and they expect enough people will be so stupid as to believe it.

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0 4Herve Montague | August 18, 2024 at 2:13 am
Our colleges have been funded for decades by the same people who funded October7th.

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1 1Skip | August 18, 2024 at 6:03 am
Wish I remember where I saw this first and continue to thinking describes our situation the easiest way.

We are ithe looting the Empire stage

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0 1Rupert Smedley Hepplewhite | August 18, 2024 at 7:31 am
It ain’t over until WE say it’s over!

Found this in my mailbox this morning: https://elizabethnickson.substack.com/p/when-the-saxons-begin-to-fight?publication_id=30495&post_id=147720773&isFreemail=true&r=1tuj8g&triedRedirect=true

A little long but so inspiring.

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0 0Edward in reply to Rupert Smedley Hepplewhite. | August 18, 2024 at 12:27 pm
Thanks. I enjoyed seeing the Brits getting to the end of patience, though some of it was pretty dated with a reference to Tony Blair, who left 10 Downing in 2007. And it might well be a case of too little too late, as it will also be here if we don’t take back control of the political system. I can’t say I’m very optimistic of that happening any time soon.

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0 10CincyJan | August 18, 2024 at 7:55 am
I was born in 1949. It has taken the last awful decade of American politics to make me realize what a unique period of time post WWII was. Shared military service overseas united US males into a band of brothers that survived throughout civilian life. It took the misadventures in Vietnam to shake the inherent respect given military veterans. The underlying truth then was that American parents were not eager to have their sons die overseas. And so cracks appeared in the trust of government institutions. Today, after the disgrace of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, the clear politicization of the DOJ, and the bald faced lies told the American people by their own government, there is little broad respect left for American institutions. That shining city on the hill has slid off its foundations..

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4 1E Howard Hunt | August 18, 2024 at 8:17 am
Never heard of Peachy Keenan. Sometimes I’m lucky that way. For chick reading I stick with Ann Barnhardt, especially on Sundays.

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0 0Arthur Chester in reply to E Howard Hunt. | August 18, 2024 at 12:56 pm
She’s bright. She’s thoughtful. She writes well. She seems to be mid-40s. I have no financial or personal connection to her. Check out her substack. Doesn’t cost you nothin, may slow the onset of what we all inevitably face: age-related crotchetiness.

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1 8The Gentle Grizzly | August 18, 2024 at 8:30 am
I was born in 1949. From my viewpoint, my country died November 22, 1963. Kennedy was, in fact, a so-so president but the man shown by the press was athletic, had this wonderful family, sailed, biked, and did all sorts of family type things. I sincerely believed then, and still believe now, that he gave this nation the attitude that there was not as single solitary thing we could not accomplish when we out our minds to it. That was already proven during Ike’s time (the transistor, polio vaccine, and more).

That all died with him/. In place of this dynamic man we got Lyndon Johnson, just another cynical crook soaking the American people for every penny he could for the benefit of himself and his gang.

I have other opinions about our downfall that I would share with you all, but won’t. First of all, it won’t change anything. Second, I will likely offend every single one of you with my views.

I have no real solutions. I just know that – as a (lapsed) Jew – when the trucks arrive I plan on taking out as many police as I can before I am gunned down or thrown in one of those trucks. And yes, it will be the police doing this, not the military. Just like last time.

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2 4AF_Chief_Master_Sgt in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 8:39 am
With Kennedy, at least we have “Camelot.”

With Harris, we’ll have “Cumalot.”

Proof of the decline and the debauchery from the Democrat party.

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3 0E Howard Hunt in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 8:43 am
Relax, Grizz.

Adolph allowed for honorary aryans, so your religious negligence and conservative views should easily earn you this exemption.

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0 2CincyJan in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 9:58 am
As a fellow 1949er, I can remind you that we were in the 8th grade when Kennedy died. It certainly did not occur to me that America had died with JFK in Dallas. For one thing, my Dad was still there, as fiercely Republican as ever, as determined as ever to safeguard the Republic. I knew it was a significant event, even as the news spread at school, but I certainly did not yet understand the horror of a political assassination. I have been a true believer for most of my life, as I suspect many MAGA supporters were. That we, the true believers, have lost faith in our government, signifies a real disaster for the United States. The most reliable underpinings of our society are disintegrating before our eyes,

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0 4jb4 in reply to CincyJan. | August 18, 2024 at 10:45 am
I was a young adult when Kennedy was killed. No one forgets where they were when they heard. Riding the NY City subway that evening was like being at a funeral. My wife, who is younger, could not understand why her parents were crying. It changed everything and the political hack, LBJ, and the Vietnam War made things worse. Men who fought in WW II were losing their sons in a war that had no justification.

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0 0Br2336 in reply to jb4. | August 18, 2024 at 1:15 pm
The military rationale for American involvement , as I understand it, was:

(1) The threat of communism was real.

(2) JFK had basically allowed Cuba to stay communist, 90 miles from the US. A complete abrogation of 140 years of the Monroe doctrine .

(3) The defense establishment had grown up since WWII with the one basic tenet that communism cannot be permitted to spread.

(4) The defense establishment knew that JFK was a slacker, and a not-serious person. Who probably come to power via voter fraud primarily in Chicago and South Texas.

And so — while the military might well have been willing to walk away from South Vietnam — maybe — once Cuba was permitted to stay USSR-aligned, the feeling was Well , we gotta draw the line SOMEwhere. Also, at the time, it was unimaginable that we could lose militarily in Vietnam.

JFK was viewed as a really young, really kinda incompetent inexperienced rich fratboy— and imho he was killed , from the pov of those who killed him, for the good of the country, and for the good of the world.

That was the logic.
That was the justification.

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0 2The Gentle Grizzly in reply to CincyJan. | August 18, 2024 at 11:47 am
I was brought up in a staunchly Democrat home, but outgrew all that crap because of Vietnam, and other things that brought about an awakening that went all the way through my 20s. It took a while, but, here I am.

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0 3Victor Immature | August 18, 2024 at 10:26 am
I’ve been thinking and saying this for a while. For me, I’m closer to the end than to the beginning, on the back 9. But for someone who is 35-40 and lived through America at it’s best but still has a way to go, they must be pissed and/or depressed.
There’s only one way out of this.

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0 5CincyJan | August 18, 2024 at 11:23 am
In my first post above, I ignored the thrust of Prof. Jacobson’s article – the pain of seeing the America we loved destroyed. Yes, it is almost unbearably painful. Certainly, it was excruciating when the realization first hit. It’s gotten better, I suppose. Perhaps I’ve grown used to it. Acceptance of the unacceptable. Where do we go from here? I wish I could see a clear path forward. I fear for DJT, whether he will survive to win the election, and, if he does, whether any one man can save the Republic in four years. The rot is pretty deep. There don’t seem to be any patriots left in DC.

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0 4The Gentle Grizzly in reply to CincyJan. | August 18, 2024 at 12:17 pm
It is not up to one man to save the republic. But, having DJT in place will provide the catalyst many will need to get the snowball rolling on taking things back.

It can start with telling a cop no, you can’t see my ID for the “crime” of eating my lunch at a picnic table in a public park.

It can be the people who are already fighting their school districts over library books and “gender affirming”.

It can be people pressuring the colleges to get rid of their DIE departments. Same with employers.

It can be many things, but, if people expect one man to do it all, then all is lost.

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0 0CommoChief in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | August 18, 2024 at 6:24 pm
Correct. Each of has to be willing to our share. Those of us in the more sane States with sensible policies at local, County and State level have been doing so for a while now, which is why those Cray Cray policies have been held at bay. Those in other places have a higher hill yet to climb. What ain’t gonna work is waiting on someone else to save you. Expecting the voters in Red States to rescue folks from the State and local policies of the blue State politicians they keep electing is not gonna be fruitful. No one with any sense in a sane State wants to hand Congress the power to override existing State/local authority for fear the next time those blue State/blue enclave voters get a Congressional majority of their own.

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0 0Stuytown | August 18, 2024 at 11:26 am
Give me back the Berlin wall
Give me Stalin and St. Paul
I’ve seen the future, brother
It is murder

Things are going to slide, slide in all directions
Won’t be nothing
Nothing you can measure anymore
The blizzard, the blizzard of the world
Has crossed the threshold and it has overturned the order of the soul

Leonard Cohen, The Future

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0 0Edward in reply to Stuytown. | August 18, 2024 at 12:45 pm
I looked up Mr. Cohen’s work. It’s a song and I looked up the lyrics (reading lyrics is easier and more accurate for my artillery ears). I find a good word for the work is “Dystopian”. I didn’t seek lyrics on the rest of his work in that album.

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0 7xleatherneck | August 18, 2024 at 12:14 pm
Born in ‘57

All societies are entropic.
All societies, eventually, tend toward disorder. Some, quicker than others.

The one, defining principle, that keeps a society cohesive, is a single dominant culture. Without that, we are doomed.

We have been moving away from that concept, for a long time. So long as we are on this path, our better days will be behind us….

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0 3The Gentle Grizzly in reply to xleatherneck. | August 18, 2024 at 12:18 pm
Much of that started with “Press 1 for English”.

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0 4Edward | August 18, 2024 at 12:31 pm
I grew in the ’40s and ’50s. Carried a weapon of war in a war (really, not Bravo Sierra) mid ’60s. I have been instructing the grand and great-grandchildren, to a greater or lesser degree depending on age, about what life was like in the US in the golden era post war to the riots of the late ’60s-70s. Have been doing the same with a 50 year old neighbor at the lake. Different world today, more’s the pity.

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0 1destroycommunism | August 18, 2024 at 12:48 pm
many children are ungrateful

so they take the riches of the parents/grandparents

and go through it like they were “owed” it and it will never run out

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0 2destroycommunism | August 18, 2024 at 12:51 pm
there are sooooo many laws in place

that it will take “lawbreakers” of a certain character to say

we are not hiring dei we re not pro affirm action

we judge people on their merits

the road to communism is now smooth

the road back to freedom is bumpy ..to say the least

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0 1jb4 | August 18, 2024 at 1:40 pm
I want to personaly thank Prof. Jacobson for posting this piece. IMO it is an important issue to think about, talk about and act upon, to the extent able. Having lived a long life, I shared my thoughts about what I thought was the best period, post Korea to the killing of JFK, which most here have not experienced; and the biggest danger I see, the MSM. It is hard to have any optimism over the obvious trend, so perhaps I should be grateful for not having many years left, albeit sad for my grandchildren.

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1 0AlecRawls | August 18, 2024 at 2:46 pm
The fall to this point would all have been prevented If the Supreme Court had ever started enforcing the Article 4 section 4 guarantee of a Republican form of government.

It is not necessarily too late even now, but this sword Excalibur, the most powerfully written provision in the entire constitution, the only guarantee in the entire constitution, must immediately be pulled from the stone and used to save us.

It was justice Brennan who sank the sword into the stone. Considering the possibility of a guarantee clause argument in Baker v. Carr (1962), Brennan wrote for the majority that he did not know what Republicanism is, and doubted that anyone would ever be able to figure it out: that they would be able to locate “discoverable and manageable standards” for adjudicating it.

But there already was such a standard. That was Alexander Hamilton’s definition of republicanism, which he articulated during in the constitutional debates in New York: “that the people shall choose who shall govern them.”

He even included a manageable standard of adjudication: that “representation is imperfect to the extent that the current of popular favor is checked.”

Thus any law, or any government procedure or action, that either intentionally or unnecessarily checks the current popular favor should be ruled unconstitutional.

There are two most obvious ways that the current popular favor can be checked. First, elections can be stolen by vote fraud or some other kind of election fraud.

One obvious example is the Democrats’ use in 2020 of 2000 mules to stuff ballot drop boxes in five key counties with far more than enough illegal votes to flip five key swing states to Biden.

Another is Arizona in 2022, disabling most of its election day voting machines, when Democrat election officials knew that conservatives mostly vote on election day while Democrats mostly vote early my mail.

The second obvious way to check the current of popular favor is to weaponize the powers of government to suppress political opposition, for instance by using unequal application of the laws to attack and disable leading political opponents, as with the Democrats’ numerous lawfare attacks on President Trump.

The sword has actually already been pulled from the stone, our lawyers just haven’t realized it. Hamilton’s definition of Republicanism was embraced (found to be “discoverable”) by the Supreme Court 11 years later in the 1973 case Powell v. McCormack.

Powell was a ballot access case that did not invoke any Republican guarantee clause arguments, and somehow the link to the guarantee clause was never made. The same thing happened in 1995 where the Supreme Court embraced Hamilton’s definition of Republicanism in US Term Limits versus Thornton, another ballot access case.

As already noted, the manageable standard of adjudication is stated right in Hamilton’s definition. A system of government is unrepublican to the extent that it’s laws and procedures block the current popular favor. No system can be perfectly republican, but the obvious standard of adjudication would be that shortfalls in the attainment of Republican government cannot be either intentional or unnecessary.

Of course it is also illegal under the First Amendment to steal elections (as that undermines rates of association for purposes of effective political participation) but this concern is given very low priority. Just look at how the disabling of the majority of election day voting machines in Maricopa County allowed to stand.

All indications are that it was intentional, but even if it wasn’t, only counting the votes of one political side is grossly incompatible with the Article IV section 4 guarantee that elections systems will do their best to accurately assess the current of popular favor.

If the republican guarantee was being enforce by the Supreme Court, it would have to be given higher priority than every other provision in the constitution. If it ever gives way to any other constitutional provision, the guarantee fails to be a guarantee.

By the meaning of words, it is the Constitution’s sword Excalibur that no other constitutional provision can stand against.

This seird Excalibur is already free. It has already been discovered by the court, and the manageable standards for using it are obvious to anyone who looks at it. It should be invoked in every suit from here on out against the Democrats’ attacks on our electoral system.

Every Democrat attempt to enable vote fraud, from mass mail-in voting the ongoing voter-registration of tens of millions of illegal aliens, it’s all blatantly unconstitutional under the republican guarantee, and everyone needs to start using it.

Another way to check the current popular favor is by the censorship regimes that Democrats have been trying to implement. Gateway Pundit’s suit against systematic government-orchestrated censorship was recently declined by the Supreme Court for lack of standing, of all things, just as the Texas suit against the use of unconstitutional voting systems by Pennsylvania and other states during the 2020 election was rejected for lack of standing.

“Are we not part of the United States,” cried Texas Attorney General Paxton. Yes you are, but for that to matter you would have had to sue under the one provision of the constitution that empowers all parts of “the United States” to act against unrepublican government actions.

The republican guarantee names the “United States” as its guarantor. Of course that means first of all, all three branches of the federal government, but it must also include every state, and even every citizen. We are all part of “The United States,” and therefore all have standing to sue on behalf of The United States.

Ours is a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. We the People can never be excluded from it, as our now fully communist Democratic Party is currently trying finalize.

They succeeded in stealing one election from us, thanks to our Supreme Court’s long abominable lack of due diligence in upholding the Republican guarantee. They must not be allowed to steal another, or the loss of our republican form of government will almost certainly be total.

The founders gave us a sword Excalibur to defend our republican system of government. We must use it.

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2 0Milhouse in reply to AlecRawls. | August 18, 2024 at 4:50 pm
OMG, where to start?

First of all, no, it was not justice Brennan who “sank the sword into the stone”. That happened in 1849, in Luther v Borden. The Supreme Court ruled that the Republican Guarantee clause is not justiciable. It’s up to the president and Congress to enforce it and the courts can’t interfere.

Each house of Congress can enforce it by not seating members it believes not to have been properly elected, and if a house makes such a decision no court can order it to seat that member. (However if the house accepts that a member was properly elected and is qualified, but doesn’t want to seat him anyway, then the courts can and will order it to seat him. Powell v McCormick.)

The president can enforce it by sending troops into a state to overthrow a government he deems not republican. E.g. a stolen state election, or election rules he considers unfair. The only check on him is impeachment.

By the way, the Republican Guarantee clause only applies to the states, not to the United States. It would obviously be silly to charge the United States with guaranteeing that its own government would have a republican form. The constitution itself is that guarantee, and no better is possible.

Also, whatever else stolen elections may violate, they do not violate the first amendment.

Gotta go now. More later, probably.

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0 0AlecRawls in reply to Milhouse. | August 18, 2024 at 6:44 pm
Milhouse is wrong as always. Brennan got a lot right in Baker v. Carr. In particular, he wrote a very clear explication of why Luther v. Borden and other earlier cases were wrong.

That is, he pulled the sword from the stone. But then he sank it straight back in.

He explained how guarantee clause cases do not automatically raise the kind of “political question” conflicts with the other branches of government that had vitiated earlier cases. In particular, Baker v. Carr itself did not raise any such conflicts.

Earlier attempts to apply guarantee clause arguments to election law had all sought to overturn the results of a particular election on that basis, after the will of the people had already been polled and the results certified by the other co-equal branches of government.

That is where the “political question” conflicts were coming from in election law cases. But Baker was not trying to overturn any election result. It was an apportionment case where the plaintiff did not want voters in the adjacent congressional district (with a much smaller number of voters in it than his) to continue to have their votes count for much more than his did. He wanted his vote to receive equal weight in the NEXT election.

Brennan actually did a great job laying out that, if discoverable and manageable standards for adjudicating the republican guarantee could be found, then it could possibly be used to decide Baker’s case.

But equal apportionment was ruled out as a republican requirement, given that it is violated by the U.S. Senate.

At that, Brennan surmised that it was very unlikely that any discoverable and manageable standard of adjudication would ever be found, and the majority signed on to this.

It was absurd. There was no attempt at any kind of historical survey of the meaning of republicanism. No, “hey, does anybody know what the definition of republicanism is?” So they missed Hamilton’s definition. If they had seen it they would have realized immediately that it has broad application, requiring at the very least honest elections and no weaponization of the powers of government against political opponents.

Instead, since Brennan himself didn’t know what republicanism was, he just surmised that no one did and that no one ever would. Crazy.

Luther v. Borden was crazy too. As I said, a long history of Supreme Court failure to conduct basic due diligence regarding the most powerfully written provision in the entire Constitution.

As for the republican guarantee applying “only” to the states. Note that the Constitution gives it to the states to conduct all elections, federal and state. Thus any unrepublican election process, like mass mail-in voting, designed in a way that leaves wide open opportunity for mass vote fraud and election fraud, clearly undermines and hence violates the guarantee of honest elections (one of the requirements of republicanism).

Ditto for any weaponization of the powers of government against political opponents that occurs at the state level, as seen with the trumped-up prosecutions of Trump in NY and Georgia.

Finally, it is obvious that in order to fulfill the guarantee to the states that they shall not be subject to unrepublican government, the federal government can also not be allowed to engage in unrepublican actions.

Every state has the federal government over it. Thus if the federal government adopts an unrepublican form, such as by weaponizing the powers of the federal government against political opponents (as Biden-Harris are doing), then every state is subject to that unrepublican government, violating the guarantee.

Milhouse in reply to AlecRawls. | August 18, 2024 at 8:28 pm
Alex, that is a load of nonsense. The Rhode Island case wasn’t just trying to overturn an election. The rebels claimed (with justification) that RI did not have a republican form of government, so they held their own election and went to court demanding that their elected governor and legislature be recognized, as well as the congressmen they elected, and the senators their legislature elected. And the Supreme Court said that’s not justiciable. It’s up to Congress whether to recognize your congressmen and the president whether to install your governor in power. The judiciary has no role to play.

Also, the term “the United States” means the federal government. Nothing more and nothing less. It does not mean the individual states; only the entity that consists of their union. And it’s that entity that is to guarantee that the states have republican forms of government. It is not to guarantee that it itself has one, nor is it for them to guarantee that. The constitution itself is the only guarantor of that. The form of government that the USA has is the one the constitution mandates, and it makes no difference whether you call that “republican” or some other word. The constitution itself does not use that word for the government it establishes.

Tim Walz' China Connections Raise More Concern and Investigation – RedState
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"Friendly" is an understatement. From Walz' teaching days in Nebraska until now, the Minnesota governor has all the leanings of a Manchurian Candidate. In this 2016 interview with Agri-Pulse, Walz calmly admits that he traveled to China over 30 times. Listen to how he speaks about America forging a non-adversarial relationship with the People's Republic. This interview was given while he was a sitting member of Congress and part of the House Agriculture Committee. //

Walz first traveled to China on a year-long teaching fellowship in 1989, months after the Chinese Communist Party slaughtered thousands of pro-democracy activists and student protesters in Tiananmen Square.

Despite the country's turmoil, Walz—a 25-year-old National Guardsman at the time—wrote in a letter to one of his former college professors that he was "being treated like a king" in China.

In China, Walz said he received a salary that was double the pay of Chinese teachers, was given a decorated apartment with a color TV, and had the only air-conditioned residence on campus. He said he was also thrown parties on his birthday and Christmas. //

This makes Walz' Stolen Valor even worse. Walz was literally being paid by a foreign country while supposedly serving and being paid by the United States military. This is highly questionable, and if he failed to be debriefed, could portend something even worse.

Walz' choice of the date of his marriage to his wife Gwen is also cringe-inducing.

Walz and his wife Gwen held their wedding on the fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre—with Gwen Walz saying her husband "wanted to have a date he'll always remember." The Walzes spent their honeymoon in China. They also founded a travel company, Educational Travel Adventures Inc., which specialized in trips to China. //

Now, a former student who says he joined Walz on a 1995 trip to China is speaking to Alpha News about the experience. That student, Shad, asked that we not use his last name.

For several weeks, Walz and his group of students explored China together in the summer of 1995, Shad said. They saw Tiananmen Square, walked along the Great Wall of China, and traversed the country. However, the former student says he was struck by Walz’s adoration for China and its communist ideology.

NEW: The Nasty Move Pelosi Reportedly Made to Push Biden Out – RedState
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Pelosi sent an urgent message to the 81-year-old president last month while he was still nursing his COVID-19 infection at his Delaware beach house, insiders told the Daily Mail.

Pelosi reportedly threatened to publicly trash her longtime friend and political ally if he continued to ignore thunderous calls to drop out of the 2024 election over fears for his cognitive abilities, four sources close to the campaign told the outlet.

Pelosi threatened to go public with her belief that her fellow Democrat wouldn’t beat the Republican nominee, former President Donald Trump, in a rematch — and threatened to release humiliating polling data to back it up, the sources alleged. //

No, he didn't quit because it would be a distraction. He quit because he was afraid they were going to savage him — because he knew enough about Nancy Pelosi and how she works. He knew that she would crank up the nasty to do him in, and he didn't want to upset the perception he has of his legacy in his mind.

“You guys have no idea how painful it is to … be forced to watch it all unravel”
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On June 25, 2024, I wrote about tweets I saw from Gad Saad, “The West has committed the greatest self-immolation in human history”:

“When the leaders hate their civilization more than their enemies do, the civilization is doomed. Never before has history witnessed such a gargantuan self-inflicted death of a civilization that was an existential light in an otherwise world of historical darkness.”

Remember: War is coming to every corner in the West. It might take 5 days, 5 years, or 50 years but it’s coming. The West has committed the greatest self-immolation in human history. Save this post.

I just saw another series of tweets from an account Peachy Keenan along the same lines, but to me more personal:

You guys have no idea how painful it is to have been young during the absolute peak era of the greatest empire in human history and now be forced to watch it all unravel.

The saddest part is that we are doing it to ourselves.

Absolutely agonizing experience. Like watching the most beautiful person you know slowly mutilate themselves.

The reason everyone on Earth wants to move here is because if you squint your eyes, this country still basically “looks” the same, is still powerful, etc.

But we are running on the fumes of the past. //

Very Insignificant Person
@VeryInsig
·
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Replying to @KeenanPeachy
Conservatives love what we have. That why we want to conserve it. So we feel pain when we lose it.

Progressives hate what they have. That’s why they want to transform it. So they feel no sense of loss when what they have is destroyed.
6:12 PM · Aug 15, 2024 //

Mike D🇺🇸🍊
@raftoregon
·
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Replying to @KeenanPeachy
GenX too, I agree but we are not doing it to ourselves. This is an orchestrated takedown of America and capitalist countries around the world. The communists made the long March through the institutions here and now they’re destroying the country from within. Everyone must vote
7:08 PM · Aug 15, 2024 //

rhhardin | August 17, 2024 at 10:34 pm
The cause is news as a profit center instead of a loss leader to contribute to the prestige of the network. As a profit center they found their 24/7 audience with Jessica in the Well, namely soap opera women. Instead of reading daily about Liz and Richard in the tabloid, they follow the news.

It’s an entertainment choice, and it’s calling itself news, which makes the audience feel even better.

Women prioritize feelings (hence soap opera’s attraction), and men prioritize structure (avoidance of perverse consequences). The Founding Fathers were structure guys, not feelings guys. The female end of the Supreme Court is feelings. (So guys are better at running big systems and women are better at small systems like neighborhoods and households. Stereotype is the too-strict father.)

Hence the collapse of everything through feminization. Amy Wax has a milder diagnosis – the rules of the nursery and kindergarten brought to the academy – but it goes deeper. Feelings attracts eyeballs of women and you can sell those eyeballs to advertisers. Democrats just supply soap opera in return for votes, in a sort of business arrangement with the media. //

jb4 in reply to rhhardin. | August 18, 2024 at 10:20 am
Interesting perspective. I fault the MSM far more directly and have considered them the primary danger for years. By aligning themselves with the Democratic Party and its values, they have abandoned what I regard as a major value of journalism and the media, to bring accountability to Society. IMO if the light of day had been shined on Biden and Harris, Biden’s incipient dementia in 2020 would have kept him from running and Harris’ obvious incompetence would have disqualified her. What this Society lacks is accountability, from the shoplifter in CA, to the Trans in women’s locker rooms and sports, to the politicians at the top. What is not “right”, really isn’t right. Period. No excuses. //

JRaeL | August 18, 2024 at 12:05 am
Reading the comments I have to remind myself that the Fall happened in Paradise not outside of it.

No generation is spared the consequence of living in a fallen world. I doubt there has been a single time when some group of believers did not take the news of the day as proof the Apocalypse was at hand.

Are current events and societal changes accelerating the loss of paradise? Yep. Can it be slowed down? In patches, maybe. Overall, not a chance. Too many people yearn for that bone strewn path to Utopia. I know many will disagree but I believe we have left the battlefield and are now under siege. That means creating smaller worlds for yourself and your loved ones. It involves taking on a fortress mentality. While trying not to abandon charity, hope, and faith. That’s tricky.

I too grew up with more freedom. Some good, some bad. But at least I had the chance to learn the difference.

Joe Rogan Drops Eye-Opening Flashback Footage of Trump on 'The View' – RedState
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The Vigilant Fox 🦊

@VigilantFox
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WATCH: Joe Rogan Plays Shocking Old Footage of Donald Trump on The View

You won't believe how well they treated him.

JOE ROGAN: “Watch this...This is literally bonkers.”

BARBARA WALTERS: “Please welcome my friend, Donald Trump.”

ADAM RAY: “My friend?”

JOE ROGAN: “Watch this.… Show more

3:47 PM · Aug 14, 2024

Joe Rogan playing a flashback to Trump's appearance on "The View" when he was considering running for president back in 2011. //

Rogan talks about the "180" this was from "the machine's" effort to go after him now. They loved him until he got in the way of their power and control.

It's an astonishing change and, quite frankly, frightening evidence of the power of the machine and how it can flip the thoughts of people who fall for the propaganda. Just as they turned Trump into Hitler for people who never thought that before, they are now trying to turn Kamala Harris, who is part of a failed administration with no achievements, into some kind of inspirational candidate and ignore all the negatives. //

Atticus62
7 hours ago
Twenty years ago, Donald Trump ran through New Your City with the Olympic Torch and was praised by all. In 1986 Donald Trump, along with Rosa Parks and Muhammad Ali was given the "Ellis Island Award" in NYC for patriotism, tolerance and brotherhood. The leftist elite and legacy media all turned on Donald Trump when he came out as a Conservative and ran for President of the United States.

anon-vujo
7 hours ago
He was beloved by many people. Rappers would name-drop him in songs, politicians on both sides lined up to beg him for money. Then he decides to run for president as a Republican and they all turned him into Hitler overnight. He didn’t change, they all did.

anon-cdoc
6 hours ago
I am well old enough to remember Donald Trump saying this same stuff back in the early 80's. He warned the government! He's never changed. The democrat party changed - they're no longer the party of my mother or even of my youth.