TS
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Great Rant
Don’t agonize over the creature now president. The impetuosity, bigotry, and misogyny of the man who makes retard jokes is neither new, nor unique. He’s actually quite precedented.
This shit was normalized years ago. The only shocking thing about it is that people are somehow still shocked. Because the president-elect simply unifies under one big toxic tent all the worst component parts of his numerous vulgar hypocrite predecessors.
For a quick pick me up, just pause to consider our nation’s many discredited past generations of white christian landowners. Truman, Johnson, and Nixon always said nigger. JFK’s sexploits so enraged LBJ that he’d bang the table and shout he had more women by accident than Kennedy ever had on purpose. And Johnson shook his dick at people.--AC
Rant of the day is hilarious, in a good way.
TS
This shit was normalized years ago. The only shocking thing about it is that people are somehow still shocked. Because the president-elect simply unifies under one big toxic tent all the worst component parts of his numerous vulgar hypocrite predecessors.
For a quick pick me up, just pause to consider our nation’s many discredited past generations of white christian landowners. Truman, Johnson, and Nixon always said nigger. JFK’s sexploits so enraged LBJ that he’d bang the table and shout he had more women by accident than Kennedy ever had on purpose. And Johnson shook his dick at people.--AC
Rant of the day is hilarious, in a good way.
TS
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Big Game Tonight
In Eugene tonight: UCLA and Oregon jump it up at 6 p.m.
Will be interesting to see if Oregon can hang with the Bruins. I would expect not.
Hope I'm wrong. A good diversion for the evening, however.
Final: UCLA 89, Oregon 78.
UPDATE: Wrong again. Oregon wins a thriller 89-87. Look at that, I got one of the totals correct, just the wrong team. The other score had the right digits, but in the wrong order.
Hmmm...
TS
Monday, December 26, 2016
Sordid Tale
For those unfamiliar with, new to, or fuzzy about the details of what happened, here is the entire sad, sordid story of the rise and fall of Will Vinton Studios.
In 1977, I was introduced to Vinton at his Northwest Portland studio. There it was, the Oscar statue Vinton and Bob Gardiner won for Closed Mondays, the short Claymation film that started it all.
Vinton pulled the Oscar down and let me fondle it before placing it back on the shelf behind his desk.
The article is 3-years old but worth a read.
TS
Obama's World
Further, the law authorizes grants to non-governmental agencies to help "collect and store examples in print, online, and social media, disinformation, misinformation, and propaganda" directed at the U.S. and its allies, as well as "counter efforts by foreign entities to use disinformation, misinformation, and propaganda to influence the policies and social and political stability" of the U.S. and allied nations.--LM
The absurdities continue to mount.
But hell, it doesn't matter. George Michael is the important story, blah, blah, blah.
This brilliant John Pilger film is the sort of project the power-elite--Democrats and Republicans-- want to silence. It has the famous scene with John Bolton, who accuses Pilger of being a commie after the journalist destroys Bolton's arguments in a tough Q&A.
With Bolton likely to settle into the Trump administration in some capacity, Obama and the criminal Congress have paved the way toward a proactive assault on dissent and a free, anti-corporate press.
The repression is worsening folks, get ready for it.
Again, I suggest that something in the streets massively larger than BLM and Standing Rock will be the only recourse for ordinary citizens eventually.
TS
The absurdities continue to mount.
But hell, it doesn't matter. George Michael is the important story, blah, blah, blah.
This brilliant John Pilger film is the sort of project the power-elite--Democrats and Republicans-- want to silence. It has the famous scene with John Bolton, who accuses Pilger of being a commie after the journalist destroys Bolton's arguments in a tough Q&A.
With Bolton likely to settle into the Trump administration in some capacity, Obama and the criminal Congress have paved the way toward a proactive assault on dissent and a free, anti-corporate press.
The repression is worsening folks, get ready for it.
Again, I suggest that something in the streets massively larger than BLM and Standing Rock will be the only recourse for ordinary citizens eventually.
TS
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Performance Art
A number of writers and critics have noted the astounding smugness and outsized indignation of white liberals during this election season. The Clinton supporters, basically. And I think it is useful to examine the relationship between the media and the Clintons. For no political mafia has ever penetrated Hollywood and NY media to the extent the Clintons have. Shows such as Madame Secretary and House of Cards could well have been scripted by the Clinton inner circle. Hell, by Bill himself. And outlets like Huffington Post and MSNBC and CNN operate as the press outlets for the DNC.
But the real nadir of media capitulation and bad faith was the response to the brutal murder of the Russian diplomat Andrei Karlov in Istanbul, on video, at an art opening. The western press spun this as a freedom fighter attacking the brutal Russian empire and defending Allepo. Almost nothing was said about the family of the slain Russian, or about terrorism. I guess terrorism doesn’t exist if its directed at the enemy du jour. The celebrations on the streets of Aleppo seemed to have been erased by western TV and print editors, too. And all of this is in line, of course, with Hillary Clinton’s (and her advisors) pathological and obsessive hatred of Putin. And with the Clinton imprint on mainstream media.--JS
Top of the list.
TS
Who Knows?
To say that my work has been uneven over the years would be an understatement.
Blogging is a curse in that regard. One blogs, and one fucks up a certain percentage of the time. The main reason I don't subscribe to Twitter is that I know what I'm incapable of--that is always having the insight it takes to not come off as ridiculous at inopportune times.
Blogging came first, and it is as dark and full of trap doors as things need be for me, and in any case many of the things I say here could be tweets. Besides, I don't have dexterous enough fingers to cope with our instant news/celebrity culture.
I'll leave it to others, including our moronic president-elect, to attempt to explain themselves via the twitter world.
It's been the year that was, whatever it was, that is for sure. Here's what RBPB published in this the sixth year of its existence.
Charles Deemer's 3 Plays About Family.
My collection of opinions (the serious ones), Along Came the Death Squad: Political and Scattered Notes.
Two videos I claim among a cluster of attempts: Here and here.
Good enough? Good lord no, but tangible in an increasingly ridiculous world.
So good riddance to 2016. Like you, I can't wait to see what the despots and assholes, as well as the good people of the world, have to offer in '17.
For my part, I'll bring out a book or two and improvise and publish some more music. I plan on doing this until I die, and I've already arranged to pass the enterprise on to my family to do with what they please when I'm gone.
Worthwhile? Who knows?
A piece from my book.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, and good luck. (My sentiments exactly.)
To all of my visitors from around the world, no matter your faith or political persuasion, thank you for helping to make 2016 a good year.
You're growing in numbers and return visits. I look forward to your continued interest, however fragile or complete, in my detritus.
TS
Saturday, December 24, 2016
Friday, December 23, 2016
No Shit
No politician or security official wishing to retain their job can tell a frightened and enraged public that it is impossible to defend them. Those in charge become an easy target for critics who opportunistically exploit terrorism to blame government incompetence or demand communal punishment of asylum seekers, immigrants or Muslims. At such times, the media is at its self-righteous worst, whipping up hysteria and portraying horrifying but small-scale incidents as if they were existential threats. This has always been true, but 24/7 news coverage makes it worse as reporters run out of things to say and lose all sense of proportion. As the old American newspaper nostrum has it: “if it bleeds, it leads.”--PC
''...reporters run out of things to say..."
How true.
How's the "war on terror" working for you these days?
It's been very kind to the corporate-media world.
Some nuts and bolts on the domestic front.
TS
''...reporters run out of things to say..."
How true.
How's the "war on terror" working for you these days?
It's been very kind to the corporate-media world.
Some nuts and bolts on the domestic front.
TS
Path of the "Elite"
The U.S. government has quietly started to ask foreign travelers to hand over their social media accounts upon arriving in the country, a program that aims to spot potential terrorist threats but which civil liberties advocates have long opposed as a threat to privacy.--NP
A can of worms, the creepy kind that are crawling around in the belly of the Empire.
In Obama's defense, with a name like Nadia the writer has to be a Russian agent, which means this is anti-American propaganda of the highest order.
The policy doesn't differ much from the "Registry;" in fact it could be more dangerous, which is why Trump will back it all the way.
It's a "beautiful" thing...
Ha!
TS
A can of worms, the creepy kind that are crawling around in the belly of the Empire.
In Obama's defense, with a name like Nadia the writer has to be a Russian agent, which means this is anti-American propaganda of the highest order.
The policy doesn't differ much from the "Registry;" in fact it could be more dangerous, which is why Trump will back it all the way.
It's a "beautiful" thing...
Ha!
TS
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Sloth
Ain't into it lately.
Have a job to do as well and I'm procrastinating a wee bit.
Editing a book by a Massachusetts writer. Will have to push my self-imposed deadline back. Not a difficult editing chore at all, but my sloth/inattentiveness a problem.
Need a new year and a fresh start. If the writer can hang with me his book will be the first one I publish in 2017.
Glad I don't have a McJob these days. Would hate to disappoint the world with my lazy ways.
TS
Have a job to do as well and I'm procrastinating a wee bit.
Editing a book by a Massachusetts writer. Will have to push my self-imposed deadline back. Not a difficult editing chore at all, but my sloth/inattentiveness a problem.
Need a new year and a fresh start. If the writer can hang with me his book will be the first one I publish in 2017.
Glad I don't have a McJob these days. Would hate to disappoint the world with my lazy ways.
TS
Sunday, December 18, 2016
Show Time
Saw a good one in Malik Monk yesterday. Reminded me of this, though Pete was a better passer.
That said, the game has changed a lot, particularly the stress on defense.
Still, I don't know if today's players could have stopped Pistol, who averaged 44 a game over three seasons before the 3 pt. line was instituted.
TS
Friday, December 16, 2016
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
July 2016 Revisited
He growls, rants, shouts, digresses, careens from shtick nugget to shtick nugget, rhapsodizes over past landslides, name-drops Ivanka, Melania, Mike Tyson, Newt Gingrich, Bobby Knight, Bill O’Reilly. His right shoulder thrusts out as he makes the pinched-finger mudra with downswinging arm. His trademark double-eye squint evokes that group of beanie-hatted street-tough Munchkin kids; you expect him to kick gruffly at an imaginary stone. In person, his autocratic streak is presentationally complicated by a Ralph Kramdenesque vulnerability. He’s a man who has just dropped a can opener into his wife’s freshly baked pie. He’s not about to start grovelling about it, and yet he’s sorry—but, come on, it was an accident. He’s sorry, he’s sorry, O.K., but do you expect him to say it? He’s a good guy. Anyway, he didn’t do it.--GS
And so it goes, or went.
TS
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Rah Rah
One could contend that just a tad bit of disrespect was shown toward Helfrich and his program after a 4-8 season that included some blowouts but also close losses to Nebraska, Colorado, California and Oregon State.
Mullens needed 72 hours after the Civil War loss to think about Helfrich's future, while the coach and assistants recruited for the Ducks? Wrong.
The UO sports information department needed to post a Helfrich firing story replete with details of the coach's downfall? Wrong.
And, in my humble opinion, the most egregious disrespect happened at Taggart's news conference when Michael Schill, a law professor and university president, said he had one piece of advice for the new coach, based on his limited knowledge of football: "Go find a great defensive coordinator."
Brady Hoke, the outgoing defensive coordinator, didn't deserve such a public slap in the face. UO's defensive woes happened because of youth, suspect recruiting and development, and player transgressions, and not just from schemes and play calls. It was just the wrong thing for the school president to say. Lacked class.--JV
Good story by Ducks' beat writer Jason Vondersmith of the Portland Tribune. He nails it when he says the UO brass showed disrespect and a lack of class throughout the firing (Helfrich) and hiring (Taggart) process.
I would add they showed a level of confusion that shouldn't have been there.
With what Oregon has coming back, Taggart will be an immediate villain in the opinion of Oregon's savage fans if he doesn't go at least .500 next year. Even that might not be enough to stymie the grumbling of the most idiotic.
TS
Mullens needed 72 hours after the Civil War loss to think about Helfrich's future, while the coach and assistants recruited for the Ducks? Wrong.
The UO sports information department needed to post a Helfrich firing story replete with details of the coach's downfall? Wrong.
And, in my humble opinion, the most egregious disrespect happened at Taggart's news conference when Michael Schill, a law professor and university president, said he had one piece of advice for the new coach, based on his limited knowledge of football: "Go find a great defensive coordinator."
Brady Hoke, the outgoing defensive coordinator, didn't deserve such a public slap in the face. UO's defensive woes happened because of youth, suspect recruiting and development, and player transgressions, and not just from schemes and play calls. It was just the wrong thing for the school president to say. Lacked class.--JV
Good story by Ducks' beat writer Jason Vondersmith of the Portland Tribune. He nails it when he says the UO brass showed disrespect and a lack of class throughout the firing (Helfrich) and hiring (Taggart) process.
I would add they showed a level of confusion that shouldn't have been there.
With what Oregon has coming back, Taggart will be an immediate villain in the opinion of Oregon's savage fans if he doesn't go at least .500 next year. Even that might not be enough to stymie the grumbling of the most idiotic.
TS
Let it Snow (Probably Won't)
Forecast says snow tomorrow afternoon and evening.
One report said 6 to 8 inches possible.
Another said perhaps 2 inches max.
My feeling is if it's going to snow let it snow.
The biggest Oregon snowstorm in my memory occurred in 1969. I was a senior in high school. Had at least 4 ft., and I loved it. I looked forward to Maine's snow a few years later as I prepared to move to the east coast.
I wasn't disappointed. It's beautiful there in a deep snowfall. You're a nobody if you don't have a plow fixed to front of your rig.
My daughter lives near the Canadian border in Minnesota. They've got plenty of snow this year and a temp of -1 degrees.
Older now, not sure I could handle that for long stretches. Suited me fine as a young person.
TS
One report said 6 to 8 inches possible.
Another said perhaps 2 inches max.
My feeling is if it's going to snow let it snow.
The biggest Oregon snowstorm in my memory occurred in 1969. I was a senior in high school. Had at least 4 ft., and I loved it. I looked forward to Maine's snow a few years later as I prepared to move to the east coast.
I wasn't disappointed. It's beautiful there in a deep snowfall. You're a nobody if you don't have a plow fixed to front of your rig.
My daughter lives near the Canadian border in Minnesota. They've got plenty of snow this year and a temp of -1 degrees.
Older now, not sure I could handle that for long stretches. Suited me fine as a young person.
TS
Show, Don't Tell
So if we’re serious about being a self-governing republic, we have to demand that President Obama declassify as much intelligence as possible that Russia may have intervened in the 2016 presidential election.
Taking Donald Trump’s position — that we should just ignore the question of Russian hacking and “move on” — would be a disaster.
Relying on a hazy war of leaks from the CIA, FBI, various politicians, and their staff is an equally terrible idea.--JSc/JSw
Inasmuch as good sense has taken a backseat to scapegoating in recent weeks, this is probably a stretch at present.
People would rather wallow around in the muck of a partisan blame-game.
TS
Taking Donald Trump’s position — that we should just ignore the question of Russian hacking and “move on” — would be a disaster.
Relying on a hazy war of leaks from the CIA, FBI, various politicians, and their staff is an equally terrible idea.--JSc/JSw
Inasmuch as good sense has taken a backseat to scapegoating in recent weeks, this is probably a stretch at present.
People would rather wallow around in the muck of a partisan blame-game.
TS
Animal Farm
McCain, Graham and much of the GOP military industrial complex establishment, want to ensure no détente is achieved by Trump and Putin. The CIA, whose raison d’etre (and budgets) was/were linked to the existence of an all-powerful USSR, argued to the very end that Glasnosts and Perestroika were merely devious plots by the Soviets to lull the US into a state of complacency. Fortunately, Ronald Reagan ignored them and proceed to cautiously make peace with Mikhail Gorbachev. To state the obvious, an institutional bias against Russia remains to this day in the CIA. This does not mean we should reject any reports or conclusions the CIA tenders, but they definitely should be thoroughly interrogated for their veracity. Moreover, there are legions of intellectuals and policy consultants whose sense of self-worth and market value is linked to the idea of an expansionist Russia.--JS
Horse sense confronts the Bear, delusions in the time of mass hysteria.
Nader speaks.
TS
Monday, December 12, 2016
Them Bad Russians
Any new left party needs to abandon the fraudulent tactics of so-called “identity politics,” in which a basically pro-corporate Democratic Party has sought to appease and cajole support for its corporatist candidates and agenda by catering to individual issues of various groups leaning its way by default. Instead, the really big issues need to be tackled head on: expanding Social Security, making Medicare universal for everyone of all ages, restoring genuine progressive taxation on the wealthy, ending foreign wars, closing overseas bases and slashing the military, obeying international law (including treaties with sovereign Native American nations), making public college free to all, nationalizing support for primary and secondary education so that all communities have well-funded, quality public schools, declaring a national mobilization to quickly end reliance upon fossil fuels to combat climate change, and creating jobs for everyone through a massive public spending program on job training and infrastructure repair and modernization.--DL
Yes, sir. That is the ticket, and nothing else will do.
This is very good as well.
TS
Yes, sir. That is the ticket, and nothing else will do.
This is very good as well.
TS
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Incomplete Team
Oregon survived Alabama, a charger with Avery Johnson in front.
Oregon needs a power forward who can score. Big need, may be the downfall of this year's Ducks.
Solid, but missing Elgin Cook, the only player the Ducks had last year who answered Hield in the Elite Eight.
Oregon just missed on TJ Leaf, who chose the Bruins over the Ducks. Too bad, the missing piece...
TS
Oregon needs a power forward who can score. Big need, may be the downfall of this year's Ducks.
Solid, but missing Elgin Cook, the only player the Ducks had last year who answered Hield in the Elite Eight.
Oregon just missed on TJ Leaf, who chose the Bruins over the Ducks. Too bad, the missing piece...
TS
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Entertain Me
I almost signed on for basic cable with a pretty good offer from Comcast, but figured without ESPN it wouldn't make a lot of sense for me.
Maybe later, if I ever catch up after paying for my summer visit to family in Minnesota!
I understand some pretty decent series run on network TV these days, but would I watch them? Don't think I'm disciplined enough. Nor enough of a TV fan in general...I caught "American Crime" as a delayed ABC stream, loved it, but eventually lost track and interest.
I've had Netflix in the past, probably better for me. I've yet to see season two of "Narcos." Loved season one. I guess I'm a binge watcher. That is how I finally partook of "Breaking Bad." Probably wouldn't have had the patience to watch it as an original series, would have missed segments and had to look it up later on disc or Netflix anyway.
Home Shopping Network? Ha ha. Network "news" programs? Ha ha ha ha. Forty channels and nothing on TV...
Streaming at the pirate sports site I use probably good enough for my bowl season. I've been watching a little college basketball that way lately.
Works, if not pleasantly, with a little effort battling the ads and one particularly nasty outfit that pretends to be Microsoft, offering to help you clear the virus that is about to destory your computer, rob your bank account, and steal your credit card numbers. I called them last night when the scammers shut me down. Guy said, "Hello, Microsoft." I said, "Let me talk to your supervisor."
He hung up on me. Can you believe how rude the world is these days?
More laughter ensued.
TS
Friday, December 9, 2016
Happy Weekend!
I'm sorry.
I often over-post political stuff here at RBPD, but this one is so cogent and funny that I cannot resist.
I'll try to gather myself this weekend and tame my menacing opinions, which are so far out of tune that it is commie-cal.
BTW, I recently reviewed my entire bibliography. Know something? I'm a political animal, screw me!
Even my baseball book is full of political poison!
This book is a disgusting political nightmare!
Have a good one everybody!
TS
I often over-post political stuff here at RBPD, but this one is so cogent and funny that I cannot resist.
I'll try to gather myself this weekend and tame my menacing opinions, which are so far out of tune that it is commie-cal.
BTW, I recently reviewed my entire bibliography. Know something? I'm a political animal, screw me!
Even my baseball book is full of political poison!
This book is a disgusting political nightmare!
Have a good one everybody!
TS
Smoke
Back in the 1990s, Alexander Cockburn and I coined a term for how the mainstream press goes about disclosing acts of government villainy that the newspapers had previously connived with or worked to conceal, and often both. We called this technique the “uncover-up.”-- JSC
This is important, be sure to check out the links in the story, including this one.
No folks, it wasn't just the Midwest Deplorables who pushed Herr Trump into power.
The University of Oregon prof referenced in this story by St. Clair is the founder of this magazine and website.
Good reason to be smeared in the land of the free? Only if you are of a certain political persuasion.
TS
This is important, be sure to check out the links in the story, including this one.
No folks, it wasn't just the Midwest Deplorables who pushed Herr Trump into power.
The University of Oregon prof referenced in this story by St. Clair is the founder of this magazine and website.
Good reason to be smeared in the land of the free? Only if you are of a certain political persuasion.
TS
More of the Same
On Wednesday at a ceremony marking the 75th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, U.S. Pacific Command Commander Adm. Harry Harris told a crowd of thousands that, “You can bet that the men and women we honor today — and those who died that fateful morning 75 years ago — never took a knee and never failed to stand whenever they heard our national anthem being played.”--MJ
Rah rah Navy! Beat Army!
Another jokester military man who might fit nicely into Trump's administration.
Let's just keep building this thing into full-blown fascism and get it over with.
TS
Rah rah Navy! Beat Army!
Another jokester military man who might fit nicely into Trump's administration.
Let's just keep building this thing into full-blown fascism and get it over with.
TS
Thursday, December 8, 2016
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Limited Identity
It seems that many Democrats are determined not to change, not to learn any lessons from the 2016 election. Instead of trying to figure out what went wrong, they are clinging to denial and self-righteousness. During the election, “I’m With Her” was used to silence internal opposition. Gung-ho Democrats dismissed the idea that liberals could have legitimate qualms about full throated support for Hillary because of her war-mongering, close relationship with Wall Street, and only passing concern for the economic struggles of large segments of the population.--ER
This is a righteous essay.
Also it is indicative of why many leftists argue that the Democratic Party is irredeemable. So many of the party's apparatchiks are tied up in the DP status quo that they'd be committing economic suicide by changing directions.
Look at something as obvious as the way liberals fight poverty. Millions of jobs literally depend on the existence of poverty, just like millions of other jobs depend on perpetual war. Poverty in other words is institutionalized, right alongside banking, the university system and the military.
Mainstream politics is a fight between those who want to control or profit off the poor and those who would rather ignore them. Poverty assures a pool of soldiers will be there to control the poor who are not militarized--a perfect storm that has terrorized our perceived/manufactured enemies globally for years, and which has come home to roost.
In the name of fighting "terror" we are fighting us.
This is the definition of a quandary, divide and conquer is a capitalistic emoticon. Stress the con.
Unable to confront the harmful effects of our class structure in realistic or meaningful terms--Hillary and her minions' biggest failing--Democrats have nothing to offer but cultural swagger. Dems generally make better movies, write better books, give better lectures, even dance better than Repubs.
They don't mind outcasts, as long as outcasts abide by their rules. Diversity and multiculturalism are okay, unless they involve a conflict with "national interests," code for the potential obstruction of globalization.
Their wars are now humanitarian. Their exceptionalism is exceptionally real--to them. The drones hum along; few notice or care, unless profit is the quest.
What they cannot do with either conviction or clarity, even if they wanted to, is alter the class structure and the necessity of economic exploitation, the engine of capitalism. That would be anathema to their own interests.
So lately Dems talk the game of equality, but they can't play it--here or abroad. That makes them the hypocrites in the equation.
This is why I detest where we are. This is why I'm bored by it and maintain it must all come down.
TS
This is a righteous essay.
Also it is indicative of why many leftists argue that the Democratic Party is irredeemable. So many of the party's apparatchiks are tied up in the DP status quo that they'd be committing economic suicide by changing directions.
Look at something as obvious as the way liberals fight poverty. Millions of jobs literally depend on the existence of poverty, just like millions of other jobs depend on perpetual war. Poverty in other words is institutionalized, right alongside banking, the university system and the military.
Mainstream politics is a fight between those who want to control or profit off the poor and those who would rather ignore them. Poverty assures a pool of soldiers will be there to control the poor who are not militarized--a perfect storm that has terrorized our perceived/manufactured enemies globally for years, and which has come home to roost.
In the name of fighting "terror" we are fighting us.
This is the definition of a quandary, divide and conquer is a capitalistic emoticon. Stress the con.
Unable to confront the harmful effects of our class structure in realistic or meaningful terms--Hillary and her minions' biggest failing--Democrats have nothing to offer but cultural swagger. Dems generally make better movies, write better books, give better lectures, even dance better than Repubs.
They don't mind outcasts, as long as outcasts abide by their rules. Diversity and multiculturalism are okay, unless they involve a conflict with "national interests," code for the potential obstruction of globalization.
Their wars are now humanitarian. Their exceptionalism is exceptionally real--to them. The drones hum along; few notice or care, unless profit is the quest.
What they cannot do with either conviction or clarity, even if they wanted to, is alter the class structure and the necessity of economic exploitation, the engine of capitalism. That would be anathema to their own interests.
So lately Dems talk the game of equality, but they can't play it--here or abroad. That makes them the hypocrites in the equation.
This is why I detest where we are. This is why I'm bored by it and maintain it must all come down.
TS
Willie Taggart/Give it Time
Kudos to Oregon for hiring an African American coach with a record of turning programs around.
A first for the university in football.
Now we must watch and see if he is as good as his backers say he is, a group including Tony Dungy and the Harbaugh clan.
TS
A first for the university in football.
Now we must watch and see if he is as good as his backers say he is, a group including Tony Dungy and the Harbaugh clan.
TS
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Moyers Strikes Out
More liberal nonsense.
HRC herself never believed or advocated for half the policies on this wish list. That was to a large degree her problem!
Has she changed her mind about anything? Fuck no, she's still crying, incapable of anything except mourning her miserable campaign while remaining unwilling to admit her inability to tell the truth or confront reality.
What a fantasy world comfortable liberals live in!
The only way the U.S. will be able to deal with its present rise of neofascism is, I dread thinking, through the power of the bullet and hand-to-hand combat in the streets.
A martial crackdown and slaughter of historically immense proportions--a genocide--would surely follow given the absolute power the militarists, inclusive of Trump and the right and neoliberals like HRC and Congress (a fascist cabal), are prepared to use to protect American imperialism and the homegrown colonization of our citizens as reflected through the burgeoning police state.
That said, Moyers isn't about to retire or back off. Good on him. He's had plenty to offer in his mid and late-years--but this is just silly, even as a joke or satire.
He'll collapse at his computer before quitting-time.
So will I most likely, fighting off this kind of crap.
TS
Warmongers at Work
I’ve devoted my academic career to spotlighting propaganda, writing numerous books on the subject. So it’s more than a little disturbing when I see references to “propaganda” in the corporate press that completely obscure the broader role that manipulation plays in reinforcing domestic political-economic elites’ agendas and in padding the pocketbooks of corporate media conglomerates. Empirical media studies have documented since the 1970s the overwhelming government dominance of the news. Government control of the news is uncontroversially labeled propaganda in dictatorships like North Korea and the old Soviet Union, but when journalists working for private media corporations willingly roll over for government interests, allowing them to monopolize newspapers and the airwaves in favor of their own agendas, we call it “objectivity.” So it is in an effort to add some sanity to our modern discussion of propaganda that I draw CounterPunch readers’ attention to the longstanding existence of fake news propaganda in U.S. media.--AD
Anthony DiMaggio gets it right.
A little something more just for you.
Something funny, pointed and apropos.
TS
Anthony DiMaggio gets it right.
A little something more just for you.
Something funny, pointed and apropos.
TS
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Water
On Sunday, the first official day of the Veterans Stand for Standing Rock action, thousands of veterans continue to pour into the Oceti Sakowin camp.
The veterans have traveled from all over the United States to protect the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and its supporters from ongoing police violence as the water protectors maintain their peaceful stand against the Dakota Access Pipeline.
"I felt it was our duty to come and stand in front of the guns and the mace and the water and the threat that they pose to these people," Navy veteran Anthony Murtha, who traveled to North Dakota from Detroit, told Reuters.--NK/CD
Water protection is a start, but much more must follow.
TS
The veterans have traveled from all over the United States to protect the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and its supporters from ongoing police violence as the water protectors maintain their peaceful stand against the Dakota Access Pipeline.
"I felt it was our duty to come and stand in front of the guns and the mace and the water and the threat that they pose to these people," Navy veteran Anthony Murtha, who traveled to North Dakota from Detroit, told Reuters.--NK/CD
Water protection is a start, but much more must follow.
TS
Friday, December 2, 2016
Have a Great Weekend
I would advise that you smoke pot and listen to this with real intent over the weekend.
Don't thank me. Just listen.
TS
Time to Look Ahead
I would have rather bathed in vomit than voted for Hillary Clinton. I thought that before she astonished the world by losing to Donald Trump, and I have not changed my mind.
That Trump is likely to be an even more awful President than George W. Bush changes nothing. As of now, for sheer awfulness, the Bush presidency is the gold standard. It wasn’t just the class war he waged (on the wrong side) or his assaults on civil liberties; Bush broke the Middle East, with consequences that will continue to reverberate for years to come. The Donald could be worse.
Nevertheless, I do not regret not voting for Hillary and trying to persuade others to do the same – not one bit.--AL
Preach it, brother Levine.
TS
That Trump is likely to be an even more awful President than George W. Bush changes nothing. As of now, for sheer awfulness, the Bush presidency is the gold standard. It wasn’t just the class war he waged (on the wrong side) or his assaults on civil liberties; Bush broke the Middle East, with consequences that will continue to reverberate for years to come. The Donald could be worse.
Nevertheless, I do not regret not voting for Hillary and trying to persuade others to do the same – not one bit.--AL
Preach it, brother Levine.
TS
Thursday, December 1, 2016
The General and the Fool
The news that President-elect Donald Trump called in disgraced retired Gen. David Petraeus for a job interview as possible Secretary of State tests whether Trump’s experience in hosting “The Celebrity Apprentice” honed his skills for spotting an incompetent phony or not.-- RM
Take it from this one-time insider who knows his stuff.
McGovern is among the most authoritative analysts around. Minted by the U.S. Army and the CIA, he is a more-radical Andrew Bacevich, a reader of tea leaves regarding U.S. foreign policy.
Like CounterPunch's full stable of commies, he has likely earned the Russian propagandist tag in the eyes of the Washington Post and New York Times.
That is, he is critical of where we are.
TS
Take it from this one-time insider who knows his stuff.
McGovern is among the most authoritative analysts around. Minted by the U.S. Army and the CIA, he is a more-radical Andrew Bacevich, a reader of tea leaves regarding U.S. foreign policy.
Like CounterPunch's full stable of commies, he has likely earned the Russian propagandist tag in the eyes of the Washington Post and New York Times.
That is, he is critical of where we are.
TS
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Yep
What elevates this theoretical exercise above a parlor game is the deep grief felt by tens of millions of Democrats, especially women. They believe not just that Donald Trump is a disaster, but that the United States will miss out on a great, inspiring leader in Hillary Clinton. For these bereft citizens, Hillary’s departure from the national political scene ranks alongside those of Adlai Stevenson and Al Gore — losing candidates who were clearly superior to the winners, whose loss left America much worse off.
I agree with the Clintonites’ horror-struck reaction to Trump. But are they right about the rest? Have we really lost much with Hillary? Let’s look at what we know, or can assume with reasonable certainty, would have happened under the first few years of Madam President.--TR
This guy always makes sense to me.
The liberal mindset is a tough thing to crack. If HC had even remotely addressed the actual problems facing the U.S. she might have turned things in her favor.
It falls on her that her own obsessive personal self-aggrandizement and quest for power and riches overran good sense and a persuasive worldview.
No one was more indisposed to confront those realities than HC, however. Hell, even Trump talked about the issues with more authority, albeit from the wrong angle and with confused and sickening logic.
Bernie made more sense, but he was shouted down by the DNC.
I'm not sad for HC, she ran an awful campaign. I am sad for a country that can't take the words of MLK to heart.
TS
Monday, November 28, 2016
Christmas Story
If you're local or visiting over the holiday be sure to head over to Newberg (not far from Portland) and catch Charles Deemer's funny and poignant "Christmas at the Juniper Tavern," in a production by the Valley Repertory Theatre group.
Read here for the lowdown.
More background on the play and author.
TS
The Ducks are Blue
Unlike the majority of Oregon's loudest fans I still like Helfrich, despite his down season. I'd keep him around, mainly because I don't see another coach out there who would be a decent replacement.
The deal with coaches is most of them are meatheads. In the PAC-12 alone you have Jim Mora (huge ego, angry and under-performing), Sonny Dykes, who can't get it done at Cal, and the two Arizona schools' coaches, both vulgar meatheads who stomp around on the sidelines like apes; all have managed to have disastrous seasons just like Oregon's.
If Helfrich is fired, the program will fall even more than it has now. It'll take longer to come back, too.
Update: Oregon's AD, Rob Mullens, is bungling his job big time as of right now. Seems to be either a coward or immensely confused, likely a little of both.
Here's the thing. Some players signed on for next year because they like the staff that is there, despite the onfield struggles this season. Now several of the better recruits are looking elsewhere.
Oregon's unrealistic expectations remind me of national politics, wherein our crazed working men and women (or unemployed men and women) went ahead against all good sense and voted for Trump.
Mullens is kind of a Clinton-like figure, frozen like a deer in the headlights of an oncoming truck.
I've never liked Nike's influence on the team. For that matter I didn't like Chip Kelly as the head man at Oregon, but there's no arguing that he was innovative at the time and could motivate his players.
He won a lot, and should have won a NC in his second year.
Guys like Kelly (during his limited college run), Nick Saban and Urban Meyer of tOSU are pretty rare. The latter two were the right guys at two of the biggest football factories in the history of the game. They took those jobs because they knew they could win there more readily than elsewhere. Oregon isn't in that league, wasn't even with Kelly.
Everyone else in the discussion is marginal. Everybody has warts.
Here's something to think about. The Michigan State team that played in the BCS playoff last season fell to 4--8 this year.
People aren't clamoring for Mark Dantonio's head like Oregon's bandwagon fans are dogging Helfrich.
It's a sticky wicket, but this is one time when I think change is unnecessary, and likely stupid over the long haul.
Well, everyone has an opinion, and there you have mine.
I wish Mullens had one, but like someone else wrote today--he's probably waiting for Phil Knight to tell him what to do.
TS
The deal with coaches is most of them are meatheads. In the PAC-12 alone you have Jim Mora (huge ego, angry and under-performing), Sonny Dykes, who can't get it done at Cal, and the two Arizona schools' coaches, both vulgar meatheads who stomp around on the sidelines like apes; all have managed to have disastrous seasons just like Oregon's.
If Helfrich is fired, the program will fall even more than it has now. It'll take longer to come back, too.
Update: Oregon's AD, Rob Mullens, is bungling his job big time as of right now. Seems to be either a coward or immensely confused, likely a little of both.
Here's the thing. Some players signed on for next year because they like the staff that is there, despite the onfield struggles this season. Now several of the better recruits are looking elsewhere.
Oregon's unrealistic expectations remind me of national politics, wherein our crazed working men and women (or unemployed men and women) went ahead against all good sense and voted for Trump.
Mullens is kind of a Clinton-like figure, frozen like a deer in the headlights of an oncoming truck.
I've never liked Nike's influence on the team. For that matter I didn't like Chip Kelly as the head man at Oregon, but there's no arguing that he was innovative at the time and could motivate his players.
He won a lot, and should have won a NC in his second year.
Guys like Kelly (during his limited college run), Nick Saban and Urban Meyer of tOSU are pretty rare. The latter two were the right guys at two of the biggest football factories in the history of the game. They took those jobs because they knew they could win there more readily than elsewhere. Oregon isn't in that league, wasn't even with Kelly.
Everyone else in the discussion is marginal. Everybody has warts.
Here's something to think about. The Michigan State team that played in the BCS playoff last season fell to 4--8 this year.
People aren't clamoring for Mark Dantonio's head like Oregon's bandwagon fans are dogging Helfrich.
It's a sticky wicket, but this is one time when I think change is unnecessary, and likely stupid over the long haul.
Well, everyone has an opinion, and there you have mine.
I wish Mullens had one, but like someone else wrote today--he's probably waiting for Phil Knight to tell him what to do.
TS
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
Monday, November 21, 2016
Gone Days
Been a week already since I last posted?
Where in the hell did the days go?
Feeling pretty shabby lately. Low energy, headaches, colds one after another.
Oh well, it's winter (or nearly), what is to be expected?
Trying to write some new Finale pieces.
Ducks bball this afternoon from Hawaii, versus Georgetown. Nobody was more surprised than me that Oregon beat Utah Saturday.
Now the Civil War feels like a pick 'em.
TS
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
Project
IP troubles continue, all day yesterday and now. Searching for a clue.
At the senior center this morning, which is cool. But who doesn't appreciate the sanctity of thee pad when online?
Working on a project for my grandson's second grade geography lessons. Evidently there's a book for young readers called "Flat Stanley." The kid has a chalkboard fall on him in class one day. Unhurt, he is however flattened. His parents take the opportunity then to send him off in an envelope to visit relatives all over the country.
My grandson's flattened likeness arrived a couple of days ago. Been shooting pics of him with Portland sites in the background.
His class will present the results in a display until Christmas break, talk about where their classmates' families come from, what those places are like, etc.
Cool? I like.
Later.
TS
Sunday, November 13, 2016
Listen
Mainstream pundits, Clinton fans mostly talking failed strategy, lauding Clinton, in popularity context.
Most, with the notable exception of these people, have voiced nothing about Clinton's lack of vision for the country, inability to connect with the poor, deliberately bogus economy, lack of common sense.
Liberals are voicing a vacuous multiculturalism without backbone, an illusion without economic justice.
Don't protest Trump. He was elected, partially because liberals are idiotic. Protest the oligarchy. Protest the system, the MIC, Wall Street. Protest the DNC! Protest the indiscriminate wars the beloved Hillary supports, indeed helped start!
Jesus, liberals, you don't listen. You are clueless.
What are you marching for? Do you even know?
I'd be out there with the protesters if I could do it without recognizing how hypocritical and phony I'd have to be, because protest shouldn't be about Hillary's lost election, but rather about America's institutional corruptness. It should be inclusive of the electoral process and both candidates' corrupt essence.
I'd rather go have a beer in a dive bar with an unemployed, high-school-educated factory worker, who incidently hasn't written off Marx in favor of whine and cheese.
You'd be surprised what poor folk know.
TS
Most, with the notable exception of these people, have voiced nothing about Clinton's lack of vision for the country, inability to connect with the poor, deliberately bogus economy, lack of common sense.
Liberals are voicing a vacuous multiculturalism without backbone, an illusion without economic justice.
Don't protest Trump. He was elected, partially because liberals are idiotic. Protest the oligarchy. Protest the system, the MIC, Wall Street. Protest the DNC! Protest the indiscriminate wars the beloved Hillary supports, indeed helped start!
Jesus, liberals, you don't listen. You are clueless.
What are you marching for? Do you even know?
I'd be out there with the protesters if I could do it without recognizing how hypocritical and phony I'd have to be, because protest shouldn't be about Hillary's lost election, but rather about America's institutional corruptness. It should be inclusive of the electoral process and both candidates' corrupt essence.
I'd rather go have a beer in a dive bar with an unemployed, high-school-educated factory worker, who incidently hasn't written off Marx in favor of whine and cheese.
You'd be surprised what poor folk know.
TS
Saturday, November 12, 2016
From Bad to Worst
My IP is shit right now, oh well...
Jeez, I guess I was wrong about my Ducks winning today.
It's okay, I've been wrong about a lot of things lately. I'm not in favor of anyone losing a job, but I certainly have no say in anything.
This game might have saved coach, had his team performed. It didn't, a sorry reality in these days of hyper-economic college football.
Oregon has a good young QB, however. But so did WSU for years while the Cougs struggled until this season.
Up next, USC and Washington. I'm listening right now.
Later, OSU and UCLA. I'll listen to a bit of that too, before crashing.
TS
It's Hard, Man
What is the difference between academic and literary writing? If this sounds like a joke, the punch lines are many. Style. Voice. Jargon. Signposts (“The aim of this chapter is …”). In fact, jargon so litters academic writing that signposts are indispensable to reader comprehension.--AS
When I can't make good sentences or sort out my thoughts, which happens frequently, I just put the bullshit out there and hope for the best.
I spent far too many years trying to be a writer's writer, and I walked away disillusioned; when I returned I came back scribbling. It is all I can do, so I live with my poor qualities in the fashion of a man who lives with a shrew and can't escape, because against all good logic he loves misery.
TS
When I can't make good sentences or sort out my thoughts, which happens frequently, I just put the bullshit out there and hope for the best.
I spent far too many years trying to be a writer's writer, and I walked away disillusioned; when I returned I came back scribbling. It is all I can do, so I live with my poor qualities in the fashion of a man who lives with a shrew and can't escape, because against all good logic he loves misery.
TS
Friday, November 11, 2016
Tip Off
It is particularly nice that Oregon basketball begins tonight, versus Army, in light of the miserable football season the Ducks are now suffering.
But like I say, I sense an upset of Stanford tomorrow.
Oregon's ballers ought to handle Army tonight, but then face two toughies back-to-back in Baylor and Valparaiso next week.
How good is Oregon, a pre-season favorite based on last year's results and the return of some nice players? Ought to find out very quickly.
I thank the candy man in the sky for college sports, an escape valve. I can't handle much else these days.
TS
But like I say, I sense an upset of Stanford tomorrow.
Oregon's ballers ought to handle Army tonight, but then face two toughies back-to-back in Baylor and Valparaiso next week.
How good is Oregon, a pre-season favorite based on last year's results and the return of some nice players? Ought to find out very quickly.
I thank the candy man in the sky for college sports, an escape valve. I can't handle much else these days.
TS
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Say You Want a Revolution?
The upshot of all of this of course is it's an anti-Trump rally rather than an anti-establishment rally.
Hillary and Donald were two sides of the same coin, corporate generated, corrupt to the bone, and hell-bent on making ordinary peoples' lives hard as fuck--all behind a magical curtain of lies.
Two biggest lies of a dumb fuck presidential race:
Trump: "I didn't touch those women."
Clinton: "We can't afford single-payer."
You get what remains of empire, folks. A misogynist and a warmonger.
An out-and-out racist, and an enabler of racism.
A real pair to draw to.
TS
Welcome!
In short, since 1992, I have watched as you have transformed a current of social thought once rooted in that most basic an necessary human sentiment—empathy—into a badge of cultural and educational superiority. And because feeling good about yourself was much more important to you than actually helping the afflicted, you signed off, in greater or lesser measure to almost all of the life-sapping and dignity-robbing measures of the authoritarian right.--TH
I find it interesting, fascinating really, that liberals are (might be if they're not simply mourning Clinton) suddenly paying attention to what is going on. The unrest in the streets is a welcomed thing to see, if somewhat belated and naive.
(Not as many as were in the street to celebrate the Cubs; people have their priorities after all.)
People, many for the first time in their lives, are confronting the essence of struggle and the limitations of the oligarchical paradigm that they have been suckered into believing is democracy--have indeed willfully embraced it like robots.
This country slipped into neofascism long ago. The oppressed already knew this--the poor, the marginalized and the ignored, all the groups liberals proposed to uplift while crushing them like cockroaches. The police state, the surveillance state, the militarists--Clinton is a shining star--all of them have us by the crotch.
Not to defend groping, but people are being groped and not even realizing it!
Maybe they'll read a goddamned book now. Put down the trash. Pick up something meaningful. A history book. A book of philosophy. Something in the sciences.
It is not just Trump that is a threat, however. Clinton was not the answer, but rather a big part of the problem. She would have been a momentary functionary, a blip on the TV screen, a neofascist in disguise. Then she would have passed the torch to another jackass. And another. On and on, as it has been working for many years.
The entire apparatus must come down. Quit crying and fight the powers that created this lie.
My fellow citizens...
If you don't like the way things are, strike.
You may have to fight in the streets, even if you don't want to, even if you are afraid. Only you can determine to what degree you should become part of the resistance--what you're capable of doing.
Nobody is going to tell you how to do it or what to do.
You may die.
It happens.
Do you see it now, America? Your freedom is at stake.
America, welcome to reality--finally.
TS
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Crap
One of my guys when I lived in Eugene and worshiped the college basketball team.
His game was stellar. I sat in my apartment in San Francisco and listened one night when he and Cal's Phil Chenier dueled for three OTs in an incredible game in Berkeley.
I can't even remember who won. Doesn't matter, they took over the game.
They traded baskets in OT like superstars, which is what they were.
They later played on the same pro team in Baltimore, I think.
TS
His game was stellar. I sat in my apartment in San Francisco and listened one night when he and Cal's Phil Chenier dueled for three OTs in an incredible game in Berkeley.
I can't even remember who won. Doesn't matter, they took over the game.
They traded baskets in OT like superstars, which is what they were.
They later played on the same pro team in Baltimore, I think.
TS
Politically Incorrect
One of my favorite chicks is a complete babe in this piece.
Naomi Klein, you rock.
Additional reading and analysis.
Bottom line, everybody needs to hug.
TS
America's Games
The Oregon Ducks are as dazed this season as the Democratic National Committee.
The Ducks, like the DNC, have some 'splainin' to do. Arrogance and abysmal talent brought both down to size this season.
That said, this failed old prognosticator (I wrote repeatedly that Clinton would win in spite of herself) is going out on the limb one more time before he goes off to protest the Trump takeover.
I'm calling Oregon in an upset of Stanford in Eugene on Saturday. (Note: the only prediction re: the Ducks I've been wrong with this year is the Colorado game. I had no idea how good Colorado would be.)
(Conversely, I'm not counting on the DNC to confront reality any time soon.)
I started crying after that one, just like the Clintonites after the Midwest Deplorables (formerly the 47 Percenters) kicked their fannies yesterday.
Oregon and the US are both in a rebuilding mode now. One thing we do know. Oregon's fall from grace happened a lot faster than the DNC's.
The Dems have been working hard for 30 years to get to this place.
Oregon did it in a couple of years.
TS
The Ducks, like the DNC, have some 'splainin' to do. Arrogance and abysmal talent brought both down to size this season.
That said, this failed old prognosticator (I wrote repeatedly that Clinton would win in spite of herself) is going out on the limb one more time before he goes off to protest the Trump takeover.
I'm calling Oregon in an upset of Stanford in Eugene on Saturday. (Note: the only prediction re: the Ducks I've been wrong with this year is the Colorado game. I had no idea how good Colorado would be.)
(Conversely, I'm not counting on the DNC to confront reality any time soon.)
I started crying after that one, just like the Clintonites after the Midwest Deplorables (formerly the 47 Percenters) kicked their fannies yesterday.
Oregon and the US are both in a rebuilding mode now. One thing we do know. Oregon's fall from grace happened a lot faster than the DNC's.
The Dems have been working hard for 30 years to get to this place.
Oregon did it in a couple of years.
TS
Reality Problems/First Idiot
Wacko Jill Stein supporters own a piece of this. Congratulations, assholes. Lesser evil is still lesser evil.--Alison Hedges at CommonDreams.
Below, the first reasonable response (couldn't have said it better myself).
You do not have a clue as to what happened. Please give the States where the Greens pulled enough votes from Clinton to flip it to trump.
The margin of Trumps victories in the key states of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania was greater than the total amount of votes cast for Stein.
Indeed I could not find a single State where the Greens made a difference. In fact in everyone of those States, the Libertarians gained more votes than did the Greens and if it were not for the Libertarians more states would have been won by Trump.
I suggest you study the facts before posting such nonsense. The Democrats lost because the Candidate they offered up was corrupt and did not appeal to the left.
This is purely on the "assholes" at the DNC and the Clinton camp.--SuspiraDeProfundis
Of course to be fair, Alison is merely questioning the gall anyone could have conjured to vote for a candidate other than her gal. Darn, it's a mean old world.
TS
Below, the first reasonable response (couldn't have said it better myself).
You do not have a clue as to what happened. Please give the States where the Greens pulled enough votes from Clinton to flip it to trump.
The margin of Trumps victories in the key states of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania was greater than the total amount of votes cast for Stein.
Indeed I could not find a single State where the Greens made a difference. In fact in everyone of those States, the Libertarians gained more votes than did the Greens and if it were not for the Libertarians more states would have been won by Trump.
I suggest you study the facts before posting such nonsense. The Democrats lost because the Candidate they offered up was corrupt and did not appeal to the left.
This is purely on the "assholes" at the DNC and the Clinton camp.--SuspiraDeProfundis
Of course to be fair, Alison is merely questioning the gall anyone could have conjured to vote for a candidate other than her gal. Darn, it's a mean old world.
TS
Shocker!
Protest vote all the way.
The dream crushed.
My career as a prognosticator/pundit didn't have a chance.
I suggest Dems get their heads out of their asses going forward.
Bernie would have crushed him, had he only the balls.
TS
The dream crushed.
My career as a prognosticator/pundit didn't have a chance.
I suggest Dems get their heads out of their asses going forward.
Bernie would have crushed him, had he only the balls.
TS
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Boring Day
Yawn...
I voted for 97 here in Oregon, raising the corporate tax.
Voted Stein.
Noted that all the neocons are Clinton backers, as was obvious would happen, creating an odd-bedfellow coalition of the unwilling--right and center.
The entire election run-up was shock and awe, baby--all that is left are the smoldering ruins of my faith in this nation.
Is Clinton winning?
Can't wait for the expanded wars, whomever wins. Then the nuclear exchange with Russia.
Note to my blog visitors from Russia: Stay safe!
TS
I voted for 97 here in Oregon, raising the corporate tax.
Voted Stein.
Noted that all the neocons are Clinton backers, as was obvious would happen, creating an odd-bedfellow coalition of the unwilling--right and center.
The entire election run-up was shock and awe, baby--all that is left are the smoldering ruins of my faith in this nation.
Is Clinton winning?
Can't wait for the expanded wars, whomever wins. Then the nuclear exchange with Russia.
Note to my blog visitors from Russia: Stay safe!
TS
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