The all-out coordinated assault by the media sector against Biden remaining the nominee, in the wake of his abysmal debate performance, finally resolves the open question I had about why the 2024 polling and reporting was so different, compared to 2016 and '20.
Because everyone on Twitter and the rest of the media are take junkies, they cannot remember what happened five seconds ago, let alone five years ago. Not having my brain constantly plugged into the dIsCouRsE vortex, I retain my ability to see things clearly, including developments over time -- where there are clear trends or reversals, whereas the take junkies only experience a chaotic swirling flux of factoids.
In a thread from December of last year, I asked what no one else was asking -- why is the 2024 polling so uniformly pro-Trump and anti-Biden? In 2016 and '20, the propaganda said Trump was destined to lose with voters, when he won with voters both times (first time catching the DNC flat-footed and able to waltz into the White House, second time having it stolen by a very well prepared DNC). Suddenly there's an about-face -- the propaganda keeps saying how badly Trump is going to schlong Biden.
At first I speculated that the Democrats were going to let Trump have the White House rather than steal it again, since the past 3-4 years have gone so horribly for the Biden admin -- better to let Trump be the fall guy for the current stage of imperial disintegration.
But then in a comment from February of this year, I added that maybe they were only going to try to kick out Biden specifically, and then steal the election on behalf of Biden's replacement. The clue was that they kept harping on Biden's weakness, Biden's this, Biden's that -- and not the Democrats as a whole. Sounded like they just wanted to steal the election again, but on behalf of Anybody But Biden.
The same media sector that has been pumping out all of this polling propaganda has now called for Biden to step aside, in the interest of defeating Trump. So that settles it -- they plan to steal it again in November, only with someone else on the D ticket. They are still committed to taking the blame for the current stage of imperial disintegration, as long as they get to occupy the office -- nothing like jumping onto a sinking ship. But that's how overweening ambition corrupts people's minds.
They are no longer getting stinking rich off of occupying the White House, since our wealth levels continue to plummet (Central Bank money-printing shut off, interest rates jacked up, contracting rather than expanding the funny-money supply), our trade deficit soars off the charts, and our lucrative partnerships and patron-client relationships with wealthy foreigners go up in flames one month after the next. Not to mention that the purchasing power of the money they get from occupying the White House has eroded like crazy, with inflation off the charts, and global de-dollarization accelerating.
At this point, they are simply in it for the status and prestige of being on top of the pyramid, no matter how toothless its enforcement mechanisms are (couldn't get the country to wear masks or get vaxxed), and no matter how puny the material benefits are for parasitizing the White House. It's just about winning and coming out on top, rather than losing. Student government strivers on steroids.
Hyper-competitiveness is now driving the entire society right off of the cliff -- a process that has been going since the Reagan / yuppie revolution of the 1980s, and even incubating during the Me Decade of the Silent and Boomer generations during the '70s.
So my initial analysis of the post-2020 system is still correct -- we're at the Year of the Five Emperors stage of Roman disintegration, 193 AD. I first made this remark shortly after the Great Ballot Count Stoppage on election night of 2020, and followed up in a little more detail in this full post from July of '21.
The Roman Empire reached its stagnation stage under the Antonine dynasty in the mid-2nd century, much as the American Empire did under the Reagan era of 1980-2020. The chaos of the Year of the Five Emperors is spread out into maybe 4 or 5 years in our timeline, but is qualitatively the same transition to a new stage, of imperial collapse rather than mere stagnation.
There's no point in coping about the pace of collapse -- slowly, then rapidly. That's like saying when you throw a body out of an airplane, it only falls slowly at first, so there's still hope, it's not in free-fall or collapse yet. Yes it is -- it will accelerate as it plummets, and fall *really* fast later on, before crashing into the ground to its death. But it's already over the moment it's tossed out of the airplane without a parachute.
That is true for Roman decline, which began in 193, and hit the rapid free-fall sub-stage in the 230s, when one "barracks emperor" after another was assassinated and replaced from within the military.
I don't know what sector the American counterparts to the barracks emperors will be drawn from -- perhaps from the military again, one general after another replaced or assassinated. Maybe it will be finance or tech bros, who will shove each other aside in rapid succession and in a climate of leaderless chaos. The C-suite emperors. But something qualitatively like that will follow the initial stage of collapse that we have already entered as of 2020-'21.
Likewise in the American case, it doesn't matter that our collapse begins slowly and picks up speed over time -- it's a single indivisible stage, qualitatively different from the previous stage of stagnation (which itself was qualitatively different from the previous stage of expansion), and will be qualitatively different from the "recovery from rock bottom" stage that will follow it.
In the Roman case, that was the Tetrarchy under Diocletian in the late 3rd century. Who knows what individual will usher that in for America? But it will be qualitatively the same -- an impotent figure within the context of the former expanding / stagnant empire, but who has restored stability within the rump-state left after the hangover / free-fall collapse.
Diocletian not only had to rule with a junior partner, he had to concede the eastern half of the empire to the proto-Byzantines. That's a long, plunging fall from the powers and status of Marcus Aurelius of the mid-2nd century (stagnant stage) -- but a bump up from the abyss of the barracks emperors chaos of the mid-3rd century.
Just as there was no Roman renaissance with Diocletian, or any of his followers, for at least 1000 years later, there will be no American renaissance when we inevitably bounce back to a stable rump-state, after the current and coming collapse. Anyone peddling these hopes, on either side of the partisan aisle, and whether in government or outside it, and whether from an elite or wannabe position, is just another hyper-competitive opportunist trying to wring a few extra bucks out of the imperial treasury during its implosion, to pad their own personal crash-landing.
The only interesting open questions are events that don't necessarily happen during every imperial collapse -- like will one of our future leaders be slain on the battlefield during one of many hopeless and pointless attempts to shore up the contracting boundaries of its influence, a la Julian the Apostate trying to defeat the Persian empire in the Middle East and biting the big one near Baghdad.
Given how wicked and traitorous our elite class has become and promises to remain for the foreseeable future -- one can only hope so.
Read the rest of those extensive comment threads and posts for a broader survey of distractions to avoid, like any hope that we're in the French or Russian Revolution (those were pre-collapse), or Japanese sengoku (the Tokugawa shogun that followed it was *more* powerful, not less, than the shoguns that preceded sengoku), or any stage of Roman history before 193 -- like will there be an American Caesar, etc?
We already had a Caesar -- Abraham Lincoln, trailblazing leader and unifier and assassinated during the integrative civil war. Hoping for a second American Caesar in the 21st century or later, is just as hopeless as hoping for one in Rome during the Crisis of the Third Century and after.
The only worthwhile tasks now are preserving what our empire has already created, not hopelessly attempting another renaissance, and softening our landing / speeding the recovery into a minimized and relatively powerless rump-state, not hopelessly trying to cling to the plateau level that we reached in the 20th century.
Everything else is emotion-inflaming fan-fiction, and doomed overweening ambition.
June 30, 2024
Imperial disintegration update, as Year of the Five Emperors continues
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How many claimants are we up to by now? Well there was Trump, then Pence or other non-Trump cabinet members for a few weeks during / after January 6, when Trump was not the one meeting with other political leaders, and when he was held incommunicado.
ReplyDeleteThen Biden successfully usurped the White House. But now he's targeted in a Democrat civil war by who knows how many claimants. At least one, most likely several.
These challengers to Biden do not fall under the "usual primary challengers in an election year" -- because the Democrats shut down the primary from happening this year.
And far from the up-and-coming challengers representing the factions who were shut out of the primary, like those who voted "uncommitted" during the primary (mostly activists against Israel), they are being supported by at least the entire media sector, and perhaps other Democrat sectors like tech, finance, education, etc. -- that remains to be seen.
The entire media called for, and supported and rationalized, the prevention of a primary election this year. When they do an about-face and mount a challenge to Biden being on the ticket, they are doing so outside the usual bounds and norms -- announcing a candidacy, getting signatures to appear on the ballot, campaigning for crowds, door-knocking activism, media appearances, and ultimately receiving voters' votes in an election.
Because that whole usual process has been side-lined, any challengers are playing the role of usurper or claimant or pretender or coup leader, just like one of the Five Emperors in 193 AD, or the various coup leaders during the barracks emperors era.
All kinds of further norm-breaking actions could be taken during this summer, during the election day, during the transition, and on inauguration day itself. Not out of the question that the number could exceed 5 before a new (fleeting) dynasty is settled upon, before the constant coup period that will follow it.
Reminder that Democrats shut down the 2020 primary as well, which is the source of all this pent-up tension and civil war maneuvering within their own party. And the source of Biden's historical weakness -- not even being supported by his own party, either at the elite or common voter levels.
ReplyDeleteIn the first three primary elections that matter -- New Hampshire, Iowa, and Nevada -- Biden was schlonged into oblivion by the Anybody But Biden candidates. Buttgag, Klobachar, Warren, and el Bernarino, who devastated Biden in Nevada thanks to Hispanics tossing Biden overboard.
Biden tied his fate to black voters, and Hispanics are not black -- they're not even from the same part of the country, where they might get some of the overflow of goodies going to blacks. Blacks live back East, and Hispanics live out West. They are antagonistic toward each other, not happy members of a great big kumbayah Democrat family.
If the primary had continued, Steyer, Bloomberg, and the rest would have made Swiss cheese of Biden's campaign. The writing was already on the wall in the early primaries. Biden only won South Carolina, which is not a bellwether or swing state like NH, IA, and NV are, and will 100% vote GOP in the general.
So, rather than allow the Democrat voters to obliterate Biden, Obama made a phone-call and every one of the candidates dropped out in the week before Super Tuesday, endorsing Biden as they got shoved out the door.
Robbing voters of their choices on the ballot nullifies the electoral outcome, and only those specifically linked to Biden have stuck by him. He never unified the broad Democrat coalition, which is how Trump so easily won voters in 2020, including with Hispanics, specifically in Nevada (one of the targets of the Great Ballot Count Stoppage, indicating a Trump win).
And Democrat voters have bristled at Biden's occupation of the White House ever since -- they don't mind that Democrats stole the election from Trump, but they didn't want *that specific Democrat*, and his tiny little cadre, to be the beneficiaries of the steal. They wanted Bernie, Warren, Bloomberg, Buttgag, or whoever else, and their supporters, to be the winners after the steal.
They bristled at the shutting down of the primary this year before it even began (the DNC learned their lesson from from 2020, and didn't even let it get started this time). Historic levels of uncommitted votes, for an incumbent president, especially in crucial battleground states like Michigan.
And now that the media has targeted Biden for a palace coup, all the other Democrat groups are letting out their pent-up frustration and will mount challenges of their own, or form into coalitions, as long as they get to shove Biden out of office (presumably not before inauguration -- just removing him from the race, and stealing it for their preferred Democrat, or in their wildest dreams, actually winning with voters if he's popular and anti-woke enough).
Trump might actually win 2024 in that case because there will be 4 or 5 different Democrats fighting for the candidacy after Biden gets pushed aside and splitting up the Democrat vote, with different Democrats in different parts of America trying to steal the election for their favored candidate cancelling out each others efforts.
DeleteTo summarize, Biden has never held much legitimacy among Democrats themselves, this whole time. Ditto for independents, who wanted a primary election in 2020 or '24, and especially ditto for the Republicans who got their election shut down in the general stage.
ReplyDeleteNobody voted for the guy, he was merely hand-picked by a small number of party elites.
Doing all these end-runs around the traditional, usual, accepted norms nullifies the electoral outcome. Legitimacy is socially constructed, it does not automatically accrue to whoever the media claims won the election.
When the would-be subjects of the leader see the subversion of democratic norms during the leading-up phase of the changing (or not) of power, they conclude that the other side has reneged on their end of the bargain. Since the other side has backed out of the social contract, the voters will back out as well, and not recognize them as the legimate ruler -- therefore, the ruler has no authority, as he will find out when he tries to issue orders, which do not get followed.
"Enforcement" is mostly due to passive compliance, not actual enforcement against the will of the targets. And when so much of the population does not recognize the ruler as legitimate, there are simply not enough enforcers to coerce everyone into following the ruler's orders.
Citizens will not follow the orders of a ruler who illegitimately came to power, any more than they will accept counterfeit currency in exchange for goods or services.
If rulers don't want to find themselves in that predicament, they should acquire power legitimately and accept losing if they cannot. But in our climate of overweening ambition, they will try to win at all costs, even if it means they fail to convince the citizenry that they're legitimate, and as a result have to rule with minimal authority. Doesn't matter -- they put a W for themselves on the scoreboard!
This is similar to a woman sleeping her way into a position of power, like Kamala Harris did to become the Attorney General of California (sleeping with San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, who was a married senior citizen). That was her springboard for becoming Senator of California, and ultimately Vice President -- maybe not ultimately, if she's one of the claimants coming up. She could be one of the de facto or de jure presidents.
ReplyDeleteThe trouble with sleeping your way into your status is that you didn't earn it in the eyes of anyone else, so you have no supporters other than the guy you got on your back for. Even if he's the national ruler, that still leaves you with only one person supporting you -- a powerful one, but he can't protect you from palace intrigue that would remove you while leaving him in place.
Harris did at least win with voters for her Senate seat, but she is not a California-level politician anymore. She was so thoroughly rejected by her own party's voters that she dropped out of the 2020 primary in humiliating fashion, before the voting even began. She received zero (0) delegates at the convention that year. And then she rode Biden's coat-tails during the theft of the general election -- nobody voted for her either.
So she remains historically weak as well, even more so than Biden. If she tries to mount a challenge, she will get wrecked by pretty much anyone else.
When nobody votes for you, you can't call out an army of voters come election day.
Well, now the primary election has been prevented, so she'd have to rely on other coalition member big-wigs from team Democrat.
However, sleeping your way into status means you didn't create any links between your and your patrons or between you and your clients. There are no such relationships that allow you to call in favors when you're challening someone, and need an army to show up for you on the battlefield.
She didn't get into the Senate by doing a bunch of lawfare on behalf of the tech giants, so they have no reason to stick their neck out for her. She didn't use her Attorney General position to boost Hollywood's profits through the roof, so the entertainment sector owes her no allegiance. Ditto for the New York media sector. She doesn't come from New York, so the finance sector owes her nothing. She didn't come to power by being the figurehead for the widespread teachers unions, university endowment funds, or anything like that.
She simply slept her way into her career -- meaning there's only one person, who is no longer even relevant in politics, who would feel compelled to stick his neck out for her (to repay her for sticking another body part out for him).
This generalizes to anyone who doesn't organically come to power. They're a paper tiger. Newsome, Bloomberg, Bernie, anybody would cut her into pieces -- all sorts of people owe their livelihoods and futures to those individuals and their cadres.
"That is true for Roman decline, which began in 193, and hit the rapid free-fall sub-stage in the 230s, when one "barracks emperor" after another was assassinated and replaced from within the military.
ReplyDeleteI don't know what sector the American counterparts to the barracks emperors will be drawn from -- perhaps from the military again, one general after another replaced or assassinated."
Probably the military, since the rapid free fall portion in the Roman Empire began 40 years after 193 (the Year of the 5 empires). 40 years is around how long it takes for political realignment to occur between political eras. So the slow decline of America will happen under the finance sector between 2020s-2060s after realignment away from our military dominant neoliberal era, and then another realignment will happen around the 2060s and then the military takes over and begin their coups.
The Roman empire parallel also implies that Russia is probably going to end up very unstable and in rapid free-fall soon, with multiple military coups as well after the Russians realign away from the slow decline Yeltsin-Putin finance dominated era towards the military again and begin their rapid free fall portion of their decline.
USSR/Russia’s years of multiple Emperors was 1982-1985. Andropov, Chernenko, Gorbachev.
DeleteI was talking about the Russian equivalent of the fall of the Severan dynasty and the beginning of 50 years of civil war in the Roman empire. If we take 1985 to be Russia's 193 then 42 years after 1985 is 2027.
DeleteWhy didn't Britain have a Year of the Five Emperors when its empire collapsed?
ReplyDeleteWho says there was no Year of the Five Emperors in Britain? You'd have to know the history at a fine-grained level, since the de facto ruler is not always listed in "lists of British Prime Ministers".
ReplyDeleteJust like how Pence et al are not officially listed in lists of US Presidents, even though they were the de facto president / regency council from January 6 through Inauguration Day of 2021, serving as heads of state while Trump was held incommunicado.
But even looking through the list of de jure Prime Ministers of the UK -- from 1922 to '24, there were 5 of them (4 changes of power), across 4 distinct individuals. Lloyd George, Law, Baldwin, MacDonald, and Baldwin again.
That's right around the time of British imperial collapse, circa WWI.
Why didn't it lead to even worse chaos, a la the barracks emperors in Rome? Cuz Rome had no other empire come in and take it over, whereas all of Western Europe was scooped up into the American imperial orbit after WWI. First in the League of Nations, but especially after WWII, with NATO, the UN, GATT, etc.
Joining a still expanding empire pacified and defused the internecine chaos that would have been there otherwise.
The Romans had no one's orbit to join -- they were left to their own devices, just like America in the 21st century. No other empires are still expanding, just contracting ones like Russia and Saudi Arabia.
Maybe if Hezbollah had gotten started 100 years ago, and conquered the Mediterranean, we could now plug into their orbit, as the Brits, French, etc. joined NATO after collapsing.
But no, there's no one else out there today -- so like the Romans, we will go out in highly unstable internecine coup fashion.
Russia also had no other empires to join when it collapsed -- ours was already stagnant by the '80s and '90s and 2000s, plus we were sworn enemies during the recent Cold War. China collapsed nearly 100 years earlier, and had not bounced back from their disintegrative civil wars of the 20th C.
ReplyDeleteSo their crack-up was very nasty, during the '90s -- and again, that's why we can't just look at lists of rulers to see about de facto civil wars involving multiple competing camps. Yeltsin was President of Russia throughout the entire decade!
You'd have to look at how many oligarchs were making moves to accrue de facto political power. And in the '90s, there were 7 of them, with no single one of them in charge over the others. Some may have had alliances or coalitions, but the '90s were certainly a period of multiple Big Men vying for political power, within an atmosphere of chaos and flux, until it settled into the Putin era.
In the Roman analogy, Putin is like Septimius Severus, and they're enjoying a period of relative stability after all that internecine chaos.
By 2040, that stability could start to wear off -- if there are no other sources to dampen it.
But maybe by joining with China, Iran, Turkey, etc., they'll have influence and wealth and prestige coming in from foreign sources, which means the Russian elites won't have to fight over only the wealth produced within Russia itself.
It'll be half-way between the Roman and American collapse, where we have no one outside to stabilize us, and the Western Euro collapse, where they were instantly scooped up into the American sphere and prevented from infighting.
Russia would be joining a multipolar alliance of regional and global power players and wealth producers. They would not be as isolated as they were in the '90s, so I don't see the next period of tumult being worse than the '90s for them.
I seriously doubt the military will furnish the ambitious aspirants who jockey for power as America collapses. We've only had a few presidents who were generals, they're pretty rare.
ReplyDeleteCould they be a de facto leader, or the muscle behind one of the tech bro aspirants? Sure, but we're not a very military-centric society like Rome was -- if we were, many of our presidents, Congressmen, CEO's, etc. would be former military generals, colonels, and so on. There's very little precedent for it here.
The last US President who even served in the military was born in 1924 (Bush Sr.). Our leaders didn't even agree to join that institution in any capacity.
Republicans represent the military's interests, as of the 1980 Reagan realignment (before then, they were part of the Solid South Democrats). But GOP politicians are not military figures in their own right.
And in case it needs repeating in this climate of ubiquitous fan-fiction -- the GOP is completely dead as a political party. It will not be the one realigning and fielding one leader after another, no matter how quickly they cycle through them. That will be the Democrats, who have already begun that internecine process.
Maybe some flunkie from the CIA, since they're nerds instead of jocks, and hence aligned with the labor non-intensive Dems instead of the labor-intensive GOP. But such an intel flunkie would just be one of many competing wannabes from the Democrat Extended Universe.
In terms of who actually wages something like warfare in contempo America, especially on the Democrat side? -- that's the media. If you're an ambitious psycho who just wants to hurt other people for status and wealth, you join the media -- not the military -- in 21st-century America. It's catty & gay warfare, of the verbal and reputational kind, but that's as close as it gets to the battlefield in America these days.
I can imagine it -- "the groupchat presidents", instead of barracks emperors, drawn from the ranks of overweening ambition-fueled posters from social media, none of whose names will be remembered, and who will accomplish nothing other than one coup after the other.
If you saw that DSA national convention in 20-whenever, this backstabbing churning is almost guaranteed if they ever get into power.
AOC would be their inspiration, and perhaps literal first leader.
Good God, America is so FUCKED! xD
Back to Star Trek: TNG design, after watching a Troi-heavy episode, I noticed a very Midcentury Modern office of hers. And sure enough, it looks like it's all by the Artifort company, with Pierre Poulin as designer. From the good ol' 1960s.
ReplyDeleteThe item that caught my eye and helped me track down the company was the Little Tulip Chair, which even comes in mauve (as all of her office furniture is in TNG):
https://www.artifort.com/Collection/Chairs/Little-Tulip
A little variation on Saarinen's Tulip Chair.
The modular sofa, ottoman, table, etc. all look like they're from that same time & place.
So proud of them for ignoring Postmodernism, Deconstructivism, and all that other LARP-y bullshit. No glass-and-steel pyramids or boxes, no simplistic grids, no lame on-the-nose AlLuSiONs in a dorky attempt at humor, none of that.
They knew the Mid-20th C would remain the iconic aesthetic for the American Empire, even if it took the form of an Earth-centric federation of planets.
And speaking of wood, there's a massive wall-sized panel with a highly figured grain and medium orange-y stain in the observation lounge (opposite the windows, and with bronze-toned model starships hanging from it as decoration).
And the entrance to ten-forward has massive wooden doors with highly figured grain and ambery stain, and vertical ribbing (like Brutalist concrete).
The bar in ten-forward also has a pronounced wooden rim like the conference tables do, although not quite as thick. But still there.
Imagine a futuristic space trek where there's still wood everywhere! If it traces back to America, you're damn right it will! Only Bauhaus LARP-y nerds would deprive the future of wood and other primitive materials.
Useful link to the office: https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Counselor%27s_office
DeleteOff topic, but it would be very interesting to hear about your memories / impressions of the Greatest Gen, what their attitudes were like, how they lived, how they contrast with everyone else after, etc. I heard similar stories growing up.
ReplyDeleteEven if the media doesn't have a specific candidate they're promoting at the moment, their attempted coup still counts. This is not part of the formal process of primary elections, not just generic bad press that they give to someone they don't like -- they're overtly and unanimously demanding that Biden not appear on the Democrat ticket in the fall, when he's the presumed nominee at this point.
ReplyDeleteThe military strivers in the collapse of the Roman Empire didn't always have one specific guy they were promoting -- there's a cadre of rowdy striver soldiers, and they want the current emperor gone. They'll figure out who to install in his place later, if need be. And maybe some had the idea of a council rather than a single guy taking the place of the current emperor -- the point being, a sign of tumult and instability and high turnover.
The media did not do this in 2020 or 2016 to the Democrat. Last possible comparison was LBJ in '68, but the party forced him out before the primary began, and a primary election with voters across the nation with multiple choices (one of whom was LBJ's VP, Humphrey) was indeed actually held.
The 2024 battles are taking things back before the primary system began, back to the 19th century, with the elite factions warring against each other, and leaving voters out of the process altogether.
The media and now the finance sector (Bill Ackman on Twitter) are behaving as though Jill Biden were the de facto president currently, and as of late, so add her to the list of de facto state leaders in the post-2020 era, along with Pence or whoever else from the final weeks of the Trump admin, who won't show up in official lists of de jure presidents.
ReplyDeletePresumably Biden was halfway competent and in charge in the early part of his admin, but by now is no longer in control of his own narrow little fiefdom of the White House.
Worse, the Bidens are turning against their own campaign team -- when they are already so tiny and isolated within the Democrat Extended Universe. They have maybe a dozen real supporters, including the family members themselves, and now they're going to voluntarily cut off the only half-dozen reliable soldiers they have on their side.
They're toast.
Jill Biden is another example of not coming to power organically -- she has had no political role of her own during her entire life, but married a Senator. She was a high school teacher, then a community college teacher, of English. Not a tenured professor, not an Ivy League president, not a national leader of the teachers' unions, not a manager or administrator, etc.
So she has developed a network of approximately zero (0) patrons above her and clients below her. Who's she going to call in favors from? -- her former community college remedial English students? Better hope she gave them all easy A's! And that they all wound up in positions of global wealth and power, after going to community college.
But like most Silents and Boomers, she *is* possessed by overweening ambition, so the fact that she is in charge of such a minuscule and impotent "army" in the war for the Democrat nomination and control over the White House, will not stop her from trying. She'll lose, though, she has no one to back her up.
Even Biden himself has almost no one -- he was a flunkie who had to leave his home state of Pennsylvania, a large and wealthy and competitive state, to the neighboring nobody-state of Delaware. He failed all of his presidential campaigns over his long and lackluster career, and only rode on Obama's coat-tails.
But Obama's patrons and clients are not Biden's patrons and clients. Biden just had some access to them, as yet another member of the Obama patronage network. But he has no network of his own cultivated over the decades -- just a handful of lifelong advisers and courtiers. When push comes to shove in the Democrat civil war, he has almost no reliable generals, colonels, and foot soldiers to come to his side on the battlefield.
Hubris, overweening ambition, incorrigible delusion, and hyper-competitiveness driving the entire society off a cliff -- something that only collapsing empires get to experience.
"Presidents of Discord" is a more apropos and double-entendre name for the upcoming American version of the Roman "barracks emperors". Or for alliteration, "podcaster presidents". Something like that.
ReplyDeleteI neglected to mention lawyers (or law degree-havers) as the other, and more powerful, version of soldiers in a military who wage campaigns in a larger war, in the American Empire.
But there's a decent overlap with media wannabes -- tons of the over-produced aspirants in the media, which includes Twitter, are also over-produced law school students.
One great thing about the entertainment industry -- nearly 0% rate of law school students / JD-havers. Including Trump himself -- he came from entertainment, not real estate (where he went tits-up in the '90s, and de-camped to the entertainment industry for The Apprentice and licensing of branding rights). He has a fake business degree, but at least it's not a JD.
BTW, Eisenhower was also an Ivy League president (of Columbia), despite not having a graduate degree of any kind (he got a B.S. from West Point). Most big university presidents are PhD's, sometimes also having a JD. So he's not a pure example of a military general who became president -- you could just as easily call him an Ivy League president who became national / imperial president.
I actually see the schooling sector as being the main sector that the American "Presidents of Discord" will come from -- that will overlap with the tech sector (where there are lots of PhD's, and who contract with / get funding from universities), and the media sector (where there are lots of PhD's trying to influence the dIsCouRsE, who are arts / humanities rather than STEM), and the finance sector (where there are lots of PhD's, who are quants like in the tech sector).
But unlike hi-tech / online-tech, finance, and the media, the schools are still labor-intensive -- they employ shitloads of people from the top to the bottom, and there are shitloads of schools across the country, and they rake in shitloads of money (all government-funded, through student loans or Central Bank money-printers to swell their endowment funds). And they already have a high degree of self-organization, through the teachers' unions.
It's not about military might, it's about being the top employer in many cities and even small towns around the country. A lot of the so-called healthcare sector is actually an annex of a university, so throw the labor-intensive and heavily unionized healthcare sector army in with the education army.
If you doubt their ability to fuck up the entire society and inflict pain on everyone everywhere, just look at their draconian torture campaign during the COVID hysteria. They were the most insane and extreme, and they kept up their war for the longest duration, when other sectors had already surrendered. The dead-end mask-wearers are still found in higher concentrations near a college or school environment.
This is separate from their culture war bullshit -- I just mean how much money they control collectively, how much land they own, how much real estate they own on top of the land, how many elite actors they can call in favors from, the prestige and supposed access to the elite stratum they can dangle to recruit new army officers, how many people they employ at various all levels of hierarchy, and so on and so forth.
If schools are labor intensive then why do they lean Democrat instead of Republican in the Reaganite era, when the Republicans were the party of the labor intensive sectors?
DeleteWe've always heard about "campus radicals" in America -- why not "barracks radicals" or "cop radicals"? Cuz the military has less power internally than the schooling sector. For expanding the imperial borders, obviously that's all on the military.
ReplyDeleteI mean, through which sector are the greatest fraction of the ranks of future elites recruited, and to which sector does the greatest fraction of the elite class owe its allegiance?
*Not* the military, in America. In Rome, yes, in feudal Japan, yes. But we're not them. We're more like China, with its "armies" of scholar-bureaucrats who got into the elite class through standardized entrance exams.
The Roman Empire and the Shogunates of Japan were not so heavily plagued by court eunuchs, whereas China has been -- and the American Empire surely is. As shown by the de facto imperial flag being the rainbow one, we are a much gayer empire than Rome or the great power of feudal Japan. As much as it pains me to say it, we're more like the Chinese.
Thankfully we have not absorbed much of their distinctive culture, since we only resemble them through independent / convergent cultural evolution, not direct cross-fertilization and borrowing. For that form of cultural influence, we have relied instead on Glorious Noble Nippon -- thank God! Less scholar-bureaucrats and court eunuchs, more samurai and shoguns! ^_^
And to the extent that we *have* incorporated Chinese culture, it has been filtered through Japan and thereby been Japanified -- Buddhism and even Zen Buddhism, landscape art, martial arts, pagoda architecture, and so on.
And the forms of Japanese culture we are the most crazy for, have no Chinese origins at all -- video games, anime / manga, and consumer electronics.
Live-action monster movies from Japan also have no Chinese origins. They could never come up with something like Godzilla for adults, or the Power Rangers for children.
ReplyDeleteOr Japanese manufacturing always having been superior to "Made in China". Who else could invent, and produce, transforming humanoid / robot / vehicle / monster toys?!
America does have a very cool side to it -- but it also has that Chinese-style scholar-bureaucrat, court eunuch side to it as well.
Japan is more pure -- and therefore, more cool. ^_^
Their version of ostentatious clothing in public is cute young girls cosplaying in one of a million sub-styles, not disgusting tranwads bringing Buffalo Bill chic off of the screen and into real life.
China is too dead inside to create something like Japanese sub-cultures.
Is there something Buddhist about the ever-in-flux, impermanent nature of street fashions and sub-cultures of Japan? They're not an anti-ascetic form of indulgence or hedonism. Buddha stressed moderation anyway, not extreme asceticism.
ReplyDeleteJust going with the flow of change, not trying to halt it in this life, not trying to achieve timeless immortality. Annihilating the self, by blending into the holistic crowd and letting the crowd act as a whole. Styles being born and reborn and reborn again, perhaps with no consciousness of the wearers being passed along through each successive reincarnation.
It may look like a status-striving phenomenon, but maybe we're just projecting Western fashion victim behavior onto them. They don't do very individual-centric things like dying their hair weird colors or getting tattoos, especially individually unique tattoos. It's very much a costume that defines a collective, where individuals are not supposed to stand out too much.
Cycles of birth and rebirth are supposed to be viewed as painful in Buddhism, a lifelong source of suffering. But I don't think the Japanese sub-cultures feel the opposite of that -- that it can be a slog to keep up with ever-shifting trends. Fashion fans even in the West allude to fashion as a form of suffering.
I don't think the Japanese are celebrating or glorifying this kind of suffering, though. They're just going along with it, cuz that's the nature of life and the world. Perhaps as they mature, they will overcome these fashion cycles, become less attached to material things, and come closer to ending the cycle of stylistic birth and rebirth.
Very unlike in America, where aging women try to join the youth sub-cultures and street fashions, where cougars and MILFs and desperate housewives are a real phenomenon. Clinging to that cycle rather than letting go of it.
Not saying Japanese fashions and sub-cultures are a direct and faithful descendant of previous Zen Buddhist practices, just that they seem to have adapted themselves to the Buddhist foundation of Japanese culture, and thereby stand in contrast to what appear at first glance to be their counterparts in Western societies.
In fact, there's a high degree of wabi-sabi in Japanese street fashions and sub-cultures. Not entirely, but there's a distinct mark of wabi-sabi aesthetics in their sub-cultures.
ReplyDeleteThese stress fashions are imperfect, since they're not haute couture or aiming to be exquisitely tailored -- they're mass-produced, pop, and the cosplay costumes are going to have that homespun imperfection compared to the pristine example they're inspired by.
They're as impermanent as a cultural product can be, both the individual garments and the style as a whole, and they cycle from one to the next, perhaps being reborn, then cycling onward again. Not a static, stable equilibrium.
And they're incomplete -- being mass-produced or homespun, not haute couture or autistically reproducing the inspirational originals with 100% fidelity. It's missing a detail here or there -- big deal, it's just cosplay, it's not an autistic reproduction. 100% fidelity is a grasp at superhuman status, we mere mortals will just go with the flow and be content with a cosplay that is mostly but not completely finished.
They have the three main characteristics of existence according to Japanese Buddhism --
1. Impermanence. The styles themeslves cycle as a whole, and the individual garments do not last forever, may be abandoned or re-sold with no clinging attachment to the material items.
2. Suffering. Keeping up with the styles cycling, putting the garments on (and make-up, hair, wigs, nails, etc.) is a slog, even when they're in the proper position the garments may be somewhat uncomfortable (like corsets or high heels), and the task of going shopping for these things, or making them yourself, and making the trek to the public spaces where these groups come to life, involves a commitment of time, money, and energy that they might want to spend indulging themselves in private, but are doing in a somewhat painful public display instead.
3. Emptiness / absence of self-nature. These sub-cultures are not a means of individual expression or glorifaction of uniqueness, or attention-whoring for individual status (looks from strangers, likes on a selfie, etc.). They're a way to deny the self by blending into a crowd, like one drop of water in an entire wave, washing over and over again against the shores of cultural history.
Zen and the art of cosplay. ^_^
Again, a warning that their practices don't necessarily resemble ours, even our imitation of their practices. American girls cosplaying is more self-aggrandizing, for example, they're not part of a crowd of similarly dressed peers that they blend into within public spaces. They're more likely to be doing it for attention from convention attendees, likes on social media, subscriptions to their OnlyFans, etc.
The American version is more like the preppy girls doing their preppy fashion thing at the mall in the '80s, or the last dying echo of that, the mall goths hanging out in the mall together in the 2000s.
Adopting a distinctive uniform, like sub-cultures do, is a form of de-individuation and promoting group cohesion. You aren't making individual decisions about what to wear, how to style or color your hair, etc. -- you're molding yourself into whatever the uniform is.
ReplyDeleteAnd the uniform doesn't have to stay constant -- maybe it will go out of style, but the new style sets a new standard that the individuals mold themselves into, still denying their individuality.
Dressing up like a specific well-known figure is also de-individuating, even if you're the only one who is dressed up like that figure in the performative public space. You may be the only girl dressed up like Sailor Moon, and in that sense you stand out from the crowd (where no one else is dressed up like her). But you are not Sailor Moon, therefore you are denying your own individuality by dressing up like her instead of whatever your own unique look would have been.
Are these iconic pop culture figures like the Bodhisattvas from Chinese-derived Buddhism? Figures who are above the level of mere mortals, but not apex gods? Halfway toward ending the cycle of birth and rebirth, attaining a lower degree of immortality than a fully enlightened Nirvana-attainer. But still, more than we mere mortals have attained, or will ever attain.
And so dressing up like Sailor Moon is a form of humility -- you yourself are a mere mortal, doomed to following whatever cycles of fashion there are during your time and in your place. Sailor Moon doesn't keep cycling her style, she has broken free -- somewhat -- from fashion cycles. By dressing up like your, you're simply paying homage or tribute to one of your superiors, like offering tribute to a Bodhisattva -- giving them the respect they deserve for having part-way transcended the cycles of suffering and rebirth.
Not cosplaying as whatever the highest form of god there is -- that's too blasphemous and unrelatable. But a tribute target who is only part-way transcendant, who has only somewhat attained immortality, is more relatable and humble.
Dark Age Christians put up an icon of a saint to venerate, Dark Age Japanese put up images of pop culture icons to venerate.
Again, this is not equating Japanese sub-cultures with Japanese Buddhism itself, or with Christian practices -- but showing how their sub-cultures and fashion culture has adapted itself to that Japanese Buddhist foundation.
Western fashion fans do the same, BTW, and that doesn't mean it's tantamount to Christian veneration of saints -- but that a young girl's veneration of a timeless style icon, who has broken part-way free from the suffering of cycling rebirth, shows Western pop culture's adaptation to a Dark Age Christian foundation, while embodying the same themes of veneration, humility, suffering, denying the self, and so on.
^_^
I haven't yet written the full post on "numerous saints vs. One Almighty God" during weak-state vs. strong-state time periods, but here's the outline, since I already mentioned Buddhist Bodhisattvas being like Christian saints.
ReplyDeleteA panoply of gods, titans, and monster-battling heroes during the Bronze Age, shrinking and centralizing into only a dozen Olympian gods during the Classical era.
Second Temple Judaism emphasizing only One Almighty God, vs. Dark Age Christianity producing leagues upon leagues of saints. Then these saints being cast aside for the One Almighty God again during the post-1300 period in Eurasia, especially with the Protestant Reformation and Enlightenment Deism (the single first-mover, watchmaker, etc.).
The version of saints in Christianity, is Bodhisattvas in Dark Age Chinese Buddhism, and Walis in Dark Age Islam (vs. the casting aside of Walis by the Salafi / Wahhabi and Modern forms of Islam, which are like Protestant and Modern Christianity).
Why? Cuz when the central state is weak, power devolves to the smaller levels, and there are more small levels than there are super-high levels. Many regional lords vs. a single king. Many knights-errant and ronin vs. a single standing army chief.
And in folklore, many ghosts, demons, and other supernatural / paranormal species.
And in religion, many "half-way" supernatural beings with part-way divine powers -- saints, bodhisattvas, walis, and so on.
A single all-powerful, all-knowing, all-benevolent leader-god is simply not relatable to people in a world with a weak central state. They want local patron saints, to mimic their regional lord and his specific knights.
When the central state is strong, it's relatable for the god to be almighty, all-knowing, etc. And with the centralization of the polity, the hierarchy of divine being should be centralized -- wiping out layers and layers of intermediary figures like saints, and going straight to God himself.
Weak central states are plagued by nomads, internal and external -- that's precisely what makes the states weak, the ascendance of nomads. And that feeds into itself, weakening the state further.
People in such nomad-dominant societies are longing for a knight-errant to wander over and protect them, in their own little patch of territory -- they don't believe in all-powerful Alexandrian or Napoleonic armies that can police the nomads out of the entire Earth.
Deifying these knights-errant, they get a regional patron saint to protect them and slay the various low-level demons or evil creatures. They don't believe in a single all-powerful Devil -- that's a strong central state conception, the same as with God but only his enemy. In weak states, they face a motley crew and ever-changing roster of nomadic invaders or local brigands and gangs.
Numerous medium-level bad-things as the scourge, and numerous medium-level saviors to protect the people, in nomad-dominant societies. A single, or few, high-level malevolent and benevolent gods, in sedentary-dominant societies.
As for American mythology, that's why we have many superheroes and villains, none of whom is singularly all-powerful like the God and Devil of Eurasian cultures since 1300 AD. Our mythology is more like Bronze Age Greece / Mesopotamia / Egypt / Etc. Lots of medium-level monsters, lots of medium-level heroes.
ReplyDeleteWe're on a separate timeline from Eurasia, so we still have that Dark Age culture, stemming from the nomad-dominant nature of the society we waltzed into / developed ourselves, in the nomadic New World.
Japan is also divorced from Eurasia, and they still emphasize the "large number of medium-level actors" in their mythology, religion, folklore, and pop culture.
Those Jizo statues I mentioned before, that are still all over Japan and were imitated by the Tanuki / Statue Mario from Super Mario Bros 3, are of a Bodhisattva (Buddhist saint) -- not the Buddha himself.
There are also numerous statues and other representations of the Bodhisattva Kannon in Japanese culture, aside from the Buddha himself.
The Japanese monster movies, Dragon Quest and other JRPGs, and anime of all sorts, have a broad cast of characters on both the good and evil side, none of whom is all-powerful. Very much like Bronze Age mythology, Dark Age religion, and contemporary American pop culture.
Japan and America -- kindred spirits, both being rooted in, yet long ago separated from, the Eurasian cultural ecosystem. ^_^
Not every collapsing empire has that Crisis of the Third Century breakdown. Britain had something like the Year of the Five Emperors -- but not 50 years of high-turnover chaos. Probably because they got absorbed into an expanding empire with internal stability -- Midcentury America. That defused the bomb that otherwise would've exploded among the elites of the collapsing British Empire.
ReplyDeleteThe collapsing Roman Empire had no other empire to take it over, provide stability, and defuse the bomb.
Russia is joining a multipolar alliance of regional and global powers, BRICS. They're not going to fend for themselves, and that will defuse some of their tension -- unlike during the '90s, when they had no one externally to absorb them and soften the landing.
America in the 2020s has no one to absorb us, so we will be fending for ourselves, like Russia in the '90s or Rome in the 3rd century. We can try to make the landing as soft as possible, but it looks like a hard landing is coming.
Dems have labor-intensive sectors that are non-profit and government-run -- like the DMV, but also the schools and healthcare providers.
ReplyDeleteYes, I know those sectors make shitloads of money, but that's not what "non-profit" means. It just means the profit motive doesn't govern their functioning. That ties into who's funding them -- the government, via taxes on the public or debt or printing money from the Central Bank.
That's why their managers don't worry about the unit cost of labor -- those managers aren't the ones paying the workers' wages, they're more of a middleman who gets a bag of government-acquired money, and hands over a slice of it to his workers.
Someone who owns and operates a small restaurant gets most of their revenue from customers, not a connection to the government money-hose. They're paying their workers somewhat out of their own pocket, so they want to keep that major cost of theirs down.
Ditto for a factory owner who wants to keep his assembly-line workers' wages down, and who were the lobbying group that created NAFTA (under Bush Sr., even if Clinton was the one who later signed it). Someone who makes clothing or silverware in a factory doesn't get the government money-hose -- they have to pay wages from their own revenues.
The seeming exception to this is the military -- they are also non-profit and funded by the government. Shouldn't that place them in the same coalition as the DMV and schools?
I think the reason is there's only one military, vs. many schools or many DMVs and other similar gov agencies or many hospitals.
When the top manager gets a huge moneybag from the government, he wants to keep it all for himself, and give his workers nothing -- but then they might leave him for another employer in the same sector. So hospital owners / managers have to compete against each other to retain workers, and that makes them fork over a decent amount of their government moneybag to their workers.
Whereas the managers of the military know that their low-ranking grunts have nowhere else to go if they don't like the pay and benefits they're getting -- they can't join another nation's military (and Jews, who could do that for the Israeli military, aren't even a drop in the bucket of the American military). They can't join another national-level military within America -- there's only one!
So that lets the military brass hog more of their government moneybag for themselves, giving breadcrumbs to their grunts and veterans, and the latter tolerating it cuz they have nowhere else to go for a patron / employer in their line of work.
So even though the military is non-profit and gov-funded, the managers have a similar incentive as a private restaurant -- to keep wages down as much as possible, so they can keep the most for themselves. It's more exploitative of laborers, which is what unites them with small biz owners, farmers, energy source owners, and factory owners.
If you want more detail on how the military is different from the other non-profit, gov-funded sectors -- look at how penny-pinching they are toward veterans. For retired hospital workers, or library workers, or teachers, they get their pension lickety-split, they've got it made in the shade.
ReplyDeleteReceiving just one red cent from the military when you're retiring is a total nightmare. My dad's going through this hellish bullshit right now, and for who knows how long. They'll give you the runaround, send you through multiple loops of referrals, and find any excuse to delay and underpay.
Same thing when he applied for disability for the partial hearing loss he came away with after working in naval shipyards. Hospitals, schools, the DMV would trip over themselves to give their workers disability payments -- but not the military. That took YEARS of bullshit, endless runarounds.
And the military is threatening to end or even claw back bonuses to currently serving members, threatens them to go on food stamps instead of raising their pay or benefits, etc.
Schools don't do that -- at most, their "underfunding" means teachers have to pay for supplies out of their own pocket. But not that they don't get free lunches in the school cafeteria, and must instead apply for food stamps to avoid starvation. Only the greedy military does that to its clients.
And what are those clients supposed to do? Especially if they're retired? Go on strike? Move to another employer in the same sector? They can't. They're at the total mercy of the brass -- they got decent pay and benefits during the New Deal, when our elites including the military brass were good rather than evil.
But now, as evil people have filled the elite class, the military managers treat their underlings just as bad as farmers, who would rather pay Guatemalans 2 cents per hour to pick strawberries. Unfortunately, the military can't hire 99% of its workforce to be literal foreigners who are dirt-poor and willing to accept 2 cents per hour -- but even there, you see the push to open the military to literal foreigners from poor countries, who will get paid in a citizenship card rather than high pay and benefits.
Add to that, the military was just like industrial factories, where they closed down so many domestic bases during the neolib era -- like the very naval shipyard my dad used to work at, in Philadelphia, and then the base in Charleston SC (where the neighborhood we used to live in during the early '80s turned into a drug-riddled shithole just a decade after we left, thank God we got out in time).
ReplyDeleteThe BS rationalization was "the Cold War's over, time to wind down military spending" -- well, spending went through the roof. It just didn't get spent on domestic bases, cuz that requires paying American citizens in labor-intensive jobs, and they want good pay and conditions and benefits.
Well then, shut them all down, and build more foreign bases in shithole countries we're trying to conquer, like Iraq, Afghanistan, or wealthy countries nearby where wages are going to the Filipino slave class living in Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, etc. Kuwaitis, Qataris, and Saudis aren't the ones mopping up floors and serving meals on American military bases in their countries.
Get more labor bang for your buck! Efficiency! More of the skyrocketing military outlays that you get to keep for your fatass war-losing selves.
Like I said back during the Trump era -- it's no surprise why California flipped from a swing state to a solid blue state. Except for the San Diego naval base, the military abandoned everyone in the state who relied on them for patronage. OK then, go fuck yourself and your entire party -- Californians will be voting for whoever replaces the fly-by-night neolib military as patrons. Schools, hospitals, tech, media, entertainment -- Democrat, Democrat, Democrat.
The military is the most rotten institution in the country, by far, it's not even close.
Ending on a positive note for the night, Moom not only sang a bunch of One Direction songs in a karaoke that I didn't even know about until much later, she's the first in Hololive (AFAIK) to sing "One Thing". ^_^
ReplyDeleteIt's such a classic anthem, hard to believe nobody has done it before. But she was on a roll with early 2010s boy bands, so it just came naturally.
Also the first in Hololive to sing "Everywhere" by Fleetwood Mac. I think I probably heard that, "Little Lies," "Gypsy" and their other '80s hits first while growing up, and found their '70s hits later on.
I still hear their '80s hits in stores, but in karaokes it's usually their '70s material that is performed. Nice to hear one of their '80s songs in karaoke this time. ^_^
Moom and Goob appreciate a good soulful singer-songwriter mood... please let them sing "Gypsy" next time they do a Fleetwood Mac song. They'd really get into it.
Moom also expanded her Jim Croce repertoire with "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown" (previously covering "Operator" and "Time in a Bottle").
Lots of unexpected surprises!
And although I don't care about their models so much, Moom has the 2nd-cutest 3D model (just a tad behind Fauna). Fauna's has that tee-hee expression built into it, but Moom's wide-apart and large eyes give her that trusting, overly attached GF look -- but the mouth expression are subtle rather than crazy and yappy, so it's mostly the feeling of being watched (as she likes) rather than talked-at.
With the camera looking up at her from below, gives it just the right amount of ominous -- like a nurse instructing her patient, "now lie down and hold still while I sing you back to health".
Similar pleasant Midwestern control-freak vibe as Fauna's ASMRs where she's keeping you in the forest forever, for your own good feelings... tee hee!
Hearing Goob excitedly tangent about all sorts of different cereals, ways of eating them, etc., makes me wish they still made the classic ones from the heyday of kid's culture -- the '80s.
ReplyDeleteYou want chocolate in your cereal? There was S'mores, Rocky Road, Ice Cream Cones, just to name a few. Don't know if she likes peanut-butter, there were tons of those back then too -- I think the Mr. T cereal, the E.T. cereal, and probably many others I'm forgetting off the top of my head.
There was a new cereal every month, it seemed like. Really was the best time to be a child.
Too bad cereal doesn't last in freshness for decades -- otherwise Goob could do a stream like Subaru did with "trying out retro toys from the Showa era", only "sampling cereals from the '80s". Or candy -- such a bewildering variety that was being added to every month. And before they took out the cocoa butter from chocolate and added bastard oils into everything.
But they still make a lot of those retro candies -- in fact, very old ones, like cow tails, Aero bar, Fun Dip, etc.
Big League Chew, Pop Rocks, etc. are still made.
Maybe a stream on retro candy -- a tier list, or maybe a sampling stream, or combining both -- sampling them, then putting them into tiers.
Cut-off date... say, nothing introduced after the '80s.
As an added bonus, we'd get an even higher energy level from the Goobinator as she ingests more and more sugar! ^_^
In yet another major Republican betrayal of America, John Deere is laying off shitloads of Americans as they move production to Mexico, where labor is cheaper.
ReplyDeleteThe National Association of Manufacturers, who created NAFTA, controls the GOP not the Democrat party -- and that goes back through every ancestor of the GOP, including the Whigs and the Federalists. Dems and their ancestors have never been the party of manufacturing magnates.
The only difference about this recent announcement is the total silence from the supposedly realigning Republican party, who are in fact completely dead. In 2016, Trump and his supporters would've cried for sanctions against John Deere, clawing back their CEO's bonuses, slamming tariffs on any Mexican-produced John Deere equipment that they tried to sell in the American market, etc.
Instead, they will find some way to defend the white conservative American leadership and management of John Deere, and gripe about Mexico instead. They don't give a shit about the "white working class" (another vanished phrase from their vocabulary), middle-class living standards for flyover state Americans, or anything like that. They imagine themselves as allies or wannabe consultants of the GOP elites, such as the John Deere managers, and don't want to bite the hand that could feed them.
But nobody else is fooled -- certainly not the legions of flyover state Americans who relied on John Deere directly or indirectly as patrons, and now have their families' livelihoods permanently wiped out as they have to work for a crappier patron like Walmart -- where they'll still be competing with cheap foreign labor, i.e. immigrants, but settling on a far lower equilibrium wage than at the John Deere assembly plant.
Even if there is a token voice in the right-wing media (say, Tucker Carlson) who comes out in favor of punishing John Deere so brutally that they reverse course and keep the plants here, that's not worth much either. It's just lip-service -- those communities need politicians to punish John Deere, not talking heads saying they feel their pain.
And no Republican will dare contradict their puppet-masters in the NAM, so this is just another example in the long neoliberal history of the GOP sectors pulling the rug out from under their clients, leaving them high and dry, and wondering why they have nobody to show up on the battlefield for them when the heat is on.
Relying on Republicans and their sectors is suicide these days. At most, they'll block Drag Queen Story Hour from your local library (and most of them won't even bother with that), while they shut down your workplace because foreigners will do your job for cheaper, leaving you starving and homeless.
Here's that Trump-era post about the electoral map reflecting patronage, not race:
https://akinokure.blogspot.com/2018/01/electoral-map-reflects-patronage-not.html
January of 2018 -- I was the first to re-ignite discussion of patronage as a driving factor in politics.
Well, you can lead a take-junkie horse to water, but you can't make him drink. By now, "patronage" as a topic of dIsCouRsE has reverted to the dum-dum meaning of "fake jobs or hand-outs in exchange for votes".
All those military bases, weapons manufacturing plants, and the rest of the MIC in California was not a no-show job, was not a fake email job, and was not a simple cash hand-out. Those were real jobs you had to show up for, and perform. You earned a wage or salary, plus benefits, decent working conditions, prestige or status for being part of "the greatest military on the planet," and so on.
THAT is what was exchanged between the military brass patrons and their laboring and managerial clients. The underlings did vote Republican, to support their patrons politically, but that's just the half of it, in terms of loyalty and interdependence.
Patron-client relationships have existed in every single society that is more hierarchical than hunter-gatherers -- it has nothing to do with elections, or even money. Often the clients are "paid" in kind, like lodging in a company housing project, getting to keep a certain share of the crops they cultivate on a feudal lord's land, and so on. Even into the early 20th C in America, mine workers were paid in scrip that was only good at the company store.
ReplyDeleteReverting the meaning of patronage from these interdependent material relationships, to "fake no-show jobs for protected minorities", allows the right-wing media wannabes to pretend that the Republicans have not betrayed their clients -- since the GOP does not, and has never, engaged in doling out these fake no-show jobs for protected minorities. Jeez, if only they would do that, how awesome it would be, but alas, the GOP has never been a patron to a group of clients.
That's the necessary step to memory-hole the betrayal of GOP clients by GOP patrons. Since being a straight white male grunt on a military base in California is not a fake no-show job for Latinx trannies, it doesn't count as "revoking patronage" when the base is permanently shut down and that guy has to bag groceries for minimum wage instead.
Likewise, when a straight while male assembly-line worker, who's voted Republican his whole life in support of his agricultural supply manufacturer patron, gets the news that the plant is being shut down by the owners so that cheap foreigners -- who have no existing interdependence and proven loyalty with the owners -- can replace him for cheaper... that's not Republican patrons betraying their clients either. Factory jobs for blue-collar men are not fake no-show jobs for protected minorities, after all.
The systematic effect of this memory-holing is to beg, or demand, that the victims of betrayal by GOP patrons still remain loyal to those who have viciously, pre-emptively, and unilaterally betrayed them. And with no promise that the patrons are going to atone for their sins, as though the two sides should try to kiss and make-up and let bygones be bygones. Nope -- the patrons are promising their former clients that the relationship is over forever, total divorce, no alimony, no figurative child support, no nothing.
Well, what the hell is there to kiss and make-up about, if they're never getting back together? They can take their political candidates and shove 'em up their ass.
That has already taken place in the entire West Coast, the Great Lakes (where Illinois and others used to be swing states), and the Northeast (where Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and New Hampshire used to be swing states). It will soon spread to the Plains, as the last remaining clients are unceremoniously cut loose by GOP-aligned patrons.
Supporting the Republicans has a multi-decade proven track record of getting your material support cut off by greedy elites, so there will be very few soldiers showing up on the Republican or conservative side in the coming American Crisis of the Third Century. That side will be an impotent spectator from the stands to begin with, all of the action -- and there's gonna be a lot of it -- will be among the various competing factions within the current Democrat coalition.
If Republicans get any funny ideas about striding out onto that battlefield, they will get Alex Jones'd and Steve Bannon'd -- not just taken out of commission, but utterly hung out to dry by their supposed "own side" of the war, in Bannon's case including by his own direct patron (Trump).
Ending on a positive note, I notice the "hawk tuah" girl is sporting the bra-less look that is increasingly common among the easy-breezy Zoomer generation (she's 21).
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure her brunette friend is as well, but it's harder to say for sure since her top is more textured and her chest is smaller. But the blonde is clearly letting her girls speak for themselves *naturally*.
Millennials were raised on total artificiality, and part of that meant turning bras into engineered machines, much like the "bullet bra" or "rocket nosecone bra" look of the Midcentury. Highly structured, wired, and padded so thick that the nipple would never make the slightest impression on the outside.
And removing all of their pubic hair, and tweezing the hell out of their eyebrows, flattening their hair against their scalp with straighteners, and the whole rest of it.
Zoomer girls are letting their brows flourish, are regrowing their bushes, and are happy to ditch the bra for the au naturel look-and-feel, to go without tons of make-up, bare their bellies and pits and cheeks... the rebirth of the Edenic Jane-from-Tarzan's-jungle noble savagette.
Luv Zoomers. ^_^
Timely reminder re: lib hysteria over being put in camps, that the American central state has always been weak, and that is not contradicted by a strong expansion against foreign states during our growth. Decentralized states can still expand -- they just can't control their domestic population however they want.
ReplyDeleteTotalitarian, absolutist, tyrannical, centralizing, dictatorial, etc. -- those are from sedentary-dominant societies, like Eurasia since 1300, or Eurasia between 700 BC and 300 AD. Not the nomad-dominant societies, like Eurasia outside of those periods, or America since our beginning, or Japan since the early 2nd millennium.
In addition to that, our empire is collapsing as we speak, so that leaves even less power concentrated at the top -- no matter what someone who occupied the top spot wanted to do with it, it just isn't there anymore.
Part of the brain disease of being a take-junkie is that you can't even remember a few years ago -- like when the President and his whole administration and federal government threatened that "Our patience is wearing thin" with unvaxxed Americans.
Yeah, and what did that senile old faggot in the White House do about it? NOTHING. Still pureblood, baby, like millions of my fellow Americans.
Some employers coerced their employees into getting vaxxed -- cuz they actually had leverage over them, and a way to enforce it. Get the vaxx, or you're fired and homeless and starving, and you'll haev a black mark on your resume forever, forget about calling on us for a reference.
These are the lords of our feudal society, where the so-called king has little authority over all of his subjects. But lord and peasant are more interdependent, so that's who really exerts coercive power in our weak-state society.
The unfolding instability / high turnover further shows how weak the state is becoming at the top level. That creates a positive feedback loop -- the weaker the central state becomes, the more tempting it is for strivers to hijack it, since there's less and less of an imposing wall blocking you from just waltzing in and taking it over.
ReplyDeleteExactly the kind of degradation of imperial authority that began with the Year of the Five Emperors for the Romans.
The wrong view is, "Wow, Kamala Harris is about to become the leader of the most powerful nation on Earth". If someone who, as I already emphasized, merely slept her way into her career -- cultivating no patronage network along the way (only Willie Brown owes her a favor) -- becomes the leader of the nation, this very fact proves that that nation is weak and has little power to wield domestically or externally.
It's like someone dying of a common cold -- their immune system must have already been severely compromised. The American state has already been infected with and suffering from AIDS for awhile now, and the Biden and likely Harris admins -- and for that matter, the Trump admin, led by a guy who had zero political experience and patronage networks either -- are just opportunistic infections that would otherwise be fought off, but in the unhealthy state, take over the host.
Imagine if a 5'2 95-lb blind woman were put in charge of the NYPD -- that could only happen in a world where that institution is no longer a mini-army for the Center of Da Universe. Only in the world of Escape from New York or something. It's the NYPD in name only.
Or going back to the role of academia in elite over-production -- look at the turnover in Harvard presidents. Quite a few in just the last few years, although not necessarily at other top schools. In a world where a total mediocrity and fraud like Claudine Gay becomes the leader of Harvard, it must have already lost its scholarly mojo, despite bearing the same name that it always has.
The act of her hiring is not a death-knell for an otherwise healthy school -- it merely reveals that the school has already become immunocompromised, and is no longer a top school in fact (only in name). The writing was on the wall earlier in the 2010s when the Marc Hauser animal psych lab was revealed by its grad students to be based on fraud by the leader, Hauser himself.
If a woman who slept her way into her career, and has recieved no votes from anyone in the country, becomes the president, this reveals the weakness of the office she's about to occupy. Harris had no votes from Dem primary voters in 2020, and none this time either, since it was canceled.
That's why she should not have been the running-mate in 2020 -- she became next in line for the highly likely event of Biden not making it to election day 2024, for whatever reason (shoved out in a palace coup, dying of old age, whatever). The fact that she *was* chosen as running-mate did not prove the strength of the system, as though over-ruling voters is a sign of strength. It proved the system's weakness -- that it lacked the safeguards that would prevent such a weak person from occupying such a high office.
Again, Harris as president will be even easier to shove out than Biden as president. And whoever takes her place -- say, AOC -- will be even easier to shove out.
Our central state was strongest when FDR ran and won 4 times in a row, and presumably would've kept going if he hadn't literally dropped dead while in office. From stability and strength, to churning and weakness.
I'm gonna toot my own horn again, as a timely reminder to ignore the take-junkies, who did not correctly diagnose the American state as having entered a Year of the Five Emperors / Crisis of the Third Century scenario, way back in November 2020. In fact, you must believe the opposite of the ones who said we were entering a *more* stable system, a *stong* system. Ha!
ReplyDeleteAnd who did not pay any attention to the fact that the media polls for the 2024 election were 100% the opposite of what they were in 2016 and 2020, which required an explanation -- either they were trying to lay the foundation for shoving out Biden specifically, or washing their hands of the powerless central state and handing it back over to Trump so he can take the blame for imperial disintegration.
The only thing I got wrong about 2020 and after was thinking the GOP would mount a defense against the Great Ballot Count Stoppage and the millions of votes discovered at 4am for weeks and months after election day, 100% of which were for Biden.
But at least I've adjusted my model accordingly -- the GOP is not only dead, it will turn on the only people willing to defend it, like Trump or Bannon or Tucker or the January 6 protesters. Talk about an auto-immune disease!
So from that point on, it became irrelevant what Republicans were doing -- they would only retake the White House if the Dems decided to wash their hands of the toothless office. If they wanted to stay, they would pull another Ballot Count Stoppage and the GOP would accept the theft again.
Removing Biden will unite the country for a moment, since nobody voted for Biden. Republicans and Independents rejected him in the general election, wanting Trump, and Democrats rejected him in the primary, wanting Bernie, Bloomberg, Buttgag, etc. He only got into the White House by the DNC shutting down the voting in the primary, then stopping the ballot processing on election night in the general, and discovering pallots of ballots forever.
ReplyDeleteSo no one will miss him, and we'll be rid of a leader that nobody on any side voted for. Justice is restored!
...until we see who takes his place, likely Harris, who nobody voted for either. Republicans and Indies rejected her in the general, and Democrats rejected her in the primary (zero, 0, delegates).
It's not simply that she's unelected -- someone who's appointed may win an election if they ran for elected office. But she *did* run in an election, and she failed catastrophically. She's not just un-elected -- she is anti-elected, she offered herself and the voters unanimously said GTFO.
Biden, although also rejected on all sides of voters, at least had a small minority of voters, earned some delegates legitimately in the 2020 primary (before it was shut down the week before Super Tuesday). Harris doesn't even have this shred of voter allegiance!
Not to speak of her elite support and patronage networks. She's weaker than Biden, even if she's not senile.
The only form of karmic balance she will bring to our universe, is that she's a Boomer (a very late one, born in October 1964). That was one of the clearest signs that the Biden usurpation was not based on votes -- voters have rejected every single Silent Gen candidate who has ever run (Mondale, Dukakis, Perot twice, Kerry, and McCain). There were a bunch of Greatest Gen presidents, then a bunch of Boomers, skipping over the Silents entirely, and with a large sample size (considering how many elections are held).
Whether voter-elected presidents will come from Gen X, or skip over them too and go to Millennials, remains to be seen. But at least for now, another Boomer president would not violate the laws of history like the current Silent Gen president is.
While increasingly weaker figures fight over the increasingly powerless central state, just remember to focus instead on your regional grand duke, local lords, and patron saint. Those people can actually make something happen for you, against the backdrop of our weak-state and collapsing-empire society.
ReplyDeleteThere sure as hell isn't any God-Emperor coming to save you.
Ending on an upbeat note, yes I checked (for clerical accuracy), and the brunette friend of the hawk tuah girl is indeed going bra-less as well. She's wearing a very open-weave top, and you can clearly see skin-tone through the holes in the chest area, matching the color of the holes over her belly.
ReplyDeletehttps://pyxis.nymag.com/v1/imgs/256/c47/9e3923f43fb7008b5d03590f4cabf5fba1-Hawk-Tuah-Girl.rsquare.jpg
Looks like a macrame top from the '70s, only in black instead of orange or avocado green or harvest gold. Very boho and chic. Millennial girls would never be so daring yet understated about it.
Luv Zoomers. ^_^
And to reiterate, I'm not a boob-man, don't care about them, don't notice them -- unless it's bra-less, and I'm merely picking up on the au naturel look as a gestalt. Girls could have medicine ball sweater-stretchers, and I wouldn't even notice.
For me it's more of an interest in the changes in social psychology.
The sector where there is open conflict is in finance. Jerome Powell vs Janet Yellen have been clobbering each other with move-countermove throughout Biden's administration. As is, the factions are Powell and the NY Fed and Jerry Diamond (and as of late the Japanese central bank), Yellen and the SF Fed and the ECB and the bank of England (couped and captured by the ECB). We already see their successors, children of Buffet, Soros, etc alia reminding people of their existence, so there are the future financiers of the Discord generals, the Romans proved time and again that you can't have an army without coin to pay for soldiers.
ReplyDeleteThe 2023 series of bank closures were all concentrated in banks under the SF Fed, and bought out by NY Fed banks. The end of Libor by Oct. 1st and the ramping up of Sofr has Powell's faction edging out Yellen's, although it remains to be seen if the Europoors will just flip the table with some nonsense, probably some kind of goading to get us involved in WWIII.
In Luongo's schema of Dem fractions, there is Obama's fraction using Biden as a meatpuppet 3rd/4th term of Obama's presidency, closely aligned with the Europeans. There is the remains of Clinton's clique, the Dem side of the neocons, aligned with the British, and getting buried by the absorption of the BoE by the Europeans in the demise of the two Lizzes, and more recently by the firing of Victoria Nuland. There is the California faction, centered around Gavin Newsom, who's been gassed up in the run up to the debate. Kamala Harris is technically part of the California faction, but as it is, she is cockblocking any attempts for the last year and a half by Newsom to swap out either as vice president or on the 2024 ticket. I wonder if her intransigence is product of some deal made with one of the financial factions.
The Supreme Court put out a flurry of decisions that I understood as refuting attempts at centralization, and RETVRN to dark age American norm.
The Kendrick vs Drake rap feud ended with a demonstration of meta-ethnic unity of the West Coast vs an interloper from Toronto and his weak low trust rabble. What amazed me was the unity demonstrated by rival gangs, eternal rivals, who joined hands to celebrate their (temporary) Chieftain's great victory.
If the American West will be the equivalent of Byzantium, one could note that cultural trends in the Roman Empire (and power itself), shifted from East to West: https://x.com/ByzRomanLevant/status/1808937906486005847
ReplyDeleteAnd a landslide for Labour in the UK elections signaling the end of the neoliberal Thatcherite era and the beginning of the post-neoliberal era, whatever that might be. The Conservatives got clobbered, with them falling to third behind Reform in many seats.
ReplyDeleteLabour didn't win, the Conservatives fractured with Reform splitting off. Reform was evenly distributed around the map, so they won very few seats -- in contrast to other parties with far lower share of the vote, but geographically concentrated, like Sinn Fein or Plaid Cymru. Reform looks like it has the lowest number of seats compared to the share of the popular vote it got.
ReplyDeleteSo Labour merely picked up those widely distributed seats where Reform split off from the Conservatives.
It's not a mandate for Labour, let alone for the overtly neoliberal status quo Starmer, it's a rebuke of the Cons by their base -- do what we want, or we'll splinter and you'll be out of a job.
Realignment in the UK will be post-neoliberal, and will come from the left side, just like it will in America, where the right-wing parties were the dominant ones ushering in the neoliberal realignment circa 1980.
In France and much of Europe, as well as Aus / NZ, it will come from the right, since their neoliberal trailblazers and dominant parties have been the left-wing ones.
So far, the only sign of post-neolib realignment is in Denmark, where a left-wing party is closing the borders and deporting immigrants.
If the French vote for Le Pen's group, that will likely be a realignment (we'll have to see once they take office, but certainly they're running on something post-neoliberal, and are from the right).
Likud is still in control in Israel, and they were the first to usher in the neolib era. Their entire society is fracturing, and the gov will only splinter and collapse more as they get decimated and have more of their northern lands annexed by Lebanon ("Hezbollah"), and their ports shut down by Yemen ("the Houthis").
Does Germany align with the UK/US or the French when it comes to realignment?
DeleteBut back to Britain's Year of the Five Emperors, they're in the midst of another high-turnover stage, with 4 prime ministers during the 3 calendar years of 2022 to '24 (Johnson, Truss, Sunak, and Starmer).
ReplyDeleteThere hasn't been this degree of turnover since the 1922-24 period I mentioned earlier.
So things are certainly shaking up in the UK, but realignment is not there quite yet. And realignment does not require high-turnover leading up to it -- no high turnover leading up to the Thatcher realignment.
A clarifying note on de facto vs. nominal leaders -- I'm discussing changes over time, or dynamics, where there's lots of instability and chaos. Like Rome's Year of the Five Emperors.
ReplyDeleteI do not mean multiple individuals occupying a ruling council at the same time, like the Triumvirate, or if an American president is an empty figurehead and there is a Shadow President or Shadow Cabinet that is de facto ruling. Those are not about changes over time.
If Trump is a figurehead, but is then replaced by a different figurehead -- like he was from January 6 through inauguration day 2021 -- that is a change over time. Formerly, Trump himself met with other senior US gov officials, foreign heads of state, addressed the nation as their leader, etc.
Suddenly, Pence was the one meeting and dealing with those officials and addressing the nation -- fulfilling the roles of the presidential office, not the vice-presidential office, while the former de facto president became only the nominal one and was held incommunicado.
With Biden, the evidence is murky -- he sometimes meets with other gov officials (domestic or foreign), sometimes addresses the nation, sometimes receives briefings and makes decisions. But it sounds like as his cognitive decline has accelerated, he's less and less the de facto fulfiller of those roles of the office of the presidency, and those roles are being picked up more by some kind of regency council, including Jill and Hunter Biden.
If it was always that way, then this is not a change over time, and Biden does not count as even 1 of the de facto US leaders. But it didn't seem like this at the outset of his admin, so I think he does count, then was replaced by this council, who count as another entity-leader. But that is hard to say at the moment, and the evidence we need may get censored and deleted by the time the fog of war clears.
Going back to how disloyal and penny-pinching the national military is as a patron, this will serve to decentralize the recruitment of soldiers into the national guards of each of the 50 states, or perhaps city-level police forces and prive security forces.
ReplyDeleteThe main weakness of the national military is that there's no competition among patrons -- just the one. With regional armies, there are as many as there are independently wealthy and powerful lords or daimyos. More competition among them to recruit and retain grunts and officers -- better pay, conditions, prestige, and *dependability* / loyalty from them.
Mercenaries drifting from one lord to another could happen, but in times of societal collapse like ours, most of them simply want a stable patron who isn't going to fuck them over. They won't minmax their careers like a neoliberal free agent.
It's more like the competition is there as an ever-present threat and bargaining chip, to keep the lord in line.
I know that nominally the national guards are under the control of the national gov, but that will become de facto pretty soon, if not already. They will be funded and controlled by state-level rulers like the governor, not the president or Deep State or not-so-permanent bureaucracy in DC.
This will echo the devolution of most of American society from a centralized imperial model to a post-collapse rump-state model. Nobody watches the national sports leagues anymore -- it's all at the regional level. SEC fans only care about which of their region is on top, and don't care if their region's top team can beat some other region's top team.
Flying the red-white-and-blue, stars-and-stripes flag has never been at a lower level, including on the nation's birthday like yesterday. Nobody is preparing a huge 250th birthday for 2026 like they did for the Bicentennial in 1976. National-level culture is devolving and peripheralizing.
And no, would-be soldiers refusing to serve in the national military is not due to woketard advertising or DEI hiring patterns -- although both of those are salt in the wound. It's that the national military has humiliatingly lost every war they've fought after WWII, waste shitloads of money in the process (angering the domestic civilians), and increasingly for less and less material or reputational benefit for soldiers, all while the brass get over-produced and over-fattened.
American states are not collapsing as hard as the nation / empire at large, the leaders of the national guards are not as over-produced and over-fattened, and are not as insulated from competition, as their national / imperial counterparts.
It's a no-brainer where military-minded men will be pledging their allegiances going forward -- to their regional lords and grand dukes, not to the national / imperial king and his generals.
fed control over state-level national guards will become *de jure* only, I mean, not de facto.
ReplyDeleteThe deployment prospects for national soldiers are far worse than the America-first doomers imagine. They say American soldiers shouldn't have to die "in order to save Israel", or "on behalf of Taiwan", or "for Ukraine".
ReplyDeleteBut that conservative mindset is too blinded by Us vs. Them thinking to see that it's far worse. They think it's trading one of Ours (American) for one of Theirs (Israeli, Taiwanese, Ukrainian). Why should We have to die in order to prop up Their society?
In reality, both parties to these alliances are collapsing and will accomplish nothing for their societies. Russia is taking back Ukraine, Lebanon (and perhaps Egypt and others) is annexing Israel, and China will take back Taiwan -- with or without American support, whether manpower, materiel, financing, or whatever else.
These will be pointless American deaths -- not because they are traded for an increase in the non-American society's lifespan, but because they won't be traded for anything whatsoever. They won't be exchanged for something else of value, they will simply be flushed down the toilet like waste.
Gee, thanks but no thanks. Most American would-be soldiers are not Israel-haters -- but they're not going to die just so that Israel can also get dissolved and annexed. What's the point? They wouldn't be sacrificing their lives for something greater, just wasting them on failure all-around.
Whereas if they get deployed to the Southern American border, maybe they can rack up some W's for once in their lives, in order to turn back a poorly equipped and trained rag-tag bunch of economic migrants.
Or they get deployed to protect their state's precious material resources, which are under threat of pillaging by elites from some other American state, as national government devolves. If anyone in the broad Southwestern region thinks there won't be literal battles and wars over water, during American imperial collapse, they are delusional. Armies will be needed on both sides of that struggle for resources -- they can't be pirated and copy-pasted with online devices. You'll need labor-intensive armies, equipment, etc.
Or they get deployed to clean up the crazy / bum / homeless problem if they're serving in a city-level police force. Even cleaning up after graffiti would be more productive and respectful than dying on the Ukrainian battlefield as Ukraine gets taken back by Russia anyway.
This is the biggest no-brainer ever -- and therefore, something that the take-junkies in the dIsCouRsE will never notice until it's already unfolding.
But then, that's why you're trekking out to visit a cliff-dwelling sage in the ruins of the blogosphere...
The funniest change ever will be Democrat governors battling for control of fossil fuels, in order to keep the lights on and stave off getting couped. Nobody will be waging wars over wind turbines, solar panels, or any of that other fake shit.
ReplyDeleteThe staunchly pro-abortion, gay-married, blue-haired Governor of California will still be sending xer army into West Texas to try to take their oil, or further afield to steal some Appalachian coal, as well as building up the ranks of soldiers and officers on the multiple permanent bases surrounding the Hoover Dam (now on the border between Nevada and Arizona, but in the future, controlled by California, de jure or de facto).
Growth allows for delusional optimism, collapse forces clinical pragmatism.
Texas has no US naval stations or bases of its own, just naval air stations. Nothing's stopping San Diego's navy (2nd-largest base in the world) from sailing through the Panama Canal and taking over all that offshore oil in the Gulf of Mexico.
ReplyDeleteThe nearest naval station they could align with is in Jacksonville, FL -- way up in the NE part of the state, where they'd have to sail all the way around the Florida peninsula. Ditto if they try to revive the old naval bases in Charleston or Philadelphia.
San Diego is about as far south as you can get in California.
But the larger point being, San Diego has shitloads of land, capital, and people -- not to mention being on the meta-ethnic frontier and more cohesive as an organization and team, compared to the internally fragmented Deep South, who don't have as much land, capital, and people on their naval bases to begin with.
I suppose the land armies from Texas could try to take it back from California, but California's protected by one hell of a desolate desert. New Mexico would side with California, since they're both Democrats. Even Arizona would probably end up siding with California, and not allow the Texan army from just breezing through, let alone using Fort Huachuca or whatever else for the purposes of invading California on an oil-theft mission -- if Arizona is promised a cut of California's oil in exchange for siding with CA instead of TX.
Very interesting times lie ahead... and those penny-pinching back-East scum shouldn't have cut so many corners if they didn't want to end up as vassals of the West Coast during imperial collapse.
Again, America-first doomers are too optimistic -- they're trying to threaten the national brass in the Pentagon regarding global conflicts. E.g., "We can't shut these bases down if we want to STAND UP TO CHINA in the South China Sea".
No, bitch -- you're going to want to revive those defunct naval bases to defend your resources from San Diego, or from other neighboring states. Remember, the most internally divided and mutually hostile part of the country is back-East Euro-LARP-ers. All of the West, including the Mountain states, would back California in a war with Texan and Southern states over offshore oil in the Gulf of Mexico.
Florida and Texas might be able to reach an agreement, since Texas is fairly Western and willing to act in team interests. But they don't have a navy, and the naval station states along the Atlantic coast all hate each other's guts, including within the Deep South itself. Georgia won't be upstaged by Alabama, and Jacksonville FL won't be upstaged by Charleston SC or Norfolk VA, let alone by Philly PA or Newport RI.
I know who I'd bet on in a war between the Grand Duchy of Pacifica and the Federation of Atlantean States...
If you want internal wars in the south, the spicy one is the festering Georgia-Tennessee water war. As far as California's ambitions, I expect them to go north and aim for Idaho, as Deseret will cockblock everything east of Las Vegas. I wouldn't put it past the Mormon glowie cartel to work overtime to fracture California.
ReplyDelete*gets blown up by the San Diego navy raiding Texan shores for oil*
ReplyDelete"Ummm, wow, really, Governor of Commie-fornia? Using military violence to enable fossil fuel consumption -- liberal hypocrisy, much?"
Fauna, please keep the Wii Sports Resorts series going. Such an Edenic pastoral paradise -- I had no idea they were still making video game landscapes like that as late as 2009!
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely a Japanese paradise, but also very American-looking. The ominous dormant volcano, waterfalls, a tropical island setting, with verdant plantlife, rich blue skies, and orange/brown earth tones for the rest of the natural world.
The only distinctly Japanese giveaway is the bridges -- they LOVE bridges, natural or man-made, including the lengthy one for the swordplay gauntlet.
It looks so much better than Switch Sports, or Wii Sports for that matter. Such a wonderful sense of place, whereas most sports / athletic simulators are set inside dedicated stadiums or other buildings. But change the location to a resort, for amateurs just looking for some physical fun while on vacation -- and suddenly you don't need those stadiums anymore, you can travel to a noble savage paradise.
It looks so great! -- and it suits you perfectly, little miss back-to-Nature. ^_^
Plus there's several dozen games to play, vs. only a handful in Wii Sports or Switch Sports. If some of them are less intense, that would allow you to take a little rest and zatsu or tangent, for some variety.
IDK, something like where you're simulating riding on a spin-cycle or working a stairmaster, repetitive motions that don't require lots of moment-to-moment attention, and you can just get chatty while going for a brisk walk / ride.
Now if only you can set up an off-collab challenge with Irys, since it's not an online game anymore... that Switch Sports collab was one of the best streams ever, and yes I stayed up until the wee hours just to catch it live.
You two have a great yin-yang friendship dynamic, but it hasn't been explored as much as other pairings have (like you + Goob, or Kronii + Irys). And you've already had great chemistry IRL when you visited Japan for New Year's of 2023.
A highly under-rated pairing -- don't let the chance slip away! ^_^
Mormonland will just be one region within the Western rump-state, they're peas in a pod with Californians -- especially since probably 25% of SLC residents are California refugees.
ReplyDeletePlus Mormons are not a military power -- they somewhat were early on, vs. the Indians and the US Army itself, before they surrendered on polygamy and were able to join the union.
But now? They don't have any bases there. Not a lot of energy extraction, or agriculture, or manufacturing. So, very little of the major GOP sectors.
But they are highly religious and family-oriented, even though the major employers are all Democrats -- finance, colleges, hospitals, and gubmint.
They do like sports, and stay fit, not obese or ugly. If anything, Mormon girls are stereotypically good-looking.
Mormons are the goodie-goodie Ned Flanders type, not badass rednecks. And if anything they are overly trusting -- making them perfect targets for fraud, a crime which has its highest rate in Utah.
They won't be standing in anyone's way, especially not California.
And why would they? They'll need someone with a powerful military, large agricultural estates, and energy sources, with some kind of industrial capacity. That's not Utah, or anywhere else in Mormonland.
Plus they have the same accent -- everyone does out West. They don't hate each other's guts like Georgia vs. Alabama, or the Southeast vs. the Northeast, or Noo Yawk vs. Bahstan.
Back to French realignment, that has been delayed until after this election. And looking into what the National Rally was proposing, it's no surprise -- they're just another fake & gay neolib / neocon party by now, with the only twist being they don't want immigrants.
ReplyDelete"Well, seems like a no-brainer -- if neoliberalism is here forever, why not choose the version of it that also comes with less immigrants?"
But there is no such thing -- open borders requires libertarianism (and vice versa), AKA liberalism in Europe, AKA neoliberalism in America.
The whole point of a realignment to move beyond the neoliberal stage of history is to really shake things up, so that it's not just a minor cosmetic change, and more importantly, so that the shake-up is real. Not only are the RN promising only a minor change, it's impossible because they aren't proposing the other societal changes that support low immigration.
Like most non-French people, I pay no attention to French politics. But looking into the Wiki article on RN -- which is mostly fear-mongering propaganda from libtards -- there's a section on their evolution with quotes from the past several years.
They are not nationalist anymore -- they want to stay within NATO, they want to antagonize Russia over Ukraine, and they view Russia as a threat to their security. This is not French nationalism, this is the most pathetic kind of vassalage to the American Empire. French interests have nothing to do with the Donbass, GTFOH.
And even if they were relevant, Russia was always destined to win -- why side with a loser? Flushing the nation's wealth down the toilet. Again, not trading wealth in one country for victory in another country -- wasting your own wealth, so that another country can LOSE its war that you're financing. Lose-lose, not a win-lose trade-off.
They've changed from economic protectionism to "market-friendly" AKA neoliberal. Well, France already joined the market-friendly anti-nationalist system in 1981 with the Mitterrand realignment. France does not need right-wingers in 2024 to give them a market-friendly society -- fait accompli, one million years ago, in political time.
They won't even fight neoliberalism on a single key issue, like Macron's recent highly unpopular raising of the retirement age from 62 to 64. They started out claiming they would reverse it -- then cucked and said j/k, we're neolibs, so fucking over the common people is what we'll do.
"We share Macron's policies for society writ large, but we like to say edgy slurs about immigrants in our private group chats" -- wow, what an amazing crusade of radical change is being offered!
There was a hilariously out-of-touch piece of propaganda going around social media leading up to the election, from a 20-something affluent urbanite woman, saying how unbearable her neighborhood had become due to African immigrants.
ReplyDeleteWho was that being pitched to? -- other affluent urbanites, who are a small chunk of the electorate, even in a highly urbanized country like France. Not everybody is in the top 10% of wealth.
And affluent urbanites understand that in the neolib order, their lavish lifestyles are dependent on an imported slave class who drive them around, deliver food, etc.
Others are not employed productively, and just laze around or deal drugs -- that's what open borders gets you. If you are against open borders, you are against "markets uber alles", you are against minmaxing, you are against efficiency, you are against economic striving and status-seeking.
You are for stability, protectionism, and staying in your own 2nd or 3rd-tier town, rather than moving to a top-tier city to chase status -- and depend on a foreign slave class, in order to afford your rent in that top-tier city.
The new president of the RN party, Jordan Bardella, went to college at the Sorbonne, AKA the Harvard of France. And he's in his 20s, born in '95 -- but "married" into the Le Pen political family. I put that word in quotes cuz he looks gay, which would not be surprising since most male politicians these days are gay, only differing on whether they're closeted (right-wing) or out (left-wing).
Gay elite-educated affluent urbanites -- but who like to say slurs about immigrants in their private group chats. Very reminiscent of the "online right", who would go down in flames electorally just like this joker.
They really got high on their own supply in the wake of Trump 2016 -- deluding themselves into believing it was just edgy memes from right-wing yuppies, for other right-wing yuppies, that won him the White House.
If the online right ever gets into power they'll just be like a right wing version of the AOC types groupme presidents.
DeleteIn reality, Trump ran on slashing the wealth of the decadent elite of his own party --
ReplyDeleteRebuilding factories in America rather than cheap-labor shitholes, which would slash profit margins for the GOP sector of manufacturing.
Ending NATO and the occupation of Japan and South Korea and Afghanistan and basically everywhere around the world. There goes the gravy train for war-losing military contractors, officers, and soldiers. Also jacking up costs by shifting the military's employee base to Americans in America, rather than Filipino slaves in a base in Qatar.
Instituting single-payer healthcare. There go Big Pharma profits.
Ending immigration. There goes the agricultural sector's profits, having to employ high-wage Americans.
And broadly, pulling the rug out from all the status-striving garbage that relies on cheap labor to afford their precarious nouveau riche lifestyle, whether they're an urbanite yuppie or an exurban kulak general contractor who only employs cheap foreign slaves.
That's why Trump 2016 was so popular with the white working-class in Rust Belt states like Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Minnesota (which he only lost due to the CIA plant McCuckin who split the vote). Who doesn't want a return to union factory jobs in those states? They were willing to shake things up, if this Republican wasn't just going to push NAFTA like they have since Reagan and Bush Sr.
And since the military is not a huge patron in the Rust Belt, it was only better news to hear Trump promise a massive reduction in military waste, by leaving NATO, Japan, SK, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc. And by promising to order weapons from the MIC at cheaper prices -- imagine a Republican running on a platform of crippling his own boss' profits, for the betterment of society at large!
Well, those halcyon days of 2016 are looonnngg gone, and by now Trump is openly running as a neolib / neocon, who just wants to waste even more on doomed crusades in Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan, pumping more do-nothing makework gravy train funding into the police and prison system -- which has never reduced a crime wave, as we saw under Reagan and Bush Sr., and as every country saw crime rates fall off a cliff during the '90s and 2000s and 2010s, whether they were right-wing tough-on-crime or left-wing soft-on-crime.
He's not even running on building a wall, slashing immigration, etc. Now it's just "We right-wing neolibs are only 95% as woke as the left-wing neolibs" -- BFD, not gonna leave the house to vote for that, or stick your neck out to promote him on social media or word-of-mouth or whatever.
As atrocious as tranny surgery for minors is, that's not a realignment issue. It's not at the core of neoliberalism, and only existed in the last several years.
Shake up the system or GTFOH.
Jordan Bardella's predecessor as vice president of the National Front is Florian Philippot, who is also gay according to Wikipedia.
ReplyDeleteRN also surrendered on leaving the EU political system, and on leaving the Euro currency system. Totally fake & gay (closeted) neolib bullshit party, as it stands now, and as it's been trending in recent years.
ReplyDeleteEither they reverse this reversal, or some other enterprising party will be the right-wing realignment party in the near future.
The other hilariously clueless and decadent elite defending propaganda they're engaging in is blaming everything on Islam -- sorry, bitch, your society has been run by Christians or atheists for the last 1500 years, never by Muslims.
ReplyDeleteMuslims never conquered France, and they are not there today as part of an expanding Muslim empire, as they were in Iberia during the Dark Ages -- they're there due to native French Christians and atheists, who are neolib efficiency marketeer minmaxxers, who've decided that foreigners are better than natives for boosting profit margins.
And if some of those foreigners are also Christian and even Catholic, like "East Europeans" (from never-imperial cheap-labor shitholes like Poland -- not Russia), while others are Muslim, while others are who knows what, it makes no difference for minmaxxing the cost structure for the corrupt decadent elite that doesn't even produce anything anymore.
Right-wing French blaming Islam instead of Mitterrand for the shithole state of their society, is just as clueless as right-wing Americans blaming Mexicans instead of Reagan. Reagan literally flung the doors open for the Mexicans, just as Mitterrand et al did for Muslims.
But pointing out these very obvious historical facts, and their material reasons, would be bad-mouthing your fellow affluent strivers, and may result in fewer social event invitations or gravy train stipends.
I'm also somewhat sceptical that the AfD will be the realigners in Germany. Biggest red flag is AfD's support for Israel, which puts them on the losing side of foreign policy. Then you have Thatcher-loving neoliberals like Alice Weidel leading the AfD and supporting many of the same economic policies as the CDU, including remaining in the EU.
ReplyDelete...or subscriptions to your podcast, substack, patreon, etc.
ReplyDeleteSadly funny, but not surprising, to see both sides in France blaming Midcentury collectivism, which delivered the closet thing to utopian paradise that any of us has ever experienced -- materially, socially, and culturally.
ReplyDeleteConservatards using communists as a slur, libtards using fascists as a slur. They're just whining about collectivism rather than individualism, whining about egalitarian prosperity rather than mass poverty -- with the chance to make it even higher if you do make it to the top, whining about having to travel around their own country rather than internationally, whining about having to rein it in rather than let your freak flag fly. Whining about regulation, in short -- economic, emotional, and otherwise.
Right-wing collectivism delivered the Midcentury utopia for Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Greece, Australia, and New Zealand. Left-wing collectivism delivered the Midcentury utopia for America, Britain, Russia, and Yugoslavia.
Same exact outcomes, with supposedly different inputs -- that means the inputs were not crucial to the outcome. The right-wing military-dominated societies were identical to the left-wing finance-dominated societies. Regulation was just the zeitgeist back then, after the laissez-faire zeitgeist of the first liberal era (meaning libertarian, in American usage). Which side of the partisan divide was in charge, had nothing to do with it.
Nor does it have anything to do with the descent into mediocrity and outright collapse in the neoliberal era. Left-wing yuppies realigned away from utopia in France et al, while right-wing yuppies realigned away from utopia in America et al.
But both share their hatred for Midcentury collectivism and utopia. The only difference is which flavor of it they use as a slur, based on their partisan affiliation. But neither side would use Reaganite or Mitterrandiste as a slur, only fascist or communist, systems that died out in 1980 and do not explain why we are where we are now.
Go on, Agnostic!
ReplyDeleteHopefully that's it for political posting, busy now with the links between a Turkic and a Japanese wishing tree holiday / ritual, after learning about the Japanese one from the Koronator's Tanabata-themed stream yesterday. Hidirellez being the Turkic one.
ReplyDeletePossible deep ancient Steppe nomad origin, since it was first borrowed into China, as the Qi Xi festival -- but whose central narrative is about a nomadic cowherd, indicating a more likely non-Han origin to the north -- from where it could have spread east into Korea and Japan, and west along with the proto-Turkic / proto-Mongol migrations.
What about Bardella stands out as being gay? And do you get the same impression from Macron or Trudeau?
ReplyDeleteLast political comment for now, the fact that RN keep getting a higher percentage of the vote, and have more seats in the legislature, does not mean they are realigning.
ReplyDeleteIt could mean they are just re-branding as a generic right-wing party, and taking the place of Chirac and Sarkozy. And given the major changes to their platform, that seems like the most reasonable interpretation for right now.
BTW, the last time the Le Pen party was heterodox, in the 2002 run-off, it was the *right-wing* party that absorbed all of the anti-Le Pen votes. There is nothing special about the left-wing party being the one to absorb the anti-Le Pen votes in 2024. We don't conclude that the right-wingers of 2024 are secret left-wingers, anymore than we conclude that the left-wingers of 2002 were secret right-wingers.
It's purely a matter of convenience and incumbency, which of the two sides will absorb the orthodox votes -- Chirac, a right-winger, was incumbent in 2002, and now in 2024 Macron, a left-winger, is incumbent. It's not the individual being incumbent that matters, but which partisan side is incumbent.
Realignment requires something fundamentally new, or highly heterodox, that shakes things up. If Jean-Marie Le Pen had won in 2002, *that* would have been a realignment. Back when the party wanted to leave NATO, ditch the EU and the Euro currency, and so on and so forth.
And there is usually an attempt at heterodoxy by the dominant party, just before true realignment by the opposing party. But the dominant party is too ossified to complete it, and the opposing party -- formerly the minor party -- becomes the new dominant party to carry out the half-fulfilled promises of the former dominant party.
E.g., Jimmy Carter, a Democrat from the end of the New Deal era, campaigning on deregulation and putting a stop to the growth of federal agencies. But his term saw 2 new departments (Energy and Education), and an overall maintenance of the New Deal regulatory state.
That's why Reagan won and realigned -- he was pushing deregulation on steroids, and showed that Carter had only put a tiny dent in the regulatory state, because his party was the creator of the New Deal, so they would be the last group to tear it down. Whereas the GOP was not the creator of the New Deal, and campaigned against it bitterly throughout the '30s and some of the '40s, so they would be natural destroyers of the New Deal -- which is exactly what happened.
In academic jargon, these end-of-an-era leaders who try but fail to mix things up in a last-ditch attempt to salvage their ossified party, are "disjunctive". Trump plays the same role for the Reaganite era, whose dominant party is the GOP.
Macron didn't really do that much that was disjunctive, so perhaps the upcoming president from the left-wing will attempt to shake things up -- he will fail, being from the ossified dominant party of the era, but those attempts will open the door to even bolder and more successful efforts to shake things up from the opposing party.
ReplyDeleteBy the looks of the landscape for a rich but collapsed Western Euro empire in 2024, I'd say the vassalage to the collapsing American Empire is the most likely target for realignment. Leaving NATO, leaving the fragmenting state of Israel to get annexed and dissolved by Lebanon and whoever else in the region, making peace and perhaps even allying with Russia militarily, leaving Ukraine to be taken back by Russia.
And the economic benefits from these overtures -- like getting cheap energy once more from Russia, which is all the more crucial during an economic collapse like they're going through in Europe right now due to their anti-Russia bullshit.
Maybe also leaving the EU? Or the Euro currency? It only benefitted Germany, not so much France. And without such a heavy reliance on German manufacturing (which is collapsing due to soaring energy costs to manufacturers, due to Germany provoking Russia and siding with America / Ukraine), maybe some of that manufacturing will return to France. Why not? They used to manufacture all sorts of things in France -- I grew up with various housewares by Arcopal, made in France. Not everything needs to be made in China, Vietnam, or Indonesia.
But that is all in the future, to be determined. Some hints can already be seen, though...
I don't think any realignment will happen in Europe until Ukraine loses the war and it becomes clear to Europeans that they have been duped into supporting Ukraine.
ReplyDeleteSubaru + Okayu playing Super Mario 3 today -- such a great yin-yang pair! ^_^ During her birthday stream, a poll showed that this is her fans' most preferred pairing -- no wonder! I loved their Clock Tower and Metroid streams from last year, I was instantly hooked!
ReplyDeleteI watched them live today, so without the closed captioned translation, but you don't need to speak Japanese to understand the gameplay, or their emotions and reactions, and their dynamic of the wild rowdy one and the mellow supportive one (who the rowdy one sends into a wheezing laughter, which she is thankful for, hehe).
In Glorious Nippon, every week is retro week! ^_^ Sora just beat Super Mario USA (AKA Super Mario 2 here), and most of Hololive Regloss has been occasionally playing Super Mario Bros 1 (the original, or the enhanced version for Super Nintendo).
It's tradition! And in a society that appreciates its culture, traditions are a fun indulgence, not a boring chore!
Just like the Koronator dressing up as the Celestial Woman and granting wishes to her fans on Tanabata (just in her meme-y comedian style), which she has made into her own tradition going back several years now. ^_^
So far, only House Dems are making amends with Biden, and there are still several high-ranking Reps who are openly calling for him to "step aside" (still unclear whether that means leave the nomination race, or the presidency so Harris can become president before the election).
ReplyDeleteSenate Dems are making no such amends, with plenty of them saying Biden can't win (Tester, Brown, etc.), and a high-ranking member (Durbin) saying "we'll have to see" who the nominee will be. Not a capitulation at all.
The reason seems to be the Black Caucus in Congress, which is Biden's most loyal bloc in government.
But their influence lies mainly in the House, where heavily black districts go to them forever, and not the Senate, where there is no heavily black state that they have a permanent lock on.
So CBC members make up 25% of the Democrat side in the House (55 of 213), but only 5% of the Democrat side in the Senate (3 of 51).
It sounds like the Black Caucus threw their heavier weight around in the House, bullying the non-black libtards into submission, but not affecting the more military / intel agency white Dems, who are still calling for Biden to leave (Adam Smith, Mikie Sherrill).
But since they have no weight to throw around in the Senate, those Dems are not being bullied into silence.
And nobody from the high-ranking donors (Netflix founder, Disney heiress, etc.) has withdrawn their calls for Biden to leave, so they aren't being intimidated by the Black bloc either.
Nothing from the people at the DNC who will write the rules for the convention, or the delegates themselves.
Nobody from the media sector is backing off either -- they're still collectively weighing against Biden.
I still see this as an open and unresolved coup, with Biden's only successful pushback being with House Dems, where the Black bloc has its strongest influence. And they don't matter so much in the big picture anyway -- they might remain publicly silent, but take part in the behind-the-scenes rules-writing, horse-trading, etc. leading up to and after the convention.
None of the forces pushing for Biden to leave have eased up -- the abysmal polling against Trump, the open display of accelerating senility, and the self-centered stubbornness. Those will only get worse in the next several months, and all of those genies are already out of the bottle -- the media can't cook up a bunch of polls after a Convention where he gets the nomination, saying suddenly Biden is up 15 points over Trump. No one will buy that, and he'll be even more delegitimized than currently. The full-court press by the media since the debate cannot be taken back either -- he's seen as a senile zombie by most Americans now, and that loss of legitimacy and authority are not coming back.
All that is ruled out by the House Dem capitulation is an overt impeachment of Biden, which would begin in the House. But they don't directly and solely control what happens at the Convention -- or after the Convention and before the Election, or after the Election and before Inauguration.
ReplyDeleteEven in the worst-case scenario for the coup, where he gets the nomination, leans on those CBC members to direct precinct workers in Philly, Detroit, Milwaukee, Atlanta, etc. to steal the election again, and becomes president-elect... I see a freaked-out progressive assassinating Biden before Inauguration Day, or there are faithless electors in the Electoral College, or Senate Dems refuse to confirm him, leading to someone else (presumably Harris) being inaugurated.
Well, the even worse case is that those black precinct workers can't work enough magic this time, since Biden is down against Trump so much more than in 2020, and Trump wins and gets inaugurated.
But I'm just talking about among the Dem side itself.
Again, even with House Dems, the most we can say is they're going to remain publicly silent or supportive of Biden, so the public chorus against him won't have as many lower-ranking voices in it as there would have been if the House were openly split among pro and anti-Biden blocs.
Progs vs. blacks -- it's Bernie 2016 all over again, LOL. But the whole BLM thing has gone up in smoke since the woketard 2010s are over (after the 2020 riots). So there isn't the same dangerous taboo around pushing back against blacks in politics.
ReplyDeleteIf the Black Caucus tries to accuse non-black progs of being racist for wanting Harris instead of Biden, they'll just roll their eyes, "oh come on...", or even "STFU".
Very dumb right-wingers promised there would be endless rioting after 2020, when that was clearly the peak of their violent outbursts, and it would be falling afterward -- which it has. The Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, previously thought to be sacrosanct, and not a single lib marched in the streets, let alone set anything on fire, destroyed buildings, or killed anyone.
It's not 2014-2020 anymore, thank God.
And overturning Roe v. Wade was 2 years ago -- there's even less gas in the riot tank in 2024, which is why there have not been and will not be any BLM riots this summer, election year or no election year.
Peter Turchin showed these civil breakdowns go in 50-year cycles, the last one peaking in 2020, and before that circa 1970, and 1920, and 1870-ish, with a missing explosion in the 1820s, and the Revolution in the 1770s.
The point being, Biden only has these weakened BLM dead-enders to rely on, and his opponent is not a socialist like Bernie but his own VP, Harris. So in this coup, it won't go down like those BLM girls who shut down Bernie's rally in 2015 -- nearly a fucking DECADE ago. Seems like yesterday, cuz the emotions were so intense that they'll last forever, but they're actually long-gone by now in reality.
Progs are going to start openly talking about blacks the same way warmongers talk about their target country -- their common people are a wonderful people, with a proud and glorious history, but they are, sadly, being ruled over by a corrupt and wicked group who we must remove from power in order to liberate the proud and noble population currently being ground under their evil boot.
ReplyDelete"Nobody loves ordinary everyday black folks as much as I do, and we will continue to extend every helping and welcoming hand we can to them -- but we must purge the Black Caucus from Congress if our society's welfare is to survive."
Bank on this changing tune! xD
Final observation: after the 2020 precedent of the Great Ballot Count Stoppage, there's a perverse incentive for the black urban Dem machine to support a WEAK candidate.
ReplyDeleteIf the candidate is strong, like Obama both times, there's no need for precinct workers to halt the ballot counting, tabulating, and reporting. And no need for ballot harvesting beforehand, to "break in case of emergency" and wheel out pallots of ballots at 4am for 10 weeks after the election is over.
Obama didn't rely on, and didn't have to reward, the black urban machine very much -- he was way more indebted to yuppie and suburban libs or indies and moderates, white professional-managerial class types. That's who made out like bandits under his terms. Part of the whole "revenge of the nerds" zeitgeist of the woketard 2010s.
Now, with Biden polling abysmally against Trump since last fall -- and only worsening through election day, due to the press assault on his cognitive state -- the black urban machine wants to back the inferior candidate.
One, because they already did so, and got rewarded, and so this is just renewing that relationship from 2020.
But two, if they backed Harris or someone else, their services in ballot harvesting, and halting the ballot processing until the books are sufficiently cooked, will not be in such high demand. Therefore, not such a huge amount of goodies promised to them if they come through on their end.
It's the same as weapons manufacturers wanting a war -- ballot box stuffers want a candidate whose ballots must be artificially conjured up, not organically filled out.
Not the weakest candidate imaginable -- then their book-cooking would be too obvious. But as long as he's a plausible winner, then they can work their ballot-processing magic, and get rewarded afterward by the WEAK candidate from their party.
Perverse incentives, but that's the precedent the Dems set in order to steal it from Trump in 2020.
Trump winning is the best case scenario. If Biden / Harris / another neoliberal Democrat ends up stealing the election from Trump in 2024 that will only delay the realignment away from neoliberalism even further. The Dems need to get hammered at the ballot and locked out of federal office before they learn they need to move on from woke Reaganite policies and the current crop of boomer politicians.
ReplyDeleteSo many babes on Star Trek: TNG, I'd forgotten how attractive everyone was in the imagined future of the end-of-history '90s. Not like they're vamping it up in a sex symbol way -- they're just good-looking.
ReplyDeleteTonight during "Identity Crisis," I thought "Damn, they sure found a stunner for just the brief role of an ensign" -- yep, turns out she had been crowned Miss Universe the previous year! Mona Grudt, from Norway, and who has that same dark mysterious look that Swedish Ann-Margret does. Both are Arctic Circle foxes, not from the mild southern parts of their countries -- are all babes dark, mysterious, and alluring that far north? ^_^
Anyway, this dovetails with the multiracial and multicultural cast -- they tried to get attractive people from all races for a futuristic utopia. Much like the multiculti '90s and y2k in general (e.g. the music video for "A New Day Has Come" by Celine Dion, which I mentioned earlier).
As of the woketard 2010s, and really during the 2000s as well, they wouldn't give the audience such attractive people to look at. Again not in a pervy way, but as a sign of how advanced the society would be, and not through overt eugenic selection or anything. If anything, it's meant to say how great the *environment* of the future is, not genetic engineering etc.
And with the handful of attractive people today, they'd have to be presented in an anti-libidinal way, where she frustrates your initial thoughts of "well, isn't she good-looking". Antagonistic rather than pleasing toward the audience, and toward its human nature.
If anything, they try to reverse the multiculti cast of the '90s and y2k -- to find the most hideous people from some race, in order to make the audience feel repulsed, and then guilty for it --
"Oh no, does it make me a bad person if I notice that this 300-pound 37 year-old with vitiligo is ugly???"
Mona Grudt was 19 in that TNG episode, BTW. Back when 19 year-olds still looked mature. Millennials seem to be where the whole "never attained maturity" look began.
It's crazy to think that the anti-racist crusaders have weaponized black women into a war of ugliness, meant to repulse the audience, rather than select their attractive members in a multiculti showcase of cuties from all races.
But that futuristic end-of-history utopia from the '90s is totally gone now. You may never see another attractive non-white person, presented in a friendly persona, in American culture for the rest of our collapsing empire's history.
Nomad-dominant societies break the curse of feudalism or slavery by allowing those who would otherwise be tied down to the land, a means of upward mobility in their own lifetimes -- joining a nomadic gang!
ReplyDelete"Feudal bondage got you down? Does your lord treat you like a jerk? Why not break free from the whole lord-and-serf lifestyle altogether? -- come ride the green pastures and clear-blue skies of the Eurasian steppe! With us -- the Khazars! That's right, no former experience raiding and pillaging necessary! If you can learn to ride a horse and hold a lance, we'd love to have you on our team! If you come from a different haplogroup, or speak a different language, that's OK -- we pride ourselves here on being a motley crew! There may already be one of your kind among our ranks! So, tell that lord of yours to go shove it, and say goodbye to those hardscrabble field-tilling days forever!"
Really, who *would* want to live as a serf, tied to the land, perhaps hereditarily? "Well, at least my lord provides and protects me, somewhat -- it's not great, but it's not bad, and it's reliable and stable."
Yeah, but what about those who don't want that? Where's the avenue for upward mobility, high-risk / high-reward, living in a more egalitarian social order, with camaraderie and honor? Even if this is a minority of the population, they still threaten to overturn the frozen-in-place social hierarchy.
But if there's a viable alternative to that whole system, that's a career opportunity with the potential for promotion, and at the very least rising above where you currently are, as a Medieval peasant.
Sedentary-dominant societies don't have this alternative available -- the central state has become so strong that nomads are shrinking and baring eking out a living. No way would you want to jump onto that sinking ship.
ReplyDeleteSo, you're forced to stick with the feudal serfdom gig, and your only chances for upward mobility are to join a status-striving contest internally, trying to force the society to provide more slots in the middle and upper tiers for strivers like you, who will leech more and more off of public funds and surpluses.
This is the familiar "over-production of elites" dynamic -- but in a nomad-dominant society, you could just join a gang instead of the elite, to chase after upward mobility. There's only so many slots in the gangs, so any excess will go into the over-production of elites -- but having gangs there as an alternative lessens the internal pressure in the over-production of elites.
The really intense over-production of elites were like the Roman Empire or Early Modern Europe, which were sedentary-dominant. Not quite as intense in the Frankish Empire or the Bronze Age, which had other avenues for a get-rich-quick schemer.
Strong central states suppress both the domestic nomads (like brigands, highwaymen, mafia, gangs, etc.), as well as foreign neighboring nomads. Neither avenue is open to a restless rambling, roving, and raiding type of guy. Weak states allow for both.
We see that in America, a historically weak central state with strong nomadic forces. Why serve as a ranch hand for some ranch owner -- when you could join a cattle-rustling gang and own a shitload more wealth than any hired hand ever could? Or when you could join a train-robbing gang? Or a common "stick 'em up" gang targeting saloons, brothels, and whoever else was a stationary target?
ReplyDeleteThe Wild West.
Why serve as a shoeshine boy in 1920s Brooklyn, when you could join the mafia and maybe ascend the ranks?
Why bag groceries in South Central L.A. in 1991, when you could join the Bloods or the Crips?
Hard honest work, at the bottom of the pyramid, has little room for upward mobility. But gang raids have plenty of career opportunities.
This must have been the appeal of joining a unionized factory -- it was a kind of stick 'em up gang against the owners, and whose ranks allowed for upward mobility from line-worker to shop steward and union boss etc. If you wanted to ascend ranks in the union, it may have had a nomadic component, as you traveled from one factory to another to take them over.
The cops and the army sure treated union organizers as though they were playing cowboys and Indians, opening fire with gatling guns on striking workers, as though fending off an Indian raid.
This is reflected in the philosophy / religion of these societies, where the nomad-dominant ones prize freedom and honor and dignity, while the sedentary-dominant ones prize slavery or a frozen stratified hierarchy, knowing your place, and accepted an undignified existence cuz that's your place.
ReplyDeleteJustifying frozen hierarchies etc. -- first began with the Classical era, Plato, Aristotle, Confucius, etc. Then again after 1300, and especially in the Renaissance and Early Modern eras, like justifying chattle slavery, the persistence of serfdom, and the Great Chain of Being.
Augustine and Aquinas, at the very beginning and end of the Dark Ages, are a lot less rosy about slavery and stratified hierarchies among people. They grudgingly accept them, and blame them on the sinful nature of mankind -- hierarchy and slavery are punishments, reflecting our fallen nature, and our imperfect mundane world. They're not praised as a natural ideal or aspirational utopia.
Well, they knew their audience -- if you openly praise a frozen hierarchy in the 4th through 13th centuries, and try to badger people to know their place, stay in their place, and like it, they'll just tell you to go shove it and run away from their lord's manor, to join the Huns or the Vikings or the Mongols. A widely available alternative, with way less hierarchy, more camaraderie, possible upward mobility, and some dynamism and excitement and honor and dignity.
What's a weak central state going to do? -- use its all-seeing intel services to locate you, and send its all-powerful army to hunt you down and bring you back to your owner / lord? Lotsa luck with that when the state is weak and nomads are roaming around everywhere.
The theme of imprisonment (most recently, Orwell, Kafka, The Prisoner) only comes up in sedentary-dominant societies -- cuz in nomad-dominant ones, the would-be prisoners can simply run away from the place they're not supposed to leave.
There are no slaves, prisoners, or hierarchies in the original nomad-dominant society -- hunter-gatherers. Talk about a weak central state that can't police fugitive slaves!
And that's really why America abolished slavery so early in its history. Not just the push toward industrial rather than agrarian economies, but our central state was too weak to police fugitive slaves, which is what most slaves would do after long enough. In their case, they didn't even have to join a gang -- just run away to a non-slave state, and perform grunt labor for a wage. If the wage were high enough, relative to what the slave-owner provided to his slaves, it's a no-brainer -- mass migration to the richer non-slave states. And that's exactly what happened with the Great Migration.
That was inevitable, and without a strong central state, Southern landowners had no shot at forcing their slaves to remain on their land. Might as well just give up the whole enterprise, then.
This ability to opt out of the sedentary lifestyle, in a nomad-dominant society, explains why even the remaining lord-and-serf relationships seem more humane and honorable. The kings and caliphs and khagans from the Dark Ages had to humble themselves *somewhat*, as opposed to the Cesars and self-styled Sun gods of the Classical and Neoclassical eras.
ReplyDeleteBetter treat those serfs well, or they'll run off and join a gang of brigands, or even worse, the expanding Steppe empire du jour. And they'll know where you live, how much wealth you've got, maybe even where it's stored!
And lords knew that threat was real -- that's why nomad-dominant architecture is so solid and fortress-like, not light airy and open. Even then, runaway serfs might know where your fortress' particular vulnerabilities were, and could use that intel to make a good first impression on a local gang or a Steppe confederation that they wanted to join instead of toiling away for your disrespectful ass.
In part, the elites of that time were more respectful cuz they were all armed to the teeth, and didn't want to set off a blood feud from insults. But just as important, cuz they didn't want to antagonize the peasantry into joining gangs or nomadic raiding confederations, and get targeted for revenge.
There's no counterpart to that fear in a sedentary-dominant society, where the elites hold all the cards.
In a nomad-dominant society, there's this whole other parallel, dark, bizarro world where violating the norms of the landed gentry could not only sustain the violators, but actually give them the much-desired shot at upward mobility. A VERY tempting alternative to hardscrabble hierarchy.
Similar to parents who don't want to constantly hector, micro-manage, and breathe down their kid's neck -- with all the tempting things out there to turn to, like drugs, it might push them away from wholesome home life and into the runaway life of drugs etc.
You have a tightrope balancing act to perform, and everyone ends up more humble and respectful as a result.
And again that's reflected in the religions of nomad-dominant societies, like Christianity (the original kind, AKA Orthodox and Catholic), Islam (the original kind, not Salafism or Modern), and Buddhism (the Tang-derived schools).
ReplyDeleteSince the secular rulers were humble, so were the gods and demons -- not a singular, all-knowing and all-powerful mono-god or mono-devil, as there was in Classical times (the tiny circle of Olympian gods, or Second Temple Judaism) or post-1300 times (Dante, Milton, and the Protestant RETVRN to Classical strict monotheism, with no role for saints, Mary, etc.).
And far from being gods who were remote and so superior to the mortal that they might not even see or interact with them, the Bronze Age and Dark Age gods had all sorts of more relatable and down-to-earth intermediaries -- saints, Bodhisattvas, and walis. This humbles the divine realm to be closer to earth and more tangible and face-to-face. More respectful toward the believers and ritual performers -- not remaining distant, unapproachable, and never to be seen in some Holy of Holies.
Religious officials, during the deeply religious times of a nomad-dominant society, knew that losing someone to a life of brigandage or raiding meant losing them as a member of the religion as well.
ReplyDeleteHighly unlikely that a tribal confederation from the Steppe would have the exact same religion as those joining from the outside. The outside religions might be tolerated, but in all likelihood the outsiders would try to assimilate and partly practice the religion of the Steppe elites -- Tengrism, not Christianity, Islam, or Buddhism.
If they joined a local group of brigands, in all likelihood they would be living as apostates or atheists, not praying, not confessing, not attending church or the mosque or anything else that's required to be a Christian, Muslim, etc. in good standing.
It's not like the Bloods and Crips made sure to have Christian pastors in their ranks, in order to ensure their members stayed good Christians while joining a street gang.
Alienate your congregation when they have the option to join a gang, and you'll be losing a bunch of members of your religion, too, not just farm laborers. It makes religious officials more understanding, tolerant, and respectful.
In fact, religious authoritarianism correlates with political authoritarianism. It's from strong central states, in sedentary-dominant societies.
ReplyDeleteOne of the most hilarious parts of watching the Cosmos series, was seeing Carl Sagan twist himself into knots to present the sedentary-dominant societies like Classical Greece and Renaissance / Early Modern Europe as progressive in knowledge, but also persecuting in religion.
He lazily blames witch hunts etc. on superstition -- but superstition was over by the time of the Early Modern witch hunts. And the Catholic Church that house-imprisoned Galileo was centuries beyond the Scholastic movement, they were about order and knowledge and reason, not magic and superstition. Ditto for the Greeks who persecuted and/or killed several of the Classical Ionian philosophers for wrong-think, and for the real and imagined totalitarians of the 20th C in Eurasia (but not in America, where we never came close).
Americans are highly superstitious -- and therefore, not totalitarian, not persecuting, not burning wrong-thinkers at the stake, etc. Only people convinced of their supreme reason and confidence and, frankly, vainglorious pride, conduct these crusades against their own wrong-thinking people.
He didn't have a single example from the Bronze Age, the Dark Ages, or America, or Japan -- those nomad-dominant societies are too delicate, with the option to join brigands or foreign raiding parties, to try persecuting, witch-hunting, burning heretics at the stake, etc.
Oh yeah, the Roman Empire's persecution of Christians, another hallmark of the (Late) Classical era. And the original crucifixion of Jesus himself -- by the rationalist Roman Empire, at the behest of the rationalist Pharisees. Not by a superstitious bunch of savages.
If a Dark Age church, mosque, or temple tried those tactics against wrong-thinkers, they'd only swell the ranks of the brigands, nomads, etc., and not only lose members of their religion, but probably provoke a literal pillaging attack on it. They knew better than to conduct broad witch hunts.
The Puritans who were particularly notorious for iconoclasm and witch-burning were also the most literate group in Christendom at the time and had the most literate female population as well! In fact for a sect that was supposedly the most misogynistic, the Puritans actually had a quote female base and their husbands often converted to please them. See "Seed of Albion" for more details. It was usually other women who leveled the charges at Salem and the judges graduate from Harvard! Kind of like SJWs today.
DeletePrideful rationalism carried out and justified slavery and witch hunts, humble mysticism did neither.
ReplyDeleteThe thing to remember about the Puritans' witch trials is how limited that was within the American context. In Germany, there were witch hunts all over the place. In Spain, likewise for the Spanish Inquisition going after wrong-thinkers, during the same time period (Renaissance / Early Modern).
ReplyDeleteIn America, it was just that one wacko sect in New England. Not in the Mid-Atlantic states, or Virginia, etc. And it was only that one spate of trials, not a continually ongoing thing -- like various widespread trials in Germany. Book-burning, for instance, is a hallmark of German Protestantism, from its origins right up through the Nazis.
Are there a handful of religious nuts in America who put on little, local displays of book-burning? Maybe -- but not a widespread or centrally orchestrated campaign, as in Early Modern and Modern Europe.
The reason there have never been phenomena like the witch trials in America is cuz we have never had a state religion, whose top officials or elders or whatever could instigate such a widespread persecution, book-burning, burning at the stake, etc.
Tortures that are slanderously labeled "Medieval" -- but they didn't do any of that stuff on a mass scale in the Dark Ages. The central state was too weak. That's all from after 1300, not really Medieval at all, with everyone at the time referring to the 14th C as emerging from the Dark Ages.
Those are more properly called "Renaissance tortures" or "Enlightenment tortures" or "secular rationalist humanist tortures" (for the later examples launched by the French Revolutionaries, the anti-clerical side of the collapsing Spanish Empire, and so on).
Who on the internet fantasizes about torturing wrong-thinkers, in intensely sadistic detail, even if it's just idle fan-fic? Redditors, not fundies reading a 1999 Geocities page about Biblical archaeology.
Don't even start me on the Puritans and Calvinists being the "Umm, ackshually" type of their day. They spurned the saints and all those intermediaries, just like Salafists did with walis (Salafism is also an Early Modern / Modern development -- not rooted in Dark Age Sufism). And they ridiculed the physical / tangible side of religion, like relics (again, just like the Salafists).
Lutherans and Anglicans were also like that, but the Calvinists were the most wacko about their Umm Ackshually rationalist approach to religion.
The Reformation did produce some more accurate translations of the Bible, going back to original sources, and kicked off the scholarly field of Biblical scholarship -- but damn if they weren't proto-redditors when it came to the actual practice of religion, complete with the fan-fic -- and sometimes successful implementation of -- torture campaigns against the wrong-thinkers.
Dark Age Europeans never descended into insane wars of religion -- that's a post-1300 thing. And I mean internal to a society, not a war between two separate societies where the different religions are just a correlation with their being different societies. Just within Germany, for instance, or just within Spain, or just within France.
The good ol' Dark Ages...
There's another post to be written about how Puritanism is not about purity, taboo, and the emotion of disgust -- but about anger at perceived injustice, self-appointment to be the judge jury and executioner of the offenders, launching widespread surveillance and enforcement campaigns to raise the level of justice, and intensely indulging in the torture aspect of punishment (torture porn).
ReplyDeleteThis is why hedonism, debauchery, and decadence can co-exist with Puritanism -- just like they do in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Dubai. So they did in Early Modern and Modern Europe.
And to a lesser extent in America, but they still co-exist and are not contradictory.
The opposite of hedonism is not Puritanism, but asceticism, monasticism, and the like. And none of those people launch insane righteous crusades against internal wrong-thinkers or wrong-doers, with sadistic torture always on their mind, inflaming their passions, etc.
There's nothing preventing a Puritan from being hedonistic, at least in their thoughts, but also in their behavior -- plenty of them are.
They are not disgusted by what they perceive as sensual indulgence -- they are outraged. And you can be outraged by yourself, if you're indulging in lustful thoughts or actions. But you aren't disgusted by yourself, as though your purity has been polluted and you need to scrub it clean to feel healthy again. Very different emotions, disgust and anger.
Maybe you could call Puritans self-loathing hedonists (at least in their thoughts and emotions, but even in their behavior). But anger wants to be directed at someone else, who's causing you an injustice, something unfair that needs to be corrected. So you direct that self-loathing toward easier targets, like those who indulge more than you, who are socially peripheral, etc. Or who aren't guilty whatsoever, and you're just making a confession through projection.
Ascetics don't hate themselves, it's more along the disgust / purity dimension, which ties into health. They see their lustful / gluttonous / avaricious thoughts as a kind of sickness, and they are going to administer some kind of treatment to cure themselves of this pollution, becoming healthier and cleanlier as a result.
They don't direct it outwards, accusing others of being lustful etc., and convicting them, and administering torturing punishments to them in order to make them healthy.
It's more like they implore others to follow the same course of treatment, to cure the sicknesses that we all are afflicted with, in order to become healthier. More like word-of-mouth advice about diet + fitness, not a discipline + punish / law & order approach.
Good ol' monks and nuns of the Dark Ages...
Hanged, drawn, and quartered -- one of the most sadistic tortures in British history, and only hinted at in the 1200s, becoming the official punishment for (high) treason in the 1300s, after which it became common when someone was accused of that crime.
ReplyDeleteBy the 1600s, Samuel Pepys in his diary of everyday life in London, remarks about seeing someone who'd been hanged, drawn, and quartered, and speaks about it so casually, like it's the office water-cooler chit-chat about how some meth-head got tasered on the episode of Cops last night. And speaks matter-of-factly about trying to get a better view of it, again like he's at a public entertainment.
Tortures weren't questioned until the Romantic era, when Eurasians began tempering their rationalism and autism and Puritanism. Hanged, drawn, and quartered wasn't outlawed until the 1870s.
Much like slavery, "cruel and unusual punishments" were forbidden very early in American history. We aren't a strong central state that delights in its surveillance and punishment abilities, so witch-hunting and public torture spectacles were never going to catch on here, as much as some back-East Euro-LARP-ers would have loved for public hangings, firing squads, or electrocutions to have continued.
And even those methods were quick and painless, compared to the rack, the Iron Maiden, being boiled, being defenestrated, being hanged, drawn, and quartered. Rationalists apply their scientific autism to the torture that prideful rationalists are always dreaming about.
Humble mystics like Americans, who are New Age spiritual seekers of various types, are not prideful, don't think we're God's deputy just cuz we said so, don't dream of appointing ourselves supreme judge jury and executioner, and do not see injustices everywhere that require correcting and punishment.
Well, the Puritanical SJWs certainly do, but again that's mostly just impotent online fan-fic. In Britain and Germany, those SJWs can enact their bullshit on the general public. Not here, though, thank Jesus.
Glorious Nippon is also like us, humble and mystical and ascetic, not prideful and rationalist and Puritanical + hedonistic. They don't witch-hunt wrong-thinkers, unlike the land of Maoist "criticism and self-criticism", yikes.
ReplyDeleteWhy don't weak-state societies have this kind of pervasive persecution? It all goes back to the lack of a single powerful entity -- there are a bunch of regional entities, and local entities, competing against each other for your loyalty, labor, etc.
ReplyDeleteIf one lord tries to pester, nag, and harangue you about not dancing or listening to music, and that's something you enjoy -- well then, you'll just run off to some other lord who tolerates music and dancing. What is the first one going to do -- waste his private retinue to capture the music-and-dance lover that he'd be butting heads with all the time anyway? No way.
And if all the lords had the same inclination to nag and harangue you about -- well then, maybe you'll just run away to those widespread gangs. They're certainly not going to pester you about music and dancing -- they probably like it!
SJWs and Puritans getting their way requires there to be no competition at their level or higher. But in America, they have tons of competition -- we'll just browse some part of the internet where we don't have to read their fan-fic bullshit, and all their wannabe powers vanish into thin air. Can they get the occasional individual fired? Sure, but not systematically.
Even where corporate lords all share some litmus test that was instigated by SJWs, they're not eliminating the offending behavior -- they're just making it go in a different space, akin to Dark Age gangs or modern biker gangs or whatever. Not actually snuffing it out, a la witch hunts, book-burning, etc.
The runaway phenomenon was and still somewhat is still a very American thing -- not just leaving a rural or small town home for life in the city, that's just rural-to-urban migration.
ReplyDeleteI mean wandering around aimlessly from place to place, being nomadic, hitchhiking, couch-surfing, etc.
Iris from Taxi Driver, the daughter in Hardcore, the real-life cast of the StreetWise documentary, the band name for The Runaways, the name of the first hit song by Bon Jovi.
Some were just bored with sedentary life, some felt pushed and nagged too hard by their parents. Either way -- nobody is tied down to the land in a nomad-dominant society like ours. So why stay? -- just run away. When nomads are dominant, their way of life is viable for survival.
It may be debauched and urban, but it doesn't have to be, as shown by the "man on the run" genre of American culture discussed previously (The Incredible Hulk, The Fugitive, etc.). Maybe you're a spiritual seeker and join a Jesus Freak commune in a rural area. There were lots of them.
That's how life must've been during the Eurasian Dark Ages, or Japan's much later feudal era. If sedentary life wasn't for you, if being harangued by parents or village elders or the lord wasn't for you, then just become a runaway. There's a viable, thriving runaway scene for you to join -- it won't be glamorous, but it could be romantic, you won't starve, and you might just strike it rich by exploiting the sedentary part of society.
Whatever measures parents could've taken to prevent their kids from choosing this very viable alternative, they would have.
That's why Japanese parents are so opposite of the typically over-bearing Asian "tiger mother" or father. They didn't want their kids to run off and join the bandits, the yakuza, or the ronin.
"Please, we'll do whatever it takes for you to stay here, do hard honest work, marry, have kids, and settle down. We know you're tempted to leave, and there would be no stopping you. We promise not to breathe down your neck about everything, bark out orders, set unreachable goals for you, or beat you when you misbehave. Just as long as you stay..."
That's probably why Dark Age cultures prefer Buddhism, with its coping mechanism for a world in flux -- not getting too attached to things. Your kids could get restless and set off for the wild nomadic lifestyle at any moment -- better enjoy your time together while you can, expecting that it could change without warning. And part of that enjoyment means parenting is more of a give-and-take relationship with the kids, not the parents being all-powerful authorities. Japanese parents are more humble in their role than Chinese (and diaspora) parents. Glorious Nippon. ^_^
In a sedentary-dominant society, parents know that kids can't leave so easily, cuz those nomadic options are not open. They have to pursue the settled-down lifestyle whether they like it or not. So the parents don't have to win over their kids, and feel emboldened to act more over-bearing toward them -- no escape, when there's no nomadic scene flourishing.
I'm now convinced that Ashkenazi Jews are originally from Khazaria, i.e. the territory of the Khazar Khaganate and drawn from the variety of genetic and cultural groups under its administration. Not the Turkic elite themselves, but not being a WASP doesn't make you not-American. So in that sense, they were Khazars, which is a cultural, not a genetic, designation.
ReplyDeleteI'll probably write up a separate post, since it touches on a lot of what's gone wrong in science during the 2010s.
Most of it will be reviewing what others have said, but I do have some original contributions of my own to weigh in with -- linguistic ones, about the nature of Yiddish. Namely, it bears all the hallmarks of a language with a large share of its speakers being L2 learners.
That did not characterize the speech community once they were in Germany or Poland or Lithuania -- they were the sole speakers, non-Jewish Germans, Poles, and Lithuanians never bothered learning Yiddish.
So it must reflect the state of the language before they showed up in Germany, Poland, etc. And the only place where a language of Jewish religionists would have been spoken by lots of L2 speakers, is in an international / polyglot empire or an international / polyglot trade network. And the Khazar Khaganate was both of those, as was the Silk Road's western terminus, even before the Khazars began expanding into a steppe empire.
The genetics of Ashkenazi Jews in Germany in the High Middle Ages reflects that -- there were two separated / bi-modal sub-groups even genetically, with one being more "Middle Eastern" and one being more "Eastern European". That attests to the highly heterogeneous origin population, and is consistent with that source being polyglot -- and needing a lingua franca that changed to be easy for L2 learners to pick up. And that's what Yiddish was.
Briefly, if Yiddish were the language for a speech community with mostly / all L1 learners, and the cultural and genetic group were mostly endogamous, it would be highly complex morpho-syntactically -- but it is in fact simplified like crazy, about as much as the imperial lingua franca of English. And unlike the never-imperial never-lingua-franca like Icelandic, or Lithuanian.
And phonologically, they don't distinguish long from short vowels, seems to be stress-timed -- not mora-timed, at any rate, like pre-imperial Latin, Ancient Greek (pre-Byzantine Empire), Lithuanian, Japanese, pre-expansion Arabic, and so on and so forth.
Yiddish speakers were never leaders of an expanding empire in Europe, and Yiddish was not a lingua franca with non-Jewish people in Central or Eastern Europe. And it doesn't go back to Classical or Antiquity times. They never led an empire during the Middle Ages, so that only leaves the trade network and incorporation into someone else's empire as the explanations -- and that puts it within the time-and-place of the Khazar Empire.
I never gave this topic any thought until Nassim Taleb waded into it on Twitter. I thought, "Huh, might check into this..." and was instantly and thoroughly bombarded with propaganda from Google results.
ReplyDeleteNo science, no papers, no scientists -- just press releases from the ADL and other such Zionist political propaganda at the top, middle, and bottom of the results. Unrelenting propaganda, no real sources whatsoever.
I thought, Wow, if they're that insane about it, they must be covering up the truth, twisting the meaning of words, etc. And sure enough, they were.
The other tip-off was the terms "debunked," "discredited," and other non-scientific scare words akin to "conspiracy theory". Just reddit-tier midwit fear-mongering about a hot-button topic... but why should it be a hot-button topic anyway, rather than some obscure academic question that nobody has passionate feelings about? Genetic determinism, that's why -- basing their political claim to rule over a certain territory on their genes having come from there, and so they're just RETVRN-ing.
God, how retarded can it get?!
But anyway, never thought about it whatsoever, until I did the mildest inquiry and was deluged with thought-terminating cliche propaganda. OK, I'll only investigate deeper! And naturally it wasn't what they want the narrative to be for their dum-dum genetic determinist purposes.
I could care less about genetic determinist political projects -- Israel is actively being annexed by Lebanon right now, whether the Israeli Jews have a 100% or a 0% genetic connection to that place.
I just can't stand these insane propaganda wars that destroy what little intellectual and scholarly culture we have left.
Dum-dums see "Roman" or "European" DNA in Ashkenazi Jews, and assume the only way that could've happened is if the Jews left Judaea, traveled into Rome -- or at least the Italian peninsula -- picked up Roman DNA from a static Roman population, then left along with this newly acquired Roman DNA, and wound up in Germany with some of their original Middle Eastern DNA, plus the Roman DNA they picked up along the way.
ReplyDeleteAs though intermixing is a passive activity like stepping in mud, and you're tracking the mud into your destination building.
What if the mud found you -- somewhere else?
Well, mud can't move around, but people sure as hell can.
And in a post-imperial collapse environment, they have every incentive to GTFO and roam in search of greener pastures. I.e., in search of a thriving empire, which has tons of wealth and activity and dynamism and chances for upward mobility, etc. All the reasons why people come to America rather than Iceland these days.
In that part of the world, the Roman Empire went into terminal decline during the 3rd C -- no point in flocking there, or staying there, after that point.
Then there was the Byzantine Empire -- but they went into terminal decline in the 8th C -- no point in flocking there, or staying there, after that point.
In NW and Northern Europe, there was the Frankish Empire, but that bit the dust in the 9th C. Even its successor, the French Empire, was in NW Europe -- not near the Greco-Roman region. And the Viking Empire was even more remote.
There was the Abbasid Caliphate, but that might be a bridge too far for Greco-Roman people. Ditto for the later Fatimid Caliphate in Egypt. Islam was just too different.
That only leaves the Khazar Khaganate for enterprising strivers of the late 1st millennium. If you're in Italy or Thrace in 800 AD, what's keeping you there? Empires that collapsed centuries ago, or are currently in terminal decline? Thanks but no thanks -- let's try out luck in this whole Khazar Khaganate deal...
Eastern Meds flocked to the Italian peninsual when the Roman Empire was the place overflowing with riches and opportunities -- why wouldn't Italians and Greeks flock to the Caucasus and Pontic Steppe if that's where all the imperial action was at, in the 700s and 800s?
Empires are materialist magnets for genetic and cultural out-group members looking to move on up in the world, so of course the Khazar Khaganate would've drawn Italians and Greeks into it, mirroring and paralleling the Eastern Med migrations to the Roman Empire many centuries earlier, when *that* was the place to be.
Or maybe Jews met these Italians and Greeks in eastern Anatolia, still next to the Caucasus, somewhat earlier when the Byzantine Empire was still highly attractive to foreigners.
Point being -- especially during a weak central state / nomad-dominant era like the Dark Ages, people roam around wherever they think they'll make a better life for themselves and their posterity. Not everyone -- but a large enough minority to create an enclave within the destination. And maybe, like Italians and Irish who migrated into the American Empire, those enclave borders won't stay solid for too long...
If someone who's "mostly Irish" American has some Italian DNA, we don't conclude his Irish ancestors migrated through Italy before migrating to America. Maybe the Irish and Italians were both migrants to the same foreign destination, whether they both stayed there or not after inter-mixing.
So it must have been with foreigners of all sorts of source populations that poured into the Khazar Khaganate's territory, once they were an expanding empire and in control of massively lucrative trade routes on the Silk Road.
Ron Unz claims that most of the Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews came from Carthage (i.e. modern day Tunisia/Algeria) and Phoenicia (i.e. modern day Lebanon) and converted to Judaism after they got conquered by the Roman Empire.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.unz.com/runz/american-pravda-the-true-origin-of-the-jews-as-khazars-israelites-or-canaanites/
However, contrary to what Ron Unz says on that article, I don't really see the Phoenician - Carthaginian convert Jew thesis to be in conflict with the Khazar Jew hypothesis - the former took place in the Roman Empire while the latter took place in the Khazar Khaganate, with 8 centuries in between. It is perfectly possible that the Phoenician traders and merchants converted to Judaism in the Roman Empire, then as the Roman Empire collapsed, migrated to other empires for better trade opportunities over the next 8 centuries, eventually ending up in the Khazar Khaganate and mixing with other people to form the Ashkenazi Jews. While the Phoenician and Carthaginian Jewish converts who remained around the Mediterranean eventually became the Sephardi Jews.
ReplyDeleteAmid threats by team Biden to expose Obama's lifestyle, the former president has decided to hit back with a new memoir --
ReplyDelete"If I Sucked It"
Meanwhile, I think that there is going to be a split in the Ashkenazi Jewish population in the West in the next few decades. Those who are really into the Jewish religion (Orthodox Jews, Hasidim, etc) are going to segregate themselves out from the rest of the population. Meanwhile, more secular ethnic Ashkenazi Jews are going to intermarry with the existing WASP and Asian and Brahmin Indian elites et cetera, with the end result being that one or two centuries into the future people will be testing and detecting Ashkenazi DNA in their genome even though they haven't been Jewish for centuries.
ReplyDeleteThe torture rack shows a nice cycle of appearing in rationalist humanist eras, then disappearing in mystical supernatural eras.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rack_(torture)
Prevalent in Greece from the 4th C BC, up through the Roman Empire in the early centuries AD. Last major example seems to be St. Vincent, a Christian martyr killed in 304 AD, and St. Jerome in 370 provides a late example, writing about a contemporaneous woman who was tortured on the rack and otherwise:
https://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf206.v.I.html
Then it vanishes during the good ol' Dark Ages.
Cruelty to one's fellow man would not re-emerge until -- when else? -- the Renaissance Humanist era, in the mid-1400s in England, where it was used through the 17th C. era of the Scientific Revolution.
Torture, i.e. to get a confession, was only outlawed in 1708, though cruel punishments were still administered until the late 1800s (like hanged, drawn, and quartered).
Similar to the rack was "breaking on the wheel", mainly in German-speaking lands.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_on_the_Wheel
The recorded examples, illustrations, etc. are all from post-1300, and mainly Early Modern. It lasted up through 1841 in Germany.
Wiki says it's in the Sachsenspiegel, which recorded Germanic legal customs from the Middle Ages. But which edition, IDK. The work originated in the early 1200s, so I doubt it was frequent during the Dark Ages.
However, a very famous early Christian martyr was killed by breaking on the wheel -- St. Catherine, one of whose symbols became the torture wheel. She was killed the same time as St. Vincent was on the rack -- around 305 AD, still basically in Classical times.
Wiki shows a fresco from 1130 AD in Georgia, depicting St. George being tortured on the wheel, but he *also* was martyred in the early 300s. I don't think that was supposed to be a commentary on contemporary torture but with an old figure.
Cruel humanists, charitable mystics.
Not to over-state the obvious, but Jesus' crucifixion was not only an example of the callously frequent use of cruel punishments in a rationalist humanist era, but the glorification of such acts into public entertainment and spectacles.
ReplyDeleteIt's not enough to be physically tortured, they want you socially tortured as well, as a hideously deformed jeering crowd points and laughs at your pathetic final moments.
Charitable mystical societies see not only how much such practices are horrible to one suffering them, but also warping the souls of those executing them, and those crowding around to gawk at them like it's Monday Night Football.
They were the torture porn movies of their day, along with bloodsports like gladiator contests, slaying animals in the arena (venationes), and so on.
After the collapse of the Roman Empire, those bloodsports failed to survive into the mystical supernatural era in which the Byzantine Empire constructed Christianity as we know it. They still had public spectacles, sports, and arenas -- but their main sport was chariot-racing, much like our NASCAR racing or horse racing, which are not bloodsports.
They are high-octane testosterone-fueled competitions, but they don't even remotely resemble torture porn, treating victims like they deserve their violent deaths, and generally debasing yourself by spectating such things.
Bloodsports were abolished by the end of the 5th C in the Byzantine Empire:
https://www.pallasweb.com/deesis/sports-of-the-byzantine-empire.html
Another W on the scoreboard for the good ol' Dark Ages.
The Byzantine Empire also saw the end of pederasty: https://www.akosbalogh.com/blog/how-jesus-launched-a-sexual-revolution-that-protects-children
DeleteThe book of Daniel has two famous examples of cruel punishments -- Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego who are thrown into a large fiery furnace, and Daniel himself being thrown into the lions' den (both saved thanks to God's protection of those who are faithful to him).
ReplyDeleteThese tales are set in the mid-1st millennium BC, and were written then or somewhat later in the late 1st millennium BC. In any case, reflecting the prevalence of cruel punishments during the Classical era, not the Dark Ages before or after the Classical era.
You can tell The Princess Bride is set in the Renaissance or Early Modern world, not the Dark Ages, cuz there's a prominent torture chamber scene, whose machines were invented by a cold calculating clinical scientist type.
ReplyDeleteThe science fiction genre as a whole is another example of where materialist Reddit-tier skeptics (i.e. Euro-larpers) ruined science fiction in the 1980s, by making science fiction all about same thing, what John Michael Greer called the monofuture, everything is about space and AI and transhumanism etc.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ecosophia.net/the-twilight-of-the-monofuture/
The fact that science fiction no longer has the diversity of visions of the future that it used to have before the 1980s is another symptom of Reaganite stagnation, since the science fiction scene cannot come up with anything new, but only rehash the same old themes over and over again.
I haven't checked in detail but I suspect post-1980 science fiction also has sterile Euro-Bauhaus glass and steel aesthetics like everything else being put out by the creative class.
Rationalist humanist eras treat people like things, everything is utilitarian and autistic. If it can be exploited or used to make you feel neuron activation, then go ahead and do it, no matter how degenerate or debauched.
ReplyDeletePederasty, gayness in general, mistreating children, etc.
I think Dark Age cultures are more family / children friendly. All the really sick, wicked shit you hear about Euros treating their children are from post-1300, and peaking during the Enlightenment, lasting even through the Romantic 19th C.
They didn't really turn it around until the 20th C, partly as a result of their own Romantic development, but also coming under the influence of the American Empire, with its nomad-dominant Dark Age culture -- which contradicts enlightened perversion and rationalized callousness.
Torture porn also correlates with porno-fied torture, i.e. BDSM. Way more popular in Europe than America, and has been for centuries. Really only popular here in the Euro LARP-y areas, like NYC and SF.
ReplyDeleteKiwawa and Shiori did a Ouija board IRL stream! ^_^ Nice lighting set-up, making the wooden tabletop look much richer and darker than it really is. And warm glowing lights. Very cool!
ReplyDeleteAfter her talking about Marine getting half-nakey again in her presence, I'm now thinking of the two of them conducting a seance... only the board is a huge set of markings / tape on the floor, and the planchette is an ottoman with casters or a swivel chair (with no arms) or stool, and instead of using their hands to move it, they both sit on it, and the spirits possess their bubble butts to push it around the floor.
That would make a great 3D game show segment for the JP girls, with Kiwawa as guest! The JP branch loves those physical game show segments. And they also love using the butt! Butt sumo, butt writing... butt Ouija! ^_^
Wow, the Ashkenazis are even more Indo-European than I ever thought! Very little that is distinctly Semitic about them, other than their religion (but that's not reliable -- the entire western half of Indo-Europeans adopted a Semitic-ish religion, Christianity, and a good swath of the eastern half of them adopted another, Islam).
ReplyDeleteWe'll get to the genetic stuff later, I just mean the most important stuff -- culture. Not in the sense that they used to have a distinctly Semitic culture, but then adopted a more Indo-Euro culture long after their settling into Eastern Europe or whatever. I mean, they *began* with a decently Indo-Euro culture, by the late Middle Ages.
I never thought about this, or had strong thoughts one way or the other, but a comment by the linguist Wexler about an Ashkenazi wedding tradition being Slavic (breaking the glass) made me look into it more broadly -- and Ashkenazi weddings look VERY Indo-Euro, from the Greek / Bulgarian / Russian Orthodox side all the way to the Armenian, Iranian, and Indian (Indo-Aryan) side.
Wedding rituals, like all rituals, are stubborn to change -- they're ritualistic! There's a certain fixed formula, and you just follow it!
I went over this logic years ago when looking into deep Indo-European culture, focusing on rituals at the major holidays or rites of passage, which are the most resistant to change.
For example, ransoming something from the bride's side, and the groom's side having to pay a bribe in order to get it back. In Slavic cultures, the bride herself is ransomed. In Armenia and India, it's a shoe of the bride. In Iran, it's the knife used to cut the wedding cake.
Sadly, I don't find evidence of this bride-ransoming tradition in the Ashkenazi weddings, but many other key ingredients *are* there. And are *not* in Sephardi weddings, or other Semitic weddings.
I'll need a whole 'nother post to go into details... and that will probably go even further afield into just uncovering what the deep ancient Indo-European wedding was like. I've already figured out the bride-ransoming thing, but there's more.
How many other figures are Dems-in-exile, returning to contest control of the party? Trump is obviously part of this group, a Dem in the 90s, and hijacking the GOP much later; Tulsi Gabbard is another, she strategically quit the party in '22, and crucially checks the box of Dem realignment of the military; RFK jr is another, it seems like the interesting people in American politics are ex Dems who grew up in the party, got roughed up by the party, became runaways where "violating the norms of the [Dem establishment] could not only sustain the violators, but actually give them the much-desired shot at upward mobility."
ReplyDeleteFor the time being, there isn't an ascending empire for these runaways to ride the coattails of, the GOP is a hollowed out entity used as a hideout/secret base. Wallstreet is funding of the Dem exiles in the GOP as they are themselves busy figuring out how to run away from the European financial latifunda. China is ascending, at least compared to everyone else. And Wallstreet is on good terms with its Chinese counterparts, hashing out a road map with respect to the transition of the reserve currency. The prize for the Chinese will be having the San Diego and Hawaii naval complements neutral.
Just as one tell-tale example, though, there's the ritual of one or both of the bride / groom walking around a focal location near where the final marriage ceremony takes place, and the number of circles completed is either 3 or 7.
ReplyDeleteIn Ashkenazi weddings, it's only the bride, not also the groom, who does the circling -- she walks around the groom, typically 7 but in some sub-traditions 3 times, at the wedding canopy location.
This almost exactly parallels the saptapadi or saat phere ritual in Indo-Aryan weddings, where both the bride and groom walk around the sacred fire 7 times, and this sacred fire is located under / inside of a wedding canopy.
In Greek, Bulgarian, Russian, and Georgian Orthodox weddings (at the least -- all Eastern Orthodox that I checked), both the bride and groom walk around the altar 3 times near the completion of the wedding. Reminder that "Greek" culture used to extend throughout Anatolia to the base of the Caucasus, and Georgia itself is part of the Caucasus.
So, the Ashkenazi wedding derives from a source somewhere between the Balkans and northern India, and north of the Semitic / Saharo-Arabian cultural sphere.
Sephardi Jews have nothing to do with this walking-around ritual in any shape or form whatsoever. It's not part of their "common heritage" as Jews. And the Ashkenazi did not pick it up from the ancient Babylonian captivity, when they absorbed some Persian / Iranian influences -- otherwise the Sephardi ceremony would have it, too. But they don't.
So, there are only two possibilities:
1. The Ashkenazi used to share a culture with the Sephardi Jews, in ancient and early Medieval times, but the Ashkenazi alone came into contact with these mainly Indo-Euro cultures and swapped out their own Semitic rituals (that would have been shared with the Sephardi) for new Indo-Euro ones. Or,
2. The Ashkenazi did not share much culture with Sephardis to begin with. So the fact that their wedding rituals look more Indo-Euro than Semitic simply reflects their own largely Indo-Euro cultural origins. This implies that a mainly Indo-Euro group adopted a Jewish religion sometime in the Middle Ages.
Given how stubborn rituals are to change, especially at highly important rites of passage like weddings, the 2nd possibility is far more likely.
This is not the only piece of evidence like this (for weddings, or culture in general) -- and in their totality, they point to a largely Indo-Euro cultural origin for the Ashkenazis.
Forgot to mention the Armenian ritual of circling 3 times -- not at the church itself, but around the firepit ("tonir") in the groom's home. This firepit is not just a utilitarian cooking tool -- it is blessed and treated with holy water to consecrate it against demonic forces. So it is just like the sacred fire in the Indo-Aryan wedding.
ReplyDeleteThis also seems to delineate the 3 vs. 7 circles divide, with the Caucasus being the far-eastern end of the 3-times ritual, and to the east, it's the 7-times ritual.
I'll have to dig deeper to see where the Iranians fall within this divide, though. And presumably, it's an Iranian group who the Ashkenazis either descend from, or came into contact with, in the Middle Ages.
Ashkenazis and Armenians also share the wedding ritual of breaking a plate, and both the bride and groom's sides have to do this. Sephardis do not do this.
ReplyDeleteAnna Khachiyan may be even more Caucasian than she thinks, if her Ashkenazi side is actually heavily Indo-European from the Caucasus! ^_^
ReplyDeleteIf she gets a formal Ashkenazi wedding, when the two sides break a plate, she should playfully neg the other side -- "Y'know, you guys got that from us..." Hehe.
To only briefly cover the genetic side, since that's the least important side -- we're talking about ethnic groups, i.e. culturally defined in-groups.
ReplyDeleteThis highlights the importance of including as many east-of-Italy genepools when trying to tease apart the Ashkenazis' genetic history. In ones that include Greek, those work just as well or better than Italian. And crucially they must include genes from the Caucasus, covering all the distinct linguistic groups. And then various Iranian groups, from as far west as possible, like Kurds, middle ones like the Ossetians, and Persians and Tajiks and Pashtuns to the east.
Most studies lazily condense all of the "Middle East" into one genepool, or don't even include the Caucasus in the first place!
The question is not "Middle East" vs. somewhere else -- the question is Semitic from the Levant, or maybe also Semitic from Mesopotamia, vs. Indo-Euro from the northern part of the "Middle East", and separately (though far less likely) Turkic from this same northern part.
If the story of the "Middle Eastern" origins of Ashkenazi Jews turns out to be mainly about (eastern Anatolian) Greeks, Caucasians, (western) Iranians, and (eastern) Slavs -- that's not exactly establishing their Levantine Semitic bona fides, is it?!
Ashkenazi Jews build bonfires in springtime for Lag B'Omer -- I swear to God, if I find out that at some point in history, they used to *jump over* these public fires of springtime renewal, I'm going to shit myself...
ReplyDeleteBut so far, it seems like they limit their interaction with the fire to forming a circle around it, either standing still to behold it or dancing around it -- but at some distance, since these tend to be rather large bonfires, not the smaller ones that you can jump over, like the Persian Nowruz or the Turkish Hidirellez (reflecting their pre-Turkic conquest culture).
Of course that could reflect the May Day ritual from Indo-Euros, but among those closest to the Ashkenazi urheimat, like Bulgarians and Greeks (not to mention Anatolians and Persians), they jump over the fire too, not just circle around it.
ReplyDeleteJumping over the fire is the best confirmation, but just building them and circling around them is fairly suggestive itself.
The assassination attempt on President Trump shows that we're not getting out of the American Crisis of the Third Century any time soon. We're still in the stage of anarchy -- in the sense of lawlessness or normlessness at the top, not mass panic and violence at the bottom -- only getting ahead by cheating the rules, and thereby delegitimizing the central state's authority even further, in a positive feedback loop.
ReplyDeleteAs observers see how easy it is to join the competition, when the only qualifications are "willing to break the rules to get ahead," this invites a lot more wannabes into the gladitorial arena than if the rules are adhered to, and the qualifications are insanely high that few even give it a second thought.
Now, every downwardly mobile striver on Twitter and Reddit thinks they can play a personal role, however modest but still meaningful, in the contest for the highest level of power. But when that's who the contestants are, it means the rules have already been broken, and therefore power is worth nothing cuz you can't enforce your will on the masses when they see that the path to power was totally illegitimate.
But strivers don't really have elaborate plans they want to implement upon occupying high office -- they just want to win, period, against the other team, or really against the other factions within their own so-called team.
The usurpers who are only in office due to the Great Ballot Count Stoppage of 2020 plainly don't care that nobody is obeying them or complying with their impotent orders -- they just want a W, no matter how worthless and fake it is. It's the hyper-competitiveness itself, and getting the W itself, that matters -- not anything real and instrumental that is supposed to flow from the W, like getting people to obey your orders, enriching yourself, etc.
That's how we can tell this is not the action of some monolithic Deep State, as it probably was back when America was far more cohesive and rule-bound, like the JFK, RFK, MLK, etc. assassinations.
ReplyDeleteThose were more of a palace coup, with the assassinating side being a highly organized and powerful bloc within the elite -- not a whole shitload of unorganized soy-slurping redditors like this assassin was, not to mention the assassins from the BLM / Antifa era of 2014-'20 -- the most you can say was they were tolerated or given free rein by the Deep State.
But unlike the FBI and CIA of the New Deal era, who had specific replacements in mind and specific goals they wanted to achieve by assassinating JFK or purging Nixon, the violent actors of the collapsing empire stage we're in now have no such replacements in mind, let alone waiting in the wings to assume power. They have no desire to keep the overall level of stability high -- just with their own Big Man in charge of things, as the Deep State did back in the '60s and '70s.
The reason why 99% of commentators will make allusions to those earlier times, or to other expanding-empire times like the Roman Civil Wars of the 1st C BC ("crossing the Rubicon") or the French Revolution or the Russian Revolution or Sengoku Japan, is that they can't cope with the fact that our empire is unraveling, power is decentralizing and devolving, collective wealth is vanishing, and therefore there's less and less of a prize to be won by whichever cadre of strivers gets the W.
They need to imagine a great big stable structure that sits on top of unimaginable piles of wealth, with god-like influence over society, to motivate them to stay in the increasingly lower-stakes competition.
They need to imagine there's One Ring to Rule Them All at the end of the political rainbow, but by this point -- and precisely due to their insane hyper-competitiveness to possess that ring -- the ring is rendered impotent, no more magical and powerful than some plastic trinket from the dollar store.
(I was going to say, "that you get from those 10-cent vending machines," but as a sign of imperial-collapse hyper-inflation, those things probably cost 10 times as much these days.)
But it's not such a paradox -- a prize is worth a lot when only a tiny select few are capable of competing over it. When the barriers to entry are lowered so much that the number of contestants skyrockets, it's not a sign of elite-level skill to win it. It's something that any random schmuck can get their slimy hands on.
The strivers must block out the reality that the very act of competing over a prize, cheapens its value, sullies the reputation of the winner, and weakens his influence and status. Otherwise they would quit -- but they're so consumed by over-weening ambition, quitting is not an option. And this feedback loop is what plunges a collapsing empire to its lowest abysmal depths.
How will we know that rock-bottom has been reached? When the W-holder has accepted the devaluation of the W, and the relative impotence of being the W-holder. Like when Diocletian decided to rule as part of a Tetrarchy, with separate rulers in the eastern and western regions of the former Roman Empire, and with a co-ruler sharing power underneath each one.
ReplyDeleteBefore then, the barracks emperors were still competing over who would be the next all-powerful dictator or empire-wide ruling cadre -- blinding themselves to the reality that by assassinating each other one after the next, this made empire-wide rule impossible, and prevented dictatorial authority (cuz everyone else in society could plainly see how illegitimate their path to power was).
Or when the Ottoman rulers had to accept the independence movements of the 19th century, whether through outright war in the Balkans or de facto secession as in Egypt. They didn't try to reconquer these lost possessions, and shortly after that, the Young Turks finally threw in the towel and say, "OK, the empire's over, let's just compete over who gets to rule Anatolia and Thrace".
The acceptance of imperial fragmentation, and the devolution and decentralization of authority, is not even remotely in sight of today's hyper-competitive wannabe elites. So be prepared for more of these developments for the rest of our lives.
To relate this to a previous topic, previously I said that the United States might ethnically cleanse the Mexicans as its empire collapses based on historical precedent like the Ottomans. But as indicated here, the Ottomans only did its ethnic cleansing at the end of its own crisis of the 3rd century, long after it lost North Africa and the Balkans, while America is still at its beginning of its crisis of the 3rd century. This means that if America does ethnic cleansing it won’t be for a century if not longer.
DeleteReminder to clueless junkies of right-wing fanfic: all of the energy is on the left side in America now, until the end is reached and the system stabilizes at a lower level of power and wealth.
ReplyDeleteThe only real struggle for power is among the various Democrat factions, and even that has been temporarily put on hold (Democrats pausing the coup against Biden, in the wake of the assassination attempt on Trump).
America has never had a strong central state, and has an even weaker one now during imperial collapse, and is only getting weaker still with all of these rule-breaking milestones passed.
The first Trump admin not only did *not* put any of its enemies on trains, in camps, dropped from helicopters, locked into breeding stockades, etc. -- it spent what little political capital it had on freeing black urban Democrat felons, sending illegal immigration through the roof compared to Obama (only mitigated by the worldwide border closures of 2020 due to Covid), giving a freer rein to the Deep State and Pentagon to waste money and rack up more L's, and handing over free money via tax cuts to those who went to the max to destroy his campaign in both the primary and even the general election.
The first Trump admin not only did not reduce political violence, they decided to keep the Army, National Guard, etc. *out* of the arena from 2017 up through the society-burning riots of 2020. Americans had to rely on a random Good Samaritan like Kyle Rittenhouse to even put a dent in woketard terrorism back then.
The entire Republican party not only folded during the Great Ballot Count Stoppage, it turned on and punished any of its own foot soldiers who tried to even discuss it, let alone counteract it. And the same auto-immune disease fed its own foot soldiers to the meat grinder after January 6, while embracing and emboldening the urban Democrat DC witch-hunters.
The only ones getting put on trains, dropped from helicopters, etc., will be right-wing wannabes -- and Trump himself will personally pull the lever on them. The Republican party is too infested with AIDS to mount a defense against its enemies, and in increasingly sick displays of disloyalty, turns only on its own supporters.
It's not 2015 anymore -- hypotheticals have had a full decade to play out, and the reality is the right wing is toast for good in America.
The situation is the same in every collapsing empire. It could be one sector or another sector of society, but somebody is sidelined from the anarchic power grab, which plays out mainly among narrow little factions of the sector that has any energy left in it.
ReplyDeleteIn the collapsing Roman Empire, the military was the only thing with energy left in it -- landowners, priests, cultural producers, artisans, etc., had no role whatsoever in the struggle for power. And its neverending flux of "rulers" were barracks emperors, not lawyer emperors.
In the collapsing Han Empire of the same time, it was more the scholar-bureaucrats and the court eunuchs who competed with each other, along with religious (Daoist) movements.
The military played little role in the anarchy and power-grabbing -- until the very end, when they wiped out the eunuchs and carved up the empire for rule by small-scale warlords, not high-scale emperors or dictators.
The American Empire has never seen the military play a strong domestic role -- only in expanding the borders of the epmire. Scholar-bureaucrats, court eunuchs, lawyers, academics, intel / media / tech, etc. are the sectors that actually control things. And so the right wing will play no role in the anarchic power grabs during the collapse of the American Empire either.
It could be that the military will deliver a coup de grace at the very end of this anarchic devolution of power, but that will only formalize and finalize the collapse of the empire. It will not allow for large-scale influence by a united military that will put libtards on trains, etc.
Instead, it will carve up the former American Empire into rump states for temporary warlord rule, followed by a transition to civilian rule at a far reduced level of complexity, wealth, power, and influence.
It's possible that in 100 or 200 years, the warlords will dissolve the universities, to end the anarchic power-grabbing by the Democrat-aligned sectors of society. But by then, the "radical college campuses" will have very little power, wealth, or influence anyway. It'll just be the final nail in the coffin, after they have exhausted themselves by fighting each other. It will not be like the right-wing fanfic where they dissolve Columbia after 1968.
In 2168 and 2268, Columbia will be no more powerful, wealthy, or influential than a community college in North Dakota from today. Similar to the gradual internal fragmentation and decay of the Library at Alexandria as the Roman Empire collapsed. Nothing really left to dissolve by the 5th or 6th century.
And if those warlords do dissolve the universities, it will not be the first phase of a society-wide right-wing dictatorship, having come into possession of the One Ring to Rule Them All (previously held in some holy of holies at Harvard). By that point, there will be no more high-scale American society to dictate orders to, or wealth to plunder, or minds to persuade.
Both conservatards and libtards must buy into the delusion that there is a strong central state in America, whose power could be wielded against the holders' enemies -- otherwise, what's the point in competing? But in reality, these delusions are just coping fanfic from downwardly mobile wannabes, whose very pursuit of power weakens the office that the winner will occupy.
On the topic of the fake & gay media using "former President" as Trump's title, unlike for any other president, in a lame attempt to delegitimize him -- while only delegitimizing themselves for being petty, fake, gay, and retarded -- this disease has spread, unwittingly, to other historical figures, as shown in search engine summaries of who they are.
ReplyDeleteFor example, if you google a famous person's name, Google will include a brief description or title under each name of the suggested results, to help you narrow down which one you're referring to. When you obtain the results, the top of the page is the person's name and that title, like an encyclopedia entry.
Search for Marcus Aurelius, and Google calls him "Former Roman Emperor" -- former? You mean he isn't the current Roman Emperor? Well, no shit! Who is it then? Giorgio Armani?
Edward VI -- Former King of England.
Timur -- Former Amir of the Timurid Empire. Not even joking!
It doesn't do it for all figures. I tried Sweyn Forkbeard, and Google calls him simply King of Denmark, not "Ummm, ACKSHUALLY, the current king or queen of Denmark and/or the Danelaw is not named Sweyn Forkbeard..."
There seems to be no rhyme or reason to it, it's not ideologically targeting specific figures, unlike their specific targeting of Trump.
Famous vs. not famous? IDK, probably no rhyme or reason to it.
The point is, somehow the Google search engine is using the media as a style manual, however this is done algorithmically. So when the catty libtard faggots in the media start deluging their content with the term "former [leader]", this pattern is recognized by Google's AI, and that spreads the pattern from the media to tech.
Just when you thought online platforms couldn't get any less usable...
Genghis Khan -- Former Khagan of the Mongol Empire. Not even joking!
ReplyDeleteIt's so funny cuz it's just some autistic algorithm, so it keeps saying these absolutely credibility-destroying things with a total straight face!
Real Philip K. Dick "you're in a Johnny Cab" era we live in...
ReplyDeleteIn non-political news, Roboco played and beat Legend of Starfy, most of which I got to see live (and the rest I went back to watch in the VOD). ^_^
ReplyDeleteThey just released the Starfy games on Switch a few days ago, so Roboco must really love them, to jump on them so quickly.
She sure did sound excited, gushing about how nostalgic it is, the music, the sound effects, how kawaii everything is. ^_^
I had the Legendary Starfy for the DS when it came out, but the ones for the GBA were never released outside Japan -- until now!
Still, I doubt anyone outside of Japan will play them, cuz only Japan has a healthy aesthetic culture right now. Everyone else -- especially the American Empire, but anywhere that is influenced by it -- is plunging into anti-aesthetics. Humor is now anti-humor, entertainment is anti-entertainment, very much like art becoming anti-art in the collapsing Euro empires of the early 20th C. We couldn't appreciate it, outside of a small minority including me.
But at least these iconic classics, set in a video game Garden of Eden, will continue to flourish in Glorious Nippon.
I checked her archives, and Roboco is not a retro game streamer. But in Japan, even someone who primarily does karaoke, FPS, etc., will also work in an occasional retro platformer with kawaii graphics, upbeat music, and Edenic landscapes. ^_^
I already saw the Koronator play this game, when I was diving into her archives, but it's such a great game that I could watch anybody play it. Just like the early Super Mario Bros games.
Elsewhere in retro land, Pekora played the arcade version of Ghosts n Goblins -- that takes real guts! I'll have to watch that one tomorrow. I hope she didn't get demoralized by the difficulty, which is notorious.
For a more balanced game, there's Super Ghouls n Ghosts on the Super Nintendo, which has various difficulty levels, and better graphics and music as well. That's the best one in the whole series.
Respect to Pekora for using her large platform to showcase a classic game that a lot of her audience may not even know about. Playing an active role in cultural transmission. ^_^
Also worth noting that Legend of Starfy uses Ottoman architecture in the model of its main palace:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.starfywiki.org/wiki/Pufftop
Not a style you see very often in video games, manga, or anime. It's Early Modern, not Dark Age, but it's heavily inspired by Byzantine, which is Dark Age. And it's uniquely Anatolian, so it has an exotic feel to it for Japanese and American audiences as well.
Just another nice detail that great video games used to include, and that you would never see in a current game, or probably anything after 2005.
Koyori also played Legend of Starfy today! To celebrate the Japanese holiday of Sea Day -- why not an underwater game? ^_^
ReplyDeleteShe mentioned going out for dessert with Moom and Haachama, enjoying salted ice cream. I wonder how Moom and Koyo get along -- they seem like a nice yin-yang pair, since Koyo is energetic and talkative and speaks with lots of intonation and is generally upbeat and bubbly.
I don't know if she has a dark side, though -- and Moom likes her yin-yang friend to have a dark / cursed side.
Also, Holo EN is about to take a trip to a video game Garden of Eden, as Raora plays the Klonoa games this week! They're the original 2 games, with some graphical improvements.
She's an artist, so hopefully she appreciates retro games, where the style is based on hand-drawn illustration and anime, not photorealism or CGI.
I wonder if I'll be able to detect what part of Italy she grew up in, from her accent...
I wonder if the apocalyptic, messianic strain in Ashkenazi culture -- whether overtly religious or secularized -- actually comes from their partial Iranian roots.
ReplyDeleteGreeks and Persians already influenced the ancient Judaeans in a more heaven-and-hell, resurrection of the dead, kind of direction. Especially Zoroastrianism, with the heavily dualistic good-and-evil, messiah / saoshyant, apocalypse, end of the world as we know it, light and dark, truth vs. lies, etc.
But then that seems to have dissipated among the Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews, sometime in the Middle Ages.
Whereas right up through the present day, there are so many latter-day prophets who write or speak jeremiads about the upcoming apocalypse, due to the people having strayed from the path of righteousness, a savior perhaps backed up by a cadre of angels will deliver the good people from destruction, delivering them into eternal paradise, while the wicked are sent to hell and punished in a reciprocal way in which they were wicked on Earth.
Karl Marx, Trotsky, Chomsky, Allen Ginsburg, Carl Sagan (climate change, nuclear weapons, superstition, etc.), Bernie Sanders, and so on and so forth. There's so many of them, it's hard to keep track of them all, just off the top of my head.
I thought that was just part of their ancient Judaean roots, a la the Old Testament, perhaps reflecting even further-back Iranian / Zoroastrian influences.
But why didn't these ancient strains persist in the non-Ashkenazi groups of Jews? It sure as hell did among Ashkenazi Jews -- perhaps because the latter were fairly Iranian (and/or Greek, and/or Armenian -- but all reflecting Indo-Euro religion and folklore). They held onto those Iranian influences cuz they're heavily Iranian / Indo-Euro to begin with! Not just borrowing a foreign influence, like ancient Judaeans.
If you ever get a chance, check out Ys VIII: Lacrimosa of Dana. Seems to be the perfect representation of the edenic landscapes. A deserted tropical island somewhere off the coast of Greece, filled with dinosaurs ruins of an ancient society, even a volcano. Beautiful, lush graphics and iconic, melodic music too.
ReplyDeleteIt looks better than others of its era, like Ark, Rust, etc. But it suffers from the trend toward desaturated colors, and lighting that is too even and bright. Closer to photorealism and CGI than anime -- contrast it with Dragon Quest VIII (which Lui has been playing lately), with its rich saturated colors (cel-shading), even though it is also 3D instead of top-down 2D.
ReplyDeleteThat was from 10 years before Ys VIII, but it looks a lot better.
For that matter, DQ XI, from the 2010s, has the too-even / bright lighting, although its colors are probably the richest from its peers.
The only hit games from the 2010s that had rich colors and an Edenic atmosphere are strangely not Japanese, but are throwbacks to the days when Japan ruled the world in video games -- Minecraft, Terraria, and Stardew Valley, all beloved by Japanese streamers and their audiences.
J.D. Vance seems like Republican AOC. Same ol' agenda, just marketing it to a next-gen demo. In both cases, not the actual base of the party -- rather, very online parapolitical LARP-ers whose downward mobility hasn't stopped their overweening ambition from desperately trying and failing to attain elite-level influence, wealth, and power. And for whom the supposedly new blood is their vicarious avatar.
ReplyDeleteAnd the libtards have to buy into this fiction as well, otherwise their familiar routine of whining about fascism (lib whiners) or communism (con whiners) would go down the drain, and they'd have to learn new tricks.
Very tiresome, fake, boring, and in this case literally gay (he has major gay-face, and his wife is clearly a beard). Another tell that he's a sop to the very online right, a majority of whom are literally gay, but "closeted" (only in declarations, not in terms of their discourse, behavior, etc., which are giveaways).
So when neocons whine about him, it's only in the branding and the demos they're now guilty of associating with -- they want '80s neocon-ism, not 2020s neocon-ism. Borrrinnnggg...
I'll take this back if he or Trump, in a hypothetical 2nd term, does something disjunctive, like shrink the number of NATO members, de-occupies Japan or South Korea or a major NATO country, tells Israel "We love the descendants of our Old Testament heroes, but we can't stop Lebanon and Yemen from annexing you, so you're on your own, lotsa luck," reshores a major industry (through tariffs or whatever means), shrinks the national debt (e.g. by pulling out of a wasteful occupation), reduces the foreign-born population percentage by 5%, reduces illegal border crossings down to Obama levels (Trump's were way higher), etc.
I won't accept throwing in the towel in the Ukraine War -- Russia's annexation of it is already fait accompli. Biden getting schlonged out of Afghanistan was not disjunctive either, just having to accept the inevitable, which the other side forced you into, not taking that initiative on your own. Russia is the party responsible for kicking us out of Ukraine, not Biden or Trump or Orban.
Disjunctive would be allying with Russia, Iran, China, or North Korea, rather than continuing to impotently saber-rattle against them while getting cucked out of their spheres of influence.
So far, there's 0% indication of a single one of those things happening, and judging from Trump's 4-year track record of his first admin, none of them will happen.
The worst thing about Biden stealing the election, rather than some other Democrat stealing it, or rather than letting the 2nd Trump term unfold, was that it delayed realignment.
ReplyDeleteBiden was not running on a platform of stealing some of Trump's 2016 winning, unorthodox policies, paving the way for a whole new Democrat-led era, in the way that Reagan stole Carter's deregulatory / anti-New Deal policies and ran with them, ushering in a whole new GOP-led era.
Neither were the other Dems, for that matter, although Bernie came closest -- way more so in 2016 than in 2020, though. I'll never forget him giving a speech, I believe in a Rust Belt state, sometime during the 2016 season or just after Trump was inaugurated, telling the crowd that he understands Trump voters, they're not crazy or evil or anti-democratic, and we should reach out to them with real changes to our society in order to win them back, and because those changes are desperately needed -- shame that Trump was the won to run and win on them, but they are needed!
Obviously that Bernie is long gone, and so is the potential realigner AOC who turned into just another woketard stuck in the Obama 2010s era.
Biden's openly running on being more Reaganite than the Republican candidate -- counter-realignment. "What will happen to pwecious NATO if I'm gone?" etc.
I don't see major Democrat contenders for replacing Biden as trying to steal Trump 2016 policies.
I think the whole pattern of realignment goes out the window, or rather gets inverted, during imperial collapse, as opposed to imperial expansion.
ReplyDeleteConstructive vs. destructive realignment.
During expansion, when there's a high level of cohesion, realignment takes a positive constructive form -- we've been doing things this way, now we're going to do things that way. The top-level of the hierarchy is in charge, there's a changing of the guard, and they deliberately blaze a new trail.
During contraction, when there's a plummeting level of cohesion and fragmentation, realignment takes a negative destructive / imploding form -- we've been struggling to hold onto some old way, and although we'd like to do something new, we're too fragmented and weak to put it together and make it happen, so the best we can do is accept the further and further devolution of power, wealth, and influence. We're not going to keep impotently struggling to put Humpty Dumpty back together again, we're going to accept a less complex society, with less wealth, less power at the top, and more regional fragmentation into rump states.
Constructive realignment is like the Octavian-led era, after the Social Civil Wars. Destructive realignment is like the Diocletian-led era, after the Crisis of the Third Century. There's no bold new plan under him -- just accepting the decomposition of the Empire, weakening of central power even within the new chunks (having a co-emperor), and so on.
Or contrast the Russian Revolution, which was constructive -- bold new ways of doing things, and actually implementing them -- with the Putin-led realignment of the 2000s, which was simply accepting the disintegration of the Russian Empire and the communist mode of production, instead of trying to keep it all together in a great big Soviet family.
In America right now, we're either just starting, or are about to enter, the Russia of the 1990s. So our realignment is still a little ways off -- but not out of sight, closer than most people imagine, as is the turbulent disintegration similar to the Russian '90s.
Our realignment will not be a bold new way of doing things, just as Putin's realignment was not to implement a New New Soviet Man. It'll just be putting an end to civil breakdown, and keeping the lights on and food on the table, in a newly de-scaled society (when they lost Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and the Caucasus).
No fun times ahead, sadly. That's why everyone is so desperate to write fanfic derived from the American Civil War, regardless of which side they're LARP-ing as (that was from our expansionist, high-cohesion era), the French or Russian Revolutions (ditto), Japanese sengoku (ditto), Rome before the 3rd century, or whatever else. Much more fun to LARP about the possibilities, potentialities, all those dreams that could come true!
Anything to avoid the obvious reality that we're in Russia of the 1990s, France circa WWI, Rome during the 3rd C., and so on. Who wants to fantasize about staggering hangovers and disintegration and the impossibility of making big dreams come true?
Most actors on both sides these days are like Indiana Jones in the climax of The Last Crusade -- pridefully grasping at the Holy Grail that is seemingly so close, yet in fact unobtainable, all while the earth is literally splitting apart underneath and all around him.
ReplyDeleteIt's the duty of any non-crazy person to be telling them, "Let it go". Not only in a moral sense about showing humility, counteracting your overweening ambition, etc. -- but on a pragmatic level, about getting the FUCK outta there before they all get swallowed up by the ever-widening abyss!
It's not a trade-off, as though he could win the great prize, but at some other great price. He's going to both fail at getting the Holy Grail, AND fail at leaving the site alive. It's lose-lose, but he's blinded by the overweening ambition, and his father is urging him to clear up his vision to see how pointless, futile, and lose-lose the situation is.
By accepting the disintegration, devolution, and decentralization of the collapsing empire, the American Diocletian will not be "giving up" the wealth, power, and influence of the empire in order to achieve stability -- that wealth, power, and influence was already gone during the anarchic civil wars of the 3rd C. There's nothing to give up, or trade off. It's just accepting that the situation is lose-lose, not win-lose, and being clear-headed instead of overly ambitious, prideful, blinded by hubris, etc.
The judgement of Solomon is the other ancient analogy I had in the back of my mind, about the value of a prize being degraded by the very act of competing over it.
ReplyDeleteIf there are just two competitors, and they agree to highly refined rules, which can be enforced by an even-more-powerful refiree -- the struggle for the single baby might not end up in tearing it to pieces, and its value remains intact at the end of the contest.
And much like a human body, control over the body politic is only worth something if it is indivisible -- it's a holistic thing, the various component pieces are worth nothing except when combined as a cohesive integrated whole organism.
Once there are a zillion competitors, pulling in who knows how many different directions, with rules and norms and powerful refirees going out the window, then the poor baby is going to get torn to pieces, none of which will be worth anything to any of the contestants.
The only solution is to give up on putting that torn-up body back together again, and having many SEPARATE contests over many SEPARATE rump-state bodies politic, each far less valuable than the great big body they were competing over before. And each one of which has only a few contestants competing over it, each one with some kind of refiree (likely a regional warlord), and some degree of norms and rules over the conduct of the contest.
As for that great big imperial body politic -- Let it go.
(I know I overdo it on the "cliff-dwelling sage" role sometimes, but our increasingly psychotic society needs more stern, clear-headed wisdom, not more blind, ambitious, doomed LARP-ing. More people need to leave the battlefield, on both sides, rather than pile into the meat grinder a la WWI.)
ReplyDeleteAshkenazis also have old Slavic roots, not just Anatolian / Caucasus / Iranian roots. Genetically and culturally. From the DNA, looks like the Ashkenazi began as a confederation, with a Slavic group and an Anatolian-Caucasian-Iranian group.
ReplyDeleteAt first the union was purely cultural, economic, and political, with genetically segregated sub-populations (as shown in the Ashkenazi burials at Erfurt in Germany from the 14th C.). Only later did they start to genetically unify and mix, such that their present-day population has genetically homogenized to a mid-point between the two source genepools.
Point being -- we can investigate the deep Slavic roots of Ashkenazi culture, not just their Anatolian, Caucasian, and Iranian roots. Not cuz they adopted such Slavic culture after they settled into the Pale of Settlement in the Early Modern era -- but cuz they brought those elements with them to their confederation during and just after the Khazar Empire.
I don't know the exact percentage, but the Slavic roots are in the minority, and the Anatolian / Caucasian / Iranian roots are in the majority.
Given how badly Israel is getting its ass whooped by Lebanon and Yemen, already a total pariah internationally -- I think the next gen of Ashkenazi Jews (meaning, under 40 or 50) will actually LIKE reconceiving of their roots, to being an exotic melange of Anatolian Greek, Caucasus, and Iranian, with a minority of East Slavic blended in as well.
Hardly Semitic at all -- but I don't think they're so committed to having Semitic / Levantine / literal descendants of Moses being the core of their identity, like the Zionist generations did.
Fun-packed, topsy-turvy times ahead!
So not only is Anna Khachiyan more Armo than she thought, she's also more East Slavic than she thought! Due to the deeper roots of her Ashkenazi side of the family.
ReplyDeleteI know she prizes Anatolian, Caucasus, and Iranian more than a Levantine or Semitic identity.
Good news! ^_^
Last remark on the election season for tonight. First, the coup against Biden is back on -- that didn't take long. The media is back at it, and so is Nancy Pelosi. Not as loud as it was last week, but it'll get back there, and keep escalating. Point is, there was only a few days of pausing due to the assassination attempt on Trump.
ReplyDeleteBut zooming out -- it's still possible that the coup will fail, that the DNC will ram through Biden, they will go down in flames so badly against Trump that not even the Philadelphia pallets o' ballots operation will be able to steal the whole election this time.
If that's where it goes, I expect the Democrat party to literally go extinct -- just like the Whigs during / after the Civil War, when they were reborn as the Republicans.
That's what you'd expect, given it's realignment time, and that polarization is so high, like during the Civil War. Polarization is a fractal phenomenon, i.e. it happens at all scales -- national, regional, local, within the parties, etc.
The Whigs were the opposition party in the Jacksonian era, when Democrats were the dominant party. When realignment came, the Whigs did not become the new dominant party -- they fractured so badly that they went out of business. Democrats splintered temporarily as well, running several candidates (Southern Dem, Northern Dem, etc.), but they held on as a party -- right up through the present.
The idea being, the Whigs were such a pathetic opposition party that they let the Bleeding Kansas atmosphere go so far, and couldn't tamp down the growing armed rebellion in the Deep South, that they were discredited as "who will replace the moribund Jacksonian era's dominant party".
They had to re-form as the Republicans, who would not be tainted by the discrediting failures of the Whigs.
Nothing is stopping Democrats from going extinct, if they insist on Biden and then he loses in humiliating fashion to the resurrected form of Trump. They'll have to re-form as, IDK the Greens or whatever, which won't have the discrediting baggage of the Biden admin and the Biden 2024 loss.
It would be way more fragmenting than McGovern '72 -- that was when there was so much unity in the country, again at all scales, including among factions of the Democrat party. We live in the polar opposite time, when the tendency is to split up. If they repeat McGovern '72 with Biden '24, the factions will not patch things up and just try again harder next time -- that's the end of the party, and the birth of the new, post-Reaganite party.
Just a hypothetical, in case the coup does fail. But just sayin' -- that's where that scenario leads.
Biden just cancelled a speech due to testing positive for Covid-24, the fake President fittingly being taken down by the same fake disease his administration pushed.
DeleteAaron Swartz (hacker who was Ashkenazi) looks Persian, not Palestinian (saw a pic recently on Red Scare subreddit):
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Swartz
Ashkenazi beatnik from 1960s Greenwich Village -- or future Ayatollah of Iran?
https://cdn-english.khamenei.ir/d/2015/08/30/4/158.jpg
That is WAY more what we mean by "looks Jewish" than, say, Yasser Arafat:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQrbPhrPJ7I
Just eye-balling, without whipping out the calipers, seems like Ashkenazis -- like other Indo-Euros from the Middle East -- have higher and more prominent cheekbones, compared to Saharo-Arabian groups (whether Semitic, Egyptian, Berber, etc.).
High and prominent cheekbones are most typical of East Asians, but "Ancestral North Eurasians" ("Paleosiberians") intermixed with the Steppe pastoralists to the west, just north of the Caucasus, who went on to become the Indo-Europeans. Part of the East Asian heritage of Indo-Euros is our higher and more prominent cheekbones.
Could be other phenotypic similarities, just one that popped out to me.
I'm more interested in the ancestral DNA and cultural similarities, but it's worth a brief visit to the skull-measuring lab in order to clarify what we mean by someone "looking Jewish" -- Michael Tracey (who's half Southern Italian) says he gets mistaken for being Jewish. And so could a young Ayatollah Khamenei.
It's an Indo-Euro look, from the central region of the meta-family (not West Euro, not Indo-Aryan).
This is also related to Ashkenazi braininess and intellectual / cultural accomplishment. Sure, when they settled in Europe, they underwent positive genetic selection for such traits when they were restricted to economic niches that required being brighter than the average bulb, for centuries, and with little gene flow in or out (by that point). The Cochran, Hardy, and Harpending story.
ReplyDeleteBut that story is a lot more plausible if they already began somewhat higher on average, compared to other groups. And if they had deep cultural traditions for intellectual and cultural creativity.
In the "selection for Ashkenazi IQ" article, they mention that nobody ever commented on how smart the Sephardic or other Jewish groups were -- only the Ashkenazis.
But also, that people *did* comment that Greeks were smart, Armenians were smart, and Persians were valued so much in empires of Semitic origin (like the Abbasid Caliphate) that they made up a large share of the scientists, mathematicians, poets, philosophers, etc.
If Ashkenazis started off smack dab in the middle of these various groups who were famous for being smart, and if they played a key role in mercantile activity in that part of the Silk Road (similar to their later niches in Europe), then maybe they were already halfway toward their final state, during the Khazar Empire.
Slavs, particularly East Slavs, punch above their weight intellectually as well -- although it requires societal institutional support of the kind found in empires, in order for these traits to be expressed in actual scientific discovery, musical composition, etc. Point being -- the minority of Ashkenazi genes + culture that are Slavic, would also give them a boost creatively.
Iranians punch above their weight in the International Math Olympiad, and chess (youngest grandmaster to have a 2800 rating is an Iranian Zoomer). Both fields that Ashkenazis (but not other groups of Jews) have a penchant for as well.
Twins separated at birth!
"This is what Tehran looked like before the Islamic Revolution" -- or host of Cosmos?
ReplyDeletehttps://nicksagan.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/me_and_my_dad.jpg
https://nicksagan.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/phobos.jpg
When Biden officially drops out, remember who got it right, and why, and who got it wrong, and why.
ReplyDeleteVery clueless people think that rules create themselves, enforce themselves, and adjudicate disputes related to themselves. This is a form of "ideas are real"-ism, and it is wrong. People create, enforce, and adjudicate the rules -- moreover, GROUPS of people, with interests that are a set of forces pushing in a direction, not separate individuals with idiosyncratic quirks and whims.
"It's too late!" "The primary was already held!" Whatever. If the sum of the forces are pushing in the "dump Biden" direction, Biden will be dumped -- and new rules will be created, old rules will be eliminated, they will be selectively enforced, and selectively adjudicated, in order to harmonize with that force.
The other, larger group of very clueless people are the culture warriors, both on the left and right, who think their hot-button issue culture wars among the rabid base of voters are what drive the parties.
Abortion, gay / tranny shit, hating white people, etc. on the left. And the opposite stances on these issues for the right. Key demos being SJWs (online or on campuses IRL), and organized black groups on the left, and evangelicals on the right.
Amazingly, Bernie and AOC and "the Squad" are propping up Biden, and so are organized blacks (represented by Jim Clyburn). This is the activist base -- and they are getting sidelined with no mercy. True, there are online irony posters who like Bernie, and are fervent "dump Biden" zealots -- but they are not activists, don't earn a living as professional organizers, NGO foot soldiers, etc. They're simply part of the media, which is not activist in itself, just Democrat partisans.
The reason is simple: blacks, organized or not, have no leverage in American society. They control no key sectors, access to which they could use as leverage in negotiations. The real sectors that use the Democrats are finance, media, entertainment (intertwined with media), schools, and hospitals / pharma / healthcare (intertwined with the school sector). Blacks don't control any of them, so they hold no cards at the Democrat bargaining table.
If they think that crying racism is a threat, they will find out the hard way -- those cries only damage their target's reputation *if* the media sector acts concertedly to propagate those cries. If the sume of Democrat sectoral forces is to dump Biden, and Biden's only meager backers are organized blacks, then the media will not amplify his supporters' cries of racism as their leader is dumped in favor of some other faction's leader.
In fact, if they get uppity enough, the media will suddenly get leaks and scoops about scandal, corruption, sexual harassment, pedophilia, etc. stemming from the Black Caucus members in Congress, the board of the NAACP, DNC leaders, Clyburn specifically, and so on. If your faction does not control the media, and/or the intel services, you will lose a war over public reputation.
Organized blacks seem to be aware of this reality, and are mainly staying silent or grumbling, not collectively escalating the "keep Biden" side of the battle. Unlike the very clueless commentators, who envision professional black leaders as an all-powerful infallible beyond-criticism magical-negro sacrosanct group, they themselves actually have skin in the game, and have the incentive to face the facts and admit the truth and act to preserve themselves.
Jim Clyburn is no kingmaker in the Democrat party -- Nancy Pelosi, Obama, and the Clintons are, with the likes of Schumer and Durbin playing junior roles, and Clyburn occupying a far lower rung on the ladder.
ReplyDeleteThe only reason Biden won the 2020 primary was that Obama and perhaps other senior leaders put out a call to force the popular candidates out of the race, and endorse Biden on their way out the door, in the week before Super Tuesday. Those leaders -- NOT Clyburn -- were the ones throwing Biden a lifeline.
Biden got decisively rejected in all three bellwether primaries: Iowa (4th place, over 10 points behind 1st -- Bernie), New Hampshire (5th place, over 15 points behind 1st -- Bernie again), and Nevada (2nd, yet still over TWENTY-FIVE points behind 1st -- El Bernarino yet again).
Biden only won in South Carolina, a non-factor in the general election since it's a deep red Southern state.
So among voters, he was thoroughly rejected. The only thing that saved him was not Clyburn's support -- that only got him the win in SC -- it was the party-wide call by Obama and whoever else, forcing the actually-voted-for candidates out of the race, endorsing the last-place loser Biden on their way out, before Super Tuesday could seal Biden's doom.
In 2024, Biden no longer has the support of the Obamas (who have always hated his guts), the Clintons (ditto), Pelosi, Schumer, Durbin, etc. Even Clyburn was wishy-washy, though his bloc was still the most solidly anti-coup -- but his bloc doesn't measure up to the combined weight of the actual sectors that matter in the Democrat coalition (Wall Street banks, Silicon Valley, Hollywood, New York media, college campuses, etc.).
So, remember to identify those who were going by a theory of either dead-wrong type, and not only discount their theories, but discount those figures as a whole if they decide to stick by their disproven theories rather than alter them / adopt new ones in order to adapt after their catastrophic failure, which clear-minded people like me saw coming 1000 miles away and years in advance.
Unless you consume such content for the purposes of emotional regulation -- "how should I feel about all this information coming in, so that I don't get depressed and kill myself?" or "how should I feel about this info, in a way that Team Us looks good and Team Them looks like fags". In that case, commentators are a kind of mass therapist for suicidal ideators, who need to get hooked on takes like junkies in order to stave off thoughts of suicide for another week.
If you actually want to know the score -- make that trek up to the cliff-dwelling sage in the ruins of the blogosphere instead! ^_^
To fill in the argument on the other side, very clueless libtards think the evangelicals are the all-powerful, run amok with no consequences, call every shot, get every bit of deference, sacrosanct bloc within the Republican party.
ReplyDeleteYes, that's why the GOP has gradually stripped out all the anti-abortion, anti-gay marriage, etc. stuff from their platform and practice.
"B-b-but, they're actively working to prevent tranwads from trans-ing 8 year-olds!" Yeah, that's the breadcrumbs that evangelicals get, much like a $5 increase in the monthly EBT balance for poor blacks, who are the most fiercely loyal Dem voters.
Back on planet Earth, the military, police, weapons manufacturers, manufacturers in general, agribusiness, and the energy oligarchs are who control the GOP. That's why they will never de-escalate a war until they've been bitchslapped out of the arena, why they enjoy patronage like $50,000 garbage cans billed to the Pentagon (paid by the public) by defense contractors, why they negotiated NAFTA to give manufacturers cheap foreign labor, why they want to keep Russian and Iranian oil off the global and domestic markets, etc.
Those are the real priorities and activities of the GOP -- not rolling back gay marriage, putting the Ten Commandments in public schools, allowing churches to organize politically while keeping non-profit status, eliminate no-fault divorce, cut rural white women $1000 per month checks for every baby they have, or anything else that would make evangelicals feel a taste of the Rapture.
Only culture warriors believe that crap, just as only culture warriors believe in the centrality and invincibility of organized blacks in the Dem coalition.
The culture war plays out mainly in the media (and some entertainment), so if that's where you're trying to get your understanding from, boy are you gonna be clueless as well!
Which is why more and more of the country just checks out from the media, of either side, and pays it no mind. "Right-wing blond fascists and left-wing melanated communists are locked in an existential war? Leading to an imminent armageddeon? -- Yeah sure they are, pal, good-bye..."
Scored a pair of vintage PC speakers by Harman / Kardon at the thrift store for only $5. This model:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ebay.com/itm/275991280788
In a sign of how crappy things have been made lately, when I tried to test them out, I brought over 2 DVD players and a Blu-ray player to the testing area -- and NONE of their disc drawers opened!
My made-in-Japan Sony DVD player from the '90s, made of metal, still works perfectly fine.
I brought over several of those portable DVD players -- none of them had a headphone / line out jack, just composite audio-video. Such garbage.
I ended up finding a portable radio that thankfully had a headphone jack and 2 working batteries. Speakers worked after all!
Just a word to the wise about physical media -- you also need a functional piece of hardware to play DVDs, CDs, etc., and a lot of the recent hardware is absolute junk.
All hail skyrocking corporate profits and made-in-Indonesia garbage for the masses!
Interesting YT rec: Faerybabyy, a Zoomer Christina Ricci who sings in a postpunk tone, funky bass lines, Cure guitars with a little surf mixed in. Very '90s / y2k on the visual side of her style and music videos.
ReplyDeleteI normally don't click on this stuff, or listen to any more than the initial video I'm recommended. But the first one made me want to poke around the rest of her stuff, and it's decent too.
Scenes are dead, due to imploding empire and dissolving cohesion, at all levels (including the narrow level, where a sub-culture would have sprouted and thrived 20 years ago). But it's still a neat sound -- not exactly copying any one period or genre, interesting and harmonious mixture of several opposing types (like upbeat Cure guitars, with a monotone droning sad girl vocal, or on the visual side, '90s PC game pixel graphics but with an '80s color palette instead of the '90s palette -- more like Fantasy Zone).
Anyway, check her out.
"Orange Soda" (what I was rec'd)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91q6PrWmKnI
"Lucky Star"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyfB9pjbRxk
"Lobotomy"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEuniLEdoXo
"Angel"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLG-XwMqHzQ
Noticeable vibe shift with her, and other Zoomers like her, away from the battle of the sexes waged by Millennials more than anyone, but also late Gen X-ers like Fergie, Pink, etc.
ReplyDeleteThe whole, "look but don't touch," "I just came here to dance with my girls / gay besties," etc. kind of attitude. Inviting the male gaze with some degree of open sex appeal -- but always having to frustrate, deny, and even shame the gazer, as though guilty of some social crime. Not to mention the negging (from guys and girls alike) -- never works, just inflates the negger's ego while preventing social connections.
Faerybabyy is also openly inviting the male gaze, but without in any way trying to make the gazer feel bad, frustrated, guilty, etc. She's more of a free-spirited flower-child -- no shame in looking at the opposite sex's ripe body. Not a combatant.
And also, not trying to hide behind girl friends or a gay / tranny eunuch, as though the gazer is guilty of trying to break into the harem, against norms of decency. Sorry, public spaces are not your harem, and you gay / tranny BFF hold no authority over who can look at or approach you. Don't like it? Stay out of public spaces -- which most Millennials ended up doing, and when they did go out, surrounded by chaperones of various kinds.
Zoomers don't go outside to socialize IRL either, but they do online, and they're not as guarded, defensive, accusatory, and itching to start a battle of the sexes over someone looking at them when they're plainly inviting the male gaze.
But due to dissolving cohesion during imperial collapse, she doesn't have anyone to hang out with in her music videos, or in her online socializing. It's more about feeling alone and sad, despite feeling a vague restless itch to interact more with others.
A lot like the girls in the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood paintings, from another time of social cocooning, Victorian sexual norms, and imperial stagnation and decline. Libidinal yet lonesome -- that's an empire on the brink of collapse for you.
And her invitation of the male gaze is not manipulative, too in-control, etc., as though she's just angling to get you to subscribe to her onlyfans. It's more flirty, insecure, getting bratty and pouty when she gets frustrated with your behavior, and so on -- like young girls who are boy-crazy act. Not vampy, not dommy-mommy, not living in your own household (all the step-mom / step-sis stuff), or other porn-brained tropes.
She's just a natural, blossoming babe who wants reassurance that she's attractive to boys, and gets miffed and placing her fists on her hips when they don't act 100% predictably, where she now has to figure boys out like a puzzle. "I thought they were just simple creatures who want sex and that's it?!??!?!!!"
And nothing aging and menopausal and drained of libido, like being a fag hag or tranny stanny, when you're trying to seclude yourself from the birds-and-the-bees atmosphere, and feel like posting a guard that would repulse 99% of would-be approachers.
Also appreciate the not-a-people-hater attitude -- she gets frustrated, miffed, upset, etc., but she doesn't hate herself, doesn't hate the guy, or look down on men in general (i.e., they're just simple beasts who want their dick sucked, and that's all there is to it), doesn't hate other girls ("female misogynists"). An all-natural girl, just one who gets a little down sometimes.
Anything to get past the battle of the sexes from the late 2000s and 2010s...
Raora is Southern Italian. ^_^ Like Gooba, Kiara, Biboo, Subaru, and the Koronator, she is from a non-standard dialect region of her country -- and therefore more theatrical!
ReplyDeleteWhile watching some of her Klonoa stream today, there was a break, so I decided to look up some clips of her speaking Italian. She pronounces "dio santo" without the final vowel in "santo" -- like "sant", and also with aspiration on the "t".
From hearing Italian-American speech, I already knew that Southern Italians tend to reduce or eliminate their final vowels -- zbaghett, gabagool, mudzarell, paisan, capish / gabeezh, etc.
But I didn't know about aspirating the "t" -- I found that out after looking into Southern dialects more, after hearing it in her speech.
(Aspiration is a heavy breathiness after a consonant, like how English speakers pronounce a "t" or "p" or "k" at the beginning of a word. Put a small piece of paper in front of your mouth and say "tip" or "pen" or "call", and see it blow back. Not so much blowback with "dip" or "ben" or "gall" -- we don't aspirate voiced consonants.)
And when she and Cece were speaking French and Italian back and forth, she said "Che fagi" or "faggi" -- then instantly corrected herself with "fai" (standard Italian), so the first time must have been a regional pronunciation. I guess they don't eliminate that "cc" consonant in the 2nd person singular, keeping the stem as in the 1st person singular (faccio). Also, voicing an unvoiced consonant is typical of Southern dialects -- like "gabagool" from capicola, "gabeezh" from capisci, etc.
Also eliminated the final vowel in "tutto bene" -- tutto ben.
And just like the mafia comes from back East in America, and the yakuza from Kansai in Japan, the Italian mafia is from the South. All non-standard dialect regions -- but where they balance low-trust anarchy with expressiveness, theatricality, and pure pizzazz! ^_^
It sounds like she geminates (doubles) more of her consonants than in the standard dialect. When she says "sugo", it sounds more like "suggo". That's typical of Southern rathern than Northern dialects.
ReplyDeleteBranching out into linguistic theory for a moment, Southern Italian pronunciation of "santo" as "sant^h" is a great example of a widespread phenomenon that vindicates "derivational" models of phonology, and destroys the "parallel processing" models like Optimality Theory.
ReplyDeleteThe process is called "opacity," where one process occurs, and then other process occurs which wipes out the reason that the first process was triggered. So there's something confusing, puzzling, and irrational in the final form -- but it makes perfect sense when you look at the multi-step derivation.
In this case, the processes are: 1) aspirating a "t" in the middle of a word, and 2) deleting final vowels.
We can tell which order these happen in -- aspiration first, then vowel deletion:
santo -> sant^ho -> sant^h
If it were the other order, the final vowel would get deleted first (giving "sant"), so the aspiration process would fail to launch -- because the "t" is no longer in the middle of the word, but at the new end of the word. The final form would be "sant", without aspiration.
Do you see? -- the deletion of the final vowel in the 2nd stage, obscures the reason that the "t" was aspirated in the 1st stage. Why is that "t" aspirated? -- it's not in the middle of a word, as the rule requires...
Ah, but it was! -- in an intermediate stage, where the form was "santo". But once the final vowel is deleted, it's no longer in the middle of a word, so the aspiration is puzzling from a surface-only view. You have to dig down into the derivation through intermediate forms, to see why the "t" was aspirated -- when the final vowel was still there, before being deleted in the 2nd stage.
Minimalist, parallel processing models like Optimality Theory cannot model these phenomena, and that is their critical downfall. In any model where "sant" and "sant^h" are competing for optimal status, "sant" will always win because it doesn't alter the underlying form as much -- "sant^h" has altered both the final vowel (by deleting it), AND the "t" consonant (by adding aspiration). These are the so-called "faithfulness" constraints (stay faithful to the underlying form).
But multi-stage derivational models have no problem handling these phenomena whatsoever -- indeed, they're the whole reason such models were invented! It plainly looks like there are several processes, and that they are in a sequence, and that sequence can be figured out by seeing which sequence gives the true final form.
As we saw above, the sequence of "vowel deletion first, then aspiration" gives the wrong answer. The sequence must instead be "aspiration first, then vowel deletion" -- puzzle solved!
The fact that Optimality Theory is still alive and kicking, all these decades after such critical failures were identified (including by me -- an inquisitive undergrad writing a term paper), is a testament to the sorry, corrupted, and irredeemable state of academia as a whole.
Add that to the retraction crisis, and the replication crisis. The "already disproven, but stubbornly still supported as the consensus" crisis.
No wonder we can't put a man on the moon anymore...
To give another example, to help you understand, the most famous example in "the literature" is in Turkish. There are two processes that happen: 1) a vowel is inserted to break up consonant clusters at the end of a word, and 2) velar consonants ("k" or hard "g") are deleted between vowels.
ReplyDeleteWe can figure out which sequence they occur in, by looking at the derivation of "your baby". "Baby" is "bebek", and "your" is a word-final suffix "-n".
Underlying form is "bebekn" -- but the final pronunciation is "bebein", with a new "i" added, and the "k" deleted.
So the order must be:
bebekn -> bebekin -> bebein
Vowel insertion occurs first, to break up the "kn" cluster at the end. But the insertion of the "i" vowel has triggered the deletion of the "k" -- it now lies between two vowels, which it did not in the underlying form.
If the sequence were the other way around, it would incorrectly give bebekn -> bebekn -> bebekin. That is, the "k" would fail to be deleted in the 1st stage, cuz it's not between vowels. Then vowel insertion would occur in the 2nd stage, and give "bebekin", which is incorrect.
But in Optimality Theory, there is no contest between the true surface form, "bebein", and competitors that incur fewer violations of the faithfulness constraints, such as "beben".
"Bebein" has two violations -- it has added a vowel, and deleted a consonant.
"Beben" only has one -- deleting the consonant. It should be the most optimal candidate in the competition -- but it's not!
The motivation for the "i" in the surface form is totally puzzling from a surface-only analysis -- vowels are only added in order to break up a consonant cluster, and there is plainly no such cluster in the surface form -- the "i" lies between an "e" and an "n", not two consonants.
Ah, but it did! -- if you dig down into the derivation through intermediate forms. At one stage, there *was* a consonant cluster that it broke up, "kn". But the very insertion of the vowel triggered another process, which wiped out the motivation for the vowel being inserted in the first place -- the first consonant of the cluster got deleted, after the cluster-busting vowel was inserted!
These puzzling VESTIGIAL elements in the surface form, hint at the sequential history of the derivation from underlying to surface form. Eliminating intermediate forms, sequences, and history, gives the completely wrong answer.
But it was a clever-silly, autistic min-max, overly optimize everything kind of model, and that is what appeals most to academics -- not discovering the truth, or gaining flashes of insight into the nature of the universe.
If it were merely a matter of intellectual fashion cycles, then Optimality Theory ought to have gone out of fashion by now -- it's been mainstream since the early '90s, whereas the most famous derivational model was from Sound Pattern of English from 1968. Derivational models only lasted 25 years, whereas Optimality Theory is still going cluelessly strong for over 30 years, and probably never will be retracted for its critical flaws -- the appeal to minimalism and optimization is too strong with clever-silly autists.
Academia has become infested by these types -- and no, they were not always there. Certainly not during the New Deal / Midcentury, when the derivational models were invented and promoted and widely adopted as the standard. Honesty and insight were stronger forces than clever-silliness and autism.
Non-standard dialect regions produce divas, like Celine Dion coming from Quebec within Canada, Sayuri Ishikawa coming from Kumamoto in Japan, and Fairuz representing the North of Lebanon.
ReplyDeleteWho comes from Southern Italy? Mietta! From Puglia, the heel of the boot (although she sings in standard Italian).
This is something like "Total Eclipse of the Heart" and "My Heart Will Go On" for Italians, an iconic diva anthem. "Vattene Amore", from 1990:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bUF_AeaTnkg
Solo version:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nwRcMvW7n4
Even if you don't understand the words, you can still understand the emotions.
If Raora has a diva side to her personality, this would be a great song for karaoke to introduce Italian music to non-Italian audiences. ^_^
One of the songs that I was obsessed with, back when I was learning Italian in college, and still remember every word to this day. Hehe.
Mietta was also in the IT dub of Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame, as both the speaking and singing voice of Esmeralda. A theatrical double-threat. ^_^
ReplyDeleteThe Democrats in America also remind me of the Liberals in the British Empire who collapsed at the beginning of the 1920s because they cannot cope with the decline of the British Empire, and were replaced with the Labour Party. Right now the Democrats cannot cope with the decline of the American empire and they are probably going to collapse and be replaced with another party.
ReplyDeleteYou should check out the old Midcentury Modernist Seattle Central Library, which got torn down in the early 2000s and replaced with the current glass and steel abomination that stands there today.
ReplyDeleteFuwamoco sang "Uchuu Senkan Yaaamaaatooo" during karaoke! One step closer toward Nihonification. ^_^ It must be central to Japanese pop cultural identity if 4 girls get together to sing it during the finale of a concert, like they did for Luna's!
ReplyDeleteAnd don't worry if it was made to be sung by manly men as a rousing battle anthem -- it's something everyone can sing, cuz it's part of their entire society and culture. It belongs to all of them, and they all worship that show, and that romantic vision of space adventures.
Just like American girls can sing the melody to the rousing Star Wars main theme -- they're not LARP-ing as the male swashbucklers directly, just like the Holo JP girls were not LARP-ing as space pilots (well, other than the pirate captain! hehe). They're celebrating a central part of their culture, which is for everyone.
Like singing the national anthem -- or "Take Me Out To the Ball Game" like the Goobinator did at Dodger Stadium recently -- it's a rousing battle anthem, originally by a male voice. But women can sing it, too -- a woman singing it is not LARP-ing as a badass soldier on the battlefield, she's playing the real role of "singer" and channeling the national spirit, which women can do just like men, without getting on the battlefield.
Y'know, they'd get a few more steps closer to Nihonification if they did a watchalong for a couple episodes of the main Leiji Matsumoto series -- Uchuu Senkan Yamato, Uchuu Kaizoku Captain Harlock, and Ginga Tetsudou 999.
It's so simple -- one stream covering all of them like a sampler, just dipping your toes into the pond, and you can take the full plunge later, or not. Pilot episode, and maybe the next 2 after that. Roughly an hour per series, for a stream somewhat over 3 hours -- not too long. And it's mainly just taking in the content, and occasionally reacting / discussing afterward -- easy-peasy!
They could let their audience know that the first 9 or 10 episodes of Space Battleship Yamato (with EN subs) are available on YouTube, and the whole series of Galaxy Express 999 is available on Tubi for free. IDK about Captain Harlock -- I was lucky enough to find those on DVD from the public library. ^_^
...or wherever else they might watch anime from...
They'd really like the theme songs, too -- especially the ending songs, which are more moody but still in an intense, powerful way. I've never heard theme songs like them. And they're so moving, I always sang along to the ending song for Ginga Testudou 999 -- I still sing it out loud, to no music, sometimes! It's like an intense, yearning, disco-Enka lullaby... how's *that* for a heady brew of ingredients?! ^_^
So many things wrong with the "new" Seattle Library, holy shit, where to start...
ReplyDeleteSome pics here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seattle_Central_Library
It's very hard to find pics of the MCM one, especially of the interior, but we can figure it looked like other MCM library interiors, in rough outline.
Just sticking with the exterior, the new one is way too close to the curb -- an article of faith in the libtard crusade to fuck up American architecture and make it feel more Euro LARP-y.
We're a wide open space country, we want every site -- even in the center of a city -- to feel like a sprawling country estate.
That's why everyone likes the layout of the typical college campus here -- sprawling, not sliced up by busy multi-lane streets, not squished right up against the street curb either.
Both the Beaux Arts and the MCM Seattle libraries set the main entrance a fair ways back from the curb -- this makes it special. There's an approach, a little trek, almost like winding your way up a hillside to enter a hilltop fortress.
We're also a nomad-dominant society, so we like architecture that is suited to thwarting nomadic raids -- like having entrances that are set far back from the main travel artery (like a city street, or a suburban road). And elevated somewhat, if possible.
This builds up some tension, suspense, and anticipation from the moment you first see the exterior and decide to enter, until you're actually inside. In the new one, it's set closer to the sidewalk, and is not elevated by steps or rolling hills or anything, and you just waltz right in.
Also no portico like the MCM one had, so not so special of a transitional portal between outside and inside. The Beaux Arts did not have a cool transitional space either, unless it was on the inside, like a foyer. But not present on the outside, like a drawbridge into a castle, as many Brutalist buildings had (including the much maligned Whitney Museum, but which was still far superior to the new garbage that replaces them in the neolib era).
There's something like a portico, in that the new one has the exterior extend outward toward the street as it gets higher. So you could say that empty space is negative space, carved out from a cube, and making the top layer like an awning or canopy that's cantilevered (not supported directly underneath).
But that just makes it feel even closer to the curb, with the highest layer being very close to the curb horizontally. It feels even less set back, as though it were special and required an approach or trek. It's claustrophobically smashed right up against the sidewalk, with some of that tightness alleviated by the negative space that's carved out -- but that doesn't make it feel set back, just alleviating the totally unnecessary pressing of the facade against the sidewalk.
And by being set so close to the curb, the new one doesn't have as much landscaping, both the plants themselves and any architectural elements they're housed in (single planters, long banks to hold plants, etc.). The MCM one has a hell of a lot of landscaping and a "garden within a plaza" feel. The new one just has a handful of trees around the perimeter at the sidewalk, and some hedges and grass -- not a full-on garden within a plaza.
This is all apart from the stuff I've already said about the glass-and-steel boxes as an entire style, vs. MCM and Brutalism as entire styles. Like how there's no sense of cozy inside-ness with a glass box.
ReplyDeleteAnd no, despite having quite a bit of glass along the exterior, the MCM one did not feel open and exposed to the outside, cuz the glass is smoked / tinted, not a transparent fishbowl. And no, smoked glass is not off-putting to passersby on the outside, cuz it's not totally reflective, like the other kind of horrendo neolib glass box, which resembles an authoritarian cop's mirrored sunglasses. Smoked glass gives outsiders a little hint of what's inside, teasing and enticing them to make the trek inside and explore for themselves to solve the mystery.
The MCM one had glass on only part of the exterior anyway -- most of it was solid, opaque, and fortress-like. On the upper levels (looks like the 3rd and above), there's no window-wall at all -- just thin narrow slits, like good ol' Dark Age Romanesque fortresses.
Having said that, I do think the MCM one is not the best of its style, since it does have too much of a window-wall -- albeit far better than the glass box crap that came after it. It should've had more horizontal opaque sections, in the same material as the outer part of the portico (concrete, looks like). That way the windows just give a little peak inside, enhancing the enticement factor on the outside, and the cozy factor on the inside.
If there are to be larger expanses of glass (which should be smoked, no matter what), they should be on the upper levels -- so-called clerestory windows from the Dark Ages, or the Bronze Age. Or the neo-Dark Age, like Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple (the birth of truly American architecture), which has a very solid and windowless lower levels, and windows only way up top.
This helps to fend off nomadic raiders -- one less possible means of entering the building from ground level. They can't just hop off their horse or their Harley -- they'd have to haul tall ladders, and that's not something an individual can carry on their horse or Harley. And even when the special team puts them in place, it take some time to scale, giving the insiders the chance to throw them away from the wall, attack them while they're sitting -- or rather, scaling -- ducks, and so on.
Most MCM and Brutalist buildings were of this type, descended from Wright. So a point taken off from the Seattle Library for being a little too open on the lower levels (even if just on one side, it's easily avoided).
Here's a good before-and-after demonstrating this:
https://www.reddit.com/r/ArchitecturalRevival/comments/1cqcqol/the_new_john_cunningham_student_centre_replacing/
The Brutalist library has a lot more thick (meaning "tall") horizontal elements, to break up the windows, and at various scales. There are horizontal elements within each window bay, making lots of small panes arranged together. And between floors, there are "tall" horizontal runs of concrete that break up any potential multi-story window.
The Euro LARP / McMansion library has ginormous windows that are not interrupted vertically by horizontal elements -- neither within each bay or pane, or between floors. These huge windows clearly show 3 floors worth of space -- and they're not at clerestory heights, they're pretty close to the ground. I'll give them half a point for having the ground level be more solid and opaque, but the total effect is still way too open.
Nor is the new glass smoked -- some of the glass looks dark, but only cuz it's in shadow. The windows that are hit by sunlight look totally transparent. The Brutalist library's glass is more tinted and semi-opaque -- hard to make out fine details of the inside from the outside.
What a total waste -- but so it goes in the neolib era. Being gifted something awesome, then desecrating it and putting garbage in its place.
As for color and texture, the MCM one had both! Here's a decent color photo of it from 1960:
ReplyDeletehttps://bpb-us-e1.wpmucdn.com/sites.uw.edu/dist/0/20601/files/2014/04/2nd-Building_-4thMadison-june-1-1960-goweyweb1.jpg
The concrete had its aggregate exposed, as is standard in the American tradition, which gives it a multi-colored / speckled appearance, as the little stones making up the aggregate have different colors.
Overall, it has a yellow, cream, tan, sand hue -- not dull gray like the steel skeletons of the neolib atrocities. The pillars of the portico look more brown and ruddy (maybe a different mix of stones for their aggregate, or maybe it's a different material altogether, not concrete, can't tell). But like the main material, it's speckled, not perfectly uniform.
Exposed aggregate concrete also gives the facades texture everywhere -- and this texture contrasts with the smooth, sleek, gleaming glass of the window-wall. Ditto for the colors -- brighter hues on the concrete, dark brown / smoked tint on the glass.
This contrast also makes us feel a primitivist vs. futurist contrast, or a yin-yang effect, which is essential to American architecture and design. When everything's smooth, glossy, gray or colorless, and hi-tech, that's too dystopian for us -- divorced from the heavily textured, matte, all-natural, warm-colored materials of our primitive origins.
So naturally, that's just what the neolibs go for, with their glass-and-steel alienation devices. Not just alienation in a generic sense, but specifically trying to destroy our specifically AMERICAN style and heritage, making us feel out of place in our own country.
Some more slight criticism of the MCM one, to make it a better example of its style, even though it's pretty good and is leagues beyond the neolib garbage that replaced it after desecration.
ReplyDeleteLooking at the color photo, the windows on the upper box are interrupted by vertical shafts of concrete (?) that run from bottom to top. That's good, keeps it from feeling like a totally open single pane the size of the entire wall.
But they need some horizontal interruptions too -- they sort of do, with those gray horizontal sections, but that's not the same material as the overall facade. It should be the same concrete.
Also, these horizontal interruptions are at the same depth as the windows, "behind" the vertical concrete shafts. By not having horizontal interruptions of the same material as the facade, and the horizontal interruptions being set back from the elements that do share the facade material, the window wall looks like the true facade -- and that those concrete vertical shafts are an external embellishment or ornament.
But as far as ornaments go, pretty dull.
If the horizontal gray sections were concrete like the rest of the facade, and were at the same depth as the veritcal shafts, then it would feel like the facade was the concrete part, and that the glass windows were recessed into this concrete facade. Thereby maintaing the coherence of the entire building -- whereas now, it feels like the facade is too different on that wall, which reads as a glass facade with concrete shafts added as a secondary matter, an ornament.
It would enhance the narrow slittiness of those windows as well, making it more of a neo-Dark Age fortress.
As for the ground-level window wall, it is broken up somewhat horizontally and vertically, but it still reads as though the facade is glass, and those wispy shafts are external embellishments, not the true facade in themselves.
So, have a "thick" (tall) horizontal section running across the middle height (where there are now the two short panes), in the same concrete material as the rest of the facade.
To add further opacity, and further maintain the coherence of the facade, put some vertical concrete obstructions too. And not just those narrow shafts like on the upper box. I mean tall rectangles that block a good 50% of the window bay that they're in front of. Same concrete material as the rest of the facade, and at the same depth as the horizontal concrete band -- not on top of it, not behind it, but same depth.
That would make the concrete feel like the true facade, with the glass windows more of a negative space carved out from it, to peer through. And if the rectangle is vertical, it would still provide a sense of a grand height for that first floor or two, and if it's not too tall nor too wide, it wouldn't block too much of the view -- it would teasingly obstruct, and therefore entice.
I stole this idea from the (demolished) Brutalist library at Macquarie University:
https://david-hill.photoshelter.com/image/I0000ozDLoAR49SQ
https://david-hill.photoshelter.com/image/I00002HzGYYo8hAE
In this library, they wanted to emphasize the horizontality of the two separate floors, so the concrete rectangles are oriented horizontally to parallel that.
In the Seattle Library, the goal was to emphasize the verticality of the ground floor (or two floors, can't tell), the tall ceilings that amaze you when you first enter. So just do the same thing as at Macquarie, but orient the rectangles vertically.
Simple! But since both have been desecrated, it's only fanfic -- but still a worthwhile exercise, to get a better insight into the truth and beauty of architecture. And perhaps as a guide for any distant-future alien civilizations who are reading this blog post somehow, and want the rules of American architecture spelled out so they can easily copy it. ^_^
OK, that's it for tonight's architecture lecture. Very fun, thanks for the recommendation.
ReplyDeleteNow back to catching up on Raora's Klonoa stream. I'm very pleased so far with how many times she says that the graphics are "pretty," mentioning the word "colors", the "aesthetic," and so on. Yearning for beauty -- so Italian! ^_^
As well as getting openly nostalgic -- not ironically.
I wonder if Italians are less irony-poisoned than Americans and other Europeans. She seems closer to the Japanese girls in Hololive, in this way. Not ironic, not seeking out things that are cursed or ugly or demonic or poorly made -- rather, appreciating what is blessed, pretty, angelic, and expertly made.
Maybe cuz Italy is not a collapsed empire like most of Europe, and the currently collapsing American empire. They were a unifying power during the 19th C, then came under American occupation in the mid-20th C, which kept them unified.
But they were never a regional great power like Sweden during the Gustavus Adolphus era or the Japanese of the Meiji era, let alone were they an expanding empire.
So I don't think they rose to the highest highs -- and therefore, they are not plunging into the lowest lows either, like the collapsed empires all around them (Britain, France, Spain, Germany, Austria, Balkans / Ottomans, and Russia).
Come to think of it, whenever I've looked up "who made this ugly, crappy video game?" -- rarely has it been Italians. French, Spanish, British, Germans, IDK about Austrians but their co-imperial realms of Czechs and Poles for sure, Russians / Ukrainians, way too many current Americans and Canadians (especially Quebecois)...
ReplyDeleteRarely Scandinavians (and they made one of the best -- Minecraft), rarely Japanese (only Chilla's Art), and rarely Italian. In fact, one of them was made by some guy from Malta! A dinky little Mediterranean island had a worse record than all of Italy.
Italians, like the Japanese, and the Americans up until the 2000s, maintain a healthy desire for beauty and craftsmanship in the things that they interact with in their daily lives -- including, it seems, video games!
I already knew that anime was highly popular in Italy, so perhaps they appreciate another aesthetically accomplished culture like Japan.
Maybe Raora will become a retro gamer -- at least, occasionally? Those classic games are too aesthetic to let them languish in obscurity... they need to be rescued and kept alive! The Japanese girls are great at doing that, but non-Japanese people these days are more into anti-art than real art.
But perhaps the Italians are another exception, and still appreciate real art rather than anti-art. Come to think of it, Italians were not very central to the anti-art movements of the early 20th C in Europe. In fact, most of the enjoyable early 20th C art was Italian -- Modigliani, de Chirico, the Futurists, etc.
And they played a central role in the rebirth of figurative painting in the '70s and '80s, so-called Neo-Expressionism (in Germany), or in the Italian context "Transavantgarde".
Old post of mine on Neo-Expressionism, with some images:
https://akinokure.blogspot.com/2011/11/expressionism-emerges-during-waves-of_21.html
Really a period worth looking into, if you haven't, and think 20th-century painting fell off hard (which it did, but with a welcome revival in the '70s and '80s).
OK, final remark. I just searched "modigliani" to see what someone who wasn't already familiar with him, would see by googling.
ReplyDeleteHe's most famous for his nudes, not his bust portraits. And yet page after page of results is only portraits, literally none of the nudes -- unless you specify "modigliani nude". But you shouldn't have to, it's supposed to show the most popular, famous, talked-about, etc. results.
So I thought, how about Renaissance paintings -- google "titian," and there are pages and pages of results without a single image of one of his most famous paintings, Venus (of Urbino), who is nude. Only if you specify "titian venus" does this result show up -- again, something you should not have to specify, since they're supposed to return highly relevant results first, or at all.
This is pure anti-heterosexual censorship by woketard puritans from the tech elite. They think if you see a nude female body that is inviting the male gaze, you're going to immediately go rape some poor woman. Again, only insane puritans believe that art or cultural works can brainwash and inflame the passions to such an extent, and that human beings are so bestial that they cannot counteract those inflamed passions, that even mildly erotic art must be censored lest it spark a violent crime epidemic.
They're a million times worse than any schoolmarm librarian from the 1950s in rural America. In that library, you could find any ol' art book, turn to Titian or Modigliani, and you'd find nude paintings, without already knowing they were there. They were shown, cuz they were the most relevant to those artists.
In the current hi-tech dystopia, such nude paintings are censored out of all view from casual browsing. You'll only know of their existence from exposure to them during the pre-dystopian times, when art was not mass-censored by puritanical woketards who control Silicon Valley. If you didn't already know about them, you never will.
Their goal is to let those with existing exposure continue to be aware of them, but to keep future generations ignorant from the get-go, so that in the future, no one will be aware of them except dead people.
It is therefore incumbent upon us with existing awareness to spread such awareness as far and wide as possible, whether by IRL word of mouth, or social media, or whatever. If the dystopian tech elites get their way, the entire world will become ignorant of Titian's Venus within the next few generations.
We can never outsource the transmission or preservation of culture to the tech elites and their algorithms, platforms, etc. We have to preserve it ourselves, and transmit it ourselves -- perhaps using their platforms, but never automating it or putting it on autopilot, assuming that google will archive everything, and return results relating to everything. So why bother transmitting awareness of Modigliani's famous nudes, since anybody can just google "modigliani" and see them -- right?
Wrong! We have to do it ourselves, we are locked in an existential battle with insane, delusional, desecrating puritanical woketards. And they are not fucking around, they are mass-censoring in order to prevent awareness from ever arising within the near future.
We can, and will beat them! Our collapsed empire may be too far gone to create truly new culture, but we can at least preserve and transmit existing culture!
(and no, I didn't have Safe Search turned on. it was already off. Just plain ol puritanical censorship.)
ReplyDeleteWhen America's empire collapses, it's going to become a lot poorer. I'm not sure how it can afford to build reinforced concrete structures in the future. Especially a few centuries from now when the world has exhausted all its fossil fuel supplies and isn't able to manufacture steel on a large scale anymore. Those Midcentury Modern buildings (and the technical knowledge for how to build such buildings) are probably going to be lost forever.
ReplyDeleteTo prove that it is specifically anti-hetero, I searched for "michelangelo," "donatello," and "schiele" -- immediately returned results of fully nude male subjects in sculpture and painting, from the Renaissance to the 20th C.
ReplyDeleteTellingly, no female nudes from Schiele -- don't know if he did any, but the ones returned by Google show only partial nudity, as compared to his fully nude male self-portraits that show up right away.
And no, this is not pro-hetero but for female searchers -- no girl is searching those names to see male nudes, especially in Schiele's case where they're grotesque.
It's meant to open the door for homo male searchers, and slam it for everyone else. Typical of a sector that has become compromised by a gay cabal, which being in San Francisco, the online tech sector must have gone through a decade or more ago.
Final remark (for real this time): this underscores the importance of physical media. Google can instantly mass-censor Titian's Venus and Modigliani's nudes, and never bring them back again, for casual browsers and explorers who are not already aware of their existence.
ReplyDeleteBut a physical art history book cannot be mass-recalled, mass-burned, and mass-memoryholed. Remember to go out there to used book stores, thrift stores, wherever, and pick up physical books that are safe forever against the insane puritanical desecrating woketards who are still running amok online.
To be safe, pick up an art history book from roughly the New Deal era (up through 1980), not the neolib era, certainly nothing from the 21st century.
I've seen perfectly intact copies of Gardner's, from various editions, in thrift stores for $5 or less, as well as in clearance sections of used bookstores for that same price. Even if you have to pay "full" price at a used bookstore, probably not more than $10-15, and it'll last forever and cover so much of the fundamentals.
We already live in a world where you can't "just google [name]" anymore! You need to RETVRN to physical media, or doom the world to the blackest ignorance within the next couple generations...
The real problem in the American West in the future is going to be water. California will be fighting Texas for control over the Ogallala Aquifer in West Texas as it runs out of water in Lake Mead, Lake Powell, and etc, due to the ongoing megadrought.
ReplyDeleteAs a magnanimous victor, I'm not going to rub it in the clueless / shocked people's faces that I called this right after the 2020 election day, while they remained deeply deluded about the nature of our society right up until the bitter end.
ReplyDeleteI don't care about bragging rights -- it's not much of a brag to have more insight than 21st-century take-havers from an imploding empire.
I just want the nature of their wrongness to be made clear -- that those who are actually trying to figure things out, will radically alter their models to adapt to this profound failure of theirs.
Rules do NOT enforce themselves or settle their own disputes.
Jim Clyburn, black church ladies in South Carolina, and the Black Causus in Congress have minimal power within the Democrat party's coalition. Nancy Pelosi, suburban professional white moderates, and the Wall Street caucus, are the ones with real influence.
And if they don't, this will make clear who is just in it for the purpose of info-tainment, partisan propaganda, and emotional therapy for suicidal babies -- while mostly doing it for free, like the good ol' jannies that they are.
And therefore, whose audience are tuning in for those same purposes, not to figure out what's going on, how the world works, etc. -- but to have a couple yuks, feel good about ARE PARTY, and have their cognitive dissonance alleviated enough that they don't cry themselves to sleep for another night.
I altered my model when part of it blew up in my face, after all. I said the GOP would, one way or another, prevent the flagrant and open theft of the 2020 election, which was dragging on for days, weeks, and then months after the election was already over.
ReplyDeleteI knew the Reagan-era GOP was moribund, but I didn't think they were actively suicidal, accepting their own murder, and throwing anyone from their side who tried to prevent their murder, to their enemies. That's the most traitorous and suicidal behavior I've ever seen in my life.
Democrats may have just ousted their sitting leader in a coup / vote of no confidence, but it was out of a group survival instinct. If they were like the GOP, and willing to accept their own murder, they would've allowed their senile usurper-president to remain as the nominee, and get clobbered by Trump in the fall, while throwing any Democrat who objected to this, over to the fanfic concentration camps of Project 2025.
So after seeing that response to the Great Ballot Count Stoppage, I adjusted my model -- the GOP is dead and suicidal and traitorous to their own supporters -- not exciting, thriving, agile, dynamic, "we got your back," or whatever buzzwords they try to appropriate for themselves in a last-ditch re-branding effort. From now on, all the action and dynamics will be on the left side, among various factions of the Democrats.
I also adjusted my model when the Trump admin counter-acted every distinctive thing he ran on, once in office. Putting American boots on the ground in Syria (and bombing it), putting more Americans back into Afghanistan, adding to NATO, further de-industrialization (shown by the widening trade deficit), and soaring immigration including illegal (except for the outlier year of 2020, when the entire world closed its borders, liberal or conservative).
I.e., there would be no realignment from the GOP, Reaganism and neoliberalism / neocon-ism is baked into the party at this point, and any future Trumpist admins would just be another Paul Ryan / Jeb Bush admin, with Trumpian branding but no Trump 2016 substance and reality. Realignment, whatever form it takes, would have to come from the non-GOP party (Dems, or if they fracture, some off-shoot of the Dems).
Both of these major adjustments were in the doomer / imperial collapse direction, so I've altered my overall / gestalt view as well -- if you don't have a clear idea in some particular case, assume "it's over" instead of "we're so back".
Also, to be clear, Harris now counts as one of the de facto leaders in this still-in-flux Year of the Five Emperors. Biden didn't merely "not receive the nomination" -- he was de facto ousted in a party-wide vote of no confidence, including both party elites and masses of voters (who, polls showed, favored him leaving the race, by 67% or so).
ReplyDeleteThe next in line of succession, and the one who is in fact receiving all the endorsements -- votes of confidence -- is Harris. It's not out of the question that Biden resigns the presidency de jure, or dies, sometime before inauguration day of 2025, making Harris' presidency formal rather than effective.
Well before inauguration day, White House policy will come to reflect the Harris team more than the ousted / sidelined Biden team. How different they are remains to be seen.
But everyone else in our government, our citizenry, and foreign governments, can now see that Biden's team is not worth negotiating with or following the orders of, since he's been de facto ousted.
They will have to adjust their behavior on the presumption that Harris is the de facto leader, since she has the confidence and support of her party elites and popular voters, albeit expressed in polls, not primary votes.
But that's cuz the primary was canceled on behalf of Biden, just as it was in 2020, when all the actually-voted-for candidates like Bernie, Buttgag, etc., were removed as choices by party elites during the week before Super Tuesday, delegitimizing the outcomes from that week onward. It's not a legitimate election when all your choices are kicked off the ballot before you can even cast it.
But then, nobody voted for Harris in the 2020 primary either, even before the party elites canceled the non-Biden choices. So she's weak within the party as well, and is an even more insecure position than Biden, regarding the stability of her support. She's just a convenient and acceptable substitute du jour -- but she did not conquer her way into the position, as though drawing on long-established clients to whom she was the patron, coming to her aid like armies on a battlefield.
And she'll only last in that position as long as it's convenient for the elites and common voters. If circumstances change, she's outta there so fast it'll make ya head spin. She has no long-term loyal army of her own to resist a coup attempt like the one she just benefited from.
I'll get back to more non-political posting later tonight. But given the formal confirmation that they dumped Biden, had to wade into the dIsCouRsE for a bit longer.
ReplyDeleteOne more doomer realization -- I was hoping for a brief moment of national unity and celebration, since everyone hates Biden and wanted to see him gone.
But both sides instantly ignored him like the tossed-overboard garbage that he is, and continued the libtard vs. conservatard war without skipping a beat.
I played a bunch of upbeat celebration songs yesterday, with a window open. But I was probably the only one, and didn't really notice much of a vibe shift in everyday life.
I wasn't deluded enough to think such a period would last very long -- but even a day or a week, feeling liberated from the Biden era, should've been broadly appealing, right? Guess not.
"Caaaannnn you feeeellll, the luuuvvvv to--"
"No!"
"No!"
OK then, party poopers! :P
Lots of libs and progs are posting clips of the '96 DNC, where everyone was doing the Macarena, smiling, enjoying their non-polarized climate, low stress, able to open up and let it all hang out, no internecine witch hunts, etc.
ReplyDeleteThere's a yearning for that vibe again, but our empire is imploding too hard for it to materialize.
There's even an easy adaptation of the lyrics for the coronation of Kamala --
"Heeeyy Macarena!" ->
"Kaaaaa-mala Reina!"
Alas, none of the libtards will be dancing in the aisles to "Hit the Road, Jack," "Good Times," "Holiday," "The Sign," or whatever else. Not cruising around in excited anticipation to one of my personal faves from the '90s (since we're in a '90s / y2k revival), the cover of "Wild Night" by John Cougar Mellencamp and Me'Shell Ndegeocello:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nPPRQeTxTY
That must be one of the last "relatable hot babe next door" videos, or in any format. So hot, so down to Earth, so natural (no bra), and so cool.
We used to have a real country...
Another indication JD Vance is fake and gay: he supports Israel and their current actions in the Middle East, like every other Republican neocon. Not a sign that he is a realignment candidate.
ReplyDeleteThe military's still jerking my dad around about his pension, just had a chat with him today. He's finally retired, but the scumbags keep lying about basic facts -- entering 0 years of military service, when he was in the Navy for 6 (in addition to other various stints of under a year apiece, but which add up). Then using that as an excuse to deny him what he's owed.
ReplyDeleteI said, have you talked to your Congressman? He's probably a Republican, might be able to lean on someone. But he said he's afraid to lodge any complaints, since that might endanger his pension even more.
It's been like this for at least a year, not to mention the years it took to get disability payments for hearing loss due to working on naval shipyards.
You don't get rich from these payments either -- they're meant to let you live rather than go homeless and starve.
The military is the most worthless and disloyal patron in American society right now. They will not pay you what they promised, they'll give you endless runaround, and nobody from the institution -- or the political party that it controls -- will have your back.
It is absolutely INSANE how horribly, callously, and contemptuously the military treats its veterans. Vets don't need radical blue-hairs on college campuses to spit on their uniform anymore -- they have their own brass and bureaucracy to cut them loose when it comes time to uphold their end of the patronage bargain.
All they do is take, never reward.
I'm just waiting for one of these military faggots to try shaming my dad about how the available funds have to go to more essential clients, like the Ukrainian scum who are getting annexed by Russia anyway, the Israeli scum who are getting annexed by Lebanon and Yemen anyway, and the Taiwanese scum who are going to get annexed by China anyway. Like how they told active-duty soldiers on bases to go on food stamps instead of providing for them like normal patrons.
"It's your patriotic duty, in these belt-tightening times, to give up some of your personal treats, so that others may win their battle for mere survival."
Fuck that, those suckers can get annexed and dissolved -- vets in America are living hand-to-mouth because the military blows all its funding on losing expensive wars (of its own or by proxy), rather than take care of its OWN goddamn soldiers and veterans!
At this point, I am never voting Republican again. I only did for Trump, twice, including the 2016 primary -- when it actually mattered. But the military party is too disloyal to its own clients, so they must be punished in every little and large way possible.
ReplyDeleteI suspect most people reading this have few or no family members with military service, but even if you do, they might not be saying anything about it, out of misplaced loyalty -- or rather because, like my dad, they fear retribution if they complain about their patrons renegging on their promises to their clients.
This is totally systematic, they don't have it in for my dad alone. Ask around to any vets in your family, about the endless runaround and under-delivering on payments, regarding disability or pensions. You'll be shocked by how common it is.
It's not just a recent / Covid / 2020s / sovereign debt crisis thing. The pension runaround has taken place during that time, but the refusal to pony up the dough for disability was way back during the QE extraganza of the 2010s. They were handing out money to everyone -- except the minuscule disability payments that vets were owed from what they incurred while serving.
But I'm sure it's plummeted to even lower depths in the 2020s, due to the outright collapse of our society. Just remember, though -- some patrons have their clients' backs, even when the SHTF. Not the military, though -- they'll cut you loose and blame you for asking for what's yours.
My Greatest Gen grandfather was in multiple labor unions (none in the public sector), and they had his back FOR LIFE. They paid on time, in full, and never stopped -- I'm pretty sure they included part of the funeral costs even when he died.
Another point in favor of the trades -- the two main unions he belonged to were the coal miners and the carpenters (and I inherited his carpenters union pocket-knife). He had slight lung problems from working in the mines, even for a little while -- mostly he was a carpenter. Didn't matter -- they cut him checks to repay for whatever lung damage he incurred while working in the mines.
If you're deciding where to go, or have kids, or neighbors, or anyone you know, considering the military -- tell them DO NOT. They'll just chew you up and spit you out. Might as well work in the mines, on railroads, as a carpenter, or plumber, or anything where the sector will have your back as life goes on.
No joke, you'll find more loyal patrons if you became a teacher, librarian, or public bus driver, all of which are Democrat patrons. That's why they have a more active base -- they're taken care of by their patrons, whereas Republican patrons tell their clients to fend for themselves, while still demanding their labor and loyalty like a pure parasite!
Couldn't your grandfather still support your grandmother as a housewife with his union jobs as well? I ultimately believe housewives are the fundamental component of any genuine "communitarian" impulse. When my mother was a child in the 1970s, there was someone with an Mrs. besides their name at home all day collectively watching the neighborhood children.
DeleteAccording to my sister, in ed school they regularly hammer home the message that child discipline is "punitive". Not the pathology of most private governments: https://books.google.ca/books/about/Private_Government.html?id=hXSYDwAAQBAJ&source=kp_book_description&redir_esc=y
50-state landslide to whoever runs on canceling student loan debt and vets getting paid in full, on time, forever -- disability, pensions, meal credits or whatever they are for active-duty as well.
ReplyDeleteNot that Democrats are capable of poaching a huge swath of Republicans, cuz they're still so psychotically polarized... but if sometime soon, one of them does want to realign the parties by stealing a decent chunk of their rival's coalition -- veterans is who to court / poach.
Democrats can point to their long and broad track record of getting payments to their clients, in multiple sectors, going back decades. And since the funds are public, they have no reason to obstruct -- it's not coming out of Democrat leaders' private bank accounts.
They just say, "We're not the ones personally profiting by diverting military resources to elite contractors, the brass, and foreign clients, instead of to our own veterans and active-duty grunts and officers. So we have no reason to squeeze funding to vets, since that funding is not earmarked for our sector anyway -- we're the banking, media, tech, and education sectors. Whatever is earmarked for the military, we're fine with most of that going to vets -- we're not going to get any of it anyway, unlike Republican military leaders hogging such funding for themselves rather than repay their clients".
The retarded faggots in the neolib Dem party have instead tried to poach the military brass, contractors, consultants, and other red-state yuppies who get infinite free money in order to lose wars rather than win them. Or the suburban non-military voters who still affiliate with the military as though they were fans of a sports team.
Realigning Dems have to go after veterans -- there's a shitload of them, they're older and more likely to vote, they are being tossed aside by their patrons and therefore full of grievances toward them. Plus they have handy skills, materials, and social connections that might come in handy as society disintegrates further.
When armed men show up to your door, you can't just flag them to the mods and have their accounts suspended, and breathe a sigh of relief. Being an online tattletale bitch won't save you from IRL collective violence.
It would be good to have as many vets on your side as possible -- so lure them with promises of getting their payments delivered, rather than tied up in bullshit forever, like their parasitic patrons have been doing for probably decades now.
Reminder: I've never voted Dem for prez either. Only Ralph Nader in 2000, at college -- volunteered for them as well! But the only sector of theirs that I came into contact with, betrayed me just as badly as the military does to vets, so they won't be getting my vote anytime soon either.
ReplyDeleteThe good news for independents, "politically homeless," etc., is that we have plunged into anarchy and devolution of central power -- so it doesn't matter who's in power, they can't force anything on us that we don't already want to do.
A libtard prez who wanted to force trannies on children in my red state, would get blocked so easily, they wouldn't even bother.
But a conservatard prez who wanted to pass a national abortion ban would also get blocked here, as red as the state is. Or if they tried to institute a draft for cannon fodder in Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, etc. They wouldn't even bother.
If you're not taken care of by either party, before you still might have had to worry about getting on either party's shitlist. But both parties are weak at the national level, they can't coerce you into anything as punishment -- as the attempt at a national Covid vaccine mandate showed. If you wanted it, you got it. But among those who did not want it, probably 80%+ did not in fact get it -- with zero consequences from the gubmint.
So, other than my academic interest in political dynamics, I'll be going back to not voting and not participating in politics in any way whatsoever, while the two sides compete over who's the fastest at jumping onto a sinking ship.
So much for no more political posting tonight, but that bullshit about the pension really got to me. I will never forget or forgive that. Whatever I can do in my own small way to hasten the collapse of the military brass, contractor class, and other red-state yuppie parasites, I will do.
ReplyDeleteMaybe all it will be is spreading negative word-of-mouth -- but combined with all the other voices who are painting the same picture as I am, we can deprive the military of at least 50% of its would-be active-duty population, who decide it's nothing but a sucker's scam to join in the 2020s.
Perhaps it needs to be stated openly, for those without a lot of vets in their family -- but those guys who might have gone into the military, but decide not to, due to their own negative assessment as well as all the negative word-of-mouth they've heard (at however-many degrees of removal), will still be military-type guys -- they just won't be serving in the US national-level military.
Maybe they'll populate the state-level militaries, which after devolution of central power, will become de facto sovereign militaries controlled by the governor. Maybe they'll join the local police, another devolution of power.
But they sure as shit won't be loyal to the central brass in NOVA any longer, undercutting the national / imperial chain of command, and pulling the rug out from those parasites in the swamp.
The brass at that point could still probably get funding from the central state -- but what are those increasingly worthless dollars in funding going to get them? Grunts are not showing up to serve under their command, no matter how much they are promised in dollars. They'd rather join a governor's army at the state level, the cops, a freelance mercenary militia, maybe gangs and cartels, whoever.
You can have all the funding in the world -- if you can't field a team of trained and cohesive soldiers under your command, your dirty money buys you nothing.
And already now, and increasingly as time goes on, would-be soldiers are going to join a regional chain of command, draining the swamp in DC of its military parasites.
I wouldn't want to be an email-sender in NOVA once those scales hit the tipping point.
Yep, my grandmother was a homemaker her whole life, thanks to industrialization and unionism. Just like natalism under Stalinism in the glory days of the Soviet Union.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure the unions continued paying *her* something as well, after my grandfather died, and she became a widow.
Really sick seeing Reaganite scum throw all social support out the window -- with cheap lip service to religious groups making up the difference of the gutted welfare state and vanishing unions due to de-industrialization, as though churches are a wealthy and powerful and influential sector in American society. They don't feed the poor, care for widow or orphans, or any of that feudal church stuff. Some might, but not the ones aligned with Reaganism.
And I don't mean cheap sentimental "thoughts and prayers" -- I mean regular cold hard cash payments, or other provisions in kind (food, handyman labor, etc.), to make sure widows don't go homeless or starve or have to re-marry in order to be provided for. My grandmother did not re-marry (she was around 80 anyway).
When the church was a real sector of society, it was a material provider and protector -- not just offering "thoughts and prayers".
Whoever advocates for a greater role of church in society is required to fork over a huge chunk of elite incomes to funding these social roles, just like the actually powerful church used to do.
But the "more church influence in society" crowd is just full of shit. They just want cheap displays like the Ten Commandments in public schools, the word "God" on currency, etc., not spending large sums of money they appropriate from the wealthy in order to provide and protect for the community at large, sponsoring the arts, etc.
Mormons, as usual, are the exception -- and of course, they're not Christian. Nor as they a back-East tightwad non-community.
ReplyDeleteIt's rare to leave the Mormon church, and while you're in, you pay a tithe, traditionally 1/10 of your income. That pools a ton of money into the church, which they use on all sorts of functions that used to be covered by a feudal Christian church (or Dark Age Buddhist monastery, etc.), but have been replaced by the modern secular welfare state.
That feeds back into itself -- providing for members on a material level makes them far more grateful for the church, and less likely to leave -- unlike the aloof, callous, tightwad churches that are hemorrhaging members over the decades.
Basic patronage. But don't expect the standard American Christian church to understand that. Only Mormons... and perhaps some Pentecostals, depending on where they are, who their congregation is.
Their audience is usually poor, so the appeal of material provision is pretty strong. Certainly that's how it is with the growth of Pentecostalism in the Third World -- that has nothing to do with a spiritual awakening, but being provided for after the Catholic Church lost its power and wealth and influence, with the collapse of the Spanish and Portuguese empires in the early 19th C.
Their governments are not rich and organized enough to do modern welfare state payments, so there was an open niche for a non-governmental institution like a church to fill those roles. But it's specifically Pentecostals, as they're willing to do all the material provision stuff -- not Protestants in general, not Catholics.
Mormons play this role as well, and they're the other expanding religion from America into the rest of the world.
Doing good things for people, while lecturing them about morality, will get you a far greater membership than neglecting people, while still lecturing them about morality.
Religious parasites in the collapsing American empire only want the deference and authority from the congregation -- not the assumption of duties about materially providing for them.
And they wonder why they have no power or influence anymore...
Ah, so a fella who views the meaning of religion through materialist ends (more spending on arts patronage and redistribution of wealth) is gonna authoritatively tells us Mormonism isn't Christian. Stay in your lane and talk about thrift stores instead, IMO :)
DeleteNot to get to rose-tinted about this kind of religious growth. That's precisely who the Jonestown cult were -- charismatic / evangelical Christians, largely poor black urban congregation (from Oakland, CA), used their pooled wealth to buy an agricultural commune in the tropics, then when investigated by the FedGov, got paranoid and committed mass suicide ("drinking the kool-aid").
ReplyDeleteAnyway, back to the Iranian origins of Ashkenazi Jews, enough politics for now. First, another quick visual demonstration. Susanna Hoffs, ageless super-babe rocker chick from the Bangles, is Ashkenazi on both sides of her family. She has an exotic Middle Eastern look -- but the Middle East is a vast place, with a major division between Saharo-Arabian and Indo-European regions.
ReplyDeleteSo which side of that divide does she resemble? Why, she looks just like half-Armo super-babe Kim Kardashian, especially pre-plastic surgery!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wnkdccMhEww
Amazing similarity! Like Kim Kardashian, who is also half-British, Ashkenazi Jews are minority Slavic -- not exactly West European, but still from the Euro side of Indo-Euro.
She doesn't look like a Levantine Semitic super-babe like Fairouz or Bella Hadid (half-Palestinian, half-Dutch).
Again, I'm not whipping out the calipers to analyze which specific features are responsible for these distinctions -- cuz they're obvious at the first-glance, gestalt level.
Ashkenazi Jews are the only supposedly non-Indo-Euro group who perform egg-tapping games during their springtime new year holiday.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_tapping
All sub-regions of Indo-Euros perform this game, and they are the only ones who do so. It's heavily concentrate from the British Isles all the way through Iran, but it is also attested in the far northeast of India (Assam).
The holiday may be adapted to various developments that came after the original Indo-Euro culture -- Easter and Christianity in the West and Caucasus, a cattle holiday (Goru Bihu) in Assam, Nowruz in Iran, and Hidirellez in Turkey. But all are springtime renewal holidays, putting the long difficult times of winter behind, looking forward to a newly reborn world with the arrival of spring.
The counterpart to Easter in Judaism is Passover (putting a long difficult time behind, looking optimistically toward a renewal to come), particularly the Seder dinner and ritual. Wiki claims without citing any source that Jews are known to play the egg-tapping game on this occasion, but I did track down some sources that confirm it:
https://jewishunpacked.com/unique-different-and-just-plain-weird-passover-traditions/
They may also do a minor variation, where the game is to crack a hard-boiled -- not raw -- egg on someone's head.
All of these references are to Ashkenazi Jews, not Sephardic or Mizrahi or other Jews of the broad Middle East.
While you could claim that the Ashkenazis picked this game up from the Indo-Euro societies that they settled among, that is not necessary -- anymore than it is to suppose that the British picked it up from contact with the French, or the Serbs from contact with the Greeks, or the Greeks from contact with the Armenians, or the Armenians from contact with the Persians, or the Assamese from contact with the Persian-ified Mughals.
The distribution of the game plainly fits the Indo-European territory, so the default assumption is that Ashkenazi Jews belonged to this territory as well when they first practiced the tradition, and that they all stem from a very deep ancient common ancestor game played among the Indo-Europeans during their springtime renewal New Year holiday.
It doesn't specify which sub-region of Indo-Euro territory they came from, but it does rule out a Saharo-Arabian territorial and cultural origin.
Also linking Passover Seder rituals with Nowruz rituals is the similarity between the Seder plate and the Haft-sin ("7 S's") plate, which even the midwits at Wikipedia have noticed:
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passover_Seder_plate
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haft-sin
Both accompany the major meal for the springtime renewal holiday. Both have the magical number 7 elements (sometimes counted as "6 + matzot" for the Seder plate), arranged in separate small containers around a plate, each one having a detailed rationale and narrative that is overtly pointed out and discussed during the ceremony. Other key items are present at the table, but not on the plate itself. Many of these items overlap or are similar (boiled / roasted egg, herbs, sweet pudding / mashed dessert, etc.). And a key sacred religious text is physically present, and read from during the ceremony.
Unlike the egg-tapping game, this ritual is far more localized within the Indo-Euro territory -- mainly Iran, with partial attestations in neighboring Armenia (boiled eggs, growing sprouts from wheat, lentils, etc. ahead of time to place on the table), and Afghanistan (the "Haft Mewa" or 7-item dessert salad made of fruit and nuts).
This narrows down the Ashkenazi origins to somewhere with a heavy Iranian influence, which have historically stretched westward to south of the Caucasus and bordering eastern Anatolia. That was the furthest extent of the Sasanian Empire and the Abbasid Caliphate, from the relevant time periods.
Encyclopedia Iranica says the nature of Haft Sin has changed over the centuries:
"...Sasanians greeted Nowruz by growing seven kinds of seeds on seven pillars (setuns) and placed on their Nowruz table trays containing seven branches of vegetables (wheat, barley, peas, rice, etc) as well as a loaf of bread made from seven kinds of grain (Ketāb al-maḥāsen wa’l-ażdād, p. 361)..."
https://iranicaonline.org/articles/haft-sin
They argue for a narrow view of what counts as Haft Sin, ruling out the obvious similarity to this Sasanian practice. If we're taking the broad view, this goes back to Sasanian times, but the form today must have originated later, perhaps as early as the Abbasid era but possibly as late as the Early Modern / Safavid era.
The Passover rituals were only first standardized during the Dark Ages / Talmudic era in Judaism, alongside the Sasanian era in Iran. The main Talmud historically has been the so-called Babylonian Talmud -- composed near historical Babylon, but by that time, under Persian / Iranian occupation and influence.
But much like the Haft Sin, Passover rituals seem to have varied much over the centuries. At least by the Early Modern era in Europe, Ashkenazi Jews are shown performing fairly contempo-looking Seder dinners, long after they lived anywhere near Iran or Babylon:
https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13376-seder
The two rituals are not identical, and the "four glasses of wine that punctuate the ceremony at intervals" seems to be an older, specifically Judaean practice. But it does incorporate other elements that bear an uncanny resemblance to the Haft Sin of Persian Nowruz -- which, again, is not even broadly shared outside of present-day Iran among their close cultural neighbors.
This points to a Persian (not ethnically Semitic, not religiously Jewish) origin specifically for the group whose ethnogenesis sometime in the late 1st millennium / early 2nd millennium would result in the Ashkenazi Jews (when they adopted Judaism).
Finally, there's egg decoration, which is mainly associated with the Indo-Euro springtime renewal holiday:
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_decorating
There is only one key area outside the Indo-Euro territory that practices this ritual for their springtime renewal holiday -- Egypt. But by all accounts, it originally was introduced to them by Christians (whose center of gravity was the Byzantine Empire, part of the Indo-Euro region), during the Dark Ages. It was maintained by Muslims as well, after the Muslim conquest. There doesn't seem to be any proof of it existing in the Bronze Age in Egypt, when it was totally Saharo-Arabian, before Hellenization and later Christianization.
And since Christianity is a global religion, and Egypt was conquered and influenced by the Byzantine Empire, I conclude the Egyptian practice is a foreign import from the Indo-Euro Byzantines.
Oddly enough, another Jewish sub-group enjoys eggs whose shells are colored / dyed / marbled -- Sephardic Jews and huevos haminados. However, these eggs are not prepared specifically for the springtime renewal holiday, but for the typical weekly Sabbath stew. So although they have a similar appearance to Easter / Nowruz eggs, they don't share the links to the important once-a-year holiday with the arrival of spring. So they seem to be a separate development altogether.
It's also not clear that they deliberately altered the appearance of the eggs -- they were just one of many items thrown into the stew pot, and after hours of slow cooking, they changed color -- like many other kinds of food after slow-cooking. Easter / Nowruz eggs are deliberately altered in appearance, to indicate it's a special ritual occasion.
By now, Sephardic Jews have been heavily influenced by Indo-Euro cultures of various types, including by the Ashkenazi Jews in Israel. So they may presently do the more deliberate altering of the egg's appearance, but still, not limited to the springtime renewal holiday alone -- that's the only time that Christians, Nowruz celebrators, and pagan Slavs decorated them prior to eating.
Ashkenazi Jews include a roasted egg on the Seder plate for Passover, and after roasting, the shell does take on an unusual and special color and pattern. And because this is the only time they do this during the year, their ritual is similar to Easter and Nowruz, not to the Sephardic weekly Sabbath stew (and the start of Passover does not necessarily land on a Sabbath day, further severing any link between the two Jewish practices).
Although egg decoration for the springtime renewal holiday is widely attested among Indo-Euros, it isn't 100% -- no mention of it among ancient Greeks or Romans or Celts, and it doesn't seem to be present in India, even where the egg-tapping game is played (all the pictures from Goru Bihu show normal white eggs).
So this would seem to localize it to the Balkans or more likely Anatolia, through the Caucasus, including the Slavs to the north, and eastward into Iran.
Those are just the groups that other evidence points to the Ashkenazi Jews as descending from. So their special-looking ceremonial egg for their springtime renewal holiday is in agreement with a mixed Iranian and Slavic origin, and goes against a Levantine or broader Saharo-Arabian origin.
As a cliff-hanger, Yiddish is obviously not a Semitic or Saharo-Arabian language, and the Ashkenazi Jews have never been recorded as speaking a language from that broad family.
ReplyDeleteBut languages can depart from other genetic and cultural cues to a group's history. Turks speak Turkic language, but they're Indo-Euro, not Turkic, either genetically or culturally (for the most part -- some minor Turkic influence, but the main one is their langauge). Hungarians speak a Finno-Ugric language, the only influence of their non-Indo-Euro conquerors during the Dark Age -- otherwise, they're Indo-Euro. And the Bulgarians saw the opposite happen -- their non-Indo-Euro Dark Age leaders adopted the Slavic language of the masses whom they led.
Nevertheless, Ashkenazis always speaking an Indo-Euro language, and not a Semitic or other Saharo-Arabian language -- until a minority of them migrated to Israel and spoke a revived form of ancient Hebrew -- is totally consistent with them not being Semitic or Saharo-Arabian in origin, but rather Indo-Euro.
That's perhaps the most obvious sign, but again, this one trait can actually get severely divorced from a group's history, so unfortunately it can't carry all of the weight of the argument. But it is consistent with it.
The really interesting stuff is what else Yiddish tells us about their history. Some I can see already -- like it was a lingua franca in an empire or other multi-cultural environment, where lots of its speakers were L2 learners, not natives. Where and when could that have taken place?
I want to dig further into it, to see if it's more like a centum or satem Indo-Euro language -- that would resolve whether it's "really" Germanic or Slavic. Everything else would predict it to be Slavic originally, and that's the view of Israeli linguist Paul Wexler -- but that it was re-lexified to Germanic roots later on, making it appear Germanic today.
Or some other angle that would shed light on which sub-region within Indo-Euro it comes from, or was in close contact with. E.g., if it's really Germanic -- shouldn't it have lots of loans from Romance languages, which border Germany? And shouldn't it have few words from Persian, which is far from Germany but close to Eastern Slavic lands?
IDK, things like that. I don't have the whole thing put together yet -- just a cliff-hanger / teaser for now, until I do.
Yes, eventually I'll make a separate post summarizing all of this evidence, and just link to these lengthy posts-within-the-comment-section, like they're footnotes or online supplemental material.
ReplyDeleteBut I'm going to keep free-wheeling it for awhile until I feel there's nothing else major for me to see for the time being.
Cope harder. All Christian groups reject Mormons' claim to being Christian, dum-dum. Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant, and everyone in between.
ReplyDeleteNot just cuz of their splitting off from the Trinitarian basis of Christianity -- some early Christian sects did so as well, they just didn't leave descendants today.
Rather, because Mormons have an entirely different set of sacred texts, narratives, and practices. Namely: the Book of Mormon, Doctrines & Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price. Christians reject all of these as sacred, Mormons require them to be sacred.
Their genesis narrative is rooted in the New World, where ancient Old World tribes are supposed to have migrated to, along with an appearance by Jesus Christ himself. And where civilizational battles were fought between various ethnic groups like the Mulekites, Nephites, Lamanites, and Jaredites -- in the New World. Christians reject this narrative, Mormons require it.
Their revelations about these things stem from a modern prophet, Joseph Smith, from the New World. Christians reject him as a prophet, Mormons require him to be a prophet.
Mormons have elaborate ceremonies in an entirely different class of buildings -- the temples, not the weekly meeting places like a church. These were borrowed from Masonic temples and their initiation rituals / secret handshakes / etc. Christians reject these sorts of buildings and rituals, Mormons require them to become full members.
Here is an undercover video of their initiation ("endowment") ritual inside a Mormon temple, taken in 2012:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ms6ny86rXU4
NOT Christian in any way whatsoever.
Just one of many reasons why all Christians reject Mormons' claim to being Christian, which you would know if you weren't a dum-dum or a coper.