About that "all men are created equal" thing...


Posted On: Thursday - July 5th 2018 6:52PM MST
In Topics: 
  History  Liberty/Libertarianism  Race/Genetics



Mr. Boyd Cathy, a writer discussed on Peak Stupidity a while back, has written an Independence Day article discussing the Founder's meaning of "that all men are created equal" phrase in the Declaration of Independence and President Abe Lincoln's serious misinterpretation of it.

Here is a big chunk of Mr. Cathy's latest article:
For many Americans the Declaration of Independence is a fundamental text that tells the world who we are as a people. It is a distillation of American belief and purpose. Pundits and commentators, left and right, never cease reminding us that America is a new nation, “conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.”
Almost as important as a symbol of American belief is Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. It is not incorrect to see a link between these two documents, as Lincoln intentionally placed his short peroration in the context of a particular reading of the Declaration.

Lincoln bases his concept of the creation of the American nation in philosophical principles he sees enunciated in 1776, and in particular on an emphasis on the idea of “equality.” The problem is that this interpretation, which forms the philosophical base of both the dominant “movement conservatism” today – neoconservatism – and the neo-Marxist multicultural Left, is basically false.

Lincoln’s opens his address, “Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth …” There is a critical problem with this assertion. It was not the Declaration that “created” the new nation; the Declaration was a statement of thirteen colonies, announcing their respective independence from the mother country, binding themselves together in a military and political alliance. It was the Constitution, drafted eleven years later (1787), after the successful conclusion of the War for Independence, that established a new nation. And, as any number of historians and scholars have pointed out, the American Framers never intended to cobble together a nation based on the proposition that “all men are created equal.”
SNIP
The Framers of the Constitution were horrified by “egalitarianism” and “democracy,” and they made it clear that what they were establishing was a stratified republic, in which most of the “rights” were left to the respective states (with their own particular arrangements), and in which serious restrictions and limitations on voting and participation in government were considered fundamental. Indeed, several states also had religious tests, and others had established churches, none of which were directly touched by the First Amendment, added to insure that a national religious establishment would not be effected. A quick review of The Federalist Papers confirms this thinking; and a survey of the correspondence and the debates over the Constitution add support to this anti-egalitarianism.

Obviously, then, Lincoln could not found his “new nation” in the U. S. Constitution; it was too aristocratic and decentralized, with non-enumerated powers maintained by the states, including the implicit right to secede. Indeed, slavery was explicitly sanctioned, even if most of the Framers believed that as an institution it would die a natural death, if left on its own. Lincoln thus went back to the Declaration of Independence and invested in it a meaning that supported his statist and wartime intentions. But even then, he verbally abused the language of the Declaration, interpreting the words in a form that its Signers never intended.

Although those authors employed the phrase “all men are created equal,” and certainly that is why Lincoln made direct reference to it, a careful analysis of the Declaration does not confirm the sense that Lincoln invests in those few words. Contextually, the authors at Philadelphia were asserting their historic — and equal — rights as Englishmen before the Crown, which had, they believed, been violated and usurped by the British government, and it was to parliament that the Declaration was primarily directed.
This is the real gist of it. Mr. Cathy says the the "created equal" clause is not just about equal rights under the law, which most people agree is the likely meaning. He is saying that this was simply the Founders' way of saying that they were sick of living under British rule without the rights respected for the actual Englishmen in England. It was very specifically directed, and not an idea of equality as misunderstood (purposefully) by Lincoln and the Socialists and, well, egalitarians, today (probably not purposefully - they are just stupid).
The Founders rejected egalitarianism. They understood that no one is, literally, “created equal” to anyone else. Certainly, each and every person is created with no less or no more dignity, measured by his or her own unique potential before God. But this is not what most contemporary writers mean today when they talk of “equality.”

Rather, from a traditionally-Christian viewpoint, each of us is born into this world with different levels of intelligence, in different areas of expertise; physically, some are stronger or heavier, others are slight and smaller; some learn foreign languages and write beautiful prose; others become fantastic athletes or scientists. Social customs and traditions, property holding, and individual initiative — each of these factors further discriminate as we continue in life.
That's about 2/3 of the article, so, just like for the previous article by this writer, I can say nothing much more than "Indeed" - h/t to Instapundit. As he also always says, "read the whole thing!"



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Redress of Grievances - then and now. Bring back King George?


Posted On: Thursday - July 5th 2018 6:45PM MST
In Topics: 
  History  Liberty/Libertarianism  US Feral Government



I'll continue with a few more posts on our country's founders and Independence to round out the week here. Yesterday, America (supposedly) celebrated the signing of the Declaration of Independence of the 13 American colonies from Great Britain on July 4th of 1776. The signers of the document were committing a serious, treasonous act against their government. Putting their "lives, fortunes, and sacred honor" on the line was not just some hyperbolic silly tweet, as it'd be now. It was a serious business, and we are (well, WERE, for a nice long while) all the better due to the courage of these men.

What did they have to bitch about, BTW? Well, most of it is in the Declaration itself, so here you go:
The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.
He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.
He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.
He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.
He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their Public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.
He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.
He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected, whereby the Legislative Powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.
He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.
He has obstructed the Administration of Justice by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary Powers.
He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.
He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out their substance.
He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.
He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil Power.
He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:
For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:
For protecting them, by a mock Trial from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:
For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world:
For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:
For depriving us in many cases, of the benefit of Trial by Jury:
For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences:
For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies
For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:
For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.
He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.
He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.
He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation, and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & Perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.
He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.
He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.
It sounds like a lot, but is basically a complaint about the British government keeping their own rule of the colonies above the colonial and local laws. Look over all of this and tell me we don't have most of that going on today. There were standing armies around. Do we not have a huge standing army? There were taxes that had not been voted in? How many of you voted in Amendment XVI causing us to get taxed on INCOME, something the colonists had never heard of? Were these colonists taxed on their labor at more than 50% on the margin? Ha, not even close. Oh, did the British Gov't get involved in, nay RUN the education of their children? Did the British Gov't pass laws daily that could at any time ruin a small business? Did it regulate every aspect of the operation of the colonists' horse and buggies? There's so much more that I'd fill up the database with current grievances.

Compared to the reign of King George, I think we've got it a lot worse nowadays.

MISS ME YET?



No, compared to America of today under our Beast of a Feral Gov't, the colonists of 1776 really didn't have a whole lot to complain about. Yet they pledged their lives, fortunes, and sacred honors to fight against it all. Why is their not a similar revolution being started today? My guess is that the colonists had lived with an amount of freedom that nobody, not even this writer, can fathom by this late date. They were used to it, and were still left alone most of their days, and I doubt an average American in colonial days saw a British government official in all the days of his life. Additionally, it was a rural society, in which there was plenty of time to think and almost none of the distractions we have with us today.

The big distraction has been TV. Really it's more than a distraction, because, since not long after its inception, it has been a propaganda tool. It is hard to realize how important our waning freedom is when bombarded about bread and circuses, and more importantly, the official narrative, day and night, because apparently those things are impossible to turn off.

Those who would like to fight some of the grievous acts of the Feral Government of today are still not in the position of the Declaration of Independence signers and Continental soldiers and backers either. Lives are NOT on the line yet. Fortunes? I suppose one could say that careers are on the line for those that even verbally fight against our odious system. That does not always translate into "fortune". For those spending everything they earn, living paycheck-to-paycheck meaning they have no fortune, the loss of career is indeed a bad thing. Honor? Seriously? I don't know if that is even considered anymore in the age of tweeting.

One thing to remember on this Independence Day (OK, next year then) is that it took these men a lot of courage to do that deed. It's easy to just think of it as a page in history, and since, the Revolution was won by them, many came out unscathed, as least physically, if not financially. However, can you imagine being there, knowing that your signature would put a mark on you for execution, were this deal not to work out? That'll get one's blood and adrenaline pumping. You have to really picture yourself instigating some dastardly felonious deed against the US Feral Gov't - I mean actually getting started on it, and the huge temptation to just think of the family and go home. It reminds me of the very beginning of the Al Pacino movie Dog Day Afternoon when one of the 3 guys ready to rob a bank in NY City, right outside the bank, decides, no, he'd just rather not. "I can't do it. Good luck guys." The men above were not those kind of men, and that's why I'm writing this as an American.



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Them US Blues - 2018


Posted On: Wednesday - July 4th 2018 6:01PM MST
In Topics: 
  Commies  Music  The Dead  Americans  Liberty/Libertarianism  ctrl-left  Holiday from Stupidity

"Red and white, blue suede shoes
I'm Uncle Sam, how do you do?
Gimme five, I'm still alive.
Ain't no luck, I learned to duck."

I guess I'll just start a Peak Stupidity tradition here that US Blues by The Dead will be posted every Independence Day, as it was last year. Enjoy a good cook-out, some beers, watch some fireworks. That's all tradition too. It's not gonna help us off the road we're on though. The road we're on leads to a state in which, if we're lucky, we may have the chance to fight for freedom again. We can celebrate Independence Day 2.0 on the same or an appropriate date, if it works out at all.



I'll just write a bit more on this music and the era in which it was written and performed. This was 4 decades ago, what you see with the truly All-American band there, with Jerry, Bob, Phil and the rest having a blast at it. The country was a strong one at that time. There was money and some tolerance in those years for the hippies, the protests, and the alternative lifestyles. What also made the 1960's all possible was the tremendous amount of freedom that was still left in America. On a scale of 0 - 10, with Soviet Russia/Red China being 0 and the American colonies at the time we are celebrating today as 10, I'd put the "current era" in American at only 2 or 3 on the scale. During the early time of The Grateful Dead, I'd put it still above 8.

Though we have discussed the great changes that occurred a complete century ago as being the start of the Commie/Globalist downfall of America, I would place the start of the actual internal war at about 1/2 that, 5 decades* ago. It was the very freedoms still existing in America that let the Commies/ctrl-left start implementing their agendas. It may have seemed that we got back to normal in the early 1980's with Ronald Reagan and the revival of conservatism, but during that time, the cntrl-left just kept on infiltrating, infiltrating, and infiltrating the institutions.

More appropriate discussion on some aspects of what we are celebrating today have been brought up in my mind for later in the week. Right now, I've just got those US Blues.

Oh, this is appropriate for today, too - The Founding of American - was it a Fluke?.


*OK, 54 years, summer of 1964, is probably more accurate, but I do like round numbers.



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On Communist Kickball.


Posted On: Tuesday - July 3rd 2018 7:47PM MST
In Topics: 
  Humor  Globalists  Curmudgeonry

Can you quit with the theatrics? Just grab the ball already, man!



Peak Stupidity's thesis tonight: "Soccer is a stupid game." At least we're not beating around the bush this time, right? This is one of those curmudgeon posts that I've been meaning to write for a year. It happens to be particularly timely now, with those World Cup matches still going on ... or are they? I don't rightly know; I'm not keeping track as, ipso, facto, quid pro quo, Clarice, soccer is a stupid game. Debate point - 1 for Peak Stupidity. Hey, shut your pie hole about your old Greek logic, or I'll throw down a flag!

I think it's neat that Ann Coulter agrees with Peak Stupidity yet again. She wrote the column right at 4 years ago, but it's one of those examples of independent curmudgeonry, and I'm pretty sure I would have said this same thing 25 years ago, when Miss Coulter was still a pro-GOP neocon barely out of law school, wet behind the ... somewhere.

OK, in line with Ann Coulter, I have seen where soccer has been sort of foisted on America by the international (let's just call it Globalist) community over the last few decades. Who cared a wit about soccer in the 1980's? It was fun to play for kids, but that was the end of it, kinda like wiffleball. This stuff has been pushed on us, as "futeball" is so international and all, and we can't be all isolationist and different from the rest of the world - that'd be the wrong kind of diversity, I guess. Soccer has still not really been taken to heart by most Americans, whether sports spectators or athletes, so the Globalists have mostly failed on this one thing.

Here's my real problem with the game of soccer It's NOT NATURAL. You may run a 3-legged race expertly at field day in school, once you and the other guy get the concept, but at some point, you want to take that sack off and run like the wind. In soccer, you've got a big ball flying around, coming right at you oftentimes, and YOU'RE NOT ALLOWED TO CATCH IT! WTF is that? It's the same once you've taken the penalty and must get the ball over to another guy. NOW, THEY TELL YOU YOU'RE NOT ALLOWED TO THROW IT! Just try catching and throwing it during a match. You'll get flags thrown down right away (flags are bad, mmmkayyy). EVERY! SINGLE! TIME! We've got 2 arms and hands supplied by Mother Nature, and she wants you to use them. Let me get this straight: We've got 5 digits on EACH SIDE, better than the cloven-hooved creatures, most of the rest of the mammals, and most crustaceans (and cetaceans, for that matter), yet we're supposed to catch a ball with our heads! Who made these rules, George Soros?

I can't do it. Now, I'll give soccer players loads of credit for the physical exertion required. There are no fat soccer players. However, you'll get the same thing by playing Ultimate Frisbee. You ARE allowed to throw the frisbee with no penalties in Ultimate Frisbee. How cool is that aerodynamic flying disk compared to a ball, also!? Do a backhand throw with the disk tilted up to curve right around those two opposing guys into the hands of your teammate! Or, send it into the end-zone with just the right amount of spin and speed for the wind, and have it float like a flying saucer for 5 seconds so your guy can jump up and grab it! That's a real sport, man.

Oh, and in Ultimate Frisbee there's no sudden death ... not unless one of the players smokes some bad weed after the game.


PS: Upon perusing Ann Coulter's soccer column again, I see that she has many different points than Peak Stupidity about why the game sucks. It's worth reading, and Miss Coulter is her usual snarky self.

PPS: Hat tip to commenter Buck Turgidson for bringing up the term "Communist Kickball" and that's the revised title of this post.


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Latest from Old Mexico - JLo OUT, AMLO IN


Posted On: Tuesday - July 3rd 2018 7:48AM MST
In Topics: 
  Lefty MegaStupidity  Trump  Globalists

Mr. Trump - Theeez wall eeees too high, Senor!



First of all, one of the big pet peeves of the Peak Stupidity blog (look under Curmudgeonry for LOTS), along with the geographical proper noun stupidity is the modern people naming stupidity. We have our movie stars/starlets/couples with the new catchy abbreviated combinations ("combrevated" is the new term) such as "JLo", for Jennifer Lopez, "Brangelina" for Brad/Angelina, and "Ardith" for Archie and Edith Bunker. I can get past that just by getting past the rack with People Magazine and The National Enquirer at the grocery store.

However, this Mexican AMLO guy has really culturally appropriated or "cultriated", if you will, all this Hollywood starlet crap. Couldn't this Mexican just use his 4 names, as El Presidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador, with the accents and everything. I knew a girl who could roll off her 8 family names off in about 5 seconds, and it was really sexy when she did. (Granted, she was sexy before that.) Why can't A.M.L.O. do the same - we don't really care who his conquistadorian ancestors are anyway; he just seems even stupider being named like a Hollywood couple. That just shows how far the worst of American culture spreads, while the decent stuff never crosses the border.

Speaking of the border, let's get to the important stuff regarding the winner of the Mexican election. My go-to site now, unz.com, does have a post, but Mr. Sailer just solicits for comments there, which are informative, as usual. However, I've been reading Mr. Allan Wall on VDare for years. Having lived in the country for a decade with his family, and obviously very fluent in Spanish, Mr. Wall knows what goes on politically in Mexico. Those articles appear under the heading Said in Spanish. Two that he wrote before the election were
Mexican Presidential Debate — All Candidates Bash Trump, Vow More Meddling In U.S.
and Yes, PUNDITFACT, Mexican Frontrunner AMLO Does Think Everybody On Earth Entitled To Go To America.

From reading of those and other information from Allan Wall, I understood that NONE of the Mexican presidential candidates had any respect for US sovereignty, any compunction to tell the truth about the illegal alien situation and any problem being hypocritical as all hell regarding American immigration policy as compared to Mexico's own policy. AMLO may have been the worst of the 4 or 5 candidates regarding relations with the US, but that may be a good thing. His blustery talk, especially the direct egging-on of the continuing invasion, may wake up those Americans that would normally need a 2 x 4 upside the head to come out of their political slumbering.

It's not like the other guys would have helped us solve our problem. I think it's best that we have the worst. It'll just make things come to a head quicker, rather than leaving us in the slow boil that's been occurring, with Trump being of some belated help, but not enough. Imagine if the President actually were to send American troops to the southern border. Firstly, that move alone, even if not done in seriousness, would ensure the re-election of him and all the big supporters of such a policy, in a LANDSLIDE. Secondly, for the innumerate, we still have 20 - 30,000 soldiers in South Korea! On a 2,000 mile border that's > 10 soldiers per mile. No, we are not trying to make trench warfare - this is 2018. With modern communications and transportation, one could get hundreds of soldiers to whatever spot needed in a few minutes. Yeah, and part of the border is impassable, and, yeah, that's just the guys that don't need to be in Korea. There's a lot of guys that don't need to be in a lot of other places too.

The more contentious and arrogant el Presidente AMLO's words, and better yet, actions get, the greater chance for a military action to occur. The sending of a serious number, in the 10's of thousands, of American soldiers to the border by President Trump would be a nation-changing event. So, carry on, el Presidente de las Estados Unidos de Mexico! Maybe the response will be "Remember the ALMO!"



Hat tip to Hippopotamusdrome for "Remember the ALMO!".



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Tried to watch a movie - here's 3 reviews in one!


Posted On: Monday - July 2nd 2018 12:37PM MST
In Topics: 
  Political Correctness  Movies  Media Stupidity  Race/Genetics  alt-right/MAGA

For having watched quite a number of movies lately, Peak Stupidity has been, and will continue to be, pretty lame in our reviews. At the start of this blog, I did mean to even have a Movie Reviews section to be pulled up via the left sidebar on the page. However, it seems like, for most modern movies, the amount of stupidity seen warrants mention for different reasons than the cast, the sets, the lighting, the director, and all that jazz. This post is another example of that, and it involves THREE movies, at that.

I had figured that having three movies on hand would ensure that I could watch something entertaining, if not (probably NOT) enlightening, the other night. That's all I ask for. You would think you couldn't go wrong with a World War II movie. Lots of war movies do have agendas to deliver that I may or may not agree with, but the WWII ones, say a Patton, Dirty Dozen, Kelly's Heroes, Where Eagles Dare, Guns of Navarone, and (THE ABSOLUTE BEST) Bridge on the River Kwai, etc.? How could one go wrong, right? Well, don't get me wrong - I don't think war itself is entertaining, but, from a distance like this, I've always enjoyed these.

The Void - try 1 at watching a movie:



Yeah, big void - between 10 minutes in and the end - who cares?


I started watching The Void, then. "The void" was said to be (in the intro. on-screen writing) the region in Western Europe, in spring, 1945, between the Allied supply bases way back toward the D-Day landing sites and the rapidly eastward-moving American front lines under the command of General George Patton. OK, it started out good - the tank crew of 3 (or that's what they showed) were a close-knit team who were about to be sent out on a small mission. Now, I'm gonna back off just a tad on my usual ignorance or lack-of-interest in the movie-making itself just to say: This movie did seem B-grade in the on-screen conversations. The talk didn't seem natural, as all the lines were said with no pauses, mistakes, etc. Yeah, I guess that makes a small difference in enjoyment of the movie (realism is IMPORTANT), but I could get over that easily.

Nah, then there's the one black guy, maybe infantry, who came up to chat, and the one tanker immediately gave him a really hard time and spit near him. Then one sees the face of another black guy who obviously was going to be involved in the movie later, probably with the other guy, to go save the ungrateful white guys from the Germans.... OK, then CLICK! I'm not putting up with that shit. I saw your agenda for the rest of the movie, Hollywood, and I'm not buying it! BTW, the US Army was segregated during that war, so the story seemed bogus anyway. That's not my main problem - I wanted to watch the US 3rd Army against the Germans, not some racial justice story.*

I'm just wondering if these Hollywood people's mindsets are still in the 1970's where movies play only at THE MOVIES, and one can't just go CLICK and turn on or pop in another. You had to sit it out back then, or walk out and lose your $2.50 (or whatever that'd be now - I dunno, I don't go). Do these producers and writers know that we can just make one click with our hands and cut the crap off?

NEXT!


I started up movie number 2, one called The Ottoman Lieutenant. Keep in mind that I had no idea about any of the movies I'd tried watching. None of these are ones I've ever heard of, so getting properly entertained is guesswork.

The Ottoman ... whaaaah, wait a minute ...



error 107339: image_server_retrieval_error. log file entry-"well, you said ottoman, dammit!"::image server rebooting ...
.... rebooting ... 10 seconds left ... be done in a minute ...

The Ottoman Lieutenant - 2nd try at watching a movie:

---- Ottoman image: Take 2 ----


The year was 1914. Hey, I like history! The movie started out in some Philadelphia hospital with a cute young nurse. This could be good, I figured "No, they didn't wear the uniforms that one may see nowadays (possibly in one of the red-light hospital districts), but still ..." I thought. Like I said, I like history too. 2 minutes into the movie - and I think that's counting all the credits - a black guy with lots of blood and trauma was brought into the hospital. It was apparently the wrong hospital, and the impression given is that there were white and black hospitals. I'd never heard this. That may be true.I don't really even need to look it up, because there's no way the doctor, as in the movie, would have sent the guy out with ZERO care, as the patient was bleeding heavily from the throat.

Oh, do you want to know what happened next? Spoiler Alert: CLICK! Enough of this shit. That's number 2, and I had just one movie left that will not be one long anti-white struggle-session of a movie. Is that a genre in and of itself, AWSS, or the AntiWhite Struggle Session films? See, this is why I just often look for anything made before 1985.

NEXT!


Movie number 3, the last shot at watching a movie in at least a somewhat relaxed state, was another I'd never heard of, called Medium Cool. Yeah, that sounds like something from the 60's or something ....

Medium Cool - 3rd try at watching a movie:



I started the movie thinking it was another modern day one that I'd missed by not going into a theater but once per decade lately. It did kind of make me wonder why that dentist (or was it orthodontist?) from Bob Newhart's old office seemed pretty young in this movie, yeah, younger than he was even on The Bob Newart Show. That should have made something click, but it really wasn't for another minute, when the opening credits showed the year made that I noticed, ahaaa, 1969! This was an oldy, all right.

Medium Cool was about the role of TV cameramen in the craziness of the late 1960's - well, it wasn't even DONE yet when they made this. It is pretty disjointed, but I think I get the story that was being told. The movie was supposed to be mostly set in Chicago, Ill and that other place, you know, that shithole... yeah, Washington, FS (for small parts of the movie), Therefore, the two main characters, Jerry the Dentist from Robert Hartley's office and the other guy, were in the midst of the cntrl-left nonsense of that time. There was much (mostly Commie-induced/Commie-supported) racial strife in that period too, so the movie showed this stuff.

Uh, oh, 0 for 3 in movie-watching, I reckoned ... but, nope, I'd forgotten ... that's right: It's not just that this was the late 1960's, the setting of the movie, that is. Also, the movie WAS MADE in 1969, so the story of the racist blacks was told in a truthful manner. It was freakin' amazing to me to see this. Not all the blacks were bad guys, of course, but the main white guys weren't either. What the hell is that genre called? I'd like to watch more of these TS-genre films, if there are any - oh, that's the Truthful Storytelling period.

I'd tell you the ending of Modern Cool if it's not too disjointed to have one, but I didn't get to finish it yet. 15 or 20 minutes was spent dicking around with the first two movies, so I ran out of time. "What the hell kind of review is that,?", the reader may well ask, indignantly. What can we say? That's the thing about Peak Stupdity - we are not good at the review part. Our genre is Stupidity, and we'd better stick to what we know well.


* I will admit, I had not read the full description of that, or any of these, movies. If I had, then I guess I should have seen this coming.


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Hungary? - come for the Goulash, stay for the Nationalism


Posted On: Saturday - June 30th 2018 7:00PM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  TV, aka Gov't Media  Globalists  Media Stupidity

The Peak Stupidity blog came across this press "interview" a few days back, featuring the Hungarian foreign minister, Mr. Peter Szijjarto. We have put "Interview" in quotes here, due to the BBC-Bitch's treating the interaction as a debate, not a fact-finding interview. The name on youtube of this specific clip below (though I'm sure you can find all or bits of it as different named videos) is "Hungarian foreign minister challenged on migration policy" - BBC Newsnight. If that doesn't illustrate to you right away the bias of the BBC, then you've been in front of the Telly way too long. Why don't you turn it off, at least during High Tea?

This Mr. Szijjarto tries to keep things pretty low-key, but the lady from the BBC ends up so pissed at his arrogant attitude of truth-telling that she gets visibly irate. That makes this a must-see, of course. What it also does, with President Trump as a lone part-time exception, is make any American or Western European patriot kind of jealous. Why don't we have guys that tell the truth like this? Why don't we have governments that care about the regular established populations of our countries? IT'S NOT FAIR, DAMMIT!

I can say a lot of bad things about the current Chinese government and its stupidity, along with that of Russia, or Argentina, or Mexico, or Japan (well, besides just Yoko Ono, I'm not that up to speed on the latter). However, no matter what, at least they don't have governments that actively work against the normal people of the country. I don't think that should be so hard not to do either.

The Lyin' Press bias here in this video is sight to behold. Emily Maitlis, the debater, just can't handle some speaker for the leader of a country saying that said country can keep anyone it wants out. This makes her livid and she then starts to debate the guy. She brought up something about the EU rules on immigration and that became the debating point. I imagine Mr. Szijjarto was not able to say "Fuck the EU" here (yes, his English is very good), just due to political reasons. He seems to be speaking for his boss, Viktor Orban, Prime Minister of Hungary. I believe that economically, these newer-to-the-EU countries have something to gain, but they'd be wise to just tell Brussels and the Globalists to fuck off before the EU ruins them.

I'll give kudos to Viktor Orban for one more thing in addition to holding a hard line on immigration (great graph here of data from a working border fence in Part 2 of "Something there is that doesn't love a wall."). He and his government are trying to put the hurt on George Soros, as atonement, I suppose for spawning that Globalist AntiChrist




Oh, 180,000 views, but "Comments are disabled for this video." Yeah, we can't have more truth than we've already run into here. The truth, it burns!



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And then there were 8 ...


Posted On: Saturday - June 30th 2018 3:44PM MST
In Topics: 
  Trump  US Feral Government

Artist's rendition as this august body mulls over
the Constitutionality of sex with goats.




"SO LET IT BE WRITTEN, SO LET IT BAAAAA DONE!"


... anyone got ahold of that guy they call "the pillow" who the cntrl-left contracted with for Scal ...? OK, anyway, there' nothing in the US Constitution that says there must be any certain number of justices. There's nothing that says to be a justice one must be a lawyer either, BTW. I'll get to this, as this post is just some general thoughts on this SCOTAL*-development.

The Socialist Franklin Roosevelt threatened to pack the court if he did not get his way with his Raw Deal program to bring Socialism to America. Most people just seem to be under the impression that all this stuff - the 9 members, but more importantly, the power they have - is fixed, just because it's been for most of a century. President Trump has a lot more power than he knows, in my opinion. That is one, of very few, disadvantages he's got by not being guy who spent his life in the Feral Government. I doubt he knows a whole lot of history about American government.

Peak Stupidity's thoughts on the power of the Supreme Court, and their transition from a interpretive body to a legislative cabal, have been detailed before just under a year ago. At this juncture though, it is very nice that this president has a 2nd pick already for this supposedly august body of wise men, lesbos and latinas. This is a fairly big deal due to the power that Americans and the other 2 branches of the Feral Gov't have given to that court in undue deference.

I'm no court-watcher, as I'd almost rather watch golf, but many suggestions have already been set out there, and I've enjoyed reading iSteve commenters under this unz post (and I see he's got 2nd one with > 200 comments I've not read yet). I really like the idea of Ann Coulter! Having disagreed with possibly only one thing out of her writing in a decade, I think her Conservatism, Libertarianism, and knowledge of the Constitution should make her a shoo-in, am I right? Hahahaa, oh wait, that would be only if we were living in the Constitutional Republic of yesteryear, silly me! However, just the suggestion of the nomination of Miss Coulter by President Trump would send the cntrl-left to insane asylums "♩♩♩♫♫♬♭ all over this land ♩♩♩♫♫♬". It'd be a hoot-nanny for the rest of us. As a commenter on unz noted, the tactic of nominating her, and dealing with the shitstorm for a few weeks, then coming up with the other Constitutional guy you've got in your back pocket, would be pretty clever. Yeah, not 3-D chess, but not tic tac toe either. We can be proud of ourselves to be promoting another non-SCROTAL SCOTI* to the position, at that.

As to my point above about occupation of said nominee, having a logical legal mind (as Ann Coulter does, BTW) could be helpful, but I'd rather just know we have a nominee who is not lying about his understanding of the court's role - most do - is not a guy who will flip on us, and can read plain English. That's all it takes. The Founders did not write this document for it to take a scholar of any sort to understand, like a priest reading Latin for the illiterate congregation of old. The document is pretty damn clear. The problem we've been having is voters not standing on principle for the last century or so (that's kind of coincident with when women were allowed to vote ... weird that...)

Looking at a timeline of how long the current SCOTILE crowd have been members, it seems like more change is due:



Keep it up, big Purple. It looks like those blue and red lines are a bit too long for their our own good. Orange and brown are a real problem.

Trump having 2 picks already in 2 years is a good deal for patriotic Americans, and just imagine if the Hildabeast were in the office... shudder, shudder. I hope we can take good advantage and have more choices to come soon.





* No, I really do hate these terms SCOTUS, POTUS, FLOTUS, etc, as they seem much too anatomical and just modern-era-stupid in general. We're just making fun here.



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Let's leave our Carbon Footprints ...


Posted On: Thursday - June 28th 2018 11:59AM MST
In Topics: 
  Global Climate Stupidity  Environmental Stupidity

... on the asses of the ctrl-left climate-admitters.

One small step for a man, one giant carbon footprint for mankind?



Dammit, if it weren't for that first stage, with its 5 North American Aviation - Rocketdyne F-1 engines pushing with 750 TONS thrust each, and burning a total of oh, about 200,000 gallons of kerosene, the Saturn V that took 12 men to the moon, 2* at a time, would have been carbon-freakin'-neutral, man! The other two stages burned Hydrogen (stored in liquid form) in pure Oxygen (also liquid in the tanks). See, when you burn Hydrogen, you make only water which HAS NO CARBON, producing no CO2 product, but only water, which is not .. a green ... house.... wait... whatever.

The phrase "carbon-neutral" can be seen all over now. It's nothing but a buzzword that nobody really even thinks the meaning of anymore, like "green" for instance. This computer keyboard I'm typing on - carbon neutral, the words you're reading right now - carbon neutral, this pencil I write my thoughts down with when I have no computer - carbon - negative? (well it seems to get smaller, but then I'm still a phlogiston-admitter too, so, you know ...) The thoughts in my head? You guessed it, carbon neutral!

At least back 5 decades ago, the environmentalists and proto-treehuggers (I don't think there was any penetration back then) had some real concrete causes to raise hell about. I guess too much concrete, come to think of it would be one. Seriously, this part of Lake Erie was a mess, the Nitrogen Oxides and particulates from the cars of the day came out the tailpipes like there was gonna be no tomorrow, the DDT was ... well, the jury's out on that one - Peak Stupidity could use some of that shit. Anyway, there were specific environmental problems that could be seen and smelled, not the vague, unsuccessfully modeled Global Climate DisruptionTM crap that we hear about incessantly today. Real environmental problems in America have improved greatly or I should say, BEEN IMPROVED greatly by the people that do the actual engineering, technical and manual work.

So don't go telling me about my carbon footprint unless you want it planted on your ass.




* The crew was 3 on these Apollo missions, but one guy would remain in lunar orbit during the lunar expeditions.



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Gold Dust Woman - Fleetwood Mac - Long Distance Dedication


Posted On: Wednesday - June 27th 2018 5:29PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music

... to Theranos?

The last post, on Miss Elizabeth Holmes, was a doozy, and I didn't want to make it longer, even though the song title here could be related.

Who knows, really, about this "Gold Dust Woman" Stevie Nicks is on about? I don't even care what the lyrics of most songs are about. With all the musical talent and great sound from Fleetwood Mac during their relatively short time as creative artists, they are no exception. As much as I've insisted before that Christy McVie had the much better voice vs. the more-widely-known Stevie Nicks (of the 2 women singers, that is) the latter sings a great tune here with her much rougher voice. She got the credit for writing the song, but also the Lindsey Buckingham guitar makes this great, especially with the long fade ending.

If I'm gonna relate this song to the story of Therano, I suppose this one verse below should be dedicated to the big-time investors who put their money and soul into the hope that was the whiz-woman-led Theranos:

Did she make you cry,
make you break down,
shatter your illusions of love.
And, is it over now? Do you know how
to pick up the pieces and go home?

From the album Rumours (nope, they didn't have spell-check in the '70's the wogs!):



Peak Stupidity has featured Fleetwood Mac before three times, with Second Hand News, Say you Love Me, and Blue Letter.



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Lady Whiz-Kid Entrepreneur shows up the Geeks ... headed to jail...


Posted On: Wednesday - June 27th 2018 4:02PM MST
In Topics: 
  Feminism  Female Stupidity  Poetic Stupidity  Big-Biz Stupidity

... for defrauding a whole lot of investors.

Not knowing what I'm doing is not, like "fraudulent", like?



("What now!? You're my legal council!"
"Uuhhhh, show 'em your tits?")


Yeah, this Elizabeth Holmes shown above has been cheered on by all kinds of big-wigs as the new girl-kind-of-whiz-kid. It hasn't worked out too well. Well, as commenter Reg Cæsar notes under the well-written Fred Reed article, Holmes, Uncle Clunk, and and Epic Con Job, "She could always pose nude." That usually solves anything, as we note:
Indeed, Reg, that would settle the matter … I mean, never underestimate the power of poontang. I’m pretty sure showing herself nude would negate all further matters of due process. Plus, it would settle the matter of whether … well, you know … that voice and all.
As as much as we appreciate the 50% of the Fred Reed articles that are not advertisements for being an ex-patriate in Ole Mexico (note our caveat on that), Mr. Steve Sailer has been all over this Theranos start-up company for quite a while. He writes so much that I'll just link to his full article in Takimag*, called Blood Simple. The company decided they would invent a device that could do the hundreds of different blood tests that are done in labs now, via a machine that could do this on-site/at-home from drop of blood from the fingertip. It's not that it's some impossible dream, but just that this entrepreneur prodigy was a smart prodigy, no doubt, but just a prodigy at being an entrepreneur, not someone who actually knows the science and engineering that are involved and not at the state of art that can invent this device, YET.

Both Mr. Reed's and Mr. Sailer's articles wonder, and try to explain, how the big-wigs Henry Kissinger, a Senator, some generals, the Waltons (no, not John Boy or Mary Ellen, I know their Daddy taught them better than this - I watched him), and more, all put big investments into a business built on an untried and never-successful invention. Yes, they all liked the idea of, or pretended to for brownie points, a girl entrepreneur who could match the big Silicon Valley whiz-boys. They may have thought she is hot ... she's not bad, but, though "she walka like a woman but talka like a man ... but so does Lola."

I really appreciate Fred Reed's article in that he distinguishes natural smarts from hard-learned knowledge in this paragraph:
Note that most of the dazzling university dropouts who became billionaires are in software, not biological sciences. The few in hardware brilliantly put together readily comprehended pieces, like CPUs and memory chips. There is a reason for this. Programming takes a lot of brains and little knowledge. Medicine takes reasonable intelligence and lots of knowledge. Molecular biology takes a lot of brains and a lot of knowledge. A (very) bright kid can learn Python or C-plus-plus in a couple of months in mommy’s basement and actually be a programmer. It doesn’t work with complicated multidisciplinary computerized micro-fluidized gadgets involving robotic glue-arms. At least, it didn’t work.
That's good stuff, Fred! It's pretty close to what I want to write in a coming Peak Stupidity blog post on engineers vs. software people. Here's it in a nutshell: The way memory space, computer speed, networking speed, and databases are these days, there is almost nothing stopping any idea relying on calculations from succeeding. As long as it can be broken down into logical steps, and there is some known way to get input, and provide output, ANYTHING THAT ONE WANTS TO BE DONE, CAN BE DONE with software/hardware these days.

Contrast that with the physical world, understood by engineers. There are natural laws, people. Conservation of mass, Newtons' laws of motion, Fourier's law of heat conduction, Ohm's laws ... there are thousands of 'em. If you design something that will need to violate any of those laws, IT WILL NOT WORK!

I believe the computer geeks, once they get big heads from having made lots of logical, but never-before-performed operations work, think that anything they can think of can be done in the physical world too. Sorry to be the one to break it to you, guys (oops, and girls), but this is why you are NOT engineers, no matter what the HR ladies call you.


OK, folks, finally now, it's LIMERICK TIME:

From "The one they call Desanex":
Miss Holmes gave superlative snow-jobs,
And perhaps even better you-know jobs—
Husky-voiced hummers
Dispensed to all comers;
For foot-fetishists, maybe a toe-job.

OUTSTANDING! We try to keep up here, so here is Peak Stupidity's take:
Miss Holmes and her project Theranos
took on the geeks mano-a-manos.
Though it turned out a dud
when one tried to draw blood,
the cash return beat the Sopranos.



* I would very much like to have linked to the 3 or 4 blog posts Mr. Sailer has written on unz on Miss Elizabeth Holmes and the company Theranos, but he writes so many posts, I have not found but 1. The unz posts have loads of comments, though, which are very much worth reading. Sailer's Takimag article is pretty complete, and pretty much what Fred Reed wrote about (in his different style), but Takimag does not have comments anymore (used to have some pretty decent commenters that would write multiple hundreds).



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The Price Point at the Field of Dreams


Posted On: Wednesday - June 27th 2018 9:02AM MST
In Topics: 
  General Stupidity  Curmudgeonry  Economics

If you build it and PRICE YOUR TICKETS RIGHT, yeah, they might come.



Hey, almost everyone likes baseball, or at least doesn't hate it the way lots of us hate soccer (oops that post hasn't been written yet - SPOILER ALERT! SPOILER ALERT!). Not all are into the more obscure rules and the unending statistics. Lot of us don't care to spend damn near a Benjamin to bring the family to a major league game - and that's in the fall when you have coat pockets with which to smuggle your snacks. However, you don't need to do that to enjoy it. Minor league ball is more fun anyway.

Listen, I don't care if these guys are not the best (yet). They still can hit, throw and catch better than I can (not sure about running). The game is the same, except more relaxing for the fans, as if baseball is not one of THE most relaxing games to watch anyway - in person, that is - on TV it bores the living shit out of me ... too many innings, people! Yeah, so this is why it's called not just a "sport", but a pastime.

Here's the thing: If you want people to come regularly to relax and enjoy this truly all-American pastime, you (the owners or stadium management) have GOT TO UNDERSTAND A TERM CALLED THE PRICE POINT, dammit! Really, you don't even need to know that term, you just need to instinctively understand it and be able to do some arithmetic. No, no calculus and number theory are required. Just, DON'T BE STUPID! When we went to the game recently, it was $12 a ticket, and the seats were only 30% filled - at best estimate - on a nice afternoon.

Let me get to the economics, shall we?



Remember this stuff? Me neither, but I LUV good graphs.


Peak Stupidity has written in On the Non-Science of Economics ... ( follow-up here - warning, you're gonna want to listen to some George Thorogood) that economics is NOT a science, per se. As written there, though, the basics, supply and demand, price elasticity, fixed costs/recurring costs and all that are good, good stuff. There is basic math involved with nice graphs that cross each other and stuff (we'll get to that), so one might almost call that initial 1st semester Econ-101 a "science". It's not completely just because, even though we know the relationship between supply & demand, etc., there is no underlying theory that the math is based on besides human psychology. Yes, we know that if you lower the price on the same thing, more people will buy it, or if not, no fewer people will buy it. If we raise the price, fewer people will buy it, or at least we can say that no more people will buy it. The exact shape of the curves can only be determined by observation, and the situation can change over time, or via surveys, which is the possibly useful part of marketing (the advertising business being the useless part - see Madison Avenue and the Advertising Business - Does it even work at all?.)

After this stuff, the study of economics goes downhill pretty fast. Once any government gets involved and starts distorting the hell out of the market, the study of economics is a study of stupidity. I believe that the subject is made long-winded and boring on purpose, as if the students are not put to sleep, or even just into a semi-comatose state, they may vaguely catch on to how the middle-class is getting screwed 6 ways from Sunday by Big-Gov and Big-Biz working closely together. It's all teamwork nowadays!

Oh, yeah, to the subject of the Price Point. I realize now that I really want to put 2 or 3 graphs up to show this simple concept nicely. I am not in a position to do so on my "equipment" here, so that'll have to come in a post in a few days. This is simple though, anyway, but the graphs WOULD be cool, and I'll give more interesting economic principle-based details in that subsquent post.

You've got items to sell, or in this case, seats at the minor league stadium. You want to maximize your revenue, or more importantly, your profits (in general these maximums would coincide based on units, but then, there are taxes - there's that distorting-the-markets crap again). One can make a curve, or at least have an idea, or how many seats you will fill as a function of ticket price. Again, marketing people could tell you that - nah, don't pay them for fairly-erroneous surveys, but some familiar with the minor-league baseball business in this size market should know pretty well the shape of this curve. Better yet, change around the prices slowly - maybe week-by-week - and see what happens.

Then, one can easily know how much profit comes from each additional seat. That sounds like exactly 12 bucks, duh, in my case, but it is not always that simple. In some business, perhaps there are associated costs for more items sold - more shelf space, more employees, etc. Here, that $12 is almost the same extra income no matter how many come, so the curve is almost a horizontal line. Therefore, that first curve on expected attendance vs. ticket price is about all you need. Take function y = f(x) where x = ticket prices and y = number of attendees Then multiply y by x again to get g(x) = f(x)(x) = yx. Find the maximum of that curve, meaning the maximum of the product (attendees x ticket price). That'll be the maximum revenue, and the ticket price that sits under that maximum is what you should charge. OK, well round it up to the nearest 50 cents - that's fine with me.

This is not the only time I've run into a business that is very stupid regarding setting prices at this point that gives them the most profit. I hate to be the one to tell these people how to do business, but come on! It's < 1/3 full at $12/ticket. Try $8.50 for a while. What if you get the stadium 75% full? (BTW, that enhances the experience for some, but for me, really, I don't care if only 50 people are in there with me. I just don't like paying $12, regularly). The stadium is sitting there, with all those seats. You come out ahead. We all come out ahead. Do the math, as they say.

This is your money. It was my money. At $12, once you've got the whole family and buy a few snacks (too hot to wear coats), you're in for serious money. It's not something we'll go to but a few times in a season. Now, at $8, a family of 5 saves $20 EACH TIME, and may go to the games weekly. It's nice to have something like that to look forward to each week.

Yeah, we've seen the movie. You built it, with part of my tax money, I might add, so they're supposed to come. At high ticket prices for minor league baseball, I'm not coming. Don't believe everything Hollywood tells you, I guess the moral of the story is - DO THE MATH!


*************************************
[UPDATE 06/27 eve:] Speaking of doing the math, I had to change paragraph ~ 8 above to fix the little bit of math necessary to get the max. revenue. Calculus is not really necessary, and even graphs aren't if you're good with a spreadsheet, but a good graphical picture helps explain better.

*************************************



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Guernica - The Propaganda and the Movie


Posted On: Tuesday - June 26th 2018 5:08PM MST
In Topics: 
  History  Movies  Media Stupidity

Guernica, Guernica, Guernica!



No, no, that's "Attica, Attica! Attica!" from a totally different, but really great movie, Dog Day Afternoon.


As we left off earlier on the topic of Guernica, the point was to have a movie review here. OK, it's another Peak Stupidity style movie review, not your Siskell/Ebert type, meaning:

A) We DON'T CARE who produced the thing, who directed it, who's the casting director, and who stars in it, unless there are absolutely no hot chicks - that's 2 thumbs down, right there. We don't care about the lighting or the camera angles or set.

B) We care if the movie is a good story with no serious amount of political correctness. That is all.

C) The DVD player has an off button, and worst case, an A/C power plug, like most other appliances, and CAN AND WILL be turned off at Peak Stupidity's discretion. Yes, nobody says you've gotta keep watching, as written before on the Peak Stupidity blog regarding another movie thusly:
I almost returned it to the video store not finished, as I have done a few times in the past, back in the days when they were VHS tapes: "Oh, sorry, what happened? Did the tape get jammed? Is it washed-out?" "Nope, it just sucks." "OK, then, do you want your money or another one?" I guess I was a member in good standing, as I remember having some kind of yellow membership card.
OK, then, about the movie Guernica:

It is a movie about the severe bombing of this town during the Spanish American War. As noted in the last post, the militaries supporting both sides used this war to test out weapons and tactics. In this bombing attack, the Germans, supporting the side of Francesco Franco and the Fascists or Conservatives/Monarchists (the term depends on who you ask) tried out their new lighting attack ways that would later be used in WWII, starting in Poland.

The target was non-military, and the attack used new thermite bombs in a tactic called firebombing (also later used at 1000's of times the scale in Dresden, Germany and Tokyo, Japan by the allies.) The Germans didn't have their Stukas in this battle, but a collection of 20-odd older airplanes, with, per the movie, no anti-aircraft defense to thwart them. It's terrible stuff to be a victim of, yet there were thousands of terrible attacks and battles during the war as started by both sides. Why did the movie and why does history single this out?

The movie purports to be about the use of propaganda and censorship during wartime. "The first casualty of war is the truth" is a quote you'll hear often. The movie cover claimed that this was the point of the movie, though the IMDB page (linked to above) had more of a general description for movie buffs, and is more accurate, as it's written by viewers. Guernica is about how the news reporters wanted to tell their own narratives in the same way done today. Of course, there is a 3-way love story involved, maybe to pull in the women viewers (sure didn't see any sex, so ... just saying), and there is some suspense that makes the movie interesting.

The point of this 2-part post is simply that this 2016-release movie is a piece of propaganda in and of itself. Both sides in the movie, the "Republicans" with their Commie advisors/handlers and the German Luftwaffe that firebombed Guernica were shown fairly in my opinion. However, the concentration just on this one attack does not tell much of a whole story about a war that hardly anyone's even heard about anymore. In the movie, this bombing changes the American reporter's whole view on the war and war. period, but I don't know if he ever got around to reporting on atrocities by the Republican-Commies. That's sure not in this movie.

A couple of minor points are that the German Air Force unit is shown as a group of decent guys but only concerned with efficiency, efficiency. Yeah, that is part of the German way, but the movie really pushed that hard. In addition, the destruction done to the town looks total, yet the actual accounts vary widely in destruction and people killed.

So, we've got a movie advertised as a story on propaganda that is itself a piece of subtle propaganda by telling only a small part of the story with one side doing all the killing.

At least we had the artist Pablo Picasso to record some details for us in the painting below:

Not the kind of guy you want as your Recon man:



Comments (2)




Guernica - The Spanish American War - Fascists vs. Commies


Posted On: Tuesday - June 26th 2018 8:23AM MST
In Topics: 
  Commies  History  Geography

"... on my wall, the colors of the maps are running ..."*



Guernica is a town in the north of Spain** that is famous for having the living hell bombed out of it one day during the Spanish Civil War. What does the Spanish Civil War have to do with current era Peak Stupidity, the reader may wonder, disgustingly? It's due to this post leading to another about a movie that I watched recently, the propaganda IN and OF this recent movie, and the fact that Commies seem to crop up in history too much for me to believe that they have lightened the hell up and are not any kind of factor today. I realized from the get/go that this would end up being too long a post, so this one is about the war and the Commies (and don't forget the Fascists) and the next will be about the movie and propaganda.

Yeah, you really don't read or hear much about that Spanish Civil War, as it was just in Spain, after all, and it was overshadowed by WWII starting only just over a year after it ended. This war was used by various parties as a testing ground for weaponry and tactics, as the Gulf Wars have been used by the American forces to prove out weapons for later (for what, indeed?). A difference though, is that the Spanish Civil War was not a one-sided affair like all of the recent American ones all over the world. I don't think American trials of the overwhelming firepower will mean anything were the Neocons to get us into a war with a real foe.

I'm not really taking sides on this one, as I'm no expert, and don't have time or space for historical details here. So, in a nutshell, the Spanish Civil War started after the "Republicans" had taken power in government from the Conservatives and the monarchy about 5 years earlier. At this time, 1936, conservatives wanted to reverse this change in power. Before long, foreign powers got involved in this war on both sides.

Keep in mind, that the word "Republican" did not have the nearly the same meaning that the founders of the United States understood, looking back to its definition from the Greek days. You've heard of the "Democratic German Republic" maybe, if you can remember the Cold War? Yeah, that was the Communist totalitarian East Germany to me and you. Then, there's the modern-day "Republic of North Korea". See what I mean? Anyway, these were Spaniards (on both sides), and so the thousand-year old (just recently destroyed, in fact - see also here) Anglo-American tradition of rights of men, rule of law, due process and shared powers never seem to be ABLE TO BE understood by most of the rest of the world.

That correction of the wrongful terminology completed, these republicans wanted to change the order of things, and the other side, the conservatives wanted the old order back. The Catholic Church, a much bigger part of life, and a bigger power, back up through this time, was on the conservative side. Hmmm, it makes you wonder... I'm not a fan of the authoritative Church, but then these "republicans" were no "wall of separation" Thomas Jeffersons either. The Republican side had the backing of the Communists, who always want to get rid of any religion that would interfere with the indoctrination into theirs. Therefore, the USSR sent loads of weapons and other help, as did Mexico, of all places. Mexico and all of Latin America can get serious leftist at times, but, just guessing, I believe that Mexico must have had some personal dog in this fight, on that particular side.

The conservatives, in addition to their support from/for the Catholic Church, had the fascists on their side, though under the leadership of one Francisco Franco, a former decorater soldier, they may or may not have called themselves fascists. They had support and weapons from the Italians and the Germans, both Fascist by the mid-1930's. "Fascist" does not always mean Nazi, or Trump-supporters, you may not know. Nazism was just one bad example of lots of them. Peak Stupidity does not take the side of Fascists, under the true meaning of the term, as they get as totalitarian as the worst of them. However, it is interesting that the Fascists seem to crop up IN RESPONSE TO the Commies, as noted here. The Commies try to completely overturn all of society, and they must be stopped in order to avoid a USSR, Red China, or Khmer Rouge. Oftentimes, the violence that eventually becomes necessary to stop these people resembles that pendulum swinging back up in the other direction. This has been seen in Latin America many times. The cntrl-left/Socialists/Commies take full advantage of any liberties in a free society (they write books on it even, cough, Alinsky, cough, cough), and then the Fascists take these liberties away in order to have enough power to put the kibosh on the Communism. Can America avoid this same situation? That's a subject for another post (spoiler alert - I don't know yet!).

Besides all the foreign advisors and troops, the Spanish Civil War also included lots of do-gooders on both sides, along with writers and artists too, all in it for the "glory of war" and stupid intentions. Their stories are the lessons learned, if any, and the movie Guernica to be discussed in the next post is a modern-day example. The subsequent post, then, will be about this movie and the propaganda.

As to the war, it went on for over 3 years, and Francisco Franco and his Fascists won by summer of 1939, just in time to stay out of World War II (though they were not exactly neutral and favored the "Axis" who had supported them in their war). I guess they'd had enough of violence and death for a while. 1/2 a million people had died in the war. Franco ruled the country until his death in the mid-1970's.



* From the King (and possibly ONLY artist) of the history-rock or history-pop musical genre, this is from Mr. Al Stewart's On the Border, which must be referencing the Spanish Civil War in this stanza:

"The fishing boats go out across the evening water,
smuggling guns and arms across the Spanish border.
The wind whips up the waves so loud.
The ghost moon sails among the clouds,
and turns the rifles into silver on the border."


(I don't really know why you need to end up at the border when you've got a boat to begin with, but, I'm pretty sure Mr. Stewart's got him one of those artistic licenses.)

** This town is in Basque country, a people that are not one ethnically with the Spaniards. I had thought that they lived only in the Pyrenees mountain range (the border between France and Spain), but Guernica is located near the north shore of Spain's Atlantic coast, a hundred miles or more west of the French border.



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"Technical" Trading - The stupid you'll always have with you.


Posted On: Saturday - June 23rd 2018 7:29PM MST
In Topics: 
  Websites  Global Financial Stupidity  Economics

First a note here. It's been a busy week, and I apologize for this one making it only a 5-post week. It's not like stupidity has ceased and desisted or anything. There are loads of thoughts coming, and posts ready to get into pixel form (the hardest part for me). Next week will bring a couple on the Spanish Civil War (I know! However it relates to the Lyin' Press and Communists of today), something on the "price point" as related to minor-league baseball, and immigration stupidity from the "foodies". to name just a few.

That is all stupidity for another day. Here today is a graph from ZeroHedge.com:

Y-axis not starting at zero*? It's a bogus graph from the get go!



Yeah, apparently there's a Death Cross coming and you may want to get the hell out of Dodge now, people! So says ZeroHedge. Now, wait a minute - Peak Stupidity would be the last naysayer to most forms of financial doom and gloom. Hell, that's what wakes us up in the morning, seeing as the crash coming is what will lead us through Peak Stupidity. Also, though bad-mouthing the ZeroHedge website (one of only 4 on our blogroll) multiple times for its out-of-control ads/scripts that make it unusable on lots of browser/operating system combinations, I personally learned very much about the big financial picture from that site over multiple years. The thoughts from all the reading/mulling-it-over are documented in posts with the Global Financial Stupidity Topic Key, and there are more to come.

The stuff I'm writing about this afternoon, however, is some of what Zerohedge puts up, along with 10's of thousands of pure investment sites and newsletters all over the web. As I wrote about in the post The Nonscience of Economics, even ZH commenters themselves (mostly the earlier-on ones) would concentrate too much on the investment-advice aspect of the talk about the big financial picture. A ZH post yesterday, Gold Joins The Global "Death Cross" Procession is an example of the kind of junk that is not the kind of stuff that helps us understand Global Financial Stupidity, so I'm badmouthing ZeroHedge AGAIN today, but it's really a rant about the term in the title.

"Technical Trading" is a total load of bullshit, and, believe me, that WAS putting it in a nice way. There is absolutely NOTHING TECHNICAL about technical trading. A better name for it would be "playing with graphs". Ever since the first stock numbers came ticking off on a paper tape, there have been people making graphs of it. That's fine, but there have been others trying to make predictions based on the shapes of graphs of stock values and any other kind of economic indices. That's the stupidity that has "always been with us."

It be one thing if, as in at least something resembling science or engineering, these "analysts" were connecting some theory with what they saw in the graphs. "This curve trends down when a company's sales reach this percentage of ... blah, blah...." ... probably lots of baloney, but one could do some math to relate theory and observation. No, these technical traders and advisers just look at shapes of graphs - they've got "head and shoulders" curves that mean this, "support" at various round numbers that mean something else, and in the ZH article, as an example, a DEATH CROSS that is the 50-day moving average crossing below the 200-day moving average. Yeah? What do you know about anything behind which way each of these commodities, markets and currencies will go from that?

The markets run on a small bit of sound capitalism and a much larger amount of psychology. Oh, and that's when the Feral Gov't is NOT involved! Well, it IS involved, making it even worse. One can try to think like the big guys and small guys together to understand what mindset will be involved in movement of certain stocks. Even that doesn't work well when the big guys have the whole system rigged. It doesn't even have to be technically illegal. Warren Buffett can give out advice that will make the market move the way that makes him money via whatever moves he made just before opening his mouth in the $200/year newsletter.

So yeah, lets just look at the 1st and 2nd derivatives of one curve vs another and smoothed by various amounts, with regression analysis and stuff. Heck, we can hire an engineer or mathematician, but with ZERO theory and no Big-Gov/Big-Biz connections, the only way NOT to lose your ass is to make money off of the newsletters and keep out of the market yourself!

As with even the non-technical analysis, which I believe means there MIGHT be some logic to it, there's still the question that always arises: If your theory is that accurate, why the hell are you telling the rest of us? You can make a ton of money buying, shorting, or whatever you people do. If lots of us really get wind of your idea and take it to heart, wouldn't the subsequent movements of that index screw up your prediction anyway?

Yeah, ZH writer, you can take your DEATH CROSS and shove it up your ass with a clove of garlic! I'm not buying this crap and I don't read financial sites for investment advice. You people keep saying it's rigged anyway. I'm not one of the riggers, and I'm not one of the playas. I'd just like to know how Peak Stupidity will all go down.


* Yeah, don't get me started on bad graphing technique. ZH is big on that too. More on that in a subsequent post.



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Hey man, nice shot!


Posted On: Thursday - June 21st 2018 2:14PM MST
In Topics: 
  TV, aka Gov't Media  Liberty/Libertarianism  Guns

If you're gonna look pretty, talk about guns while you do it!



"This one guy had an icky gun! But then this other guy used his icky gun to stop the first guy with the icky gun. Ewwww! (but I'm in love...)"


The Lyin' Press does all they can too keep their narrative together, and "guns are bad, mmmkaay", is part of that. Therefore, the fact that this story of a successful shooting got shown on the Seattle Fox-13 TV station is something in an of itself amazing to me. Peak Stupidity got to this story from this ZeroHedge post which, turn, got it from a decent site called The Daily Bell (a sound-money financial news site that continually tries to get you to sign up for something or other) which points to the Seattle TV post, with video.

That's the great thing about the new world of media. Peak Stupidity can get some real stories from web sites we can (usually) trust, which do lots of the sorting of the real truth from the narrative for us.

Though pro-gun-rights in every way, the Peak Stupidity blog does not have a topic key specifically on this, but related posts can be found with the "Liberty/Libertarianism" topic key, and this article is an example, as it discusses that gun self-defense incidents happen more often than anyone knows about.

Tumwater Police spokeswoman Laura Wohl said it all happened about 4:40 p.m. Sunday when officers were alerted to a possible carjacking near a gas station.

Wohl said Day approached a family and attempted to take their car but was not successful. He then fled the scene, drove the wrong way on Highway 101 and quickly exited into the City of Tumwater.

Day crashed the vehicle at the intersection of Tyee Drive and Israel Road SW, near Tumwater High School, police said.

He then left his car and attempted to carjack at least two other people, fired shots at the vehicles, and demanded owners abandon their cars. Day was successful in carjacking a third vehicle that he drove to Walmart, police said.
Yeah, he went into WalMart to get more ammo!
Tumwater Police said Day tried to carjack two cars in the Walmart parking lot at 5900 Littlerock Rd SW.

One driver was shot when he refused to give up his car, Wohl said. He was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center. As of Monday, the man was in critical condition and in intensive care.

As Day tried to take a second car a "bystander here in the parking lot shot the suspect," Wohl said.

According to a police release, two armed shoppers saw Day inside Walmart and followed him outside.

Before attempting the carjackings, Tumwater Police said Day went into the Walmart and fired at a locked ammunition display case. He then removed some ammunition and left the store.
(No, news sites don't have writers that understand paragraphs and all that fancy stuff. They are there to GET ON TV, dammit.).

It sounds like the armed citizen, Mr. "47 year-old man from Oakville" stopped an ongoing pretty-widespread crime spree. He is right on the edge there of being a hero, per my discussion about First Responders. Don't get me wrong here, please:

He did the right thing.
He most likely saved a number of lives.
We need lots more guys like this man.
Nice shooting!
It took some guts (probably due to fear of the law more than the nutcase).

I just don't use the term "hero" lightly, as I don't know the details as to whether this guy was getting shot at or aimed at when he took aim and killed the criminal. It's great for the people of Seattle and Western Washington to get to see a successful use of a gun in self-defense, rather than getting nothing but the "ewwww, guns!" narrative. We at Peak Stupidity already know what's what.

Again, "Hey Man, Nice Shot!"



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Tucker Carlson rocks on immigrant's vs. OUR children


Posted On: Wednesday - June 20th 2018 5:44PM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  Pundits

Here is Peak Stupidity's favorite TV pundit. It's from seeing him on youtube. I've meant to put him up more, as he's been on the Peak Stupidity blog lots more in the past (see here, here, here, here, and here.)

In this case, it's not an interview with somebody whose stupidity is so high that the whole thing is hilarious. There's no interviewee on this one, and Mr. Tucker is talking about the brewhaha about the separation of illegally entered children. He compares this to the American children of anyone put into prison for something just as illegal as breaking into a country.

It's amazing that they let this guy on TV:
"The hysteria over separating illegal immigrant children from their families tells you everything about our ruling class. They care far more about foreigners than about their own people. They are only interested in changing the country."




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One year after our last post - Housing Bubble 2.0 going Bubblicious


Posted On: Wednesday - June 20th 2018 9:34AM MST
In Topics: 
  Global Financial Stupidity  Economics

As I copied some housing price graphs off of the website Seattle Bubble a few days back, I realize now that it's been just under a year since our graph-filled post entitled Housing Bubble 2.0 - West coast, university towns, minorities, to be hardest hit!. It's good timing, though the Seattle Bubble site itself puts out this data in the nice "tableau"-software graphical format based on Case-Shiller housing data monthly. It's pretty much the only reason to visit that site, unless you live in Seattle, are a realtor, or are thinking of buying housing out there. From the year-ago post:
SeattleBubble was interesting early on, but the posts were geared toward people living in Seattle, or King County, or surrounding counties of course. Besides discussing the ridiculousness of the prices (till 2007), the state of housing in the area during the big decline (2008 - 2013), and then the reasons for the new sharp rise again (2014-Present), the site is geared toward people into real estate as a business. Most of the commenters, in fact, would only be interesting to readers in Real Estate, one of the unproductive large areas of the American economy, as part of the FIRE sectors (see 5th paragraph and down). In addition, a majority of the commenters are fairly leftwing and clueless, which shows when any kind of politics come into discussion - that'd be expected, I guess. Nowaday, I look forward only to reading the monthly post with graphs from Case-Shiller data on housing prices for 20 metropolitan areas of the US. Granted, this data can be read elsewhere - from the 2 guys Case and Shiller, if nothing else. The Tim has some really well-presented graphs in his posts each month, that haven't changed format (which I like) and use software called Tableau that enables user control of the graph on-line - oh, that doesn't work on slightly older browsers, like a lot of stuff!
I will now also excerpt another chunk of that year-ago post, only because I don't want readers to misinterpret these graphs:
1) All of the cities' housing prices are given as the median value, as opposed to the average, or mean. This really makes sense with this kind of data. Most buyers are buying ONE house out of thousands, and a few very high-dollar mansions being sold can skew an average. The median, for the statistically-declined, means the value at which 1/2 of the other numbers would be higher than it and 1/2 lower.

2) All of the city's median housing prices have been normalized to a value of 100 at the beginning of 2000, at a time when these guys considered housing bubble 1.0 to have started. This means that, though the median LA price and the median Charlotte, NC price were way different at that time, they both show 100 on the graph. The idea is to enable people to compare not actual prices between cities, but relative rises and falls based on that "initial" value, before any bubbling.

3) This last point is not particular to Case/Shiller data, but the housing market in general, for most parts of the country, gets better (more sales and higher prices) in Spring and Summer than in Fall/Winter. It may be a matter of more people getting out and around or something about jobs/schooling and moving. Who cares, but the yearly waves in most of the graphs are not noise, but real. It's the long-term trends that are more important.
I have 7 graphs here, each for a different region of the US. The Case-Shiller data are only presented for 20 cities, so some regions of course don't have big samples.

The West Coast:


As discussed herein, there is lots of foreign money coming into these locations and put into housing as an investment and foothold. Most of it is Chinese money. This does not look like it's been abating one little bit. Look at Seattle! Peak Stupidity also discussed the parking of this Chinese money all over the (especially) English-speaking world in Selling out the country - Aussie and Canook style.

The (rich-part) East Coast:


New York always has the Big-Money money (the initial "F" in F.I.R.E. economy), and Washingon, FS (oh, Federal Shithole for you PS newbies) has all of OUR money that we apparently have to spare. Boston has lots of old-timey money too, and is a pillar, or to stick with the metaphor, a big gas source of the University bubble. Keep in mind caveat #2 above in interpretation of the data. This real estate may be the MOST expensive - the graphs show the rise/fall/rise in relative terms for each city.

Florida:


Florida and cities of the "Sand States" below, were big players in the purposeful use of housing as a speculative investment vehicle (that's a money-man term, "vehicle", I mean WTF?) back in HB 1.0. I knew people involved in this in Florida and in Arizona. I don't feel sorry for either of them in their losing of their asses.

The Desert Southwest:


Like I said above.

The Midwest/Great Lakes:



The South:


It's just steady as she goes. There's never been a whole lot of big money in the Southern cities. The manufacturing that came down 50 years ago has mostly high-tailed it to China. The newcomers consist of lots of black from up north who don't bring much money with them. The Californians (most of them bringing their cntrl-left socialist ways with them) don't usually make it to the South, as the serious humidity and bugs are not a welcome change from the West. They've mostly infested the Pacific NW and Texas so far. It's a good thing, really, as it still doesn't take as much money to live down South as it does in much of the nation. The University towns, as in all of the country, are a different story, but Atlanta, Georgia, and Charlotte, N. Carolina are not particularly university towns.

Cleveland/Detroit:


Cleveland never did as badly as Detroit at the bottom, probably due to slightly better demographics. However, even the Continental (now part of United) Airline hub is no more. That can be a big loss, as there are billions of dollars flowing at a major airline hub. Anyway, these are the epitome of the Dem/Black/Union destroyed rust belt cities. Both of these place have "good deals" on housing due to not very good reasons to live there anymore. What were you expecting, Paris on the Erie?

How is this one going to end? Are people really making that much more money in order to afford a lifestyle that includes payments for these "homes" or are they again counting on them as savings accounts that are earning 10% annually (beats hell of of the FED-induced < 1% CD rates)?

Let's compare these increases to inflation. The index had a value of 100 for all of the cities as defined by Case-Shiller for the year 2000. That year was considered to be a time before any serious bubble in housing prices. If we believe the 1.5 - 2% annual inflation rates as told to us by the Feral Gov't (we don't) than anything over 140 or so in 2018 has risen higher than general inflation. My comparisons of prices of food, insurance, vehicles, etc. give me a gut feeling of more like 4 - 5%. Any numbers below 220 or so, then, are not really very high. That means only the West coast is really getting out of whack. The Midwest, Florida, and the desert seem not unreasonable, and the South cheap still. Detroit and Cleveland? We don't want to go there. No, that wasn't an expression - I mean, literally, WE DON'T WANT TO GO THERE!

It's the way that lots of these curves are rising, though, that still make lots of this housing-as-an-investment business still a bubble.



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Dances with wolves? ... sounds like that wasn't the half of it!


Posted On: Tuesday - June 19th 2018 12:35PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music  The Dead  Humor  History  Race/Genetics

Yes, it gets lonely out there on the prairie. WE GET THAT!



A commenter has pointed me to an article from the British Lyin' Press tabloid Daily Mail with the long title "Canadian company offering $250 DNA heredity tests is accused of scamming customers after a man submitted a sample from his DOG and was told it was a descendant of Native Americans", making it pretty much too good to pass up. Now, the commenter under an iSteve post on unz was more interested in the HBD, (meaning Human Bio - Diversity) aspect, involving reliability of DNA testing. We at Peak Stupidity, are more interested in the humorous aspects of this silly-in-all-respects story.

It seems that "it's good to be Injun" these days, and the folks paying for DNA testing from one Viaguard Accu-Metrics were doing so to try to prove ancestry from the Indians, ooops, Native Canadians, ooops, Spirits Communities. There were many people suckered in by the testing company, but in a way it serves them right, as the ability to scam the rest of the remaining Canadians, through the heavy hand of government was their purpose in becoming officially, fuck it, INDIANS. Now, the one guy on the picture, he doesn't look Indian to me. I'm no Donald Trump (check out youtube on that one - look for "Trump", "Indian casino", "hearings"), nor a Banker, Lawyer, nor Indian Chief, but c'mon, that's a ball cap with not a feather in sight.

OK, I jest, and, not that I feel bad about that, but I will give the Indians credit, like lots of Americans do. They just got a bad deal over the last 200 - 300 years. Of all the "disadvantaged" groups we seem to have complaining, these guys just weren't gonna come out well with the clash of civilizations between people who believe in property/rights, and savages. Yeah, I can use that word, and it's not the complete insult that people take it for. They lived off the land, didn't make improvements to life in general (with good use though of the white man's improvements - guns and horses - when they got 'em), and lived without a host of rules and regulations that can define civilization.

Hey, it's not all bad, and that's why the idea of the "noble savage" gets people wistful about the Red Man's ways. They wouldn't stay wistful for long if left in that lifestyle for long with no way back - "Naked and Afraid", baby. Sure, the simple life, and simple social rules much more in tune with Mother Nature can feel great, but just wait until a week or two with hunger pains and no food in sight, or a blizzard with crude shelter and heat. It'd make most human beings long to improve the world a bit, I can tell you that. We're way off the subject here, but I'll end this rant about Indians by just saying that their current woes are mostly US Feral Gov. induced, just as they were on the other end 150 years back. The broken treaties and lies by Fed-Gov screwed them over then, and now to pay the Indians back, the other Americans are getting screwed - just think of the fishing rights, in which Indians can put nets across whole streams, while the white man gets fined for keeping a fish 1" too short. It's more of that Anarcho-Tyranny that governments are so, so good at. The Indians, with the easy casino money and different rules, suffer from a serious lack of self-respect and work-incentive, and these new woes aren't much better than the old woes.

Whew, what happened to the post, here? Oh, yeah, well, the DNA testing must have been pretty bogus, but do we know that for sure? They say that all mammals (just as an example) have lots more genes in common than ones that differ. After living on the land with all the creatures of the wild, maybe these Canadians trying to find their roots are getting data that they'd just rather not know. Maybe we all don't need to know that.

I can see the Tribal hearing now (or "tribunal" if you will, I guess that's where the word comes from(?)):

"Mr. With-wolves, you say that your Mama was a squaw from the Dakota territory. Yet, the DNA says otherwise. is there something you are not telling us?"

Defendant sits cross-legged in silence.

"Remember, Mr. With-wolves, you are UNDER OATH, to the Great Spirit of Winter!"

From the live album Ded Dead Reckoning, here is Jerry singing about the Dire Wolf:



In the timbers to fennario, the wolves are running round,
The winter was so hard and cold, froze ten feet neath the ground.
Don't murder me, I beg of you, don't murder me. Please, don't murder me.

I sat down to my supper, twas a bottle of red whisky,
I said my prayers and went to bed, that's the last they saw of me.
Don't murder me, I beg of you, don't murder me. Please, don't murder me.

When I awoke, the dire wolf, six hundred pounds of sin,
Was grinning at my window, all I said was come on in.
Don't murder me, I beg of you, don't murder me. Please, don't murder me.

The wolf came in, I got my cards, we sat down for a game.
I cut my deck to the queen of spades, but the cards were all the same.
Don't murder me, I beg of you, don't murder me. Please, don't murder me.

In the backwash of fennario, the black and bloody mire,
The dire wolf collects his dues, while the boys sing round the fire.
Don't murder me, I beg of you, don't murder me. Please, don't murder me.
No, no, no don't murder me. I beg of you,
Don't murder me. Please, don't murder me."



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Cntrl-left Anti-American agenda? Yeah, there's an app for that!


Posted On: Saturday - June 16th 2018 5:53PM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  Globalists  Artificial Stupidity  ctrl-left



It's just a simple test on prepositions, "that's all".
(The other two answers were "of" and "to".)


Oh, wait, they did leave out one answer that we feel should go in the blank:
While human rights activists all over the world call for humanity [sic, missimg comma] some e[sic - capital "E"]uropean countries still have negative attitude [sic - missing "s" for plurality] ___________ refugees from Africa.
"due to their wanting to keep their own countries in working order, against the Globalist scum just as much as their pawns, the". Hmmmmm, maybe the app has a bug in it, as the Peak Stupidity answer is not one of the options.

Ohhh, it's a feature you say? The Globalist agenda to replace the populations of white western lands has seeped into the apps now? No, not the apps! What would we do without the apps? Without them, life would cease to have meaning. I wouldn't be able to get the car started without my car app, so I'd have to walk to the grocery store, but without knowing the way and how many steps I'm taking, I can't get there from here. It's getting to where I need my iphone charged up to make sure that the TTT-AD* app will work, or I really can't be myself.

This stuff should really piss you off, even if you don't pay for any of this shit, like yours truly doesn't. Just look at that question again. It's not designed to teach someone prepositions at all, it it? Since the level of English it's designed for is 2nd grade or so, I'm guessing the clever Globalist scum behind this stuff want to catch the little ones or the new "Americans" right off the boat or straight out of Chinatown.

I've been off the normal Government Media, aka TV, for quite a while, but it's still not easy to get away from THE AGENDA.

This is why people home-school their children!** Even then, you've got to get together with the other Moms and Dads to make sure you can find, let's call it "non-judgemental" software. It's lots of work keeping you and yours from the brainwashing.


* TTT-AD is the Time To Take A Dump app. It's a really good deal. The phone charges you monthly or by the reminder ... all synched in with my calorie-burn app and my that new gas sensor at the bottom of all the new iPhone 11's. Far out, man ...!

** Peak Stupidity has a 3-post series on home-schooling - Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.



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