Will the REAL Deep State please stand up...


Posted On: Thursday - July 11th 2024 3:21PM MST
In Topics: 
  Pundits  US Feral Government  Deep State

... and give your name and what step of our 12-step Deep Staters Anonymous program you have attained?



This post is somewhat of a repeat from a part of our post What IS the Deep State? from over 7 years back. Donald Trump had been President for less than 5 months as of that writing. He'd already been disappointing, so Peak Stupidity wondered about his relationship, if I may, with the Deep State and looked back to another guy back 25 years prior: The Deep State vs. Donald Trump - remember Candidate Ross Perot?.

I can see that there's much confusion between 2 different definitions of the Deep State. I don't think I'd write the following (1st link above) any differently today:
We (we bloggers, I guess) need to get something straight. This phrase, "the Deep State", has been trending, as the idiots at google, yahoo, and assorted other idiots like to say these days. The phrase is being used a lot, though it is nothing new, yet I've been reading it as having 2 different meanings. This Peter Brimelow blog post on VDare is an example.

The original meaning of "the Deep State" is the one that has been used for 50 years or more, at least in reference to goings-on with or really, behind, the US Feral Government. It refers to a "shadow government" and/or powerful elite non-government people who work behind the scenes to make the real decisions as the politicians play their role as puppets. The idea is that these nefarious types do not want to be public figures and they don't want the public to know there even is any Deep State. By "Deep" here, writers mean "deep secret", so we don't guess these people blog about their activities or have a Deep State facebook group and stuff like that.
OK, I'd have to add Twitter, excuse me, X, today. That post was from '17... it was a different time, you understand ...

I mentioned a Peter Brimelow article. The bigger example of this mistake comes from Steve Sailer. In his recent posts, he has been proud of his taking this term from Turkey, of all places, and spreading the it around. Of course it's not purposeful, but this is one time I see Mr. Sailer as spreading confusion rather than shedding light. No, no, no, by "the Deep State", we* don't mean the government bureaucracy! That's not at ALL the same thing.

Mr. Sailer's somewhat annoyingly clever mantra has been lately to ask those who attribute high-level political happenings to the Deep State "How come we don't know their names?" Nah, the CIA guy who's been blackmailing Senator so-and-so may not carry business cards and have a big presence on Twitter.

Granted, I do realize that Mr. Sailer is using his misnomer, so, sure, if this head of the White House staff has pushed for this thing or this Chief of Homeland Security is behind that thing, yeah, we know their names. We know who the traitor Mayorkas is and could know but don't care who Jeff Zients is. (I indeed had to look that one up.) Thing is, they ain't The Deep State.

A friend of mine with whom it's great to discuss this kind of thing says the the term "Administrative State" should be used for the entrenched Government Bureaucracies. We're talking the US Feral beast, the EU, other nations, and even California's. There are people within who do have power based on the fact that it's very difficult to change one of these Ships of Fools** , errr..."ships of State" around.

I see there being less inherent evil in the Administrative State than in the Deep State. I also can see that there's some overlap between the two. My friend mentioned Lois Lerner, the former head of the Tax-Exempt Organization office of the IRS who purposely harassed Conservative organizations... and, of course, never got punished. She is part of the Administrative State, but who set her up to this vendetta? You don't figure people like this care that very much about the politics over getting up into those G-levels with higher positions for bigger pensions. Was she hooked up just with Øb☭ma or with others behind the scenes?

Denying that any Deep State is behind this or that political phenomena means something different if you don't know the basic long-used definition of "Deep State". Let me discuss the 2 entities, the Administrative State (first) and then the Deep State, in 2 subsequent posts.



* It's not just me, and don't call me Kemosabe! My wife gets political info off of some Social Media, and she'd tell me that "the Dee Ess behind so-and-so did so-and-so...", pronouncing just the letters. She doesn't get that from me.

** That post has the Dead song, but we've also got a 3-part review of Tucker Carlson's 6 y/o book with that title: Part 1 - - Part 2 - - Part 3.


Comments (2)




SteveSailer.net


Posted On: Wednesday - July 10th 2024 10:15AM MST
In Topics: 
  Websites  Pundits



I've been following Mr. Hail's and a few others' comments back on the ole Unz Review on occasion - it's called backsliding, though I have kept to my goal of abstaining from commenting there. Mr. Hail and others alerted the commenting crew of iSteve that Mr. Sailer has been going full speed on his SteveSailer.net substack* site.

I just now looked through the archives there, and I see that I was wrong about something. Mr. Sailer didn't just slowly build up his writing on substack from long ago. He started it up on December 4th of last year with this welcome post:
Steve Sailer’s brilliant commentary finally arrives at Substack. Subscribe to read Sailer’s daily output and selections of his best work from the last several decades.

This blog operates with Sailer’s blessing. To reach Sailer directly, please see his contact and patronage information at The Unz Review, his primary platform.
Ahhh, so he did mention TUR this one time, but that was for that info for readers. As I will discuss later on, he has distanced himself from that site, at least via a complete lack of referrals.

Let me tell you first my experience with Steve Sailer's new site. This is not any kind of advice, but just an explanation of why I'll probably not be writing in there. The site is a bit wanky on the iCrap, but that's probably me - substack is huge, so I doubt it's their problem. There I was, reading comments, including many good ones from our friend E.H. Hail, so I decided to reply. It turns out, one needs an actual real email.** I know, get on protonmail to get an address for this express purpose, etc... However, a light came on - would I not be doing the same thing as I tried to avoid finally with TUR, spending just too much of my day going "Hey, that guy's wrong about this." and "I wonder if that other asshole wrote back." as I did on TUR? (This is all in addition to the great camaraderie with people I do agree very much with, including the O/P, as they call 'em.) So, I had to resist.

I've got to add here, though, Mr. Ron Unz made a very well-functioning site! That especially includes the way the commenting works. I would miss that anywhere else, and then, why not just go back on his site, were I to fall back off the wagon? Well, there might be a reason, which we'll get to...

I see Mr. Hail has been on there a lot, and I notice other familiar handles. So, if you guys end up there, I'll read you and be really really tempted ...

Let me comment on the site content finally: Mr. Sailer's posts on his substack site seem to be midway between TUR posts and TakiMag articles in length. The subject matter is much of the usual stuff, but his latest kick is to be against conspiracy theories, people of the right who indulge in too much of it, and that there is no real Deep State, so we should calm down about all that. I've been disappointed in this pundit's general attitude as of late. As I've written, Mr. Sailer has made the semi-Big-Time lately. Besides understandably wanting to distance himself from comments and other articles with glaring headlines on TUR that make the writers "extremists" in the eyes of the rest of those well-known pundits, he seems to have decided to settle in to some established role.

Granted, Mr. Sailer was stalwart in bringing up the name Jared Taylor on the Tucker Carlson show. (Of course, Jared Taylor is civil as all get-out, so...) He continues to be very solid on the race/crime commentary. I don't think Mr. Sailer is going native completely.

I want to get back to that Deep State business. We'll start with a discussion of some real confusion on the basic definition. Our next Peak Stupidity post: Will the REAL Deep State stand up and be counted? After that, it'll be back to Mr. Sailer's site yet again with the question of his transition. No, it's not that! Man, you can't say ANYTHING anymore!

Finally, I did notice, going from titles only, that the last 5 posts on the site are right up iSteve's and my alley. I'm sure I'll be drawn in. In the meantime, as Steve Sailer enjoys his ride on the book tour and through the podcasts, he's got a quiet*** voice in his ear, a guy with a funny 3-letter last name whispering "All glory is fleeting."



* I'd written "powered by substack" before, but I suppose stevesailer.net is ON their site, period. I guess they allow you to have your own url without the "substack". Mr. Hail is stuck with the ".wordpress" in his URL which gives one more to memorize. This is important when the Establishment works to block searches, as Mr. Hail has given us many examples of.

Along with this footnote, let me just ask nicely of people (this is to the world, not necessarily PS people) to please, please, not say "... a new Steve Sailer substack I just read ..." Look, we don't say "I just read a great new National Review" rather than "... great new National Review ARTICLE or POST". That example, unfortunately, is about 25 years old and won't work today, but you get the idea ...

** I'm not very familiar, so I don't know if giving that email address makes one a free "subscriber" or just gives one the ability to comment. They may be one and the same.

*** Is that even possible?


Comments (18)




Sailer's Law of Mass Shootings - the spirit of the law


Posted On: Tuesday - July 9th 2024 7:00PM MST
In Topics: 
  Pundits  Race/Genetics



Illustrious commentator Steve Sailer's noticing, analyzing, and clever writing has left us with some really good phrases and Social Science Laws. One of the most accurate and reproducible laws of his is Sailer's Law of Mass Shootings.* In simplified form it says:
If there are more wounded than killed, then the shooters is likely black. If there are more killed than wounded, then the shooter is likely not black.
It's simple and easy to apply. No calculus is necessary.

The observations are nothing new. We've all read plenty of news stories about shootings. We've probably all realized that the kind of Black! people that shoot their gang rivals or homies who've dissed them aren't the guys that spend time at the range.

What Mr. Sailer is good at is putting together everyday observations like that above, possibly seeing other points (such as the difference in the mentality of White vs black mass shooters), and matching them with as large as possible data sets. The more you think about these things, the more you notice them yourself, thinking, "yeah, no shit". However, did I already know this to the point I could have stated the same thing? Probably not, on one of Mr. Sailer's best points.

I've not seen an example that illustrates Sailer's Law of Mass Shootings as well as this story out of Montgomery, Alabama: Another Black Mass Shooting: In Montgomery, Alabama, More Than 350 Spent Casings Found from Massive Gun Battle at Black Party (13 Wounded/O Dead). 350 rounds! "Shots fired." does not begin to describe a scene of Black! dysfunctionality like this. 13 people being hurt** out of 350 shots fired is like 9 out of 10 kids jumping off the swing set landing not just out of the sand but outside the whole schoolyard. You've got to make a real effort to shoot that badly. Or, yeah, hold the guns sideways and push on them when you fire.

Wait, there's more:
All of shooting victims had injuries that authorities described as not life-threatening.
Amazing.
Three people were injured when they were struck by vehicles leaving the area and one woman was injured by broken glass, police say.
So, that's only 9 people actually hit by bullets during this mass shooting of 350 rounds (or more). I hope it wasn't bigger caliber than 9mm. The bigger stuff is getting pretty dear. How can these young folks afford that ammo and still pay their bills and raise their families...?

In the aftermath, my reaction to this splendid example of Sailer's Law of Mass Shootings is quite the opposite of Hey, Man, nice shot!. Some of these ghetto thugs understand the letter of the law, but this crowd also got into the spirit of the law.

Note that I linked to this story on "Paul Kersey"'s Stuff Black People Don't Like blog. With good reason, Mr. Kersey doesn't add much humor usually, but we see this at the top:
Were the National Rifle Association (NRA) truly a racist organization, they’d be engaging in minority outreach marksmanship lessons across the nation on a weekly basis.
LOL!


PS: Shooting really small CC pistols accurately is not very easy. We'll practice up, but even at 10 yards - first time with this gun - we were lucky to hit the letter-sized paper targets! (Gotta learn the sights better.) However, the point here is, there are people all over - how could you not hit more people?



* Really, I like his "Law of Female Journalism" even better, but it's not so easy to prove out with math... hard to obtain a closed-form solution.

** I gotta assume nobody else was hit, or they'd been considered "injured", ghettos, lawyers, and billboards being what they are today ...


Comments (5)




Jillary '24?


Posted On: Monday - July 8th 2024 12:17PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '26  Hildabeast  Female Stupidity  Dead/Ex- Presidents  Zhou Bai Dien



Inevitable? Thank God it wasn't really.


What's gonna happen with these Democrats and their '24 Presidential candidate, what with the convention coming up in about 6 weeks? If you thought that debate wasn't entertaining enough, the Chicago shitshow to come may very well top it. I don't know how much hotel rooms overlooking the possible, hopeful violence in the streets would set one back, but after 56 years of inflation and the transition of this party to the utter mobile mental institution it is since last time there, 500 bucks a night would not feel so out of line. (Of course, I'd want, nay, NEED, a fully stocked bar. Having Pat Buchanan drop by to regale us with stories and maybe make a reaction video would make the visit complete.)

However, I've written before that I'm not certain the Blue Squad of the UniParty won't just attempt to drag old JoeMentia across the finish line by hook or, for the most part by crook. Yeah, I mean without the by crook part, he can't win this thing. The Deep State (yes, post to come on this with an ACCURATE definition) can handle a senile, half, or even fully dead man, once he's been elected. The ctrl-left voters and Lyin' Press talking heads may really be worried Bai Dien can't be dragged across the line. Additional others worry about a President in his sad shape being in control of the nuclear arsenal. Nah, it doesn't work like that. They'll make sure Bai Dien presses the button only if or when they WANT him to press it. That's not a real concern.

If they've given up though, it has been just been great for the Lyin Press and all of the media that there's massive ongoing speculation out there on who the D party will nominate.

I've read that it's kind of tricky to put someone different on the ballot at this late stage. I wonder about that though. Back in the smoke-filled room days, not THAT awful long ago, the candidates WERE selected this late, rather than the said conventions being just rallies for the guys (or gals, sorry Hillary!) who'd been already decided on by the primary election process.

There's talk about switching to younger, slick-haired, slick-minded Gavin Newsome, the embarrassing to everyone, but still, Black! (ok, 1/2) and female Kamala Harris, Oval Office-experienced Big Mike, and I wouldn't say the Hildabeast herself is yet out of consideration. (She has a fatal ambition, and nobody has yet had an opportunity to put a stake through her heart,... you know ... just to be sure)

What about Doctor* Jill, though? I've been glad not to have heard a thing about her for 3 solid years. That good luck streak ended as I've been seeing her try to help her husband with both his dementia and his holding onto power for dear life. There was the scene after the debate in which she talked to him as a child "You answered ALL the questions!" (I can't remember if she said "honey" or "little buddy".)

Doctor Jill has been working her butt off trying to keep JoeMentia the running to remain in power during the past week and a half of speculation. That picture above is from a Vogue magazine cover. From the Gateway Pundit: Jill Biden Dons $5,000 Silk Tuxedo Dress on Cover of Vogue, Asserts, “We Will Decide Our Future”. What do you mean "we", Jillosabe? Is this all about her standing by her man? We've heard that expression somewhere before, around 25 years ago IIRC. If she cared about old Joe so much as a husband, wouldn't she find a way for him to bow out gracefully. (That is, without hitting his head on something.) It'd be good to do this before his condition got any worse.

Maybe Mrs. Biden is so concerned about Joe's keeping in the running because SHE wants to hold onto power because she's already BEEN in power. So long as one works within the confines of what the Deep State wants, there's some leeway. Has Doctor Jill already been running an Edith Wilson** operation? Who would know? Would Joe remember signing some little piece of paper? If he did get suspicious, what could Doctor, remember, Jill do about it? "Is it safe?!" (Wait, that would be Dentist Jill.***)

Running an Edith Wilson op for the next 4 years would take a lot of guile. Could Doctor Jill somehow become the D-party Presidential candidate herself? I haven't read much on this, but then, she has sure been in the news a lot lately for a 1st lady. Unlike the other "lady" in our top image here, Jill Biden has not paid her dues. After spending her time as an unelected non-office-holder, she hasn't been duly elected to the Senate of a State she just became resident of and then held a cabinet position in which she killed people at will overseas and fomented revolutions. So, I mean...

Jill would also have to do this all on her own, without a sentiment loving husband behind her who owes her big time for her "standing by her man" ... after he wagged his finger on national TV at Americans to shame them for believing he was a liar of some sort about sex...

Will we see another version of the Hildabeast? I'm not confident that the original HIldabeast would be satisfied being her mentor, but I see a lot of similarities. Both are ambitious feminists in positions so very close to big power. I am making no predictions - it's all mere entertainment for us here - but if we read about this 1st lady being considered, Peak Stupidity will dub her The Jilldabeast in honor of her predecessor.


* She goes by "Doctor" due to her accomplishment of obtaining a a Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) in "educational leadership" later in life. Most PhD's don't ask to be called "Doctor" unless it's in the classroom. (In some U's, it "Professor" and others it's "Doctor".)

** Wife of Woodrow Wilson, who was incapacitated while in office for a spell.

*** Another old movie reference.


Comments (28)




Led Zeppelin Long Distance Dedication


Posted On: Saturday - July 6th 2024 6:28PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music  Zhou Bai Dien

Peak Stupidity's long-distance dedication tonight is one sent over a long distance in TIME, not space. One of the greatest rock bands of all time, Led Zeppelin, hereby dedicates one of their best from Madison Square Garden, New York City over 51 years to present-day Joe Biden. It's Dazed and Confused. 51 summers later - pass it forward!



A bunch of the live footage from 3 NYC Madison Square Garden shows that Zeppelin did on this 3 month long, 34 show tour in '73 was put into a movie, The Song Remains the Same*, along with some footage of the band, mostly in England. The movie was not released until '76.

I saw that movie twice. After seeing it the 1st time, I would have bet the small amount of money I owned that John Paul Jones sang House of the Rising Sun in it as he played the keyboards. No, you're right - he didn't. I found that out after telling a friend this before we saw it my 2nd time. What the heck happened the 1st time? Was there pot smoke wafting around the theater? Were that the case, I didn't inhale anyway, so this remains a mystery to me. Dazed and confused, indeed, but at least I was not running a failing ex-Constitutional Republic at the time ...


PS: The money that this band made from the 3 shows in NY City, $207 THOUSAND DOLLARS!, was stolen out of a safe at their hotel. It was never recovered. To make matters worse, Dazed and Confused was written by some guy named Jake Holmes. He settled things with the band finally in 2010. I really hope the settlement took inflation into account.


Thanks to all the Peak Stupidity readers this week and all previous weeks. No, you weren't out of your gourd in imagining we've been playing Huey Lewis and the News songs here. Listen, we can't even keep up with the stuff we've promised to post on, yet, the blog was filled.

Thanks for the comments especially! Have a happy Sunday. PS, over and out.


* That's the title of a great song from their Houses of the Holy album. Just for confusion's sake, an even better song, Houses of the Holy, is NOT on that album.


Comments (5)




A more intelligent and civil '24 Presidential election


Posted On: Saturday - July 6th 2024 5:11PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '26  History  US Feral Government  Dead/Ex- Presidents

As per commenter Robert's opinion that he'd hoped we'd have neither of the 2 major Presidential candidates that we saw last week, sorry but our title here doesn't suggest getting rid of Trump and Bai Dien. We are talking here about 1924, not 2024. (Perhaps I should have used Twenty-first Century digits.)

The Presidential candidates in 1924:



Mr. Coolidge who'd assumed the office after the death of President Warren Harding on August 3rd of '23 (see Calvin Coolidge inaugurated as US President 100 years ago this minute.) was running as the Republican. John William Davis in the middle was the Democrat candidate, while Mr. Robert La Follette there on the right was the Progressive candidate.

I read that wiki page on Democrat candidate John Davis. This W. Virginian was a lawyer (what's new?), a US Congressman, Solicitor General (I guess same office as the current AG) working for Wilson, and the ambassador to Great Britain. Mr. Davis, the dark horse candidate in the vein of Big Mike*, obtained the D-party nomination on the 103rd vote, in the longest convention they had in history - June 26th through July 9th. A century ago, there'd still be 3 days left of it there at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Madison Square Garden, eh? Who'd have known then that some long-haired British youngsters calling themselves the Led Zeppelin would be playing at that same venue 49 years later? As they could have told the '24 electorate, were the Rock & Roll a thing a half century earlier, "There are 2 paths you can go by, but in the long run, there's still time to change the road you're on...." 2 paths, yeah, screw La Follette, but we'll get to him in a minute.

John Davis was an old-timey Democrat, the 1920s being indeed old times. He supported State's rights, anti-lynching legislation, and lost votes in the South due to his denunciation of the KKK and support for black voting rights. Except for the 1st thing (cause when you run things, you don't need that or even want that stuff), modern Democrat candidates would be on-board. In addition, he was the founding president of the Council on Foreign Relations and involved in other now-shadowy organizations. However, in later life as a lawyer, Mr. Davis worked on behalf of Big Biz against Roosevelt's Raw Deal programs.

That La Follette character, who'd been the Governor and a Congressman and Senator of/from Wisconsin, was indeed a "progressive" in the derogatory sense economically and ideologically. He'd called for government ownership of railroads and electric utilities, in addition to supporting the Bolsheviks in the still-ongoing Russian civil war in the early '20s. That's pretty, errrr, yeah, "progressive". However, in contrast to OUR early '20's, I get the feeling Robert La Follette would not have been in favor of young women being able to get their breasts cut off without their parent's permission... or with it, for that matter. It was what, '20, '21.. it was a different time, you understand ...

Then, there's the guy on the left. A month and couple of weeks ago last century, while in his 1st term as President, Calvin Coolidge signed the Johnson–Reed immigration Act. Though maybe politically disunited at the very end of it, this ushered in a real unification of the American people over the next 41 years, till the Hart Cellar Act was signed in December of '65.

If that wasn't enough, Silent Cal was a true Libertarian**. He believed in "He who governs best, governs least." Imagine an America that would vote for a guy like this in a landslide.



La Follette was pretty strong as 3rd party candidates go, getting more electoral votes - that support from his Wisconsin home*** - than Ross Perot did in 1992 - he got none. However, Mr. Perot got 18.9% of the popular vote as opposed to La Follette's 16.6%. The eminently reasonable John Davis got the lowest percentage of popular votes by any D candidate in history. The South went solid for Davis (did they think we was kin to Jeff Davis?), and New York City went for Coolidge. It was a different New York City... you understand...

Just look and read about these guys, even the proto-Commie guy there. They were intelligent men. Principles of governance were being discussed, rather than, by necessity now, how quickly America is to be destroyed. None of the 3 of them had dementia or were bombastic egotistical bullshitters. What a country! What a difference a century makes!


PS: Interestingly, it was only 40 years later when there was another Presidential election with a strong Libertarian running. Alas, the American population had changed by '64, so the landslide went in the reverse direction. You'd think that unification process, with that hard pause having gone on for 4 decades, would result in a different outcome. Was it that the Lyin' Press had become established by '64, and that was the difference?

PPS: The State numbers of electoral votes were also so different a century ago. Look at California, man! Iowa had as many, Georgia had more, Illinois had 3 more than twice as many, Pennsylvania had 1 less than 3 times as many, and New York had a hair under 3 1/2 times as many. Then, New York State and Pennsylvania just plain dominated! Florida had the same number as Maine and fewer than Nebraska, Connecticut, or West for cryin' out loud Virginia.


* Thanks for that one, Mr. Hail. I realize no pun was intended in your comment, but that doesn't mean it wasn't a good pun.

** Note to certain people: Libertarian principles and open borders do not have to go together. In fact, after a while of it, they CAN'T.

*** You didn't have your Kyle Rittenhouse's around in that last '24, unfortunately.


Comments (34)




Hey Florida Man, nice shot!


Posted On: Friday - July 5th 2024 7:35PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music  Humor  The Future  Geography  Big-Biz Stupidity  Guns



Although enjoying the humor often involved, Peak Stupidity has a more nuanced view of the proverbial Florida Man than most, errr, news outlets(?). We don't always sympathize - as with this Florida Man who took a not so nice shot due to his unhappiness with a haircut. OTOH, we are generally predisposed toward rednecks, such as those Florida Men who are competent with front-end loader machines even when drunk off their asses.

We were quite heartened to read the Gateway Pundit story reporting Florida Man Arrested After Shooting Down Walmart Delivery Drone. This was in Lake County Florida last week, as the drone was doing a demonstration.

Lake County is just north of the center of Florida. It's west of Orlando, south of Ocala, north of Lake City, and well northeast of Tampa Bay. It's big cattle country and was a big citrus growing area until the huge Global Warming induced cold wave at the end of 1989 destroyed much of the groves. Now it's getting developed big-time, like lots of Florida has especially as of late. This development is bad enough if you are already a Florida Man, wanting your peace and quiet. The last thing you want in your rural spread is a damn Wal-Mart drone flying over your property.

The "shooting down" part is questionable, as we read in the one short article by GP's Anthony Scott that:
Despite taking a bullet, the drone was able to fly back safely to Walmart, ...
Damn! At least though:
... but an investigation revealed the drone received close to $2,500 worth of damages.
So there's that, at least. Still, if it got back to Wal-Mart, it unfortunately wasn't exactly "rendered inoperable".

What we are impressed with is that this was a 9 mm pistol round, not pellets from a shotgun. "What a good shot, man!"

Here's the song that best fits this Florida Man story and Peak Stupidity's attitude about drones intruding into one's personal airspace:



I don't really know much about this 1990s band named Filter. Their one hit I remember hearing about 10 years after its time (1999) was, Take a Picture. I think that song is fantastic, with a really great melody and sound, so we featured it early on in the life of this blog.

Their older music, such as this one, from their album Short Bus, is said to be of the "Industrial Rock" genre. Filter played songs for a bunch of movie soundtracks too.

Now that the smoke's gone
and the air is all clear,
those who were right there
got a new kind of fear.

You'd fight and you were right,
but they were just too strong.
They'd stick it in your face
and let you smell what they consider wrong.

That's why I say "Hey man nice, nice shot!
What a good shot man!"


Comments (14)




Trump v Bai Dien further debate thoughts


Posted On: Friday - July 5th 2024 1:29PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '26  Humor  Trump  Economics  Zhou Bai Dien

(See previous posts Who's the sucker 'round here? and Debate wrap-up by Old Soldier and E.H. Hail.

Though it's something I've noticed in myself, 1990s TV show Seinfeld, with head noticer* Jerry, showed the same phenomena with George Costanza in the episode with the "jerk store". Imagine Zhou Bai Dien, half an hour after that debate while driving home to the White House. "Dammit, I know exactly what I should have said!" Yeah, sure, it'd have been plagiarism of Ronald Reagan, but Dark Brandon has no qualms about that silly plagiarism fixation. Besides, who can remember 40 years ago, or even 36, for that matter? (Obviously, even lucid and cognizant Americans can't.)



(Note: Meme self-plagiarized from this post.)


He mighta' won the debate with that one! Reagan did. People saw that 72 y/o Reagan was fun, clever and quick-witted**... maybe not so easy for this current guy also running for re-election but 4 decades later - blank looks and gibberish are not helpful.

Bai Dien will be interviewed by long-term Beltway parasite George Stephanopoulos today, As Old Soldier wrote in a comment here, it'll be rigged up to come out good in properly applied doses by the Lyin' Press. I guess the Establishment may still want to avoid uncertainty by dragging Dark Brandon across the finish line. (I don't know - more on that tomorrow. I'm sure the PS readers all have their own guesses.)

As for Peak Stupidity, we're still fixated on that entertaining debate of last week. Some use the 1/2 century entrenched form for a revelation by top-notch investigative journalists - in this instance, Senilitygate, to describe it. Haha! Thank you for that, Ann.

That was one hell of a cover-up by the Lyin' Press of the senility of Mr. Bai Dien. I mean, who could have possibly known this?! It's not like there are internet sites with video clips and shit we can just up and view - that there are such sites FAKE NEWS. Senilitygate WAS fake news until crack sleuths Tapperward and Bashstein revealed it all for us in All the President's Dead Men.

This thing was just too entertaining to leave be, with enough embedded stupidity for a plethora of posts, so let us get on with a quick review of it.

Trump:

Did he HAVE to keep exaggerating? I already knew he's a big bullshitter, but c'mon, man! "I filled up the Petroleum Reserve with more oil since the founding of this country!" "I closed the border tighter than the snatch of any witch since the Salem Witch Trials!" "I killed more terrorists than any Administration since the Book of Joshua!" Well, like that. I know he went back to the Founders' time frequently.

A friend, in our discussion about this, explained: Trump doesn't want to get wonky and give this or that number, as we suggested in reference to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Giving some numbers and dates would just get the other side "fact-checking" some minor thing. Also, by exaggeration, Trump still gets his point across bigly, without distraction.

I do get that. How about just "I did the most of [this or that] since Ronald Reagan" or whatever sounds good but is also correct? I just don't like the BS, but if it works ... He's going to be "fact-checked" anyway, I suppose.

What Trump did really well was answer questions with no specific answer at all besides what he wanted to talk about anyway. That was an excellent idea for this format. He had the usual anti-Trump moderators, so why comply with their biased agenda? He talked about what he intended to talk about for his allotted time, answers to the questions notwithstanding. Yes!!

Bai Dien:

There's not enough time to cover his stupidity with the time allotted to me today by the Astronomical Ephemeris Tables. You've seen the best of it, I'm sure.

One lie that I kind of liked seeing come out was "He [Trump] had the largest national debt of any President in a 4 year period ..." Nope, the national debt has been going continuously up through most of living Americans' lifetimes, so ... no.

If he instead meant "deficit", well I took a look at the National Debt Clock for the latest number***. It's a real close call. They've got end-o'-fiscal-year numbers here, so '16-'20 rings up just under $8.2 Trillion spent by Congress with Trump as President - much of that Flu Manchu CARES ACT cash. End-'o-fiscal-year '21 starts the debt under Brandon at $27.7 Trillion, and we'll call the current debt $34.9 Trillion from the clock. (It increased $2.1 Million as I watched the 1:07 minute clip, which is a pretty good clip, an ~ $2 Million/minute burn rate, 24/7/365, sometimes 6). There are still 6 months left though in this spending contest. It's a reverse NASCAR race at this point. At the current rate Bai Dien will "win" this one by a nose. (1 1/8 of his $7.2 Trillion deficit so far = $8.1 Trillion, and here come's the checkered flag!) This fact check brought to you by Peak Stupidity at no extra charge.

Oh, and it's fake news that Bai Dien stated "I beat Medicaid." That wouldn't make any sense. What Bai Dien actually uttered was "We finally beat Medicare." That's different. Peak Stupidity hereby apologizes for the error and our incorrect Huey Lewis (and The News) parody lyrics.

If you look at that part closely, it's pretty obvious that the man had his brain stuffed with a number of very rigid talking points during more than a week of (per what I read) practice drill with flash cards (I assume) and maybe a team of education Psychologists **** It just wasn't enough. Bai Dien's brain is so far gone that he was trying to pull out the correct replies from random access memory, but had faulty pointers. He'd go from one to another, digging deep for the right reply, but than mixing them together. Hence:
"... for what I've been able to do with the Covid... excuse me ... with, ummm, dealing with ... everything we had to do with ... uhhh, look ... if ... We finally beat Medicare."
I'm no Steve Sailer. I DON'T feel sorry for the guy. I would if he weren't such a bastard in his lucid moments and hadn't been for the last half a century of public "service". Nah, don't service me, bro!

Lookit, per the experts on the TV, Joe Bai Dien just had a bad night. He only is like this part of the time. So long as there's not a decision regarding nuclear war at the wrong moment.... No, I actually know better than to care about that aspect of the President's Senility. That's yet another post. Stupid proliferation - we need a new SALT treaty. (Stupidity Allotment Limits Treaty?)


PS: I know this post concentrated mostly on one 1 minute clip. There's much more, but maybe we'll discuss the prospects for the D-squad over the next 4 months next instead.


* Rather than noticing social phenomena for political reasons, he was just all about the humor in it all.

** Even if Reagan (likely) had put that one-liner in his memory beforehand, he came out with it at the right time. It'd have taken Bai Dien a minute or two, plus some prompting through an earpiece ... and probably a new drug.

*** That site's actually got about 100 numbers on its front page alone. It's a lot of fun... till it won't be...

**** Yes, Psychiatrists too - they took care of "the elixir".


Comments (12)




Them US Blues -'24


Posted On: Thursday - July 4th 2024 4:51PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music  The Dead  Holiday from Stupidity

Wow! It's been just 2 years under a quarter of a Millennium since the Founders declared that the yoke of tyranny was too much to put up with. Now, a half century after the days when The Dead played this US Blues in San Francisco (The Winterland ballroom), the loss of freedom I've experienced in my life time has got to be many times what the American Colonists lost from 1725 to 1776. Yet, there they were, putting their lives on the line signing that Declaration. What'll happen here?

We've missed it a couple of years, but generally, featuring the Grateful Dead's US Blues* on Independence Day is a Peak Stupidity tradition.

It was Jerry, Bob, Phil, Mickey, Billy, Keith and Donna, a true All-American band, no matter what people think from the name and the acid-rock hippy stereotype.



I'm Uncle Sam. That's who I am.
Been hiding out in a rock and roll band.
Shake the hand that shook the hand
of P.T. Barnum and Charlie Chan.
Shine your shoes. Light your fuse,
Can you use them old U.S. Blues?


Yep, though not able to go to a show, I was aware of things when The Dead was playing this 50 years back. America then was the freest place you could imagine, or maybe couldn't anymore.

Oh well, we've got 35 bucks worth of fireworks to fire off. The Founders hoped their courageous move would be celebrated with fireworks in celebration for years afterwards .. if they were successful. They were ... till we blew it all to hell. There'll be fireworks all right though ...

Here's hoping Peak Stupidity, but more importantly, the U.S. of A. in some recognizable form, will still be here for them US Blues in '26!


PS: Oh, about those Tories going back to '76 - they had a good run, but they seem to be done.


* youtube goes "live version of ..." Well, duh!

*************************
[UPDATED 04/05:]
Added line about "All-American band".
*************************


Comments (6)




Steve Sailer: Trust, but Verify


Posted On: Wednesday - July 3rd 2024 6:35PM MST
In Topics: 
  Trump  Pundits  Media Stupidity  US Feral Government  Dead/Ex- Presidents  Zhou Bai Dien



Anyone remember that guy? He didn't coin the phrase Trust, but verify, as it came from the Russian (in which it rhymes): Doveryay, no proveryay. However, it was the Russians, that is the Soviet Communists, who were the ones President Reagan famously referred to with this phrase, specifically regarding the numbers of nuclear missiles and warheads they said vs we verified they had. (There were no smart phones and internet ... 1984, 1987... it was a different time, you understand...)

I haven't seen this written anywhere, surprisingly, but the phrase "Trust, but verify" sardonically means "Don't trust." If you have to go back and verify, you never trusted to begin with. Reagan was smart not to have. It's too bad he didn't have the same attitude about the US Congress*.

Trust, but Verfiy is the title of Steve Sailer's latest Takimag article. Note the super-title too, a subtitle on top really, that says The Untold Story. This one is about conspiracy theories and "people" (not sure which exact segment/level he meant here) of the right being too enamored with them.

I gotta say, as of a week back, I've been miffed by this guy.

Peak Stupidity has written a lot about Mr. Sailer lately, now that he's "come out" (not gay, not Libertarian - heaven forbid!, but simply more visible and out of his literal closet). There have been his great book, his interview with the great Tucker Carlson, lots more interviews, appearances, and, I imagine, much more well-deserved income for him.

E.H. Hail has steered me to the new, or newly busy at least, SteveSailer substack-"powered" blog. The URL is simply stevesailer.net I've done some reading there.** Between a few articles there and most especially this latest Takimag article, I'm getting a little, I dare say, pissed. I haven't agreed on a number of basic points of his writing lately (including 2 or 3 posts on his site).

I'll have more detail (argumentation) later, but for now, I'll note that the series of posts Deep State, Peak State, and Shallow State - - The Biden Crisis: Deep State Theory vs. Peak State Theory, and Deep Cluster: How Influential Elites Actually Make Decisions all pushed his opinion that there is no real Deep State running American policy behind the scenes of at least the Executive Branch.*** I would disagree going well back 2, 3, 5? decades, but now with JoeMentia, I mean, come on, man! How COULD that guy be in charge, even if they let him? On that score, Mr. Sailer's been misled on at least this one thing, with no easy way to back out of his mistake.

The article in Takimag gets into conspiracy theories more generally. The question Mr. Sailer starts with has an obvious answer:
If the mainstream media won’t tell you the truth about the President’s age-driven mental decline until forced to spill the beans by a debate on live TV, can you trust them not to try to mislead you about other things as well?

No, of course not.
Right.
Does that also mean that if they misdirect you about some facts, that therefore they are lying to you about anything and everything?
No, of course not. You mean like what date the 4th of July falls on this year? No, of course not.

OK, I get it. They aren't all OUT TO lie. We've got to trust but verify, i.e., generally not trust them. We can figure out from many sources and our common sense when we are being lied to. However:
Part of the problem is that most people aren’t good at running reality checks on theories they hear.
Steve Sailer is. However, he's gotten a big head, and he thinks this applies to everything. When it comes to his own particular niche studies - black crime, as one example brought up, yes, his common sense matches the data. He knows very well who in the media is lying about crime stats, racial and sex differences in abilities, sports, university admissions and SAT scores, the gays ... There's a lot more Steve Sailer is good at. This doesn't include every subject though, and there's a hell of a lot going on in the world.

Mr. Sailer brings up 5 conspiracy theories. As he does "basic reality checks on the theories mentioned above", I agree with him on 4 and the 5th is one I neither know nor care much about. These are the easy ones, and well, this debunking is a "no duh", but doesn't cover it all:
But nobody seems to care much about those questions, instead preferring to emphasize genuinely stupid theories such as that jetliners didn’t actually crash into the WTC.
The "No Planes" theory is not the only area of doubt, and I don't think it's so very prevalent at all. Going back to before "But nobody..." there (sorry), Mr. Sailer agrees:
Well, 9/11 was a conspiracy, and like several other conspiracies, such as Lincoln’s assassination, it’s not clear just how high up the conspiracy went. Who knew within the Saudi regime? Who in Pakistan gave Osama refuge a mile from the Pakistani military academy?
Sure, and who knew something like this was coming and wanted it to happen? (The "Patriot Act" was ready to go right out the box.)

One problem I have with all this is Mr. Sailer's particular picks of conspiracies to discuss here. Here's a good one that he adds:
An interesting aspect of this trend is that valid conspiracy theories are of little interest to the right these days. For example, as I reported in this column on Nov. 11, 2020, and confirmed on March 23, 2022, Trump’s Operation Warp Speed would likely have been announced a huge success on the day before the 2020 election, except that Pfizer shut down processing of its Covid vaccine clinical trial from late October until the day after the voting, which allowed the corporation to avoid Democratic enmity for helping Trump win reelection.
Yes, as I wrote in the comments on his site a few times, that was a very good scoop. Of course, the Lyin' Press wasn't interested.
But the GOP rank and file has since proved, as Pfizer executives smartly anticipated in October 2020, too stupid to notice.
Wasn't there something about a laptop computer found around this same time? The Lyin' Press covered that story too... with a pillow, until it was dead****. They'd have done the same with your story, Steve, but it didn't get far enough for them to need to.

Yeah, and what ABOUT that rank and file GOP? The MTG's and Matt Goetz's are not your rank and file GOP. I'm pretty sure they'd have been the ones touting your scoop to the rooftops. Yet, those are the types you deride harshly with your columns about lowbrow people of the right. Sure, MTG touted that nutty Jewish space lasers conspiracy theory - see America's deep divide and Large Marge expanded version - but as you can see in those and other videos Peak Stupidity has featured, she's onto the important conspiracy theories. She understands and calls out the UniParty for what it is. She is onto the Ukraine war scam. She explained directly why Congressmen act and vote like they do. She calls out CongroSomalians who work on behalf of foreign powers. She has done what (unfortunately little) she could do to expose the lying traitorous Alejandro Mayorkas. Oh, but those people aren't evil, no, just... they've not read Noticing, so they don't get it...

Those are the true and important conspiracies that Steve Sailer seems to want nothing to do with. It's a wild guess, but I'd put $1,000 on his not liking MTG one bit. (It's the least I can spare - I'm in LUV!... not with her body but with her patriotism.)

The problem is just that the imagined conspirators that have been taking this country down have not ever having read his columns or else things would all be very clear to them, and they'd quit doing that.
Instead, Republicans have decided that Trump’s immensely well-publicized plan to rush vaccines into service, which proved more or less successful, was actually a sinister plot to poison America. But of course, they also argue, Trump should therefore be reelected…because reasons.
OK, now this is getting stupid. Your average Republican probably got the vax. Your average WISE Republican didn't and likely thinks like the Peak Stupidity crowd: This vaccine was not safe, it was not effective by definition, and that wouldn't be so bad if they hadn't tried to mandate we take it. It was pushed out there to calm the Panickers (like Steve Sailer, I must say), to make a lot of money for Pfizer, and so the Feral Gov't (yes, including dumbo Trump) could say they DID SOMETHING!

Guys like me can't believe Trump would be so stupid as to still keep bringing any of this Fall '20 "warp speed" stuff up. (Has he?) He did not arrange for the country to get invaded at warp speed though. As stupid as he can get occasionally often, the man cares about the American people. If nothing else, we're voting for him for this reason. Oh, but he's too low brow - wouldn't fit in on Meet the Press.
Unfortunately, an increasing number of people on the right are making these kinds of flying leaps into the lunatic fringe.
Even if that hyperbole were all true, so what - let 'em fight, and let 'em WIN!

Steve Sailer: Trust, but Verify: "Trust"? Yes, he's an honest guy. "Verify"? I can verify that he has temporarily lost his way...


* More background.

** I've been meaning to write about this. I ALMOST signed up. It's not the money, it's the time - I will explain.

*** Bribery, blackmail, threats, etc., to influence the other 2 (or 3 if I count the Lyin' Press) branches are another subject. I don't think I'd agree with him there either.

**** That was coined by the "Iowahawk", Dave Burge.


Comments (8)




John Derbyshire reviews Mania


Posted On: Wednesday - July 3rd 2024 12:47PM MST
In Topics: 
  Books



It's baaaackkk! Nooooo!!! Don't worry though. Peak Stupidity will not continue our series of posts written as just one book review of Lionel Shriver's latest novel Mania. (We're done, but just in case: basic review - - book criticisms - - author criticisms and ending post.)

I just saw that in his June monthly "Diary", John Derbyshire has a review of the book. See, THAT'S how you write a review! I can't keep most of them from getting WAY too long - I really gotta work on this. This is a great example for me.

However, I will say that Mr. Derbyshire, in writing a short review, did not get to demonstrate the writing of Lionel Shriver that has me convinced she will never learn... basic NYC leftism is hard to shake. So, if you want to get the full story, you'd have to read Peak Stupidity's long-ass review instead.

That's too bad about Lionel Shriver. She's still good people, I suppose, but ...



No comments - Click here to start thread



I Want a New Jab


Posted On: Tuesday - July 2nd 2024 6:26PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music  Humor  Kung Flu Stupidity



We're running a little behind here. That is, I'll think of funny and/or appropriate things to say often 2 years after the perfect time. This was the case with our I am Monk! No, I am Monk! post 2 years after its time of peak memeity, and then we were about a year late in using the We're Not Gonna Take It! songs (Twisted Sister and, going back another 15 years, The Who - much better tune and sound) for our anti-jab posts.

Same here, but since we had the Huey Lewis & the News song parody in this post on Saturday, we've already got lyrics in mind. Just in time for the newest Bird Flu and word from The WHO, it's I Want a New Jab:

I want a new jab,
one that won't make me itch,
one that won't make me drop stone dead,
on the soccer pitch.

I want a new jab,
for the new Bird Flu,
one that won't make me lose my job
and spend a year in the loo.

I want a new jab,
no more are enn emm ayy.
no 2 foot clots in my arteries,
Don't care what old Fauci say.

One that won't make me sterile,
wondering what to do,
one that won't make me feel like
I've been lied to by The WHO, oh-oh, lied to by The WHO...


I won't embed I Want a New Drug here again. How about this one, Heart and Soul, another nice mid-1980s hit from the same album, Sports, by Huey Lewis and the News? I like it.



Comments (8)




Tucker/iSteve interview: Coming to America


Posted On: Tuesday - July 2nd 2024 12:04PM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  Pundits  Race/Genetics

(Continued from the interview - - Who/whom? and the Kung Flu question.)



I've got no argument with Steve Sailer in this post - it's more like an "atta-boy". I've only got this series going about this great TC interview because I have followed Mr. Sailer for a good while and am surprised when I do disagree with him. As for Tucker, he does a great interview, meaning he doesn't spend so much time giving opinions - therefore I have no argument with him. There was that exception, already covered, of his remarks on the Kung Flu. Of course I had no arguments with any of that!

I was pleasantly surprised to hear Mr. Sailer talk about something here that I'd thought he'd not noticed at all. He has presented his "World's Scariest Graph"* and discussed it often. In the first part of our 2-part series Coming to America (Part 1 and Part 2), I wrote:
What he's NOT noticed, as I have, is that they ARE coming, and NOW. I am not even referring to the Bai Dien imposed 12,000,000*** "newcomers" from all reaches of the Earth, including Africa.
If you do a search** Most of his writing is about African immigration to Europe. That is surely an important and angering topic, but for America, I didn't see much. There is this, from '15: Mortgage Meltdown in Prince George's County Among African Immigrants. He discussed a story from one of his usual sources, the Washington Post, starting with:
From the Washington Post, a story of an African immigrant family who have racked up $1.3 million in debt, even while not paying their mortgage for over six years.
Yeahhhh. Anyway, I'm glad to see that iSteve brought up to Tucker (and America) in this interview what Peak Stupidity has been noticing with alacrity but serious dismay.

The context here is iSteve's great use of the word "equity" to indicate what the race hustlers in this country really want, yes, your stuff, your money, such as your home equity. He's really clever this way, and using the ctrl-left's terms against them, like the word "woke" itself is a nice tactic in the cold cultural war.

The transcript below starts after iSteve has expounded on this to Tucker, and he gets back to discussing D.I.E. just after this:
... Another question might.

Steve Sailer [01:02:07] Be.

Steve Sailer [01:02:08] You know, how how big is the African immigration going to going to be if you'll go to look at the border, there's all sorts of people showing up from Mauritania. Except. ] They're still way above. Reproduction rate in, in most of Africa. Right. And. It's not people know how to get out of Africa. Now you get a smartphone, it gives you only instructions and so forth. Clearly, you know, highly legitimate descendant of American slaves and Barack Obama not at all. But yeah, that's we're going to see.
Just as with many of the politicians, though, iSteve is alarmed about the illegal portion of the invasion in particular. As I discussed in those 2 posts, the legal number must be higher than that. That 13% Black! people number will not hold***, not unless the rest of the invasion continues as it has under Dark Brandon.



Anyway, thank you, Steve Sailer for bringing this up. I'd thought you hadn't noticed.


PS: Since we're talking Africa, the continent, here, I'll note that Tucker brought up the terrible situation in South Africa nowadays****
Tucker [01:43:30] Is there a point? I mean, I'm asking this question because South Africa, you know, tried this in the country is just continuously degraded for, well, 30 years this year and to the point where there's no electricity in parts at times, and the murder rate is among the highest in the world, the rape rate is the highest in the world. And but there's no deceleration that I can tell from afar, thousands of miles away. But I'm watching and it's like, no, there's no second guessing. It's just like going to ride it right back to the Stone age. Pretend it was never an advanced society in our country, which is different from South Africa in a lot of ways. Will there be a point, like when the planes do crash and the air traffic controllers are just high, or too dumb, or distract or don't care, to keep the points from crashing? Will there be a public demand like, no, no, no, let's just hire by ability from now on?
(These time stamps are only guaranteed accurate for the interview on the TuckerCarlson.com site. Sorry I can't give you my PW, only because it requires the email address too.)

This led to some great discussion, but, as usual, iSteve has the pilot/ATC stuff a bit wrong. Pilots now have generally much LESS real experience, but there are other reasons for the great safety record. ATC had delays in training indeed due to D.I.E., but the Kung Flu fiasco was a big part of it - out of the mouths of ATC personnel to me.



* This graph of projected Africa population up through 4 billion, while the rest of the world remains stable below that is actually dubbed "The World's Most Important Graph" by iSteve. I substituted in "Scariest", because, yeah, if you want a decent world left ...

** This is page 3 of the search for me on "Africa _+ Immigration", early on in my reading of his work.

*** There's chain migration in all sorts of ways, and there are offspring.

**** See Peak Stupidity's series Cry, the Deconstructed Country!: Continued from Part 1 - - Part 2 - - Part 3 - - Part 4: Anecdote on Anti-Apartheid - - Part 5: Cold and Hot Wars, and the Commies, of course - - Part 6: Africa Wins - - and Part 7: 1st World Memories of Suid Afrikaanse Lugdiens and Part 8: As Falls S. Africa....


Comments (6)




Hungary for a change


Posted On: Monday - July 1st 2024 6:58PM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  Globalists  World Political Stupidity

Viktor Orban - Hungarian Nationalist leader:



(By "Nationalist", I mean someone who cares about his own people and nation. Why is that a bad word? Does it all go back to Hitler? I'd say more likely since The Great War and Woodrow Wilson.)

We've all likely been cheering on this ray of hope in the fight with the Globalist overlords, in his case, the big crowd of them in Brussels. Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban has been strongly resisting the Population Replacement Programme designed by the Globalists for the White people of Europe (along with the people of N, where N = any nation with a present or former White majority).

VDare, experts on immigration invasion issues here and worldwide, has praised this man and his work many times. I've read recently that the EU leaders will withhold some 10's of millions, maybe even 3-digit millions of Eurotrash currency, if Mr. Orban doesn't comply with their demands that he open up Hungary to the Hungry Hordes, hungry for welfare and White women that is. He's told them where to go.

Well, you learn something new everyday, and on one of the non-clickbait articles on The Gateway Pundit one Paul Serran reports Conservative Champion Viktor Orbán Takes Over European Union Presidency – Hungarian PM Vows to ‘Make Europe Great Again’. Whaaa? Yes. It's pretty surprising that the EU apparatchiks will honor it, but apparently, it's Orban's turn at a 6-month rotation as President of the EU. The Hungarian PM has described the EU as "the contemporary parody version of the Soviet Union’" Indeed.

The short article explains the complicated EU management, but unfortunately the EU Presidency seems to be worth that whole warm bucket of spit, after the consumption of Belgian-invented French Fries with mayo (Hmmm, this post is making me Hungary!):
“The presidency’s role is to set the agenda, chair meetings of EU members in all fields except foreign or euro zone matters, seek consensus among EU member states and broker agreements on legislation with the European Parliament.”
"Except for foreign and EU zone affairs." What DO you get to set the agenda for? And when you do get to set this agenda, so what?

Oh, well. It's Hungary's turn. The fun part is that Victor Orban is out there saying he will MEGA, Make Europe Great Again. The EU people don't like that one bit, no, not one bit.

C'mon people! It's been over a century now - Make Nationalism Great Again!



Kick ass Viktor Orbán!


PS: The Eurozone elections have been major good news lately, at least that from France. The continuation - after nothing but an introduction so far - of a comparison of America vs, Europe's prospects under the PRP and Globalism in general should include this news. I want to start with the damage already done though.


Comments (22)




I Want a New Drug


Posted On: Saturday - June 29th 2024 8:04PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '26  Music  Humor  Trump  Hildabeast  Zhou Bai Dien

Again, though I didn't watch Thursday evening's entertainment, excuse me, important part of the American electoral process, I have seen enough to comment. I've read many people contending that Bai Dien must have been off his normal cocktail of medications that have kept him sounding somewhat coherent on previous occasions.

I'm not so sure I agree. Those other occasions were speeches that Bai Dien could simply read off, as best as he can. This time, I've heard he had been given the questions ahead of time (as the Hildabeast had for debates back in '16, causing the canning of a journalist responsible in cahoots with her on the cheating). Even so, that requires memorizing talking points and then remembering them again and stating them clearly. Even had he had a drug cocktail, it seemed to me that Bai Dien was trying to pull these things out of what's left of of his mind and just not succeeding. He had that look, but who knows?

Maybe Bai Dien's handlers just screwed up and got the mixture and/or dosages wrong. I'm sure those mistakes were the actions of an intern. (Always, always, blame it on an intern!) If the D-squad plans on keeping this guy (another post there) around, they're going to have to spend some time at the Apothecary's or even an organic chemistry lab. In a lucid moment even Dark Brandon must realize "I want a new drug."

And now, Peak Stupidity presents some music for this Saturday evening, this time from a band out of the San Francisco Bay area. The sound from this clean-cut looking '80s band was pop-rock (it was hip to be square), and they had a number of fun hits during their time.

From Joey Bai Dien and the Blues, (the "blue team", see?) it's I Want a New Drug:
I want a new drug,
one that won't make me sick,
one that won't make me sniff kids' hair,
and take a real quick lick.

I want a new drug,
one that comes in a pill,
that you mix with your ice cream cone,
prescribed by Doctor Jill.

I want a new drug,
one that might get me laid,
one that won't make me fall down stairs,
one that beats Medicaid.

One that won't make me stumble,
wondering' what to do,
one that makes me feel the way I feel when I'm with you,
when I'm alone with you, Cornpop...



Huey Lewis and the News was:
Huey Lewis – lead vocals, harmonica
Sean Hopper – keyboards, backing vocals
Bill Gibson – drums, percussion, backing vocals
Johnny Colla – rhythm guitar, saxophone, percussion, backing vocals
Mario Cipollina – bass guitar
Chris Hayes – lead guitar, backing vocals

This song was from their very successful album Sports.

Thanks for reading and writing in this week folks. More Bai Dien/Trump and Tucker/iSteve goodness is coming next week, and maybe we'll start back on the abandoned series about Europe v America and the Population Replacement Programme. Ad hoc stupidity will crop up - we'll call it when we see it.


Comments (16)




Debate wrap-up by Old Soldier and E.H. Hail


Posted On: Saturday - June 29th 2024 9:12AM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '26  Trump  Zhou Bai Dien

There are 37 comments (far shy of a record, mind you) under our quick Presidential Debate post of Thursday night. Though I didn't watch it, there WILL be more posts, as this kind of humor and stupidity is not something a site like ours can afford to pass up.

Between that and the encouraging and engrossing Tucker Carlson interview of Steve Sailer, we'll be busy through Tuesday. Other stupidity will have to wait in the queue. For now, let me paste in 2 summaries of the debate, first a short one from Old Soldier, and then a longer one, with much on the Lyin' Press handling and reaction, from E.H. Hail follows.

From commenter Old Soldier:
****************************************
The things that were apparent to me during the debate: (a) Biden definitely knew the questions in advance and had carefully prepared responses programmed into his mind...but couldn't possibly speak the responses clearly because his over-drugged brain was too drugged for him to say anything clearly (b) Biden looked like death warmed over (c) Biden was slurring most words to the point where his words were incomprehensible and his sentences were just garbled sounds that even he did not understand (d) Biden seemed totally lost and confused throughout the debate. I could go on and on, but there's no point.

After the debate, the liberal commentators worked diligently to put a positive spin on Biden's responses and they're now fact checking everything Trump said while fact checking NOTHING that Biden said (but maybe the fact checkers couldn't understand Biden any better than I did???).
****************************************

From commenter E.H. Hail:
****************************************
I'm glad I watched the debate, or most of it, in its full form -- by which I mean not clips curated by partisans or social-media addicts, but the debate as aired. I also watched without following any rolling commentary on social-media or elsewhere during. Afterwards I saw reactions from the various sides, including CNN, MSNBC, Fox, Univision, and the interesting network NewsNation. I'll give here all that I can remember.

Newsnation seems to hire anchors fired from elsewhere (Chris Cuomo a host; Bill O'Reilly, an analyst; Geraldo, same) and aim for a happy-go-lucky big-tent centrism. The tone is definitely different and happier feeling that the big players.

NewsNation brought on Robert Kennedy Jr., who, it was explained, had "held his own debate" on Youtube. RFK Jr. answered all the same questions asked by the CNN moderators, for a Youtube audience of his fans. I didn't see any of that. He is not excelling in the polls.

Chris Cuomo suggested to RFK Jr., on the air, that he (RFK) ought to make some calls to the DNC. He could now find receptive audience for an arrangement for the DNC to ditch Biden and nominate him, RFK Jr., as the Democratic nominee for president after Biden's terrible performance. Chris Cuomo said it's because "you have such solid Democratic credentials," because he's already in the field and has an enthusiastic following, and because Biden had failed so shockingly at the debate, the stars had aligned. RFK seemed to say that would never happen. The DNC hates him and is inundating his campaign with legal harassment to try to keep him off ballots or otherwise harm him. He seemed really resentful against the DNC.

Biden's constant rifting off, trailing off, staring into space, mumbling, speaking too softly, all looked bad, of course. But I was, I think, more taken by the 'canned' nature of all his responses, a point Old Soldier brings up. I don't know if I agree that Biden "definitely" had the questions fed to him before the debate (although Hillary Clinton did have that advantage in her CNN debates, it was later revealed). But what is for sure is these were rehearsed lines. The problem is, Biden couldn't remember his own rehearsed lines and constantly bumbled them. A good thinker, who is also a extemporaneous speaker, doesn't need to memorize set-piece lines like that. There were also times I wondered whether Biden had a secret ear-piece in which someone was correcting his missteps live, because he often corrected himself after misspeaking. But maybe that just happens with someone trying hard to recall memorized lines.

Biden's points were the "same-old, same-old" ones he always uses. This always happens with "old" people, of course; some people are still sharp in the early eighties (Biden turns 82 later in this year), but almost all people, by that age, find it hard to truly live in the time they are in. Instead, they are always re-living some time of the past and applying it to the present. There were moments when this also came through from Biden, ranging from re-living the talking-points of the 2010s, including some proven to be false; but also dropping in the word "segregation" when the topic of Blacks came up, a word from the 1960s when Biden was in his twenties.

Another observation: Biden's facial reactions, body-language reactions to Trump were mostly muted. He sometimes condemned him as an evil person or a liar, but when Trump was making points he just stared blankly, like he was confused.

Someone produced this 'meme' during the debate, which hits the points I am making there:



MSNBC strangely brought on the California governor, Newsom, for a strangely long and strangely toned soft-ball interview. It was supposed to be a reaction to the debate, but it turned out to be, in my opinion, a long Gavin Newsom For President infomercial. All grins by the mixed-race anchor for interviewed him, the four-night-a-week successor to Rachel Maddow.

I did see some of the MSNBC reaction. Rachel Maddow, their star, was on hand and in the driver's seat of their large panel of experts. Her anti-Trump hysteria about Russia-Russia-Russia, and all the rest of what she traded in for so long, was absent tonight. She looked shell-shocked and said frankly that Biden gave the worst possible debate performance short of falling off the stage and begging for help on live TV (she didn't say any of this, this is my interpreting her mood). She looked like a general who had just received intelligence that the enemy had him surrounded, supplies would be cut off, and there was no easy way out. A restrained panic. That would characterize the mood of most of the anti-Trump commentators.

However, MSNBC tried to focus on the anti-Trump line (playing to their audience) and tried to go neutral on Biden. CNN, meanwhile, which had a panel of its own experts that looked to be about twelve people, was really anti-Biden, and kept putting things on the air like "Influential Dem: Biden as nominee is problematic" and more. CNN brought on Kamala Harris who attacked and mocked her interviewer, but some on the panel of experts praised her for it, which was also strange.

On Fox, the response was as would be expected. The smart-alec Jesse Watters, who is Tucker Carlson's replacement, said he was shocked tonight, not at anything from the debate stage but from within his own chest. He said he felt repeated pangs of sympathy for Biden, he felt bad for Biden. The performance, supposedly, was SO bad (for Biden) that it induced sympathy, "someone help this old man" feeling in him, a well-known Biden-hater.

I think CNN had the old anti-Trump hack Chris Wallace, the Jewish son of longtime journalist Mike Wallace. Chris Wallace was long of Fox, so I'm not sure why he was on CNN. (It turns out he went from Fox to CNN in early 2022; who knew?). Chris Wallace was on the warpath against Biden, saying it was a deep national shame that a man with clear signs of dementia was running for president, and there was no defense for this. Biden had a job to do, and he failed to do it. One or two co-panelists tried to contradict him, but he slammed them and morally attacked them for trying to defend Biden here. This is a Jewish debating tactic that I've often seen used, and is a large part of what's behind the crassness of political commentary now, especially its cable-TV form. It's take-no-prisoners moral-shaming.

Chris Wallace, who is a Democrat and hates Trump, was clearly trying to use his considerable influence to get Biden replaced. Although millions were watching all this chattering, a lot of it was, I think, aimed at the donors and the DNC bigwigs. The DNC has enough "superdelegates" that they might be able to maneuver a way to defeat Biden at the convention and replaced him with someone else. No one knew who that might be. A few names came up, one (I can't remember from whom) was: Josh Shapiro. He was elected governor of Pennsylvania in 2022.

Bill O'Reilly, on NewsNation, said he guaranteed that Biden would not be the nominee. He wasn't certain of that position before the debate, but now he is certian, he says. From the signals CNN was sending, it's no longer implausible that an anti-Biden palace-coup will occur within the DNC, before their convention in mid-August of this year, at Chicago. Geraldo and Bill O'Reilly laughed at both being old guys who remember the 1968 DNC convention in Chicago and its legendary chaos (I recall Pat Buchanan narrated himself witnessing the chaos from atop a high building). The 2024 DNC convention is also in Chicago. Bill O'Reilly then added that the role of left-wing violent protestors from 1968 would now be played by "pro-Hamas people."

There was also a live-translation Spanish simulcast on Univision. It's a remarkable skill to be able to do live-translation in that way. It must've been especially tough to do it for Biden when he was at his least-coherent.

The Univision commentary, which I also saw some of, was neutral and lacked the alarmist tone of CNN and MSNBC, and the gloating from Fox. From what I've seen of Univision's news coverage, they strive to be several things: (1.) pro-Hispanic, always (in which news is given from a "things happening with Hispanics always lead); (2.) serious news and not overt propaganda; (3.) not too serious, a lightness of touch, in the way you get from local news or from English newscasts of many decades past now.

Univision had two commentators on, one Republican, one Democrat, both White men with thick glasses who spoke reasonably and politely and were completely without histrionics and urged caution at jumping to any conclusions. But as I've already said, histrionics ruled the day for the agenda-setting talkers of the Left.

What's disappointing to me about all this drama, which is easy to get swept up into, as a sports mega-fan can be swept up by some big tournament. (Univision chose to air the debate and follow-on commentary instead of the latest "Copa America" soccer match, which it's been airing since the Western Hemisphere's biggest soccer-tournament began last week.) But in the debate itself and in the avalanche of reactions, of which I've given what I remember here, I heard little about actual policies.

Will Trump debate illegals or not? He dodged the question (which was asked to him twice), and instead he just used his usual talking-points. He bashed Biden for letting them in and focused on the dubious idea that most are directly exported from prisons in other countries, or insane asylums. He still wouldn't say if he'd deport them or not. What's his policy? Who knows? It all becomes a personality-game and a gotcha-game.

Trump is a clinical narcissist and, like all such people, is good at charming audiences. He won't even say for sure what his policies are, though. And given his record, we have no way to rely on him even keeping what promises he does make. So you're not voting for a set of policies but just kind of a vague apparition, a tendency, a mood, a gust of wind.
****************************************

I like that meme, but still, I'm attached to the line at the bottom of a small poster the secretary had in her office: Dumb looks are still free!



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Tucker/iSteve interview: the Kung Flu question


Posted On: Friday - June 28th 2024 10:01PM MST
In Topics: 
  Pundits  Kung Flu Stupidity

After looking at parts of this interview the 2nd time around, I knew exactly why I could see a question about the Kung Flu coming from Tucker about 2 seconds before Tucker came out with it. As he's written in his book and has talked about in recent talks (usually in the summary), Steve Sailer again brought up his social commentary bread & butter. That is, he explains (01:17:45 - 01:18:43) that the personal, local anecdotes and observations we make cannot be unconnected to the results of analysis of lots of data ("This higher world of The Science", as Tucker chimes in "The world of data") on the same issues. As he says, "There's just one reality out there." and "It all tells pretty much the same story."

Here Mr. Sailer is, explaining to Tucker this philosophy. Yes, we have play-by-play commentary here at Peak Stupidity:



As iSteve finished up on this sound point that I've heard before from him, I had the thought "OK, well, how'd all that apply to the Covid one-niner PanicFest, Steve?" Because thoughts fly pretty fast sometimes, I remember thinking just after that "I guess he's not gonna touch the Kung Flu issue, and good idea there too!" Then, Tucker says (more play-by-play) at 01:18:44 - he can't help himself here, I think - "But why is it? ... we don't mean to get into Covid, but ..."

Ahaaa! I kind of agree with the general thoughts of E.H. Hail on this, at least as he's told us about the Tucker network TV show, that what's going to be discussed is planned ahead of time. At least on the Kung Flu, from the way this went down, that's what I think. Likely iSteve didn't want to get into that one, as, that period just wasn't one of his better stretches of Noticing, March to June of '20.



So Tucker probably slipped up there, but I LUV LUV LUV his point. He didn't ask a question. and he talked for a while, saying something I've personally said a lot. Not only do I not know anyone who's died from the Kung Flu, I don't (knowingly) know anyone who KNOWS ANYONE who died from it.* Tucker said this with different wording, talked about knowing people who died from the vaccine, continued with a his amazement at the PanicFest, and then simply let iSteve talk, with no question asked (at 01:19:22).

"Yeeeahhhh", started iSteve, but that's just one of his thinking modes. I am pretty sure he doesn't agree with Tucker's view. At this point, he went to one of his points from at least one post (that I did read) in that Spring of '20, lists of deaths of prominent people (celebrities) who died of Covid. I easily found one specific article, Mean Age of Celebrity COVID-19 Deaths: 78.5, from May 21st of '20. (Anyone else remember that stuff?) In this case it was former NY Mets star pitcher Tom Seaver (baseball too!) who Mr. Sailer brought up.

The logic of his answer is... unsound. Watch for yourself (01:19:23). He admitted that Tom Seaver, not that old at 74, had dementia (Tucker brought up Parkinsons) and "didn't have the good life ahead of him". iSteve says that we weren't aware of these people who were "no longer in the public eye". Why did they have to be in the public eye for us to know them? We're not all celebrity worshippers. (Did it help a lot not to have a TV, like the Amish?) There are plenty of old people near me, and none of them I know died of the Kung Flu. Then we come to that question again, did, say, I dunno, Tom Seaver, die OF the Kung Flu or just WITH the Kung Flu?

At 01:21:12, Tucker moved on. I need to move on.

With all this excellent Social Science Noticing, in Spring of '20, Steve Sailer didn't notice the problem with the Totalitarian measures being enacted using this virus as an excuse. He got sucked into it all for a while. I am not holding a grudge here. I agree with 98% of iSteve's explanations of Social phenomena. He shouldn't have to say he's sorry**, as we didn't have to read him and agree for a few months there. He got better. It's just that Tucker brought this up, and, well, those 2 1/2 minutes had me siding with Tucker over iSteve, in what didn't seem like a point of contention but was.


* There is an exception in that Mr. MBlanc46, commenter here, has stated that he knows someone who died from it.

** Saying "I was wrong" would be in order though.


Comments (10)




Bad luck $treak at the $PLC


Posted On: Friday - June 28th 2024 1:05PM MST
In Topics: 
  Race/Genetics  ctrl-left

VDare's got so many good writers, who often get into niche areas of immigration/racial stupidity with very good follow-through. The HATE.orgs, such as the $PLC.hate, the ADL.hate, and so forth can be real nemesi (?) for Conservatives wanting to get the truth out. VDare has gotten grief from the $PLC particularly, in the form of advisory info to Totalitarian government officials and recommendations that induce cancellations.

Lately Pat Cleburne has been all over the story of the $PLC's recent woes. The start of their woes goes back a ways, with Steve Sailer having written multiple posts about the change in management.

See, there was this grifter named Morris Dees, a White lawyer who marketed the Southern "Poverty" Law Center into an outfit that raked in the bucks from (heavily Jewish-leaning, per Mr. Sailer) donors to supposedly help out the Black! folk... and yeah make a real decent salary in Montgomery, Alabama running this non-profit that had accumulated half a Billion bucks in the banks (some local, some not), you know, for rainy days. Morris Dees, no matter how much of a money-grubbing, slandering, anti-White grifter he was*, WAS a White guy, after all. Therefore, he did run things pretty well. Half a Billion is not chump change, even today this week.

Well, he'd put in his time, and handed the reins over to those who deserve it much more, Black! money-grubbing, slandering, anti-White grifters. They ain't necessarily so good with the finances... I wanna' say, but that's a stereotype. Somehow the $PLC is having money problems.

One of these gentleman is the IT guy. You guess.



Whaddya' gonna do? You gotta make cuts somewhere. As much as the AA crowd is due their cushy office jobs, someone's gotta go. (No, not the IT guy! Please don't throw me in the ... fire the IT guy!) Actually, the CEO, errr, top non-profiteer, is a Chinese lady, one Margaret Huang, known as Yellow Margaret, I guess. (I just mean, that's her name in Chinese! That's all.)

That's only part of the woes the $PLC is undergoing. That Circular Firing Squad problem among the "Coalition of the Fringes" has the Jewish ctrl-left donor base not so awfully enamored with the new pro-Palestine left.** Besides adding to the financial woes, there is some animosity. Believe it or not, the $PLC has a union, the Grifters Union Local #314, I think it is.
“A message from SPLC Union officers and stewards: SPLC Union is and will always be rooted in the legacy of anti-oppression and decolonization led by Black and Indigenous leaders.
... so long as you bastards pay up on your back dues!



Diversity, Inclusion, and Equity Management: "You demand WHAT?! This is a tightly-run HATE outlet here. Only so many of us got dibs on the donor equity. Get your shit together, or you're out of here."

I got on a roll there, so I'll just give links to Mr. Cleburne's articles on the Palestinian issue and an excerpt from a review of a book on the $PLC:

The $PLC Massacre—Purging Pro-Palestinians?

NOW I See Why $PLC Dumped Classroom Propaganda Program. Left’s Palestinian Purge Problem Just Beginning.

SPLC Union Strikes Another Shattering Blow At $PLC. But Is This A Labor Or A Political Dispute?

Now, the ADL is having the same conflict. Fan-damn-tastic!!

SPLC 2! Wikipedia Demotes The ADL. This Left Split On Gaza/Israel Is Epochal.

This is good news all around. I'd like to see these HATE.orgs DIE, from DIE, or Medicaid, or something. From the 1st link:
O’Neil has the advantage of having written Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center. This book’s Amazon accurately says "The Southern Poverty Law Center … has… contributed to a climate of fear and hostility in America. Hotels, web platforms, and credit card companies have blacklisted law-abiding Americans because the SPLC disagrees with their political views … Corporate America, Big Tech, government, and the media are wrong to take the SPLC’s disingenuous tactics at face value.
I love the book title.

As for you union workers, once you set foot in the Southern Poverty Law Center offices, you'd best set'chr mind to workin'!





* Yet, Steve Sailer says Morris Dees is alright - in so many words - because he's a smart and fun guy or something ...

** Would it not be better if none of these people had any influence in our country?


Comments (2)




Who's the sucker 'round here?


Posted On: Thursday - June 27th 2024 7:33PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '26  Humor  Trump  Zhou Bai Dien



My wife just showed me a couple of clips off of Telegram. We have no TV hooked up to anything but a DVD player. Now I wish I had had a 12 pack at some friend's place for this!

"My son was not a loser, he's not a sucker!
You're the sucker - you're the loser!"


Unless it was in the context of the great father/son corruption, you don't bring up he family. Still, Trump was right about Hunter.

"I really don't what he said at the end of this,
and I don't think he knows what he said either."


Big LOLs here! Yes, maybe a whole case, next time.

I think the suckers are those who sat in front of CNN for hours- then again, where else can one find this level of entertainment?

Oh, and finally, some kind of big-ass Fentanyl machines:

"We need those machines."


Comments (39)




Tucker/iSteve interview: Who/whom?


Posted On: Thursday - June 27th 2024 6:54PM MST
In Topics: 
  Pundits

Our 1st few thoughts and the video itself are here. Also, I found I could watch the whole video on Tucker Carlson's own site, without logging in - I've got to go through a short process to get a new PW, but I didn't have to for this particular video. (Possibly that's the case for all new ones for a short while.)

I hope you all will watch this interview. I watched the whole thing yesterday. Today, I went over parts of it, probably about 2/3 in total, to get to the parts I want to write about. Thanks go to Mr. Hail for finding me one spot I'd skipped over today.

"Who/whom?" a phrase from the Stalinist times in the USSR (near a century ago now), is a Steve Sailerism that the latter guy didn't employ in these 2 hours. It just fits for the title today, as I just want to mention who was mentioned. This is important, as Tucker Carlson does have a whole lot of American Conservative viewers. A short mention on the Tucker Carlson show could mean a lot to those involved and more importantly to the cause of Conservatism via a large number of new readers/viewers for those mentioned.

To begin with, and to answer a question Mr. Hail had before, no, Tucker had never met iSteve before in person but obviously knew his stuff and his reputation. He compared Steve Sailer to Matt Drudge (obviously the old Matt Drudge, before he went native) in that "everybody" read him, but nobody would admit he did.



How can you NOT like that guy, once you've seen him speak? Jared Taylor is greatly on the outs with cancellors of all sorts, the usual HATE Aggregators - $PLC, etc. - the Big "TECH" platforms, and everybody. It's such a shame, but then I suppose it's not technically "a shame" when this treatment is very purposeful. I am glad to see that (22:25 to start, then 23:02), in answer to Tucker's question "So why aren't there any organizations dedicated to them [rural (especially) White people]?", Steve brought up Jared Taylor. He also told Tucker how this "bright very gentlemanly fellow" "tried to do this for 30 years, and he's still banned on Twitter..." I'm glad Steve didn't go "conventional" here, though I wish he'd mentioned American Renaissance, Mr. Taylor's website, full of new articles daily, for exposure reasons. (Now viewers would have to look him up, and good luck with that!)

VDare was not mentioned. We know that Tucker has known VDare very well, if not before, after his interview of Lydia Brimelow. I can't recall (and don't see in the transcript) that Tucker introduced Steve's writing background at all*. Therefore, Steve would have had to bring up this organization. Seeing as it was much of his bread & butter for 20 years, I really figured he'd plug VDare, at least to explain where he'd expounded on his ideas, in addition to on Takimag and for most of the last decade, The Unz Review.**



Speaking of The Unz Review, neither it - Steve's most recent steady venue - nor that gentleman above were mentioned by either man. I say "gentleman", when I sort of mean "piece of work", but kind of in a nicer way. Mr. Unz, in his quest to run a true free speech bastion, and his site most certainly is, has got some strange bedfellows writing there. It's a bit much for even the Sailers and Carlsons of today's world, yes, even after this interview.

At 01:50:30, near the end, Steve talks about his possible place in the zeitgeist. (I am not really sure what a zeitgeist is, but he brings it up a lot). He does kind of have a big head about this all, BTW. I believe that his line at that point about being the Lord Voldemort, whose name must not be mentioned, was lifted from Ron Unz's oft-used line. Mr. Unz used to say that about his site, explaining why the ctrl-left would not try to cancel him. I think Ron Unz is so far out there, he's uncancellable. As much as I admire Ron Unz to a degree***, I understand why Steve didn't mention him. (Part of it may be his recent switch to his own site - maybe money matters?)

It's a shame VDare did not get another big plug here. Steve Sailer owes them a lot.

Next post in the series, because I can't wait, and you're gonna like this one: Discussion of the Kung Flu.


PS: OK, I really needed the transcript eventually, to write this. I had to get to my wife's acct, due to too much spam in my email accounts. Thanks, again, Mr. Hail - if you want me to look up anything, let me know. I could paste in the whole transcript somewhere, on your or my site, in a comment? I just found that some sections are skipped, however - one is a full minute about Bill Buckley and Pat Buchanan.


* In the part skipped in the transcript, starting at 01:52:50, Steve brought up that he used to write for National Review in the context of Buckley and Buchanan.

** That is very likely subject to change imminently, as
Steve Sailer.net has come into fruition. We'll have more on that.

*** ... not so much his political opinion, which is occasionally damn near retarded but his stalwart defense of what might be the truth and his great web skills.


Comments (3)