Speed bumps and phone freaks
Posted On: Friday - April 2nd 2021 4:27PM MST
In Topics:   Cars  Curmudgeonry  Artificial Stupidity  Peak Stupidity Roadshow

Post like this come to me all the time, due to my being a Curmudgeon. In this case I was flying full speed over a couple of speed bumps. By flying, I mean 35 mph in a 30 - "damn the speed bumps, full speed ahead!" These were the benign ones, not ones that will hurt your frame if you get up to 10 mph.
There's a bit of neat basic physics and engineering even in something like speed bumps. Between the expected vehicles' suspensions, wheel bases, which vary a lot, of course, and the shape of the bump*, there's quite a bit to matching it with the vehicle speed desired.
Now, don't get me wrong, readers. I understand that many of these are installed in neighborhoods with kids around and a good reason to slow drivers down - I'll get back to this. I don't complain in general about them, because they are the new 4-way stop sign.** For that I am grateful. You can bash your gas tank a bit or scrape your plastic front cap, but that's still cheaper than the ticket and higher insurance prices that can result from smoothly and gas-efficiently rolling through the 4-ways. Those yellow signs are warning signs, not regulatory signs, something I amazingly have always remembered from that old drivers's written test booklet.
We've bitched about before on these pages, in Sport Utility Drivers - GET OFF
I have one vehicle that has a low ground clearance, and no, I swear I AM a White guy. I don't have low profile tires. This car is not ridiculously low, but it has a long plastic front end. There's some more engineering for you again. It's not the high acceleration or bottoming-out in the middle, for this car, but its long wheelbase and long front-end that can scrape.
The vehicle I was driving has no problem like the other, besides stuff in the back making noise as it comes back down from it's zero-g excursion. (More cool calculations for you!)
Speaking of excursions, yeah, this post is really about something else that Peak Stupidity covers, the Artificial Stupidity. Here I am, not slowing down per the idea of these bumps, but, since I spend almost no time staring at a handheld piece of iCrap***, I was looking out the window, scanning, as per old-timey Driver's Ed. I thought how this is a whole lot safer than slowpokes who stare at a screen.

(I'm pretty sure this is posed.)
Back to that stuff from the Highway Dept. written test booklet again. Remember that bit about how far you will go when you look down for 2 seconds? Yeah, well better to look outside at 35 mph than inside at 20 mph. Do THAT math. Therefore, I think there should be higher speed limits for those of us not on the damn phone. If there were a non-Orwellian way to do this, I'd be all for it. Just get off the road, period, you phone freaks!
* Some signs read "hump" now, but to me that is extremely triggering to Quasimodo and other POHs (People Of Hump), not to mention camels.
** Traffic circles have been the big rage for a decade or more. At least you can have fun with those, in light traffic. Speed bumps are sprouting out of the streets like warts on a frogologist (humor me, please). All that asphalt could probably repave the entire Route 66.
*** I've only tried it a few times, and for me at least, it is dangerous, especially at night!
Comments (4)
Hello, this is Josh in, errr, Provo, who may be who I am speaking width?
Posted On: Friday - April 2nd 2021 11:16AM MST
In Topics:   Globalists  Economics  Big-Biz Stupidity  Customer Care

(Yeah, OK, I picked the image for the hottie. What can I say? Search Engine Optimization, Bitchez!)
PeterIke's comment under the previous post reminded me to write this one, something I'd intended to write 14 1/2 months ago. (I know it exactly because that's when I saved some related images.) His question was whether Cody, Aaron, and Jason, the GoDaddy tech support guys I talked to, could really be Cody's, Aaron's and Josh's. I answered in the affirmative because I am very good in detecting accents.
That's something I like about GoDaddy and any other Big Biz outlet that has call centers in America. As far as GoDaddy, I assume most of their guys are in the Scottsdale, Arizona area, going accents and by some times I've asked them. Oh, and Cody this morning may have been woken up by me, I dunno... They are working from home now (STILL), so that could change drastically..
Being able to talk to Americans is not the normal thing anymore. Lots of this work is being outsourced, as we all have found out. It's not just the "TECH" guys, but even such support people as those involved with my healthcare plan. Big Biz is saving that 5-10 bucks an hour. I really don't think that this small difference would bust their budgets if they hired Americans. I think about the internet, which is no cheap deal* anymore for my family. When we have a connection problem (usually on the pole due to rain), the guy may come once or twice even, as they don't always get it right, but this is once every couple of years or so. These guys are contractors. I doubt each series of visits costs more than $100 to the Big Biz "provider". Averaged out, I would say that one monthly bill a year covers that.
Then for the call centers, let's say the difference is $10/hr counting overhead. Even one of the longer calls may be 20 - 30 minutes if it's about technical problems, while billing ones take 5 or 10 depending on the argument. Say once a year each on that, conservatively, so that's not even 10 bucks. What else does the company do, for ME, that is, once the infrastructure is in place? Their marginal profits on customers like me are massive. I'd say that, above the billing, probably outsourced too or very automated and the customer service, physical or other, they keep 90% of my money.
That was the economic estimating that I like to do in my head occasionally. Back to Cody, Aaron and Jason, for that small difference in costs to Big Biz, then will get happier customers. As I wrote back to PeterIke, I don't think those Josh's and Cody's in Bombay and Aarons or Phylis's in Manila are dummies. Compared to the GoDaddy guys, maybe so, but for most jobs, helping me with the healthcare complicated billing thing or helping me return parts for a broken exercise bike, for example, you don't have to be a "TECH" guru.
It's usually India or the Philippines** to which "customer care" is outsourced. That is for the simple reason that these two countries have loads of English-speaking people. In India, it was the British influence, and in the Philippines it was the American influence that has given them this advantage. Lots of these guys and girls can speak English very well, annunciation-wise, and often they hide the accents pretty impressively (though that doesn't usually work on me).
I mentioned the healthcare guy twice. I couldn't believe I had to deal with a guy out of the country on this. At a point at which the call was not going along swimmingly, I asked "Where are you?" "I am from the Philippines." Oh, OK, that could be right, but it sounded like BS. Later on in the call, I asked, "wait, where are you right now?" "Uh, in the Philippines." Ahaaaa! At least Big Biz doesn't have them lying yet.
The problem is not the speaking of English. The problem is the understanding on their end. It takes a long time to get acculturated, and these folks in India and the Philippines have not at all. They simply have a script that SHOULD cover all the questions, and speak English well. That doesn't mean we can really connect when it comes to ideas about problems. Speaking of the script, the GoDaddy guys apparently are not required to do the "I will help you with this, but ..." or "Is this answering all your concerns..." crap. They are more blunt and no-nonsense, which works out pretty well for me.
Maybe Big Biz thinks we are in no position to argue or complain when the give us strange foreigners with fake American names to talk to. However, I almost wrote a big cell phone carrier about this one. (I should have - it seems easier to just blog about it.): I joined up way back when, not only would you get Americans on the phone, but there was not voice system to get them either. They'd just do the damndest thing you've ever seen - pick up the phone when it's ringing. WHAT! A! CONCEPT!*** That was great for 5 years or more. Then, you had a voice system, but you got good people in America. By about 6-8 years back, it was overseas. I lived with it until I had a problem that was too much hassle for me to deal with them on. I let the bill charge up a couple of months due to the lack of communication regarding it and then changed companies after 14 years. No, I am not worried about my credit. It's a great feeling!
Thank you, GoDaddy, for letting your customers deal with Americans! It's a small thing to ask, but could you think about putting some of these guys' pics on the web site instead of your Dieversity tokens, as the People of GoDaddy?
* We had a run for a few years in which I'd threaten to cancel at renewal time, if they had raised the rates. Usually, an actual sales guy would CALL ME, which is pretty damn irregular for Big Biz. If he didn't play ball, I would cancel it, and switch it on in my wife's name. We've both been customers for a while, "married subscribing separately", as the IRS would put it. They are tough asses nowadays. They know you need that internet.
** On the whole, if it's not going to be Americans, I would rather deal with people in the Philippines than in India. It is partly due to my feeling that there is more scamming being done by the •Indians. The other part is that the •Indians seem to be 95% or more guys, but the Filipina/Filipina ratio is about 3 to 1. For technical things, I would rather have a guy to speak to, but for the billing stuff, well, I have the girl up top in my head, so ...
*** I really don't want to hear much of the argument that I'm saving my time punching in my own account #, etc. Half the time, they ask you to give them the same or more of the same, wasting my time!
Comments (7)
We are back to normal operations...
Posted On: Friday - April 2nd 2021 7:40AM MST
In Topics:   Websites
... but crossing your fingers would be a nice gesture anyway.
With help from commenter Adam Smith and more time on the phone (mostly hold time this morning - it was much quicker yesterday) with Cory @ Godaddy, I think things should be good now. I don't seen the comments getting cached, nor do I see my even weirder problems when I am doing my own writing. For me, it wasn't just post not appearing right away, as that's the same problem, but I had menu items acting strangely.
Forget the site name I put in the last post and subsequently stripped out. That won't work right in a few days, I think, but it's not the secure one anyway.
It turned out that the new SSL certificates are not in the same virtual "place" as the free ones I've been putting up. Things were just getting complicated enough that I laid down the money to be good for 2 years without tri-monthly hassles for all of us. Sure, that's better than every 28 days, but still...
Well, this new way had changed the caching (storing of files for quicker loading by users) to where it was doing what you saw. I still do not know the "why" on that still, but I just wanted it to STOP. Clearing the server-side cache was recommended by Cody, and, of course, it solved the problems while we were still on the phone. Once I had hung up ... that was another story. It's baaaaacck!
Being a bright guy, Cody there gave me subsequent troubleshooting steps. Next thing was to disable the cache. He didn't really describe that option as anything so bad as to have required the "caution" wording on Godaddy's control page, but this is no high-trafficked site (where you can pick up underaged girls and take 'em to Epstein's Island in the Caribbean, well, or whoever inherited the place) either. This seems to have worked! We didn't have to escalate any further. Yeah!
Anyway, first:
Peak Stupidity offers our profusist apologies for these problems. We know you have a choice in stupidity-discussion websites when you surf.. Please accept our token gift of free reading and commenting for life! (OK, I know, you'd rather have the tote bag.)
I've got one hell of a piece of stupidity off the New Yorker from an iSteve commenter that I really want to get on and about 5 other ones ready to write. I've had enough of this "TECH" stuff for, hopefully 2 years now.
PS: Well, we're still not out of the woods yet. This won't affect the reading or commenting, but I can't edit a post* with youtube videos embedded. To be precise, I can't submit it to the database without getting to a warning about the firewall. This is not time critical, but we've gotta have our music here!
* I only found that out because I see typos weeks later that I want to fix.
Comments (5)
Not April Fools, I swear
Posted On: Thursday - April 1st 2021 4:42PM MST
In Topics:   Websites
Peak Stupidity readers and commenters: I wouldn't do that to you all to begin with. There's a problem with commenting, and it's more than just that. While doing admin stuff, I'm seeing a problem too that must be related. Pages are acting weird for me.
For those computer types (hey, Adam), the comments are making it into the database right away. They are not displaying on the pages right away though. I will see whether that's the story for this very post I'm writing now. I haven't checked the time lag yet, for either my problems or the comment problems, but anything longer than normal is no good.
This is not a complete mystery, as I had the hosting service help me get a new SSL cert. It HAS to have something to do with that. I'll be in touch later on this evening with them, and see if they can be of help. The two bright young White guys, Aaron and Jason, who got me going on the SSL thing are a great example of who SHOULD be on the front page of Godaddy's customer service pages. We, and they, deserve better.
I hope to solve this so I can do some normal posting tomorrow. The lack of posting on Wednesday was just due to the normal too much to do to allow a good quite hour or two, and, yeah, OK, I was writing on unz again, haha.
Addendum: (I've got to do this within the dBase editor.) Yeah, this post didn't appear on the site at 1642 MST after I submitted it. If anyone sees this, try to check the time when you do and remember it. I'll have at least a maximum delay time from that. Of course, your communicating that to me will be delayed too...
Comments (14)
March Mask Madness - Part 5
Posted On: Tuesday - March 30th 2021 8:56PM MST
In Topics:   Peak Stupidity Roadshow  Kung Flu Stupidity

If you've done any airline traveling in the last 9 months, you may have noticed that they have gone mask-crazy. That is, both within the terminals and on the airplanes. A month or two ago, the Feral Gov't stepped in to make it a Federal Offense not to keep one of these stupid things over one's nose and mouth. I don't recall a big debate or anything - it's all "stroke-of-the-pen, law-of-the-land" nowadays.
Well, they've got their new procedures for boarding and de-planing now, involving somehow staying 6 ft apart during this process. (Hopefully, you'll have an early arrival.) They don't get into too much detail on how the 6 ft distancing is maintained as we are seated. Perhaps, 6" or a foot suffices once we are seated, due to reasons like "better airflow", no, more like "listen, we're just doing this stupid charade so we won't get fired, OK?"
Well, we were getting up to get off, nothing near 6 ft. apart, as no one is actually fearful enough of the Kung Flu to pay attention to that stuff, cause, flight connections. This one guy I had been chatting with for just a minute or so already said something like "I think they ought to do some anal probe on those people that don't wear the masks right." I thought "now here's a cool guy, not afraid to make a few low-brow jokes about this whole ball of stupidity." Alright. "Yeah, this whole thing is getting pretty stupid, huh? This whole mask thing is a joke and ..." "No, I mean they need to punish these people. They should wear them right or..." something.
That was unbelievable to me. This damn guy, who looked like a professional businessman, was serious. He thinks they should punish the mask-deniers by sticking things in their asses. I get shocked each time I meet one of these true-believing panickers.
Comments (9)
The Attempted Assassination of Ronald Reagan
Posted On: Tuesday - March 30th 2021 9:40AM MST
In Topics:   History  Dead/Ex- Presidents

It was 40 years ago today. Ronald Reagan had been in the office of President for just 2 months and a week and a half, when a guy named John Hinckley shot 6 .22LR shots at him and those around him with a Röhm RG-14 revolver. None of the shots hit Reagan directly, but he was hit by the last bullet when it ricocheted off of the armored Presidential limousine.
It was not all in the same calendar year, but during that same winter of 1980-81 Pope John Paul II got shot, Reagan got shot, John Lennon got shot dead, and worst of all, Zeppelin drummer John Bonham died from heavy drinking, all within a few months as I recall. Nope, the country, the world, and music concerts were not fenced off and LOCKDOWNed, believe it or not! The Vatican has a wall though. (It's been there a while)
I know while writing this that not all real Conservatives today are fans of Ronald Reagan. They have some good points. In general, Peak Stupidity disagrees*. We have admitted that old Ronnie screwed up royally on 2 major policy strategies:
1) One (not in order, as (2) was a long-term thing) is that Mr. Reagan signed the "Immigration Reform and Control Act". (We got the immigration, but not the reform and control.) Mr. Reagan was duped by the Congressional D's, and he admitted later that it was his biggest mistake of his Presidency.
2) The other was his trusting in a deal with Congress that the domestic budget would be cut to keep the budget nearer to balanced as the military budget was ramped up to win the Cold War. No, it wasn't some deal on paper, but just a generally agreed on thing. You don't do that. He should have known not to trust those people, as civil as things still were then.
All that was still in the future on March 30th of 1981. A 25 y/o guy named John Hinckley, Jr., born as an Okie, but from Dallas, Texas, had been obsessed with impressing the actress Jodie Foster, ever since she was a juvenile actress in the movie Taxi Driver**. The movie plot has Travis Bickle (Robert DeNiro) attempting to assassinate a presidential candidate. Mr. Hinckley had such an obsession with Miss Foster that he moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where she was attending college at Yale, to better stalk her. See, now there's a big lesson for all of us: The movies, even when they were non-PC and worth a damn, were just ENTER-FREAKING-TAINMENT! The actors and hot actresses are not actually those movie characters, which is why I don't care very much who is in a movie and why we have no reason to listen to any stupid political advice out of the mouths of these people. They look good and recite lines. They don't even do most of the stunts.
OK, that off my chest, John Hinckley, Jr. felt otherwise, and, yeah, Jodie Foster was kind of hot in a way, in her day. Mr. Hinckley reckoned that shooting a President would get the kind of attention from Jodie Foster that he'd been looking for. (At least she'd read about it in the newspaper, so there's that ...)
It's hard to believe in this day and age, but there was nothing political about the assassination attempt on President Reagan. Hell, I read somewhere (can't find it right now) that he was a Reagan supporter. From his views, one would expect that. He had stalked President Carter for a while to see how easy this assassination thing would be and got within a foot of Carter, though Hinckley was later arrested for carrying a gun in the Nashville airport.
On a trip through Washington, FS, Hinckley figured he'd have a go at the new President. He'd written a letter just before to Miss Foster, saying:
Over the past seven months I've left you dozens of poems, letters and love messages in the faint hope that you could develop an interest in me. Although we talked on the phone a couple of times I never had the nerve to simply approach you and introduce myself. ... The reason I'm going ahead with this attempt now is because I cannot wait any longer to impress you.Yeah, he wanted to be on the cover of Newsweek. Haha, nobody wants to be on the cover of Newsweek anymore - that's a plus.
— John Hinckley Jr.
Mr. Hinckley was in the right place at the wrong time for President Reagan. Reagan was not wearing his bulletproof vest, as he was just going to walk 30 ft. from his hotel to the waiting limo. He went walking right next to some bystanders that included John Hinckley, Jr. Hinckley took his opportunity. The first shot hit Press Secretary Brady in the face, just above his left eye. A Cleveland, OH labor leader named Alfred Antenucci tackled Hinckley after the first two shots, but he kept shooting. The Secret Service guys did one hell of a job, from what I've read, considering all 6 shots were fired within 1.7 seconds. That last unlucky ricochet bullet got Reagan under the arm, through part of his lung, stopping an inch from his heart. He was rushed to the hospital
Keep in mind that these weren't ordinary .22 Long Range cartridges. The bullets had a small exploding charge. That could have been the factor that left Press Secretary Brady paralyzed.
We must keep in mind that medical science and technology was not the same 40 years ago as it is now.. Reagan had lost 1/2 of his blood by one point, between in the ER and in surgery. Reagan was out of the hospital 11 days later, but the situation was touch-and-go at points. Most people, such as I, would not have remembered that part. It was not a given that Reagan would live. Peak Stupidity will always remember that Old Ronnie was still making one-liners even in pain on a hospital bed. When being brought into the surgery room, he said to the doctors: "I hope you are all Republicans". Democrat Speaker of the House and political arch-enemy Tip O'Neil came to the hospital to visit at one point.
The difference between then and now was that America was still a civil country back then. Even Reagan’s bitterest political enemies would have wished him well. As I wrote, even John Hinckley himself had wanted Reagan to win the 1980 election. He just wanted to shoot the President, whomever it was, to impress Jodie Foster.***
Another thing an observer can see from pictures and footage from 40 years ago today is that this was such a freer country, that there is almost no comparison! The fact that a man could walk that close to the President, or at least mill about 15 ft away is amazing. No 8 ft. chain-link fence, no Jersey barriers, no walled-in anything. That included airports, for the most part. I had never gotten on an airplane in the year 1980 but had seen people off or greeted them at the terminal gate. There were metal detectors already but no TSA army and no airport prison holding pens. (That's EXACTLY what they are in effect right now, at the smaller airport terminals.)
One could say "well, Peak Stupidity blogger, that's why we haven't had an assassination attempt on a President or a close call of such since 40 years ago." I say, is that worth it to have lost part of what made this country great? No.
PS: On the conspiracy theory aspect of this happening: I learned much later that I don't like much about the late George H. W. Bush, who was 2nd-in-line to be President. He was definitely one with the Deep State. Some say the shooting 40 years ago was a warning for Reagan to not go off the plantation with his Conservatism and get with the Deep State program, or else! How do you explain the perpetrator though, on this one? He really sounds like an a-political lone nut.
* We have a 5-part series dubbed "Ronnie vs. Donnie", brought on by President Trump's comparing himself favorably to Ronald Reagan. We disagreed wholeheartedly with the braggart Trump's assessment of himself:
Intro,
Part 1: Personalities ,
Part 2: Foreign Policy,
Part 3: Domestic Policy, and
Conclusion.
** I saw that one while in college at the cheap university movie theater. It's pretty good - I'll write a review after I watch it again sometime.
*** John Hinckley, Jr. used the typical insanity defense cop-out. Sure, he may have been insane, but so what? Why not the same punishment for him as for a sane guy who shot the President? He got sent to a psychiatric hospital and was released in September of '16.
Comments (21)
Mars Attacks
Posted On: Monday - March 29th 2021 4:38PM MST
In Topics:   Humor  Movies

As is a regular thing lately, I'll look up a book or some old movie (most of the new ones are just too PC) based on the direct recommendation, or a just a mention, by an unz or Peak Stupidity commenter. Someone had an embedded youtube clip on unz with a scene from the 1996 movie Mars Attacks. I'd might have heard mention of this from a friend or maybe a character in Seinfeld, but I'd never seen it, so, I watched it recently.
Like Plan 9 from Outer Space or any of the classics mentioned in the great music in The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Mars Attacks is not supposed to be taken seriously. You watch it to enjoy how stupid it is. This one was, I'm guessing, made years after those early ones as a retro thing for those nostalgic for those old ones. I don't know my old movies that well, but perhaps some of them were not campy on purpose, but the special effects were so crude that they were unintentionally funny.
Mars Attacks has a slew of very famous actors and actresses of that time, most of them still popular today. I'm not a big fan of the Hollywood scene by any means, so it's not that I care that much who is in what. You will see just a slew of them though, most likely having a better time than in normal movies, as in this movie, stupid is good. That's had to be fun for them.
What I thought about afterwards is that this would have been a pretty good movie to see with kids. I can't remember any bad language or "adult scenes". (It beats the crap out of Rocket Man in that respect.) The little ones may think it realistic, but any boy over 9 or 10 would enjoy it, IMO. The Martians are stupid-looking enough to be cute, and their speech is made of nothing more that sounds akin to Mike Judges' Beavis laugh (or is it Butthead? I think Beavis.) The aliens put her little Chihuahua's head on the kidnapped TV reporter, Sarah Jessica Parker's body and vice versa, for another example of silliness. Yeah, the more I think about it, Mars Attacks is a great movie for kids of all ages.
That scene that got me to obtain the movie was place on the thread due to it showing this Grandma in the nursing home exclaiming joy when the Martians shot up the US Congress. "Right with you, Grandma. Yeah, I gotta see this!"
Anyone in the Lyin' Press watching? Now, those are what you call insurgents!
Comments (7)
The real story of the week
Posted On: Monday - March 29th 2021 8:38AM MST
In Topics:   TV, aka Gov't Media  Media Stupidity  US Feral Government
I wanted to post this at the end of last fiscal-blog-week, but I got interested in the big ship in the Suez Canal and didn't get to it. We've said most of this before, so this will just be one more comment on what Peak Stupidity dubs Media Stupidity. It is really more a mixture of evil and stupidity, but we've got our URL, so we're stickin' to it!
Last week was Active Mass Shooter Fest Week, for the Lyin' Press' Infotainment programming. Hey, it got Americans to forget their Kung Flu panic and hysteria for a while, so there's that ... "Thank you, Lyin' Press - nice job! I couldn't take my eyes off the screen, even during our Kung Flu Anniversary dinner."
I refer the reader to this recent post with PeterIke's comment for an understanding of what the Lyin' Press is up to here. It's a big country. No, there aren't mass shootings every day, but there are plenty of incidents of violence, as Steve Sailer and the stats types notice that could be reported on instead or in addition, for perspective. The Lyin' Press can pick and choose whatever fits one of their main narratives. Once they pick one and make it part of their country-wide, often worldwide Infotainment, they have to pull out of the story only the facts, and give only the opinions, that go with one of their big narratives.

There was not much mention put into the story along the lines of "hey, Mr. Long did shoot two White people too. Could this possibly not be simply about his hating Oriental ladies?" How about anything about the entire illegal indentured servitude of people illegally in the country, worse yet, in an illegal business? Isn't that a big story? Women are being trafficked. I had been told that was bad. They are being exploited for hand jobs for, I dunno, what 50 bucks? (Just wondering is all.)
A commenter with the handle Trinity wrote a very good comment under a John Derbyshire post, here, with good insight about what might have been the true motivation of Robert Long. It involved the shady money dealings likely to be going on in one of these places, and Mr. Long's bad spot to be in if he had been "clipped" or just treated with disdain by the ladies. It's not like he'd go to the cops, out of embarrassment, if nothing else. (I think I will see if "Trinity" doesn't mind my posting his entire comment.)
There are some good, interesting, and important stories about society, not just Robert Aaron Long, underlying what happened in Atlanta, Georgia. The Lyin' Press didn't want anything to do with those stories though. They don't report, really - they just feed infotainment into the narratives. The narratives that the Atlanta massage parlor shootings story were "for" are GUNS! and White people hate Orientals!*

The Moslem connection was not brought up very much with regard to "Crazy Triple-Al" Al-Issa. That "Moslems as terrorists" thing is so 2002. That was just to scare us into enacting a Police State to protect our freedoms, is all. We're over there, see, fighting them, so we don't have to worry about fighting the ones over here, who are coming in droves now and love America for our welcoming and freedoms, except for last week ...
How about the mental case factor regarding they young Al-Issa? Were there any stories stuck in there in the Infotainment, maybe late at night after the important "guns are bad" stuff ,about what's changed with mental health since nut-cases were let out from State Hospitals into the streets 30-40 years ago? (See Outsourcing of the Funny Farms.) There were many people, including the guy's own family, who knew he was not right. What was the story about why people wouldn't speak up, again? Was it something about being railroaded and canceled for doing so? I guess I missed it.
There are good, interesting, and important stories about society, not just Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, underlying what happened in Boulder, Colorado. The Lyin' Press didn't want anything to do with these stories though. The narratives that the Boulder grocery store shooting story were "for" are GUNS! and
Here is what Peak Stupidity thinks is the real lesson for Americans of Active Mass Shooter Fest Week: There is the internet now. There is youtube (though bitchute is the near future) Many of us can get some news that's outside of the Infotainment world of narratives. Many more Americans have gotten to see exactly what parts of these stories the Lyin' Press includes and what they don't, and they often well understand the reasons for each.
I hope what Americans have learned from last week is that the Lyin' Press is just another department of the US Feral Government now. I will discuss that more in an upcoming post.
* I'm sorry, but I'm just not agonna write "Asian" when I mean "Oriental". Peak Stupidity has been over this before.
Comments (5)
Where's my stuff??
Posted On: Saturday - March 27th 2021 9:34PM MST
In Topics:   General Stupidity  Geography  Big-Biz Stupidity

Now for something completely different. It is kind of nice to write about this story. It's just that we have all been so overloaded with the government- or Establishment-generated politically-correct, anti-American, anti-White political stupidity continuously for years. Refreshingly, this story is about something real. I also like that it's about geography and economics, favorite topics of this blog. It's about a private shipping company doing real work in the transportation industry, with a huge container ship that has ended up completely blocking the Suez Canal. It was just a short ways in from the south end, heading north.
"High winds and sandstorms" are said to be the cause, but I don't know much about massive ships or the shipping business in general. That'd be forgivable for the writers of the non-technical or non-industry publications too, if it were not for some of the inconsistent simple facts that I noted when trying to find a good site on which to learn some details. Half the blurbs on the 1st page of the DuckDuckGo search results, most linking to TV stations sites, yahoo, etc, have the ship's name listed as the Ever Green. No, that is the shipping company. You see these green containers up and down the interstate highways*, right? Evergreen is not the name of the truck, so ...
Then, I was told that the ship was headed north through the canal, which is true, from Rotterdam, Holland to the far East (not true). No, the ship's origin was China**, and it was headed TO Rotterdam, which is the direction most containers seem to go anyway (Asia to Europe and the US).*** This was on the first page of blurbs, mind you. Couldn't the writer have spent 3 minutes pulling up bing maps to get an idea of the geography? Yeah, maybe he doesn't like geography, but see, they are PAYING him. OK, enough about the Lyin' (and incompetent) Press, as I wanted to get away from that for a while.
It's weird that the best thing to do is to just pick a blurb that's not one of the big LP ones, that just seems to not be written by a clueless moron. I try to avoid the TV stations' sites just due to their often having so much cluttered Mexican-jumping bean pop-up crap, but this page is from, of all random places, the web site of KCEN TV out of Temple, Waco, and Killeen, Texas. (That's a beautiful part of the country, BTW.) This article has the basics.
This beast of a vessel can hold 20,000 containers, and weigh up to 1/2 a BILLION pounds! Let me work something out quickly here: The standard 40-ft containers**** max out at 65,000 lb. from what I see written on the doors of them. The Ever Given obviously can't take 20,000 maxed-out containers, as that get your to 1.3 billion lb. I just figured out though, something that the article writer didn't bother with. The ship holds 20,124 (to be exact) TEU's. That stands for Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit. That makes more sense. The 20-footers can hold ~50,000 lb, but I doubt they get near that most times. (Maybe if you're shipping bowling balls ;-})
I imagine most of the containers are bulked out, rather than near the gross weight limit. I got the numbers I wanted to see elsewhere anyway. If you trust the wiki page:
With a length overall of 1,312 ft 2 in, it is one of the longest ships in service. Its hull has a beam of 192 ft 11 in, a depth of 107 ft 11 in, and a fully laden draft of 47 ft 7 in. Ever Given has a gross tonnage of 220,940; net tonnage of 99,155; and deadweight tonnage of 199,629 tons. The ship's container capacity is 20,124 TEU [Note: I wiped out SI units from wiki - sorry, I just wanted to stick with one set.]What I'd like to know is how much fuel these things carry. I mean, do they bump extra fuel for cargo, or can they carry just plenty to divert a long, long way?
Back to the canal for a minute: The Suez Canal was opened over 150 years ago! The 120 mile-long (with the incorporation of 3 lakes) canal connects the Mediterranean Sea with the Red Sea to save many thousands of miles in a journey from origins in the south and east of Asia to ports anywhere in Europe by avoiding the whole route around Africa. It canal runs between the northeast corner of the continent of Africa and the Sinai Peninsula, which is officially in Asia with, like, "Asians" living there. (Actually it's pretty empty worthless desert.) The Suez Canal see 12% of the world's international trade.
Since this ship has backed up the canal, and it may be few more days before refloating efforts are successful (it may take the removal of containers - not an easy deal when not at the dock), a question I haven't found the answer to just yet is this: Are the vessels awaiting passage through the Suez Canal able to change to a much longer route, the southbound ones heading out to the Straits of Gibraltar to go around Africa counterclockwise and the northbound ones back to the mouth of the Red Sea to circumnavigate it clockwise, without refueling? I would think they carry a lot of extra fuel for all kinds of contingencies. If not, could they fuel up anywhere near where they are backed up?
The latest article I read, from Sunday morning Ireland time, said that it's gonna be a while yet, and there are 321 ships backed up as of their writing, I suppose somewhat equally for each direction. More on this huge ship:
Ever Given is a Golden-class***** container ship, one of the largest container ships in the world. The ship is owned by Shoei Kisen Kaisha (a shipowning and leasing subsidiary of the large Japanese shipbuilding company Imabari Shipbuilding), and time chartered and operated by Taiwanese container transportation and shipping company Evergreen Marine. Ever Given is registered in Panama, and its technical management is the responsibility of the German ship management company Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement (BSM).The international shipping business takes advantage of cheap Philippine labor, (not described there), and, in this case, Japanese heavy manufacturing, Taiwanese corporate ownership, German management, and Panamanian registration. That's some Globalist stuff there...

Though there was likely some stupidity involved, this event is physically real rather than another piece of emotional political BS, so it is interesting to me. I had 2 other posts I was supposed to write today, but they'll have to be posted on Monday. Thanks for reading this week!
* I guess for those heading farther inland, they may be on rail cars, stacked 2-high, for much of their journeys.
** One article gave Malaysia as the origin, but a BBC one said China. Maybe the last stop, for more containers, was Malaysia.
*** I've seen containers for sale cheap at one of the west coast ports, because they pile up, with not many manufactured products going the other way.
**** as opposed to those 1/2 sized 20-footers and then the extended 53 foot-long "high-cube" containers.
***** All 11 of them are named "Ever" [something], the other 10 being the Ever Golden, Ever Gifted, Ever Genius, Ever Glory, Ever Globe, Ever Goods, Ever Grade, Ever Gentle, Ever Govern, and Ever Greet. For a huge project like this, I'd have hired a creative English-speaker for better names. How about the Ever Seen a Grown Man Naked?
Comments (24)
We're glad you're our neighbor, Ahmad Al Aliwi Al-Issa
Posted On: Friday - March 26th 2021 8:34PM MST
In Topics:   Immigration Stupidity  Lefty MegaStupidity  University  ctrl-left

Have you seen the above signs? I have seen them here and there for at least a few years now, maybe since the time of Donald Trump's election. One was at a nearby left-wing church, made into a big banner hanging right next to the big "Black Lives Matter" one. I'm guessing, just guessing, mind you, that the city of Boulder, Colorado has more than it's fair per capita share of these welcoming signs.
Boulder is a big university town, with the University of Colorado in that nice locale right up against the front range of the Rocky Mountains. University towns have a larger share of the ctrl-left than anywhere else but Washington FS, New York City, and the big cities on the west coast. Why? The whole academic establishment has been infiltrated by the ctrl-left over the last 5 decades, and many graduates, especially those who don't find the professional jobs, are hangers-on that stay for life in their ex-college towns. They tend to be of the left too.
So these signs are all over Boulder, saying that the homeowner does not care where you are from, neighbor, in English, Spanish, and oh, what's that bottom one that's really hard to read? Now that's a weird-ass foreign alphabet. It ain't Russian, and they are definitely not Chinese or Japanese characters. Oh, where have I seen .... ahaaa, that part is in Arabic, welcoming the Arab newcomers to the Boulder area, from, say, Syria and places like that! No matter where they are from, they are great to have around.
See, the people of Boulder, Colorado, and the rest of us too, since the post-graduate degreed people there know what's good for us, feel bad that the United States had bombed the hell out of some of these countries. Over the years, they felt that we should let the poor refugees, from places bombed or not bombed, into our welcoming country. The people of Boulder are good, welcoming people. These new immigrants will be so grateful we accepted them from the country in which we may or may not have attacked, maimed, or killed their cousins and such. No, they won't hold a grudge when they get here, cause "Merica! Though almost all the people from the Arab world American invites to be our neighbors are Moslems, that should not be a problem. Diversity is GOOD, especially with religions.
There are highly-educated people, the welcoming folks in Boulder that put up these nice signs. They've thought these ideas through. There's no way that they would miss anticipating any problems, such as a foreign misfit going crazy and killing 10 members of the nice Boulder community. Right?

This was unanticipated! Some of these people may even have had their own welcoming signs, so how is it possible that they have been shot dead? It's not like the people of Boulder would have had access to VDare articles over the last 20 years. Even for the purpose of foreseeing further mass murders, the lefties of Boulder just wouldn't feel comfortable reading James Fulford's recent article "Another Muslim (Immigrant) Mass Murder". There are 22 mass murders by immigrants listed, with "134 actual murders, and about 1300 wounded. (9/11 isn’t on this list, for various reasons.)" Well, you can add 10 more White People of Boulder, Colorado, shot dead, to the list.
What's the solution? For the lefties of Boulder, it'll be putting up more welcoming signs for Moslems. That can't hurt, right, because for now, as the New York Times reports, as related by Steve Sailer, "Motive in Boulder Shooting Is Still a Mystery".
I am pretty sure though that there are at least 10 families in Boulder, Colorado right now that are just not that damned glad that Ahmad Al Aliwi Al-Issa was their neighbor.
Comments (7)
How to insert the Crazy Al shooting into the narrative
Posted On: Thursday - March 25th 2021 10:05AM MST
In Topics:   Music  Media Stupidity  Race/Genetics  Guns
OK, "Crazy Al-Issa" to be precise. I would think that's what his friends might have called him, seeing as his full name is Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, or "Ahmed Triple-Al" might work. Of course, we Americans are supposed to be tolerant enough to know exactly how to pronounce these the RIGHT way, or else the immigrant may get very pissed off, black out, and ka-boom-yow!

See, now the Lyin' Press has a really hard job with these acute stories, that is, ones that must be discussed with appropriate solutions right away. Hell, Peak Stupidity is on this one a coupla' days later, and the Lyin' Press outlets need to stay ahead of us. It's tough because you have to get the story out, at least within a few hours of the twitterers, facebookers, and instagramers, yet you need to know how it will fit into one or more the ongoing narratives too.
Sometimes, this rush to opinion, called more properly "the late-breaking news", causes fuck-ups. Actually it happens quite a bit if we all save Lyin' Press screenshots and keep their initial rantings in our memories.
Because he looks white enough, you know, with that un-suntanned pot belly and all, Crazy Al there in Boulder, Colorado was said to be a White Man for most of the 1st day of that story. That depends on the Lyin' Press outlet. If they don't pay their subscriptions for their Journ-o-list e-news, some (as per Adam Smith in the comments here) may stick with the evil gun-owner White Man Shooter way too long and look even stupider than the pack. (You don't want to do that - bad for career progression.)
Between the Atlanta mass shooting and this latest Boulder one, it looked like a real lock for the Establishment. The Lyin' Press department was doing its job diligently in providing infotainment that complied with the narrative of:
1) White men hate Oriental people because Donald Trump keeps using the phrase "China Flu", and it has riled them up enough now to shoot people willy-nilly.
2) Normal law-abiding sane White People should not be able to have guns. Look what happened. It was especially bad in the grocery store in Boulder, as unarmed people are sitting ducks, so there ... so there should not be guns ... cause .. that's, like, the only way to kill people.
What hadn't gone into the narrative in the infotainment being provided Americans was the sex-trafficking and illegal immigration angles of that story. These aspects were simply not useful. There's no
It was going well, but that freakin' Crazy Al fellow turned out to be Crazy Al-Issa instead. Dammit! Yeah, his friends and even his family saw him as a normally good Syrian-immigrant kid, a member of the wrestling team and all, who just went a little overboard in his anger on occasion. It was nice that he had an out, threatening to call anyone giving him too much shit back a racist or xenophobe.*
Man, that has GOT TO SUCK! You've got the news that you can use ready to insert into a couple of the big narratives, but one of your premises gets changed last freaking minute! This 2nd shooting didn't support narrative (1), because, unfortunately, there were no Oriental people in the line of fire that day, or the guy only wanted to shoot White People. If that wasn't bad enough, then narrative (2) couldn't use this story either. Yet, the story was already out there.
It was that stupid, stupid little piece of punctuation in his name, maybe an arithmetic operator symbol for those math-inclined, that came out last minute. No, it's not Alissa but Al-Issa. Who knew? Without that stupid dash that has something to do with being a Moslem Arab , we would have had support for the narrative through the rest of Spring! "Yeah, he and his family were from Syria, but that's Syria, Kentucky, pronounced 'Seye -Ray'", we could have told them.
It's time to just switch the whole story to GUNS! GUNS! GUNS! period. That's what you are going to hear and read now, people. The Lyin' Press has wasted a lot of their time with this story, already, but there's still that piece of "news you can use".
Really, readers, this is basically how the mass media operates in 2021. '
As for young Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, is he the guy Paul Simon was writing about in his 1986 hit You Can Call Me Al? The lyrics are a bit uncanny:
A man walks down the street.Holy moley, there's even a line saying "Mr. Beerbelly". I shit you not. Due to this blogger's chronic lyricosis, most of the lyrics are ones I had never known and could only have gleaned off the internet.
He says why am I soft in the middle now?
Why am I soft in the middle?
The rest of my life is so hard?
I need a photo-opportunity.
I want a shot at redemption ...
You Can Call Me Al and lots of the other songs on Paul Simon's 1986 album Graceland are not in the style of his older music written/sung as a single artist. It's just my opinion, but the best of it was his entire There Goes Rhymin' Simon album from more than a decade earlier (1973). He liked to experiment with different styles. I like the horns and sax, and I like this classic old music video with Chevy Chase:
* Peak Stupidity will have more on the immigration aspect of this mass murder in another post. ---
Comments (11)
March Mask Madness - Part 4
Posted On: Wednesday - March 24th 2021 7:04PM MST
In Topics:   Salesmen  Big-Biz Stupidity  Kung Flu Stupidity
I've got some thoughts regarding this Ahmad Al Aliwi Al-issa mass shooting, but I'll hold off and just write about a mass mailing instead.

The mask culture is everywhere now. Writer C.J. Hopkins calls this, along with the much more nefarious LOCKDOWNS, the "new normal". I see that the Presidential Duo are wearing masks in lots of photos and that one or two video clips I've seen of Zhou Bai Dien. I note that there are people with masks on in on-line ads.
This is the first time I've gotten a paper ad with people wearing these things. I don't know whether the point is to show that "yes, we are good upstanding people, complying with the mask mandates and everything, here at Liberty Tax". Is there more behind it, and Big-Biz has been encouraged to push the mask-wearing? Maybe this ad is just relating the mask-wearing to this "complicated tax year". I don't what's so especially complicated anyway. A lot of people will just be putting down "0" this year. Is income averaging still in the tax code?
I just remembered that Liberty Tax is the company that has those people dressed up like the Statue of Liberty right out by the road, well that's usually. Have they been out there this season with face masks over Lady Liberty's pie hole? I haven't seen a one of them, come to think of it, so there's some more simple 1040 forms with "0"s on those line 1's.
It's not like I can't fill out the forms myself anyway, but you really turned me off with this ad, Liberty Tax. As one of our Founders said, "give me liberty or give me death". I don't like the way it's going...
Who's gonna be next with this, the bikini models in Cosmo magazine? Now if they were to wear JUST face masks and nothing else, I would consider perusing the magazine a tad.
Comments (8)
Is this the lamest Lyin' Press narrative ever?
Posted On: Wednesday - March 24th 2021 9:14AM MST
In Topics:   Trump  Media Stupidity  Kung Flu Stupidity
Or, will they have some doozies to come that will beat it?
(This post is taken mostly from comments of mine on Unz Review threads. I was replying to one of the most annoying commenters to me, opinion-wise - he's polite enough, which is why I reply sometimes.)

The latest Lyin' Press narrative is that the March 16th massage parlor shootings in Atlanta were a continuation of anti-Oriental animus on the part of White People whipped up by Donald Trumps' previous and continual dubbing of the COVID-19 "the China Virus". Apparently we are all extremely pissed off at them due to that virus having come out of their country. Peak Stupidity maintains that this narrative is just plain ludicrous.
At the beginning of the article that I was not about to read (just happened upon it looking for images), I noted that the writer credits Mr. Trump with using "Kung Flu" too. Excellent. Peak Stupidity did not make that one up, but it's obviously our favorite term for the 'Rona, that being our 2nd right now.
Yes, it's amusing! Can’t we be amusing, or is that verboten now per the Governors and the Lyin' Press? Everyone knows Donald Trump has fun with names. Not only that, but he says “China Flu”, which is perfectly reasonable, as that’s where the hell it came from. We know that much. Have any readers here read much on any Spaniards getting the crap beat out of them because of their role in the Spanish Flu 105 years back? (Yes, I know it was not from Spain, but that was the name.)
I had a reply on this with the argument that it's because they look different that Americans CAN hate on Oriental people. Uhhh, OK, then how did American treat Vietnamese immigrants after the Vietnam War was over? There were no doubt lots of Americans during and shortly after that war that called them "gooks", etc. with bitter memories of loved ones lost or maimed over there. In general, after the war was behind us, Americans have treated the Vietnamese people very well. Some may have had guilt for the Vietnam war, but most Americans just liked helping them get assimilated. (Yeah, assimilation was GOOD back then!) We've also had the "Asian Flu" of 1957, the "Hong Kong Flu" of 1968 and so on. OK, granted, there weren't very many Oriental people in the nation to pick on in those years, which brings up a point to come...
As hysterical as many Americans have been over the last year about this virus, the issue of exactly where it came from is not even close to the primary thing in their minds about it. Ron Unz’s Ft. Detrick story could be right. If so, that doesn’t look good for our Deep State (WTF does?), but the thing is, I don’t really care that much where it started. My hunch that is that it was a Q/A problem at that brand-new American-supported Wuhan lab. It doesn’t matter that much. I just would rather Americans get ahold of their damn selves about it, that’s all.
We had a Cold War going on for 40 years, with the arch-enemy of it all being the USSR. Was there any problem with Americans harassing Russians or Poles in America (the ones that could make it out), because “you people have got 10,000 warheads aimed at us”? Even Moslems in the US, as foreign as they are, wouldn’t get any trouble due to “hey, you’re from Syria, aren’t you? You people are the enemy. Or, are you?” (We don’t know, it’s complicated.) No, we often don’t like them because they are weird-looking, weird-acting foreigners. (Oh, and some of them wig out and go shoot 10 people dead.)
Americans have been EXTREMELY tolerant and welcoming of foreigners into this country. I’d say way too much, as this has blinded many of us to the large numbers till very recently. If you can imagine any White person with the gall, because he knows he can be railroaded for one bad sentence, giving some lip to some strange-looking Moslem, for example, it wouldn’t be anything about this Moslem’s country itself or its political relations with the US. It’d be out of exasperation and extreme annoyance of having to live in a foreign country without freaking even moving anywhere!
Back to Oriental people in America, I personally get along with them very well, have had many friends and a few good friends.* Yet, I think enough has been more than enough, with the numbers. That’s how most Americans feel, and that’s what they have against foreigners, not the Kung Flu.
Again, this story about this amusing "Kung Flu" or "China Virus" wording causing Americans to specifically take things out on Orientals is ludicrous. We all know that, yet the Lyin’ Press keeps broadcasting that one as the branch of Government responsible for creating the narrative that the other branches can use to screw us with by law.
This narrative has been so stupid that the Lyin’ Press has had to blast it over and over, associating it with Trump of course. Trump hasn't been President for 2 months, but I guess they figure he's still somewhat of a leader**, and they don't like that. The reason that the average American doesn't believe this is that he knows how they feels himself about foreigners. Their culpability for generating the Kung Flu is not the problem. The foremost insult Americans have in the front of their minds regarding foreigners is “Why don’t you go home?!”
* I had 2 close friends from 2 other foreign countries (in different continents even), long ago.
** We do need better leaders, if any, believe me.
Comments (8)
How the Lyin' Press feeds the narrative - PeterIke
Posted On: Tuesday - March 23rd 2021 7:32PM MST
In Topics:   Media Stupidity

The Lyin' Press is apparently still working their Whites hate Orientals narrative, which they hope to get, what, a months worth of infotainment out of. Is the Kung Flu PanicFest losing Nielsen rating points? No problem with that, as we can roll it into this one. That's a point for another post.
As I wrote in the comments under the previous post, commenter PeterIke wrote what was to to be most of this post. As I speculated about the possible conspiracy that could be behind the extremely timely Atlanta massage parlor shootings (for the Lyin' Press, that is), it did occur to me that this wasn't THE perfect incident, as 2 out of the 8 victims were NOT Oriental. Why would you set up something and have that happens? Could it be to throw conspiracy theorists off your trail? That's going down a rabbit hole, I think.
Who knows, but PeterIke explains that the Lyin' Press can pick and choose the stories from all over this big country that go along with their narrative and leave the huge number of not-so-narrative-compliant stories alone.
Here''s his comment, verbatim:
******************************************
It's a big country. There's always incidents of all kinds going on. The media decides what becomes "important" to the narrative.
Imagine if the narrative was "whites being attacked by blacks." They could have hysterical, 24x7 coverage every day of the year with a hundred incidents a day. But they have none whatsoever.
Now this guy could be some kind of CIA stooge, and I wouldn't doubt it. But it could also just be some "good luck" for the narrative engineers.
In any case, the real story is the massive sex trafficking and sex slavery of these "massage parlors." A story that never raises higher than local coverage. Asian lives, like black lives, really don't matter. What matters is attacking whites.
*****************************************
Exactly!
I also wrote this in the comments, but let me add it here, something about the sex trafficking etc. After all, if you're going to fill up your 24/7 infotainment time, you could use that juicy story about the massage therapists, what they do, what a "happy ending" means (sex sells, right?), etc. Nope, but that works against another big narrative they've been yarning up, which is "DIVERSITY UBER ALLES!" Yes, the sex angle is part of the story in terms of the motivation of Mr. Long. "Nope, can't use it", say the Lyin' Press execs, cause:
1) Sex trafficking, per the airline companies anyway, is about anyone, white guys, black women ... It could be just ANYONE, so be on the look-out! Of course, those of us who read a little bit know that it's Hispanics bringing people into the country, •Indians importing their personal slaves, and, yes, lots of this shady illegal alien indentured servitude or indentured sex servitude. This Oriental sex thing being such a huge widespread business ruins the narrative, hence "nuh uhh, can't touch that stuff..."
2) Along with that is the illegal immigration angle. If the Lyin' Press brings up this big story, American might realize that Hispanics aren't the only huge group of illegal aliens living in this country. (Sure, Hispanics must be a large majority, but I'd guess 30 million to a couple of million.)
So, they can't touch this stuff. Well, if you read comments here, this post is nothing new, so I apologize for that. The next one will be from some unz comments, so possibly nothing new too, but it'll be related to this same story. Now, we have that Boulder shooting that is not at all working out well for the Lyin' Press, once it turned out that the murderer had a last name with a punctuation mark in it. Nope, not a white guy - "shut it down, guys, we got nuthin'"
Comments (5)
Unhappy Ending or Preplanned Crisis?
Posted On: Monday - March 22nd 2021 8:13PM MST
In Topics:   Media Stupidity  Race/Genetics  ctrl-left

While searching for pictures of "massage parlor shooting victims", I got an awful lot of images of rows of older Oriental women in orange jumpsuits.
I'm guessing most Peak Stupidity readers have been bombarded by this Oriental massage rampage story more than I have been. The fact that there IS a media bombardment to begin with is only known to me from my reading of Steve Sailer, VDare, Instapundit, etc. I still want to get a few details before I write too much more, I didn't even get straight who the 8 people killed were because I think the media web sites didn't want to keep mentioning that there were anyone but Oriental women killed.
It is interesting that Steve Sailer had been posting a lot lately about the commonplace black on Oriental* crime, nothing new in particular, that the Lyin' Press has been blaming on White People. Oh yeah, it's because Donald Trump, President about 2 months back now, called the COVID-19 the "China Flu" a lot, riling Americans up against Chinamen or something ... OK, that's a different post to come.
Is it coincidental that just after a few months of the yarning of these white-people-caused black violence against Orientals stories, we had this multiple shooting by a white guy? I've had my discussions with commenter Mr. Anon before about plots vs. simple confluences of stupidity, but I gotta lean a little bit toward the idea of this massage parlor rampage being planned, by somebody. The timing was awfully good for the anti-white ctrl-left and the Lyin' Press. What does it take to do this? Do you brainwash the guy and/or drug the guy up in order to influence him to do this deed? How does something like this work?
This series of murders sure gives the ctrl-left a great opportunity to push for more gun control, get more Oriental people to become "woke", rail against Christians, take more money from White Men... this one's a Godsend for them. Never let a crisis go to waste, especially one that you spent a lot of time planning.
Or, it could be that there was nothing particularly nefarious here, and Mr. Long shot the ladies because they rubbed him the wrong way.
* I'm just going to use this term, because, though there may be •Indians involved in a few incidents, the incidents I've been led to by iSteve were all against Orientals, likely Chinese, most of them (simply because they are a majority of the Oriental people in America now). The Koreans must be big in this massage business, as 4 of the victims of the shooting were Korean, I think.
Comments (18)
Peak Constitutional Amendment - XXVI
Posted On: Monday - March 22nd 2021 8:15AM MST
In Topics:   Morning Constitutional
Continued from Amendment XI, Amendment XII, Amendment XIII, Amendment XIV, Amendment XV, Part 1 on Amendment XVI, Part 2 on Amendment XVI , Part 3 on Amendment XVI, Amendment XVII, Amendment XVIII, Part 1 on Amendment XIX, Part 2 on Amendment XIX, Part 3 on Amendment XIX, Amendment XX, and Amendment XXI, Amendment XXII, Amendment XXIII, Amendment XXIV, Amendment XXV - Part 1: Housekeeping, and Amendment XXV - Part 2: Presidential Incapacity.)

It's been another month since our last Morning Constitutional. "Don't do that", says the Doc. We're moving right along to the 2nd of the last one, so far.
Section 1"Well that was easy!" said the US Congress in March of 1971, and 3/4 of the States by just over 3 months later. Amendment XXVI was a copy and paste job from Amendment XV, with "age" subbed in for "race, color, or previous condition of servitude". The wording is otherwise exactly the same.
The right of citizens of the United States, who are eighteen years of age or older, to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of age.
Section 2
The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
The voting age, as with so many other things back in the days of Federalism, was up to the various States. Nowhere in the original Constitution does it specify any ages for anything but office holders. It wasn't until Amendment XIV was railroaded through the ratification process in Southern States under "Reconstruction" in 1868 that States were required to allow any male of 21 years-of-age and older to vote.
Per, the usual Constitution-Center's interpretation page (more on this one at the bottom):
By the time of the Vietnam Conflict, most states still limited the franchise to people 21 and older. Because so many men between 18 and 20 were being drafted to fight in Vietnam, Congress came under substantial pressure to expand the franchise to them. Congress consequently enacted the Voting Rights Act of 1970, which lowered the voting age to 18 for all federal, state, and local elections.It was not just the Vietnam War - "If I'm old enough to kill people for the US Government, I'm old enough to vote". After all, a year into WWII, the draft age went to 18. Is it because this was the "good war" that nobody bitched about not being able to vote about it, yet being conscripted to fight?
In Oregon v. Mitchell (1970), a deeply divided Supreme Court held that Congress had authority to lower the voting age in federal elections, but lacked power to do so for state and local elections. Thus, states were statutorily required to allow people between 18 and 20 to vote for President, U.S. Senate, and the U.S. House of Representatives, but retained discretion to limit state and local elections to voters who were at least 21. In response to Oregon,
I'm guessing that, because the Baby Boom generation, at the time of this Amendment, were 26 y/o, with 18-25 y/o's too, and huge in numbers, their voice was heard. It's not that I don't agree with their sentiment on this too, though. However, lets get to the ROOT of the problem. To do that, we go right back to the US Constitution, way on back, y'all, to the beginning. In Article I, Section 8 (mash that "keep reading" link), we see that the powers of the Legislative Branch include :
To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;I don't see anything about conscription in there. Drafting of men to fight in the Revolution was done by the States themselves.
To provide and maintain a Navy;
To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;
To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;
To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;
Wasn't the problem that Amendment XXVI was designed to fix rooted in the loss of State rights to begin with? If the State of Georgia were drafting men at 18 years-of-age, then perhaps Georgians could decide that those men ought to be able to vote, and so on. In fact, if you look at that case Oregon vs. Mitchell mentioned in that interpretation page excerpted above, you find that the Voting Rights Act of 1970 usurped almost as much States' rights as this Amendment did.
So, there they went again. Amendment XXVI took away States' rights regarding the election process, just as Amendments XIV, XVI, XVII (in a more fundamental way), XIX, and XXIV did. Anyone starting to notice a pattern with this Constitutional Amendment process? We've got one more. Let's cross our fingers for a lucky #27. I know, the suspense is killing you, right?
PS: About that interpretation page, again, they have got plenty of factual information to make it worth reading, but it's got the good writer/bad writer thing going on again. We don't learn directly which writer is the agenda-pushing bad writer, as it's all one essay, as usual. However, since there's this "she" pronoun for an unknown gender thing going on, I'm going to take a wild guess and say SHE is Jocelyn Benson - Secretary of State for the State of Michigan.
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President Stumbles, World Gasps: Constitutionalists hardest hit.
Posted On: Saturday - March 20th 2021 4:01PM MST
In Topics:   Music  US Feral Government  Zhou Bai Dien
I realized, as soon as I started writing that his post has got the same point as a recent post called The Farewell to Kings didn't take. That's OK, it needs to be said again with this newest brouhaha about Old Joe Bidet slipping on the stairs on the way into Air Force 1.
Here's a headline I just saw while looking for another picture on this:

The news is all over the world. The Chinese are talking about it. (Outwardly mocking, but likely inwardly a little worried about their investment.) Hey, the reader should know that Peak Stupidity feels nothing weaker than deep distain for this President, A stumble is probably just a stumble though. I've done it, and Crazy Uncle Joe Bidet has quite a few years on me. True, it possibly shows that, yeah, he's an old man, and who knows how he really functions?
Go back 100 years, and only a few reporters would know, and likely not make a deal out of, the President stumbling like that. Well, there's TV and the internet now, so that's part of the problem here. Go back nearly 50 years, when everybody watched TV and you had Saturday Night Live with Chevy Chase imitating and exaggerating the goofing and bumbling of President Gerald Ford. It was in fun. I really don't think there was that much political to it. Also, nobody thought it as something to worry about. So what, he's a goofball (if that was even the case)? Is the problem now that any Blue-Squad President shall not be made fun of, so people spend hours analyzing a stumble instead.
Here's my point though: The bigger part of the problem with having to hear about the President stumbles for days, is that IT SHOULDN'T MATTER! There's a VP to take over (shudder). There's a Congress. This guy is not the freaking King!
All this reminds me of what one would hear about the Soviet Union back in the day. If Brezhnev coughed once, uh oh, what if he dies?! What kind of hell will we live in under the next guy?
Where is my beautiful Constitutional Republic? Where is that large automobile? How did we get here?
That Talking Heads song would be nice, but let's continue with the "Farewell to Kings" theme. Back in the post I'd thought we'd bid Farewell to Kings (on the 1/2-mast flag stupidity), we featured the title track of the 1977 Rush album A Farewell to Kings, and longer ago, when writing about Ayn Rand, we featured out favorite off the album, Closer to the Heart.
From the same great album here is Cinderella Man:
Yeah, we'll get on this Oriental massage parlor dealy next week. Enjoy the rest of the weekend PSers, and thank you very much for reading, and listening too!
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Blame it on the rain. ♫ ♬
Posted On: Saturday - March 20th 2021 8:01AM MST
In Topics:   TV, aka Gov't Media  Global Climate Stupidity  Kung Flu Stupidity
To be more exacting, "blame it on the Global Climate Disruption™ " 🎶. (It just doesn't fit the meter of any song I'm about to write, is the problem.)

OK, look. I guess there's a guy being sarcastic in saying: "Climate change forced the Chinese government to ..." Is he jtLOL? Is he the same guy saying "I got your #Unity right here" or is that a different guy? Have I cut someone off? Twitter is stupid.
To clear a mistake up in the tweet above, this Chuck Todd talking head character (never heard of him before) said "People are saying ... " then the line "It's inevitable..." that the tweeter Tom Elliot, errr, tweets. I had to watch the video in this Washington Examiner article for 2 emotionally painful minutes to see what the deal was.
I'd only seen Anthony Fauci speak for perhaps 5 seconds before, maybe 2 or 3 times. That's why I write that it was painful to watch. As much as I recommend judging a person by his actions, not words, and much less his facial expressions, there IS something to be said for seeing a little bit of the guy talking. It's this know-it-all smirk on his face telling us "I am the expert, and only I know what's the problem and what we are going to do (to you) about it next." Fauci really looks happy there announcing that this pandemic business has him in such an important spot. He seems glad to be leading the panickers along in the next phases to come.
It's gonna be some time, because "people are saying" that we need to cool the earth way down before we quit getting sick like this. OK, not cool, that's old terminology, sorry. The climate must be stabilized* at a steady state over the globe first, before we quit getting sick.
I meant to write this post to note that "Climate Change" tie-in. Peak Stupidity has had our say on the topic back near the beginnings of this blog. (Check the Global Climate Stupidity Topic Key.) We have been pretty quiet about it here, with a break in that for making fun of poor little Greta fall of '19 and winter '19-'20, figuring our understanding of the lack of a working model of the entire world's climate is SETTLED SCIENCE. Well, like a poltergeist, "it's baaaack..." No, not Greta, but the demon of "Climate Change", aka, "Global Warming", has been brought back from the near dead to become a bogeyman behind more pandemics.
They have proved that Americans can easily be brought under tight control. This is about control for these people, and for some, as per E.H. Hail and others, a religion. If I'm to go by the look on that asshole Fauci's face on the TV, just as much as his words over the last year, he enjoys the control Yes, maybe he enjoys being the Messiah too, because that could be messianic look in his eyes. I lean toward, he get's off on being looked up to by hysterical panicked Americans and being on TV every day as the resident expert.
* From old weather/climate classes: Weather is caused by uneven heating of the earth's surface. ** Can we push for even heating? We're gonna need bigger bulldozers ... to flatten the planet into a disk facing the sun. Careful with the surveying though - if we make it too thin out of the same volume of material, then we will run into the uneven heating problem, as the disk will be big enough for different parts to get significantly different sun angle. OK, then we make it a concave surface with the radius of one A.U. What about gravity? Hey, one thing at a time!
** We know, we know, weather is not climate.
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mySecurityHole 2.0
Posted On: Friday - March 19th 2021 12:38PM MST
In Topics:   Globalists  China  Artificial Stupidity  Big-Biz Stupidity

Peak Stupidity has warned our readers multiple times: We don't guarantee timely news, and our wise investment strategy advice is generally done retroactively. Caveat emptyor goes your wallet. In this case, this 2-week old news about Chinese hacking of email server programs may be just a wee too late to save that secure information regarding your plans for the next insurrection on the US Capitol.
That is, for the Microsoft Windows users, this could have been a problem. Commenter Adam Smith has advised you and me to go to Linux many times. It's MS Exchange Server that has been hacked by the Chinese through 4 security holes, per some dude named Chris Krebs (Krebs On Security is his web site). He reports At Least 30,000 U.S. Organizations Newly Hacked Via Holes in Microsoft’s Email Software. 30,000 organizations probably runs into the 10's of millions of people, Basically, 30,000 copies of those versions of non-secure software have been sold in the US and over a hundreds of thousands worldwide:
At least 30,000 organizations across the United States — including a significant number of small businesses, towns, cities and local governments — have over the past few days been hacked by an unusually aggressive Chinese cyber espionage unit that’s focused on stealing email from victim organizations, multiple sources tell KrebsOnSecurity. The espionage group is exploiting four newly-discovered flaws in Microsoft Exchange Server email software, and has seeded hundreds of thousands of victim organizations worldwide with tools that give the attackers total, remote control over affected systems.Great.... it was bad enough keeping the NSA and Deep State in mind when you email your friends, but now we have to worry about what the Chinese will get out of it. So, no insurrection plans and no bright new ideas would be the way to go.
On March 2, Microsoft released emergency security updates to plug four security holes in Exchange Server versions 2013 through 2019 that hackers were actively using to siphon email communications from Internet-facing systems running Exchange.[My bolding there.] Interesting... perhaps the Chinese have already hacked some brilliant new face-diapering technology from the CDC, or, failing that, just information on how to raise another cool virus like the COVID-one-niner.
Microsoft said the Exchange flaws are being targeted by a previously unidentified Chinese hacking crew it dubbed “Hafnium,” and said the group had been conducting targeted attacks on email systems used by a range of industry sectors, including infectious disease researchers, law firms, higher education institutions, defense contractors, policy think tanks, and NGOs.
In the three days since then, security experts say the same Chinese cyber espionage group has dramatically stepped up attacks on any vulnerable, unpatched Exchange servers worldwide.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters today the vulnerabilities found in Microsoft’s widely used Exchange servers were “significant,” and “could have far-reaching impacts.”I'll just bet you're concerned. I'm not at all trying to tell you how to do your job, Miss Psaki, but the first person I'd call would be former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. We don't know for sure the Hildabeast has a handle on this, or whether she ever actually successfully wiped that hard driver of hers. I mean, isopropyl alcohol and some elbow grease SHOULD do it, but at the level of security involved, "Evil Level Class IV Secret", her staff may want to try something stronger, say hydroflouric acid.
“We’re concerned that there are a large number of victims,” Psaki said.
This is a comprehensive systematic hacking job, not some one-time breach:
In each incident, the intruders have left behind a “web shell,” an easy-to-use, password-protected hacking tool that can be accessed over the Internet from any browser. The web shell gives the attackers administrative access to the victim’s computer servers.What to do? What to do?
[SNIP]
“We’ve worked on dozens of cases so far where web shells were put on the victim system back on Feb. 28 [before Microsoft announced its patches], all the way up to today,” Adair said. “Even if you patched the same day Microsoft published its patches, there’s still a high chance there is a web shell on your server. The truth is, if you’re running Exchange and you haven’t patched this yet, there’s a very high chance that your organization is already compromised.”
Meanwhile, CISA has issued an emergency directive ordering all federal civilian departments and agencies running vulnerable Microsoft Exchange servers to either update the software or disconnect the products from their networks.Uhhh, yeah-uh! The information is out. As cheap as memory is today, just as the NSA can do, the CCP can save every last email and attachment file, and the information can be looked at when the need arises.
Adair said he’s fielded dozens of calls today from state and local government agencies that have identified the backdoors in their Exchange servers and are pleading for help. The trouble is, patching the flaws only blocks the four different ways the hackers are using to get in. But it does nothing to undo the damage that may already have been done.
“On the call, many questions were from school districts or local governments that all need help,” the source said, speaking on condition they were not identified by name. “If these numbers are in the tens of thousands, how does incident response get done? There are just not enough incident response teams out there to do that quickly.”I'm guessing these organizations made the most calls because they have the highest level of Affirmative Action, hence the smallest proportion of smart White people. As Steve Sailer says, we're running out of White people.
“It’s a question worth asking, what’s Microsoft’s recommendation going to be?,” the government cybersecurity expert said. “They’ll say ‘Patch, but it’s better to go to the cloud.’ But how are they securing their non-cloud products? Letting them wither on the vine.”Whoa, do they think I feel any better knowing all the info is on the cloud? When the Chinese ever get the humidity and instability how they want it in this cloud, I foresee a thunder-hackstorm throwing out information the size of golf balls.
Peak Stupidity has written before on the stupidity of a country that practically begs for espionage from the darker elements out of China - See ICE Jail Chinese Spy Si Chen* and Current-Era Espionage and Immigration. Instead of working from the mainland of China, how much easier would it be to create a back door, or the framing for one, in Microsoft software, as a Member of the Technical Staff? There's no end to the benefits of Diversity.
PS: "Oh, wait", you say, "there's only one guy in that picture who looks Chinese." Yeah, but that's because the rest are a bunch of slackers who would rather be paid in that diversity parade, rather than be on the Redmond campus that day hacking away.
* This is the post about the LA Woman, "LA Woman Si Chen", that is.
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When the Music's Over
Posted On: Thursday - March 18th 2021 7:37PM MST
In Topics:   Music
I was trying to pick some music that I could dedicate to the scum Commies like the doxer described in the previous post. Nothing came to mind really quick, and I felt like some Doors. Peak Stupidity has only featured The Doors music once in a post about an "LA" Woman (in reality, a Chinese spy).
When the Music's Over is from The Doors' 54 year-ago album Strange Days. Yeah, 1967 had some strange days alright. These guys, especially Jim Morrison himself fit right in with all that. These weirdos could play though. This, along with The End, and maybe more songs I don't recall or never heard, has Mr. Morrison going on a rant in the middle. So long as that hypnotic combination of bass guitar and keyboards keeps going, I can get lost in these songs, whatever Morrison was going on about notwithstanding.
Guys like Christian Exoo's days won't go on forever. The music will be over for people like him, as soon as Americans have a little less to lose. Imagine "our fair sister" is America:
What have they done to our fair sister?
Ravaged and plundered and ripped her and bit her,
stuck her with knives in the side of the dawn, and
tied her with fences and dragged her down.
The Doors were:
Jim Morrison – Vocals
Ray Manzarek – Keyboards
Robby Krieger – Guitar
John Densmore – Drums
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