The 5-Comrade Electrical Band vs. the Bee Gees
Posted On: Thursday - September 5th 2019 6:37PM MST
In Topics:   Commies  Music

Our post on road signage of this past Tuesday, Sign, Sign, where'd they put the sign? ♪♫♬ referenced, of course*, a song by a late-1960's/early-1970's band called simply The Five Man Electrical Band. The hit song Signs (later on covered with decent success in 1990 by Tesla, already run out of material, I guess) is the only song I know. The Wiki page says they had many other hits in Canada. I had no idea this was a Canadian band from Ottawa. Well, isn't that special?
I've been putting Peak Stupidity music features mostly along with posts that they seem to go with, as of late. I DID NOT put this band's song in Tuesday's post for the simple reason that the lyrics are pretty much what you'd get out of a bunch of Communists. Yeah, I know, Peak Stupidity has maintained since our beginnings that lyrics aren't important. The song in question has a good melody, though not in particular a great "sound", as it sounds like a folk song. This '60's-era (it was actually 1971) song has hippie lyrics that go with the times. and I'd always liked it before.
As I read the lyrics in order to put some into that previous post, I just got really annoyed with whoever wrote it's 48 y/o attitude. Yeah, there can be too much clutter in the world, as per the image above. I don't like people telling me what to do, either. I! GET! THAT! [/Carlson]
And the sign said anybody caught trespassin' would be shot on sight,I'm not sure. Jesus does come across as a hippie Commie sometimes, I'll grant you. However, I'll take the wisdom of the Founder's of America and their great respect for property rights. The guy's got every right to keep you off his land, hippie. Wait until you and your friends actually do some work and build something. How'd you feel, Five Man Electrical Band songwriter, if someone steals your guitars, or worse, Tesla decides to quit paying the royalties for the use of your one hit that keep you in the nursing home? Are you gonna sue him? "What gives you the right?!"
so I jumped on the fence and-a yelled at the house, "Hey! What gives you
the right
to put up a fence to keep me out or to keep mother nature in."
If God was here he'd tell you to your face, "Man, you're some kinda sinner"
Alright, enough, I was gonna "fisk" the whole damn song, but I don't have time for this. How about some non-Commie music for tonight?
This one is pretty non-political, as the lyrics don't mean a whole lot. Peak Stupidity has put down the disco music before (or if not, we damn sure should have), but this Bee Gees song was just a tad before the disco era, being from 1975, off their album Main Course. It did have that funky bass, which is great in this song, and the guys do use the guitars as percussion instruments (a disco thing that I don't like), but it's still got a great tune to it. Additionally, this was before the time that the Bee Gees went full chipmunk with their voices.
Even at it's worst, disco still beat Communism, so enjoy Jive Talkin':
This Australian band's name, is just a representation of the letters "B" and "G" for "Brothers Gibb". They had various other band members, but the 3 brothers were:
Barry Gibb – vocals, rhythm guitar.
Robin Gibb – vocals, occasional keyboards.
Maurice Gibb – vocals, bass guitar, rhythm and lead guitar, keyboards.
* "Of course" depending very much on your age.
No comments - Click here to start thread
Our favorite pundits have grown up.
Posted On: Thursday - September 5th 2019 8:18AM MST
In Topics:   Pundits  Liberty/Libertarianism  Anarcho-tyranny

It just so happened to be columns I've read recently from 2 of Peak Stupidity's favorite pundits that really made me wonder "why has it taken you this long?" The question is in regard to their, assumed, based on what they've just written, naivety regarding the state of the
On the left there, you've got Ann Coulter remarking, regarding the ctrl-left:
The only problem is that no one on their side believes in good faith, fair process or common sense. Here’s the reality: We don’t trust the other side, nor should we.In her latest great (as usual) column, Ann Coulter To The Left: We Can’t Entrust Our Liberties To Your Dirty Hands, is Miss Coulter really just now realizing that the left doesn't play fair and the American legal system, infiltrated by the left at the high levels, doesn't care about Constitutionality? In a few examples she gives, Ann shows us the unfairness and the ctrl-left's unwillingness to play by the rules that Conservatives and Libertarians play by:
In 1994, nearly 60% of Californians voted to deny government services to illegal aliens. Proposition 187 was approved 59% to 41%, with the votes of 56% of African Americans, 57% of Asians—and even a third of Hispanics. It won in every county of California except San Francisco. In heavily Latino Los Angeles County, Proposition 187 passed by a 12-point margin.Her conclusion:
Liberals said: No problem, we’ll take the case to a left-wing, Carter-appointed federal judge who will overturn the will of the voters! District Court Judge Mariana Pfaelzer held that the perfectly constitutional law was “unconstitutional” and, today, California taxpayers are forced to spend billions of dollars on food, housing, education, health care and prison cells for illegal immigrants.
In 2008, Californians voted against gay marriage. Again, this was California—not South Carolina—and voters decided, 52% to 48%, that “marriage” is not between a mailbox and a chimpanzee, a rhododendron and refrigerator, but only between a man and woman.
Liberals said to themselves: No problem. We’ll just find a gay district court judge to overturn the vote. This will be a piece of cake.
They also said, Not only are we going to reverse the vote, but we will name and shame the people on the other side (except African Americans, who voted overwhelmingly for Proposition 8, much to the embarrassment of progressives). People found to have donated to the marriage initiative would be driven out of their jobs, fired from high-tech firms they founded, and chased from Mexican restaurants. [sorry, missing a bunch of Coulter's italics and links.]
It’s not the underlying issue in any of these examples that’s the problem—it’s the flouting of the democratic process. I’m not saying: We trusted you and got a bad result. I am saying: We trusted you, but you abandoned the Constitution and the law to get the result that you could not win honestly.Ya' think?!, as they say now. That's been going on for decades now.
On the right (side of the picture, that is), I just read a series of unz/vdare posts by John Derbyshire that bemoan this non-adherence to Constitutional principles by the ctrl-left. (From unz, because there are good comments, please read: Do We Have Government of Laws, or Not?, Unequal Justice In New York: Sheldon Silver Still Free,and Justice Delayed Twelve Years In Knoxville Horror Slayings.) In the most general of these columns, the first one above, Mr. Derbyshire relates the story of Conservative Congressman Steve Stockman of Texas is being railroaded by the Feds - 10 years prison for "fundraising irregularities." Hell, there are so many Federal laws that YOU CAN'T NOT BREAK ONE every day of the week, especially if you are in that Feral swamp itself. Mr. Derbyshire refers to an article by a VDare colleague*:
My colleague makes a good case that Stockman was stitched up for taking on the Deep State while being too much of a National Conservative—translation: not enough of a cuck to the cheap-labor donor lobbies—to get any support from the Republican Party.In the 2nd article we've linked to by Mr. Derbyshire, he dicusses the lack of justice for the NY policrook, Sheldon Silver:
James then contrasts Stockman’s fate with the numerous non-prosecutions or gentle wrist-slaps delivered to Establishment darlings like Hillary Clinton, Al Sharpton, and Ilhan Omar, who have displayed an approach to the people’s laws about campaign-finance, taxes, and immigration far more careless—to use the mildest possible adjective—than Steve Stockman’s.
James notes that this pattern doesn’t just apply to the politically powerful. When there’s a street rumble involving Antifa, arrests are made, charges are brought, and convictions are handed down … but hardly ever against the Antifa goons.
And all that time, since he was found guilty the first time four years ago, Sheldon Silver hasn’t done an hour of jail time. Not only is he a free man; he’s been drawing a state pension from his assembly years of nearly $7,000 a month.This is nothing new, John. Anyway, his 3rd article on modern American "justice" is on the horrific "Knoxville Horror" double-murder/torture case perpetrated by 5 black guys against a young white couple. NO, it HASN'T been in the national news much. Why do you ask?
This guy is 75 years old. If this current appeals panel re-affirms his conviction and he appeals to the Supreme Court, he might easily string this out for a couple more years. If they overturn his conviction and the feds go for a third trial, Silver could be in his eighties before anything happens to him, if anything ever does.
OK, by this point I've just gotta say something to Mr. Derbyshire and the other intelligent patriotic Conservatives out there:
Where the hell have all the Conservatives been when Libertarians have been talking and writing about the travesty of the American justice legal system? They have had lots of words deriding them for harping on “muh Constitution” and calling them “Libertards” when they get into too much detail on the intricacies of our Founders principles and “muh rule of law” and shit.
Whatdya’ expect was gonna happen when the other side took over, Conservatives? Do you think they have this respect for the ideals of the Founders of this country? They cared a lot only when it got them out of jail on technicalities for acts of destruction over the last 50 years. Now that they have control, the principles you’ve been taking for granted don’t mean a hill of beans to them.
Peak Stupidity, in our Liberty/Libertarianism section, has a post that explains that Libertarians and Conservatives have a lot to learn from each other.
All of this writing by these 2 excellent pundits would be great examples for a dictionary under the heading Anarcho-Tyranny. Though I will give Ann Coulter plenty of credit for being a Libertarian, having written much about Constitutional principles and how important it is they be followed, I still see her as sounding pretty naive, along with Mr. John Derbyshire, in thinking this is something quite new. I'm glad you've grown up, you two. Join the party, pals!
* By colleague there, John Derbyshire is referring to the excellent VDare writer (part of the meat & potatoes of the site) Jame Kirkpatrick. For more on Congressman Stockman and more on Anarcho-Tyranny, here - Unequal Justice And The Persecution Of Steve Stockman, Proud Boys, Andy Ngo—Is U.S. ALREADY A Third World Country?.
No comments - Click here to start thread
Historic Stupidity and the Phlogiston Theory of Combustion
Posted On: Wednesday - September 4th 2019 5:54PM MST
In Topics:   History  Science

Anyone? Anyone? Gore?
Way back, in our post Towards Sustainable Stupidity*, we compared Stupidity to the theorized substance called "phlogiston". Phlogiston was a substance theorized to be a part of the combustion reaction, in order to explain the results of scientific experiments conducted in this area.
Per this American Chemical Society page on this chemistory (chemical history?),
Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier forever changed the practice and concepts of chemistry by forging a new series of laboratory analyses that would bring order to the chaotic centuries of Greek philosophy and medieval alchemy. Lavoisier’s work in framing the principles of modern chemistry led future generations to regard him as a founder of the science.Mr. Lavoisier left behind the old Greek elements of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water, as understood by Aristotle, to try to explain what was being researched his age of modern chemistry, in which actual experiments were being done. Much earlier in the 1700's, German scientist Georg Ernst Stahl had proposed this invisible (and weirder yet, capable of flow through solids) substance to explain this: When many substances, such as a normal fuel, were burned in air, at the end of combustion, the product, ash, weighed less than the initial fuel. The explanation was the phlogiston was released via the reaction.

It got more complicated, though, when reactions of metallic substances resulted in a GAIN in mass as they were heated. That had to be explained. These guys already had the conservation of mass concept ingrained in them, so the reaction had to involve a product that had a negative mass.
Sure, that sounds crazy, but it's really rather creative. It's not like the real details of the 4 forces of physics (or is it more now, due to more government funding? I haven't been keeping up with the lit-ra-toor) were all known about. What was mass on the chemical level, before the basic particles of atoms were known? Newton had developed his theory of gravity, but who said "m" had to always be a positive number? This negative mass of the phlogiston was part of a theory that still was the best explanation scientist had, at least the ones that weren't DENIERS.
Keep in mind, there were no spectrometers and precision flow meters and the like. This was the kind of equipment the scientist of the time, and up through less than a century ago had to work with. It was all glass, flasks, beakers, tubes, with some rubber and leather products for seals of different sorts and mechanical scales and balances.

Down further in this same article, we see that the science was not settled.
In experiments with phosphorus and sulfur, both of which burned readily, Lavoisier showed that they gained weight by combining with air. With lead calx, he was able to capture a large amount of air that was liberated when the calx was heated. To a suspicious Lavoisier, these results were not explained by phlogiston.Now that's some brilliant science and the reason that Mr. Lavoisier is considered the father of modern chemistry.
Although Lavoisier now realized that combustion actually involved air, the exact composition of air at that time was not clearly understood. In August 1774, the eminent English natural philosopher Joseph Priestley met with Lavoisier in Paris. He described how he had recently heated mercury calx (a red powder) and collected a gas in which a candle burned vigorously. Priestley believed his "pure air" enhanced respiration and caused candles to burn longer because it was free of phlogiston. For this reason, he called the gas that he obtained from decomposing mercury calx “dephlogisticated air.”
In Paris, the intrigued Lavoisier repeated Priestley's experiment with mercury and other metal calces. He eventually concluded that common air was not a simple substance. Instead, he argued, there were two components: one that combined with the metal and supported respiration and the other an asphyxiant that did not support either combustion or respiration. By 1777, Lavoisier was ready to propose a new theory of combustion that excluded phlogiston. Combustion, he said, was the reaction of a metal or an organic substance with that part of common air he termed "eminently respirable." Two years later, he announced to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Paris that he found that most acids contained this breathable air. Lavoisier called it oxygène, from the two Greek words for acid generator.
At this point in the post, I want to make sure the reader does not think I'm being facetious about all this. See, the title of this post may not mean what one would think it means at first glance. My point is absolutely not that this 350 y/o wayward theory of the composition of substances was an instance of "historic stupidity". On the contrary, I think that those who have disdain for the great work of the "giants" whose shoulders modern scientists stand on, are the ones showing historic stupidity.
It's easy to be smug about the degree of intelligence of the people back in history, as we live in comfort and prosperity. I can remember in high school history classes thinking that people of 100 years back, not to mention 1000, were just all much, much dumber that our crowd (it was not even a particularly stellar high school!) As for science, I'd felt the same way. These people were screwing around with flasks of this and that, dropping stuff off of leaning towers** and stuff, while we had rocket engines putting out 750 TONS of thrust.
Nope, the humans in history, at least of the Western world, were no dummies, just people living their lives at the level humanity had achieved. Their scientists were just standing on the shoulders of a much fewer number of giants. I will write another post on the science/engineering aspect another time.
PS: I found the ACS article the best source on this history from just a cursory search, though the Wiki article is fine. This science blog, written by a lady PhD is a little flippant and in my opinion, has a little of that disdain for those scientists of the past. Finally, this last one is a very quick summary of the history, and has a silly video at the bottom that gave me the first clue (in > 3 decades since chemistry class) that phlogiston is pronounced flah'-gis-tin (accented on the 1st syllable), not Flow-gis'-tonn (accented on the 2nd). Who knew? There's no way I'll ever get this pronunciation correct at this late date, and should I really care?
Maybe I should care, come to think of it, were I the type to be concerned and all about this Global Climate DisruptionTM thing. I mean, that phlogiston theory has the advantage of carbon neutrability, and who doesn't want a world that is carbon neutral?
* One of my best titles, if I do say so myself. Also, my promise to write on this topic was at the bottom of the post Nat-Geo and the once great Royal Scientific Societies - Part 2, in which I gave appreciation to the wonderful science and scientific societies of the past.
** No, I don't think that's the real story, as Galileo Galilei's idea of a constant gravitational acceleration was most likely not really tried, and air drag would have caused it to be an invalid test anyway. Still, Mr. Galileo's curiosity has remained with the Western world, in projects such as David Letterman's dropping of objects off buildings, and then, of course, those fabulous gentlemen of modern science, the Mythbusters. (Yes, that last part was indeed facetious!)
No comments - Click here to start thread
Back to Skool
Posted On: Tuesday - September 3rd 2019 6:43PM MST
In Topics:   Race/Genetics  Educational Stupidity

It's that time of year again. Time for a real edumacation, not just that stuff your parents teach you because they love and want the best for you. No, this is straight outta
Now, this lady is very nice, as every one of the elementary school teachers have been. She's not stupid. (I don't mean in the political world, because the Big-Ed business make them all pretty dense in that sense.) There's a minor racial angle here, I gotta say.
See, the "y" on the end of "can not hardly ready" is obviously a hand-o (typo by hand?), and with all the grading these teachers have to do, I can let that slide easily. However, the "not hardly" part is a different story. It's the kind of grammar that is so ingrained in a black lady that even after years of teaching, she can probably not shake off the verbal idiosyncrasies from use in her home life. It's that simple. She's got to "keep it real", as it were, even if it means writing with bad grammar in the corrections of the kids!
I had to start explaining already that the teachers and others in authority are not always right. One may as well start early in life. He gets it. He does need to work on the penmanship, though, as I ain't agonna stand for that sheeet, no way, no how.
No comments - Click here to start thread
Sign, Sign, where'd they put the sign? ♪♫♬
Posted On: Tuesday - September 3rd 2019 10:20AM MST
In Topics:   Artificial Stupidity  The Future  Peak Stupidity Roadshow
... the GPS is yellin', I'm goin' out of my mind.
Do this, don't do that, where the hell's the sign? ♪♫♬

Way back, in this Peak Stupidity Roadshow (formerly "Traffic Stupidity") post, called Smart Devices / Dumb People - Will Moore's Law hold?, we mentioned a possible trend for the near future. That is, with all the Artificial Stupdity around on the stand-alone GPS/database devices and now the smartphones, how long will cities, counties, and State road departments keep up the signs?
I related that short anecdote in that post linked-to above from 2 years ago in which the fellow who trusted his GPS over some simple directions did not seem to understand that street signs could help him get to my house. In this case, the street signs are indeed still up. They are not on each of the 4 corners of the intersections anymore, though.
Maybe I'm remembering badly, and this is of course location dependent, but didn't they used to have one per corner? Perhaps that IS a big much. You do want one sign that can be read from your direction that is perpendicular to you, so you know what street you're about to cross or turn on. Then there should be a parallel one for the street you're on, for the drivers on the other street. They may as well be on the same post, for cost savings.
That guy on the way to my house had no excuse, but his old-fashioned navigation skills were apparently pretty much gone. However, I DO like to know where I am based on more than what a computer is telling me. Old-fashioned navigation on the road is very much like old-fashioned navigation in the air, using both Dead Reckoning* and Pilotage. Whereas in the air, dead reckoning would mean determining one's future position based on airspeed, heading and the forecast winds, on the ground it'd be "take a right on the big road, head north 1 1/2 miles, take a left at that intersection..." Whereas in the air, pilotage would be checking the deduced position via towns, lakes, highways/railroads, and antennas, on the ground it'd be making sure you see that Quicky-Mart at the left, and then there are the signs to POSITIVELY identify one's position**.
(If you've ever done a delivery job before the current-era, then you would know how addresses, usually, work in cities. Even numbers are going up on your right, the N vs. S. numbers split at this street, etc. There's quite a bit to it, depending on the city. I personally like rectangles, to make this work.)
It's a combination of both, dead reckoning and, let's just call it driverage, that, just as in old-fashioned aviation, lets one comfortably navigate around town, and around the whole country even. Both in aviation and with your average American driver on the ground, the old skills are being lost.
Someone in my immediate family (not gonna say who, in case she reads this blog!) is a case in point. Her phone account was somehow completely out of "data", as in she wasn't gonna get anymore of those internet packets till next cycle (not her cycle, the cell company's). The last time this happened, she paid $5 last minute at one point in order to get somewhere she'd already been multiple times. That's a serious unhealthy reliance on software***, and explains why we call it "Artificial Stupidity" on this site.
Nowadays, with those strapped budgets of cities and counties, having to pay for those promised high pension benefits, oh, and the $80,000,000 sprucing-up of the libraries and the building of new stadiums, they just don't have that extra money for fixing pot-holes, much less repairing signs! It doesn't help to be fairly close to a university - gotta spruce up that dorm-room wall or take a souvenir of the good times back home upon graduation, right? Who HASN'T taken a road sign? Come on, fess up here. There SHOULD BE enough money in a city/county budget to replace those signs lost to rust, students, and plinkers.
Yet, if the assumption is that Americans have lost their old navigation skills, then why replace any signs? There are probably many drivers out there who would believe their GPS over a street sign as to where they actually are at the moment. If the phone says "this is not your beautiful house" then, hell, maybe this is NOT your beautiful house.
Per the song referenced up top, would it be better to have fewer signs around? I'll have more to say on that song in another post, but, nah, the other signs that are nothing but annoyances, the "800-SUE-THEM" billboards and 100 ft. high Golden Arches, will still be there. The useful ones for those of the old school navigation, as in knowing where the hell you really are, may just never get repaired. We'll all absolutely need those pieces of electronics to get where we're going, or really good dead reckoning, one.
What better time to get that souvenir, for me, the 1100 block of Stupidity Lane.
* Yeah, it really should be "Ded" reckoning, as the "Ded" is for "Deduced". However, it's been written as "dead" for a long time, which, conveniently, made for a great title for an early-1980's 2-record acoustic Grateful Dead album (songs from it are featured here, here, here, here, and here. What can I say? It was a GREAT ALBUM!)
** In the not-really-THAT-old days of flying, this would mean getting down to 500 ft off the ground to read the town name on a water tower.
*** I'll give her some credit. She doesn't use if for many of her normal destinations, after a few trips, and she can read a map at home if it comes down to it ... but WOULD she?
Comments (3)
Head East - Never Been Any Reason
Posted On: Saturday - August 31st 2019 8:01PM MST
In Topics:   Music
This song by a fairly unknown band named Head East, from eastern Illinois, goes way back to 1974. This is such a great sound, that I will have to try to see if any other music by them is as good, starting with the rest of the Flat as a Pancake album that I never have listened to.
In case you're wondering, Wikipedia describes a possible explanation for the name of this band:
In a 2011 interview, founding member Steve Huston claimed that soon after sunrise one morning in 1969, Baxter Twilight woke the band members in their communal home/practice facility. Having been up all night sitting in the front yard consuming acid, the roadie said that when the sun rose, it turned into a giant talking head and told him the band's new name should be "Head East". After thinking on it briefly, the band liked the unusual nature of it and has kept the name. However, other members of the band dispute Huston's claim about the naming.Sure, go with what the sun tells you. Ask John Denver about that.
At the time of the recording of Flat as a Pancake, Head East was:
Roger Boyd - keyboards/vocals
Steve Huston - drums/vocals
Mike Somerville - guitar/vocals
Dan Birney - bass
John Schlitt - vocals
Steve Anderson - back-up vocals
The high voice in this duet is Steve Huston, the drummer, while the regular lead singer, John Schlitt, sung the rest of it. What a great sound! Even the mini-moog synthesizer is played as a rock instrument.
No comments - Click here to start thread
The Cocktail Party theory of Political Stupidity
Posted On: Saturday - August 31st 2019 2:16PM MST
In Topics:   Trump  US Feral Government  Female Stupidity

Peak Stupidity has spent many words trying to explain why the patriotic Americans, either a majority still or very near one, have not been getting anything like their way in policy in many decades. What happens to these good-guy politicians once they get over to Washington? It's especially bad with Supreme Court justices, as once they go bad, there's usually no removing them from the Federal Shithole without us having to round up a coroner.
We've theorized before that maybe it's just that the ones that get elected, or selected, as it were, are just a bunch of immoral psychopaths. We've theorized that perhaps most of them have been Deep-Stated (threatened, bribed, or blackmailed), or in the case of our President, who is not to be left out here, maybe Neo-conned. (The latter is only in terms of foreign policy.)
Something I've been thinking of for a long time that could explain the reason even most of our best people go native is the possibility that they have been simply pussy-whipped by their wives, who want to dress up and go to the best Washington, FS cocktail parties. See, women being women (and we sure don't want to stop that), they do like to show off black dresses, new $200 shoes, and $50 hairstyles.* Some of these ladies have been through a lot of abuse, whether actual abuse from the psychopathic politician husbands or just the normal wear-and-tear on the rubber-chicken** campaign trail. Woman call a lot of things "abuse" that are normal parts of life, but still, that resentment will be there.

"I'll be damned, Honey, if I'm gonna get all the way to Washington, and you're gonna get us dis-invited to the Department of Homeland Security summer cotillion just because of your, what was it, concerns about CONSTITUTIONALITY?!! If you want this marriage to last, you'd better learn to get along with these people. Why do you keep starting these arguments about illegal searches and seizures and Red Flag laws, and that crap? You're embarrassing the both of us!"A decent married guy may come to Washington to take office and make some changes to help actual Americans vs. our Globalist elites. However, usually his wife will not be concerned with the politics, just more with the social scene. There is lots of taxpayer money there to be spent on clothing and entertainment. She reckons that that was the point of making it to the nation's capital.
"Then, last week, you ask that girl to refresh our drinks, and she turns out to be Justice Kagan, of the FREAKING Supreme Court's girlfriend .. and, where did she get those awful shoes anyway?? And quit arguing with that woman from Minnesota, the one that wears that ugly headscarf indoors. Imagine! She never did get your Aloha Snackbar joke, hey, I just laugh to keep up appearances - I don't get it either! Then you get us kicked out from the McCain memorial black-tie ball for saying, what was it, 'I'm glad he's dead'? I mean, I can't take you anywhere. We're pariahs! People look at me like I'm wearing a dress from Old Navy."
What happens after 5 years, or 2 terms, whichever comes first, of this constant haranguing about fitting in, as per the "conversation" above? How much can the guy take before he just chucks all those principles and goes native?
The "Cocktail Party Theory" relies on a major assumption, which is that the whole social society of that city is made of lefties. It's not just the President, Speaker of the House, and Attorney General who attend these things, mind you. You may get invited to the house (recently awarded the "yard of the month") of the Assistant Secretary of the Department of OPM Disbursements who PERSONALLY KNOWS the wife of the Acting Deputy Attorney General. Or maybe it's just the Assistant TO the Secretary of OPM Disbursement ... still, these people are IMPORTANT and they dress very well.
After 5 decades of ctrl-left infiltration of the Institutions of American society, a major one being the US Feral Gov't, believe me, you won't find many true Conservatives or Constitutionalists in the common ranks. After all, these people live off of taxpayers' money, so they are not likely to be fans of Dr. Ron Paul.
It's the swamp. Once you've been there for a while, and the wife is anxious, you just got to decide: Get busy draining, or get busy entertaining.
* I hope I am not too out of date here with my pricing. I'd be perfectly fine with women of the current day paying $4.25 to get their hair fixed up like Valerie Bertinelli, but One Day at a Time Valerie Bertinelli, with a rear-end to match of course.
** This expression, I suppose, has meant chicken that is not cooked well enough. Who cooks anymore, though? Both chicken titans of the superpowers have made this a non-issue.
Comments (4)
Protocols of the Sisters of Zuckerberg
Posted On: Friday - August 30th 2019 7:19PM MST
In Topics:   Internets  Feminism  ctrl-left
There'll be more original posts coming here on Peak Stupidity - tomorrow, next week at the latest, I promise ... It's just that many of the opinion posts on our very small blogroll (and I hardly read Instapundit anymore, unfortunately) bring up additional points I'd like to make. The Steve Sailer posts on unz.com, in particular, also perturb me enough to want to comment some more here. Mr. Sailer reads the NY Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, and a bunch of other lefty propaganda outlets that would not be safe* for me to peruse myself, even if I did have the time. Per his own words, he "gets the 21st century" (in terms of sociology and politics) and I believe that.

Facebook's CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a sister Donna, one crazy feminist critic of "the classics" (on account of who wrote 'em), that Steve Sailer has written quite a few posts about. The latest, Mark Zuckerberg's Sister Speaks Power to Truth About How She Is Oppressed by Socrates, is a piece of work about a real piece of work. In the latter case, that is no compliment.
Donna Zuckerberg is famous only because her brother created this wonderful "platform" for people all over the world to pass along photos and videos of their quiche recipes and bowel movements (often associated, and equally "LIKED") to each other and is a gazillionaire many times over. She now has a platform of her own as this Classics professor who, again, does not seem to like or understand the concepts of those founders of Western civilization that eventually resulted in stuff like, well, Facebook. Her point in an article excerpted by Mr. Sailer is that there are opinions out there in the political world that are bad. They should not be debated, because, the way men do this, see, is to keep bringing up logic and arguments that get one trapped. That hurts your credibility, which is mean ...
A call to debate may seem intellectual, even civilized. In theory, well-structured and respectful debates are an ideal opportunity to reach an audience that isn’t fixed in its views. In reality, however, most “debate me” types seem to view them mainly as a chance to attack their opponent’s credibility. Their model is not Lincoln and Douglas, but rather Socrates: By needling their interlocutors with rapid-fire questions, they aim to reveal, as they see it, their opponents’ ignorance and stupidity, and their own superior intelligence and logic.It sounds reasonable at first - name-calling is not part of a good debate. However, reading between the lines, one may wonder why she doesn't like answering these "rapid-fire" question that lead to noting that Mrs.. Zuckerberg may indeed be ignorant and stupid, advanced degrees notwithstanding. Apparently, "if you're right, you're right" is not cool, and therefore debating is bad, mmmkaay? Here's where DZuck goes full Commie:
… And whatever happened to my Latin enthusiast? His online presence has faded, and his followers complain about how difficult it is to find his videos because YouTube keeps deleting his channels. As Laurie Penny noted last year with respect to Milo Yiannopoulos, deplatforming white supremacists is a much more successful way to shut them down than insisting that “sunlight is the best disinfectant” and allowing them to air their hateful views in a structured debate setting.Case closed, I guess. The modern ctrl-left talks a lot about having conversations, but, as Steve Sailer notes, "As everybody knows in 2019 a “conversation” is when you shut up and listen to Donna Zuckerberg-types talk.". I couldn't have said it better myself, but I would have if I'd been the first of us to read her Washington Post article, which could never have happened.
… I believe there is little point in engaging with these people — and I’m not open to debating that topic further.
I can add that this type of talk is familiar to me from the history of the hard-core Socialists and Commies. At this point it's not yet about rounding up dissenters or just humiliating them with big-character-posters hung around their necks and pig's blood spilled on them (remember what happened to Carrie and she wasn't even Chinese!). This is the end of the '10's and we are in the information age. You just get de-platformed in various ways from the Social Media, youtube, and whatever else slows down the access to information on, and the information flow from, the bad-thinking dissenters.**
Take heart, though, people. It's just the internet, not real life. Even if your youtube channel is gone, your Facebook account shut down, and your website hard to find, when the ctrl-left tries to shut us all up, there is still plenty of technology for communication. Ham radio, anyone? Even on the internet, it may come to different ways to disseminate the web site addresses. If they come for the URLs, I guess we will all have to start writing 12-digit IP numbers on secret slips of paper. The things that are real, our preps, weapons, some real money, etc. will still be real, while these power-hungry ctrl-left freaks are left with nothing but their words of stupidity.

* Trying to keep the blood pressure in the green on that Higi Station.
** Oh, and they try to get you fired. That won't work either if people understand what sticking together means. There is great power in numbers.
*************************************
[ UPDATED 8/31 morn.: ] Took out 2nd footnote, as it is Mrs. not Miss, Zuckerberg. I did not do a good job in searching for information on whether she was married. Corrected, and THANK YOU, BernCar!
*************************************
Comments (2)
Rocky Mountain High
Posted On: Thursday - August 29th 2019 7:04PM MST
In Topics:   Music  Treehuggers  Liberty/Libertarianism
Perhaps the best way to get a song out of my head is to blog about it. The great live version of John Denver's Rocky Mountain High is the case today. There's only one bad part of this live version. Whether it's for trademark reasons* or I dunno, at the end of the chorus, he does not sing " ... Colorado". I keep waiting for that, and, well, I had to sing "Colorado" it myself to make this work, and, believe me, you wouldn't want to be here.
say it, say it!

" ... Colorado ♪♫♬" Whewww! That's better.
No, that's not all my thoughts on this. I thought back to the time of John Denver's music, including this very inspirational classic**, when America had 2 1/8 hundred million people in the same area in which there are now 3 1/2 hundred million (depending on which aliens WANT to be counted). Maybe we should pick up that Greenland - it IS, in fact, kind of high, but that's 11,000 ft. of icecap, not quite the scenery one would imagine from the song.
It's just so much easier to have room to enjoy the land, and Rocky Mountain High, sung by someone who was no silent majority member*** has the lyrics you can't sing today "... more people, more scars upon the land ...♪♫♬" in it. This was a time, when, for just that one decade of the 1970's, more people were moving out of American cities than into them. The treehuggers of the era were no longer wearing sandals and keeping their arm-pits unshaven (unless in the middle of hiking the Continental Divide). They were no longer hippies, but put their money where there mouths were often, to get off the grid or at least leave the rat race, as John Denver also sang "Thank God I'm a Country Boy". There were a lot of people getting high in all kinds of ways, some of them while much closer to sea level than John Denver was. There were people singing about "blowing up your TV" even, my kinda people!
Your Peak Stupidity host was known to get high in his time, in the literal meaning of this wonderful song. I've hiked a lot in one particular mountain range that I consider very pristine. It's my favorite, and "I've been everywhere in this here land.".
Yep, what a time to be an American that was, in the era when John Denver was getting Rocky Mountain High! We lost this great musical artist more than a decade back. He died while getting high flying small homebuilt aircraft, something that would be right in the wheelhouse of a 1970's off-the-gridder. As you get older, you would find it easier to get to get high with a horizontally-opposed IC engine, versus hiking it. Or, you know, you could never see the Rocky Mountains and still be "born in the summer your 27th year, coming home to a place you've never been before... ♪♫♬
Here's the standard, polished-up studio version mentioning Colorado:
(Well, whaddya' know? The first video I embedded, with the best scenic views of the mountains, was not allowed to be played embedded. That's, like, Rocky Mountain LOW, or something.)
* For a State, though?! I figure Colorado, especially in this day and age, is perfectly fine with being associated with getting high in all meanings of the word.
** Kind of like a 2-generation-ago preppers anthem on getting off that grid.
*** He was a Democrat back when they were not the anti-white-people party, but then he was also anti-2nd Amendment and a critic of my man Ronnie. Not cool,
Comments (7)
Ann Coulter on traffic safety and illegal aliens
Posted On: Thursday - August 29th 2019 6:21PM MST
In Topics:   Immigration Stupidity  Pundits  Anarcho-tyranny  Peak Stupidity Roadshow
(Stand by for one more "hey, read this!" post for the week.)
We've had our very slight quibbles with this still-#1 written pundit of Peak Stupidity's, as explained herein. However, she's still batting a .980 to .990, and Miss Coulter hit it out of the park with this one - Labor Day Safety Tip—Watch Out For Drunk Driving Illegal Aliens! (yeah, her snark comes out even in the titles).

Go read the whole thing before I start pasting almost every bit of it in. I have to put this:
Or, as the Huffington Post puts it: “Latinos At Greater Risk of Dying From Driving While Intoxicated.” They’re victims of the drunk driving epidemic! German Concentration Camp Guards At Greater Risk of Dying From Accidental Inhalation of Zyklon B.What a wit, and, man, that Huff-Po headline is NOT a joke. I just clicked on it (so you wouldn't have to). I don't know what this type of lying is called - is there a long German word for it? Anyone ... anyone ... Dieter?
Anyway, Miss Coulter then quotes the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (like the NTSB, made up of decent people and one of the few US Feral Gov't agencies I could even stand to work for), thusly:
“The authors found that some Latino parents actively promoted drinking among their sons as a sign of masculinity or machismo. (A focus group) indicated drinking among Hispanics might be motivated by the need to prove their manhood within the Latino culture: ‘Everyone thinks they can handle alcohol, especially men.’ ... ‘A lot of Hispanics think that way. It’s the macho male and the woman gives in to the man. Machismo causes this behavior.’”Before I go far into this, let me state right here, that I have absolutely nothing against alcoholics and drunkards. I am long past thinking the M.A.D.D. organization is anything but a bunch of harridans struck with major mission creep. Drinking is one's own business. They don't see it that way anymore, as just the anti-drunk-driving "space" is not lucrative enough, apparently.
Besides that, drinking on the road can be pretty damn safe, FOR THE PEOPLE WHO CAN DO THIS. Driving after having 2 or 3 glasses of wine is a whole lot safer than driving while picking out some new shoes off on-line Macy's. In the former case, at least you are looking out of the fucking window, through which the vehicles, people and animals you may hit can be seen!
These hispanics, though, go too far, per Miss Coulter's next bit:
The report also stated, “Mexican-American DWI offenders vastly overestimated the number of drinks required to make them unsafe drivers (eight to 10 drinks).”See, that 10 drinks might be OK if it were some of that "near beer" or a few of those fruity deals (although, don't expect your stomach to be OK with 10 of those). However, note that macho business. It can be a good thing, and maybe current-era Americans could use a bit more of that. The Mexicans, though, would not be caught dead drinking near-beer or Bartles & James, especially because it's usually the drunk ones who survive the collisions due to "relaxed".
It’s unclear if the NHTSA’s methodology took into account the effects of Cinco de Mayo. [ LOL! ]
Contrary to the "PEOPLE WHO CAN DO THIS" above, the drunk macho illegal Mexicans, after having blood alcohol levels of 0.15% and up through "comatose" are not of the mindset of "I can do this". When you're that drunk it's more "I don't' give a damn about anything." People have been getting killed regularly by illegal alien drunk drivers, while Americans have curtailed this habit quite a bit over the last 30 years.
You can read the rest of Ann Coulter's article for some of the stats and the sadness of it. Peak Stupidity will add another aspect that, though hitting it out of the park, mind you, this pundit did not get into. That aspect is the Anarcho-Tyranny of it all. It's a 2-part thing, as not only do indigents with nothing to lose get treated much more leniently by the law (after all, there's no big money for The State to confiscate), but also, these illegals are under a different method of justice.
Let me bring the latter part up first. If you're "undocumented", well, who will be keeping track of you after the court case or your inadvertent or purposeful release from the "justice" system? The thing is, just as with the Chinese illegal aliens, discussed in "(let me tell ya') It's More Fun, Bein' An Illegal Alien.", who in American law enforcement* will be able to pick the guy out of a line-up or the kitchen of a restaurant, next year, when truly they all look alike?
So, once the guy who ran over and killed your family (in my case, I'd just want him held long enough for me to arrive an put holes in both lungs) skips out, there is no easy way to find him in Ole Mexico. Hold on, it gets WORSE! See, there's no border control, so the guy can just come right back next year. He is no longer named Jose. He is Hose-B now. 2 years and 10 beers later, and who knows who else may die. It'd be bad enough WITH this proposed border "wall", as justice wouldn't be served. The current way is that a manslaughtering illegal alien can get away with it multiple times.
In the meantime, Mr. Upright IT guy, who had 1 extra Mai-Tai at Applebees, will have his life up-ended if he blows that 0.09%. Yeah, $10,000 in fines, extra-high insurance for 3 years, and probably a loss of his job, then the HR ladies will make it hard for him to get hired at another IT job. Now, if he's a .Indian and the company is .Indianed-up, including HR, then it's all good. That's more Anarcho-Tyranny there, but at the Big-Biz level.
There you have it. Illegal alien Mexicans can drink and drive and kill and maim people with little recourse, while Americans have to stay at home, and drink while writing their friends on the internet and maybe blogging ... just sayin' ....
Thank you Ann Coulter. Read the whole thing!
* Oh, "hire Hispanic people into the immigration enforcement agencies" you say? Yeah, no corruption will happen there, no, none at all...
No comments - Click here to start thread
Traffic School hilarity update
Posted On: Tuesday - August 27th 2019 8:10PM MST
In Topics:   Humor  Peak Stupidity Roadshow
An anonymous commenter on the unz site regaled me with a tale of his experience in Traffic School, one that beats Peak Stupidity's couple of anecdotes all to hell. We related our experiences in "Good luck streak in Traffic School".
There will be test!

In Los Angeles you can sometimes get out of a speeding ticket by taking a few-hour class in traffic safety. Originally off duty cops would lead classes that concentrated on showing gruesome accident videos. Then an entrepreneur got the idea to organize classes led by struggling comedians, which were more entertaining.What a brilliant idea this guy had! You have to spend the time, if you're gonna do the crime, cause, I know, you can't do FIFTY-FIVE! Why not allow yourself the luxury of daydreaming time, without the annoyances of a distracting language that you can understand? You've gotta pay your own good money for Traffic School. I personally think that the US Gov't should guarantee bank loans for this important education - it's only fair.
Since I was studying Japanese I went in another direction and signed up to take the class in Japanese. It turned out that the teacher was Chinese, who could speak a little Japanese, and the class was supposed to be bilingual. All the other students were Chinese. To his credit the teacher every once in a while said something to me in Japanese, but most of the time I had no clue what was being talked about.
Nevertheless, it was enough to keep my driving record clean.
A Chinese driving instructor teaching Traffic School in Japanese in California! What a country! Only in America, no I mean, in California. What's next, Gypsie instructors teaching 3rd year college Ethics 301? Guatemalan illegal aliens teaching prep classes for the US Citizenship test?
I'm sure the roads of California are just a little bit safer now. Thank you for your testimony, anonymous commenter.
Comments (4)
"Almost Missouri" on web browser use
Posted On: Tuesday - August 27th 2019 6:20PM MST
In Topics:   Preppers and Prepping  iEspionage

This iEspionage form of modern stupidity is something Peak Stupidity has not concentrated on as much as we would like to. On the other hand, it is more of a topic for a prepper site. We do feel that a SHTF situation will arrive sometime in the not-too-distant future (nice weasel-wording there!). It'd really be best now to learn more about how to not be kept track of as much as the next guy.
When "the Man" is out for you in the current-era, you could only wish the technology of the era when the black folk really had something to be afraid of from him. Right now, The Man is named Uncle Sam, and he can find out so much about you without* leaving his swivel chair.
Computer software is not a major one of Peak Stupidity's core competencies, as the corporate pukes like to call it. Stupidity would be the molten lava at our core. I would like to have been saving more of this information, such as the quick advice from unz.com (mostly iSteve) commenter "Almost Missouri", but this is a start, at least, regarding anonymity in the use of web browser programs:
With a VPN, you are entrusting even more personal information to someone you don’t know.It's not like Peak Stupidity will give anything to Uncle Sam, The Man, but the hosting company is not one I have any confidence it as far as confidence goes. At least in our comments section, you could be anybody. That, and the fact that we are peanuts, as of yet, with not even the $LPC listing us as hateful, (thanks a lot!) as of yet. Keep on reading, and keep on writing, but that kind of advice above is always good to keep in mind for the future. I'll try to post more of this sort of thing, with the iEspionage Topic Key.
Under normal circumstances, your browsing can be read by your ISP (internet service provider). A VPN cuts the ISP out of the loop but cuts the VPN in, and now with more personal information (your credit card number, which to be fair, the ISP may also have) and opaque, proprietary software installed on your computer. ISPs also often try to get you to install such software on your computer too so they can better spy on you, but you can just skip it. With a VPN, you need that software for the VPN to work.
If you are using the Chrome browser (aka Google spyware), Google’s already spying on you at the source, and a VPN won’t shield anything from them. Indeed, since Google knows the source and destination of your browsing, it effectively invalidates the VPN, as far as Google is concerned. The same goes for other social apps, e.g., Facebook. (Note I said “app”, not just browsing a Google or Facebook page in a secure browser. They will still try to vacuum up all the data they can from your browser visit, but without source-side software, they are much more constrained.)
Also note that pretty much any computer made since 2008 has at least two additional operating systems you probably don’t know about (Management Engine and UEFI) which start before and stop after the operating system you think you are using. Most NSA-tier hacks probably happen here and VPNs will do nothing against it.
All that said, a VPN with a good reputation may still be worthwhile. Anyone with a subpoena (only slightly harder to get than a ham sandwich) can go to your ISP and get your full browsing history. With a VPN, the ISP will have nothing but the VPN’s URL to hand over. This will of course tell the subpoena holder that he needs to serve it on the VPN instead, which he will then do. The VPN will comply and hand over all of your browsing history they have, which at a good VPN should be no more than the last few seconds worth, at most.
So yeah, if you anticipate ever being in a lawsuit, you should probably get a VPN. If you think doxxers are after you, you should probably get a VPN and quit Chrome. If you think the NSA is after, you should quit the internet and the airwaves, retire to a villa in Abbottabad.
* Although it IS the US Gov't, after all, and its competency level is highly overrated, as we discussed in "Apprehending Jason Bourne, we're the government and we're all on it." (Part 2 and Part 3).
No comments - Click here to start thread
Roman Numeracy
Posted On: Monday - August 26th 2019 8:34PM MST
In Topics:   General Stupidity  Humor  History

While in Rome, you want to do as the Romans do, not as the Chinese tourists. I very much like their 2 millennia-old idea of not having to lug water around - water mains are your friend.
Roman numerals are a different story. What a crazy system! It was about a pretty presentation of numbers but not anything good for doing math. While we figured out the ages of buildings and engravings on the walls in Rome from the "I"s, "V"s, "X"s, "L"s, "C"s, "D"s. and "M"s, I thought about how a a Roman kid would have felt doing long division. Imagine being cooped up at 10 years old working out 20 problems like MCMLVII divided by XXV, instead of being outdoors in that nice Mediterranean climate playing Roman Ultimate Frisbee with the goats.
It's bad enough for a kid to have to do this stuff with our quite useable system of base-10 numbers, but Roman Numerals?? What in the Sam Hill were they thinking? We should count our blessings though, what with the aqueducts, sanitation, roads, Latin language roots, etc., but other than that stuff, I ask again:
What have the Romans ever done for us?!
Comments (4)
A Great War never even heard of - the Taiping Rebellion
Posted On: Monday - August 26th 2019 7:30PM MST
In Topics:   History  China  Bible/Religion  World Political Stupidity
Peak Stupidity's facetious post on Superpower Battle of the Chicken Titans featured (in one corner) General Zuo, known to Americans as General Tso, of sweet/salty/fatty chicken ignominy. Here's a follow up on the real war that this Chinese general was part of, and this was no laughing matter.

(Again, a lack of quality Jap cameras hampers our post.)
A friend brought this up 5 years or so ago to me, the fact that over the course of history there were wars in China the size of 20th-century World Wars of the West (and the whole world, of course) that most people have never even heard the name of. By "size", I mean how many MILLIONS of men maimed and killed. One such, and I believe this is the one he was referring to, was the mid-19th-century Taiping Rebellion. There is a nice compact write-up on a blog-site called "Daylight Atheist", written by Charleston (WV), Gazette writer James Haught*. For the record (of some sort), here is the Wiki article with quite a bit more detail.
As the Wiki article says from the get-go, this was no mere rebellion. It's called the Taiping Civil War** or the Taiping Revolution. Though not 1 in hundreds of Americans have heard of this Taiping Rebellion, for the Chinese it is a major part of their history. This war went on over three times as long as, and included the ~ 4 year time period of, the American Civil War**. Estimates of the men killed from just the fighting are at least 20 million, with maybe 50 more million, some of the latter dead from disease and starvation. At the least, there were 40 TIMES the deaths as there were in America at that same time in history, as almost as many Americans died in wartime than in all other wars of ours combined***.
One could of course put this as a proportion of population, and as pointed out long ago, China had more people at the time under discussion than the US has EVEN NOW! That would make America's proportion of the population killed (655,000 out of 31,000,000), 2.1%, under 1/2 of China's lowest estimate (20,000,000 out of 430,000,000), 4.6%, that could have been up to a horrific 15-20%! Just in absolute numbers, though, this was a culling of a big chunk the warrior population.
I had thought of Christian missionaries around the world as not having that much long-term influence, and I've mentioned before the Chinese lack of religion after the Communists drilled it out of them. People will tend revert to their old ways after the brave Christians get kicked out, as a group. However, this Taiping Rebellion, from back when China was Taoist, Buddhist, and all that, was started by a guy, one Hong Xiuquan, who had read some of that literature that Christians regularly leave wedged into the mailbox. Mr. Hong was under the mistaken impression that he was Jesus Christ's kid brother.
Hong said God commanded him to “destroy demons,” meaning officials and supporters of the reigning Qing Dynasty. [quotes from the James Haught article]Things got ugly very quickly after this.
Hong proclaimed the “Heavenly Kingdom of Peace” (Taiping Tianguo), and began raising a volunteer army to wage the opposite of peace. Oppressed peasants in southern China flocked to him, partly because of his miracle message and partly because they felt bitterness against the ruthless northern Qing government.This "Heavenly Kingdom" bit rings a bell, don't it? Oh, yeah, that sounds very much like the "Heaven's Gate" (only 39 dead - no biggie) cult of 1997 fame, and then the "People's Temple" of San Francisco with branch offices in the jungle at Jonestown, Guiana (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4 of this story).
The Qing Dynasty was the last of China's many multi-century-long dynasties through its 5,000 year history, and was ended after the child "last emperor" (of the movie) and the Empress "Dowager"**** Cixi at the beginning of the 20th century. General Zuo, the reason for this post out of nowhere. was on the side of the Qing government.
Early rebel victories against Qing troops in 1850 caused the Taiping army to swell beyond 700,000. One of leader Hong’s top aides — Yang Xiuqing, who claimed that his utterances were the voice of God speaking through him — became a secondary commander. Together, they mandated a puritanical society inflicting the death penalty for various vices and imposing strict separation of sexes.Yeah, see, now just as with Jim Jones, and fellow Commie Mao Zedong of one-century-later China on his Long
Although polygamy was banned, Hong, the supposed younger brother of Jesus, had a harem of concubines.


(I couldn't get any better resolution than this - sorry.)
Qing Dynasty rulers struggled to defeat the snowballing mutiny. Several local resistance militias were organized. The largest was the “Ever-Victorious Army” led by American commander Frederick Ward. After Ward was killed in 1862, command was taken by Briton Charles “Chinese” Gordon. Hiring expert foreign commanders for local mercenary defense armies was expedient during that chaotic period in China.This is interesting. I learned when reading up for that (linked-to just above) Long March article, both sides of the century-later Commie vs. Nationalist Civil War had Germans to help the with war strategy and tactics. It always comes down to "our Germans are better than their Germans", doesn't it?
Here's a tidbit from the end, after the
Hong’s body was exhumed and burned, and his ashes were blasted from a cannon, to deprive fanatical followers of a gravesite where he could be worshipped as a divine martyr.I've said it before, the Chinese LUV their fireworks. (They did invent, gunpowder, you know ...)
General Zuo had a big part in the Chinese government's side in ending this war. Think of this, as you munch down at the China King Buffet. As Paul Harvey would have said, had he written for this blog, "Now, you know the rest of the story." I guess the Chinese don't do very much in a small way. Though it's a small tidbit of history to us, the Taiping Rebellion stands as possibly the biggest war of all time.
This is Peak Stupidity ...
....
....
Good day!
* Note that this blog is not my cup of tea, but it's owner, one Adam Lee, just included the whole Charleston Gazette article.
** Somewhat as with the American "Civil War" that was mostly State against State, not neighbor against neighbor, the term "civil war" does not quite fit. In China, the rebellion name is more appropriate in that one section of the country rebelled. In the US war, on the other hand, it was more a matter of several States, quite legally seceding from a loose compact that didn't make that part quite clear enough. As much as we'd rather use "War of Northern Aggression", or, at least "War Between the States", we're trying to be concise ... trying ...
*** This Wiki table shows that there were right near 700,000 total deaths in all other wars vs. 655,000 during the War Between the States.
**** Yeah, the Chinese are in need of better translators. They think we are supposed to know terms like "dowager" and "capitalist roader". They are not sending their best English speakers to write history.
No comments - Click here to start thread
Trash in the rivers - get off our case, zookeepers!
Posted On: Saturday - August 24th 2019 8:34PM MST
In Topics:   Treehuggers  China  Environmental Stupidity  Geography
Off a tweet by a commenter named Dave Pinsen on an iSteve thread, I'd like to post a follow-up to Peak Stupidity's "Someone told me it's all happening at the zoo..." of a year ago last spring. If you recall, I was very annoyed that we had to be harangued by a treehugger zookeeper about plastic in the rivers THE ENTIRE TIME that we got to watch the sea lions and seals get fed.
The tweet in question here flew away somehow like a little birdie, but the article it linked to is Just 10 streams carry 95% of all river-borne plastic into the ocean (from a site called BigThink). Here's a nice map from that site, showing these 10 rivers that are conveyors of the most plastic garbage to the ocean:

I like the article because it's not preachy. It just gives a bunch of facts with the numbers.
Every year, plastic kills around 1 million seabirds, 100,000 sea mammals and inestimable numbers of fish. The volume of plastic trash in the world’s oceans is currently estimated to be around 150 million tons. No less than eight million tons are added to that every year—that’s one truckload every minute. Between 0.5 and 2.75 million tons come from rivers alone.I'll give these German environmental scientists (note, these are REAL scientists) credit for not giving precision that's not backed up by accuracy. Firstly, even at the high end, only 30% or so of the plastic in the ocean comes out of the world's rivers. Who's dumping the rest of the plastic trash into the ocean, and where?
Per the article, of those 10 rivers on the map, 4 of which flow solely through China, the Yangtze River that goes west-to-east through the center of the Middle Kingdom carries more trash than all the other 10 rivers. That means a lot when you also read that the rest of the world's rivers combined barely equal to one of the number 2 or 3 rated of these worst plastic-carrying rivers. In other words, the Yangtze is mostly to blame for this river-borne plastic trash polluting the oceans, and the zoo lady should have just shut her damn mouth and let us watch the seals and sea lions in peace. The next time she's got something to say, it damn well ought to be in Chinese!
No comments - Click here to start thread
Victoria's other secret
Posted On: Saturday - August 24th 2019 9:04AM MST
In Topics:   Genderbenders  Humor  Big-Biz Stupidity
I don't know if is it my getting older, or just jaded, but it's no longer the case that just thinking of the name of this lingerie chain store gets me aroused, not to mention walking by the store in the mall. It turns out that all these "unmentionables" that are actually mentioned after all with terms and everything on the internet store (not a porn site, but will do in a pinch ;-} ) are not really the secret to Victoria's success. Victoria's secret is that she dresses like a slut.

Now, before I go any further, let me mention that the joke above was truly LOL-worthy, back when we just started saying "LOL". Since I can remember very well the place that I heard the joke, I can pin down the time-frame to the mid or late 1990's - yet, I cannot for the life of me find a reference to it (duckduckgo, then bing, then the goolag) on the internet. I remember it was one of the Rosannes who said it even. It's weird to me that this funny joke wouldn't show up with top billing.
Maybe, in the current era, it's NOT FUNNY anymore. It's not funny because there are even funnier things going on, but not "haha funny", just current-era genderbender stupidity. The latest thing is a push for Victoria's Secret to feature a trans-sexual as one of their underwear models. The specific ex-man* in question is one Carmen Carrera, formerly a guy named Chris from New Jersey, and not to be confused with Carmen SanDiego ("Who in the hell is Carmen SanDiego?" you say. NO - it's "Where in the world is Carmen SanDiego?")

"It's a man, baby!"
Now, one may be easily fooled - panty hose are amazing things, much less the unmentionables. However any future ads featuring Mr. Carrera would be better off not showing us the unmentionables. As much as the whole point of Victoria's Secret lingerie is to reveal a whole lot but cover just a titillating bit, there is going to be a new Victoria's secret, a secret probably better not ever revealed, if you want to sell underwear. The new secret, psssst ... is that Victoria used to be named Victor.
Now to get serious and political for a paragraph or two, or four, how would it be a good thing for these enticing ads, probably more looked at by men than women, to not feature the sexiest REAL women? Women don't want to emulate a transexual, and men would be afraid to look at another ad again for fear of being aroused! I'll say in this store chain's defense, that this does not sound to be the store's idea. It's a petition, per the Daily Mail article linked-to above with 22,000 signatures of people that think this is really important.
Yet, Victoria's Secret wants to sell sexy underwear, and that depends on advertising more than with a business like, say Advance Auto Parts. I mean, I'll go buy a set of shocks for the car's rear end without seeing a picture, but if I want a set of panties for the woman's rear end, they'd be better off it I see it on a woman in a picture. That'll turn me into a motivated buyer.
Now, Peak Stupidity has explained numerous times that the current economy is one of crony capitalism (old name - "fascism") with Big-Biz holding sway over Big-Gov to get anything done to keep them in business and the small guy down. We think the media business, as one example, might as well be department of the US Gov't and not really in business to make money but as an arm of the State to spread the propaganda. Big-Biz seemingly has nothing to lose by supporting the "globohomo agenda" and all of the modern stupidity.
Victoria's Secret, like other big business, is ready to kowtow to any piece of current-era stupidity that the elites and their ctrl-left minions are pushing. This genderbender stuff is, of course, one of the big ones. Still, these people are supposed to be trying to sell sexy lingerie (that means underwear for those of you in Del Boca Vista). I mean, eewwwww!
* Not to be confused with the X-men. They are normal ... for today's world. "Ex-man" was coined by Steve Sailer, I think.
Comments (1)
The Mall of America
Posted On: Friday - August 23rd 2019 9:50AM MST
In Topics:   Salesmen  Americans  Race/Genetics  Big-Biz Stupidity

We had to spend a number of hours at the "Big Box" stores a few weeks back, before our family vacation trip. That expression, the "Big Box", is very appropriate, as your Wal-Marts, Targets, Best-Buys, Costcos, etc, are just very big bright open boxes. There's no character to them, of course, being part of Big-Biz large chains. Additionally, unless you like living in an ex-urb (just not my thing, but many don't have so many choices), these places aren't going to be nearby. In fact, maybe the real estate agents are using the Big-Box store as a selling point now. "Pretty good schools, within easy walking distance, around and round a big spiral with no sidewalks, to the fashionable Big-Box and Chipotle district!".
Therefore, it could have been a very unpleasant couple of days shopping for a digital camera the first day, and then going back the next for a swap out for a non-defective one. (It's kind of old-fashioned buying a camera of any sort nowadays, but my wife really wanted something better than the phones.) Yes, again, the Japanese branded camera was made in China, and therefore subject to the usual Q/A of cheap China-made crap. The time wasted was indeed annoying, of course, but the interaction with the whole Big-Box crowd was not unpleasant as expected.
It was the usual diverse crowd that you're gonna get anywhere in a public area nowadays, unless you are in parts of New England or northern Idaho. Yet, in this case, it was a good experience with both the salesmen (and one young lady*) and the crowd too. The first young guy really loved cameras, especially film ones (really?!), and I spent 5 minutes explaining to him what B&W developing was all about before he steered us to the camera that would be best for us. Then next day, during the return/swap-out of the first one, we ran into a black guy who was a real expert on these things. (We had to first find out whether the problem was somehow user error - nope, it was CC-mC!) It was all surprisingly pleasant.
Especially surprising to me was the atmosphere. Even with the bunch of partial English-speakers and other diversity of the customers, everyone was polite and got along nicely. Perhaps I should come back on after-Thanksgiving "Black Friday" and see if this still holds. Perhaps not! Anyway, this gave me thoughts that led to this post: I see why people get sucked into this "diversity (if not our strength, which is flat-out ludicrous) is OK" business. They seem fine with it - in the store. Sure, we can get along splendidly. After all, except for THIS GUY, lots of people are happy to be shopping. They like acquiring more stuff. (Is this country run by women, or what?)
You know, you don't have to be there. Nobody has forced us together into the Big Box. When it comes to your neighborhood, your church, or your kids' schools, though, once you pick them, you've got to be there, quite a bit. You really don't want to be forced to continually deal with people that are not like you and have nothing in common. That's why the same people from the store will go to church the next morning with almost all white people, or black, hispanic, or Chinese. That's why people get really worried about who moves into the neighborhood, and parents especially, as those people's kids will be at school.
It was kind of a nice Kumbaya-style thought there, "yes, see, we can all get along". This what many of the Snowflake types must believe all day long. It's not what the globalist elites who arrange this stuff really believe, as they just want to destroy the place, traditional America, that is.
To elaborate, our elites don't want to destroy America as with a nuke. It's just that, as I've written many times, they just don't want any uppity, self-motivated, mostly white guys, who have discretionary income to form associations, work for political change, and start businesses that complete with Big-Biz's Big Boxes and that sort of thing. They want the 3rd world environment full of people that are so happy to be able to get that deal at the Big Box store today - savings today on toilet paper, school supplies, and milk chocolate rations - come now! We even sent a coupon right to your phone.
Yeah, it was an OK experience with diversity for a couple of hours there. People like to consume, consume, consume, so they are usually happy in the stores, except, as mentioned, on Black Friday, and then you really don't know what horrible thing diversity may bring, even in the Mall of America. Come to think of it, that's what the elites want for us. They would like this country just be be one big mall.
"I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United Mall of America, and to the public and Richard Stands ... "
* The young lady had a lot of unexpected integrity (well, they don't work on commission, is part of it) to explain to us about a phone that, without being unlocked, would not be the best thing for us. They did not have the unlocked type, so gave us this info. just to be helpful You don't get that all the time.
Comments (2)
Let's just nationalize The NY Times
Posted On: Wednesday - August 21st 2019 6:22PM MST
In Topics:   Pundits  Media Stupidity  Orwellian Stupidity

As I wrote in the previous post, pundit Steve Sailer, known as "iSteve" from the name of his former blog, read the NY Times, at least enough to root out the complete bullshit almost on a daily basis. Were Peak Stupidity to do such a thing, the time wasted and anxiety caused by such a practice would make us extremely hypertensive, albeit with a side-benefit of increased regularity. Mr. Sailer does yeoman's work in this regard, bringing the bullshit to the forefront. The Peak Stupidity department has not yet been able to hire any competent yeoman, so there's that too.
The big thing lately with the NY Times and other Lyin' Press outlets is, per Sailer here*, a big pivot from the no-longer-believable (by anyone) Russian collusion in election '16 narrative to a new one. Mr. Sailer's post NYT Editor: After Failure of Our Russia Mania Plan A to Get Trump, We've Launched Our Racism Mania Plan B, gets into some details with some idiotic back-and-forth conversation between NY Times "intellectuals". It's kind of touchy, because as they pivot to racism talk, they have to actually include people of a different race, such as nominally gay columnist Roxane Gay, an obese black woman, in the creation of this new narrative.
More Steve Sailer writing, in the full-length Takimag column 1619: Founding Fallacies describes the new strategy of the ctrl-left and their media department, the NY Times. I hate to excerpt too much from another great column by Mr. Sailer that you ought to go read right this minute**, but I'll include just a bit:
There haven’t been slaves in America for 154 years. So the topic of slavery might seem of little more than antiquarian interest, just as the now-vanished Rocky Mountain locust was a subject of immense concern in the 19th century, but of very little in the 21st.Great writing there! There's only one little piece, right near the beginning, that I don't agree with:
But polite discourse today demands that we attribute the continued racial distinctiveness of African-Americans—such as their low average wealth and test scores and their high average crime rates—to the Peculiar Institution in order that white Americans be blamed, demoralized, divided, and exploited.
Yet, all over the world, sub-Saharan African communities tend to share somewhat similar characteristics.
[SNIP]
A cynic might observe that the purpose of The New York Times venting endlessly about 400 years ago is because Times subscribers have controlled racial policy for the past 55 years.
Yet for about the past 45 years, African-Americans haven’t made much relative progress. Thus during the Great Awokening of the second Obama term, the dogma hardened that today’s blacks are pathetic puppets of events in the increasingly distant past: Emmett Till, redlining, and slavery in 1619.
And therefore whites must pay. (As everybody knows, what it’s really all about is money.)
As reassurance that this latest intrigue would not fizzle as ignominiously as the Times’ previous machination,...I beg to differ on this bit. Maybe the goal of this big 2 1/2 year narrative push was impeachment, so, OK, that wasn't reached. Maybe you could say the “Russians are coming!” thing has fizzled, but it sure served it’s purpose pretty well. Maybe it would have happened anyway from this President who can’t seem to concentrate for 10 minutes and make a damn strategy, but this thing has distracted President Trump from enacting even 5% of Candidate Trump’s agenda for the whole 2 1/2 years. . I’d call that a successful piece of journolism intrigue, myself.
Anyway, the new narrative is a racial one, as you can read from the article or excerpts above (and if you go to the first link, you can read that this is not some conjecture on the part of Mr. Sailer. These "journalist" are talking about this new push out in front of everybody (well, everybody who reads that rag, that is). That brings me to my own amazement at the state of our "newspaper of record".

Good times ... good times ...
They don’t even try to pretend anymore. Probably what the angst at the NY Times about their change in narrative is really about is that they don’t have as big a budget as they ought to. Any decent propaganda outfit in the old Soviet Union, Red China, Cuba, or Oceana would have had a bigger share of the nation's budget available to it, and RESPECT too, dammit! Those other organizations, back when Communism wasn’t so half-assed, would not have had to put up with the nominally-gay, obese black blob of human protoplasm that's part of this NY Times "conversation" having anything to do with the assignment of work and the seniority list.
One excerpt about the now-abandoned Russia collusion narrative had "That was a really hard story, by the way, let’s not forget that."
Just WTF does he mean by “hard” here? Doing the reporting is not hard. You just report what this guy said, what that guy said, what happened here, and what happened there. I guess it is “hard” if the job is working for years to make some narrative work out to your liking. Just listen to this following crap, and replace “cover” with “generate” and "interpret", and you can see what the actual job of the NY Times is:
I mean, the vision for coverage for the next two years is what I talked about earlier: How do we cover a guy who makes these kinds of remarks? How do we cover the world’s reaction to him? How do we do that while continuing to cover his policies? How do we cover America, that’s become so divided by Donald Trump? How do we grapple…Grappling is what happens when the truth doesn’t fit the narrative well enough. Gotta grabble … yeah, it's hard. This is not how reporting-the-news works. It is exactly what one would expect from a propaganda department of a Communist country though.
It’s just time to do what should have been done long ago by the Clinton Administration, Let’s go ahead and put the NY Times on-budget, so they can get the job done!

* He's got a number of other posts referencing this ludicrous revision of history to make 1619 (year of importation of the first of the relatively few slaves (compared to say, Brazil or the Caribbean islands) THE important date in history.
** The unz version, for enjoyment of the comments, is here.
Comments (3)
That was Easy!
Posted On: Wednesday - August 21st 2019 10:10AM MST
In Topics:   Curmudgeonry  Big-Biz Stupidity

Having been on a trip with eyes wide open, there is enough stupidity in mind for 2 weeks of blogging. It's a matter of sorting it out. Then there is the usual stuff pointed out by Mr. Steve Sailer on his excellent iSteve blog (the motto of which should be: "I read the NY Times so you don't have to!"). However, this morning, my curmudgeonry about a topic discussed before (see Chipotle - no credit, no debit, and hold the E. Coli", along with "Cash is King - (Part 2)", and "Cash is King - (Part 3)" for more) got the better of me.
At the drug store a lady buying 2 items that totaled something like 3 dollars and 20 cents was ahead of me, as I waited to buy a couple of last-minute school supplies. I know it was 3 dollars and 20-odd cents because of the fact that I had to stand there for nearly 5 minutes to buy a 3-ring binder. See, the lady was trying to use a credit card that must have been a bit worn out*, and was swiping the living hell out of it, up, down, try up again, faster, faster, why not slower, I don't know ... Did she not have 4 bucks on her? How about in the ashtray of her vehicle, as it should always have some change (old prepper talk here)?
It's not just the lack of cash, though. As I commented in the 2nd stu-paragraph of "3 minor doses of stoopiditee. It all adds up, though.", sometimes there are transactions going on that are more complicated than the sale of a home would have been in the 1950's. Was the lady trying to make sure she got that 55 cent discount on one of the items which required an account? Hell, that was me the very day before, so I can't bitch too much here. Yesterday, I put in the usual made-up but well-remembered phone number, and it was a no-go from Houston
Well, the lady today did not have the 4 bucks in cash, so she kept trying until she finally successfully paid for the 2 minor drug store items. I just imagined going back 30 years, when it would have taken all of 30 seconds. What you did back then is just freaking PAID FOR STUFF, not conduct complicated electronic transactions. That's what I did, just pay. "That was easy! Cash is still King, bitchez!
* BTW, a cashier long ago showed me a trick to enclose the card in a plastic grocery bag (the usual very thin kind) and swipe it then. It seems to work, when I ran into a problem - maybe it's a static electricity problem?? (I didn't have a chance to talk to this customer, as she was frantically swiping and wouldn't have listened to me.)
No comments - Click here to start thread
Racist Sentiments from the Ole East Bloc
Posted On: Monday - August 19th 2019 9:13PM MST
In Topics:   Immigration Stupidity  Race/Genetics  Socialism/Communism
It was our first day in Prague, Czechia*, and we saw 2 black people out of tens of thousands of people we must have set eyes on in this former East Bloc country's capital. Yet, somehow things are running fine there. Have we been told wrong by the experts who tell us what to believe on TV?
Note that there are no obligatory black kids.

Again, yet the country has not fallen apart!
This was so refreshing. Yeah, you ($PLC hate-perusers - I know, OK, I hope, you're out there...) can call me those names. I don't care. Listen, black people have 2/3 of the huge continent of Africa. By no choice of their ancestors, there are 40 million or so in America. How about lets leave a few areas white and just see how that goes?
Many of the Socialists of an otherwise alt-right bent on-line will tell you that it's BECAUSE this country was Communist that it hasn't had the hell diversified out of it via population replacement. That is supposed to indicate the Communism/Socialism is good, and what they mistakenly think is capitalism (the crony capitalist/fascist system America runs on today) is bad, see.
On this point, Peak Stupidity maintains that those 43 years that Czechoslovakia/Czechia was under the thumb of Soviet Communism was not the reason there are things for us to envy there, and in Hungary nearby. I think the real advantage the former East Bloc nations have today is two-fold:
1) The Commies had defeated these nations from the outside. In the meantime, the US and Western Europe had kept the external Commies at bay, while mounting a piss-poor defense, if any, against the internal ones. Those internal Commies, distributed thoroughly among all the institutions of our society, are doing a bang-up job of destroying traditional culture. Was the USSR not sending their best minions, ones who understood that one must destroy the whole country? They thought they had these people licked already, I suppose.
2) Peak Stupidity speculated about the long-term effects of Communism on the Russians and the Chinese a while back. As far as these East Bloc countries, 43 years of that shit have at least made them worldly-wise and politically aware. That may be the reason they have been rejecting the dieversity and multi-cultural BS that is ruining the West.
PS: On the next day, we hung out in some open squares in the beautiful city of Prague. In these places, there were quite a few more black people, both among the tourist set, and the crowd hawking cheap stuff to, or entertaining, said tourists.
* It's hard to keep up, but they dropped the Slovakia 26 years back. Time flies! It is Czeck-o-slo-nothing now, but is more commonly known as the Czech Republic or Czechia
No comments - Click here to start thread