Last year's tax (preparation) burden


Posted On: Saturday - August 5th 2023 8:16AM MST
In Topics: 
  US Feral Government  Dead/Ex- Presidents  Taxes

This was to be part of the previous post, but it was already too long. This image below is of another graphic that appears yearly in the IRS 1040 Instruction book .pdfs. This one is in there one page prior (107):



In case it's hard to read, this is the "Estimated Average Taxpayer Burden for Individuals by Activity". Haha, well, doing the taxes is not exactly what makes us beasts of burden owned by the IRS. It's the money - though that's only #2 in the top-5 list of the evils of the Feral Income Tax, per Part 3 on Amendment XVI, in our Peak Constitutional Amendment series.

We've done this post before, in '22 - Peak Stupidity beats national time-wasting averages.

In that previous post I mentioned that this tax-burden information is something that came out of the Reagan Administration, I'm pretty sure. Old Ronnie really did want to cut government, whether people today believe that or not. What those people might want to "search up" is that President Reagan dealt with a D-controlled Congress the whole 8 years, so it's not like he could actually implement everything he wanted.

I remember that President Reagan was bent on simplifying the Income Tax system, if he couldn't eliminate it. A little bit changed for the better on the former, and the latter was of course out of the question. Reagan also wanted Feral regulation paperwork in general cut, especially as it burdened the individual or small business. Hence, this chart, as at least now we know how much of our time this paperwork is to take. (Well, nobody figured on the internet. Turbotax, though, had started up in 1984.)

I see that I, were I average, per the IRS, I am supposed to have spent 3 hours completing the forms, but also another 5 hours on other tasks, planning and record-keeping. Nah, the plan is to get this crap done sometime in mid-April as quickly as I can. The record-keeping is shove all the stuff the comes in late January into a file in a drawer.

Then, I delegate the paperwork to the kid.. [Wipes hands of whole matter.]

Then, he screws up 2 things on the State form, so I re-delegate the paperwork in the form of an amended return.

Interestingly, the 2 numbers in that previous post (from the Washington Examiner), average time spent, and opportunity cost, are way different from what the IRS says. For the average of all taxpayers - gotta assume they're not counting Big Biz corps - the IRS says 13 hrs, of work, while the W.E. study says 24.9 hrs. The IRS says $250 in opportunity cost, while the W.E. study says $800. Note the income the IRS takes as average: $19/hr. The W.E. study uses $32/hr. The IRS ought to know average income, right? Or is it that nobody has updated this table in years. That's probably the case.

The IRS 1040 Instruction booklet: Bring it to the beach this Labor Day weekend. Two thumbs up!


Comments (2)




The Bi-Annual Peak Stupidity IRS Pie Analysis


Posted On: Friday - August 4th 2023 7:57PM MST
In Topics: 
  Global Financial Stupidity  US Feral Government  Taxes

It's not quite a yearly thing, but usually around income tax time, near the cruelest day, Peak Stupidity has been known to display the pair of pie charts that appear near the back of the IRS 1040 Instructions .pdf. Who else reads through the whole thing? (Beats the New York Times, as is the case with cough, cough, some people ...*) They are simplistic, and the categories in the latter are vague, but the 2 pie charges of Tax Revenue and Expenditures, along with the actual totals underneath, give me an idea of these numbers. Most especially I am interested in what looks like a little slice of that pie, the "net interest" being paid.**

Here are previous posts with discussion of these pie charts: Quick glance at the budget from US-Gov crack Green-eyeshade boys (discusses the '15 budget), Comparison of '15/17 US Government Budgets ('15 vs '17), EXTRA, EXTRA, IRS tells all! (in .pdf 1040 Instructions) (with the '19 budget). That's kind of nice, because this we're doing every odd-number year. That was just by chance!



The forms one fills out in April, or when he gets around to it, of '23, are for the '22 tax year, but the year before that seems to be the latest year the IRS can get the numbers for.

Those previous posts have more discussion, but for this post, I want to concentrate only on the 5% slice of pie again. Under the graphs, page 108 of the 1040 Instructions .pdf, 3 numbers are given. Verbatim:
In fiscal year 2021 (which began on October 1, 2020, and ended on September 30, 2021), federal income was $4.047 trillion and outlays were $6.882 trillion, leaving a deficit of $2.775 trillion.
Because it's a cute pie chart, there's just one significant digit - 5% - for "net interest", so keep in mind that calculations should be rounded to a number that's good only to 10% (That 5% should mean it's from 4.5% to 5.5%)

That 5% is of the $6.88 Trillion outlay pie, coming to $0.344 Trillion = $344 Billion (we'll round off at the end). That's the numerical value of net interest on the debt paid in '21.

How much debt were "we" paying interest on that year? For total debt, I used numbers from the simple table on this page, one I want to write more about. It says the national budget debt was $29.6 Trillion in '21. I don't know if that was at the beginning or end of the fiscal year. This is just back-o'-the-envelope stuff, so again, I don't care.

"We" (gotta keep putting it in quotes, because I didn't ask for ANY of this shit!) paid $0.344 Trillion on $29.6 Trillion. (We'll finally round here.) That's STILL only a 1.2% rate! Why the exclamation points? I like 'em! OK, it's more than that. Each time Peak Stupidity gets into the financial stupidity*** and interest rates, we go all doomer on the reader, because we think of these pie charts.****

What if the FED quit holding rates in the basement? At 8% interest, that 5% would be a nearly 35% piece of the expenditure pie. It would be an even bigger chunk of the revenue pie, as that one is always smaller (the difference being the annual accumulation of debt, called the deficit). When 50% of all taxes go toward paying interest on the debt - no principle - well, America will look like one of those deadbeat credit card borrowers. We've got 5 cards that we're paying not even the minimum payments on, with daily calls we've got to keep blocking, and a 6th card is in the mail, one we applied for to help us pay off those other 5.

There’ll be a vicious cycle. They can’t seriously cut anything but “Defense” without financially hurting government dependees, which are probably a majority of Americans. The deficits will get that much higher, instead of 20-30% overspending each year, they’ll get to 50% regularly, with no PanicFest of other excuse. Instead of going but 5-10% yearly as now, that total debt will go up by numbers like 20-25%. At constant interest rates, the share of the budget spent on interest will go up to swamp the whole deal.



Well, we all know that interest rates HAVE been going up (not left naturally, but done by the FED to try to fight inflation). I will refer you to this comment by the astute Unz Review commenter "Res" right here for commentary on this and another graph. Forget the projections past today, but note that, from a 1-2% range, the long-term interest rates had a spike to 8% in '22. I don't pretend to know exactly how these numbers fit with the Federal Treasury net interest rates but they surely go together.

Why didn't we up and have that crash that Peak Stupidity keeps doomering on about? Well, that 8% interest rate was the top of a narrow spike, for one thing. However, to me, a crash can't NOT happen. I can't say what week or month. When the world sees that this US dollar is not supportable by anything real, there'll be a psychological tipping point. Seeing that we are paying 1/3 or 1/2 of our budget on interest to bondholders and acting like that deadbeat credit card holder I described above may be that point for the finance crowd.

Now that rates are staying at least somewhat higher, will the IRS keep putting that informative pair of pie charts in the back of the 1040 Instructions book? That might scare some people. It still might though, because I don't know who else in the world actually reads the instructions! Actually, I don't either, but I like pie and pie charts.



* That refers, of course to Steve Sailer. In fact, he got 3 posts out of the stupidity contained therein within a day, and his resulting commentary is very entertaining.

** It's not like there are payment coupons and such, but this is about how much is paid out in bond interest, the difference between bonds sold and redeemed, etc. It's complicated. I don't care.

*** We use the Global Financial Stupidity topic key often even on this US budget stuff. It's kind of late to make a another one, this country is still big enough to where a crash here will affect the world, and then, what country can you name in which there isn't a whole lot of financial stupidity these days?

**** There's also a 2nd problem that will occur with natural higher interest rates - the stock market won't be propped up by people with no safe investment options.


Comments (3)




Calvin Coolidge inaugurated as US President 100 years ago this minute.


Posted On: Thursday - August 3rd 2023 12:47AM MST
In Topics: 
  History  Liberty/Libertarianism  Dead/Ex- Presidents



Peak Stupidity has been glomming posts here and there off of John Derbyshire's writings on VDare. He's a great writer and tells a good story when he's got a story.

This one I want to use here is from his post last week noting It’s 100 Years Since Calvin Coolidge, Who Signed The 1924 Immigration CutOff Into Law, Was Sworn In As President!. About half of John Derbshire's VDare posts, "Diaries", transcript pieces from his podcasts, etc. make it to The Unz Review here, where one can make comments. This post on Silent Cal Coolidge does appear, right here.

Now, VDare's primary and almost sole focus is the immigration invasion. That's why Mr. Derbyshire appears there, and it fits that his take on President Coolidge is that Silent Cal's signing of the 1924 Immigration Act was his best act in his term as President.

We may have mentioned it since, but Peak Stupidity's being big fans of this President was something we noted in our quick discussion (not a review) - Amity Shlaes on President "Silent Cal" Coolidge. I did read her book on the Great Depression 1.0, years ago, The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression, so I mentioned that she also had written a book called Coolidge.

I don't know why I haven't read Miss Shlaes' book on him, but I already know President Coolidge was one of the handful or two of Presidents who didn't make himself a liar when he swore to the oath on inauguration day. Any President who is criticized for "doing nothing" and just, like "administering the government" or something is a real Libertarian/Constitutionalist - a guy I can admire.

President Harding, another in one of those handfuls of the good guys, IMO,
had gotten sick while in Alaska and ended up dying some weeks later while the VP Coolidge was up in Plymouth Notch, Vermont at his family's place. Mr. Derbyshire tells the neat story of this simple small-government America change of power, as little as there was, and downhome inauguration in the wee hours of the morning after a phone call from Washington, DC.

Rather than take the story from John Derbyshire and retell it, I will do something better than him, which is to post this at 02:47 EST*, an even century after the quick inauguration was held by 4 people at Mr. Coolidge's family home in Vermont.


PS: OK, I cheated. I did get the time zone thing, but then, short story even shorter, I couldn't do this at 03:47 EDT, so I'll doctor up the database.


* That's 03:47 EDT, but they didn't have this mess back then. That's 3 hours earlier in the summer from the Peak Stupidity standard of Mountain Standard Time, so it's (well, I'm gonna make it!) 00:47 MST.


Comments (20)




Global Boiling - turning up the Climate Calamity™ to HIGH


Posted On: Wednesday - August 2nd 2023 5:15PM MST
In Topics: 
  Global Climate Stupidity  Globalists



Over 15 years ago, Doctor Al Gore told us the Earth had a fever. That's nothing a few days rest and another Ice Age couldn't handle. We've long passed the point of know return on Professor Gore's mathematical model predictions. By his standard we might as well continue driving our SUVs when the weather permits, keep the fireplace going all winter, and maybe sit in front of it listening to REM, kissing our asses goodbye. (Not sure about the fever, but it's supposed to start with earthquakes, snakes, and aeroplanes... yeah, that's right.)

Al Gore has been quiet as of late, probably just enjoying his sea-level beach house in California and occasionally flying on a large-cabin biz jet from one place on the feverish Earth to another. Then little Greta came along to give us the updated picture and what had become by then a flat-out Climate Crisis!™

A couple of years after the debut of Greta, in Spring of '20, the Kung Flu PanicFest came along and gave officials and journalists around the world something to panic about, well, a good well-believed excuse anyway. Crises were declared worldwide. I really thought for about a year or more there that the Global Climate Stupidity was going to fade away. We didn't hear from Greta even from the un-LOCKDOWNed Sweden. What a breath of fresh air (with a few tenths of a percent CO2 mixed in)!

I was premature in my thinking. (OK, flat-out wrong. They will not just quit.) Over the last year, this flavor of worldwide stupidity has been cranked up, recently to 11 on the volume. I refer to the latest change in the name for this alleged crisis, from The Climate Crisis to Global Boiling. I mean, it wasn't just Al Gore or Greta using the term - this comes straight from the Secretary-General of the Unified Nations, the U-freaking-N, you know, those people, and the one guy, who are there to lead the world.

The newest SecGen, as we call them, of the UN, is a guy named Antonio Guterres*, another foreign grifter occupying prime real estate in NY City. Formerly a long-term member of Socialist International, the one thing he's got going for him is he's part of that Portugal fad. CNBC reports ‘The era of global boiling has arrived,’ says UN boss, as White House announces provisions to protect workers from extreme heat. In other words, it's summertime. It's not just any summer, though. It's summer in an era of a big Globalist agenda of Totalitarian control of the economy and the population.

Now this next thing is simply hilarious. The caption below the CNBC picture (that I can't get just now) says: "As one construction worker wipes his brow, two other roofers work under a 90 degree temperature at a housing complex under construction in Clarksburg, Maryland on July 26, 2023." See, this intrepid reporter drove all around Clarksburg to find a roofing crew that were not obviously illegal aliens, and got up on the roof of a building with his 35mm to snap a picture of a guy on the roof wiping his brow. What a scoop! 90 degrees in the summer! Sake's alive, Andy!"

The "National News" asks the burning question Global boiling: What is it and should we be worried? What is it? It's the newest term for this excuse to clamp down on the peons, but it was really a poor choice. "Global Warming" works - you figure they mean average temperatures around the world - not counting the core of the Earth and shit, but most people get that. "Global Boiling" on the other hand... WTF?!! Can the whole globe boil? The oceans can and WILL, per the AlGore**, but what about the rocky mantle and then that inner moon-sized core of solid iron and outer core of molten iron? I'm not sure about the rock - volcanoes could tell you - but the boiling point of iron is 5180 degrees. That's in Fahrenheit. Mr. Guterres is a sophisticated European and world leader who works in SI units, so it's actually only 2860 degrees in Celsius. Hey, stranger things have happened than the boiling of the Globe.

OK, turning down the stupidity to SIMMER now, that National News article says:
This year it has led to record air temperatures across Southern Europe and wildfires in tinder-dry woodlands in Greece, Spain, Portugal and Croatia – as well as parts of North Africa –
Those must have been the areas predicted to have record high temperatures and/or dry air by '23 or so by the mathematical models. Wait, the mathematical models DID predict this, didn't they?! I mean, or do we continue making after-the-fact predictions until we get a working mathematical model of the entire Earth's climate?*** Now wait, let me let them finish that though:
- although some fires are suspected to have been arson-related.
I've read about regarding other wildfires too. What exactly do we have going on here? Is the arson a concerted "Reichstag Fire" (heh!) effort to accelerate (heh!) this new panic-stage of Global Climate Stupidity? Or is it just the usual non-assimilated mass immigrant fire season in progress, as in Paris? (In our case, it's most often non-assimilated Hispanics who don't care for Smokey the Bear and his crap about not throwing cigarette butts out of car windows.)

The short article explains the new term to us:
The concept of global boiling reflects a transition from global warming, towards a more intense period of heatwaves, climate-related disasters and extreme weather patterns.
There's nothing new there. Conflating weather with climate, but only when it's bad weather has been a technique of the alarmists for decades, even when it was called "Global Warming". However, the next term, "Climate Change" (man, I almost miss it!) incorporated that technique already, long ago, 15 years, maybe?

Let's give equal time to Mr. Guterres:
“For scientists, it is unequivocal — humans are to blame,” Guterres said. “All this is entirely consistent with predictions and repeated warnings. The only surprise is the speed of the change. Climate change is here. It is terrifying, and it is just the beginning.”
Yes, the speed of the change has indeed increased, as in the 1st derivative, acceleration of the narrative. There's a little more in there too that shows that this acceleration of this formerly creeping Climate alarmism is very likely the newest Globalist control scheme to take over where the Kung Flu PanicFest left off. They may have been a little taken aback by the resistance and eventual complete halting of their program of continual forced vaccinations of the world. The specter of a virus that kills only 0.1% of the people infected is one thing. The whole globe boiling - well, most people ought to be able to see that that's a real problem. Global Boiling it is, then!

I think, at least, I hope, that this mouthing off by Mr. Guterres of the UN using "Global Boiling" may be a bridge too far. It's a ridiculous term that may just bring some on-the-fence people to see that the Climate Crisis™ is a load of hype. Then again, most of them fell for the recent PanicFest. Have they learned anything?


PS: Do you see why we John Birchers have been calling for "US out of the UN and UN out of the US" since the beginning... of the John Birch Society at least? I've only been a member for a couple of years, but that didn't stop me from saying that long ago.

PPS: One bright spot from the CNBC article:
For help with future preparations, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will put $7 million from the Inflation Reduction Act to improve weather forecasting.
Good! I like the NOAA. The Apple corporation in always sunny and pleasant Cupertino, California cold really use some guys like you, NOAA.


* Who knew? I sure didn't until this nonsense.

** More on the hilarious GoreRant here.

*** Peak Stupidity has a 5-part series explaining how there's not one, back in our early days with this Global Climate Stupidity topic key.


Comments (8)




Midnight Flyer


Posted On: Tuesday - August 1st 2023 8:40PM MST
In Topics: 
  Music

Our post on the passing of ex-Eagles band member Randy Meisner included one of the songs he wrote and sang for the band. While conversing in the internet threads about best Eagles songs, I listed Midnight Flyer as one of my very top favorites. A few seconds later, I asked myself "who else could that voice be, but Randy Meisner".

This is my favorite by this artist, but Mr. Meisner didn't write Midnight Flyer. It was written by a songwriter named Paul Craft, who, I just found out, also wrote another favorite song of mine. It was also recorded by the famous Osborne Brothers bluegrass band a year or two before the Eagles did. I'll put that one up later this week.

For younger readers, yes, there were trains carrying people around America, not called Amtrak, not THAT awfully long ago. Steve Goodman-written, Arlo-Guthrie performed City of New Orleans is a beautiful song, the title of which is not the name of what was a specific train (as in, the same locomotive(s) and passenger cars) but a specific route. That song laments the passing of the classic passenger railroads in America. They had a long very good run, as did songs about trains.

Readers could probably name 100s of songs about trains, or with trains in the lyrics, but there are also quite a few that mention those old famous specific train lines of yesteryear.

Midnight Flyer is obviously a name for some route there was somewhere. (Seems too great a name to have not been.*) In just the one Grateful Dead song alone, Jack Straw from Wichita, there is the mention of two trains, "Catch the Detroit Lightning out of Santa Fe... the Great Northern out of Cheyenne, from sea to shining sea ..."

I caught up with The Eagles's music well after their "hell will freeze over ..." break-up. On the Border, on which Midnight Flyer was found, was the first album I bought by them, on vinyl. I'd put their 4 country-rock albums in this order of my liking:

1) On the Border
2) Desperado
3) The Eagles (debut, self-titled album)
4) One of These Nights



The old trains were very romantic, but not necessarily the best way to go for America. The music, however, yeah, we should have stuck to the kind of music heard here, like that old country-rock Eagles with Don Henley, Glen Frey, Randy Meisner, and Bernie Leadon.


PS: Amtrak did keep this train route naming thing alive, with a City of New Orleans, a Coast Starlight, etc. It's not the same with the Feral Gov't running the show... not the same at all...

PPS: Again, I forgot that I'd featured this song before. Too good to be new to Peak Stupidity.


* Yeah, it was. One "instance" of the Midnight Flyer was involved in a crash in Winslow, Arizona 101 years ago.

***********************
[UPDATED 08/02 evening:]
Mr. Hail noted that the Osborne brothers, one of the most famous bluegrass "combos" recorded this one. Also, I realized I'd post this song before.
***********************


Comments (8)




Hotel of Fear - Brideshead Rockford Files revisited


Posted On: Tuesday - August 1st 2023 6:49AM MST
In Topics: 
  TV, aka Gov't Media  Humor

For previous Peak Stupidity Rockford Files commentary see:
Peak Rockford Files
Jim Rockford - In Pursuit of Carol Thorne
Inflation indexed to the Rockford/Davenport basket of goods
Rockford Files: Bug v Land Yacht
Jim Rockford in the days of decent denominations
Rockford Files - cars, smart-ass remarks, etc.
Rockford Files update and one minor POS
The Daily Stupid, edition #53643- Part B, and the near-daily Rockford file
Goerge Floyd indicted for IP theft for "I can't breath!"
Rockford Files: Pizza, wine, and coffee - and a BIG THANKS to our commenters

It's been a whole year. I had to change out DVD players.



After a year hiatus of watching this great half-century-old TV show, from Season 3 to now Season 4, I'd figured I'd passed Peak Rockford Files. One of the episodes of this season (still 1977, going into 1978 soon) was so confusing, I couldn't really follow the plot after 10 minutes in. In one of the episodes I just watched, even Jim Rockford himself said he didn't know what was going on. I completely agreed!

I came upon the episode titled Hotel of Fear * though. I enjoyed this one so much, mostly due to the efforts of the recently-passed Stuart Margolan, who played the shyster ex-con, active con-man Angel Martin, his show given name being Evelyn. Yeah, that's him in the cop uniform in a fancy hotel room above, from this episode.

It's kind of coincidental, but, in some (his?) apartment building, Angel happened to witness a shooting murder, and the perpetrator and he saw each other directly. Being in fear for his life, as is the usual thing with him, Angel told Jim but did not want to call the police about it. Angel had a good point, as, once he saw no way out of this but to get the law involved, it turned out this was indeed a very bad guy, a hitman of the mob named Del Kane. (This murder of that young lady was not a "hit" but an impulsive personal thing. The theme later on is that this guy has gone off the rails and even the mob bosses have had enough of him.)

Because Angel Martin's testimony would be their ace in order to bust hitman Del Kane (who's done 19 of them, AIR), the LA police make the effort to keep Angel safe from getting murdered himself. It's Lieutenant Chapman who's in charge of security for him. I could use readers' input here, as I haven't found this info, but when did the police Lieutenant switch from being Lieutenant Diel to Lieutenant Chapman? Lt. Chapman is a nicer guy, as Lt. Diel had it in for Rockford or any "civilian" and wanted no interaction with them. (I.e., Diel was a more realistic police Lieutenant.)

They put Angel up in nice hotel rooms. That's where he and the show get really funny. Angel was ordering up all kinds of room service meals. At the 2nd hotel, there due to a near-hit on Angel at the 1st one, one of the hotel staff knocked. "It's the eggs I ordered at the last place and never did get." That didn't make a whole lot of sense, but even the actor playing Lt. Chapman was caught smiling at that, by me anyway.

I am so glad that IMDB has the best quotes, as I don't have the ability to watch any of the show as I write, and I'd never have gotten all this right. The very best is when a scared Angel is told to pick out the suspected murderer out of the line-up.
Lt. Chapman: [the cops have brought Angel down to have him look at a line-up] Do you recognise anyone?
Angel: [Angel - always nervous - is more-so than usual] You sure they can't see me?
Lt. Chapman: It's a one-way glass. You've got nothing to worry about.
[Angel - his cheap pants hiked-up past his pot-belly, and slouched over, looks, as Chapman begins to get impatient]
Lt. Chapman: Do you recognise anyone?
Angel: [Angel furiously waves his arms in front of the glass] Well, uh...
[pointing]
Angel: ... he dropped about 15, 20 pounds, but that's Marco. Used to be over at the Hollenbeck station.
[Angel turns and starts walking away]
Lt. Chapman: [Chapman grabs Angel's arm] Come here, c'mere, c'mere... so, you know Sgt. Marco. Now, is there anybody else you recognize?
Angel: That's Stein. [pointing at the glass]
Angel: He used to be a narc. What's he - in robbery/homicide now?
[Angel smiles, Chapman chuckles]
Lt. Chapman: Why don't I just give you a subscription to the precinct paper, that way you can keep tabs on everybody.
Angel: Don't get sore, lieutenant. You asked me who I recognize. I said I recognized Stein and Marco. I don't know Harry's last name, but, uh... there's Whitbeck [camera moves from Whitbeck to the next man - Del Kane]
Angel: It's the man in blue.
Lt. Chapman: What about the guy in the blue blazer?
Angel: [Angel looks nervously around the room] He ain't a cop.
The title of this episode comes from the plot line in which Angel has taken to working on a crime novel of some sort (I think biographical), at the hotel, with a ghost writer there at one point. He's still stuck at the title, which is not a good sign for a writer. Hotel of Fear is the working title, but Angel feels that Witness for the Prosecution would be much better. He and the rest KNOW that there is already a book by that name. "So, people might see my book at the bookstore instead and get it by mistake, for some more sales." is something like what he said.

Also from IMDB for accuracy, I can't remember where the following fits into the show:
Angel: Y'know Jimmy, I've got some feelings too. "If you prick me, do I not bleed?"
Jim Rockford: That's Shakespeare!
Angel: [Condescendingly] No it's not. Vincent Price said it on the Hollywood Squares.
Near the beginning, when Angel went to Jim's trailer:
Angel: See, here's the idea, Jimmy; if they don't pick the guy up then, I'll spend a couple - maybe three weeks, down in El Segundo, place like that. What happens?
Jim [shrugs his shoulders] Mmmm, real-estate values plummet.
Haha, Angel Martin was the least of Los Angeles' worries, were one to look into a crystal ball and see upcoming election results.

Regular readers here would know that Peak Stupidity does not get into Hollywood worship. The Rockford Files is just a great show, with some nice blasts from the past (especially re: the cars). I don't care that much where's he's from and what else he did, but Stuart Margolin as Angel Martin really added the humor to the show and especially this Hotel of Fear episode.


* I hadn't realized it when writing some of those earlier posts, but the IMDB Internet Movie DataBase has done a nice job compiling details for this show and others. I should say, the users providing the "content" have done a nice job.


Comments (3)




The relentless persecution by the ctrl-left Totalitarians


Posted On: Monday - July 31st 2023 4:41PM MST
In Topics: 
  Commies  ctrl-left  Anarcho-tyranny  Totalitarianism



Ann Wilson Smith is a Southern gal with a family history of Southern History. Her Dad, Clyde Smith studied and wrote about Southern, specifically South Carolina, heritage. Ann Wilson Smith has her Southern heritage website* called Reckonin' (no "g") and has also written a book on the Anarcho-Tyranny that took place during and after the "Unite the Right" rally 6 years ago in what was to be a peaceful defense of the heritage, hence, a famous statue, of Robert E. Lee.

She, with 3 articles, and Jason Kessler, with a dozen, have kept VDare readers up on the aftermath of Charlottesville. No, it's not over for the ctrl-left. They will not stop coming after the Americans with lawfare and even criminal prosecution.

Last week Miss Wilson wrote Communist Coup In Charlottesville: Invictus Arrested For Tiki Torch Parade. This Augustus Invictus shown on the right in the VDare image is a flamboyant lawyer with a political bent - Conservative/Libertarian - and somewhat of a "colorful"** past. He's on the side of the Historic American Nation, as VDare calls it, and is on our side.

Mr. Augustus was there in Charlottesville that day, the 11th of August of '17, and he got arrested just a week or so ago, 6 years later on some charges or other. Unfortunately, for the life of me, I can't find out WHAT charges (this article doesn't say), but some of them have been about the bearing of tiki-torches. Yeah, you can come up with anything. 5 others have been arrested THIS YEAR on various charges related to the events that day in '17.

There are Statutes of Limitations for crimes. However, a Totalitarian official like the ones involved here can just go for the crime with the appropriately-long Statute of Limitations that works for him. "You pick the man, I'll pick the crime with the right Statute of Limitations", is the new take by the new Lavrentiy Beria's. The Founders never saw THAT coming.

An important point made by Mr. Invictus is that (he figures) the Charlottesville Anarcho-Tyranny was a warm-up, "prototype" he puts it, for the narrative and aftermath of the January 6th, '21 protest. After J6, the crimes that these over 1,000 protesters stuck in Washington, FS dungeons supposedly committed are things a member of the ctrl-left would not even have been detained for. We have a full record of this from the summer of '20. It's not like there weren't any cameras or microphones around! It's the same story for the alt-right arrestees and prisoners*** after Charlottesville.

Mr. Invictus, as per Miss Smith's article:
It's supposed to be a great divide between a legal prosecution and a political prosecution... Conservatives are really coming to understand Charlottesville was the prototype for J6. You create this alternate reality of what actually happened at the event, and you dragnet prosecute everybody you can get your hands on... Charlottesville was the watershed moment, and J6 was just where everybody finally woke up.
Well I wouldn't agree that everybody has finally woken up. Those on our side who know some details should have. The contradiction between what we saw happen in person, heard about from people there, saw on youtube, or read about and the Potomac Regime narrative is huge. The lies are blatant, which works pretty well, I'll admit, on the majority of Americans who still watch TV news and read yahoo headlines.


PS: Who's that Jim Hingeley, you may be asking? He is a Soros-supported "Commonwealth Attorney, I guess a D/A, who was installed errr, elected, in '19 with one campaign issue being the bringing of charges (any charges would do) against the Charlottesville Unite-the-Right protesters. The previous holder of that office, one Robert Tracci, did not see fit to issue charges. More prosecution shopping. The Founders never saw A LOT of this shit coming.

PPS: "Communists", as used by Miss Smith and often by Peak Stupidity, or just run-of-the-mill Totalitarians? They're not preaching economic Communism (yet), but what's the difference between these people and those who'd done the same in the old USSR, East Bloc, Red China, etc, etc, etc...?


* I've checked it out. There's pretty good writing on there, not much of it very political at first glance. I'll keep up with this one.

** I would go with "checkered" instead of colorful, but without information from someone I trust, I have no idea how politically motivated his past convictions for spousal abuse and such are. It's easy to set men up, especially if you're a woman. UPDATE: See Mr. Hail's comment below. He knows a lot more about this "gentleman". He would go with "narcissistic cult leader".

*** We should not forget James Fields. He received a ridiculous 400 years + life (how's that work?) sentence, for what was manslaughter at worst case. An average American charged with that would have gotten a handful of years max. That is, if it WERE manslaughter, rather than what I think in this case, a panicked man escaping attack whose muscle car collided with a roley-poley.


Comments (4)




Randy Meisner takes it to the limit


Posted On: Saturday - July 29th 2023 7:37AM MST
In Topics: 
  Music

R.I.P. - Eagles bass player, backing vocalist and #3 lead vocalist Randy Meisner died a couple of days back at 77 y/o. He played with the band for the first 5 of the 6 albums during the time I think of as The Eagles' era.* That is during the 4 albums that comprise the best of the country rock band (leaning towrd the rock sound after Don Felder joined for On the Border, and then the blockbuster rock Hotel California album. Tim Schmidt filled his place for The Long Run album and also sang. I like Randy Meisner's vocals better.

Take it to the Limit was a #4 hit song that Randy Meisner co-wrote and sang lead on from the band's 4th album, One of These Nights, in 1975. It's still a great song to me, though it used to get played a lot. I'd rather feature a more obscure song written and sang by Mr. Meisner. On one of the best concept albums of all time, the concept being that of the old Wild West, Desperado, there's his song called Certain Kind of Fool.

It takes a certain kind of fool who likes to hear the sound of his own name.



(I wanted the Desperado cover here, but YT didn't oblige me.)

It wasn't for the money, at least it didn't start that way ... It wasn't for the runnin', but now he's runnin' every day ...

I was still catching up with music albums, a while after the initial demise of The Eagles in 1980. Because I liked the sound so much, I bought one of 3 solo albums Randy Meisner made. This was self-titled, but so was the 3rd of the 3 too. Whaaa?! Anyway, this is the 1st one. I haven't played it in 25 years probably, so when I looked at the song titles on the wiki page, the only 3 songs I recall at all are Take it to the Limit (his solo version) and 2 famous old cover songs.

Randy Meisner wrote some good music and had a good sound. He didn't ever get back with the Eagles.

Thanks for reading and commenting this week, Peakers. The posts on the burner have more on the Climate Calamity™, rebranded yet again, depopulation (crisis or not a crisis?), a spot of Kung Flu PanicFest detritus, something on taxes and something else on those who make bank on them, artifical stupidity of the exercise machines - you thought we were done with all that? Think again ;-} - and various other forms of stupidity. We'll get to at least some of this next week. Have a good weekend, all!


* I know, hell froze over, and they got back together and still play - Randy Meisner has not been with them during that frozen over era, AFAIK, as the replacement bass player, Tim Schmidt was. Glen Frey has passed anyway.


Comments (5)




The Significant Others of the Founders


Posted On: Friday - July 28th 2023 8:57AM MST
In Topics: 
  Humor  Political Correctness  Female Stupidity  Morning Constitutional



The above picture, allegedly painted by one Barry Faulkner, shows the signers and signing of the US Constitution. Mr. Faulkner was commissioned by the National Archives in the mid-1930s to paint 2 HUGE- 37 1/2 ft long by 14 ft high! - murals of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the signing of the US Constitution - for the US Capitol. (More about them here. I've not seen these. I have not planned to ever get to the FS again, but if I were to, I want to see these.)

One thing though, that you may notice in the painting above ... John Derbyshire did, and wrote Feminizing History: Classical Murals Of The Founders With Added Ladies the other day. I don't recall learning in school that there were SOF's - that'd be Significant Others of the Founders - there in Philadelphia that fine day in September of 1787. I suppose I could have forgotten...

Apparently, history revision is the way to go now, I mean, we got Photoshop, after all. Women SHOULD HAVE been there that day, if we'd been a society of diversity, equity, and inclusion, as we are now, so put 'em in. This is as sold at the National Archives store, per Mr. Derbyshire. Getting up to the 37 1/2 by 14 ft murals in the Capitol with, errr, Photoshop?, no, paint, airbrushes, and all that old-timey stuff, well up there on the scaffold, that there's man's work.

I had to modify this modified painting myself due to Peak Stupidity's usual 500 pixel width limit (and still make it reasonable to make out), so I'm missing 3 guys to the (viewer's) left of South Carolina's John Rutledge. That'd be Virginia's John Randolph, Massachusetts' Nathaniel Gorham, and Delaware's John Dickenson. To the right, we just cut off half of Delaware's George Read.*

Who are these Constitution Chicks? I'd say 3 of them are fairly attractive, with 2 being pretty young and busty. Well, Martha Washington seemed to have gained some social status that day. I guess that's John Rutledge's wife too on the left. The one in the gold dress is in between Connecticut's Oliver Elseworth and S. Carolina's Charles Pinkney. I don't know what her deal is, Founder Services? The hottie on the right in the purple halter top with bare midriff showing - wait, I zoomed in, just my imagination runnin' away with me - she's by herself for the photo op, with New York's Alexander Hamilton having his back to her.

I don't know, it might have been a good thing, having the women there. When you're hashing out the last little significant details of a Constitutional Republic, you can really work up an appetite by tea time. One might look forward to some apple pie, fricassees, boiled dumplings (Quaker food, but when in Philly, and all...), probably not hot dogs, but roasted duck, and all of it washed down with some of that non-pasteurized Sam Adams beer.** Tea was probably out of the question, much of it likely pretty moldy after having lain at the bottom of Boston Harbor for 15 years.

On the other hand, that spousal support could have its drawbacks. Back to Alexander Hamilton, he was one the 3 main authors of the document (along with James Madison and John Jay). His wife Eliza could have been there for moral support, as he argued against those there who were more worried about the powers that were to be relinquished to a national government. Just because Mrs. Hamilton is not in THIS painting doesn't mean she can't be in the next one, right there laying down the law to her spouse.

"Look Alex, how long have we spent here in Philadelphia for your little pet project, what do you call it, 'Federalism with Authoritarian characteristics'? You left our 5 children back in New York with the sitter. It's been all summer now that I've had to spend all day being nice to these... politicians! I've got nothing new to wear either. I can't even pose for the next National Archives painting. I'm wearing the same outfit as Martha Washington! Is this thing even gonna make us any money?! End it. Just sign what they got, and let's go home!"

Maybe it wouldn't have been such a good idea. In fact, one wonders who put a bug up in someone's rear-end about the "General Welfare" clause ...



* We've had a thing against Delaware for the last couple of years, for some odd reason ...

** Sam Adams wasn't there that day though. He was not a signer at the convention, and he wasn't enamored with the document, reluctantly signing the ratification for Massachusetts. Likewise, John Hancock reluctantly signed. Mr. Hancock's signature had become part of the language now, but that was from his big signature on the Declaration of Independence, which Mr. Adams signed too.


Comments (10)




More on Alleged Mike Pence Stupidity


Posted On: Thursday - July 27th 2023 4:45PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '24  Media Stupidity



Based on a seemingly tone-deaf or plain stupid answer he gave to Tucker Carlson in an interview recently, Peak Stupidity alleged The stupidity of Mike Pence. In the fine conversation underneath, Mr. Hail had another explanation for this alleged stupidity than what Mr. Anon (in Unz Review comments) and I had thought initially.

Please read that previous post, if you want to understand this one, although this will be repetitive of some of the comments thereunder. I'll just start with the appropriate comment from Mr. Hail, as he explains the premise in it:

************************************
-- The meaning of "Not My Concern" --

"Tucker asked Mike Pence, "Where's the concern for the United States in that?" Mike Pence: "That's not my concern."
Sure there's more to this...."

This is my interpretation of the "Not my concern" line:

Tucker was doing a political-polemic-essay interlude of his own, starting at 24:35, using the same tone and moral-outrage style he used to effect on his now-eliminated TV show. This kind of interlude is normally frowned upon for a political panel or debate moderator, even if it seems to inevitably happen these days, and the audience does kind of expect it from Tucker, as would the guests (like Pence).

Tucker's original question was (delivered 25:07-15) was: "Your concern is that the Ukrainians...don't have enough tanks?"

At the point this question gets asked, following its forty-second wind-up from Tucker in polemical-mode, you can see and hear that Pence has a response formulated. But Tucker won't be quiet and let the question hang. Pence is too polite to cut in and interrupt a person speaking. Tucker continues and redirects to a different question. When Pence speaks, he delivers the line he had formulated earlier in response to "That (i.e., tanks for Ukrainians) is NOT my concern." It makes 100%-normal sense in that context.

The notion that someone like Pence would say: "Oh, the welfare of the USA and its loser-people whose lives are getting worse, that is not my concern; I mainly only care about military-deliveries Holy Ukraine" -- this enters the realm of the absurd, or satire; as if a man running for U.S. president would ever say that. The anti-Pence people will claim it was a freudian slip, of course, but it's much-more classifiable as a grammatical slip while being off-balance from a hostile moderator.

The "Not My Concern" controversy reminds me a little of the "Rapists" line from Dernald Jay Blumpf in June 2015. As John Derbyshire has pointed out, Blompf was just stumbling around his words but he clearly meant "They're not sending their best; they're sending their rapists..." But because of the way it came out, the media all quoted it as "They're rapists," i.e., someone who has wide business interests and decades of fame would just out-of-nowhere declare all 60 million Mexican men are rapists ("they're rapists") instead of the actual point he was making about migrants up from Mexico are often laced with bad people ("they're sending their rapists"). Derbyshire declared that this the most momentous misinterpreted "their/they're" mix-up of the 2010s.
************************************

That makes sense. My reply was:

"What was (Mike Pence's) mind doing that whole damn time Tucker was talking? Was he not listening and just simply waiting for Tucker to finish to give that quick answer? That seems kind of ... stupid, in another sense anyway. Is he a robot? Even, I coulda' done better. (I do have plenty of time here to think about it, granted!)"

Mr. Hail replied to explain this behavior, as follows:

************************************
I am reminded of the 2016 R-nomination campaign when Marco Rubio, having been coached on how to release talking-points, repeatedly ignored pointed questions with answers that he had rehearsed. This became obvious when too many nuanced questions were blasted at him and he didn't answer the question. The name "Rubiobot" or "Rubio Robot" began to be heard by pro-Trump trolls (like Ricky Vaughan, a super-troll of the era who retweeted me more than once; Ricky Vaughan is on trial in 2023 by order of Attorney General Garfinkel for a joke about voting by text-message if you are a Democrat).

I don't know that the Rubio-2015/16 case applies directly in the "Not My Concern" mini-controversy of 2023, here. But the general phenomenon of so-called "talking points" is a disservice to political debate. It also seems to have been unstoppable. Everyone does "talking points" now. Even Trump has his own version of them, and his rally material is always the same as he only seldom innovates any real freshened-up talking-points.

It used to be that politicians or other speakers would speak on a specific theme, like well-crafted essays delivered with varying levels of passion in front of audiences, rather than a stripped-down, bullet-pointed "talking points" version. This is a lot like the style of journalism promoted by "Axios," an ideology that says almost all writing should consist of bullet-points without details or elaboration or flair or personalized touch or Peak-Stupidity-style interesting-'asides.'

Some say the use of "talking points" as we know it (to redirect away from actual questions) only began in the 1990s. I don't know how to evaluate that claim.
************************************

OK, well you can't call this a post, as it's nothing but a rehash of the Peak Stupidity comment threads. However, this needed to be said, for the record. Now, as far as an apology, I mean to Mike Pence, well, this - gonna go to the comments again - from Mr. Anon - is pretty much all we got here:

************************************
You could sort of tell from Pence's aspect that he wasn't paying too much attention to what Tucker was saying during his long digression, but rather was formulating his reply - probably to the first question, as you said.

So, perhaps I was unduly harsh on Pence.

He's still a boring cuck though and I still wouldn't vote for him.
************************************


Comments (16)




Depressing weather forecasts


Posted On: Wednesday - July 26th 2023 4:28PM MST
In Topics: 
  Internets  Music  Websites  Curmudgeonry  Science



The color of the sky is anything but coal gray, as it was for the 10,000 Maniacs in some music for the depressed*. Hot isn't depressing, Thunderstorms aren't depressing. No, what's depressing is that the predictive ability of weather forecasts seems to be getting worse lately.

Who's actually doing the forecasting that the iCrap devices use for their built-in weather apps? You may recall that Peak Stupidity bemoaned the loss of the site Dark Sky as it got merged with the app borg, in DarkSky goes Dark. After that I was using WeatherBug, and I received other suggestions here about sites. I've since "migrated" to the app out of convenience, which is the problem. Anyway, Wiki says "From iOS 8 to iOS 15, The Weather Channel was used as the app's weather data source. Since iOS 16, Apple has used their own internal forecast data.". I guess Storm Stories and Aviation Disasters aren't the weather anyway, as TWC morphed a few times.

So Apple is using their internal forecast data. Who do they have working in that department? Is that where they put the AA/Woke hires to keep them from fucking up the software? I mean, a few weeks back we did a lot of watering in two different places, as the phone said it was not going to rain until the weekend at the earliest. This was on a Tuesday. It rained like hell Tuesday night, and it rained like hell on Wednesday night. We could have saved on the water bills, but more importantly, on our time.

I know, I know, it didn't rain in Cupertino, California, the headquarters of Apple. It never rains in California, but apps, don't they warn ya', it poured (where we are), man it poured! And yes, I had a window up for OUR town, which is not, for you gleeful doxxers reading this post, Rockville, Maryland either. (Though feel free to assume so, but I'd advise you to not go back and waste another year.)

I do get that chance of rain given in percent means just that, but there was NO rain forecast. I remember Steve Sailer giving lots of credit to the weathermen and their computers a year or two ago for forecasting the time of the start/end of rainfall within 15 minutes. Sure, programs that interpret the progress of radar returns are one thing. I could argue this stuff in another post. However, while searching for Mr. Sailer's post on that, I ran into one from 11 years ago, "the Weather Man Is Not a Moron", in which he wrote "The forecast on the evening news is much more accurate than when I was a boy." That's because there IS no evening news.

OK, no, but there are apps now. Aviation weather has gotten better due to the short termedness of it. The general longer-term weather outlooks I've been looking at on the build-in iCrap app seem to have gotten worse. I've never trusted any predictions out past 4 days, as they ridiculously come out with 10-day forecasts, but I don't trust this app now. Incompetence has even infiltrated Meteorology. If I'm gonna get a bogus forecast, at least I want it to come from Flavia, even if it is for a country on a different continent a decade ago.


* Off that "Alternative Rock" band's excellent album In My Tribe. Holy moley, that's the "new stuff", but it was 36 years ago! (I first heard the alternative rock about 5 years later - sort of a late adopter.)

That post, BTW, has another great song, about Porcelina of the Vast Oceans - Smashing Pumpkins rocked! Was it "The Smashing Pumpkins", as in the adjective "smashing" or "Smashing Pumkins", with "smashing" as a verb?


Comments (18)




Cry the DeConstructed Country - Part 8: As Falls S. Africa...


Posted On: Tuesday - July 25th 2023 5:39PM MST
In Topics: 
  The Future  Race/Genetics  World Political Stupidity

... so falls America?*

(Continued from Part 1 , Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6. and Part 7)

They had and have a big portion of a continent - south of the Sahara desert - as big as the whole N. American continent , yet they just have to have it ALL - can't leave the White man even that bottom tip.



This should be the last post in this serious with the weird title. (In case it makes NO sense, I was playing off the set-in-S. Africa movie title Cry, the Beloved Country. I haven't seen this one, but perhaps I should. I linked to the original 1951 movie, but there was a remake release in '95.) I will link again to the article SOUTH AFRICA AT WAR WITH ITSELF, written by Michael Witkin, that instigated this series of posts. That article does a good job describing for us how much S. Africa has descended into ruin, first gradually, now suddenly.

Could this sort of thing happen to the good old U.S. of A? No, I mean it couldn't have to the "good" and "old" U.S. of A, but could it to this country we inhabit now? I've seen that speculation of a bleak future, with increasing Black! control of government and society out of commenters on various virtual venues. I've dismissed the idea as many have, for the same reasons. "We aren't a small minority of the population, as South African Whites are."** "We gave the Black! people their freedom 160 years ago and have given them special benefits and "rights" above and beyond for half a century. They shouldn't have any grudges against us now." "We're a Democracy! OK, fine, Constitutional Republic, whatever. This is a whole different deal."

Yes, the numbers are different. S. Africa has a decreasing and always fairly small, minority of Whites, the mixed race people called "coloured" and plenty of •Indians. Here, if not a majority anymore, we have lots of White people in America running the show still. Then, there are a ton of Hispanic residents, not fans of black*** leadership or black residents period by any means, and then there are other big groups in addition - Orientals, our own •Indians, etc. The top-down Regime-pushed program of black worship is not held by most of the population. It's strongest in White people, sad to say, but then, that's only seriously the case with a minority of them. (I mean there, those actually believing the bullshit.)

Let me go back to the above "Yes, the numbers are different." Fertility rates of most groups (I don't know about the Moslems) are fairly low, we keep hearing. However, regarding blacks in America, the Globalists are making it up in volume... in volume of black immigrants direct from the Caribbean and Africa that is. Mark my words, for the ones the census counts - I'm sure there are many illegal ones, who may or may not be counted - you will see some LARGE numbers of BIA or BIC black Americans next census, you know, to keep the pressure on. I've noted before that Big Biz LUVS LUVS LUVS these people for employees. The companies can meet their quotas while getting generally harder working and smarter people. However, big numbers, tribalism and genes trump assimilation, any day of the week, I'm sorry to say.

That said, also, the ruination that S. Africa has seen is not JUST due to the overwhelming numbers, that is, after they succumbed to Communist and other World political pressure (see Part 5) to let go of their control of their country. As I mentioned, from that original Witkin article, even the current 8% of the population White people there are discriminated against in employment by Affirmative Action. Yes, still! In case you don't recall Part 3, "The intake of white [surgery and medical] students is capped at 2%." The recent SCROTUS decision has many Americans hopeful, but I don't see that alone as enough to push back against the AA-on-steroids that is just one part of Wokeness, as discussed in our post Demographics to DIE for from.

That post mentioned the various other demographics too that have been degrading society from its former state of White-run competence. The problem is simple. Without a majority of White men in the workplace, civic groups, government****, etc, much of the competence and civility we used to see around us in society will be gone.

Well sure, the Orientals can keep things running, as we see in China, albeit while politically letting it go all to hell, and the •Indians can "code" and stuff too, as they close off the jobs that White men could be doing in their own country to White men, as soon as they make inroads. None of this is good for the White man, of course, but will American go to ruin in the way of South Africa? We probably won't need to care at that point, as it won't be our country to worry about.

Assuming we still want to, can Americans stop a ruinous slide into 3rd World incompetence and corruption resembling South Africa? Yes, but it's going to take some backbone. That's really the only thing necessary. People must refuse to participate in the wokeness. The employment aspect of it, the real worry, is being pushed hard by the Regime, but do Big Biz outfits really want to go to the mattresses and to ruin with all this? Do they want electrical power to be available only for small spurts daily due to graft of funds and theft of wire? (Rather than the railroads, as in S. Africa) do they really want bridges to crumble and roads to be closed, impeding the competent and incompetent alike from showing up to work regularly. I don't think so.

People are going to have to stand up, show a little courage, and speak up against the stupidity of letting the Wokeness keep pushing us toward that tipping point... from gradually to suddenly. There's another post I want to write. That's the end of this series. Look at what's happening in South Africa right now, and learn something, Americans. Good luck to all of us.


* Totally off the subject here, but one of the best album titles I've known is jazz musician Pat Metheny's As Falls Wichita, so Falls Wichita Falls. But, I like Geography... and some jazz.

** I don't know if the White Boers were ever a majority of the population of that vast land, but, as per Post 1, the Bantu black population mostly came AFTER the Boers had been there for a while. (Indigenously?) The black people there now came to live in that magic dirt. Somehow, the magic wasn't there in the dirt before the Boer and the English.

*** I'll stop with the Black! bit, oops, here. If readers want it back, it can come back upon request.

**** As I've written before, incompetence in government is not at a bad thing, the way the Potomac Regime has been rolling... trying to roll us, that is.


Comments (11)




21st Century digits


Posted On: Saturday - July 22nd 2023 10:31PM MST
In Topics: 
  General Stupidity  Music  Curmudgeonry



Look. We're almost 1/4 of the way through the 21st Century. I know. We aren't still writing in COBOL to small databases in which every byte matters. We're not storing programs off our "Trash-80's" on cassette tapes. We've got lots of room for data including 4-digit years. That's not the problem. The problem is that everyone is still saying the "Twenty..." or even "Two thousand and..." before the years in this century they talk about. It's a waste of time, and time is precious. More importantly, it sounds dorkey, and I'm getting tired of it.

A friend mentioned an even worse trend from 5 years ago or so, in which people would say "Two nineteen" for 2019, for example. Then I started noticing it. It was just plain weird. There's no call for that.

Now, Peak Stupidity will write "19" in front of years until it's clear which century we mean. We've gone to using just 2 digits for years in the 21st Century, unless there could be confusion.

Did people in the 1920's still say "Nineteen..." in front of the 20th Century years previous? I doubt it. Let's all go to 2 digits, as we've wasted enough time already with this... yeah, the post too! Oh, and "turn of the century doesn't mean 1900 or 1901 anymore either.

I got that off my chest finally, after 23 years. We don't have a "Pet Peeve" topic key - this goes under "Curmudgeonry", but also music, because there's the Doors song:



The Doors recorded their debut, self-titled album in '66, errrr 1966. This cut, 20th Century Fox is one of the 11 songs on it, none of which I would call a "weak cut". This one isn't long enough for all of the hypnotizing keyboards by Ray Manzarak and guitar solos that take you places by Robby Krieger. As I write, the autoplay function went to Soul Kitchen and then Back Door Man - "You men eat your dinner, eat your pork and beans. I eat more chicken any man ever seen." WTF?! Doesn't matter. These guys are mesmerizing - gonna have to to embed more Doors.

Thanks for reading and commenting this week, Peakers. Have an enjoyable Sunday!


Comments (10)




Demise of the American City - Hartford, CT: Part 2 - Explanations


Posted On: Saturday - July 22nd 2023 10:40AM MST
In Topics: 
  Americans  The Future



Part 1 on this topic, written yesterday, had observations only. The explanations are myriad and arguable as to significance, but the demise of American cities IS a thing, one we can all observe if we have memories of only a decade or two back.

Let's go back more than that, to before my memories of the world, to the flight from cities to suburbs. Of course, the automobile and the interstate highway system (meant for yes, inter-state but spurs and loops ended up serving city/suburb travel as much as interstate travel) made it easier for American to have their own "spreads", even if only 1/2 an acre. One fact in this flight I did not understand myself until fairly recently, from my reading of certain non-Narrative-based (or just "based") blogs, is the racial aspect. Going back 1/2 a century it was mostly White flight, not everybody. The reasons for this are likely known to the Peak Stupidity crowd, so I won't belabor the point of getting the hell away from Black! violence and theft.

I can still remember a department store in the downtown of a medium-sized city I know well. It was there in the early 1980s, but, as I recall, just closing down. Yeah, the malls drew the shoppers - think Breakfast at Tiffany's (the movie, not the song) - away from the city, but that seems like a chicken/egg question. Were the malls successful because people already lived outside the cities and needed to drive to shop anyway? Or, were they built because the inner city shopping experience became "not so great" due to the same factor that drove White residents away.

Well, that's the long past. Because medium-sized cities had* government offices one might need to go to, the banks, etc. there was a reason to occasionally go downtown. Then too, there were the office workers. They went to lunch at various establishments near them downtown and had to do errands too. So, downtown was kind of fun - except for parking, about which I could write a book of humorous anecdotes! - during the daytime. At night, unless you were a partying university student, you got the hell out. It got dark and quiet, way too quiet.

Then what? I was pretty late in noticing, so I imagine the trend of lots of housing being built in America's inner cities was happening 5 years or more before I noticed it ~ 2 decades ago. You all have seen the types of buildings. (I didn't see any of this in Hartford that day, but I didn't get around all of downtown.) Those pricey 5 story condo buildings with their coffee shops in the loft-style lobby are not my style, but I don't begrudge the young people for wanting to leave those Sub-divisions for the Bright Lights, Big City** Before these residences, I'd seen huge old brick mill buildings get converted into apartments too. Either way, gentrification, the ousting of ghetto dwellers via razing of old dwellings and the construction of these newer buildings (also the pastel row-house thing), made these parts of the cities safer to live in over a 30 year span or so.

That sounded great then. You can live right there downtown near your job where all the conveniences are and party at night with other young people. They've got the blocked off walk streets for craft beer festivals, and other stuff, which I'll mention at the end...



That one block section, with that fancy clothing store at one corner, was blocked to cars.

The thing is though, as of late, as there are more places to live in them. the cities themselves are no longer all they've been cracked up to be.

I've got to back up here. A factor making cities less pleasant is the slow but sure increase in the number of street people, homeless and/or bums. There've always been the down-on-their-luck, the Wharf Rats, as described nicely by the Grateful Dead (Robert Hunter, to be fair). The situation nowadays involves more than a few established bums and grifters. A factor in the demise of the cities has been the demise of the Funny Farm. See Peak Stupidity on Outsourcing of the Funny Farms and All flew out of the Cuckoo's Nest - an Unforced Error? ***

There's a political aspect to this, and, as usual, the cities of the West coast more than tolerate the mess, and even have encouraged it. The good weather also makes the cities there a haven for the homeless. (Were I homeless, I'd choose San Diego, but I don't know if they'd have ME.) The situation is worse almost everywhere though.

That's a long-term deterioration that could be dealt with. Another is the more recent politically-caused crime wave, motivated by the "Summer of George". This goes back closer to 10 years though, and it's gotten to the point where Black! city dwellers can get away with anything, making things more miserable for everybody. Steve Sailer is all over this, so I don't need to expound much.

All of that damage to American cities might be overcome with political will, of which there is none. The future keeps coming though, and it's the internet that has been part of what could be the permanent demise. The Kung Flu PanicFest consisted of experiments in Totalitarianism, for the most part, but along with those were the experiments in a UBI (Univeral Basic Income)****, which didn't go well at all and also remote work via the internet.

Lots of that white-collar work can be done from home. Is there a reason for big office buildings at all anymore? In the comments under the previous post, Mr. Blanc mentioned that management may not always like this idea. The concept of "hours worked" would have to be changed in the minds of managers to "work done". That's not easy for them, as some work has never actually involved any perceived "work done". Some employees are up to the task of self-motivation and suppression of distractions, and some aren't.

A family member who is conservative in all ways (not a fan of change) did not relish the idea when he got sent home to work like everyone else there during the PanicFest. He's gotten used to it well though, was told to stay away longer than most others due to his successful resistance to the vax mandate, but now got told he HAS to come in (on Tuesdays by one manager, Wednesday by another, so lets call it Tuesdays and Wednesdays). This place is not in downtown however. I'm not sure what will be their plan in the long run.

Remote work saves a LOT of money for rent and other overhead for businesses. True, there are plenty of white-collar jobs that must be done in an office somewhere that involve interfacing with reality. Where it can work I think remote work will continue, if not expand even.

If people aren't doing much working in offices downtown, will they still live there, in those converted former office buildings? I suppose one could work remotely from his condo in downtown too. You get out and about, if it's safe, hang out with other young people for lunch and dinner and the craft beer festival on that walk-street right about the corner... she lives on Pride Street ... lingers long on Pride Street... , got The Doors in my head...



Yeah, that's not so family friendly, as much as they think it is or WISH it would be.

The purpose of cities used to be serious industry a half-century ago, maybe more, but since then and before the internet allowed the type of interactions it does, it was to support company headquarters, government offices big entertainment venues, etc. Can a city be just a place for dense living with no other purpose? That would have been more possible if it hadn't been for the large increase in diversity and the experimentation with all the lefty weirdness that has made the street more miserable. Additionally, all this stupidity costs money. That may have been OK when tax money still poured into city coffers from the office towers. Can the residents alone support the stupidity that they must also live with? Family formation looks like a no-go item in these downtowns, affordable or otherwise. Better get away from the Bright Lights/Big City and back to those Subdivisions. Be cool or be cast out.

Cities have been around since Homo Sapiens began farming 100 centuries ago. Is their time over with? I only write about America here, but that's the way things are headed right now. I could be wrong.


PS: I didn't mention the factor of big universities in the cities. UConn has a small campus in West Hartford and a school of business in downtown, but the big campus is in Storrs, 22 miles to the east, a long way in Connecticut! There's an ~5,000 student Univ. of Hartford, but it's not a college town. Big university campuses can add life and money to a city. This is not so sustainable a business model either, as it's just based on more tax money. (No, not the State funds, but the school loan money coming from the taxpayers, the way it looks ...)


* Even this is going away. Water Department, power company, etc, offices have moved out of downtown, at least a little ways.

** I've always been a big Michael J. Fox fan. His sister Mallory was not too bad either!

*** In a rare style of Peak Stupidity brain fart, I'd written the 1st of those post 4 years before the 2nd one, and I'd totally forgotten by the 2nd. That's happened a few times over the 2,670 posts written.

**** Whatever happened to Andrew Yang, anyway?


Comments (16)




Demise of the American City - Hartford, CT: Part 1 - Observations


Posted On: Friday - July 21st 2023 7:25AM MST
In Topics: 
  Americans  The Future



The small portion of a Tucker Carlson interview of Mike Pence that we discussed in our most recent post (Wednesday) included Tucker Carlson's mention of the sorry state of America's cities. Not to repeat the discussion there, but, yes, Pence was right if his point was simply that the job of the President of the US does not include taking care of American cities. OTOH, it doesn't include sending weapons of war to foreign countries fighting other foreign countries on which the US Congress had not voted to declare war either!

I was on the side of President Gerald Ford when he, per the New York Daily New's paraphrase, told then-broke New York City to drop dead in 1975. Were a (God forbid!) President Mike Pence to tell Hartford, Connecticut or any other city in America begging for US taxpayer dollars the same thing, I'd gain a little respect for him.

Tucker Carlson was right in his more basic point that this country is going downhill fast (so it's ludicrous to send billions of $ to the Ukraine). He's right about American cities.

OK, it's great we can say "I told you so" about the left-coast cities of San Francisco, Seattle, and Portland, or the Big One, NYC, as their Socialist and Black!-worship policies have come back to bite them in their asses. It's every American city I've been to that is falling fast though. Perhaps there are some trends based on geography, and definitely some political factors, but this goes beyond all that. The world is changing. The demise of the city may be an inherent and important part of the transition into the future.

Due to business reasons, we were in Hartford, Connecticut, and I had a few hours to get out and about. This is not some unique place - it's just an old established American city.

Hartford has been the sole* capital of the State of Connecticut since 1875. It's known as the "Insurance Capital of the World". Hartford was the richest city in the country for a few decades after the War Between the States, but wiki says it's the poorest now. Does that make this post an act of cherry-picking? No, the Cherry Capital is Traverse City, Michigan. OK, seriously, no, because, as you'll see this post is about an outwardly normal looking city, and the observations I'll make here are the same as I could in other cities of the same size that I've been to recently. I just took pictures this time.

I'll make observations only, in this post. I'm sure the PS reader will have plenty of thoughts on the reasons behind these observations, but I'll hold those thoughts of mine until Part 2 tomorrow.

Note in the picture above that the buildings and the lighting look modern enough. The downtown doesn't look run-down at a first and far-enough off glance. This scene is from nearby the other big buildings.



There are SOME people downtown, as this parking lot indicates - this wasn't the peak (trough, really) of the PanicFest - it was a few weeks ago. Where are these particular people, working in some of the offices? With major insurance companies based here and the many State offices, you'd think office work would be a big thing here. Things are changing though ...

Office workers have to eat lunch sometime (around noon, I guess), and they have to take care of errands. That's supposed to be one of the benefits of being in the city - convenience. There were not many people out and about, and hardly any people dressed in office attire.

I am used to medium sized American cities being virtually ghost towns after office hours, due to the pervasive Black! influence in the inner cities. However, I've seen positive changes over the last 2 decades on that score as more people LIVE, rather than just work, in the downtowns. You all know what those standard-issue condo buildings look like - all the same design, high rent, but you've got that coffee shop on the ground floor and maybe a couple of pool tables...

That gentrification (pricing out the ghetto dwellers) has been a good thing for cites , but things are changing again though...

A significant portion of the few people walking around that day in Hartford were bums. The smell of urine was all over, except when the smell of skunkweed overpowered it... a good thing... barely. I came upon this fairly high office tower that is now vacant.



A big sign on the glass in front says that this place is up for residential rental. There's a lot of conversion of office space to living space now. You don't get your balconies and that, but it's all location, location, location, right? That is, if this still IS a good location.

There was me, a couple of bums, and some other guy walking by, that's all, over the course of a few minutes, pretty dead for The Big City. Yeah, "Bright Lights, Big City", we can go out to the bars, wait, what bars? Me, well, I went into a fast food joint. Service was better than it looked like it WOULD be, but that's because I was one of only 2 customers. The place smelled bad and was almost entirely Black! What else does downtown Hartford have for "amenities"?

There is still this fancy clothing store? Isn't that a thing in the big city, shopping, for the nice shapely city women who you may meet at the office and those bars, right?

Just look at the name! No way you're getting a shirt for less than 50 bucks.



I looked inside, and there was nobody but a salesman or two in the place. I admit, Sears (as I forgot to mention in that old blue jeans story), formerly, and now Target are where I buy clothes in person. Still, there are people who like these sort of places. I'm thinking Elaine in Seinfeld, but actual real people too.

What is the point of being in these cities now? What does the future hold for them? That discussion will be in the next post (or in comments here - that would be fine).


* Prior to that, there were dual capitals of Connecticut, Hartford and New Haven.


Comments (18)




The stupidity of Mike Pence


Posted On: Wednesday - July 19th 2023 6:56PM MST
In Topics: 
  Elections '16 - '24  The Russians  Pundits  The Neocons

This guy is one of the 2nd-tier GOP '24 election candidates, per E.H. Hail here. After learning a bit more than I'd already known about his fake anti-invasion stance, Peak Stupidity dubbed him just Another dumb Trump hire.

The Tucker Carlson video interview of Mr. Pence below that you may want to watch confirms this, especially early on. How could Mike Pence, a guy who was very much aware, associated with, and nearby, the events of January 6th '21 spout the media "insurrection" "violence against the cops", BS narrative? This is something that makes me think he is either an idiot who actually believes the Lyin' Press over his own lying eyes, or a big liar himself. He's a scumbag either way. Personal anecdotes that I've read of him being a good neighbor are one thing, but as a politician, ostensibly on the side of Americans, no, he's scumbag.

But that part is not what the post is about. Mr. Anon, Peak Stupidity and Unz Review commenter, first showed us a small part of this video interview in comments on the latter site. It showed Pence making a seemingly egregious "screw Americans, I'm a Neocon" style statement that wonks would call "tone deaf". We'll put the start/end tags in to highlight just this part, but one can easily watch the whole 34 minutes here too.

I was about to write a post on this one part of Mike Pence stupidity, but Mr. Anon's subsequent analysis of it was pretty much what I was going to write.

Actually, I'll start just a little bit early, to highlight here the Neocon attitude - a real criticism of Bai Dien for not providing enough money and weapons for the war. Unbelievable!



After talking about the disaster areas that are American cities and showing his incredulity about Pence's concern about MOAR TANKS, Tucker asked Mike Pence, "Where's the concern for the United States in that?" Mike Pence: "That's not my concern."

Sure there's more to this, but at the end of my specified duration, well, I don't want to sound like an off-the-boat immigrant here, but, Mr. Pence, where is this Free World of which you speak?

Regarding Mike Pence's longer reply, here's Mr. Anon's comment in its entirety, the blockquote at the beginning being part of a comment by Res (a very astute commenter) who Mr. Anon is replying to:
*****************************************
The full quote is not nearly as bad (short version: “we can do both”) and is less than two minutes of video, but what was he thinking when he led with that? Adept backtracking or just a malapropism?
I think the “We can do both.” was him recognizing that he had just made an awful blunder. Tucker recited a laundry list of all the ills that now beset American cities and asked Pence, in effect, “What about America.” And Pence replied “Not my concern.” Now, Pence might have been speaking in a strictly federalist sense; as the President he is not responsible for local matters. And of course he’d be right to think so. He isn’t, and he shouldn’t be. But while those problems might not be his responsibility, you would think, that as President, they would be his concern.

But even then, the “We can do both” is nonsense. We can’t do both. Pence is a boomer-con who is stuck in the 1980s, where it’s morning in America again, and the US is a “Shining City on a Hill”. Boomer-cons, and their doppelgangers on the other side of the aisle, the neo-liberal boomer-libs, still think of America as that late 20th century America they grew up in. They think that America is an inexhaustible source of money and good-will that can solve all the World’s problems. What the World needs is just a good strong dose of “Murica!”

But we can no longer “Pay any price, bear any burden” if indeed we ever could (fat lot of good that price paying and burden bearing did us in the 1960s, when Kennedy uttered those words). We’re done for. America is a dying empire. And there is only one thing that dying empires do. They die.>

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

Thank you very much, Mr. Anon. Those are my thoughts exactly. I'll add this: I wonder how much of a Federalist Pence is anyway, but he sure could have made that clearer. Either way, his adamancy regarding the Ukraine had me thinking it’s 1 of 2 things:

1) This guy is stupid as a post, as he really thinks Russia is our existential enemy, and, as it were the Cold War era, we must be the adults and not let the defense of the Free World get derailed by young idealists.

2) He’s not stupid, but he’s under serious pressure – “say what ever else you want, but support for the Ukraine is non-negotiable, if you want to get anywhere with our money..” (Well he wasn’t going anywhere anyway.)

That's the same question of extreme stupidity vs. lying that I had on Pence's take on J6. Sorry, I wouldn't vote for this guy for sewer inspector.


PS: Another reason I had for posting this video is that I have a post coming on America's cities with one personal experience to share.


Comments (27)




Site Note: Peak Stupidity Brain Fart


Posted On: Wednesday - July 19th 2023 8:09AM MST
In Topics: 
  General Stupidity  Websites

It's not the first time, and this is not any factual error.

I just noticed that the video of the Feds cutting Texas-placed razor wire at the Rio Grande was shown in our Them US Blues (we always feature that Dead song) Independence Day post. That was 11 days before I embedded the video in the recent post Is this how it starts?, which had the wording
Two weeks back I read a VDare post by writer Federale* that was downright enraging. I didn't find the video then, so I didn't post about it. I found it now - ...
That was wrong. I'd given credit to Adam Smith for very helpfully putting finding this video on youtube, so that credit is again due. I also had already quoted that certain unz commenter on the feelings upon seeing that treasonous act by the BP on July 4th too.

What happened is that I found the video on youtube myself on Saturday, but I don't know why I'd already forgotten about getting into all this back on Independence Day. Sorry, Adam Smith and other readers (for the duplication).


Comments (9)




Is the biggest American story of the 21st Century developing?


Posted On: Tuesday - July 18th 2023 7:37PM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  US Feral Government



Yes, we've been wrong before. Peak Stupidity has a topic key People's Revolt of 22 with, count 'em, only 3 posts using the key*. I thought those Kung Flu vaccine protests, the highlight being the great Canadian trucker protests in Ottawa would start protests of all sort by the remaining sane free-thinking people of the world. Didn't happen... by a long shot. The media is a HUGE force, and it put the kibosh on coverage of further events - there was an American trucker protest of sorts, but it got only small-website coverage.

Therefore, I'm putting no money down on this, but the recent clashes between the State of Texas and the US Border Patrol, very obviously Patriots vs Traitors respectively, does have me wondering if this will be the start of a way out, a means of reasonable peaceful separation of many American people from the Potomac Regime. We discussed this on Saturday in a post basically lifted from VDare, but with our commentary and hopes - Is this how it starts?.

We were referring to the start of a real conflict between Feral Authoritah and the attempts by the States - Texas here - to protect the country from invasion. (This could carry over to protection of the country from mandated insanity by the Feral Gov't, as far as BLT-G++, financial stupidity, and other ruinous programs of cultural destruction.)

Will there be an official secession by Texas anytime soon? No. This fairly localized conflict in which the Federal BP has been sabotaging Texas efforts to stop the immigration invasion seems like it will lead to a bigger clash, as (thankfully, as far as Governor Abbott goes) neither side is backing down. VDare had more on this story today. It was the writer "Federale" who brought up the enraging story of the BP cutting through the Texan-laid razor wire on the US side of the Rio Grande - not just cutting it, but doing this in spots to specifically let in illegal aliens waiting there. Then, it was A.W. Morgan with better news (again, reported more initially by one Tod Bensman of the Center for Immigration Studies) that Peak Stupidity discussed on Saturday. Now, Federale is back with the post The War On Texas’ Border Security Actions Is Beginning.
While there is much about Greg Abbott that is more hat than cattle, he has stepped up his actions to secure the border in the last month. Miles of concertina wire and barbed wire fencing have gone up and for the most part illegal aliens who approach the fencing are not being allowed in. However, the alien smugglers are developing a new tactic, deploy infants, children, and pregnant women in the water in front of the fencing, at great risk of death, to force Texas officials to cut the fencing themselves to allow in the illegal aliens to receive medical treatment.

Texas is deploying shallow watercraft to discourage this strategy by preventing illegal aliens from wading the river, but the smugglers, the Biden Regime, and the Lying Press have decided to make deaths of illegal aliens, shameless baby waving, part of their strategy to stop Governor Abbott’s policy to hold the line on the banks of the Rio Grande.
Unlike during the time of the actual secession in the 1860s, Media is not just a daily newspaper but it's an ubiquitous part of almost everyone's life now. The Lyin' Press arm of The Regime is being used to start a new "dead baby on the beach" campaign. Peak Stupidity readers will likely recall that European disaster in which one dead baby, dead due to his being trafficked across the Mediterranean Sea, was used as an excuse to allow a multi-million man, errr, refugee invasion of Germany and the rest of Europe. It's the kind of thing that can happen in a Matriarchy only.

That's the tactic being used at this point in this border skirmish between Feds and Texans. One Ben Wermund is part of the Regime's Lyin' Press are implementing this.
Not mentioned in the story is that the illegal aliens had the option to not illegally enter the United States. However, the Lying Press reporter, Wermund, appears to have an agenda. The Jewish resident of Washington, DC, the Washington correspondent for the Chronicle and self-admitted Texas expatriate, has written before about barbed wire on the Rio Grande, a strange story for a Washington correspondent. Wermund is also hyping the political reaction to his stories, hardly the behavior of a disinterested and responsible reporter without a political agenda.
Federale, on our side (that's just his handle), notes:
If anything, these illegal aliens should be arrested for child endangerment for dragging their children across a river, when they could just obey the law or just avail themselves of the Biden CBP One App Amnesty or just present themselves at the Port-Of-Entry to get in.

Clearly this strategy of putting themselves in danger is a ploy by the Biden Regime and the open borders advocates to get some dead bodies to trumpet and force Governor Abbott to back down.
Further down:
The Big Lie is that no one is being “pushed into the river,” much less a child. The illegal aliens are just being told to return to Mexico. No one can be “pushed” across a yard of concertina wire, it is just not physically possible. When the troopers us the word “pushed” they just mean refusing to let the illegal aliens in. Just another example of the press just lying for political purposes, of which Wermund is a classic example of the Lügenpresse.
There's a lot more in the article about what's going on down there at the Rio Grande. Backing up a little bit, Federale speculates:
The good news is that Governor Abbott and his troops are taking action, but clearly more is necessary and they need to prepare for attacks from the Biden Regime, likely arrest of Governor Abbott for violating the civil rights of illegal aliens.
He was a Fed (or maybe still is), but I don't think this is the way it will go down. Yes, that WOULD surely be a big story, the arrest of a Governor by a FED, putting Federalism to a big test. I think it will be underlings, those Guardsmen (other States have sent men too) or local law enforcement that resist this Fed sabotage that will be arrested. At least attempts will be made. That's when it could get dicey. That's when it could turn into a real battle between the Potomac Regime and America.

That would indeed be the biggest American story of the 21st Century, bigger than the PanicFest and bigger than the Black!/Commie rampages of '20 and much more heartening.


* We do have a few other keys with slim pickings, also new ones, but it is the case with those that the old posts have never been back-filled with some (5 or so) of the more recent topic keys.


Comments (6)




Hail To You on America's Demographic National Crisis


Posted On: Monday - July 17th 2023 7:19AM MST
In Topics: 
  Pundits  The Future



Peak Stupidity commenter, and lately returning (backsliding?) Unz Review commenter E.H. Hail became well known to this blog as an early-on stalwart anti-Corona-Panicker over 3 years ago. His Hail To You blog featured a series of 15, maybe a few more, data-based articles against the Kung Lue PanicFest during the worst of that period. We have linked to him before, but one would be better off going to his site to find the Kung Flu stuff.

He's written about more than just that important subject though. We've linked to his posts about Ron DeSantis (which started with discussion of the PanicFest but branched out from there), and his discussions of the racial situation in America, some of that going back well over a decade. His latest is on this combination of population replacement and demography - an interesting, solid, long (give yourself an hour) post A study on America’s demographic-national crisis — Early-2020s birth-data by race; and developments in the White birth-share in the USA, 1920s to 2020s.

There are just a few basic easy-to-interpret graphs in Mr. Hail's article, with much discussion to go along with them. Americans don't seem aren't allowed to care very much, but the numbers - births to White mothers and births to 2 White parents have gone down drastically. We're talking 50% and 45% respectively, as of this year.

Rather than given any opinion here, I'll ask the PS reader to check out Mr. Hail's article and comment section. I'll point out 3 more things here though.

1) OK, this is a tiny bit of discussion: It's interesting that the graphs of White population proportion in the article show 5 fairly distinct phases over the last ~75 years.

2) We didn't do any numerical analysis - there are only 2 graphs in the 3 posts - but Peak Stupidity had a series of 3 posts a year into our blog life (November of '17) called Western World committing demographic sooeee-cide. - See Part 1 - - Part 2 - Snowflake Girls, and Part 3.

3) The Instapundit Glenn Harlan Reynolds just wrote an article 3 days back about decreasing birthrates around the world - Free Will, Children, and the Great Filter. He didn't seem to be too awfully worried about the mix of children being born. I think he should.


Comments (16)




Is this how it starts?


Posted On: Saturday - July 15th 2023 9:50AM MST
In Topics: 
  Immigration Stupidity  Liberty/Libertarianism  US Feral Government



(Both images here proudly lifted from A.W. Morgan's VDare article. They can't sue me - their lawyers are (unfortunately) too busy.


Two weeks back I read a VDare post by writer Federale* that was downright enraging. I didn't find the video then, so I didn't post about it. I found it now - a video showing US Border Patrol agents cutting through razor wire placed by the officials of the State of Texas to stop the invasion. This treasonous Fed let illegal aliens into Texas, right in front of a camera at that. From that post by Federale, Border Patrol Agents Now Under Orders To Cut Barbed Wire, Bring In Illegal Aliens!:

Warning: Those with high Blood Pressure - check it before watching... and afterwards.




The question of secession of patriotic America from the Potomac Regime comes up a lot more often than it used to. In a 2nd-level response to another good comment on proposed separation by the frequent iSteve commenter AnotherDad, a commenter, cough, cough, you may know, had this to say 12 days back:
Here’s the way I can see it starting, Silent Cal.

[SNIP]

I’m telling you that, were I a Texas National Guardsman watching that, I don’t know what the chances would be that I would raise my rifle and fire at the traitorous Fed. They would not be 0.

That’s how something may get started. The Feds derail State policies that are designed to prevent the evil that the Potomac Regime has been implementing. Some Governor with guts, or maybe a group of brave locals, decides that enough is enough. Then, of course, the FBI or whoever come to the State to arrest said Texans, Floridians, or whomever. Then, State officials have to prevent this by detaining these FBI men at the airport.

What’s next after that?
12 days later, some news from Texas gives us an idea. An article today from A.W. Morgan reports that Secession Crisis Brewing At Ranch In Texas, Where Texas DPS Battles Border Patrol.
Writing in the Daily Mail, Tod Bensman of the Center for Immigration Studies has reported that officers with Texas’ Department of Public Safety “are locked in a bizarre daily struggle” with the Border Patrol at a pecan farm in Eagle Pass, Texas.
Schematic layout and scenario from VDare/A.W. Morgan:


Biden has done what we thought he might do, almost. His Border Patrol is undermining Governor Greg Abbott’s effort to close the border.
A clash of the Potomac Regime vs. a State, especially the strongest, Texas, is probably the best, easiest, and probably least violent way a secession could get started.

This next is a quote from Center of Immigration Studies' Tod Bensman in The Daily Mail within Mr. Morgan's post.
It also wasn’t helpful to Texas that the Urbinas—who leased a long stretch of their riverfront to the Border Patrol at expense to the U.S. taxpayer—dug a walkway ramp down to the river to make the steep bank more accessible.

This is nothing short of an absurd civil war of sorts pitting two American forces, one controlled by Texas and the other by Washington D.C., against each other.
Absurd? It's better than a firefight for right now.
Now, for the really good news. Abbott dispatched state troopers to the farm because it was the scene of a crime:
Texas then bulldozed the river ramp, strung rows of barbed wire across it and planted a large sign that threatens a fine and reads: “You cannot pass here.”

Some illegals are swimming down river to find another entry, but others are swimming back to Mexico:

Privately, because they’re not authorized to speak, some Border Patrol agents tell me they abhor having to escort illegal aliens into the country. But they’re following orders.

One young, dripping wet Venezuelan man confirmed it all to me.

“They [Texas Department of Public Safety officers] won’t let us pass,” he says.
So, his group will walk several hundred yards upriver to a spot where they heard the green uniformed “American immigracion” officers might be found.
OK, so as not to both steal the 2 images AND excerpt the entire VDare article, let me skip a little bit - still worth reading there - to:
Either way, in one sense, Biden has gone to war against Texas.

Abbott must respond in kind. Texas DPS officers must arrest Border Patrol agents who assist the invaders and/or interfere with efforts to close the border.
My bold for what would be a BOLD move by Governor Abbott. Is it true that you don't mess with Texas? It's so exciting and encouraging to see this formerly anti-litter message become a reality on the southern border.

That's for you Traitor Bai Dien: Don't mess with Texas, bitch!

Ich ein una Tejano!!


Couldn't help myself:

Mr. Bai Dien, leave this fucking wall alone!!




* Federale gives credit for this information to "The best mainstream media reporter on the immigration beat, Bill Melugin ..." I really, really hate to link to twitter, but one could go to this ungodly mess of a URL to see Mr. Melugin's tweets on the matter.

**************************
[UPDATED 2 hrs. later:]
Changed references to Tod Bensman. He's an American and not OF the Daily Mail.
**************************


Comments (10)