Is there some new pretext for the revival of the Star Wars mania? Only on my block there are 3 sets of Christmas Star Wars decorations proudly displayed by middle-aged men one would expect to have gotten over their Oedipal issues about two decades ago.
Month: December 2015
Radical Islamic Terrorism
Question: why doesn’t Obama just say the words “radical Islamic terrorism” already and spare us the continued misery of having to listen to endless complaints that he doesn’t say them?
Yes, clearly, saying the words won’t damage ISIS in any way. But it will alleviate the tedium of seeing the public space colonized by the discussion of his reluctance to say the words.
Hillary said she was sorry about the emails, and they mostly went away. Why not do the same for this discussion? What good is being advanced by the refusal to just say it already?
Stupid in Montréal
I was always so miserable that I had to leave Montréal forever but now I’m thinking I wouldn’t be happy there anyway. See this:
The borough of Cote des Neiges-Notre Dame de Grace is doing what it can to encourage healthy living through a proposed bylaw limiting the availability of fast food.
The borough wants to prevent the construction of new fast food restaurants bordering major traffic arteries. Existing restaurants won’t be affected.
I don’t eat fast food but I grew up in the USSR and this kind of sloganeering brings back traumatic memories. Besides, one gets the privilege of paying enormous taxes only to enable some fucker bureaucrat who can’t get snow cleaned from the streets lecture one on “healthy living”? CDN/NDG is a mess every year when it snows. I almost killed myself slipping in CDN last January, and that was way more dangerous to my health than the fast food I don’t eat.
Besides, CDN is the area where recently arrived immigrants live. Maybe they don’t have money to eat in / start expensive eateries. But yeah, let’s lecture them on healthy living instead of cleaning garbage from the street.
The Winner of the Debate
Here is a fellow at the Atlantic who thinks the debate was won by. . . Rand Paul.
To me, Rand Paul did the worst at the debate, sounding whiny, incoherent, and weirdly resentful. His foreign policy is that of Pat Buchanan (who somehow made his way into my blogroll and now haunts my news intake). And what is staler than Buchanan?
GOP Debate #5: Conclusion
Not a word on the economy, not a word on education, not a word on the plummeting life span of the white working class (which is supposed to be the Republican base, by the way), not a word on crime, not a word on poverty, not a word on healthcare. Not a word on anything that is relevant to the daily lives of actual voters.
Are these people running for President of the US or President of the Middle East? I’m sitting here, between Illinois and Missouri, listening to candidates who don’t seem to be aware that Illinois and Missouri exist and face problems that are not connected to the Middle East or even North Korea.
The debate is good entertainment but it’s completely divorced from the real issues facing the country.
Republican Debate #5: Liveblogging
19:34 – Reince Priebus is not even remotely managing to live up to the hypnotic beauty of his first and last name. What a waste of a name on such a poodle-like fellow.
19:44 – I would look sensational in Fiorina’s suit. What a stunning piece of clothing.
19:46 – during the anthem, everybody held their hand to their heart except for Cruz who was grabbing his wallet.
19:48 – when asked to introduce himself, Rand Paul immediately started attacking others.
19:51 – Kasich is being reasonable once again. And Christie is fear-mongering pathetically. The extreme anxiety he keeps talking about doesn’t seem to have spoiled his appetite.
19:53 – Fiorina’s cross is so enormous and flashy that it’s embarrassing.
19:59 – if I were still a drinking person, I could play a shots game with the phrase “radical Islamic terrorism.”
20:01 – Trump brings up cell phones with ISIS flags pouring across the border. What’s that even about? I like Bush’s line about Trump being a chaos candidate.
20:06 – enough with the “radical Islamic terrorism”! Boring!!!
20:18 – why is everybody piling on poor little Rubio all of a sudden?
20:36 – Trump has been completely marginalized in this debate.
20:41 – Carson was asked the stupidest question and gave the stupidest answer.
20:46 – no, Trump never heard of the Geneva convention. Why would he, he’s not even an actual politician!
20:57 – Cruz is going all Putinoid in his pro-Assad fervor.
20:58 – Rubio finally brings some reason to the discussion reminding that Gaddafi was removed not by the US but by the people of Libya.
21:14 – why is Rand Paul getting so much air time? He’s an idiot, everything he says is ridiculous.
21:20 – and Carson is a Leninist with his citizen – statesman theory. But he said something smart about Putin, wow.
Fanaticism and Dogma
An illustration of what I was talking about this morning didn’t fail to appear. A Liberal blogger wrote an extremely mildly worded post that questioned whether the concept of trigger warnings was necessarily entirely always completely useful and asking students maybe, possibly, if they would be so kind as to consider maybe possibly doing the kindness of accepting that professors don’t always object to administration – mandated trigger warnings because of being horrible evildoers. Maybe. Possibly. Or not.
The post sounded even more tentative and apologetic than my retelling. Still, it departed by a hair’s breadth from the dogma that trigger warnings are good. As a result, the post’s author got terrified of his own enormous daring and deleted the post.
This kind of thing happens all the time. The moment Bernie Sanders began his campaign, the very Liberals whose interests he was trying to promote descended on him like a flock of angry crows for not using the exact PC terminology of today back in the blethering 1970s. This is not even about censoring ideas. It’s complete intolerance for anything that departs from rigid formulations that have to be reproduced photographically. And of course, the politicians who try to appeal to this audience sound like broken records.
Baltimore Trial
I can’t believe anybody seriously thinks that racial justice in Baltimore will be advanced by the jailing of some poor black schmuck of a police officer.
But of course it’s easier to scapegoat Porter than actually to do something about Baltimore’s problems.
The Mysteries of Laundry
Since I started working from home, it feels like I’m doing a lot more laundry than ever before. Mind you, I don’t do more housework than normally. It’s just laundry that seems to be overrunning my life.
I can’t even remember what we did before I suddenly found myself running up and down stairs with endless laundry baskets. I’m sure we didn’t walk around in dirty clothes. And it seems logical that we wore more clothes when I had to change for work and then change back into house clothes. These days I can do one outfit all day long but laundry is mushrooming.
There are definitely more dirty dishes since I now eat only at home but I don’t do more dishes than before. I never did any, actually.
This is one of those little life mysteries that surround the process of laundry in a way they don’t any other process.
Ready for Another Debate
Who’s with me on watching tonight’s Republican debate? It promises to be quite animated.
What I wonder is whether Republicans are compensating for the lack of a single viable candidate with creating an animated, conflict-ridden field that attracts attention and produces the feeling that the party is alive, bustling and happening.
I’m worried that the Democrats, with their two not very young candidates who never say anything unpredictable and don’t make it into the news very often + the idiotically scheduled Saturday debates, are failing to milk the moment for all the attention they could be getting.