Word Of The Day

Groyper:

The Groypers, sometimes called the Groyper Army, are a group of alt-rightwhite nationalist, and Christian nationalist[4] activists led by Nick Fuentes. Members of the group have attempted to introduce alt-right politics into mainstream conservatism in the United States and participated in the January 6 United States Capitol attack and the protests leading up to it. They have targeted other conservative groups and individuals whose agendas they view as too moderate and insufficiently racist and nationalist. The Groyper movement has been described as white nationalist, homophobicnativistfascistsexistantisemitic, and an attempt to rebrand the declining alt-right movement. [Wikipedia]

Ya gotta wonder if declining is a wishful adjective, or is backed up by a statistic that can be examined. Noted in “Will the MAGAs admit that Charlie Kirk’s alleged killer is one of them?” Frank Vyan Walton, Daily Kos:

So, this wasn’t an attack “from the Left.”  This kid was from a White Mormon Republican family who were steeped in gun culture.  His dad was a Sheriff.  He wore an unironic Trump costume for Halloween. He wasn’t a Latino, he wasn’t a Trans person. Some indications are that he was linked to the Groyper subculture who were deeply antisemitic and hated Charlie Kirk for his staunch support of Israel.

As it happens, this guy just goes on and on and on, and not much of interest, either, although probably fairly accurate. I’ve seen groyper before, but I hadn’t look it up.

All The World’s A Stage

Augh! I’m compelled!

And all the men and women merely players

That came to mind when I learned — yes, yes, I’m well behind on my reading, maybe I’ll catch the fiendish reading monster of relative ephemera, aka news articles and blog posts, when the snow flies – that the detention center dubbed ‘Alligator Alcatraz‘, a tent city in the Florida Everglades, is being dismantled:

In July, Florida Republicans launched the brutal “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration detention center deep in the Florida Everglades with great fanfare. Soon, the Trump administration was championing it as a model it wanted to replicate across the country. But less than two months later, the camp is being dismantled and emptied of detainees. [MSNBC]

And, frankly, with nary a whisper.

As if a stage change was taking place on the stage that is the world.

Remember, President Trump’s greatest skill – I shan’t call it talent – isn’t building, branding, or governing. He reportedly made millions and millions of dollars, and built a nation-wide reputation, as an actor.

Or, as a professor long ago said of John Wayne, a performer. Although I never saw Mr Trump’s vehicle, The Apprentice, my understanding is that he did the same thing over and over and over; so the professor also said of Wayne.

But now that Mr Trump is descending into dementia, his acting skills coming to the fore to sell his daily issuance of mendacity, he seems to believe that the world is a stage, and yesterday’s big dramatic scene is for tomorrow’s disassembly, quietly accomplished to make way for the next big act.

Not the way a government should be run.

Belated Movie Reviews

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024) is the sequel to Beetlejuice (1988), the ghost story in which a young married couple goes off a bridge and end up dead, after which they discover that the dead have their own culture, including hucksters, and their own set of dangers.

But what happened to the huckster? That’s the point of this sequel, but, despite the best efforts of the actors, this movie doesn’t make the grade. Promising characters are developed and discarded, the delights of the first movie are repeated and extended to no particular end, the parts that might have charmed us fall flat, and the central mystery is clumsily handled.

It was a disappointment, at least for me, even if I did like the actor playing the arguable lead, Jenna Ortega. But your mileage may vary.

On The Precipice Of Stupid

The assassination of Charlie Kirk puts us on a precipice, I think. People think they’re justified in killing people with whom they disagree, and that endangers a political system that has produced the finest military ever.

Intolerant, arrogant assholes on both sides are trying to tear us down because of their firm belief that they’re the smart ones, or a silent God is on their side.

I did not pay attention to Mr Kirk, so I have no opinion, but, just like State Senator Hortman’s assassination, Kirk represents another step in the Structural-Demographic Theory’s disintegrative phase (same link), as arrogance and impatience with divergent opinions leads to fatal conflicts.

Professor Turchin’s work suggests that in rural societies it takes about fifty years for the adamant to realize that civil war is not a fake war, but leads to horrible deaths and a weakening of the country. Will that hold true for our technological society?

Hysteria Supreme

When a Federal judge ruled that tariffs may not be set by the President, hysteria seems to have broken out at Truth Social on the President’s account:

Without Tariffs, and all of the TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS we have already taken in, our Country would be completely destroyed, and our military power would be instantly obliterated. In a 7 to 4 Opinion, a Radical Left group of judges didn’t care, but one Democrat, Obama appointed, actually voted to save our Country. I would like to thank him for his Courage! He loves and respects the U.S.A.

Yeah, I might like to know how the loss of a few tariffs would instantly obliterate our military. Maybe he means spiritually?

No, I won’t provide a link. You can find it on your own, I feel sure.

Word Of The Day

Nonet:

  1. a group of nine performers or instruments.
  2. a composition for a nonet. [Dictionary.com]

Noted in “Former CDC directors: RFK Jr. is ‘unlike anything our country has ever experienced’,” Steve Benen, Maddowblog:

But just as notable, if not more so, is the written condemnation itself. Under a headline that read, “We Ran the C.D.C.: Kennedy Is Endangering Every American’s Health,” the nonet was unreserved in its criticisms of the anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist who is currently serving as the nation’s health secretary.

Not quite matching the definition.

Honey, That Damn Bird Came Home To Roost

Folks who are paying attention will recall, years ago just a few weeks ago, when Paramount, now owned by Skydance Media, and its legendary show Sixty Minutes, succumbed to a dubious lawsuit and agreed to pay a settlement of $16 million in response to silly accusations by President Trump.

Evidently, Skydance, et al, do not understand that bullies constantly probe for weakness, and, when detected, exploit it to the full.

When you realize Come home to roost isn’t just a quaint remark concerning bad judgment.

So this should come as no surprise:

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem accused CBS News of selectively editing footage from her Sunday interview, cutting some of her remarks about Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Salvadoran national who was mistakenly deported and returned to the U.S. to face separate charges.

I anticipate a lawsuit demanding ridiculous damages, seeing as Trump’s previous lawsuit asked for $20 billion in damages, and then Skydance will be up against it, as they say.

This is what happens when you let financial considerations have priority over everything else, including questions of loyalty to political systems.

Skydance is becoming the Trump Administration’s thumb puppet, and those aren’t smooth fingernails, I’m tellin’ ya.

Belated Movie Reviews

Another sordid attempt at drowning.

Stone of Destiny (2008) is a slightly fictionalized story of a real incident. The Stone of Scone, aka Stone of Destiny, is a real thing, a Scottish boulder with associations to the Scottish monarchy.

At the time of the movie, 1950, the Stone of Scone was stored in Westminster Abbey, having been plundered and removed from its Scottish home by King Edward I of England in 1296. A young Scottish college student, Ian Hamilton, like many other young Scotsmen, hungers to return the Stone as a symbol of Scottish nationalism. Unlike most, though, he falls in with just the right mix of fellow students to actually accomplish the task: a hard drinking engineering student, a more studious and withdrawn friend of the engineer, and a young nationalist woman, who provides motivation and support.

The charm of the story is in the details of the theft, as it is with most such stories: ducking the cops, getting access to the location, obtaining the plunder, and getting out of Dodge, or London. Further, the story shows the myths of the Scottish, namely grit, persistence, and hard drinking.

But there’s also the vivid difference between a national leader, John MacCormick, who is balancing national politics, such as retaining plausible deniability even as he provides finances, and must think of the optics of being a nationalist not only to Scotland, but a wide world, and the group of students, who, despite internal rows, should have the motto Let’s get this shit done!

This is not necessarily an inspirational story. Failure did not mean death, but more likely personal embarrassment. But it’s educational and fun.

And there’s nothing wrong with that.

A Win For Writers?

yahoo!finance is reporting a victory for authors who are litigants in suits against AI companies using their books in training generative AIs:

Anthropic told a San Francisco federal judge on Friday that it has agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit from a group of authors who accused the artificial intelligence company of using their books to train its AI chatbot Claude without permission.

Anthropic and the plaintiffs in a court filing asked U.S. District Judge William Alsup to approve the settlement, after announcing the agreement in August without disclosing the terms or amount. …

The proposed deal marks the first settlement in a string of lawsuits against tech companies including OpenAIMicrosoft and Meta Platforms over their use of copyrighted material to train generative AI systems.

Successful suits in those still-open cases could bring larger prizes yet, now that a settlement produced a “mere” billion dollars, excuse me $1.5 billion, and the three companies cited are cash rich. Juries, depending on presentations by the attorneys, are often impatient with manifestly unfair situations in which a corporation is gaining riches.

This, too, is interesting…

Anthropic as part of the settlement said it will destroy downloaded copies of books the authors accused it of pirating, and under the deal it could still face infringement claims related to material produced by the company’s AI models.

They may have to erase the data produced and start again. Will their AI be as accurate as the current AIs? In any case, I’m naive on both the AI and legal fronts, but it sounds like Anthropic looked at the arguments and decided they were in a hole and it was caving in on them.

And how will investors react to this rather large penalty? This isn’t like a line of research not panning out; this is a legal blunder and may be met with fury by people who expected a big return and only get a small one.

Or nothing at all.

We’re All Citizens

CNN has a report on the National Guards’ involuntary sojourn in Washington, DC:

With each phone call home, the troops describe a mission unlike any other.

One soldier from Tennessee told his father that from 4 p.m. to 4 a.m. every day, his only task is to walk around Chinatown. Another service member from Mississippi told a loved one that she’d been repeatedly cursed at while on patrol. During a call to his wife, a guardsman from Louisiana said there was confusion about what the military was actually doing there.

“We haven’t gotten critically low on morale, but we’re falling fast,” said one soldier who, like others quoted in this story, spoke to CNN on the condition of anonymity because they’re not authorized to speak to the media and feared reprisal.

I think my fellow citizens in DC are making a mistake when they make the National Guard the enemy by yelling curses, because they are also our fellow citizens. They are in the Guard because they believe they can do good there – and often do. The Guard isn’t just a fighting force, but also fire-fighting and rescue and recovery and quite a few other things.

And now this is an opportunity to welcome them to Washington, explain that Trump’s orders are illegal and should be ignored by their commanders, and to build those bonds that will be important as Trump supporters are winnowed down to the hard-core grifters.

They should be reminded of the nature of our country, and not let it be remade into a Nation of Thieves & Victims by Trump. The Guard isn’t an invading force, but victims of Trump.

Word Of The Day

Crypto-hieroglyphs:

While studying the red granite pillar up close, [Egyptologist Jean-Guillaume] Olette-Pelletier identified several “crypto-hieroglyphs,” which use puzzles, wordplay, or special positioning to convey coded information. He noted that, high up on the side of the obelisk that once faced the Nile, Ramesses is depicted wearing a crown representing the union of Upper and Lower Egypt. Given its position on the obelisk, this hieroglyph would have been nearly impossible to read from the ground. It would only have been legible from the river, where nobles approached the nearby Luxor Temple by boat each year for the Opet festival, which celebrated the pharaoh’s authority. On the side of the obelisk overlooking a processional route used to bring offerings to the god Amun, Ramesses is shown wearing a crown with bull horns, which symbolized divine power. When paired with an image of an offering table, Olette-Pelletier believes, this hieroglyph exhorted viewers to make offerings to Amun to moderate his destructive tendencies. [“Crypto Power,” Daniel Weiss, Archaeology (September/October 2025)]