Something was looking for dinner in the backyard this morning:
And from a different angle:
Getting back to this thread, the next picture from the subject email is this:
No, dear Boromir[1], you don’t have it straight. The first guy stole the money from our defense fund in order to build a wall to satisfy his xenophobic followers, using at least one corrupt contractor. They built walls that fell over in, well, I wish I could say “high winds”, but it was a 30 MPH wind, a wall that could be taken down by people with simple power tools.
A wall that really was a waste of time and money because most illegal immigrants come in using tourist visas and then don’t leave when the visa expires.
The first guy did all this without trying to fix the problem at its source. It’s rather like putting a bandage on a weeping wound without curing the cancer beneath it.
Then along comes the second guy, who has to fix the mess left by the first guy.
Again.
The danger is simple enough to see, isn’t it? It’s the relentless pounding on the Distrust government! button. In this case, it’s a partisan distrust; other mails pursue a more secular distrust. But the fact remains: driving wedges into society as a way to destroy it is the intent of this picture.
Incidentally, Boromir’s role in The Lord Of The Rings had to do with stopping invading hordes from destroying his homeland. Presented with the chance to hold ultimate power, he betrays his group as he’s driven mad by power. Recovering, he repents and dies defending the remnants of the group.
1 For those readers who don’t recognize the picture, this is the character Boromir from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001).
At the heart of The Book of Life (2014) lies a simple question: what are the consequences of a simple breakage of the rules of fairness?
And how do these differ from the rules of convention?
This tale of two men vying for the hand of their childhood friend, who has little patience for the patriarchal ways of ancient Spanish culture, explores those consequences. One man becomes physically invulnerable – and thus careless of his prize.
Who hates being a prize.
The other loves his music, and while he adores his family’s vocation of bullfighting, cannot stomach the final plunge of steel into the bull’s vulnerable back. He earns his father’s sad disdain for that.
All around them lies the danger of bandits, looking for loot – and a special someone’s medal.
And above? Why, it’s the players of the Divine, laying bets on the winner of the lady’s hand – and breaking rules when it’ll help them win that all-important bet.
Add in some lovely artwork in this animated feature, some excellent voice work, and I can say that, if you’re a fan of a simple, organic story that pushes to its limits, then this is Recommended.
And, in the Land of the Dead, I can say that the twins are my favorites.
Paleolake:
A paleolake is a lake that has existed in the past. Its origin can be dated back to an era when the climate and hydrological conditions of its area were different than today. These types of lakes may have already dried up or may be in the process of drying up, or have become filled with sediment, and are now significantly smaller in size than they were in the past. These paleolakes are known as former lakes and shrunken lakes. Depending on the manner of water loss, a shrunken lake may actually have divided into two or more smaller lakes. [WorldAtlas]
Or, as used below, palaeolake. Noted in “The other cradle of humanity: How Arabia shaped human evolution,” Michael Marshall, NewScientist (21 August 2021):
Since then, [Michael] Petraglia’s team and others have published many similar findings. “We now know there are about 10,000 palaeolakes of Arabia,” he says. “We’ve only been to a couple of hundred. On 70 per cent of those we found fossils or archaeology.” Hominins even lived in what is now the Rub’ al-Khali desert. At Mundafan Al-Buhayrah, a flat region that was once a lake, the team found stone tools dating from between 100,000 and 80,000 years ago.
Especially heliophysics:
Sunspots located near the sun’s western limb are magnetically connected to Earth. The sun’s magnetic field spirals around like a lawn sprinker–a shape known as the “Parker spiral.” Look at this diagram. Lines of magnetic force coming out of the western limb curve around and touch our planet.
If there is an eruption today while AR2860 is passing through this danger zone, the debris will be funneled back to Earth. The resulting radiation storm could pepper satellites with high-energy protons, fogging cameras and causing reboots of onboard electronics. At such times, shortwave radio propagation can become difficult to impossible. During extreme storms, passengers and crew in commercial aircraft may be exposed to radiation. [SpaceWeather.com]
We have a stable star as the Sun, but it still has its shrieks and outrages.
BTW, this is a cool pic.
I see Erick Erickson is mighty proud of being a radio host:
Six months in and I’m the only 12-3 national host to make number one in a top ten radio market across formats — music and talk — both overall and in the ever precious 25-54 “demo.” (July ratings)
Now I’m number 26 on this list. Thanks very much. As always, where ever you are, you can listen live right here 12pm to 3pm ET every weekday and you can even call in at 1-877-973-7425.
I have to wonder how much he’ll regret what he’s having to do – consciously or unconsciously – in a decade or two.
As I’ve already noted, he’s charged into the Afghanistan withdrawal as if were an uber-angel, calling for the resignations of President Biden and VP Harris, suggesting the 25th Amendment should be invoked on Biden, while claiming Harris has disappeared in the wake of self-made disasters (Jennifer Rubin has a far more positive assessment), all supported with supposed facts.
Me? I’m waiting for facts to be verified. A fair assessment requires “facts” of a stable nature, a clear eyed view of what has happened and what appears to be happening, lots of study, and a self-awareness of fallibility and ignorance. My experience is that initial facts are often wrong, either made up of whole cloth or lacking important context. A number of conservative sources, for instance, cited a report that the Taliban used a helicopter to hang someone. It didn’t take long for the truth to come out: the guy was in a harness and was very much alive.
I don’t know if Erickson cited that particular incident, as I’m having trouble reading his columns – I shake my head so much I get dizzy.
But I do cite these two indisputable points in support of my concern about his future: On August 19th he demanded President Biden resign. This is hardly into the withdrawal itself, even before the deaths of the thirteen heroes by suicide bomber; it’s a hurried call, an attempt to get out ahead of other conservative voices. The pursuit of ratings, if you will.
The second point? This deeply shattered, hate-filled screed motivated by the recently passed Texas anti-abortion law. Based on broken logic and calculated to stir the emotions of its readers, it doesn’t read like the meditations of an intelligent, stable citizen, but the calculated phraseology of an expert at rage communications[1], with baby-killer this and that. He’s pretending – or perhaps in earnest – to be so blinded by rage that half the post is “baby-killer.”
It’s a great way to keep your audience addicted to those rage hormones. It does nothing to advance the conversation.
But as he lets his pursuit of ratings, rather than truth, shape his messaging, it distorts his image more and more. Not that he was angelic before, but now it’s becoming more and more disturbing.
How long before he calls some poor college freshman a slut?
And will he realize he should be ashamed?
1 See The Persuaders.
Every time I read this headline it made me jumpy, but it took four reads before I finally figured it out. From NewScientist (21 August 2021):
Insect-killing plant found by Australian highway is new to science
Damn, they’re making everything sentient these days!
The anti-abortion law in Texas that permits private citizens to sue anyone who is not the woman but considered involved in the abortion, or apparently even just thinking about it, has gone into effect. Professor Richardson has an interesting, if accurate, summary point:
S.B. 8 puts ordinary people in charge of law enforcement. Anyone—at all—can sue any individual who “aids or abets,” or even intends to abet, an abortion in Texas after six weeks. Women seeking abortion themselves are exempt, but anyone who advises them (including a spouse), gives them a ride, provides counseling, staffs a clinic, and so on, can be sued by any random stranger. If the plaintiff wins, they pocket $10,000 plus court costs, and the clinic that provided the procedure is closed down. If the defendant doesn’t defend themselves, the court must find them guilty. And if the defendant wins, they get…nothing. Not even attorney’s fees.
This is – not literally – a lawyer’s dream, because now everyone in Texas is a potential defendant. All it takes is an allegation that, say, Governor Abbott is considering suggesting a friend get abortion. Proof?
Who cares?
Someone else already sued?
Who cares? Everyone – but the pregnant woman – is a big ol’ piggy bank. You need $10,000, and you know someone who already lost? Sue them again.
All it takes is someone willing to make an allegation. Lawyer costs will ruin defendants, if nothing else.
The first person leaving Texas due to this law may be a pro-choicer, but the second person may be an anti-abortionist burnt by a lawsuit, and pursued by a dozen others.
Jennifer Rubin wants to drag many American voters into, well, adulthood:
But mostly, voters need to elect mature adults, not rage performance artists who use military casualties to demand the president’s impeachment. Voters need to grasp the concept of “no good choices” and “opportunity cost.” In other words, we must be better citizens who insist on better leaders — and then not punish them when they take principled action. [WaPo]
I like the phrase, which I bolded, but I think we first have to give up our addiction to rage performance artists who are simply there to make money off us audiences by telling their audiences what they want to hear, rather than known truths. Once we learn that rage artists are not authentic, are not often rational, and very often are using emotion to manipulate audiences for fun and profit, then we’ll learn to recognize politicians, in both parties, who do not appeal to intellect, but rather brazenly manipulate their audiences.
And discard them.
Getting back to my “daily” entry – stop laughing back there! – of a critique of pictures from a toxic email from a conservative friend – he only passed it on – here’s the next entry:
Unfortunately for the good Senator, the world is full of idiots and – I fall into this category – clumsies.
But it’s the missing context that’s important here, for Senator Kennedy recently opined as to the legislation he’s most proud of … being the 2017 Tax Reform bill that has greatly inflated the Federal deficit. (If I find a link, I’ll update this email. It’s escaping me at the moment.)
He may have attended Oxford in England, but it’s not at all clear he understands what makes for good legislation, or good reasoning.
So this part of the toxic email is dangerous because it promotes dangerous illusions concerning gun control with a cute little slogan.
And in our current spate of murders, enabled by our failure to implement gun control, as well as the deflation of police morale, this is not an acceptable message to be sending.
A week or so ago I pointed out, in relation to the Afghanistan withdrawal, that there’s a rush to judgment going on that’s quite unjustified, and suggested that Biden’s decision to leave Afghanistan might actually turn out to be a plus. Steve Benen on Maddowblog, as well as others, is beginning to think this may be true:
[David] Rothkopf’s argument is worth considering in detail, though there was one point of particular interest.
If anything, Americans should feel proud of what the U.S. government and military have accomplished in these past two weeks. President Biden deserves credit, not blame. … Unlike his three immediate predecessors in the Oval Office, all of whom also came to see the futility of the Afghan operation, Biden alone had the political courage to fully end America’s involvement.
It’s an important observation that has gone largely overlooked. The incumbent American president had a profoundly difficult call to make and dangerous circumstances in which to make it. But Biden had the courage to make the decision anyway.
Meanwhile, Erick Erickson, who I noted had already gotten into the swamp here, has elected to plunge in as deeply as he can go:
In 1990, after George H. W. Bush broke his “read my lips, no new taxes” pledge, House Republicans, guided by Ed Rollins, walked away from President Bush. They criticized him and distanced themselves from him. The ones who stayed with Bush lost. The ones who criticized him survived. A bloodbath is coming in the midterms for the Democrats even without redistricting. The ones who want to save themselves can and should now work with the GOP to hold Biden accountable for his broken promises.
I’m proud to be an American. But I’m ashamed of my government and demand Congress do its job instead of serving as chief apologist for the second branch.
There’s a lot wrong with Erickson’s reasoning, but propagandists’ reasoning does not have to be correct, it just has to appeal to the audience. But, just for fun: The Republican adherence to the religious tenet that there’s no such thing as a good tax has proven to be a false view of reality; additionally, it cost the Republicans the White House for eight years, and led to the prominence of Newt Gingrich, who has turned out to be a canker sore on the neck of the Republicans.
And only now he wants Congress to do its job. Before, it was Trump Derangement Syndrome this and that. He couldn’t shrug off the January 6th Insurrection, but give him time: he may yet come around to the viewpoint that those under arrest are, bizarrely, political prisoners rather than a pack of five-year olds petulantly demanding an election be reversed … because. Just because.
If post-analysis of the withdrawal doesn’t reveal any gaping mistakes, it’ll be no skin off Erickson’s nose, because he’ll just ignore it or denounce it as more evidence of the left’s degradation. But it may rescue the Democrats from disaster in 2022.
databob on Daily Kos is pissed off at the government of Florida:
As has been explained in other diaries, Florida has been engaging in a horribly duplicative duplicitous practice of reporting Covid-19 deaths based on date of death, not date of report. This has led to the kind of totally misleading chart such as the one today on the CDC Covid tracking site [omitted.] …
So the 6 deaths reported on 8/23 morphed into 53, and even the 126 deaths reported on 8/1 is STILL going up more than 3 weeks later, from 126 to 130.
It’s impossible to get a good estimate of how many people are actually dying from Covid-19 because of the way deaths are being reported, but the (current) total for the week beginning 8/5 is really scary: 1,400 Floridians died of Covid-19 during that week which is 200 per day.
And that total of 1,400 is going to go up even more, for several more weeks, as the DeathSantis administration here in Florida continues its deadly game of misdirection by pretending that death totals are going down precipitously, when in fact, they are nearly as high as they were a year ago, and trending higher.
There’s no great mystery here: DeSantis is desperate to make his chosen strategy of pretending no emergency exists appear to work.
In the television world of GOP politics, appearances is all. The most primitive GOP politicians simply parade about shouting lies about their performance, much like Governor Noem (R-SD). Governor DeSantis understands that plain-speaking data can sink him, but manipulated data, particularly that which he can argue is still in some way true-if-not-useful, combined with the public short-attention span theatre of the American public, can still save his ass.
But appearances are not reality. If you’re thinking of visiting Florida, take precautions. DeSantis may be shouting that all is well, but looking at revised numbers suggests Florida is in the grip of a pandemic, and that it’s not going well.
Evolutionary biologists often talk about selection pressures:
Any cause that reduces or increases reproductive success in a portion of a population potentially exerts evolutionary pressure, selective pressure or selection pressure, driving natural selection.[1] It is a quantitative description of the amount of change occurring in processes investigated by evolutionary biology, but the formal concept is often extended to other areas of research.
Think of it this way: in a mixed population, genetically speaking, if a new environmental pressure is brought to bear on a portion of the population vulnerable to it, other less vulnerable portions of the population will flourish, relative to the oppressed, and this may lead to evolution of the sub-population to become less and less vulnerable to that environmental pressure.
I’m beginning to wonder if this is what we’re seeing with the delta variant of Covid-19:
“The mask was off only momentarily, not an entire day or hours. We want to make the point that this is not the teacher’s fault — everyone lets their guard down — but the thing is delta takes advantage of slippage from any kind of protective measures,” Tracy Lam-Hine, an epidemiologist for the county, said in an interview.
The case study, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and highlighted by CDC director Rochelle Walensky during a briefing on Friday, highlights the potential danger for children under the age of 12 — the only group in the United States ineligible for coronavirus vaccines as a hyper-infectious variant tears across the country. [WaPo]
The tendency for bacteria to become immune to targeted antibiotics is an example of the problems associated with evolutionary pressures. The antibiotic destroys most of the bacteria, but if some are resistant, but not otherwise superior to their brethren, they remain hidden until the antibiotic strips away their cousins. Once they are no longer suppressed by those cousins, they can run rampant in the patient. A lack of antibiotic specific to them, or a lack of recognition of the problem, can lead to long-term damage or death.
The evolutionary pressure may be the masks, which have kept a lot of people from being infected. Until now. Now the delta variant may have changed to make it through masks, or it’s simply more efficient at infection so that a single mistake is more expensive.
It’s a real medical conundrum that infectious disease docs must face quite often.
Flexitarian:
Flexitarian is a term coined to describe individuals who mainly eat a plant-based diet with the occasional meat or dairy added in. The word flexitarian has been around for a while but hit the mainstream in 2008 with the publication of the book “The Flexitarian Diet” by nutritionist Dawn Jackson Blatner. [The Spruce Eats]
Noted in “Real milk, no cows needed: Lab-made dairy products are now a reality,” Graham Lawton, NewScientist (14 August 2021, paywall):
Formo ferments caseins and whey and then uses standard cheese-making to turn them into mozzarella and ricotta. Like many in the industry, its founders are driven by a desire to replace ethically and environmentally troubling animal products with guilt-free replicas. “In the Western world, the demand for dairy products is kinda limitless,” says CEO Raffael Wohlgensinger. Demand is rising in Asia too. All this is putting unsustainable pressure on the environment, but many consumers are loath to give up cheese. “The biggest consumer pain point for flexitarians who want to get rid of animal products is cheese because plant-based products are not performing well,” says Wohlgensinger.
Without reference to what other folks have to say when it comes to Afghanistan – I’m too busy to go read them – it occurs to me to observe that the media does tend to prefer to observe the moss on the trees rather than the forest. Not exclusively, of course, but what I’m leading up to is this:
Within the greater picture of American foreign relations, what does the Afghanistan withdrawal do for us?
Let’s break it down.
Don’t get distracted by the insta-opinions of the partisan pundit core on either side. If one must read them, don’t let personal preference win the day, but rather prefer those pundits who express opinions out of sync with their side. Like Rauch, above.
Me? Patience and more patience. Yes, we have thirteen dead. It’s a tragedy. But it could have been far, far worse. If we had decided to stick around, we would have lost more than thirteen over the following months and years.
I’m looking to see most or all the Americans get out, and as many Afghans who have helped us also get out. With no more dead. If that happens, Biden wins the moral victory and possibly the messaging victory. If the Taliban make a determined effort to keep terrorist organizations out of Afghanistan, then Biden wins hands down.
But there’s still a long ways to go.
I rather like this new take on steganography:
Secret underwater messages could be camouflaged as the clicks and whistles of whale or dolphin calls, fooling eavesdroppers by making them believe they are hearing marine animals.
Marine mammal sounds can affect military sonar systems, so they are usually deemed ocean noise and filtered out. This makes these animal signals a stealthy solution for communicating secretly underwater. …
Mimicking marine mammals to communicate underwater isn’t a new idea. But previous approaches mainly used artificial sounds that imitate animals and focused on just one type of call – either clicks or whistles – limiting their camouflage potential. Since many whales and dolphins live in groups, their calls naturally overlap. If someone heard only one kind of call in isolation it would raise suspicions. [NewScientist (7 August 2021)]
Artificial Intelligence is used to filter whale song from underwater noises, so if you can fool it you’re safe.
It’s cool.
Gamera vs. Zigra (1971) is a deeply forgettable tale of Earth being invested, again, by an alien force. When kaiju and deeply patriotic turtle Gamera hits the spaceship with his (underwater) flamethrower, the spaceship is transformed into, well, it looks like a cross between a giant shark and a swordfish.
A little fighting, a little threatening of the kids (“Gamera is friend to all children!“), who’ve stowed away on a bathysphere this time, and Gamera takes the day. Zigra is notably clumsy on land. I don’t know why he (…?) thought he could live in the sea and harvest humans for dinner. Maybe he thought they’d be paralyzed with laughter.
At least this one didn’t feature reusing footage from other films. I think.
Yeah. Forget I wrote this review. There may be socially redeeming value to this movie, but I cannot imagine what it might be.
I was ruminating this afternoon that evolution deniers often face a real challenge when it comes to transitioning to accepting evolution as true:
Evolution is imperceptible to the unaided human senses, and thus intuition.
We’re not equipped to observe, say, a semi-aquatic species equipped with legs evolve over hundreds of thousands of years or more into the legless blue whale species, say. It’s just not possible with our current biological equipment and lifespan. We didn’t evolve that capability because knowing about evolution wasn’t important for our species’ survival for the first 200,000 years – or, really, any other creature.
And some people really need to be able to reach out and touch something in order to believe it.
But imperceptibility is a problem in many realms. WaPo recently published a profile of Britain’s most famous shepherd:
[James] Rebanks represents one possible future for farming, which is set to be transformed in the promise of a post-Brexit, zero-carbon world. The British government plans to strip away all traditional farm subsidies and replace those payments with an alien system of “public money for public goods.”
What are these public goods? Not food. Bees! In 21st-century Britain, the goods will be clean water, biodiversity, habitat restoration, hedgerows, pretty landscapes, wildflowers, flood mitigation and adaptation to climate change. All the stuff the public wants, according to the pollsters.
While I was fascinated by Rebanks and how a small farmer with a degree in history and an inherited farm has somehow captured a lead position when it comes to returning to what he hopes is sustainable farming, it was the riff on industrial farming which is truly important:
He wrote two books about all this, both international bestsellers. The latest, published to stellar reviews this month in the United States, is “Pastoral Song: A Farmer’s Journey.”
On one level, the book is about how cheap food culture, globalization and super-efficient, hyper-mechanized, highly productive modern farms (giant monocultures of beets, wheat, corn) are terrible for nature (insects, rivers, climate) and our health (obesity, diabetes) and our farmers (indebted, pesticide-dependent, stressed).
To me, part of the reason for industrial farming not being abandoned in horror is that we do not perceive the troubles it’s causing, and even deny them when they are revealed. From not being big enough to cause a substantial problem in terms of pollution, to health problems not being obvious in large societies, and the imperceptibility caused by latency in negative effects, along with more traditional explanations such as sheer greed, it all works together to deny that there’s a problem – or, at least, a problem worthy of mass disruption of the industry.
After all, we have this population to feed, don’t we?
The solution? Regulation, and not by “captured” agencies. Perhaps roughly on a model provided by the Amish, in which social cohesion is considered to be more important than profit.
Because otherwise we face more ecological degradation, all in the name of profits. An old, old message, I know, but I enjoyed the article of Rebanks and wanted to share it.
Lost in Kabul last week:
Marine Corps Rylee McCollum
Marine Corps Cpl Daegan Page
US Navy corpsman Maxton Soviak
Marine Corps Cpl. Hunter Lopez
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Jared M. Schmitz
Marine Corps Sgt. Nicole L. Gee
Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Darin T. Hoover
Marine Corps Sgt. Johanny Rosariopichardo
Marine Corps Cpl. Humberto A. Sanchez
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. David L. Espinoza
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Dylan R. Merola
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kareem M. Nikoui
Rest In Peace
I can’t help but wonder if the docs and nurses in Texas, Florida, and Mississippi, where nurses are reported to be resigning in droves, have considered executing a citizen’s arrest on their respective governors, citing malfeasance and a refusal to do their jobs.
It might get their attention.
To be honest, I’m having trouble reading any analysis of the withdrawal from Afghanistan because I know it’s going to be slanted, distorted, and even out and out dishonest. It’s bad enough from the right that I don’t even trust lefty Professor Richardson. No particular example other than she sounds … ah … reasonable. Which means this is an emotional reaction on my part. I actually generally figure Richardson to be about as fair and accurate as can be, as she’s a historian by trade, trained to evaluate fairly – although historians are notorious for viewing history through their own prisms of biases. But I still am extremely wary of groupthink.
But there’s a difference between that and, say, what Erick Erickson, the Limbaugh replacement, is peddling. Consider this:
Also, had the Biden administration done a better job, it would have been preventable. That’s the most important thing to note here, is that so much of this could have been prevented because all Joe Biden had to do was nothing. All he had to do was nothing. In fact, H.R. McMaster was on CNN earlier today. They were essentially asking him to call out Donald Trump and blame Donald Trump. And what H.R. McMaster said was, in fact, no one bound the Biden administration to this. No one required the Biden administration to maintain what Donald Trump did.
This is not hard, Erickson.
None of this is hard. This is all straightforward.
Erickson, for all his piousness, is little more than a propagandist.
And I’m avoiding reading either side with regards to this conflict. I honor and mourn our fallen.
I’ve never been one to get all excited about symbolic meanings or secret messages, so I have to admit the latest conspiracy theory from the QAnon-folk leaves me a bit baffled:
On Aug.16, hundreds of Afghan civilians swarmed an Air Force C-17 cargo plane after it landed at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul. Before military officials could unload the aircraft, security concerns led the crew to take off as some Afghans clung to the side of the aircraft.
In the days since, conspiracy theorists have pointed to viral videos of the deadly events as evidence the conflict in Afghanistan is not actually happening. Proponents of this “false flag” theory are highlighting the number 1109 on the side of the cargo plane as a signal the events are somehow connected to the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
One lengthy Instagram post from Aug. 18 presented the conspiracy this way: “I find it an odd ‘coincidence’ that the US plane that was in the Afganistan (sic) Taliban video was 1109, which seems to be hinting at 9/11 and thus another false flag event to provoke WW3 and order out of chaos and the crowning of the Antichrist false Savior and One World Leader.” [USA Today]
I know that such fields as Christian Art have well documented symbolic images, which make some sense when it comes to getting messages across compactly when it costs substantially to go with a more prolix, if I may use such a term in painting, message. Hidden messages are more of a mystery to me.
I mean, Why have a hidden message at all? What function does it serve to hint that a plane carrying refugees is somehow connected to the 9/11 attack of 2001, and that it means the whole Afghanistan withdrawal is a hoax – even though 9/11 was not?
Yeah, once you ask that question, the whole edifice comes tumbling down.
I don’t know what the conspiracy theory experts have to say – and, yes, they’re out there – but, to me, it feels like the conspiracy theorist who has sussed this sort of thing out of whole cloth is climbing the social ladder. Look at me, they say, I’m smart enough to see the clues.
It’s all about self-importance.
This is related, in an odd way, to this dude, who thinks – or grifts – that because the number 45 came up in a football score – uh, sort of – that means God wants our 45th President to remain President. And he wants to be known as the guy who saw it.
The climb up the social ladder to power and prestige can lead to some rather odd rungs.
I must add, full disclosure, that this sort of reasoning even applies to me, only I don’t use the religion or conspiracy theory route. I just see some potential future event happening due to an occurrence in the recent past, and I put it on the blog. A lot of it is just me venting, but if other people think it’s an insightful thought, then, hey, it puffs me up, too.
Sort of.