US watch

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careful_eugene
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Re: US watch

Post by careful_eugene »

More footage of the wall climbers. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmmeXPLKdVY
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Re: US watch

Post by kenneal - lagger »

We live in a particularly Orwellian world when those who doubt Trump's sanity can be called morons while those who find his antics "normal" are the sensible ones. Is it now normal to pose like Mussolini and make speeches like Hitler and have raids on the democratic fabric of the day openly organised and promoted?
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careful_eugene
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Re: US watch

Post by careful_eugene »

kenneal - lagger wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 13:05 We live in a particularly Orwellian world when those who doubt Trump's sanity can be called morons while those who find his antics "normal" are the sensible ones. Is it now normal to pose like Mussolini and make speeches like Hitler and have raids on the democratic fabric of the day openly organised and promoted?
I think you're wasting your time, it's easy to see what Trump is and what he stands for. Anyone who still supports him or believes any of his nonsense has erected a wall of denial bigger than the one that's supposed to exist between the US and Mexico.
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Re: US watch

Post by Catweazle »

kenneal - lagger wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 13:05 Is it now normal to pose like Mussolini and make speeches like Hitler and have raids on the democratic fabric of the day openly organised and promoted?
Perfectly normal, if you are an authoritarian with dreams of leading a fourth reich.
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Re: US watch

Post by clv101 »

careful_eugene wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 13:45
kenneal - lagger wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 13:05 We live in a particularly Orwellian world when those who doubt Trump's sanity can be called morons while those who find his antics "normal" are the sensible ones. Is it now normal to pose like Mussolini and make speeches like Hitler and have raids on the democratic fabric of the day openly organised and promoted?
I think you're wasting your time, it's easy to see what Trump is and what he stands for. Anyone who still supports him or believes any of his nonsense has erected a wall of denial bigger than the one that's supposed to exist between the US and Mexico.
I'd be wary of dismissing Trumpism so easily. There is depth (not necessarily to Trump himself!) behind the movement he's mobilised and it won't vanish when he does. I read Teitelbaum's War for Eternity: The Return of Traditionalism and the Rise of the Populist Right in the summer and it makes far more nuanced arguments than you typically see in the media. I'd recommend it to anyone interested in some of the anti-modernity philosophy behind Trumpism.
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Re: US watch

Post by Little John »

And so, bit by bit, despite it taking 50 odd years, every last facet of the "counter culture" and "liberal activism" whose major flowering occurred in the late 1960s, has been co-opted.

Your railing against "Trumpism" is scripted by men in suits in boardrooms.

You rage on command at their bidding right on cue from their mass media platforms.

You are lost.
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Re: US watch

Post by kenneal - lagger »

If you think that Trump does anything for the poor downtrodden masses of the US, LJ, you are the lost one. Everything he does is to benefit the people who paid for his campaigns, the richest people in the US. Yes, he tells ordinary people that he is working for them but the reality, which more and more people are seeing is that he is a conman and a rabble rouser, a modern day Hitler. He even now has his own version of the Brownshirts, right wing nutters who say that "six million wasn't enough", who beat up policeman while carry flags supporting the police and Qanon conspiracy theorists who call out supposed paedophiles while supporting a proven misogynist.

His tax reductions benefit the ultra rich most: his trade war with China benefits US business moguls most as does his reneging on the Iran deal; and his war against "socialist" Obmacare plays right into the hands of big pharma, medical providers and the insurance industry. The poor only gain when something he does for the rich indirectly give them a few megre crumbs from the table.

If you can't see that, LJ, you are blind and deaf. You are supporting a man with the brainpower of a 5 year old child who stamps his feet, rages and goes into a sulk when he doesn't get what he wants.
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Little John

Re: US watch

Post by Little John »

You just provided all the evidence that was needed to demonstrate what I was about Ken Neal

Wanna guess what that is?

No, of course you don't

You are lost
Little John

Re: US watch

Post by Little John »

Some of us are ready

Some of us are lost.

https://consentfactory.org/2021/01/11/a ... MD4px1DJMs
Are You Ready for Total (Ideological) War?

So, welcome to 2021! If last week was any indication, it is going to be quite an exciting year. It is going to be the year in which GloboCap reminds everyone who is actually in charge and restores “normality” throughout the world, or at least attempts to restore “normality,” or the “New Normality,” or the “Great Normal Reset,” or “The New Normal War on Domestic Terror” … or whatever they eventually decide to call it.
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Re: US watch

Post by careful_eugene »

clv101 wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 14:50
careful_eugene wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 13:45
kenneal - lagger wrote: 12 Jan 2021, 13:05 We live in a particularly Orwellian world when those who doubt Trump's sanity can be called morons while those who find his antics "normal" are the sensible ones. Is it now normal to pose like Mussolini and make speeches like Hitler and have raids on the democratic fabric of the day openly organised and promoted?
I think you're wasting your time, it's easy to see what Trump is and what he stands for. Anyone who still supports him or believes any of his nonsense has erected a wall of denial bigger than the one that's supposed to exist between the US and Mexico.
I'd be wary of dismissing Trumpism so easily. There is depth (not necessarily to Trump himself!) behind the movement he's mobilised and it won't vanish when he does. I read Teitelbaum's War for Eternity: The Return of Traditionalism and the Rise of the Populist Right in the summer and it makes far more nuanced arguments than you typically see in the media. I'd recommend it to anyone interested in some of the anti-modernity philosophy behind Trumpism.
Thanks for the recommendation, I don't see Trumpism as a philosophy it was described as an "attitude" by a republican on the radio this morning. He's a convenient figurehead for communities who are angry because they've been left behind and can't see things getting better anytime soon. Unfortunately he's also greedy, incompetent, a liar (bigly) and a narcissist who went from calling his capitol invading supporters "patriots" to throwing them under the bus as soon as there was talk of the 25th amendment. The GOP will learn from this and choose someone more stable for the 2024 race, I suspect this will be Josh Hawley. Most of Trumps cheerleaders and sycophants will distance themselves and stab him in the back over the next few months.
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Re: US watch

Post by PS_RalphW »

Trump is impeached for a second time, 10 republicans joining the democrats in the house of representatives,

Senate probably won't debate this before Trump leaves office, after that I do not see enough republican senators voting (17) to confirm the impeachment. Even then it would take a second vote to bar Trump from standing again in 2024
Little John

Re: US watch

Post by Little John »

Trump is gone and everything will be fine

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/tucker- ... TlkEE-hDac
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Re: US watch

Post by kenneal - lagger »

Then, of course, there is the fact that he is a dangerous psychopath who has fostered hatred and division since before his election.

I note that he is not embarrassed by the fact that the wall he inspected recently was paid for by the US taxpayer, the poor ones of course because they haven't had the tax reductions that the rich ones have (is "rich US taxpayer" an oxymoron?) rather than the Mexicans who he said would pay for it.

Will everything be fine now he's gone, almost? There are still his "Brownshirts", his SS, who are threatening armed insurrection. Ah! the joys of a gun owning democracy! Where's VT when you want his learned comment?
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Re: US watch

Post by kenneal - lagger »

Here's a rather damning view of life in the USA at the moment from Boaz Shoshan, editor of Capital and Conflict.
13 rounds in the magazine, plus one in the chamber. You could fire this thing 14 times without needing to reload. Only problem is, there’s a shortage of bullets due to a sudden surge in demand...

A few nights ago, a colleague sent me an image of their latest acquisition: a Heckler & Koch P2000. It’s German engineering at its finest: a pistol that’s light enough in the hand to draw and aim with ease, but heavy enough to dampen the recoil and ensure that second bullet follows the first. There’s a brutal grace to its design – blocky yet compact, and with a sandy tan grip that might suit a Middle Eastern landscape... or the sunny streets of California, where my colleague lives.

And even better – it’s made with lefties in mind!

I remember learning in school how left-handed soldiers in ancient Rome were forced to train and fight right-handed. The key strength of the Legion was the ability to fight as a single unit, and they couldn’t let lefties compromise the structure of their battle formations.

I had assumed this was something left-handed soldiers in modern military forces didn’t have to deal with any more. But then Charlie Morris over at The Fleet Street Letter Wealth Builder informed me the rifle he carried as a Grenadier Guard – the SA80 platform, which remains standard issue for British Armed Forces – can only be fired right-handed. Try firing it from your left shoulder and you’ll get whacked in the face by the bolt as it flies back, and receive a face-full of hot spent cartridges for your trouble.

No such problem for civilians living in the States though, where ample supply of ambidextrous firearms meets left-handed demand. My colleague is left-handed which was a deciding factor in his choice of the H&K. There’s a magazine release, a slide release, and a decocker on both sides of the weapon.

(It’s ironic how good the Germans are at making guns when you consider how woefully underequipped their military is. It’s odd to think that this fine firearm comes from the same country which sent their soldiers to a NATO exercise with broom handles instead of machine guns a few years ago. Though considering the German government’s endless appeasement of the Chinese Communist Party though, I can’t say I mind...)

But what would drive you to buy one?

9mm insurance

With the exception of Northern Ireland, it’s illegal to possess a handgun in the UK, and I highly doubt the Scottish government will change its mind any time soon, so I doubt I’ll be buying and brandishing an H&K of my own anytime soon.

It’s Eoin Treacy, who lives out in Los Angeles, who’s just bought one. He’s no gun-nut; he’s lived in the US for many years, but until now he never felt the need to own a firearm.

“Fires and earthquakes are a nuisance but don’t faze us. People are a different matter” he says. During the riots in the summer, rioters were threatening home invasions less than a mile away from his house. I can’t say I blame him – in fact, I imagine I’d have reached for my Second Amendment rights a lot sooner than he has if I were in his position.

It appears that he hasn’t been the only one in LA wanted to get “tooled up”. There was a shortage of hollow point bullets (banned in theatres of war by the Hague Conventions, but ideal for home defence) at the local gun store due to exceptionally high demand.

The civil unrest we’ve seen over the last year marks only the latest low in a governance slide that has gone on for years. As he detailed in a recent note:

In 2014 theft of anything less than $950 [in California] was made a misdemeanour [in the state]. It has been a bonanza for thieves. Criminality has become big business and the lockdown riots were like all their Christmases came at once. On my block four cars have had their wheels stolen in the last 18 months. There is very little the police can do. Videos are popping up everywhere of shoplifting from all kinds of stores... The shoplifting ordinance was upheld by popular vote in the recent election so there is no end in sight to this trend.

We had the opportunity to take a lease on a prime retail location in September on the corner of Hollywood & Highland. It’s ground zero for Los Angeles’ tourist area and the pandemic meant the lease was attractive. We decided to forego it, because who wants the hassle? The reality is casual crime and the risk of being sued are major impediments to many people starting brick and mortar businesses. Quasi-political social unrest adds another dimension to that. Ecommerce is not free from a version of shoplifting but it’s an easier business model overall...

Support for strong policing and zero tolerance of crime tend to move in cycles. It generally has to get bad and affect the lives of most people before they are willing to vote for “hard-on-crime” policies. Until then, the rights of the underprivileged are given priority at everyone else’s expense.

Terry Pratchett made the observation in the Discworld series that there is no crime without police. It’s a play on Berkeley’s thought experiment, “if a tree falls in the forest does it make a noise if no one hears it?” If we change the law and defund the police, crime statistics improve, but the reality of life is altered. Governance is a trend and unfortunately in the US it has been pointing lower for a while now.


Not long ago, political activists who said they represented Black Lives Matter came knocking at Eoin’s door looking to raise funds. Now to be clear – this may well have been a perfectly innocent fund-raising effort to support a worthy political cause. But the manner in which the “pitch” of these activists was conducted, led him and his wife to suspect that the goal of this door-to-door operation was not actually about raising money; it was about identifying which households in the neighbourhood support them and which do not. Eoin’s wife, who’s from mainland China, drew correlations with the Cultural Revolution.

Eoin’s tale of feeling the need to be armed amid the growing civil disorder reminded me of a quote by an investor called Daniel J Want:

When confidence collapses in the private sector, this is deflationary – when confidence collapses in the public sector, this is inflationary.


I don’t know about you, but my confidence in the UK public sector continues to plumb new lows – a bear market in faith that just doesn’t end. The bureaucratic bloat and profligacy of the government makes me feel ever more pessimistic for the purchasing power of sterling, and ever more optimistic about the purchasing power of what sterling used to be: silver.

But one wonders what kind of “inflation+” might occur were we to see a collapse in confidence in the public sector of the US driven by its citizens. As the largest economy in the world and the issuer of the global reserve currency, such inflation would not be contained within its borders...
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The facts of life

Post by Snail »

https://time.com/5936036/secret-2020-election-campaign/

“Every attempt to interfere with the proper outcome of the election was defeated,”

Another successful example of mass-manipulation? A conspiracy?

Remember when members slagged biff on being in biff-world. Not I, incidentally.

What planet was Biff on? Ah, it was woke-world, and he's now no longer alone!
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