May 132025
 

Yesterday, I found another Substack besides Wonkette which allows comments from no-paying subscribers – The F***ing News. And, even more so than on Wonkette, Hoo boy, do you ever hear back. In your email. Most of is is “like”s, but there are also replies, and the email contains the full reply, so you don’t need to leave your inbox unless you want to reply to (or like) the reply you got. I take that as evidence above and beyond the statistics and ratings that Substack is really reaching people.

I don’t often post John Pavlovitz. But I am today. He is not saying anything, for instance, Robert Reich is also saying. But he is saying is in a voice metaphorically like a volcano. Maybe you know someone who needs to read (or hear – there is a “voiceover” 4:21 minutes long.)

I have posted items I found in Wonkette Tabs before, but this is the first time I am posting a link to the Tabs themselves. Tabs are a collection of newsworthy articles which for some reason no Wonkette individual writer is writing a whole post about. But that doesn’t mean the stories are necessarily trivial. In fact, I’m posting to the link today because I was overwhelmed by the amount of consequential news. I’m not expecting everyone to go to every story it could take you all day – but as a summary, I found it effective on its own.

Dog

Share
May 112025
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was Puccini’s “Turandot” in an archived broadcast studded with stars from my youth. I always subconsciously expect it to be longer than it is, and I think that may be because the casting for it, especially the principal soprano, require singers capable of singing Wagner, whose operas are notoriously long. Anyway, it received rave reviews at the time, and rightly so.

From Democratic Underground. Video in Italian with English titles. No telling how much, if any, impact it will have. But he’s not wasting time.

This from goodgoodgood – well, you’ll see. As much time and energy as we have all probably sped worrying about 3D “printed” guns, this reallt is a ray of sunshine.

John D Cundle

Share
May 102025
 

Yesterday, I wondered how badly I need to get over being annoyed by American exceptionalism, at least over some things. But I’m at the point where If I see the phrase “American Pope” one more time, I might – I don’t know – beat my head against the wall or something. Yes, he is American born, which makes him a birthright American citizen. Yes, his brother still lives in the US, and yes, they do Wordle together every morning. But the Pope is also a naturalized Peruvian citizen, which means at the very least he should be called a dual citizen, or an American-Peruvian. (I just learned before getting ready to post that he is in fact a dual citizen.)  But frankly, as right wing as the American Roman Catholic church is today, that gives me a lot more hope that if he were in fact just an American. Pope Francis was also from South America. OK, end of rant. Let’s have something good for a change. My email from the ACLU yesterday had this subject line: “Breaking: Rümeysa Öztürk is free!” The case is not over. But for now, she can wait it out in her own community with her own asthma meds.

This link is to a video about 16 and a half minutes. It is about government surveillance and data collection. The CEO, IMO, had balls the size of church bells to name it Palantir, and if I were Chris Tolkien, I’d take him to court over it – if I knew about it. Not that is isn’t appropriate – particularly in how sinister and dangerous the misuse of it can be – it just irks me to see a word invented by JRR Tolkien ripped out of context for commercial use.

Heather Cox Richardson adresses the direction in which we may be heading. OK, this is a quibble – you can have your own opinion on how important it is, but it always bothers me. Yes, “Brave New World” is a dystopian nobel, but it is utterly unlike just about every other dystopian novels in that its inhabitants are not miserable, and that is by design. Everyone in it is conditioned from conception to be in a specific labor pool, and also to be comfortable with the jobs in that labor pool. Hence, everyone is employed practically from birth (however it is defined.) The inhabitants do not want for necessities such as food or shelter or health care. All that is provided by the government. The goverment also provides access on demand to a powerful antidepressant (in fact, I don’t think the word “antidepressant” is strong enough for soma.) Birth control is perfected, and there is no nosigyny, so casual sex can be casual and guilt free. Destructive emotions are dealt with in group sessions. Even a form of religion is government-provided. There is no resistance, not because it’s sternly put down, but because there is nothing to resist – everyone is happy (except that one guy, an no one pays attention to him because they are all happy.) And it works. The seeds of its destruction do not come from within it, but from a place so totally outside it that it has been overlooked. Republicans, authoritarians, do not want a Brave New World. Because for them, cruelty is the point, and there is no cruelty in the Brave New World world. They want a 1984 world, in which people can be tortured for counting to four. And that is what the surveillance is for.

Here is what the 19th has to say about the new pope. He’s not perfect, but he’s far better than I feared when Francis died. I can say with some confidence that he is personable. At least one of his friends is delighted that the rest of the world will get to meet him.

Share
May 092025
 

Yesterday, I picked up some Belle videos. She’s still posting four a day, and of course they are all of interest, but to different groups, so they are no means all of equal interest to PP readers. Sometimes the choices are tough. Also, I picked up some music parodies, including a Canadian parodist I was not familiar with. Tomorrow, I’ll post his praise for Australia – for Lona. Also, there is a new Pope (or in Latin, Habemus Papa) on only the second day of the conclave. His papal name is Leo XIV, and I don’t know much else about him, but he appears to be someone Francis himself might have chosen. He was born in Chicago, so (not all) American Catholics are going nuts over the first American Pope. In America we have so many – or maybe they aren’t that many, but they are loud – bishops and archbishops who are Nazis that I was worried. But I’m not sure he should be called an American Pope, except in the broadest sense – he was born in the US but has mostly worked in Peru and is a naturalized Peruvian citizen.

This Letter is about corruption in general, which includes tariffs along with many other grifts. If you want to know exactly how the Apricot Antichrist is grifting you (and the rest of the nation), this is the place to come. But wait – there’s more. The following day’s letter follows up on the first one.

I certainly don’t want to encourage complacency, but if Robert Hubbell is reading the room correctly, this is worth at the very least a sigh of relief.

Share
May 082025
 

Yesterday, I ran my car for a while, since I hadn’t driven it Sunday. I also out the updated insurance and registration papers in the glove box and the registration sticker on the license plate. (After three wet days, it stopped raining long enough for me to do that.) A couple of weeks ago I was scraping around the base of one of my irises so the rhizome could get sunlight so it can bloom. I was thinking it was kind of early – we’ve been having temperature ups and downs but chilly (at least to me) on balance – but I noticed a bud today – so there may be more coming. No guarantee, but irises tend to surprise me always.

Politics Plus has known and remarked on this phenomenon for some time. There are memes about it which have had widespread and repeated exposure. I don’t know why it’s taking so long for so many decent people to get it. I suppose the fact that decent people, because they are decent, don’t think like that – and deep down we all believe everyone thinks the way we do – is a huge factor. Unfortunately, that isn’t true. Different people think different thoughts, and many of those thoughts are anything but decent. Check out comments on the fundraiser for Shiloh Hendrix (in the 4th paragraph – barf bag alert.)

Y’all know I’m not a huge fan of Meidas Touch journalism. It’s not because of inaccuracy – despite the occasional exaggeration in a title, they are on target. Nor is it because I dislike them personally – because I don’t. I’m delighted to see them exceed Fox News in viewership. And I do respect their “Tell them what you’re going to tell them, then tell them, and them yell them what you told them style . It useful for many, maybe for most listeners. It just bores me to tears. But this is a text article, not a video – and written not by staff but by a Ukrainian journalist. It’s not very long, and it’s profound. It does have a short introduction by Ron Filipkowski.

Share
May 072025
 

Yesterday, I see I forgot to post at the regular time again.  I hope I didn’t scare anyone, or at least not too much.  I also got an email with a petition from the PAC “Patriotic Millionaires.” The petition is certainly an interesting idea, and I would suggest a good one. But you can make up your own mind on that. Also yesterday, Axios announced that there is a new PAC called “Ban the Trade” dedicated to passing legislation barring Congresscritters from trading on the stock market. And it appears they are going to hoist the traders with their own petard (bomb). Finally, Ann Telnaes has won the Pulitzer for cartooning. Take that, Jeff Bezos!

I no longer get the Daily Beast directly, but The Lever sent me this today, and I feel compelled to share it. Imagine holding a grudge since 1988. For that matter, imagine holding a grudge against a work of art, not just against the artist, but against all its viewers, including those who weren’t even born yet.

June 14 is, among other things, Flag Day. It’s also being called as No Kings Day and mass demonstrations are being organized. Here’s the link to find an event near you.

Share
May 062025
 

Yesterday, I slept even later than usual – which I really needed – sometimes the stress created by not being able to do something one had planned is even more debilitating than the work of actually doing it. That was me yesterday. I don’t think I mentioned earlier that my primary credit card company over the weekend for some reason changed every blessed cardholder’s card number (and expiration date and CVV) on the same day. I had done most of on Sunday, but I had forgotten one. After I finished changing that one, which was a struggle because the site isn’t exactly intuitive, I decided to go to Democratic Underground for a while before tackling other email. The first article I looked at had me almost in tears. So did the second one I read, although not in quite the same way. And then there was this one – I’d almost forgotten about Anonymous in all the commotion.

This from Chris Bowers at “Wolves and Sheep” Substack discusses strategies which are necessary (though not, I think sufficient) to get us through this mess. Certainly it’s a place to start.

Naomi Klein recently wrote an essay for The Guardian which Rolling Stone then interviewed her about, and then MSN passed on the interview. It starts with her credentials – which you probably know – and then goes through the whole thing. It isn’t pretty. But we need to know as much as we can. And, yes, it’s long. But not a word wasted.

Share
May 042025
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was Verdi’s “Il Trovatore.” Yes, the “Anvil Chorus,” as you may have heard on TV cartoons as a kid. The opera takes less than two and a half hours excluding intermissions, but the story – that’s a revenge tragedy which was decades in the making. And so hard to believe that many people still want it explained to them. I think someone finally told this guy, but there sued to be a cafê in Italy whose owner offered a free bottle of wine to whoever could explain it to him. Frankly, it didn’t totally click for me until the last decade. Sometimes I’m slow. But at least in this case I have good company. Now I need to go back to Friday, when I got an email from Virgil’s prison that my paperwork was expiring and they needed new paperwork by 2:30 pm that day or I would not be able to see Virgil today. Well, I didn’t even see it until after 2:30. I was able to put it all together and email it, but not until about 10:00 pm (still Friday though.). So you don’t have to worry about me being on the road today, and I won’t post a comment.  Almost forgot – May the Fourth be with you.

This from Reasons To Be Cheerful pretty much speaks for itself. I could wish we could have this here, of course. But it’s probably happening where it most needs to.

From Democratic Underground – You have probably read or heard this. I’ve seen references to it but not the actual story yet.

This is from Good News Network, and it’s regarding something I’ve been worried about for quite some time now. Maybe you have too. I’m not suggesting we can be complacent – but it is a step in the right direction.

Share