Friday, April 25, 2025

israel should fight and win this in court.

there's certainly plenty of space to criticize israel's recent actions in gaza. i would agree they're distasteful actions, but the general crux of what israel is doing right now is required. others may disagree may forcefully, and there is plenty of room for subtlety.

however, the jurisdictional question is pretty clearly in israel's favour (you can't get out of the circular logic applied by the court and some western states) and the idea that israel has been intentionally starving the population has - at least until perhaps very recently - been entirely without merit. israel should defeat these specific charges, the way they are written, and that is what they should do, rather than something else.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

what happened to the ndp this election?

it's been clear for months - years - that singh was not going to be able to capitalize on the unpopularity of trudeau, which is a catastrophic failure. the ndp should have been the go-to after trudeau's collapse. 

but that is like playing around of the children's game, who made god. god. but who who made god? 

god.

so, why are the ndp dying? and, round and round you go, until you get to this:


this is the cause. this is not an effect.

what is happening to the ndp is that the ndp are sucking terribly at social media and it's utterly destroying them in the polls. this may be the first canadian election where social media truly overt takes television, and just look at that. ouch.

well, look at their leader, spokesperson and mascot.

listen, i've been saying this for years, and i'm not just being mean. i have a vested interest in a strong ndp. they need to exist. and this guy is a pr nightmare.

however, if you're paying attention, you really it's not just jagmeet singh that's tilting the party in this dead end direction. that graph is a cause, and mr. singh is the root cause of the graph. but mr. singh is a symptom of his party, and not the root cause within it.

if the ndp lose party status, they will have to make some hard choices on what they want to be in the future. they may double down, or they may try to refocus, but they'll never be what they were a mere few years ago. do upper middle class canadian migrants need a party of their own? maybe there's enough of them that they do.

the canadian left should focus strictly on the greens.
unfortunately, if the pa tried to take control of gaza, it would just restart the stalled civil war. the palestinian authority has absolutely no democratic legitimacy in gaza, and should have called an election in the west bank decades ago at this point. israel cannot allow a civil war to erupt in gaza, so an attempt by fatah to take control of gaza will just lead to more bombing in the west bank.

gaza needs to be placed under a foreign occupying force - and that force could include egyptians and turks. sure.  - until some very serious de-radicalization can be enforced, and fresh elections can be held.

fatah must be told in no uncertain terms that they are not welcome in gaza and violently kept out of it, if required.
my brain does this on me every single time, and it's true. do an a/b.

the term "highway to hell" is common enough in english that you see it relatively frequently. it was also a mega hit by the australian shit-rock or doofus-metal band, ac/dc in...i'm on the internet. i wasn't sure if it was late 70s or early 80s. it was 1979.

this is what my brain does on me:

"i'm on the highway to hell" comes in as the familiar, horrid unison full band screetch and then...

"...and i've been workin' like a dawwwg!"

because it's true.

they're actually the same song.

as far as i can tell, what this report is talking about already happened and it's called thatcher-reaganism, or neo-liberalism.

the local universities should buy up entire buildings worth of these 100 square foot condos and turn them into affordable dorm rooms.

you couldn't do anything else with them - they have no use value. 

that could in turn potentially open up more actual housing for adults to move into.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

meanwhile, papal scholars are struggling to make sense of the break down in infallibility that occurred when he insisted he would speak further on and and ask questions about the resurrection after he woke up.
i actually think the next pope should be hindu, so he can make history as the first hindu pope.
i've got it.

they should make pete hegseth pope.

he already has the hat-head.

Sunday, April 20, 2025

what's my analysis of the election polls?

i think you're going to find it's a mirage. when polievre was running at 40%+ it was mirage, and carney running at 40%+ is also a mirage.

the question that you need to ask when looking at the numbers is if they're going to translate into seats, and it's unclear where. the liberals are actually up a lot in conservative areas, for the obvious reason that carney is a more convincing and appealing conservative than polievre. is that going to get them seats? where?

at most, a 10% bump in alberta might win them one seat. where's ralph? a 15% bump in saskatchewan might get his seat back.

the liberals are also up 5% in ontario, which is a lot of voters, but where are those voters? are they in safe liberal ridings? or is carney going to swing rural ontario?

if the liberals are going to win seats, it will probably be in quebec, but the three or four way split is tricky, and it may be the case that carney is just going to sweep montreal by huge margins.

i have a habit of making non-standard projections based on my reading of the polls, and i have flubbed it a few times, but i usually get it right when the mainstream media analysis doesn't.

right now, carney has nowhere to go but down, he peaked too early.

my projection: liberal minority. it might be a stronger liberal minority, but it will still be a liberal minority.

unfortunately, the ndp appears set to lose the balance of power, leaving it with the bloc, or resulting in an unworkable parliament.

Saturday, April 19, 2025

sell it to them, with steep export taxes to generate revenue.

it took them way too long to admit that this is not the time for austerity, and they can't cut their way to prosperity.

you have to invest to build.

this is relieving in some sense, in that they sound more like liberals, but i'm still wary and apprehensive. it is still too much of a focus on the military and not enough of a focus on social spending.

Friday, April 18, 2025

there is no autism epidemic. it's overdiagnosed.

autism is real, but it's not a single disease. rather, it's a description of the process of specific genetic mutations that decrease the fitness of the individual. these should not be seen as mistakes, and are not genetic replication gone wrong, but are how evolution works, by trial and error. autistic people are nature's experiments; this is how our dna does experiments to see what works and what fails. sometimes mutations are good; that's called natural selection. sometimes they aren't and lead to genetic unfitness, and those genes don't replicate. there's thousands of bad genetic mutations that create unhelpful phenotypes and we collectively call that autism. some of the most common mutations, like down's syndrome, have names. they're all fundamentally, mechanistically, the same thing.

this is the necessary side effect of the process in which our genome uses trial and error in order to guess mutations that make us stronger. it's necessary that some must be born unfit in order to have some that are born with higher fitness. this is only upsetting in the sense that it upends the calvinist basis of american christian charitable dogooding. most cultures, historically, would think this is obvious and normal and not be bothered by it at all.

humans are unique. the unfit should be treated with dignity, but they are what they are, and they cannot be cured, nor can they be eliminated. to eliminate autism would be to end evolution. we should not desire genetic stagnation. our genome must continue to experiment, which will produce both failures and successes.

however, 95% of the kids being diagnosed with autism don't have genetic mutations and don't have anything physically wrong with them, they just have shitty parents that abuse and neglect them and are suffering from a deficit of attention and love. what they need is a hug.

this is the cure for "autism" that rfk really seeks - better parenting. more love. more hugs for abused kids.

what america has is a child abuse and child neglect epidemic brought on by lack of access to contraception and abortion and subsequent overworked two income families, not an autism epidemic.

Sunday, April 13, 2025

does howard lutnick remind anybody else of hank scorpio?

i'm just saying.
the economic theory being developed by trump is actually sarcastically called "fully automated luxury communism" by cynical post-leftists trying to grapple with the real-world consequences of superproduction within a capitalist mode of production, which isn't how it was supposed to happen. the capitalists were supposed to insist on artificial scarcity and empower us via employment, which would be their downfall. oops.

i'm in favour of reshoring superproduction, but we're supposed to get a guaranteed income out of it, not be told to go starve in the ditch. the proletariat of the future is supposed to be like me - overeducated due to emancipation from labour, and able to focus on esoteric art and literature, instead.

see, this is where you have to bring in some concept of eugenics. like, actually. not dumb racism, but some way to better the human race. so that communism doesn't become idiocracy.

let the robots do the work. great. but we have to have distributive justice. maybe it's not quite as rigorously held to marx as some would like, but we need some way for the masses to take advantage of this rather than be bludgeoned by it.

Saturday, April 12, 2025

i didn't think it would happen until it did.

i've slept in a hotel the last three nights. that's it. i'm evicted.

i talked to the new case management judge on friday and he seemed perplexed. he didn't like what he was learning about the case and seemed to want to undo it but there's no precedent for this. if the court in the end rules a mistake was made, as one clearly was, i am not going to get the apartment back. rather, i'm going to get a giant payout for damages, which are now substantive.

there is some tentative preliminary evidence that the gross freaks followed me here, but i need to be careful before i start accusing anybody of anything, in context. i don't have a lease here.

i've seen a few apartments over the last few days and will see a few more this week. i need to get in some where immediately.

i've also finally converted my agptek mp4 player (running android 8) into a wifi phone using voip. it's basically a cell phone without a sim card so i have no network access but i'm able to make voip calls over wifi, if i'm in coverage. chances are pretty high nowadays that you're going to be close enough to a bank or fast food restaurant at almost all times, but i actually bought it because i wanted to be able to do things like scan qr codes. i am going to, for the first time, find myself carrying a cell-like device, even if it's actually a mp4 player running voip over wifi and not actually a cell phone.

i've been busy and i'm going to remain busy but the first order of business when i get this lease signed is redesigning computer setups and network paths.

this is all the more frustrating because i was and am still right and the court has to this point been wrong. it will work itself out in the end, but i've already suffered an extreme injustice, and the only solution at this point is monetary. it's something to look forward to, but the situation right now is pretty awful.

i don't know right now, in the end, if i'd rather go through the bullshit for a bigger payout or if i would have preferred to avoid all of this and not get compensated for the subsequent hardship. if i do end up with 20-30K in total damages, that is going to buy me a house and that will solve this problem of housing once and for all. i'll certainly be better off, at the cost of 2-3 years of torment and hell. it sort of doesn't matter; there's no longer a choice. this can't be undone, all they can do is pay me for it.
the liberals are massively ahead in the polls, but dilbert has repeatedly refused to work them, anyways. this is legitimately not acceptable in canadian politics, but it sort of doesn't matter because the damage is so far gone. unfortunately, dilbert has actually run in the centre to centre left of the windsor mayoral field, which has tended to be pro-business. there hasn't been a good replacement option.

if people were naive, they shouldn't be, and any lingering confusion about the mayor's politics should no longer exist.

Wednesday, April 9, 2025

i'm telling you - market canadian dairy as growth hormone free in the states.

i don't know why they don't.

(some) people will pay a premium for it.

Monday, April 7, 2025

the houthis are in the middle of a volcanic field.


if we could trigger the volcanic flow, we could literally rain hellfire on them.

that would feel good.
this isn't quite what i'm imagining.

these bombs are like giant icepicks that use gravity to cut through a structure before detonating.

i actually think we should be able to put a robot on the tip of the bomb that excavates through the structure, so that it's less a question of using the physics of mass to smash your way through in a collision and more like throwing a dart at a mountain that can burrow it's way through it when it gets there like a giant metallic groundhog before letting it rip mid mountain.

i wonder if you could actually trigger an inactive volcano using the same mechanism. that would be pretty brutal.

empires are sometimes conquered, and sometimes collapse.

more often, the empires that are the most stable and last the longest are eventually overrun by illegal immigration and taken over by barbarians. trump is a dolt, but he's basically right about this - the barbarians are our greatest real threat.
the ongoing barbarian houthi pestilence may justify r&d spending on new weapons designed to direct payloads underground. these weapons could also be used against hezbollah and eventually against iran. i'm imagining something launched by ship that lands at pinpoint precision and burrows into the ground before it detonates remotely. this would be well within our engineering capabilities to get a prototype for almost immediately.
that's right.

these are our enemies. they are barbarians, and we will need to fight them forever. there is no end to this war, and we have to fight it continually, with resolve, or they will destroy us.

you're not going to hear this critique from the soft-left.

this article is not left wing, it's boiler-plate neoliberalism, pushing the idea that developing markets get better with foreign investment and more property rights. yuck.

if you are a member of the trump administration (and somebody is reading this), and you do care about eradicating child labour, you have an opportunity here. this is in alignment with the administration's goals. the reordering of global trade could very well occur with global standards on child labour, if it is guided that way. it is your responsibility and opportunity to get that done.
this just in: kathy lee gifford is organizing a major protest against trump's trade policy, with a million wive march planned to descend on the capital.

Sunday, April 6, 2025

the 50% import tax on goods from vietnam and india might be frightening to people that base their profits on child labour, but there's an upside to that. these are not countries that even import raw materials to north america, their export economy is almost solely designed around the exploitation of child labour.

i would rather see punishing taxes levied on an economy that relies on child labour than free trade with them.

that's not what anybody in trump's administration is thinking, except maybe tulsi gabbard. sometimes you can see unintended upsides in the policies of opponents.

inflation aside, if the us dollar survives that, this might not land badly, after it explodes.
these tariffs are probably the biggest threat to the greenback since the nixon shock.
from what i can tell, trump isn't fundamentally altering anything in the relative trade balances. he put steep tariffs on almost all of east asia, and also put steep tariffs on europe. he put lower tariffs on canada, mexico and most of latin america. that would means that north and south america remain preferred trading partners, relatively speaking.

it's really just a giant, huge consumption tax hike.

and it should result in subsequent giant, huge inflationary effects, although it remains to be seen if it can remain localized in america or not. canada is inevitably going to get hit with the inflation.

there is some possibility of this going zimbabwe-like, but i don't think it's that high. the fear is if the inflation starts feeding back. if that happens, it gets out of control.
these consumption sites reduce the spread of aids and other communicable diseases from needle sharing, which is a net public health benefit and saves the taxpayer untold millions of dollars on unnecessary treatments. to some extent, they also speed the inevitable process of overdose up.

the focus should be spent on prevention. i can't imagine why anybody would choose to take any kind of opiate, given the media around it, but they do.

that said, i would also like to see a national investigation into the conditions in which people become addicted to opiates in hospitals. i've had to push my way out of emergency rooms out of fear of being injected. they are aggressive enough that it opens up a lot of questions about kickbacks. drug companies should not be permitted to pay doctors to prescribe anything, but there needs to be a strong prohibition and crackdown on doctors getting paid to prescribe opiates, and there needs to be much more stringent consent clauses worked into people getting injected with opiates when they're unconscious. apparently, well over half of opiate addicts first got injected when they were unconscious and wake up addicted.

life saving healthcare should not come attached to a life ending addiction.

even if the steel and auto plants only idle temporarily in the long run, there's still a great opportunity to retrain hidden in the layoffs, which have already started.

have you recently been laid off due to the tariffs? get a construction hat. you're needed.

it's quite the swing in the canadian election polls. why is mark carney polling so well?

canada needed to get past justin trudeau. the country was sick of him. polievre was the guy running, but he was clearly unelectable. a lot of people opined when he was running at 40% that it was a mirage and that would never happen. carney is the escape mechanism people needed.

however, he's also going through his honeymoon phase in the course of an election and that is dangerous. i don't quite understand the movement from the bloc and ndp to carney, other than that..

mark carney is not a politician, so he made the most obvious mistake a rookie politician can make in canada, which is running on hockey. he's not running on his record as a banker or on his ability to fight trump or on what he would do to fix the housing crisis, he's running on hockey. the rookie mistake is actually working.

for now.

it's going to blow up. so, the liberals better hope they do get a majority.

Saturday, April 5, 2025

can we get a nice spot in siberia for the gazans?

listen, i actually support this. it's required. what else do you do with these barbarians that won't give up? they think they're going to win, eventually. you have to pack them up and move them out.

as marco rubio would say, and perhaps he ought to, let us dispel once and for all with the fiction that there will ever be a palestinian state in the levant.

the world needs to move on. i want a less insane way, but we've got what we've got.

gaza delenda est.
we all know this is true.

can we say it out loud?

donald trump is a stalinist.
somebody is going to stand up and say,

i think america should make the stuff and buy the stuff. it even kind of makes sense, because you buy the stuff with the money you make selling the stuff. we don't need to do one or the other.

it sounds reasonable. but, it is unfortunately very naive.

in practice, albeit not in theory, that is the system we labeled communism in the 20th century. that was "really existing communism" when it really existed. oversimplified. nobody's expecting that, but it does seem to be what's in the back of don the coyote's sneaky head, and i don't think he fully realizes it.
the president is not supposed to run the economy from the oval office. that's not what "commander in chief" means.

congress would be correct to pare back powers.

the reality is that the president isn't using his authority well, correctly or appropriately.
reciprocal tariffs aren't about reciprocity or even about tariffs, they're about trade deficits. trump is irritated by countries that sell americans more than america sells them, but that's how the system was designed - everything comes to the centre of the empire. trump fundamentally, foundationally doesn't get it, or is at least pretending not to.

if you want to evade the wrath, then, you should sell less items to the united states, and that's what the policy will result in if it suceeds, the united states being removed from the centre of global commerce. i suppose that would most likely return europe to the centre of the global economy, as china's middle class is still far too small to adopt that purpose. trump's attempt to punish europe will re-establish the pre-nixonian status quo. our neo-nixon is going to undo the old one.

this isn't so complicated, really. somebody needs to make the stuff and somebody needs to buy the stuff. for the last 50 years, since the nixon shock, america has bought the stuff and china has made the stuff. before that, america used to make the stuff, and europe bought the stuff (china was cut out). this was supposed to be the postwar order - europe buying the stuff america makes. it did work well for america, but nixon blew it up and there's a narrative in the investor class that americans had become lazy and entitled, which there is some truth to. there was a particular push back on white people, who won reforms in the union era, pushing for civil rights for black people to mirror those reforms; rather than help pull the blacks up, the bankers reacted by pushing the whites back down off the ladder to whence they came. progress was over. go back to the fields, okie; it's feudalism all over again.

we can pinpoint where this whole progress thing broke to a few months in 1971 and it's been falling apart into smaller pieces ever since.

does trump want to bring that back? i don't think his intent is to go back to 1970, but he seems to want to immediately undo nixon first and foremost, and, i mean, that's what american workers would indeed want. this being in the centre of the empire thing benefits the banks, not the workers. the workers want to make the stuff and sell it. 

what's unclear is whether this is a quixotic journey by an individual named donald trump to save the world economy or if the system is desiring this outcome, potentially as it gears up for a world war. if it has already been decided that there will be a war, america needs to reshore. this seems feeble and wrongheaded, but is it a function of incompetence or irrelevance?

we're not used to seeing america or americans act like this. they're supposed to know what they're doing, or convincingly bullshit it. anybody can see that trump has no clue and that nobody around trump has a clue, either. i don't think there's a precedent for this outside of the worst roman emperors.

if america seriously wants to make the stuff again and re-establish other countries - canada, europe south america, the midde east - as export markets rather than suppliers of raw goods and finished products, it is going to need to do more than this to get to that end point. massive government investment to rebuild industry would be a start. they will need to make some kind of deal with east asia to get wages up or get cut out again. if they had an excuse 50 years ago, they don't anymore.

if it is merely trying to create a revenue generating import tax to offset other revenue streams (like income taxes), that, however, might work quite well. after all, americans are reliant on imports.

Friday, April 4, 2025

what i'm saying is that i've trekked through endless skyscrapers for hours in vancouver and toronto and montreal, but detroit's not a concrete jungle like that.

you get over a few highways surrounding the core and it's just sprawls of residential houses for miles in every direction. there's no sea of concrete in detroit. it's actually relatively lush.
this didn't take long and there's more coming. they're building a giant battery plant on the edge of town that might never open.

this factory wasn't created by nafta; it opened in 1928. a lot of the history of the ford era, including the original home of the detroit red wings, was actually in windsor, not detroit.

detroit is a sprawling mess, but it's actually a pretty small city. so is windsor. in recent decades they've been pointed right across from each other.

Thursday, April 3, 2025

besides steel and aluminum, you could look at nickel, zinc, aluminum, uranium and rare earth metal to hike export taxes on.

it would generate an inflationary revenue stream to offset the damages being done by trump while minimally altering supply chains.
i find heavy metal to be taxing.

however, rush records are not a proper target for export taxes into the united states.
this is what pierre polievre is trying to say when he talks about "biological clocks".

and while he seems to have assigned intellect to the parties in backwards order, he is correct in his thinking.

i don't care about this stupid planet and hope it crashes into the sun. i've got a few years to live and want to spend it having fun. i don't care about children and family and houses and wealth.

if i did, i would have waited to breed and would have bred selectively and with minimal offspring.



how do we react to these stupid import taxes the american president is putting on his own people?

i've been clear that we shouldn't tax our own people but should focus more on export taxes, instead. however, i'm really suggesting we wait it out, and it might not take too long. republicans have voters to face in a year and a half.

out of all of the taxes, the ones that make sense are the ones that are about protecting american industry that does or could exist, probably for national security reasons. that's why we have import taxes. that would actually arguably apply to both steel and aluminum, in the united states.

is it a problem that the americans import so much aluminum? it could become one. fair enough. but, these tactics are usually reserved for developed industries and not raw industries. either the united states has aluminum or it doesn't; if it does, it will find it where it needs it. 

like through recycling?

are they on the brink of starting a war? they're acting like it.

so, what industries does canada need to protect? fish. water. lumber. you put tariffs on that to protect your own.

however, i think that the insistence on holding to these metals tariff also requires a direct response in the form of an export tax on two specific metallic exports that america is reliant on canada for and cannot replace. it's become necessary.

the other thing is the auto tax. we had an auto pact going back to the 60s - this is before free trade. it kickstarted free trade. i think that if they're doing this, you mirror it, just to undo it. you want to relevel the playing field so that costs go up on both sides and not just entering the united states. you have to do that. and what else can you do?

is there some equivalent industry on the border that canada wants to protect?

let the senate pass the bill first, and see what the house does. export taxes are unilateral - easy to generate and remove.
i haven't heard such limp prose in eons.
ugh.

who is at mark carney's typewriter?

michael ignatieff?
an article like this relies on the tentative concept of an informed electorate.

if trump has truly just talked the tea party into supporting a massive tax hike, which it seems he has, he deserves some twisted credit for that, even if he doesn't even understand it himself.

we've all seen weird twists and turns in american politics.

this is breathtaking.

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

ok, i'm awake and the headache is finally receding.

i didn't have time to deal with that right now. ugh.
i have been repeatedly drugged recently and it has at times been difficult to tell if i'm having a migraine or need to pass something through.

this is complete migraine, going on 23 hours. i've got these tylenol+caffeine tablets and they just knock me out anyways. 

i'll stick with the caffeine. i would never take any sort of opiate, including codeine, on purpose.

i don't think there's a headache scale, like the richter scale, but these are the worst of the worst, and they make me sometime feel like the guy from pi, but i don't take drugs when the headaches get bad, they don't even really work, i just sleep it off.
there's a bill to block the tariffs that looks likely to pass in the us senate.

there are ways to force it to the floor of the house:
i've been getting hemiplegic migraines for years and the one that hit this morning around 9:00 lasted almost 15 hours, making it one of the most brutal headaches i've ever had.

it's still lingering. 
well, it's april 2nd. 

if you're a poor american that was dumb enough to vote for donald trump, here's your reward: a massive consumption tax hike on imported goods.

yes, he's laughing at you. 

because you're stupid.

next step: once the import taxes are in place, they can pass giant tax cuts for elon musk.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

this is correct. we want solidarity - solidarity helps us. competition is stupid and harmful and wasteful and should be against the law.

however, we also have to respond in a way that makes sense, and putting import taxes on canadians doesn't actually make any sense.

canada needs a three party system to keep the liberals somewhere close to the centre and stop them from veering off to the far right like the democrats, but singh's consistent policy failures, which include things like trying to force the federal government to adopt provincial responsibilities, abolishing carbon rebates, removing consumption taxes on unhealthy food and taking away tax credits for low income housing corporations, cannot be singularly assigned to him. the ndp have always been a weird party. they don't come from industrial era workers movements, but from a western canadian conservative christian uprising against the amoral godlessness of the liberal banking elite. the ndp is a conservative party - more conservative than the conservatives - and it always has been.

let the ndp die.

the new left should be the green party, as the greens are what the new left actually is

as carney is a conservative anyways, and polievre is obviously not one, it's increasingly irrelevant which party wins. the truth is that trudeau and harper were identical, policy wise, as reagan and clinton were in the united states. historians will talk about the mulroney-chretien-martin years, and then the harper-trudeau years. it doesn't matter anymore.

carney is winning because people prefer his personality. it's not about policy; the policies are indistinguishable. right now, people like the less flamboyant hair and the more tightly knotted tie of the liberal over the goofy fruitiness of the conservative. they think carney looks like he has a harder ass to fight off trump.

it's bullshit. nonsense.

the ndp offer nothing in response, but the same neo-liberal policies under a phony veneer of populism misbranded as vulgar socialism.

vote green, instead.

pro-tip: if you ever accidentally dump your entire pepper shaker on your eggs, don't just shrug it off and eat it anyways.

i slept all day and woke up with a fever and a migraine. my subsequent shit looked like it got basted in a turkey. 

i didn't even got covid at all (unless i got it in 2019). i haven't been this sick in years.
who benefits from washington putting tariffs on canadian oil?

not american consumers or producers.

the major beneficiary is the saudis.

who is directing ukraine-russia talks? the saudis,

who is fighting yemen? the saudis.
in fact, usually the first trip is to canada. trump broke that tradition in 2017.

saudi arabia is preferable to donald trump than canada and, if you're paying attention, has been playing a key role in trump's foreign policy decisions.

Monday, March 31, 2025

given that he's on the brink of destroying his own country's economy, donald trump will not win a third general election. the issue's moot.
i did my taxes this morning.

we're mid election and not a single one of the parties has explained how it's going to replace the carbon tax rebate for people that don't pay income taxes.

they gave me $560 last year in carbon tax rebates. as i use no carbon at all, i spent $0 on carbon taxes, and i know that the carbon tax had no discernible impact on the cost of food (especially the cost of imported food, which is 90% of the food i buy, because i buy actual food, produce, and not processed garbage).

my total net income from odsp last year was $16056. that means that the carbon rebate was 560/(16056+560) = 3.4% of my income.

cutting the carbon rebate checks will result in a 3.5% decrease in my total income. that's supposed to help me, in some way?

how do i replace that lost income?

Saturday, March 29, 2025

i got a big caesar salad this morning and have been watching this.

it turns out that mark carney is donald trump without a combover.

great.

ugh.

Friday, March 28, 2025

the liberals generally don't pretend that they don't represent the banks first and foremost, but they're also generally relatively enlightened about. it's noblesse oblige; it's charity. sure. 

but, as a poor person, i almost always end up voting liberal (if i vote at all) because the ndp are just fucking clueless. their policies are often even worse for poor people than the conservatives, but they market themselves otherwise. it's worse than a charade, it's a scam.
yes, it's true that your average bourgeois middle class landlord is just trying to feed their kids, too. ok. fine.

the point is that they shouldn't be allowed to prey on the poor to do it. there should be laws that protect the poor from being feasted upon by the middle class, who are just being middle class. it's like criticizing a lion for being a lion; you don't tell a lion to behave, you lock it up to stop it from being a murderer.

i know better than to get frustrated with the ndp, it's just....

AAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH.
The NDP also said that it wants to cut off low-interest federal loans, along with what it calls preferential tax treatment and mortgage loan insurance for large corporate landlords.

AAAAAAAAGGGHHHHHH!

fuck.

fuck.

FUCK.

so, let's instead have high interest bank mortgages for "small business owners", which will be passed on to working class and disabled renters in the form of higher rents. 

winner: banks. loser: poor people.

what a bunch of fucking idiots.
*sigh*.

this is utterly stupid. again.

the problem right now is bourgeois professionals in the middle class buying cheap houses with small downpayments and having to hike the rent to pay off interest rates. that's what is happening to me. the people that bought my home are not corporate landlords, they're a middle class family trying to find a way to pay their own bills by offloading them to renters. this is called rentier capitalism and it is not about faceless corporations, it is about regular people in the middle class acting like parasites by using rent as a side hustle instead of working a second job to raise extra money. it's the latter that needs to stop, not the former.

in fact, if a large corporation bought this house (it wouldn't, but go with me) outright with cash instead of with a minimal downpayment and a huge loan with a high interest rate, it could charge less rent because it would have lower margins. that's actually what low income people, need - more upper class owners buying property that aren't paying interest rates and can operate at lower margins. i'm probably going to end up in a corporate apartment building with a higher margin because i can't afford the offloaded hike on interest rates that smaller landlords are paying right now, which is blocking me from renting another basement apartment.

a far more informed, intelligent and helpful policy would be to ban people from renting property until they have paid off more than 75% (or more) of the mortgage on the property, first. the middle class should not be allowed to offload their bills on the poor by buying up cheap property that they'd never live in themselves and then inflating the rent to levels that drive the poor further into poverty, and which they have no choice but to pay. this is predatory and parasitic; it's "rentier capitalism" at it's worst. this cuts the banks and the middle class bourgeoisie (who are the problem) and not the corporate sector out of the process. it would discourage bourgeois middle class people from becoming rentiers and shift the process of renting properties back to the wealthy (and to the corporate sector), which would lower rent costs because it would require less borrowing from the bank and because it would assert an economy of scale, rather than five million "small business" independent mom and pop entrepreneurs that need to raise money to pay for their kids and fund their cocaine habit somehow.

but this is the ndp, canada's protest party for rebellious 12 year-olds, and they're instead going to blame it all "on corporations", without any sort of analysis, which they simply don't have. the ndp should have a deeper class consciousness and a coherent class analysis. they don't. they want to appeal to the alienated children of the bourgeoisie to send them funding and donations, instead.

google recently announced it has developed a new quantum chip that is not always wrong, but merely usually wrong. it may get a correct answer, occasionally. 

this is being hailed as a giant breakthrough.

this is the device they need to put the chip in to lower it's temperature to close to absolute zero:

absolute zero is colder than outer space.

it's colder than the end of the universe.

colder than margaret thatcher's dead remains, and this is very much a race to the bottom, the bottom of existence, itself.

it's so cold that matter halts to vibrate, although it's important to be careful in understanding the difference between what we call absolute zero in existing models and an actual bottoming out of existence, which is something lower than it.

you are never going to have an absolute zero enclosure in your pocket calculator walkie talkie, but you maybe you can pay mit to log into their computer, if you need to solve some np problem for work before the end of the universe.
the quantum computer itself is a schrodinger's cat. 

it's a dead end and the saviour of humanity at the same time.
if you want a serious way to address solving np-complete problems in polynomial time with reasonable amounts of energy and using reasonable amounts of memory, quantum computing is an extremely poor approach. if quantum computing ever works, it's going to be for mainframe computing, strictly. your phone will never be a quantum computer.

using bacteria is a far more serious idea that could very seriously be mass manufactured.

it's the hindus that are leading the way on this, right now.

the guy they put at the top of the most wanted list was most wanted for operating on hell's angels territory and refusing to buy drugs from them.

it's a demonstration of how the country really operates.

i will decide if conan runs the world or not. he has no say in the matter.

the way i see it is that if the world is going to be absurd and incoherent, it might as well be satirical, too.
i'm giving elon musk an ultimatum to immediately cease and desist copying conan obrien's appearance or to let conan run the world instead. if elon musk does choose to continue running the world, he needs to make his appearance more conducive to the purpose. for example, he might base his appearance on michael jackson, instead.

your choice, e-lo.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

you might have expected this from the conservatives.


instead, they tried to set up a massive welfare system to give every kid this, at massive unsustainable taxpayer cost:

Municipal data confirm the negative effects of federal discrimination against the child care sector.

corporate daycares want a dei program?

of all the oppressed and marginalized groups in society, for profit childcare providers are the least of my concerns. the subsidy system that harper brought in was the most inefficient, market-breaking thing imaginable, making daycare providers wards of the state with federal contracts that looked like lockheed martin deals. it was crazy. i'm not a fiscal conservative, but childcare is a basic service, and it can't have this unsustainable model attached to it.

the simple reality is that if people actually wanted to pay for expensive childcare spots then the providers that skipped out of the subsidy system wouldn't be going bankrupt. they are failing due to lack of demand; they say so themselves. the market is speaking, and it's choosing the cheapest spaces possible and driving the expensive ones out of the market. in response, big daycare wants government to step in and hand out higher corporate subsidies to stop their business model from failing. 

it looks like hypocrisy, but it's actually normalthis is how markets actually function in real life - they fail without government regulation.

the system that the liberals brought in was less inefficient than the system it is trying to replace, but it's still extremely wasteful. as people clearly want the cheapest daycare options possble, the government should listen to them and start looking at bringing back the dryden plan.

in the longrun, what we want is government run ece centres at cost, not expensive private nannies, subsidized by taxpayer dollars.

mulcair is wrong on it's face.

however, canadians are not going to vote for jagmeet singh because he looks like a clown, and they're entirely correct to reject him strictly on the basis of his absurd appearance and his goofy religious views. the ndp made a severe error electing him leader of the party. 

canada will never have a sikh pm, and that's a good thing. it would be a tremendous step backwards to elect this guy or anybody that looks like him or believes the things he believes pm. there is nothing progressive or forward thinking about making space for silly belief systems and unsanitary cultural practices.

he has no chance.

he should resign tomorrow and endorse the liberals.

what it's demonstrating is that youngish canadians (this applies more to gen x than millenials, from what i can see and isn't that new) have a very poor understanding of economics due to an insufficient level of education in the topic.

young canadians are correct to identify problems in distributive justice with the neo-liberal status quo, but they are demonstrating incredible ignorance in voting for more of that status quo in order to solve the problem.

polievre's policies will make every problem he identifies, most of which are real, a thousand times worse.

only canada would be stupid enough to try to align with the french on the brink of a global conflict. we know what will happen to france in five minutes, right?

but, smart americans have always known that the germans are no ally. there's no surprise in seeing europe bolt for china on the earliest opportunity.

canada's cold war policy was to stay out of the dirty fighting. we need to retreat back to the pearson-trudeau-chretien position that was consciously and very foolishly (as we see now) aggressively reversed by the previous government.
canada should not be given the opportunity to choose between a europe-china alliance and us-russia alliance.

the american occupation of europe must be enforced, with violence if required, to prevent them from revolting against washington.

european insolence will need to have a price, if it comes to it.

canada cannot make the mistake of expecting otherwise.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

re-nationalizing petro canada is a better idea than a new pipeline.
i don't want to say this is good. it's terrible.

but, it's a gaza protest i can stand in solidarity with.

a 25% tariff on assembling cars in canada and shipping them into michigan pretty much kills ontario's automotive sector.

the government is responding by planning to ship oil from alberta to quebec (the national energy program) and generate an industrial policy around made-in-canada cars. but, this is dumb. it's backwards - it's bringing back the 50s. it's responding to trump with trump.

if we're going to build our own cars just for us and are no longer going to be able to export, the most obvious thing to do is to completely phase out fossil fuels entirely, which makes the nep strictly obsolete thinking. if all new cars are to be electric, and only electric vehicles are allowed by some upcoming date like 2035, canadians will need to buy electric vehicles to replace their old economy ones. this will drive the sector for a while.

we may need to nationalize some of the plants. 

then, you reroute the electricity we're exporting back to canada to get the grid up by hiking up export taxes, which drives up the cost of manufacturing in the us rust belt at our benefit.

in all of this is an opportunity to retrain workers to build more houses in a massive make work plan, which we clearly need.

the canadian political spectrum is once again asleep at the wheel. this could be an opportunity to transition off carbon, at least in our populated great lakes and st lawrence region. let alberta export it to texas all it wants, until it starts to see the value of export taxes, itself.
your brain is a quantum computer, it's not a turing machine. all chemical reactions in real life are quantum reactions. classical computers are also quantum reactions, but those quantum reactions are obscured, as they exist at a lower layer.

your brain error corrects, but the amount of data it requires to do so is immense and the way we're approaching quantum computing has no resemblance to the way our brains work, at present.

there's likely better possibilities in building supercomputers out of bacteria bioengineered into behaving like synapses, but we need to get something like wave packets happening in the quantum computer, not pretend we can rely on this concept of superposition, which we don't even have a viable theory of. we don't know what superposition even is, yet we're trying to design computers around it, then getting frustrated when they don't work.

it's a dead end.
ai as it exists is just a computer program that does a google search for you.


i can already look up facts on google without asking ai and that does 90% of what a doctor or teacher does. they're already obsolete. the other 10% is never going to be replaced by any computer searching decision trees, ever.

but i learned something when i went through my cancer scare a few years ago - doctors are trained to use the same algorithm an ai would. i actually took graduate level courses on ai at carleton about ten years ago, and it's really not any sort of magic. it's a decision tree, a database search. 

we have no idea at all how to make computers actually think and won't until we understand how we ourselves think. quantum computing may never happen, but real ai is likely outside of the possibilities of binary logic.

i have a better idea: let's get auto workers retrained as construction workers and get them out there building houses.
and who will buy those cars?

once again: this is stupid.

everything mark carney is proposing is stupid. he's the dumbest conservative politician we've seen here in canada in years.

if trump wanted to break the canadian political system, he's already done it.

i have absolutely no interest in this election at all. the issues being discussed are idiotic, and the proposals on the table are moronic, across the board.

the canadian political establishment is using trump as an excuse to push policies they otherwise couldn't get away with, like hikes in military spending. nobody wants to waste money on the military, and i'm not falling for the bullshit.

trump's stated goals of the tariffs are to generate a revenue stream he can use to offset cuts in income taxes. he's trying to oversee a giant tax shift from progressive income taxes to regressive consumption taxes. in response, both of the parties in canada are proposing the same copycat tax shift. then, they're arguing that they have to do it to fight trump, when they're actually both adjusting tax policy in alliance with trump.

this whole thing is a facade. a charade. theatre.

nobody wins in the end, but the big losers will be the canadian people.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

i strongly support annihilating the barbarians in yemen and hope that canada participates in a global mission to erase them from the planet.

anybody standing up for the yemeni terrorists - anybody - should be seen as a national security threat by both the united states and canada. there is no acceptable argument for aligning with this particular group, which has absolutely no redeemable qualities, whatsoever.
this is roughly how trudeau came off to the power elite in washingon.

we need to tone it down.

the developing talking point from the white house is that america prefers to deal with russia than canada.

this is absurd, but the old tory canadian apparatchiks should not write this off as nonsense. the intent is to take canada down a notch because the trudeau government was vocally and aggressively pushing itself as america's bestie, and it was actually starting to piss them off. the trudeau administration appears to have ignored years of subtle hints to tone it down. worse, the canadian government has adopted an extremely anti-russian policy position since 2015, which is a direct move away from the non-alignment that canada tried to hold through the 60s-00s. an aggressive, pro-war, anti-russian government in ottawa is a major liability to washington. the truth is that it's a major liability to canadians, too. i don't want to die in estonia, fighting a war i don't give the slightest fuck about.

trudeau was not his father, he was an intellectual lightweight and shallow thinker brainwashed by the hollywood propaganda he grew up on, into seeing the american-led west as being in an existential struggle with the commies that doesn't end until william shatner (a canadian) becomes dictator of the united nations. canada's foreign policy has become delusional and in the interests of nobody in the country or on the continent at all.

this isn't the ideal way to direct a policy shift in canada, but we need to change course. they're basically right. the cold war ended decades ago. it's time to let go of the blockbuster film 70s and 80s hollywood propaganda and we certainly shouldn't be driven by 40 year old propaganda when the propagandist has justifiably shifted direction and changed course in an overdue reaction to actual reality, which is that russia is a democracy with a difficult spectrum.

in the west, our parties are all about the same and nothing really changes after the election. in russia, there are legit fascists and legit stalinists running every single election, and the system has to navigate that harsh reality. putin represents a grand coalition of the liberals and conservatives and has held power for so long because he can keep the stalinists out. there is a social democratic party, but it's outside of the grand coalition and would end up in 3rd or 4th in open elections.

in order for a multiparty system like exists in the west to develop n russia, russia needs to address the lingering threat of a return to stalinism, which remains serious and real. the stalinists remain the only other competitive political force in russia and the only viable alternative to putin and his grand coalition.

reliving rambo over and over again is not what canadians or washington needs or wants from the pmo.





because the reason people don't want to become soldiers is that the pay is too low.

that is the dumbest fucking thing i've ever heard.

in a properly regulated market, supply shouldn't be driving demand, but that's not exactly what i'm saying. what i'm saying is that a lack of supply is inflating prices, and those inflated prices (called a housing bubble) are suppressing demand. this is a subtle but important point. supply side economics is the theoretical mistake that you can control demand by changing levels of supply, generally - that it goes up and down the graph, proportionally. i am not remotely making that argument, although i realize that a novice might think i am due to the language. to the extent that i'm arguing that demand is low due to artificial scarcity hiking the price too high, and that you fix the demand issue by hiking supply via direct government spending, i'm explicitly describing that as a market failure, and presenting direct government investment as the solution to the broken market.

these are very different analyses and very different arguments, but i acknowledge that the language is confusing.
housing in general has become so scarce that new housing in canada has become so expensive and so out of the reach of canadians that builders have stopped building, because nobody is buying, because nobody can afford to buy. a modest suburban house in canada is going to cost something like two million dollars. it's insane.

the market is not correctly assigning value to new housing, but inflating it due to artificially generated scarcity, which has become systemic due to a failure by government to intervene (specifically by deregulating and privatizing the immigration system). this is generally what happens when governments fail to correctly intervene in markets and instead allow them operate without regulation, they fail to assign value correctly.

we consequently are not facing a failure in government oversight, but a failure in a lack of government. we're facing a market failure.

this market failure requires government to intervene by directly building housing itself in order to increase supply to lower costs to increase demand.

the cause of this overwhelming market failure is multiple governments at multiple levels "leaving it up to the market" rather than intervening and fixing it. the market will not fix itself; it hasn't fixed itself yet. a hands off approach will simply lead to more market failure and continued impossible housing costs.

both major party candidates, however, are true believers in the religion of markets. their faith will not be shaken no matter what evidence is placed in front of them and we have no expectation in front of us as voters and citizens besides another four years of market failure and another government that refuses to intervene to fix the broken market.
it's an utterly terrible idea right now. it's the opposite of a responsible government policy, and the trivial amount collected will have no effect on demand.

both of the major parties are broadcasting very clearly that those workers harmed by the tariffs will be cut out and left behind, with little to no government support. rather, we're going to get austerity, cuts in services, subsequent high unemployment and lower taxes whether we want it or not.

“Housing starts are collapsing in large parts of the country, including Ontario, and especially in Toronto. This is due to restrictive land use rules, Byzantine approvals processes, and high tax burdens,” said Spoke.

no. supply is not driven by bureaucracy. that is the height of economic ignorance. supply is driven by demand. housing starts are low because demand is low due to impossibly high prices. yet, latent demand to purchase housing is sky high.

the solution is that government needs to buy up more houses through the cmhc in order to drive down prices, in order to generate more demand. the solution is more government intervention to fix a market failure, not less red tape and more market failure.

the bloc mp is exaggerating.

but, his point should be well taken, actually.

it's kind of not surprising that a journalist would leak plans to the media.

it was consequently kind of dumb to make a journalist secretary of defense.

Monday, March 24, 2025

trump, who has become president of an arts institution in washington named the kennedy centre along with his role as commander in chief, wants to alter the programming by removing a play that has transgendered people in it.

he wants to replace it with the 1980s commercially successful and critically panned andrew lloyd webber production, cats.

he would be more into furries than the trans, it would seem. well, look at his vp; he thinks he's a dog.

the truth is that, as melania has dumped him, he really just misses ivana. i promise you ivana loved cats.

and he's irked that barron didn't go to columbia.

right?
does schumer have a point that a shutdown would be worse than the awful spending bill he voted for?

on it's face, but only on the assumption that it's better to have peaceful coexistence with brutal austerity than it is to grab yer pitchforks and rise up against it.

in the short term he's right, but you want trump to generate as angry a backlash as possible so you can organize around it. preventing trump from doing awful things just restricts the reaction to him.

you don't want to stop him from shutting down the government so you don't have to fight him, you want to let him do it and then fight him to stop him.
we don't want chuck to end up like this.


be kind and help him step down.
schumer is not stepping down because he needs some help getting off the soapbox he's on. he's stuck. it's too steep. he'll need hip replacement surgery if he falls. 

somebody will need to walk over to the soapbox and carefully help him step down.

i really think people need to calm down.

yes, trump is freaking people out.

however, he'll be gone in a few months. 

don't do anything rash, you might regret it.

Sunday, March 23, 2025

how would i rank gabriel's records, up to 2002 (which is the last one i know well)?

his discography is intrepid. staggering, even.

1. selling england by the pound (1973)
2. nursery cryme (1971)
3. long walk home (2002)
4. lamb lies down on broadway (1974)
5. passion (1989)
6. III (1980)
7. trespass (1970)
8. IV (1982)
============================= records above this line are almost flawless
9. up (2002)
10. ovo (2000)
11. foxtrot (1972)
12. so (1986)
13. us (1992)
14. birdy (1985)
============================= records above this line are merely extremely good
15. I (1977)
16. II (1978)
17. from genesis to revelation (1969)
============================= the last three are just pretty good, but most artists operating for 60 years would kill to have car and scratch be their worst records.
i want chandra arya to run as an independent and to win.
maybe the dipshit should stop smoking.

where's your messiah, now? huh?

it makes absolutely no economic sense whatsoever to cut income taxes when you've got a brutal trade war in front of you, and you're raising inflationary import taxes (a regressive consumption tax hike) and are dealing with slashes in revenue due to an imminent recession. you're going to end up with a structural deficit and be unable to pay for the social services required by the trade war.

it's the most asinine, sophomoric, amateur tax policy imaginable.

it's something i'd expect from the conservatives.
i'm not voting against my self-interest, and income tax cuts are the last thing we need right now.

as far as i'm concerned, his credibility as an economist is out the fucking window. he's just another dumb right-wing populist with naive ideas about markets that is trying to pull one over on us.

https://www.npr.org/2022/10/23/1130782408/how-liz-truss-aggressive-tax-cutting-policy-led-to-her-downfall
have we got a head of lettuce out for carney?
an increase in consumption taxes and decrease in income taxes is an extremely regressive and negative change to the tax code that negatively affects me and i strongly object to and i would certainly not vote for.
in the upcoming canadian election, you're allowed to vote for prime minister stephen harper.

if you don't like that, you can vote for opposition leader stephen harper, instead.

and if you don't like that, you can always vote for stephen harper, as a protest vote.

please vote green or not at all.
when i first moved to windsor, it felt like i moved to some twilight zone barrhaven.

like, there's no mall downtown. it's the weirdest thing; you have to leave downtown to go shopping. it's a giant, sprawling suburb without a city centre to anchor it.

the reason is that the city is detroit.
“Why would we want to subsidize economic development in the United States when their president is assaulting our communities? We receive almost no benefit in return,” Dilkens said last month.

because if i can't get to detroit on a city bus, i don't want to live in your boring as fuck city at all, and i'm going to move to somewhere where i can get to toronto.

windsor is a suburb of a detroit. it's sole selling point as a place to live is access to the big city. without detroit, windsor is just a boring small city in the middle of nowhere. there are no cultural events here, no concerts, etc. it's a totally dead, completely boring place to live, and dilbert here just wants to make it even more boring.

windsor is more boring than ottawa, even.

that said, the bridge will open soon, and i can just ride my bike over, anyways.

Saturday, March 22, 2025

the liberals have developed a disturbing habit of being extremely pro-muslim and extremely anti-hindu, to the point of repeatedly targeting individual hindus. this isn't the first victim.

i don't support this. at all.

if i had to pick, i would decide that hinduism, as a sister religion to european paganism, is more aligned with secular european values than islam, which is similar to catholic papal despotism, is. 

the direction that the liberals are heading in is extremely concerning.

i actually don't think this would be very difficult at all, because the united states has mountain ranges across both sides of it - the rockies and the appalachians. simply setting up two long strings of missile defense interceptors across the two mountain ranges would be highly efficient and not very hard.

they would have to work with us to set up a similar set of interceptor sites across the northwest territories, but they are largely defended from attack in the mainland us by the depth and size of the canadian frontier sitting in front of it. 

i clearly remember when george w. bush tried to push for missile defence - before the israelis proved it was possible - he showed a map demonstrating how the system would knock down incoming nuclear missiles that had the debris making a direct hit on an area in canada called EDMONTON, which was unmarked on the map, and which the americans doing the presentation were entirely oblivious of. they had no idea. needless to say, paul martin wasn't very excited about this.

it would make more sense to do this through norad and extend the shield through the canadian rockies into alaska, and then across the north to greenland. maybe something falls on baffin island. i wish no harm on the inuit, but we can't save everybody and we should be realistic about that.

but a shield across the continental american states? i don't think that's such a hard engineering problem at all. this is the country that built the hoover dam and beat the nazis to the bomb. c'mon guys. rediscover yourselves.

the point i'm getting at is that white muslims from the middle east and north africa need to question their origins and understand their history as one of violent colonization. they've been violently separated from their roots and their history and their culture by the process of islamification and arabization. decolonization of the middle east and north africa means dearabization and deislamicization.

reconnect with your indigenous roots, whatever they are, as hebrews, as phoenicians, as berbers, as egyptians, as persians, as greeks, as armenians, as assyrians, as hittites. find out who you really are.

you're no arab. you're no saracen. you're no ethiopian.

you're white. you're caucasian.

so, decolonize yourself and reclaim who you really are.
the wikipedia map is very conservative.

this map better describes the three regions, and the areas they controlled at the end of antiquity, before the muslim invasion north.


it's easier to see what happened by consulting this image.

when the romans and persians were done killing each other, the saracens and axumites moved in and established a new religion in the elite. but they were quickly absorbed into the local population.

this was a period of chaos and anarchy. in addition to the heraclean wars, there was an outbreak of plague that devastated the population and a breakdown in trade that was probably the result of the ethiopians controlling all of the red sea ports for the first time, blocking roman access to the indian ocean and persian access to the mediterranean. what the archaeology shows is that the middle east underwent a period of massive depopulation from about 600-800, not that it underwent a period of invasion or replacement. the cities of antiquity in the levant were overgrown with weeds. the fields reclaimed the land.

when the dust cleared, people wanted to know what happened, so they made up this history in the 9th century to explain what happened. the truth is that the people alive in the 9th and 10th centuries, writing this stuff in syria and iraq, had no idea what actually happened, and no way to figure it out. so they made it up.
the origin of islam, and the people that spread it, is almost certainly as a heresy of the type of christianity practiced by people that lived in the kingdom of aksum, which is the geopolitical entity that dominated ethiopia, which again was christian during late antiquity and the early middle ages.

there were wars fought between aksum and rome and they probably took an unclear side in the long roman-persian wars, which allowed them to overrun the middle east at the conclusion of the catastrophic heraclean wars, and basically take over the area permanently.

this is obscured in the history but it is clarified by the genetics.

if mohammad existed, and he almost certainly didn't, he looked like an ethiopian. he was african black.

if jesus existed, and he also almost certainly didn't either, he looked like a greek or a persian. the oldest pictures we have of jesus make him look pretty white. most residents of the levant at the time of jesus' life would have been light-skinned. he would have been quite light-skinned, contrary to the attempts at revisionism that developed out of the 60s and 70s to make him look olive-skinned or brown.
that said, i don't support attempts to deport mohammad khalil, unless he is convicted of a serious offence, which i do not believe he has been charged with.

i would consider aiding or abetting hamas to be a serious offence worthy of deportation, but those charges have not been proven in court, nor has he even been charged with them, to my understanding.

you can't just deport people without convicting them of anything, first.

however, if there is evidence, i hope there's a lengthy show trial, that he is convicted on live television and that he's deported with flair. if they actually have evidence of him working with hamas, he should be made an example of.

In February, Trump announced he was revoking Biden's security access. In a social media post, Trump said Biden "set this precedent in 2021, when he instructed the Intelligence Community (IC) to stop the 45th President of the United States (ME!) from accessing details on National Security, a courtesy provided to former Presidents".

that's correct.

biden shouldn't have done that.

and nobody should be surprised that trump isn't acting like a grown-up about it.

i want to react to columbia's instant shift in policy in reaction to trump's threats by side-stepping the issue. in fact, the administration likely agreed with trump in the first place and was happy to use the threats as an excuse to change course in a way it probably wanted to do anyways. trump is giving them an excuse.

are palestinians arabs? are they indigenous people? who are they exactly?

the genetic studies indicate that the palestinians are directly descended from the hebrews that lived in the period during antiquity. this has been interpreted by many as a fact that requires a rewriting of history, but that is not true; it is a fact that requires the reassertion of written history and the discarding of the attempts to rewrite history that developed out of 1960s and 1970s social movements, which is the true revisionism. the genetics have undone the recent post-wwII, largely post-1970, revisionism and reasserted the narratives from the classical, medieval and early modern periods. the hard science of genetics has actually upheld the importance and primacy of written history and undone the attempts to rewrite and revise that history that developed in the 1960s and 1970s.

what the older histories state is that the hebrews were largely converted to christianity after the destruction of the temple and the "expulsion of the jews" (which was overstated. more jews stayed and converted to christianity than left for europe or iran.), that they remained christians deep into the middle ages and early modern period and that they were only converted to islam by force in the late middle ages and early modern age, largely after the year 1700. they then became arabs in a process referred to as "arabization", in line with the islamicization. this happened across north africa and the middle east through different stages, over a long period. the carthaginians of north africa were quick to convert to islam, whereas the hebrews, assyrians, armenians and other indigenous groups in the middle east were actually very slow to convert, and in the end faced attempts at genocide in the 19th and 20th century for refusing to do so. this is actually ongoing; it's what isis is trying to do, and what hezbollah is in a real sense all about, in it's vicious persecution of the remaining christians in lebanon.

if the palestinians are indigenous, it's because they're converted hebrews, not because they are arabs. 

are the palestinians arabs at all? 

well, this word "arab" has had shifting meanings through time, and it's important not to conflate the word "arab" as it exists today with the word "arab" as it existed 2000 years ago.

the roman sources clearly distinguished between regions it called arabia, which were the areas in the middle east under roman occupation, and the peoples that lived in what we today called the arabian peninsula, which is where islam originated, who they called "saracens". the people in the roman arabian provinces were actually largely of greek extraction, but had integrated with the canaanite/hebrew/phoenician branch of semitic culture. for example, the nabatean kingdom of petra was a hybrid greek-hebrew region that spoke a language similar to hebrew and worshiped the greek god zeus. the romans called these people "arabs" and the people that lived to their south, along the coast of the red sea, "saracens". the saracens spoke a language more similar to arabic, and were the northernmost expansion of a people that have an origin point in yemen and ethiopia. these saracens were described in the roman sources as barbarians, occasionally fought wars with the romans, were at times conquered by the romans (there was a roman province along the red sea that it called arabia, but was in a region that saracens lived) and at times fought as mercenaries in the roman armies as distinct units from the arabs/ghassanids. the migratory bedouins on the direct boundary of the empire were called arabs.

the people that spread islam in the 7th century were not arabs but saracens. it is worth noting that the islamic history as we know it was not actually written until hundreds of years later, and by syrians initially and then kurds, not by saracens. these syrians would have been a mix of greeks, romans, persians, kurds, assyrians, hebrews and arabs and had little cultural or ethnic association with the saracens that spread the religion via the sword. these histories gloss over the distinction between arab and saracen made in the roman sources, for the precise reason that they were intended to generate the historical fiction of a united semitic race called "arabs", which did not exist at that point, but was generated into reality by the fabricated islamic history, which occurred in conjunction with a massive "translation event", in which islamic theologians scrubbed the secular greek texts (which they controlled because they controlled the land with the libraries, most importantly in egypt) for ideas that were inconsistent with islamic theology and then rewrote or burnt the ones that they didn't like. this is described in islamic history as a "translation event", but it was actually a giant process of historical revisionism under the guidance of vicious islamic fundamentalism, and it resulted in the alteration or destruction of virtually the entire greek cannon of history, science and philosophy. we only retained a small percentage of classical writing, and had to translate it back from severely distorted arabic translations. they wouldn't let christians access the greek sources until after they'd scrubbed and distorted them and translated them into arabic, first. it's for that reason that the renaissance didn't really pick up until after the fall of constantinople, which resulted in a mass migration of byzantines back to rome and the reintegration of ancient greek texts back into roman civilization, which the byzantines had themselves hoarded and prevented access to (although, the fact is that the latins and germans couldn't speak or read greek, anyways).

so, the term "arab" was initially the roman description of it's most south-east provinces, the areas south and east of judaea, and was inhabited by greco-canaanite tribes who were essentially hellenized jews or hellenized phoenicians. the people that lived to the south of these hellenized jews or phonecians, along the coast of the red sea, were called "saracens" by the romans and are the people that spread islam in the 7th century. however, their history was not written until the 9th-11th centuries, and by syrians and kurds (who were not saracens) that had been converted to islam, and sought to generate a falsified history to create a new empire using the roman name for the area, arab. this process of arabization occurred alongside the process of islamification, from roughly the years 1000-1700, with the levant actually being the last area to be islamicized and consequently arabized.

something else that the roman sources, and in fact some of the early islamic sources as well, are clear about is that the people that spread islam (the saracens, not the arabs) were black. the romans knew the difference between tanned and black. shakespeare, in his description of othello, might not have; the roman historians did. they had provinces in africa. they knew the existence of ethiopia. when the romans describe the saracens as "pitch black" or "as dark as the night", that should be taken literally and seriously. mohammad probably did not actually exist but, like jesus, was probably a fictional character. nonetheless, the people that came out of the desert in the 7th century and walked into the vacuum left by the end of the roman-sassanid wars were africans. they were ethiopians.

this makes sense based on what we know about genetics and linguistics, which places the urheimat of the saracens as in yemen, and indicates the saracens had previously migrated across the red sea from ethiopia into yemen. the roman-ethiopian conflict isn't well studied and is largely forgotten but it's every bit as important as any of the other roman border conflicts. the romans conquered egypt and moved south up the nile, to be blocked by the nubians and ethiopians somewhere in modern day sudan, as the greeks, persians and egyptians had been before them. however, they sent christian missionaries into ethiopia, who were quite successful. when europeans made contact with ethiopians, they couldn't conquer or enslave them because they were christian and the papal bull that gave them authority to conquer and enslave the rest of africa indicated they could only enslave and conquer non-christians. because they were christian, ethiopia maintained independence from european colonialism until mussolini tried to conquer it in the 1930s. the roman sources initially described islam as a christian heresy that developed on the arabian peninsula, and that also makes sense.

the classical history consequently describes an african black people moving north from ethiopia via yemen with a new religion called islam that probably began as an ethiopian coptic christian heresy and walked into the vacuum of power left in the middle east by the heraclean wars and converted an elite of hellenized jews and persians before being very quickly absorbed into the population. this is a modern example of the "elite replacement" model developed by the archaeologist jp mallory, which would appear to be the best way to describe how these things actually happen in real life.

the terms arab and saracen have different meanings in the latin and greek histories up until about the year 1500, after the end of the reconquista. they then become used interchangeably, but they were not initially the same thing and initially referred to different ethnic groups and geographic regions, with the arabs being the largely light-skinned hellenized semites in the roman controlled regions, who were most similar to hebrews and canaanites, and the saracens being the dark-skinned muslims outside of roman control, with an origin point in yemen and ethiopia, and who successfully invaded the area called arabia by the romans in the 7th century.

it follows that the palestinians are indigenous hebrews that were colonized by converted syrians and egyptians to the african/saracen religion of islam and had an islamic identity violently enforced upon them, and then were consequently "arabized", but not until as late as the year 1700. this is what the classical, medieval and early modern histories say, which was revised after world war two by archaeologists using questionable methods and a lot of magical thinking to develop a new history of peaceful coexistence, to eject the old history of war and conflict. this revisionism has now been upended by the genetics, which has reasserted the value of history, and the genetics should be seen as the type of evidence that has greater priority, over the archaeology. currently, these pro-palestinian protests are operating on the debunked revisionist histories made by archaeologists pushing magical thinking, to uphold the revisionism presented by islamic theologians. a school like columbia should make sure it is getting this right and is advancing modern theories, not the discarded ideas of late twentieth century archaeology or, shockingly, of dark age islamic theology.

what does that mean, functionally?

it means that palestinian nationalism is a fraudulent concept and that if palestinians want to celebrate their indigenous identity, they should do so by rejecting arab and muslim colonialism and reembracing their indigenous hebrew ancestry. as it is, palestinian groups pushing the primacy of islam are guilty of advancing colonialism in the region, not of fighting against it, and they should be called out for and condemned for their hypocrisy and ignorance. certainly, white european socialists should not be confused or misled and should assert and understand the facts. the role of an institution like columbia must be in asserting and teaching the facts and not in obscuring or confusing them, to advance ignorance and backwardsness.