https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
Friday, June 3, 2016
i've explained this in my vlogs, but it's a hard thing to find. i have reasons for posting this here.
i do not monetize show footage, nor do i include it in the vlogs. the reason is that it would give the copyright owner on the footage the ability to steal my vlog.
i think that people "out there" may be a little confused about youtube. youtube is not a system where people can post and make money from whatever they want. facebook video largely is exactly this. but, youtube is actually a very controlled system of content management.
here is one example. i was walking through detroit a few months ago, talking into my camera. i happened to walk by a bar that was playing a michael jackson song for a few seconds. understand that this is incidental audio - neither captured with intent, nor inserted consciously. it's not even "fair use"; i had no intention of even using it at all. it was just random background sound. however, sony was then able to take control of the entire half hour vlog and i had no ability to argue against it. i'm left to conclude that the same thing would happen if i recorded myself talking in a mall, a restaurant or anywhere else with background audio.
is that legal? of course not. but, there's no legal mechanism in place to have this discussion. the system is designed to benefit copyright owners at the expense of content creators, with no exceptions or caveats.
now, as it is, i don't really care about recording your band for the sake of recording your band. there will be some exceptions, but i go to a lot of shows and i'm only really deeply interested in a small fraction of it. rather, i'm recording a vlog. take yourself down a notch. it's not about you. it's about me.
but, what that means is that i have to abide by the rules - which not only do not allow me to monetize songs i didn't make (if i'd want to....but it's not what it's about...), but actually would give the artists i'm recording the ability to claim copyright over my entire vlog.
so, please be cognizant of the actual reality, here: in order to prevent record labels and other rentier capitalists from copyrighting my vlogs, i am required to separate performances out of my vlogs. not only am i not cashing in on their performances, but i need to take steps to prevent them from cashing in on my vlogging!
the system is unsustainable; it will have to be changed to take power away from copyright holders. but, for now, it is what it is.
nor do i claim copyright over material i do not own. should that be discovered, i would face punitive measures. the second picture demonstrates what happens when you upload something by an artist in a relationship with a large rentier: sony claimed ownership of the son lux video, whereas universal claimed ownership of the julia holter one.
i do not monetize show footage, nor do i include it in the vlogs. the reason is that it would give the copyright owner on the footage the ability to steal my vlog.
i think that people "out there" may be a little confused about youtube. youtube is not a system where people can post and make money from whatever they want. facebook video largely is exactly this. but, youtube is actually a very controlled system of content management.
here is one example. i was walking through detroit a few months ago, talking into my camera. i happened to walk by a bar that was playing a michael jackson song for a few seconds. understand that this is incidental audio - neither captured with intent, nor inserted consciously. it's not even "fair use"; i had no intention of even using it at all. it was just random background sound. however, sony was then able to take control of the entire half hour vlog and i had no ability to argue against it. i'm left to conclude that the same thing would happen if i recorded myself talking in a mall, a restaurant or anywhere else with background audio.
is that legal? of course not. but, there's no legal mechanism in place to have this discussion. the system is designed to benefit copyright owners at the expense of content creators, with no exceptions or caveats.
now, as it is, i don't really care about recording your band for the sake of recording your band. there will be some exceptions, but i go to a lot of shows and i'm only really deeply interested in a small fraction of it. rather, i'm recording a vlog. take yourself down a notch. it's not about you. it's about me.
but, what that means is that i have to abide by the rules - which not only do not allow me to monetize songs i didn't make (if i'd want to....but it's not what it's about...), but actually would give the artists i'm recording the ability to claim copyright over my entire vlog.
so, please be cognizant of the actual reality, here: in order to prevent record labels and other rentier capitalists from copyrighting my vlogs, i am required to separate performances out of my vlogs. not only am i not cashing in on their performances, but i need to take steps to prevent them from cashing in on my vlogging!
the system is unsustainable; it will have to be changed to take power away from copyright holders. but, for now, it is what it is.
nor do i claim copyright over material i do not own. should that be discovered, i would face punitive measures. the second picture demonstrates what happens when you upload something by an artist in a relationship with a large rentier: sony claimed ownership of the son lux video, whereas universal claimed ownership of the julia holter one.
at
19:45
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the dnc's actions indicating that they are not taking sanders seriously
yeah.
listen - you can say what you want about this, but the important takeaway is that the dnc is a lost cause. voter suppression in an unorganized territory, in the last two weeks to save an unpopular frontrunner?
if you were to call the dnc the absolute embodiment of mindless foolishness, you'd be on to something. it might be an understatement. but, the idea that bernie has any serious chance of swaying the elites is delusional.
i stated a few months ago that all bernie can really accomplish is a rigorous demonstration of systemic party corruption. he's done that, and it will have long term consequences - the democratic party is done, as a vehicle for anything but the status quo. i stated a few weeks ago that he can't win, but he can sure make the party look stupid for refusing to give him the nomination. i do think that's what you're going to see happen over the next few days.
i've also stated that none of this makes any sense unless he's planning a run, but that the decision to run as an independent must be taken over the careful analysis of voter intention. we'll see if that works out or not.
but, the data that's coming in right now suggests that if you want a lock on latinos, sanders is the better choice. the capitalist refugees from cuba are going to continue to warp the narrative, but understand that this is about money and not about votes.
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/06/03/3783185/puerto-rico-polls-closed/
listen - you can say what you want about this, but the important takeaway is that the dnc is a lost cause. voter suppression in an unorganized territory, in the last two weeks to save an unpopular frontrunner?
if you were to call the dnc the absolute embodiment of mindless foolishness, you'd be on to something. it might be an understatement. but, the idea that bernie has any serious chance of swaying the elites is delusional.
i stated a few months ago that all bernie can really accomplish is a rigorous demonstration of systemic party corruption. he's done that, and it will have long term consequences - the democratic party is done, as a vehicle for anything but the status quo. i stated a few weeks ago that he can't win, but he can sure make the party look stupid for refusing to give him the nomination. i do think that's what you're going to see happen over the next few days.
i've also stated that none of this makes any sense unless he's planning a run, but that the decision to run as an independent must be taken over the careful analysis of voter intention. we'll see if that works out or not.
but, the data that's coming in right now suggests that if you want a lock on latinos, sanders is the better choice. the capitalist refugees from cuba are going to continue to warp the narrative, but understand that this is about money and not about votes.
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/06/03/3783185/puerto-rico-polls-closed/
at
16:22
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the media party's new bad math around the dnc delegate process
this is the media party's new nonsense: if there weren't super-delegates, clinton would only need 50% of pledged delegates to win, so she would only need half of the 4051 pledged delegates, which is 2026.
it's entirely circular logic. the party rules are that she needs 58% to win, not 50% to win. of course, if it were true that the party set the threshold at 50%, then that's what she would need. but, they very obviously did not do that.
well, unless you think that a pledged delegate is of equal weight to an unpledged delegate, which is an argument nobody would ever make. one would need to take that entirely ridiculous and elitist position to eliminate the circular logic, but it is itself a contradiction to take an undemocratic position to try and argue for a more democratic position.
just deal with it: the democratic party set the threshold at 58% because they wanted a strong candidate. hillary clinton has failed to meet the minimum threshold to win in the first round. the convention should therefore be seen as round two.
and, nothing could possibly be more american - if you understand what that actually means.
http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/the-most-important-number-bernie-sanders-next-week-256
it's entirely circular logic. the party rules are that she needs 58% to win, not 50% to win. of course, if it were true that the party set the threshold at 50%, then that's what she would need. but, they very obviously did not do that.
well, unless you think that a pledged delegate is of equal weight to an unpledged delegate, which is an argument nobody would ever make. one would need to take that entirely ridiculous and elitist position to eliminate the circular logic, but it is itself a contradiction to take an undemocratic position to try and argue for a more democratic position.
just deal with it: the democratic party set the threshold at 58% because they wanted a strong candidate. hillary clinton has failed to meet the minimum threshold to win in the first round. the convention should therefore be seen as round two.
and, nothing could possibly be more american - if you understand what that actually means.
http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/the-most-important-number-bernie-sanders-next-week-256
at
15:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
i had an unexpected talk about the hip last night. i couldn't remember the name of this track.
for those unaware, their singer was recently diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. they're doing a final tour. i hope he gets through it.
i think the hip have been overrated in canada, and underrated outside of it. their influence as canadian cultural icons probably never extended outside of a subculture, and that subculture got left in the 90s.
at the end of the day, which is coming soon, they will have amassed a collection of mediocre records and a really, really, really good greatest hits collection. but, as is usually the case with rock bands, the record label will fuck the choices up. hit spotify for some fan takes on this.
for those unaware, their singer was recently diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. they're doing a final tour. i hope he gets through it.
i think the hip have been overrated in canada, and underrated outside of it. their influence as canadian cultural icons probably never extended outside of a subculture, and that subculture got left in the 90s.
at the end of the day, which is coming soon, they will have amassed a collection of mediocre records and a really, really, really good greatest hits collection. but, as is usually the case with rock bands, the record label will fuck the choices up. hit spotify for some fan takes on this.
at
10:37
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the imminent establishment take down of hillary clinton
guys. listen. this is a set-up.
clinton is not the establishment pick. they hate her. she wants to be the establishment pick. but, the establishment doesn't want her.
they hang on to her in case of emergency. and, they nearly had to break the glass. but, trump is coming around.
who was the establishment pick in 2008? it was not clinton. nor was it mccain. it was obama. and, who got the media? who won? yes, plenty of people understood what was happening. you could look it up.
i'll leave it to the journalists to determine if we've been subject to a charade over the last year, or if the conflict is actually real. but, trump is very rapidly coming around.
the establishment candidate is donald trump. and, they're in the process of taking hillary clinton out to make room for him to walk in.
http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/281973-new-clinton-emails-due-out-in-days-before-convention
clinton is not the establishment pick. they hate her. she wants to be the establishment pick. but, the establishment doesn't want her.
they hang on to her in case of emergency. and, they nearly had to break the glass. but, trump is coming around.
who was the establishment pick in 2008? it was not clinton. nor was it mccain. it was obama. and, who got the media? who won? yes, plenty of people understood what was happening. you could look it up.
i'll leave it to the journalists to determine if we've been subject to a charade over the last year, or if the conflict is actually real. but, trump is very rapidly coming around.
the establishment candidate is donald trump. and, they're in the process of taking hillary clinton out to make room for him to walk in.
http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/281973-new-clinton-emails-due-out-in-days-before-convention
at
10:15
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the logic around what is acceptable to throw at trump supporters
the eggs are fine. appropriate, even. it washes out. but please avoid glass if you're going to start hurling things at trump supporters. somebody may lose an eye.
let's think this through together.
things that are perfectly fine to throw at trump supporters
- eggs
- tomatoes
- *oranges
- *bananas
- sanitary liquids originating from supersoakers, spray bottles or soap dispensers
- !rhetoric
things that should not be thrown at trump supporters
- glass of any type
- bottles
- pets
- wild animals
- children
- muslims
- migrant workers
- #gavels
* - peeled, only
! - ymmv
# - non-rhetorically
i just want to reiterate that this is entirely appropriate.
these are people that are publicly supporting an open bigot. you have an obligation to make them feel uncomfortable.
just keep your elbows down. which is canadian for "don't throw glass shards at heads full of rocks".
it goes back to what i've said about trump normalizing the absurd. if he can convince you that his discourse is acceptable, the country is already done.
it's one thing to stand back and passively let him win, then start fighting him the next day. it's another thing to show up at the rallies and actively support what he's saying. that can't be seen as socially acceptable. the fact that he's running a major party isn't any kind of excuse for it.
so, there has to be an appropriate and proportional response. i think tossing tomatoes and eggs at supporters is within those bounds.
boycotting business is within those bounds. termination of employment may be, as well.
but no glass. no molotovs...
let's think this through together.
things that are perfectly fine to throw at trump supporters
- eggs
- tomatoes
- *oranges
- *bananas
- sanitary liquids originating from supersoakers, spray bottles or soap dispensers
- !rhetoric
things that should not be thrown at trump supporters
- glass of any type
- bottles
- pets
- wild animals
- children
- muslims
- migrant workers
- #gavels
* - peeled, only
! - ymmv
# - non-rhetorically
i just want to reiterate that this is entirely appropriate.
these are people that are publicly supporting an open bigot. you have an obligation to make them feel uncomfortable.
just keep your elbows down. which is canadian for "don't throw glass shards at heads full of rocks".
it goes back to what i've said about trump normalizing the absurd. if he can convince you that his discourse is acceptable, the country is already done.
it's one thing to stand back and passively let him win, then start fighting him the next day. it's another thing to show up at the rallies and actively support what he's saying. that can't be seen as socially acceptable. the fact that he's running a major party isn't any kind of excuse for it.
so, there has to be an appropriate and proportional response. i think tossing tomatoes and eggs at supporters is within those bounds.
boycotting business is within those bounds. termination of employment may be, as well.
but no glass. no molotovs...
at
09:22
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
clinton seems to have worked "donald trump says america is a third world nation" into her stump. and, the similarity is non-trivial.
at
07:44
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the underlying schizophrenia in clinton's arguments against trump
it's hard to disagree with her.
but, the problem with this approach - and the reason it's a losing strategy - is that she's stuck with this glaring problem: the objective facts indicate that she simply doesn't offer much of an alternative to what she's describing. the insider understanding is that she has a reputation for temper tantrums as a negotiation tactic, and that obama had developed a habit of just ignoring her when she went off on them. she's also describing herself. and, the more she takes this approach, the more attention she draws to her own dangerous - if predictable - foreign policy.
some of what she's saying is even simply anti-populist. america has been in europe long enough. has her court allowed her to interact with any "yankee go home" protesters in japan? she's likely only barely aware of such sentiments or how powerful they are, interpreting them as fringe voices from the peasant class.
tearing your opponent down only works if you take the opportunity to build yourself up. that's the point, right. the contrast. if you spend a half hour tearing down your opponent and then say nothing of yourself, you've just kind of lost the plot. you've just given your opponent free publicity. you might think it's bad publicity, but things have a tendency to define themselves differently. because you've implicitly defined yourself in the process - as an angry, spiteful person willing to set up a press conference to tear somebody down. it doesn't matter if what you say is true.
let's say i set up a press conference about oprah and put down a half hour speech about how she needs to lose some weight. this may be a narrative from her husband's term; i haven't seen any pictures of oprah recently. she gained weight, lost weight, gained weight - the tabloids loved it. constant material. but, i could spend an hour explaining that oprah needs to hit the gym and ultimately be correct in everything i say. but, in doing so, i'd be defining myself as an ass as much as anything else.
the thing is that she can't draw a contrast, because there isn't one. one can only control narratives in the presence of ignorance. hillary's foreign policy perspectives are too widely known. everybody knows she's not offering an alternative to what she's describing. and, she isn't. the more obvious she makes that by drawing attention to the topic, the more she places them on a level playing field.
i know she doesn't see it like this. she lives in a bubble of upper class, white meritocracy. but, that's the problem.
so, we heard a lot about donald trump, here. we didn't hear much about hillary clinton. and, while i won't argue with her overall message, or with any of her details, i must point out that if she's going to instigate this argument she must draw more effective contrast - which she can't do, because it's not real and everybody knows it.
trump has won by watching his opponents fuck up over and over. hillary's doing the same thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpX0YAbhtvY
but, the problem with this approach - and the reason it's a losing strategy - is that she's stuck with this glaring problem: the objective facts indicate that she simply doesn't offer much of an alternative to what she's describing. the insider understanding is that she has a reputation for temper tantrums as a negotiation tactic, and that obama had developed a habit of just ignoring her when she went off on them. she's also describing herself. and, the more she takes this approach, the more attention she draws to her own dangerous - if predictable - foreign policy.
some of what she's saying is even simply anti-populist. america has been in europe long enough. has her court allowed her to interact with any "yankee go home" protesters in japan? she's likely only barely aware of such sentiments or how powerful they are, interpreting them as fringe voices from the peasant class.
tearing your opponent down only works if you take the opportunity to build yourself up. that's the point, right. the contrast. if you spend a half hour tearing down your opponent and then say nothing of yourself, you've just kind of lost the plot. you've just given your opponent free publicity. you might think it's bad publicity, but things have a tendency to define themselves differently. because you've implicitly defined yourself in the process - as an angry, spiteful person willing to set up a press conference to tear somebody down. it doesn't matter if what you say is true.
let's say i set up a press conference about oprah and put down a half hour speech about how she needs to lose some weight. this may be a narrative from her husband's term; i haven't seen any pictures of oprah recently. she gained weight, lost weight, gained weight - the tabloids loved it. constant material. but, i could spend an hour explaining that oprah needs to hit the gym and ultimately be correct in everything i say. but, in doing so, i'd be defining myself as an ass as much as anything else.
the thing is that she can't draw a contrast, because there isn't one. one can only control narratives in the presence of ignorance. hillary's foreign policy perspectives are too widely known. everybody knows she's not offering an alternative to what she's describing. and, she isn't. the more obvious she makes that by drawing attention to the topic, the more she places them on a level playing field.
i know she doesn't see it like this. she lives in a bubble of upper class, white meritocracy. but, that's the problem.
so, we heard a lot about donald trump, here. we didn't hear much about hillary clinton. and, while i won't argue with her overall message, or with any of her details, i must point out that if she's going to instigate this argument she must draw more effective contrast - which she can't do, because it's not real and everybody knows it.
trump has won by watching his opponents fuck up over and over. hillary's doing the same thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpX0YAbhtvY
at
07:03
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
02-06-2016: two shows in detroit and a hard crash at the end (last day out for a while)
show footage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pqebb8PH9ac
more footage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TsorZklwtpY
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/06/02.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pqebb8PH9ac
more footage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TsorZklwtpY
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/06/02.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
at
03:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Thursday, June 2, 2016
"The most likely outcome is that Trump would be neither good nor disastrous as president, but simply bad. For example, he might mismanage the country's finances, needlessly inflame racial tensions, undermine the rule of law, confuse and antagonize our allies, and hurt the economy through erratic policies that punish and reward investors based on his political whims."
hrmmn. sounds like obama.
hrmmn. sounds like obama.
at
07:15
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
this argument is actually particularly egregious given the circumstances, which is itself an argument to re-engineer society to abolish markets.
the general way to prevent scalping is to prevent people from exceeding their ticket quotas. but, i have no problem with sending cops out to arrest them, confiscating their tickets and distributing them on a needs basis.
www.cbc.ca/news/business/tragically-hip-scalper-outrage-1.3610489
the general way to prevent scalping is to prevent people from exceeding their ticket quotas. but, i have no problem with sending cops out to arrest them, confiscating their tickets and distributing them on a needs basis.
www.cbc.ca/news/business/tragically-hip-scalper-outrage-1.3610489
at
05:50
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to marxists rejecting sanders (what of historical materialism?)
see, i can make this argument because i'm an anarchist. but, this is a strange argument to hear from a socialist.
socialists aren't immune to political grandstanding or opportunism. they can throw around bullshit with the best of them. and, it might sway a few kids. but, the problem is that when people that understand the theory get wind of it, it exposes them as bourgeois and kills their credibility.
there's a kind of difficult truth at play, here. sanders is not actually a socialist in any meaningful way, and anybody on the left has a responsibility to point it out. but, it necessarily follows from pointing that out that it makes more sense to support him than it does to support a small third party. the reason is that historical materialism is incrementalist in nature.
now, i'm an anarchist, so i think historical materialism is a lot of nonsense. but, anybody that is walking around and calling themselves a marxist, a trotskyist, a maoist - anything of the sort, really - should be supporting sanders as a necessary stage in transition.
again: i can duck out of that, because i think hegel is a pile of anti-scientific nonsense. i reject the idea of the state reforming society. i want decentralized co-operatives. but, no marxist can get away with discarding the logic around supporting sanders. and, if you hear it from them, they're being disingenuous.
i mean, there's not even a health care system.
http://www.myajc.com/news/news/sanders-socialist-some-far-left-say-sellout-more-i/nrXd6/
socialists aren't immune to political grandstanding or opportunism. they can throw around bullshit with the best of them. and, it might sway a few kids. but, the problem is that when people that understand the theory get wind of it, it exposes them as bourgeois and kills their credibility.
there's a kind of difficult truth at play, here. sanders is not actually a socialist in any meaningful way, and anybody on the left has a responsibility to point it out. but, it necessarily follows from pointing that out that it makes more sense to support him than it does to support a small third party. the reason is that historical materialism is incrementalist in nature.
now, i'm an anarchist, so i think historical materialism is a lot of nonsense. but, anybody that is walking around and calling themselves a marxist, a trotskyist, a maoist - anything of the sort, really - should be supporting sanders as a necessary stage in transition.
again: i can duck out of that, because i think hegel is a pile of anti-scientific nonsense. i reject the idea of the state reforming society. i want decentralized co-operatives. but, no marxist can get away with discarding the logic around supporting sanders. and, if you hear it from them, they're being disingenuous.
i mean, there's not even a health care system.
http://www.myajc.com/news/news/sanders-socialist-some-far-left-say-sellout-more-i/nrXd6/
at
03:12
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the shooting of the gorilla at the zoo in ohio
this isn't going to go away for a while, is it?
gorillas are individuals. the way they will react to different situations depends on their personality, which is in turn a function of their life experiences.
think of it like this. let's say the situation was flipped and a gorilla fell into the human pit. would you say "humans aren't dangerous, it's fine."? that would be an error, wouldn't it? many humans would bludgeon the gorilla almost immediately. but, it would be no less of an error than saying "humans are vicious monsters, shoot it!" - as plenty of humans would take the time to care for the child. put tersely, you would shoot if it was jeffrey dahmer in the enclosure and shrug if it was mahatmas gandhi. right?
while you can probably be pretty sure that the male gorilla in ohio would not have eaten the child, as a distant onlooker you and i are simply not qualified to say anything else of any value. in order to make a worthwhile decision, you need to be familiar with the personality of the animal.
this is a situation where experts are experts because they are experts, and everybody else is not because they aren't.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Xr1YjwDNm4
gorillas are individuals. the way they will react to different situations depends on their personality, which is in turn a function of their life experiences.
think of it like this. let's say the situation was flipped and a gorilla fell into the human pit. would you say "humans aren't dangerous, it's fine."? that would be an error, wouldn't it? many humans would bludgeon the gorilla almost immediately. but, it would be no less of an error than saying "humans are vicious monsters, shoot it!" - as plenty of humans would take the time to care for the child. put tersely, you would shoot if it was jeffrey dahmer in the enclosure and shrug if it was mahatmas gandhi. right?
while you can probably be pretty sure that the male gorilla in ohio would not have eaten the child, as a distant onlooker you and i are simply not qualified to say anything else of any value. in order to make a worthwhile decision, you need to be familiar with the personality of the animal.
this is a situation where experts are experts because they are experts, and everybody else is not because they aren't.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Xr1YjwDNm4
at
02:15
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
yeah. you know, i almost wrote this essay a few days or weeks ago. it was the term "folk theory of elections" that just about caused me to break something. it was used to describe the idea that voters have brains and can work things out, in contrast with the scientific understanding of elections that claims we vote based on identity.
i just didn't have the stamina to work it out. they've done the work here for me. thanks, guys.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/06/bernie-sanders-achen-bartels-white-men-krugman-election-clinton/
i just didn't have the stamina to work it out. they've done the work here for me. thanks, guys.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/06/bernie-sanders-achen-bartels-white-men-krugman-election-clinton/
at
17:23
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the tactical blunder of clinton running on her foreign policy experience
see, she just doesn't get it. she thinks her "foreign policy experience" is going to help her win voters, despite the deep unpopularity of her open imperialism. the reality is that if she wasn't such an open fascist when she was secretary, she'd probably have been able to get to 60%. she honestly thinks that the american people are fully interchangeable with the romans, at their most savage point. she thinks that more wars will bring her more popularity. i was over this once before. the united states has not yet seen this kind of naked imperialism, but it's coming.
there was a period when roman emperors would routinely begin their rule by adding a province to the empire. this showed the roman people that the emperor had the favour of the gods and could uphold the glory of the empire. hillary clinton really, honestly thinks that this is the way to increase her popularity - partly because she sees america as a country full of illiterate savages.
trump is of course a horrible candidate. she's been handed a gift. there's only a couple of strategies she could pick that will squander such good fortune. making the election a referendum on her foreign policy (while trump pushes for glorious, splendid, long overdue isolation) is pretty much the only thing i can think of that will seal her loss with clear certainty. unfortunately, that's exactly what she's going to do.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-clinton-idUSKCN0YN52L
there was a period when roman emperors would routinely begin their rule by adding a province to the empire. this showed the roman people that the emperor had the favour of the gods and could uphold the glory of the empire. hillary clinton really, honestly thinks that this is the way to increase her popularity - partly because she sees america as a country full of illiterate savages.
trump is of course a horrible candidate. she's been handed a gift. there's only a couple of strategies she could pick that will squander such good fortune. making the election a referendum on her foreign policy (while trump pushes for glorious, splendid, long overdue isolation) is pretty much the only thing i can think of that will seal her loss with clear certainty. unfortunately, that's exactly what she's going to do.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-clinton-idUSKCN0YN52L
at
16:54
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to final polling for june 7th
i'm not going to talk a lot about the final polls. the saying is that the polls don't lie, but the pollsters might. i'm not even convinced that much is true - i have little faith in the sanctity of the data being thrown around.
it's not that the polls are meaningless due to bad methodology or whatever other thing. i'm flatly suspicious that the polling companies are corrupt. and, i've made this argument in this space already.
i'll just point out that:
1) hillary clinton has not won an open primary since mar 15th.
2) the polling leading up to several of her losses since then favoured her, and was shown to be "wrong".
3) in fact, the demographics also favoured her in several of the states that she lost.
i'd argue that you want to look more at recent contests for predictors. california should fall somewhere between the closed primary in oregon and the open caucus in washington. and, the best guess we've got for jersey is rhode island.
it's not that the polls are meaningless due to bad methodology or whatever other thing. i'm flatly suspicious that the polling companies are corrupt. and, i've made this argument in this space already.
i'll just point out that:
1) hillary clinton has not won an open primary since mar 15th.
2) the polling leading up to several of her losses since then favoured her, and was shown to be "wrong".
3) in fact, the demographics also favoured her in several of the states that she lost.
i'd argue that you want to look more at recent contests for predictors. california should fall somewhere between the closed primary in oregon and the open caucus in washington. and, the best guess we've got for jersey is rhode island.
at
11:12
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
see, this should really work the other way around. that is, autonomous worker collectives that own their means of production should be forcing companies to bid on which products will be made there.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/ge-picks-welland-over-windsor-as-site-for-new-factory-150-jobs-1.3610954
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/ge-picks-welland-over-windsor-as-site-for-new-factory-150-jobs-1.3610954
at
10:32
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
"Despite the praise Stephen Harper had in his speech to the party's convention last week for the Conservatives' electoral gains in Quebec, that is one province where the party saw its support decrease for a second consecutive quarter."
it's remarkable really. free from the shackles of governance, the man admirably carries on in total oblivion to reality.
it's remarkable really. free from the shackles of governance, the man admirably carries on in total oblivion to reality.
at
10:15
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
31-05-2016: thoroughly confused by lunch cult
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/31.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/31.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
at
04:03
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to third parties on the right and on the left
just a few points.
first, you suggest the media should take note of the unrest and report it. but, the media exists to quell unrest. there's a potential for a moment of clarity there, actually.
second, i think it's a mistake to assume too much kneejerking. if you're the pro-market type of conservative that the republicans have been nurturing, donald trump is basically satan. it's a non-option for the economic wing of the republican party. if you ask around, you'll no doubt find people desperately seeking for 'real conservatives' and coming out with the libertarians.
it might not last. but it's probably legit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4iNBrYbEjA
first, you suggest the media should take note of the unrest and report it. but, the media exists to quell unrest. there's a potential for a moment of clarity there, actually.
second, i think it's a mistake to assume too much kneejerking. if you're the pro-market type of conservative that the republicans have been nurturing, donald trump is basically satan. it's a non-option for the economic wing of the republican party. if you ask around, you'll no doubt find people desperately seeking for 'real conservatives' and coming out with the libertarians.
it might not last. but it's probably legit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4iNBrYbEjA
at
03:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
there's an acceptable middle point. if you're going to show up with a pro camera and record the whole thing, that's called piracy. but, if you take a song or two on your phone, that's fair use.
there's a lot of recorded snippets of live music on my profile; for me, it actually doesn't have anything to do with them, it's just a part of the vlog. i've been questioned a few times and i'm just totally transparent: what i'm doing has nothing to do with recording them and everything to do with documenting me. they're not any more important or special than the seagull i filmed last night when i was smoking a joint in the park. so, i go to a lot of concerts and i try to take one song from each band i'm there to see. but, i'm the topic, not them.
i think that logic transfers over to really anybody that's taking a song or two for personal use, whatever it happens to be. but, as mentioned, there's a point where it's not reasonable. it's all about discretion around a concept of reasonable behaviour.
there's a lot of recorded snippets of live music on my profile; for me, it actually doesn't have anything to do with them, it's just a part of the vlog. i've been questioned a few times and i'm just totally transparent: what i'm doing has nothing to do with recording them and everything to do with documenting me. they're not any more important or special than the seagull i filmed last night when i was smoking a joint in the park. so, i go to a lot of concerts and i try to take one song from each band i'm there to see. but, i'm the topic, not them.
i think that logic transfers over to really anybody that's taking a song or two for personal use, whatever it happens to be. but, as mentioned, there's a point where it's not reasonable. it's all about discretion around a concept of reasonable behaviour.
at
11:31
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Monday, May 30, 2016
j reacts to the intersection of voter suppression laws, race and exit polling
finally!
this is the actual story. i've been yelling about this for months.
i can't believe that it took fucking nbc to get it right.
clinton slays amongst older people of all demographics, while sanders dominates amongst young people. but, young blacks are simply not voting. this creates the illusion that sanders is doing poorly amongst blacks. but, if young blacks were participating at the same levels as young whites, the numbers would be far closer.
so, the real question is: why aren't young blacks voting? is it about not having the right kind of id? feeling disconnected? not having time? just a lack of awareness?
this is the actual story. i've been yelling about this for months.
i can't believe that it took fucking nbc to get it right.
clinton slays amongst older people of all demographics, while sanders dominates amongst young people. but, young blacks are simply not voting. this creates the illusion that sanders is doing poorly amongst blacks. but, if young blacks were participating at the same levels as young whites, the numbers would be far closer.
so, the real question is: why aren't young blacks voting? is it about not having the right kind of id? feeling disconnected? not having time? just a lack of awareness?
at
23:12
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the dispensary busts in toronto
this has been expected for a while. the reality is that it's still illegal. there's a lot of writing floating around that the people running these stores somehow didn't know this, or were "confused". that's actually conservative party propaganda, and is designed to point the finger at the government in order to create a scandal.
obviously, these store owners knew what they were doing and made a calculation that the risk was worth the reward. they got burned. that's what happens when you gamble.
but, what's the best option, right now? well, this is a clear truth: this is a waste of resources. police. legal. and, in fact, i'd argue that everybody that was arrested today will have an incredibly strong civil argument for compensation. not only is it the case that they are wasting public money, public policing resources and public legal resources in the present, it's also the case that the state is going to have to produce huge payouts for wasting the time, money and resources of private citizens and commercial interests. i'm very much in favour of full legalization, but we have to collectively understand that it's going to come with a tremendous cost of reparations going to to the victims of prohibition over several decades. and, our court system will interpret the situation that way. for the first ten years or so, all the tax revenue is going to go towards legal costs fighting for reparations.
so, this situation is hard to describe without using the word stupid. but, the cops have a job to do, too.
the answer is that the feds should decriminalize it immediately, and then go after the black market once the legal distribution system is properly in place.
https://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2016/05/27/police-chief-talks-about-marijuana-raids.html
obviously, these store owners knew what they were doing and made a calculation that the risk was worth the reward. they got burned. that's what happens when you gamble.
but, what's the best option, right now? well, this is a clear truth: this is a waste of resources. police. legal. and, in fact, i'd argue that everybody that was arrested today will have an incredibly strong civil argument for compensation. not only is it the case that they are wasting public money, public policing resources and public legal resources in the present, it's also the case that the state is going to have to produce huge payouts for wasting the time, money and resources of private citizens and commercial interests. i'm very much in favour of full legalization, but we have to collectively understand that it's going to come with a tremendous cost of reparations going to to the victims of prohibition over several decades. and, our court system will interpret the situation that way. for the first ten years or so, all the tax revenue is going to go towards legal costs fighting for reparations.
so, this situation is hard to describe without using the word stupid. but, the cops have a job to do, too.
the answer is that the feds should decriminalize it immediately, and then go after the black market once the legal distribution system is properly in place.
https://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2016/05/27/police-chief-talks-about-marijuana-raids.html
at
02:01
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
the narrative here is on the right path, but is still stuck in quite a bit of propaganda.
the reason they dropped the bombs was that they wanted absolute surrender. this panel is repeating a widely held misunderstanding: that the japanese were not willing to surrender. in fact, they had already been negotiating a surrender for quite some time. the biggest factor was that the americans had cut off their access to indonesia, which was their source of oil and rubber. the outcome of the war was crystal clear somewhere around d-day, and was in fact understood even earlier than that. the japanese could barely even fight without oil & rubber, let alone win. they had no chance. it was just a matter of time.
but, they didn't want an absolute surrender. the standard line is that they didn't want to hand over the emperor, but that's one of those historical glosses. like the idea that world war one was about an assassination in austria by serbian terrorists, rather than imperial competition over global resources. in actual fact, the japanese wanted to hold on to certain strategic islands, for resource reasons. these negotiations were preventing a surrender.
the actual truth is that the americans would not accept anything less than absolute surrender, including the occupation of all japanese lands. the japanese saw that as a bit onerous. so, they dropped the bomb to try and force the concession. it was a negotiation tactic. and, the fact is that it actually failed - the japanese did not surrender as a consequence of the atomic bomb. this is where the political/military debate comes in - the military knew it wouldn't work, but the politicians pushed for it anyways. that's become a common theme in american imperialism, and is perhaps reflective of somewhat of a flaw in the governing structure of the united states.
so, the bombs had little to do with the surrender. rather, what happened was that the russians saw what was going on and took it upon themselves to move in. this was just strategically intelligent. so long as the japanese and americans were haggling over terms, the japanese were an easy target for further expansion. further, the soviets had reasons to keep the americans out of japan, too. what set in was a race.
the japanese elite now saw themselves in a situation where they had to choose between being taken over by a communist regime and being absorbed by a capitalist empire. the capitalists may reduce them to a puppet-state, but the communists would execute them in public. so, they picked the americans over the soviets and accepted the absolute surrender.
it was the threat of stalin that forced the surrender, not the bombs.
but, that doesn't address the question of whether it was justified or not. i mean, just because it failed doesn't mean it was unjustified. i think this is a complex question without a good answer, but at the very least you need to get the motives right, first. see, you get a very different analysis if you think it was about ending the war early than you do if you understand that it was about forcing absolute surrender.
i think the better argument is that the atomic bombs actually weren't as large of an escalation as has been imagined. these were small bombs, in contemporary terms. the topic of iraq is brought up here. it was widely reported in 2003 that the "bunker busting" bombs - which were conventional - were actually more powerful than the h-bombs that were used in japan. and, the americans dropped depleted uranium in iraq, too.
i've argued both points, depending on context. my reaction has tended to be dependent on the precise argument i'm interfacing with. but, i don't think there's an actual answer.
the reason they dropped the bombs was that they wanted absolute surrender. this panel is repeating a widely held misunderstanding: that the japanese were not willing to surrender. in fact, they had already been negotiating a surrender for quite some time. the biggest factor was that the americans had cut off their access to indonesia, which was their source of oil and rubber. the outcome of the war was crystal clear somewhere around d-day, and was in fact understood even earlier than that. the japanese could barely even fight without oil & rubber, let alone win. they had no chance. it was just a matter of time.
but, they didn't want an absolute surrender. the standard line is that they didn't want to hand over the emperor, but that's one of those historical glosses. like the idea that world war one was about an assassination in austria by serbian terrorists, rather than imperial competition over global resources. in actual fact, the japanese wanted to hold on to certain strategic islands, for resource reasons. these negotiations were preventing a surrender.
the actual truth is that the americans would not accept anything less than absolute surrender, including the occupation of all japanese lands. the japanese saw that as a bit onerous. so, they dropped the bomb to try and force the concession. it was a negotiation tactic. and, the fact is that it actually failed - the japanese did not surrender as a consequence of the atomic bomb. this is where the political/military debate comes in - the military knew it wouldn't work, but the politicians pushed for it anyways. that's become a common theme in american imperialism, and is perhaps reflective of somewhat of a flaw in the governing structure of the united states.
so, the bombs had little to do with the surrender. rather, what happened was that the russians saw what was going on and took it upon themselves to move in. this was just strategically intelligent. so long as the japanese and americans were haggling over terms, the japanese were an easy target for further expansion. further, the soviets had reasons to keep the americans out of japan, too. what set in was a race.
the japanese elite now saw themselves in a situation where they had to choose between being taken over by a communist regime and being absorbed by a capitalist empire. the capitalists may reduce them to a puppet-state, but the communists would execute them in public. so, they picked the americans over the soviets and accepted the absolute surrender.
it was the threat of stalin that forced the surrender, not the bombs.
but, that doesn't address the question of whether it was justified or not. i mean, just because it failed doesn't mean it was unjustified. i think this is a complex question without a good answer, but at the very least you need to get the motives right, first. see, you get a very different analysis if you think it was about ending the war early than you do if you understand that it was about forcing absolute surrender.
i think the better argument is that the atomic bombs actually weren't as large of an escalation as has been imagined. these were small bombs, in contemporary terms. the topic of iraq is brought up here. it was widely reported in 2003 that the "bunker busting" bombs - which were conventional - were actually more powerful than the h-bombs that were used in japan. and, the americans dropped depleted uranium in iraq, too.
i've argued both points, depending on context. my reaction has tended to be dependent on the precise argument i'm interfacing with. but, i don't think there's an actual answer.
at
01:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Sunday, May 29, 2016
28-05-2016: exploring in search of the source.....(kraftwerk bust + june show schedule lookahead)
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
at
11:38
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
it's spitting on a fish, in terms of what's worse. climate scientists talk about tipping points and feedback cycles. whether hillary gets us there later or trump gets us there sooner isn't a logical separation point. what you're really doing is buying into hillary's argument of incrementalism on a topic that is really purely binary. that argument can work on social issues, wherr a little better is really a little better. but, whether you freeze to death at -40 or freeze to death at -50 is irrelevant - you still freeze to death. so, you can't really say she's bad but a little better on this issue. it's just not how climate science works. if the permafrost starts going, it starts going - and you can't fix it with small regulations. you have to go all in, or not at all. if anything, it's more rational to take trump's position, if we're fucked and can't stop it, anyways - which is not an obscure position, either.
but, nationalization is not purely a left-wing idea. it's also an idea that the far right has historically drawn heavily upon. the united states doesn't have a history of traditional conservatism like the other british states or the germans do, so it might seem a little foreign. but, british conservatives like churchill were strong advocates of state-run industry. so was bismarck. today, that's about where putin stands on the spectrum. hitler didn't support nationalization, but he rejected free markets; the nazi system was defined by cartels with monopolies. and, this was kind of the same as the colonial system in britain, where you had these private charters (like the hudson's bay company, or the east india company) that were essentially run by the crown. here in ontario, we used to have a publicly run electricity company that was set up by our old-tory conservative party.
there's actually even support for publicly run utilities in classical liberal literature (adam smith, for example) as well, but it justifies itself in more proto-leftist language. the argument from the right is very old and very classist. well, look at saudi arabia. there's no private industry. it's all run by the state. communist? hardly. it's about concentration of wealth in the upper crust. state ownership is seen as a kind of firewall to keep the wealth in the hands of the aristocratic elite.
the more relevant question is probably related to whether trump has thought this through carefully or not. britain (and canada) have been democracies for a long time. germany wasn't. but even in britain (and canada) you have this system with the house of lords and these private charters that is just designed along this strenuous class lines. i'm not sure how one would propose this be emulated in the united states, or whether an elected senate (however weak it is...) may actually make that functionally impossible. but, most of what he says is functionally impossible, so that should be no surprise.
it's just not necessary to see this as a left-wing idea. and, if you want to look at ways that this could be done today, russia is probably your closest comparison. that might even be a broad statement: putin may be the best predictor of what trump would actually be like.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hvxmMIbaAM
also - the canada thing is complicated. the numbers may have changed in the last few years, but we are usually actually thought of as a net importer, despite being able to potentially be independent. but, it's because the costs of production are so high that it's cheaper to import it. we tried to set up something called the "national energy program" in the 70s through a state run company (it wasn't a monopoly, just a crown corporation) that would have made us energy-independent through a complex system of subsidies, but the province of alberta flipped out. and, it was, in fact, a reaction to the opec embargo and the stagflation that resulted from it. it even worked. but, the consequence was that the bubble economy in alberta collapsed. housing prices fell, for example; it was, in truth, a correction on a bubble, but try explaining that to the guy that has his house fall by 80%. so, we could actually do this, and have tried, and may try again, but it's politically very difficult in the oil-producing regions.
but, nationalization is not purely a left-wing idea. it's also an idea that the far right has historically drawn heavily upon. the united states doesn't have a history of traditional conservatism like the other british states or the germans do, so it might seem a little foreign. but, british conservatives like churchill were strong advocates of state-run industry. so was bismarck. today, that's about where putin stands on the spectrum. hitler didn't support nationalization, but he rejected free markets; the nazi system was defined by cartels with monopolies. and, this was kind of the same as the colonial system in britain, where you had these private charters (like the hudson's bay company, or the east india company) that were essentially run by the crown. here in ontario, we used to have a publicly run electricity company that was set up by our old-tory conservative party.
there's actually even support for publicly run utilities in classical liberal literature (adam smith, for example) as well, but it justifies itself in more proto-leftist language. the argument from the right is very old and very classist. well, look at saudi arabia. there's no private industry. it's all run by the state. communist? hardly. it's about concentration of wealth in the upper crust. state ownership is seen as a kind of firewall to keep the wealth in the hands of the aristocratic elite.
the more relevant question is probably related to whether trump has thought this through carefully or not. britain (and canada) have been democracies for a long time. germany wasn't. but even in britain (and canada) you have this system with the house of lords and these private charters that is just designed along this strenuous class lines. i'm not sure how one would propose this be emulated in the united states, or whether an elected senate (however weak it is...) may actually make that functionally impossible. but, most of what he says is functionally impossible, so that should be no surprise.
it's just not necessary to see this as a left-wing idea. and, if you want to look at ways that this could be done today, russia is probably your closest comparison. that might even be a broad statement: putin may be the best predictor of what trump would actually be like.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hvxmMIbaAM
also - the canada thing is complicated. the numbers may have changed in the last few years, but we are usually actually thought of as a net importer, despite being able to potentially be independent. but, it's because the costs of production are so high that it's cheaper to import it. we tried to set up something called the "national energy program" in the 70s through a state run company (it wasn't a monopoly, just a crown corporation) that would have made us energy-independent through a complex system of subsidies, but the province of alberta flipped out. and, it was, in fact, a reaction to the opec embargo and the stagflation that resulted from it. it even worked. but, the consequence was that the bubble economy in alberta collapsed. housing prices fell, for example; it was, in truth, a correction on a bubble, but try explaining that to the guy that has his house fall by 80%. so, we could actually do this, and have tried, and may try again, but it's politically very difficult in the oil-producing regions.
at
04:17
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to trump's curious meteorological claims
see. how does one argue with this?
one could define the term drought and cite rainfall levels, thereby demonstrating the point. but, it's also missing the point - which is that he's peddling fantasies to people who have had their hopes shattered. it's the thing that religions do. it's predatory, really. so, that evidence is not the solution to a reasonable debate but the shattering of one's dreams. there's a process here. denial. anger. more denial. acceptance. but, not everybody gets through it.
you really can't argue with him.
if i were clinton, i would refuse to debate him at all. i'd offer a press release describing him as a pathological liar that is not worth debating, or even listening to. and, i'd have a think tank dedicated to debunking every speech, offhand remark and anecdote that he spews - which would be a full time job for many people.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-water-california_us_574910e0e4b03ede4414f435
this isn't "let's have a reasonable debate".
this is more like "don't feed the troll. ignore him and he'll go away."
and, i'm not joking. i would campaign as thought he doesn't exist. i would bring think tank people with me to the news conferences and duck the questions, instead allowing the experts to debunk him with citations and references to web sites.
this can't be thought of as an election between two candidates. it doesn't matter who wins - the country loses when we take this seriously. rather, it needs to be thought of as a teachable moment. she needs to create a kind of teacher-student dynamic. she should talk down to him at every opportunity. this has to be a no-brainer, unless you avoid voting altogether (which i still suggest).
she has to treat him like a complete, utter, total fucking retard.
the bureau of debunking that fucking idiot, trump.
one could define the term drought and cite rainfall levels, thereby demonstrating the point. but, it's also missing the point - which is that he's peddling fantasies to people who have had their hopes shattered. it's the thing that religions do. it's predatory, really. so, that evidence is not the solution to a reasonable debate but the shattering of one's dreams. there's a process here. denial. anger. more denial. acceptance. but, not everybody gets through it.
you really can't argue with him.
if i were clinton, i would refuse to debate him at all. i'd offer a press release describing him as a pathological liar that is not worth debating, or even listening to. and, i'd have a think tank dedicated to debunking every speech, offhand remark and anecdote that he spews - which would be a full time job for many people.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-water-california_us_574910e0e4b03ede4414f435
this isn't "let's have a reasonable debate".
this is more like "don't feed the troll. ignore him and he'll go away."
and, i'm not joking. i would campaign as thought he doesn't exist. i would bring think tank people with me to the news conferences and duck the questions, instead allowing the experts to debunk him with citations and references to web sites.
this can't be thought of as an election between two candidates. it doesn't matter who wins - the country loses when we take this seriously. rather, it needs to be thought of as a teachable moment. she needs to create a kind of teacher-student dynamic. she should talk down to him at every opportunity. this has to be a no-brainer, unless you avoid voting altogether (which i still suggest).
she has to treat him like a complete, utter, total fucking retard.
the bureau of debunking that fucking idiot, trump.
at
03:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Saturday, May 28, 2016
some of my video comments over the next few days may seem confusing if you're following the Official Alternative Media Narrative, so i think i should be explicitly clear about this.
regarding the issues of financial regulation and the narratives around the bank bailouts, i may actually be closer to clinton than sanders. i wouldn't really agree with either, entirely.
see, i would take what is called an academic left perspective, which neither of the candidates are taking. clinton is taking more of an academic right position. what that means is that there are certain broad academic points that clinton has been making that i agree with (and are not really contested), but that i'm not ideologically aligned with her so i disagree with her on a lot of details. sanders is taking a populist position that is broadly (and correctly) seen as just flatly wrong by most academics. the people that are parroting him either don't know what they're talking about (cenk uygur) or are acting from questionable ideological positions (elizabeth warren).
i would prioritize careful, academic analysis (clinton/obama/krugman) over populist and misleading agitprop (sanders/pseudo-warren/wolff). pseudo-warren because i think she's misunderstood - she's a market fundamentalist, not a leftist. she's good at the agit-prop, but leftists will be sorely disappointed if she gets any kind of position of power. so, i haven't been shy about this: clinton is, indeed, broadly less wrong about the banks.
so, why am i supporting sanders? because i don't care about the bank bailouts. at all. i see the politicking for what it is: populism, agit-prop, maybe a little demagoguery. frankly, i'm pragmatic enough to see the value in it. what i actually care about is foreign policy, health care, social issues and more data-driven analyses of growing inequality.
and, this is not just why i'm supporting sanders over clinton. it's also why i couldn't possibly support clinton at all.
so, i hope that clarifies the point.
what the upcoming video comments are going to focus on is the question of whether some of this agitprop and politicking, as pragmatic as it may be, may have some unintended consequences - blowback - in it's use.
it's one thing to get people angry at the banks in order to get a tobin tax in. that's politics. it's good politics. it's another thing to wake up in eight years and realize we not only don't have a tobin tax, but now have also lost the lender of last resort because the masses got confused about what they were supposed to be angry about. that would be a tremendous fuck-up.
regarding the issues of financial regulation and the narratives around the bank bailouts, i may actually be closer to clinton than sanders. i wouldn't really agree with either, entirely.
see, i would take what is called an academic left perspective, which neither of the candidates are taking. clinton is taking more of an academic right position. what that means is that there are certain broad academic points that clinton has been making that i agree with (and are not really contested), but that i'm not ideologically aligned with her so i disagree with her on a lot of details. sanders is taking a populist position that is broadly (and correctly) seen as just flatly wrong by most academics. the people that are parroting him either don't know what they're talking about (cenk uygur) or are acting from questionable ideological positions (elizabeth warren).
i would prioritize careful, academic analysis (clinton/obama/krugman) over populist and misleading agitprop (sanders/pseudo-warren/wolff). pseudo-warren because i think she's misunderstood - she's a market fundamentalist, not a leftist. she's good at the agit-prop, but leftists will be sorely disappointed if she gets any kind of position of power. so, i haven't been shy about this: clinton is, indeed, broadly less wrong about the banks.
so, why am i supporting sanders? because i don't care about the bank bailouts. at all. i see the politicking for what it is: populism, agit-prop, maybe a little demagoguery. frankly, i'm pragmatic enough to see the value in it. what i actually care about is foreign policy, health care, social issues and more data-driven analyses of growing inequality.
and, this is not just why i'm supporting sanders over clinton. it's also why i couldn't possibly support clinton at all.
so, i hope that clarifies the point.
what the upcoming video comments are going to focus on is the question of whether some of this agitprop and politicking, as pragmatic as it may be, may have some unintended consequences - blowback - in it's use.
it's one thing to get people angry at the banks in order to get a tobin tax in. that's politics. it's good politics. it's another thing to wake up in eight years and realize we not only don't have a tobin tax, but now have also lost the lender of last resort because the masses got confused about what they were supposed to be angry about. that would be a tremendous fuck-up.
at
01:03
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
bob dole says trump should select gingrich for vp.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2016/05/28/dole_trump_should_select_newt_gingrich_for_vice_president.html
you thought i was going to tell a joke, didn't you?
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2016/05/28/dole_trump_should_select_newt_gingrich_for_vice_president.html
you thought i was going to tell a joke, didn't you?
at
00:38
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Friday, May 27, 2016
26-05-2016: enjoying the hot summer walk back and forth from palm....then ranting
show footage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9rzmBOunoQ
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/26.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9rzmBOunoQ
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/26.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
at
10:33
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the trump/sanders debate proposal (it's a bad idea for both of them)
so, before we can think about who benefits or whether this is a good idea, let's contemplate what it might be like. and, in doing so, we need to answer the question: how does bernie usually respond to nonsense?
1) by laughing. he's laughed off a lot of what hillary has said.
2) satire. the speech bit, for example.
3) by repeating the nonsense in an incredulous tone, then launching into talking points.
so, for example, let's say the topic of global warming comes up. the donald thinks it's a nefarious plot by the chinese to crash the us economy. what, exactly, could bernie say on a podium in a minute or so that is going to address this? he won't. rather, you're going to get...
"...you think it's a plot by the chinese. ok. but, i think an economy where the 1% control...."
so, what is a debate, in context? it's impossible, because trump is consistently incoherent. while the juxtaposition may help in defining just how ridiculous trump really is, and turn off conservatives that are warming to him, it's hard to see how it can present sanders as anything other than confused, perplexed and flummoxed. if this is your first exposure to sanders, there's a good chance he's going to come off as a stammering old man.
"you...you want...you want to give nuclear weapons to south korea !? i...i...in an economy where the 1% control...."
so, what's actually going to happen, then, is not a debate. what's going to happen is that sanders is going to get a prime time tv slot to stump over, while he shrugs incredulously at the incomprehensibility of trump's positions.
no major network will actually let this happen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2W2v23m8RA0
i pointed this out earlier in the campaign: trump's irrationality is actually an advantage, if his opponent is rational. the reason is that rationality requires predictability.
the best example of this is reagan. it's widely understood that reagan forced the russians to stand down [i don't mean the coup, i mean collapse, i'm talking purely about the military] by increasing military spending through the roof. he then gets credit for "winning the cold war". there is actually a kernel of truth in this, but it's less understood how the russians reacted.
what the russians realized was that reagan was behaving irrationally relative to all their theories and models. you had generals on both sides running these game theory simulations against each other. one of the most famous results of this was this idea of mutually assured destruction. but, it's broadly acknowledged that one of the major reasons that nuclear war didn't happen was that both sides assumed the other would always behave rationally. this both led to unchallenged escalations and withdrawal decisions.
so, when they became unable to understand reagan as a rational agent, they had to stand down - because they could no longer predict his behaviour by assuming he was rational.
nobody should suggest that the lesson is that it is a good idea to elect irrational people to confuse the country's adversaries. rather, we should be grateful that the russians did not become unpredictable and irrational, but rather remained rational even in de-escalation.
but, it's going to put bernie in the same quandary on question after question. he can't argue with absurdity - and especially not in a few seconds at a time. rather, he's going to have to stand down over and over again.
1) by laughing. he's laughed off a lot of what hillary has said.
2) satire. the speech bit, for example.
3) by repeating the nonsense in an incredulous tone, then launching into talking points.
so, for example, let's say the topic of global warming comes up. the donald thinks it's a nefarious plot by the chinese to crash the us economy. what, exactly, could bernie say on a podium in a minute or so that is going to address this? he won't. rather, you're going to get...
"...you think it's a plot by the chinese. ok. but, i think an economy where the 1% control...."
so, what is a debate, in context? it's impossible, because trump is consistently incoherent. while the juxtaposition may help in defining just how ridiculous trump really is, and turn off conservatives that are warming to him, it's hard to see how it can present sanders as anything other than confused, perplexed and flummoxed. if this is your first exposure to sanders, there's a good chance he's going to come off as a stammering old man.
"you...you want...you want to give nuclear weapons to south korea !? i...i...in an economy where the 1% control...."
so, what's actually going to happen, then, is not a debate. what's going to happen is that sanders is going to get a prime time tv slot to stump over, while he shrugs incredulously at the incomprehensibility of trump's positions.
no major network will actually let this happen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2W2v23m8RA0
i pointed this out earlier in the campaign: trump's irrationality is actually an advantage, if his opponent is rational. the reason is that rationality requires predictability.
the best example of this is reagan. it's widely understood that reagan forced the russians to stand down [i don't mean the coup, i mean collapse, i'm talking purely about the military] by increasing military spending through the roof. he then gets credit for "winning the cold war". there is actually a kernel of truth in this, but it's less understood how the russians reacted.
what the russians realized was that reagan was behaving irrationally relative to all their theories and models. you had generals on both sides running these game theory simulations against each other. one of the most famous results of this was this idea of mutually assured destruction. but, it's broadly acknowledged that one of the major reasons that nuclear war didn't happen was that both sides assumed the other would always behave rationally. this both led to unchallenged escalations and withdrawal decisions.
so, when they became unable to understand reagan as a rational agent, they had to stand down - because they could no longer predict his behaviour by assuming he was rational.
nobody should suggest that the lesson is that it is a good idea to elect irrational people to confuse the country's adversaries. rather, we should be grateful that the russians did not become unpredictable and irrational, but rather remained rational even in de-escalation.
but, it's going to put bernie in the same quandary on question after question. he can't argue with absurdity - and especially not in a few seconds at a time. rather, he's going to have to stand down over and over again.
at
05:01
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to nobody understanding the taylor swift is an aryan goddess thing
ok, so a lot of people are pointing out that they got trolled. now, you can have debates about whether this is funny or not, but let's get what the actual point is here, first. nobody's doing that, and you kind of can't really have this discussion until you do.
what the site is doing is actually criticizing taylor swift for upholding broken stereotypes of antiquated femininity that seem better left in the third reich. so, are they feminazis? well, it's maybe closer to what they're articulating. see, here's the hard part: it's actually true. here are we are in 2016 and, like her or not, we're probably going to see a female president by this time next year. meanwhile, taylor's living in some kind of mad men reality, where women seek physical objectification as their ultimate purpose in life. there's a hole wide enough for criticism, there, to drive hillary's first deployment through. i kind of want to write this essay, but i really don't - i think you can put it together from here, once i've pointed this out. but, now that it is pointed out, let's keep it in mind as we carry on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tEdAtX_ze68
what the site is doing is actually criticizing taylor swift for upholding broken stereotypes of antiquated femininity that seem better left in the third reich. so, are they feminazis? well, it's maybe closer to what they're articulating. see, here's the hard part: it's actually true. here are we are in 2016 and, like her or not, we're probably going to see a female president by this time next year. meanwhile, taylor's living in some kind of mad men reality, where women seek physical objectification as their ultimate purpose in life. there's a hole wide enough for criticism, there, to drive hillary's first deployment through. i kind of want to write this essay, but i really don't - i think you can put it together from here, once i've pointed this out. but, now that it is pointed out, let's keep it in mind as we carry on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tEdAtX_ze68
at
03:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Thursday, May 26, 2016
26-05-2016: palm - crank (detroit)
their music:
https://palmnewyork.bandcamp.com/
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/26.html
vlog for the day:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v19c6_lyp0M
https://palmnewyork.bandcamp.com/
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/26.html
vlog for the day:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v19c6_lyp0M
at
22:18
Location:
Detroit, MI, USA
j reacts to tightening numbers in california
you could tell from clinton's campaign's language that this was coming. and, where's the trendline? she's nose-diving. fast.
she doesn't want debates. she doesn't want coverage. she doesn't even want people to know there's a primary. she just wants to get it over with with the least amount of damage done possible.
a split doesn't help him, of course. he has to really demolish her for the dynamic to change, and that's hard to contemplate so long as she doesn't stick her foot in her mouth.
if you see some polling with sanders pushing 60%, she'll have to react. and, if you see her react, you'll know the internals are looking incomprehensibly grim. but, for now, you should expect her to say almost nothing at all between now and the 14th, in the hopes that the news cycle drops the story and everybody forgets about it.
it's damage control from an established candidate.
she's always been hard to get excited about, and that's not going to change now.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/27/us/politics/clinton-sanders-california-poll.html?_r=0
"running out the clock"
that's what you want to go with. that's how you shalt describe what clinton is doing. go forth...
she doesn't want debates. she doesn't want coverage. she doesn't even want people to know there's a primary. she just wants to get it over with with the least amount of damage done possible.
a split doesn't help him, of course. he has to really demolish her for the dynamic to change, and that's hard to contemplate so long as she doesn't stick her foot in her mouth.
if you see some polling with sanders pushing 60%, she'll have to react. and, if you see her react, you'll know the internals are looking incomprehensibly grim. but, for now, you should expect her to say almost nothing at all between now and the 14th, in the hopes that the news cycle drops the story and everybody forgets about it.
it's damage control from an established candidate.
she's always been hard to get excited about, and that's not going to change now.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/27/us/politics/clinton-sanders-california-poll.html?_r=0
"running out the clock"
that's what you want to go with. that's how you shalt describe what clinton is doing. go forth...
at
03:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to pop science misunderstandings of the observer effect
the observer effect. it's a pop science thing that drives me nuts. i run into this all the time, from people of all kinds of education levels. i've even met physics students that started studying physics because they heard this interpretation of things, and have refused to let it go as they've learned it's nonsense.
the bottom line is that it's something we want to believe, because it puts us at the center of our own universes. not only do we get to keep religion, but we get to be gods. it's compelling.
what all these people believe, educated or not, is the following pop science reading of the observer effect. suppose you look up into the sky at night. by observing the night sky, you create the shooting stars. fuck conservation laws. it's just magic.
i've learned that one rarely gets anywhere explaining this properly, but for the record let's do this. how does the observer effect relate to shooting stars? well, let's realize that it's not restricted to quantum effects. the observer effect is universal between masses, like gravity is. things do not have to be alive to observe each other, and that itself should give you a clue that nothing is actually happening at the level of projective thought. there is an observer effect between a rock and a tree. but, you might guess correctly that it would be smaller than any kind of statistical error you could conceive of. this is the actual observer effect you may have on a shooting star: the disturbance is entirely insignificant. that star shoots by whether you see it or not. the tree falls. and, while you do have an effect on the shooting star, that effect is purely abstract - you couldn't even really begin to try and quantify it.
that shooting star has probably been floating around the galaxy for billions of years. it doesn't matter whether you see it enter the earth's atmosphere or not. it will or it will not dependent entirely on the various gravitational forces at work.
but, there's a twist. depending on the size and age of the object, there may very well be an important observer effect on the shooting star, but from other gravitational objects. jupiter. saturn. the sun. maybe even some of that exotic pull we've got coming from outside the galaxy. and, the sum total of all of those planetary observer effects would comprise something called the n-body problem.
so, it would follow that if we were the size of planets then we could measure our effects on the stars. to scale, that's why we can have a noticeable effect at the quantum level.
so, no. physics doesn't say that you imagine your own reality. that was a bunch of fucking potheads in the 60s, not physics. maybe they watched star trek together or something. i dunno. i know it drives me bonkers...
the bottom line is that it's something we want to believe, because it puts us at the center of our own universes. not only do we get to keep religion, but we get to be gods. it's compelling.
what all these people believe, educated or not, is the following pop science reading of the observer effect. suppose you look up into the sky at night. by observing the night sky, you create the shooting stars. fuck conservation laws. it's just magic.
i've learned that one rarely gets anywhere explaining this properly, but for the record let's do this. how does the observer effect relate to shooting stars? well, let's realize that it's not restricted to quantum effects. the observer effect is universal between masses, like gravity is. things do not have to be alive to observe each other, and that itself should give you a clue that nothing is actually happening at the level of projective thought. there is an observer effect between a rock and a tree. but, you might guess correctly that it would be smaller than any kind of statistical error you could conceive of. this is the actual observer effect you may have on a shooting star: the disturbance is entirely insignificant. that star shoots by whether you see it or not. the tree falls. and, while you do have an effect on the shooting star, that effect is purely abstract - you couldn't even really begin to try and quantify it.
that shooting star has probably been floating around the galaxy for billions of years. it doesn't matter whether you see it enter the earth's atmosphere or not. it will or it will not dependent entirely on the various gravitational forces at work.
but, there's a twist. depending on the size and age of the object, there may very well be an important observer effect on the shooting star, but from other gravitational objects. jupiter. saturn. the sun. maybe even some of that exotic pull we've got coming from outside the galaxy. and, the sum total of all of those planetary observer effects would comprise something called the n-body problem.
so, it would follow that if we were the size of planets then we could measure our effects on the stars. to scale, that's why we can have a noticeable effect at the quantum level.
so, no. physics doesn't say that you imagine your own reality. that was a bunch of fucking potheads in the 60s, not physics. maybe they watched star trek together or something. i dunno. i know it drives me bonkers...
at
00:31
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
j reacts to "anarchist" kids ironically throwing around safe spaces like a neo-pmrc
"i sometimes feel unsafe at punk shows" - self-identified anarcha-feminist.
you know, it's not a crazy thing to say. is rock music dangerous? conservatives have been claiming that for decades. but, it's kind of the point.
the insinuation was not that she should avoid rock concerts, but that rock concerts should change so that she feels more safe at them. no irony. no self-awareness.
i just don't understand why these kids can't see themselves for what they are. i don't want to tell them what to think. i just want them to have a mass self-realization that they're all a bunch of conservatives and just get the fuck out of the left.
-
if you want to feel safe, i'd suggest avoiding rock concerts and, instead, stick closer to church-oriented social activities.
you know, it's not a crazy thing to say. is rock music dangerous? conservatives have been claiming that for decades. but, it's kind of the point.
the insinuation was not that she should avoid rock concerts, but that rock concerts should change so that she feels more safe at them. no irony. no self-awareness.
i just don't understand why these kids can't see themselves for what they are. i don't want to tell them what to think. i just want them to have a mass self-realization that they're all a bunch of conservatives and just get the fuck out of the left.
-
if you want to feel safe, i'd suggest avoiding rock concerts and, instead, stick closer to church-oriented social activities.
at
20:32
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to hillary's vote suppression tactics ultimately being self-defeating
hey hill...
when you say trump is being used as a recruitment for isis, is that before or after your government sends them equipment to carry out it's geostrategic goal of destabilizing the area for saudi expansion?
nonsense piled on top of nonsense. i've pointed this out before: if you're going to keep track of this space over the upcoming election, prepare yourself for sardonic, disconnected rants about the surreal absurdity of the charade. i have no interest in either of these candidates, except to deconstruct and expose them.
the best thing you can do this election is refuse to vote. the candidates themselves won't care. hillary will high-five her advisers that her suppression tactics worked, and she won. but, there's a certain point where low turnout really does send a message.
let's get turnout under 25%. that should be your goal, as an activist. they might not care or react. but, at least they'll hear the message - and that's better than you can say about anything else, right now.
when you say trump is being used as a recruitment for isis, is that before or after your government sends them equipment to carry out it's geostrategic goal of destabilizing the area for saudi expansion?
nonsense piled on top of nonsense. i've pointed this out before: if you're going to keep track of this space over the upcoming election, prepare yourself for sardonic, disconnected rants about the surreal absurdity of the charade. i have no interest in either of these candidates, except to deconstruct and expose them.
the best thing you can do this election is refuse to vote. the candidates themselves won't care. hillary will high-five her advisers that her suppression tactics worked, and she won. but, there's a certain point where low turnout really does send a message.
let's get turnout under 25%. that should be your goal, as an activist. they might not care or react. but, at least they'll hear the message - and that's better than you can say about anything else, right now.
at
18:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the role reversal on voter turnout (democrats want suppression this cycle)
i just want to draw attention to another component of this election that is acting in a role reversal: turnout.
sanders has drawn attention to an apparent truth: when turnout is high, democrats win. this is because the democrats have long been the quasi-populist party, whereas the republicans have been seen as fronts for deep money. i mean, the smart kids know better, but that's the popular perception, anyways.
that is about to flip over entirely this election, and it's also just another example of how clinton and sanders are really moving in drastically opposite directions. sanders knows he needs big turnout to have any chance and has been basing his entire campaign around it. but, if the election is trump v clinton and there's high turnout? clinton is going to lose. she actually wants to take more of a traditionally republican tactic, and try and suppress turnout - as she has been doing in the primary.
so, presuming that sanders does fall in line like he's expected to, you're going to end up in the situation where the republicans are trying to run as the populist party and get turnout up and the democrats are pushing the cynical vote suppression tactics designed to make people think it's not worth their time to bother voting.
the democrats have never been particularly inspiring, sure. but i don't think it's ever been this bad.
sanders has drawn attention to an apparent truth: when turnout is high, democrats win. this is because the democrats have long been the quasi-populist party, whereas the republicans have been seen as fronts for deep money. i mean, the smart kids know better, but that's the popular perception, anyways.
that is about to flip over entirely this election, and it's also just another example of how clinton and sanders are really moving in drastically opposite directions. sanders knows he needs big turnout to have any chance and has been basing his entire campaign around it. but, if the election is trump v clinton and there's high turnout? clinton is going to lose. she actually wants to take more of a traditionally republican tactic, and try and suppress turnout - as she has been doing in the primary.
so, presuming that sanders does fall in line like he's expected to, you're going to end up in the situation where the republicans are trying to run as the populist party and get turnout up and the democrats are pushing the cynical vote suppression tactics designed to make people think it's not worth their time to bother voting.
the democrats have never been particularly inspiring, sure. but i don't think it's ever been this bad.
at
06:43
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
first alter-reality post
May 22, 1996
i guess this is my new blog. wow.
i should be asleep, but it's a saturday night and my parents don't really force me to go to sleep. well, how can they, really? they need to sleep, too. fatalism is actually pretty rational, in context - it's an unresolvable problem. and i'm a bit of a hard-headed little punk rascal.
i just find that i only need a few hours of rest, not something crazy like eight hours. who sleeps that long? wow. i'm ok with four hours, really. so, what should i do for the rest of the night, then? toss darts at the wall? count sheep? lying in bed when you're really not tired is just simply being unproductive. if i'm going to be awake anyways, i'd rather stay up and read something, or listen to some music. i guess it's a good time to do some blogging, too.
i don't have internet access in my room, though, so i need to sneak into the spare computer room when i want to use the internet at night. i do have a computer in my room, but it only has windows 3.1 on it. i need windows 95 to use internet explorer. so, i probably won't be able to do this blog every night.
i've been up all night playing civ2 and listening to this new soundgarden cassette on my walkman. i skipped the afternoon class on tuesday (computer class, and i already know it all, anyways, so it's just a waste of time) to go down to the hmv at st. laurent to pick it up. i get a free bus pass from school, so i can go wherever i want in the city whenever i want, which is actually very liberating. much easier than bicycling. there's a music world at billings, too, but it's always over priced and under stocked. the hmv at st. laurent is only a few minutes up the transitway and always has what i want.
it's a little different than superunknown, a bit poppier, but it's still pretty good. parts of it remind me a lot of the beatles, and i really like the beatles a lot. parts of it are sort of weird, and i like that, too. i always like to hear things that i haven't heard before. i think i'd like to teach myself how to play some of these songs, too, but i'm wondering if maybe they're in weird tunings. i know soundgarden likes weird tunings. my ibanez has a locking bridge so i try to avoid weird tunings. maybe, i can figure out how to play them in normal tunings, anyways. when songs are in weird tunings, it's sometimes helpful to find tabs on the internet, because then i can figure out how to play it with normal tuning. sometimes, that means transposing the song up a key or two but it's all relative so it doesn't matter.
i've been playing civ2 ever since i got home last night. dad says i'm totally addicted, but it's a video game, not a drug, so i think that's a weird thing to say. but, i do sometimes play it all night, until the sun comes up and the dogs come running in and i have to pretend i'm sleeping. i like to change the civilizations i play with so that i can learn the names of the cities in different parts of the world. tonight, i am catherine the great of russia. i always liked to learn about geography, ever since i was very small. i knew all the capital cities in the whole world, almost!
i found a tab for burden in my hand, and it is actually in a weird tuning. i should try and convert it to normal tuning when i wake up tomorrow.
i should sneak back into my room now. shhh.
really enjoying the new soundgarden record
i guess this is my new blog. wow.
i should be asleep, but it's a saturday night and my parents don't really force me to go to sleep. well, how can they, really? they need to sleep, too. fatalism is actually pretty rational, in context - it's an unresolvable problem. and i'm a bit of a hard-headed little punk rascal.
i just find that i only need a few hours of rest, not something crazy like eight hours. who sleeps that long? wow. i'm ok with four hours, really. so, what should i do for the rest of the night, then? toss darts at the wall? count sheep? lying in bed when you're really not tired is just simply being unproductive. if i'm going to be awake anyways, i'd rather stay up and read something, or listen to some music. i guess it's a good time to do some blogging, too.
i don't have internet access in my room, though, so i need to sneak into the spare computer room when i want to use the internet at night. i do have a computer in my room, but it only has windows 3.1 on it. i need windows 95 to use internet explorer. so, i probably won't be able to do this blog every night.
i've been up all night playing civ2 and listening to this new soundgarden cassette on my walkman. i skipped the afternoon class on tuesday (computer class, and i already know it all, anyways, so it's just a waste of time) to go down to the hmv at st. laurent to pick it up. i get a free bus pass from school, so i can go wherever i want in the city whenever i want, which is actually very liberating. much easier than bicycling. there's a music world at billings, too, but it's always over priced and under stocked. the hmv at st. laurent is only a few minutes up the transitway and always has what i want.
it's a little different than superunknown, a bit poppier, but it's still pretty good. parts of it remind me a lot of the beatles, and i really like the beatles a lot. parts of it are sort of weird, and i like that, too. i always like to hear things that i haven't heard before. i think i'd like to teach myself how to play some of these songs, too, but i'm wondering if maybe they're in weird tunings. i know soundgarden likes weird tunings. my ibanez has a locking bridge so i try to avoid weird tunings. maybe, i can figure out how to play them in normal tunings, anyways. when songs are in weird tunings, it's sometimes helpful to find tabs on the internet, because then i can figure out how to play it with normal tuning. sometimes, that means transposing the song up a key or two but it's all relative so it doesn't matter.
i've been playing civ2 ever since i got home last night. dad says i'm totally addicted, but it's a video game, not a drug, so i think that's a weird thing to say. but, i do sometimes play it all night, until the sun comes up and the dogs come running in and i have to pretend i'm sleeping. i like to change the civilizations i play with so that i can learn the names of the cities in different parts of the world. tonight, i am catherine the great of russia. i always liked to learn about geography, ever since i was very small. i knew all the capital cities in the whole world, almost!
i found a tab for burden in my hand, and it is actually in a weird tuning. i should try and convert it to normal tuning when i wake up tomorrow.
i should sneak back into my room now. shhh.
at
05:22
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
j reacts to sanders' choice for the dnc rules committee
i think we can at the very least expect an honest telling of events from dr. west. but, don't be surprised when he explains that there was never really anything up for debate - that the majority came in with a stack of binders full of neatly printed materials and was looking for nothing more in depth than an enthusiastic rubber stamp.
this is how they get you. they make you think the process is real. that's the lie that keeps this whole charade in motion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puRzyEoCdJI
this is how they get you. they make you think the process is real. that's the lie that keeps this whole charade in motion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puRzyEoCdJI
at
20:22
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to clinton's debate refusal (strategically correct, if deflating)
no. it's the right choice. note the language from the clinton campaign: they want to compete in california. if they wanted to win in california, they would have said that. that's a slip that seems to have been missed and that implies their internals are negative.
if sanders wins a close race, it doesn't matter much. but if he wins in a landslide, there's a chance it might.
clinton's optimal strategy is to keep the situation low key in order to reduce turnout. turning down the debate is actually a voter suppression tactic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnO-EnkyNV4
if sanders wins a close race, it doesn't matter much. but if he wins in a landslide, there's a chance it might.
clinton's optimal strategy is to keep the situation low key in order to reduce turnout. turning down the debate is actually a voter suppression tactic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnO-EnkyNV4
at
19:45
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
and, i'm going to post a sobering link to some comments gore made in 2002.
"So this time, if we resort to force, we must absolutely get it right. It must be an action set up carefully and on the basis of the most realistic concepts. Failure cannot be an option, which means that we must be prepared to go the limit. And wishful thinking based on best-case scenarios or excessively literal transfers of recent experience to different conditions would be a recipe for disaster." - al gore on the iraq war, 2002
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2002/02/gore-f20.html
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
"So this time, if we resort to force, we must absolutely get it right. It must be an action set up carefully and on the basis of the most realistic concepts. Failure cannot be an option, which means that we must be prepared to go the limit. And wishful thinking based on best-case scenarios or excessively literal transfers of recent experience to different conditions would be a recipe for disaster." - al gore on the iraq war, 2002
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2002/02/gore-f20.html
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
at
19:16
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
sorry, just to be clear: sanctions are an act of war. they imply the intent for war. and, in context, they were preparation for an eventual invasion. the fact that gore actively and belligerently supported the sanctions, the no-fly zone and everything else indicates pretty clearly that he was on the side of invasion and would have either done it on his watch or set it up nicely for the next president to do it.
the fact that he was out of the senate at the time robs us of absolute proof. but, we know who was in the senate, and how she voted. gore's logic may have differed mildly from bush', but he would not have made a different decision than clinton did.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
the fact that he was out of the senate at the time robs us of absolute proof. but, we know who was in the senate, and how she voted. gore's logic may have differed mildly from bush', but he would not have made a different decision than clinton did.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
at
19:06
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the continuing specious scaremongering around third parties (gore == bush)
fuck the scare mongering. you should know better.
i'm not going to argue against the idea that nader won bush the election. it's mostly not true, but let's say it is.
reality check: it wouldn't have mattered. gore and bush were interchangeable. that's why nader was appealing.
reality check: trump and clinton are interchangeable. it doesn't matter who wins.
stop falling for the two-headed monster.
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2002/02/gore-f20.html
i'm not going to argue against the idea that nader won bush the election. it's mostly not true, but let's say it is.
reality check: it wouldn't have mattered. gore and bush were interchangeable. that's why nader was appealing.
reality check: trump and clinton are interchangeable. it doesn't matter who wins.
stop falling for the two-headed monster.
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2002/02/gore-f20.html
at
17:23
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Tariq Shakoor
I think Jill Stein's invitation to Bernie supporters (I am one) is a significant one and has immense future possibilities for a viable third party in this country. I'm all for it---just not in this particular election cycle. Why? Because the one thing this otherwise excellent article did not touch on was the surrendering of the Supreme Court and at least one or two appointments in the next few years. If Trump wins this election, we already know what he will do---"appoint a judge like Scalia." Okay? You can't be more clear than that. Hillary for all her warts and issues will never make such a disastrous appointment. Why? She has a constituency that would literally drag her ass out of the White House if she did make that type of appointment. She may be a lot of things---but, stupid is not one of them. The Supreme Court appointments are not small factor to consider when you look at all the possible issues the left holds dear all of a sudden become DOA. So, I do not hold the same opinion that both Trump and Hillary would be equally bad for this country---that is only true in some areas---not all, and especially the social programs that we support. Roe v. Wade, LGBT rights, Obamacare/Single Payer Healthcare, Voting Rights, Social Security, Public Education, Consumer rights, wage equality for women, and so much more. It's easy to say she is a war hawk and should not serve----but, do you actually think Trump is going to be able to be the isolationist he wants to be without losing massive support from his base and the GOP establishment? No, if they want war--there will be a war, and he won't be able to stop them. So, let's look beyond the issue that they both will be on the same page about ultimately. I feel our support for all the other programs are more important and more realistic to bring us together.
Plato
Honduras death squads? Haiti, invasion and repression? Libya, wealthiest country in Africa bombed to the stone age and Hillary Clinton gloating that ISIS with U.S. support tortured and murdered the president? Funding, arming and importing terrorists to Syria? From destroying Yugoslavia to the extermination of the native population of Palestine, Hillary Clinton never saw a bloodbath she didn't love.
MPEG1982
You didn't actually address Tariq's point. Several Republicans appointed to the bench could be a serious disaster for this country, arguably more so than any war. Look at the impact of decisions like Citizen's United.
Clinton has done some horrid things, but at least she won't hand over the Supreme Court.
deathtokoalas
but, it simply doesn't make sense to vote for clinton if you're trying to keep the right off the bench.
if it's trump v. clinton, the issue is already decided: the right keeps the court for another generation.
this boat has sailed.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
I think Jill Stein's invitation to Bernie supporters (I am one) is a significant one and has immense future possibilities for a viable third party in this country. I'm all for it---just not in this particular election cycle. Why? Because the one thing this otherwise excellent article did not touch on was the surrendering of the Supreme Court and at least one or two appointments in the next few years. If Trump wins this election, we already know what he will do---"appoint a judge like Scalia." Okay? You can't be more clear than that. Hillary for all her warts and issues will never make such a disastrous appointment. Why? She has a constituency that would literally drag her ass out of the White House if she did make that type of appointment. She may be a lot of things---but, stupid is not one of them. The Supreme Court appointments are not small factor to consider when you look at all the possible issues the left holds dear all of a sudden become DOA. So, I do not hold the same opinion that both Trump and Hillary would be equally bad for this country---that is only true in some areas---not all, and especially the social programs that we support. Roe v. Wade, LGBT rights, Obamacare/Single Payer Healthcare, Voting Rights, Social Security, Public Education, Consumer rights, wage equality for women, and so much more. It's easy to say she is a war hawk and should not serve----but, do you actually think Trump is going to be able to be the isolationist he wants to be without losing massive support from his base and the GOP establishment? No, if they want war--there will be a war, and he won't be able to stop them. So, let's look beyond the issue that they both will be on the same page about ultimately. I feel our support for all the other programs are more important and more realistic to bring us together.
Plato
Honduras death squads? Haiti, invasion and repression? Libya, wealthiest country in Africa bombed to the stone age and Hillary Clinton gloating that ISIS with U.S. support tortured and murdered the president? Funding, arming and importing terrorists to Syria? From destroying Yugoslavia to the extermination of the native population of Palestine, Hillary Clinton never saw a bloodbath she didn't love.
MPEG1982
You didn't actually address Tariq's point. Several Republicans appointed to the bench could be a serious disaster for this country, arguably more so than any war. Look at the impact of decisions like Citizen's United.
Clinton has done some horrid things, but at least she won't hand over the Supreme Court.
deathtokoalas
but, it simply doesn't make sense to vote for clinton if you're trying to keep the right off the bench.
if it's trump v. clinton, the issue is already decided: the right keeps the court for another generation.
this boat has sailed.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
at
17:09
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to clinton taking her open and transparent demagoguery up a level
i want to clarify what i said about this a while back, because it's floating around all over the place.
i said something like "the real issue with trump is that he'll bankrupt the country". now, if you put it into context, it's clear that what i was talking about was tax policy - that he'd slash taxes to almost nothing, thereby creating tremendous structural deficits.
that's not literal bankruptcy. it was just meant to suggest that you can expect that he'll carry on with the privatization of all the things, by continuing to reduce revenue sources down to nothing.
here, clinton is once again demonstrating the demagoguery that has defined her candidacy. a country cannot go bankrupt, and there is nothing of any value that can be gained in comparing running a country to running a business like a casino - except to confuse and mislead people.
these are conservative talking points designed to appeal to conservatives. and, get used to it. that's what this election is going to be like.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2016/05/24/clinton_trump_will_bankrupt_america_like_hes_bankrupted_his_companies_hes_a_bully_in_the_pulpit.html
i said something like "the real issue with trump is that he'll bankrupt the country". now, if you put it into context, it's clear that what i was talking about was tax policy - that he'd slash taxes to almost nothing, thereby creating tremendous structural deficits.
that's not literal bankruptcy. it was just meant to suggest that you can expect that he'll carry on with the privatization of all the things, by continuing to reduce revenue sources down to nothing.
here, clinton is once again demonstrating the demagoguery that has defined her candidacy. a country cannot go bankrupt, and there is nothing of any value that can be gained in comparing running a country to running a business like a casino - except to confuse and mislead people.
these are conservative talking points designed to appeal to conservatives. and, get used to it. that's what this election is going to be like.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2016/05/24/clinton_trump_will_bankrupt_america_like_hes_bankrupted_his_companies_hes_a_bully_in_the_pulpit.html
at
16:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
RRuin
Jill Stein has no more serious qualifications to be POTUS than Donald Trump. The Presidency is NOT an entry level position. Sure, disgruntled Bernie followers can vote for Stein and help elect Donald Trump. No, this isn't about a lesser of two evils either. This is about a bigot, Trump, running against Hillary Clinton who is one of the most experienced and qualified candidates to run for the Presidency. It's all swell to give these academic holier than thou lectures about our democracy. But this is the real world where a vote for Stein is a vote for Trump. That is reality.If nothing else remember the future of the Supreme Court is up for grabs. Think long and hard before casting a protest vote.
Carls Pen
You're right, just look what happened in the 2000 election and see how well that worked out. If the people in this country would take the time to really understand our history they might stop making the same stupid mistakes over and over again.
loebner
let's explain for those to young
Ralph Nader ran as a liberal third party candidate vs Gore and Bush, thus ensuring Bush's victory.
Nader's followers kept saying "there's no difference between Gore and Bush."
Fools
deathtokoalas
i still don't think there would have been any difference between gore and bush except in public perception. so, when gore invaded iraq, he wouldn't have generated the same kind of protests.
loebner
No, no, no dtk. There is a world of difference between Gore and Bush. We *know* that Bush invaded Iraq. We don't *know* that Gore would have invaded. Why did Bush invade? Oil. You are aware, I presume, that the only ministry protected was oil? And that VP Cheney was CEO of Hallibuton. Gore would not have had the oil interests pushing for invasion.
And of course Bush is lauded for his concern for the environment. (sarcasm)
deathtokoalas
well, we know that gore supported the sanctions under the clinton regime, and no doubt thought that the price of hundreds of thousands of dead children was worth it. your argument that gore was less beholden to oil interests is simply not upheld by any evidence.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal?
Jill Stein has no more serious qualifications to be POTUS than Donald Trump. The Presidency is NOT an entry level position. Sure, disgruntled Bernie followers can vote for Stein and help elect Donald Trump. No, this isn't about a lesser of two evils either. This is about a bigot, Trump, running against Hillary Clinton who is one of the most experienced and qualified candidates to run for the Presidency. It's all swell to give these academic holier than thou lectures about our democracy. But this is the real world where a vote for Stein is a vote for Trump. That is reality.If nothing else remember the future of the Supreme Court is up for grabs. Think long and hard before casting a protest vote.
Carls Pen
You're right, just look what happened in the 2000 election and see how well that worked out. If the people in this country would take the time to really understand our history they might stop making the same stupid mistakes over and over again.
loebner
let's explain for those to young
Ralph Nader ran as a liberal third party candidate vs Gore and Bush, thus ensuring Bush's victory.
Nader's followers kept saying "there's no difference between Gore and Bush."
Fools
deathtokoalas
i still don't think there would have been any difference between gore and bush except in public perception. so, when gore invaded iraq, he wouldn't have generated the same kind of protests.
loebner
No, no, no dtk. There is a world of difference between Gore and Bush. We *know* that Bush invaded Iraq. We don't *know* that Gore would have invaded. Why did Bush invade? Oil. You are aware, I presume, that the only ministry protected was oil? And that VP Cheney was CEO of Hallibuton. Gore would not have had the oil interests pushing for invasion.
And of course Bush is lauded for his concern for the environment. (sarcasm)
deathtokoalas
well, we know that gore supported the sanctions under the clinton regime, and no doubt thought that the price of hundreds of thousands of dead children was worth it. your argument that gore was less beholden to oil interests is simply not upheld by any evidence.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal?
at
13:01
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
T Fletcher
Jill Stein and the Greens have a fantastic shot at getting my vote depending on how things unfold.
And remember that the Movement is much more about transforming your everyday lives and your communities than it is about voting for president.
RRuin
The President nominates the justices on the Supreme Court. If you don't think that will impact your communities than you're fooling yourself. This is not an intellectual exercise. It has real consequences. All a vote for Jill Stein will do is increase the possibility of a President Trump and a right wing Supreme Court. Then let us see if you still think the vote for President has no impact.
deathtokoalas
i'm not convinced that clinton's picks will be less right-wing than trump's. i mean, we're talking about somebody that rejected gay marriage to the very last moment, wants a constitutional restriction on access to abortion, has supported trade deals with secret tribunals, supports mass deportation and has stood up for corporate hegemony at every possible opportunity. if you let clinton shape the supreme court, she will put it on a rightward path that will not be reversible for another generation.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
Jill Stein and the Greens have a fantastic shot at getting my vote depending on how things unfold.
And remember that the Movement is much more about transforming your everyday lives and your communities than it is about voting for president.
RRuin
The President nominates the justices on the Supreme Court. If you don't think that will impact your communities than you're fooling yourself. This is not an intellectual exercise. It has real consequences. All a vote for Jill Stein will do is increase the possibility of a President Trump and a right wing Supreme Court. Then let us see if you still think the vote for President has no impact.
deathtokoalas
i'm not convinced that clinton's picks will be less right-wing than trump's. i mean, we're talking about somebody that rejected gay marriage to the very last moment, wants a constitutional restriction on access to abortion, has supported trade deals with secret tribunals, supports mass deportation and has stood up for corporate hegemony at every possible opportunity. if you let clinton shape the supreme court, she will put it on a rightward path that will not be reversible for another generation.
www.truth-out.org/news/item/36148-green-party-s-jill-stein-shares-her-plan-b-for-bernie-sanders-supporters-a-green-new-deal
at
11:09
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
23-05-2016: starts rock band. cancels tour because he has to work.
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/23.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/23.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
at
04:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to the ramifications of not being conditioned properly by tv brainwashing
somebody asked me about which saturday morning cartoons i used to watch as a kid last night, and i really drew a bank.
"my parents never had cable."
and, that's true. they didn't. but it's not really the reason - i wouldn't have watched them if i had cable, anyways. see, i do think i can actually draw larger conclusions about my individuality through my disengagement with popular culture so i think this is worth a bit of a rant.
the truth is that i used to sleep in on saturday mornings. the reason is that my parents were divorced and friday night was the time i spent with my dad. he'd often keep me up until well past midnight, even when i was very young. so, i would almost always be asleep on saturday mornings until close to noon.
i guess most parents want to put their kids to bed early on friday nights, so they can get a rest from their kids. for me, it was the opposite: i wasn't allowed to go to sleep.
so, rather than watch early morning cartoons on saturday, i always watched late night movies on fridays. and, i actually remember being isolated from the other kids because of it. they'd be talking about these cartoons, and i'd have no idea what they were talking about, so i'd just end up on the outside. had they seen the new tom hanks film? the star wars trilogy? and, the answer was they hadn't - they weren't allowed to, they wouldn't want to, they weren't able to follow...
so, i found myself unable to relate to the other kids at a pretty young age.
a pattern developed as i grew older. had i seen the new sitcom? no; i was reading a book. had i seen the new action series? i still didn't have cable. had i played the new video game? i didn't have a gaming console, and i didn't really want one - i preferred my guitar.
i've argued in the past that you could probably convert me into a normal dipshit by sitting me down and making me watch every episode of friends for a month, clockwork orange style. the reason is that the reason i'm not a normal dipshit is that i didn't watch every episode of friends. or any episode of friends. i don't know which one i am; i'm not even entirely sure which is which.
what that means is that i never got all the subtle capitalist brainwashing that they cram into television, and i've consequently never really had to reverse it. so, all the left-wing music and political commentary came at me as a tabula rasa; i didn't form myself by reacting against the status quo so much as i formed myself by not knowing what the status quo even was.
there's a lesson for parents. if you keep your kids off tv, they may end up with a higher kind of pure intelligence. but, the functional outcome of this may just end up being a life time of alienation and an inherent inability to understand how to conform.
forced brainwashing aside, i think i'm too far gone. i'm half way to my grave. i'm not worth the energy. and i kind of like myself who i am, anyways. but, in hindsight, i realize the longterm social disadvantages of not being able to relate to the people around me when i was very little and am aware that i'd be very different today had i actually watched those saturday cartoons like the other kids.
"my parents never had cable."
and, that's true. they didn't. but it's not really the reason - i wouldn't have watched them if i had cable, anyways. see, i do think i can actually draw larger conclusions about my individuality through my disengagement with popular culture so i think this is worth a bit of a rant.
the truth is that i used to sleep in on saturday mornings. the reason is that my parents were divorced and friday night was the time i spent with my dad. he'd often keep me up until well past midnight, even when i was very young. so, i would almost always be asleep on saturday mornings until close to noon.
i guess most parents want to put their kids to bed early on friday nights, so they can get a rest from their kids. for me, it was the opposite: i wasn't allowed to go to sleep.
so, rather than watch early morning cartoons on saturday, i always watched late night movies on fridays. and, i actually remember being isolated from the other kids because of it. they'd be talking about these cartoons, and i'd have no idea what they were talking about, so i'd just end up on the outside. had they seen the new tom hanks film? the star wars trilogy? and, the answer was they hadn't - they weren't allowed to, they wouldn't want to, they weren't able to follow...
so, i found myself unable to relate to the other kids at a pretty young age.
a pattern developed as i grew older. had i seen the new sitcom? no; i was reading a book. had i seen the new action series? i still didn't have cable. had i played the new video game? i didn't have a gaming console, and i didn't really want one - i preferred my guitar.
i've argued in the past that you could probably convert me into a normal dipshit by sitting me down and making me watch every episode of friends for a month, clockwork orange style. the reason is that the reason i'm not a normal dipshit is that i didn't watch every episode of friends. or any episode of friends. i don't know which one i am; i'm not even entirely sure which is which.
what that means is that i never got all the subtle capitalist brainwashing that they cram into television, and i've consequently never really had to reverse it. so, all the left-wing music and political commentary came at me as a tabula rasa; i didn't form myself by reacting against the status quo so much as i formed myself by not knowing what the status quo even was.
there's a lesson for parents. if you keep your kids off tv, they may end up with a higher kind of pure intelligence. but, the functional outcome of this may just end up being a life time of alienation and an inherent inability to understand how to conform.
forced brainwashing aside, i think i'm too far gone. i'm half way to my grave. i'm not worth the energy. and i kind of like myself who i am, anyways. but, in hindsight, i realize the longterm social disadvantages of not being able to relate to the people around me when i was very little and am aware that i'd be very different today had i actually watched those saturday cartoons like the other kids.
at
03:14
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
Monday, May 23, 2016
j reacts to the possibility that trump is being blackmailed over his tax returns
some of the conservatives that won't get behind trump are pushing his tax return situation, which is potentially a more serious scandal than hillary's emails. anonymous?
but, listen: i actually think that some people somewhere may have something on him. i know that sounds conspiratorial. and i have absolutely no evidence; it's just a hunch. but the reality is that this is actually how politics works, right. it's not just about buying influence. i mean, what's to stop trump from lying his way in to power and just not doing anything he said? i mean, this process works both ways, right. all we've ever seen is the obama-style politician that says they're going to do great things, then doesn't. this is likely what trump will end up as, too (if you think his proposals are "great things"). but there's really not any reason why the process couldn't work in reverse. there's been persistent mumbling for decades that reagan tried to reverse himself, and got shot as a result. and, the motives behind jfk's death remain unclear.
so, yes, there's influence buying. it's necessary, but not sufficient. you've also got these shady motherfuckers that sneak around in the shadows and find ways to make sure that the candidates can't get out of their control by blackmailing them into compliance.
i suspect - i have no evidence - that trump's expected compliance with the status quo will have everything to do with what are in his taxes. oops.
so, how this plays out is interesting to me. you could have both candidates facing charges. and, that might be exactly what the bastards actually want.
but, listen: i actually think that some people somewhere may have something on him. i know that sounds conspiratorial. and i have absolutely no evidence; it's just a hunch. but the reality is that this is actually how politics works, right. it's not just about buying influence. i mean, what's to stop trump from lying his way in to power and just not doing anything he said? i mean, this process works both ways, right. all we've ever seen is the obama-style politician that says they're going to do great things, then doesn't. this is likely what trump will end up as, too (if you think his proposals are "great things"). but there's really not any reason why the process couldn't work in reverse. there's been persistent mumbling for decades that reagan tried to reverse himself, and got shot as a result. and, the motives behind jfk's death remain unclear.
so, yes, there's influence buying. it's necessary, but not sufficient. you've also got these shady motherfuckers that sneak around in the shadows and find ways to make sure that the candidates can't get out of their control by blackmailing them into compliance.
i suspect - i have no evidence - that trump's expected compliance with the status quo will have everything to do with what are in his taxes. oops.
so, how this plays out is interesting to me. you could have both candidates facing charges. and, that might be exactly what the bastards actually want.
at
16:43
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
22-05-2016: baby labour & blessed at phog in windsor (and primary rants)
show footage:
baby labour: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzOmLQGDptI
blessed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTt0ZeuSAZw
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/22.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
baby labour: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzOmLQGDptI
blessed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTt0ZeuSAZw
review:
http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/shows/2016/05/22.html
tracks worked on in this vlog:
https://jasonparent.bandcamp.com/album/period-1
at
08:05
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to trump's attempts to re-define himself as the establishment candidate
yeah. you got it at the end. it's exceedingly cynical, and while i don't dispute the claim that trump is making the same errors as the people he just beat (which is kind of daft), if you look at it from this vulgar marxist/gramscian perspective then it makes a lot of sense.
it all turns on the following question: does the media cover elections, or does the media decide elections? if you take the latter perspective, and you're donald trump right now, you have to realize that the number one problem you have in front of you is that you're not the establishment candidate. so, you don't have establishment money on your side. so you don't have establishment media on your side. so, you're basically fucked, because that's what decides elections. the way you see the outcome from this perspective is obvious: clinton, msnbc and cnn gang up on him to beat him into the ground, while fox continues to spurn out punchlines for late night tv (and trump no doubt doesn't help himself, either).
it seems to contradict the narrative: he won because he's the anti-establishment. but, that was the primary. and i don't think it's true, anyways: he didn't control the outside, he controlled the center. so, the proper way to adjust is actually to go after the center in the general - which means becoming the establishment. and, i would claim that he already committed to this tactic several weeks ago.
so, you can argue that it's going to mean he's throwing away the sanders vote. really. like that was ever serious. i've argued it's his only real tactic, but it's based on the idea that he just doesn't have any space to operate on hillary's right. it's too narrow a spectrum. of course, if he can somehow knock her off the pedestal and out of being the establishment candidate then he gains the spoils - he gets the media. so, he wins. how, exactly, he thinks he's going to manage this while carrying through with his other ideas is hard to parse, of course. but what it exposes is the tactical impossibility that he really faces.
....meaning that it might seem like he's throwing away his advantage on the surface, but what he's really doing is cutting his losses and going all in. risky, but high reward - and not dumb. he just doesn't have good options.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdeUL2a2ZPw
it all turns on the following question: does the media cover elections, or does the media decide elections? if you take the latter perspective, and you're donald trump right now, you have to realize that the number one problem you have in front of you is that you're not the establishment candidate. so, you don't have establishment money on your side. so you don't have establishment media on your side. so, you're basically fucked, because that's what decides elections. the way you see the outcome from this perspective is obvious: clinton, msnbc and cnn gang up on him to beat him into the ground, while fox continues to spurn out punchlines for late night tv (and trump no doubt doesn't help himself, either).
it seems to contradict the narrative: he won because he's the anti-establishment. but, that was the primary. and i don't think it's true, anyways: he didn't control the outside, he controlled the center. so, the proper way to adjust is actually to go after the center in the general - which means becoming the establishment. and, i would claim that he already committed to this tactic several weeks ago.
so, you can argue that it's going to mean he's throwing away the sanders vote. really. like that was ever serious. i've argued it's his only real tactic, but it's based on the idea that he just doesn't have any space to operate on hillary's right. it's too narrow a spectrum. of course, if he can somehow knock her off the pedestal and out of being the establishment candidate then he gains the spoils - he gets the media. so, he wins. how, exactly, he thinks he's going to manage this while carrying through with his other ideas is hard to parse, of course. but what it exposes is the tactical impossibility that he really faces.
....meaning that it might seem like he's throwing away his advantage on the surface, but what he's really doing is cutting his losses and going all in. risky, but high reward - and not dumb. he just doesn't have good options.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdeUL2a2ZPw
at
01:22
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
j reacts to trump's use of an undefined ternary or quaternary? logic system
"She talked about guns in classrooms. I don't want to have guns in classrooms. Although in some cases, teachers should have guns in classrooms, frankly. You look at some of our schools. Unbelievable what is going on. But I'm not advocating guns in classrooms. But remember, in some cases, trained teachers should be able to have guns in classrooms."
i don't know what logic system trump uses. what's the status of de morgan's laws? are we going to get a paper, here, or what?
maybe we can try and use an artificial intelligence on the d-wave system to decode it?
da fuck, really.
and, you doubted that funding for nasa would be useful. ye of little faith.
https://ti.arc.nasa.gov/tech/dash/physics/quail/
i don't know what logic system trump uses. what's the status of de morgan's laws? are we going to get a paper, here, or what?
maybe we can try and use an artificial intelligence on the d-wave system to decode it?
da fuck, really.
and, you doubted that funding for nasa would be useful. ye of little faith.
https://ti.arc.nasa.gov/tech/dash/physics/quail/
at
00:35
Location:
Windsor, ON, Canada
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