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Stranger than Fiction The Current Situation

Possibly the best use of “Yakety Sax” (a.k.a. “The Benny Hill Theme”) ever [UPDATED]

As news of upper class twit of the century and UK Prime Minister Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson’s (yes, that’s his real name) resignation was announced, some merry pranksters decided to blast Yakety Sax (a.k.a. the Benny Hill theme) outside British Parliament, and it was perfect.

Update: Hugh Grant (yes, that Hugh Grant) requested it!

According to ITV News:

It’s now emerged that Brexit protester Steve Bray played the iconic slapstick music outside number 10 Downing Street, after a request on Twitter from the actor Hugh Grant.

The blaring theme could be overheard in live news broadcasts as journalists delivered the latest developments in the political drama.

Mr Bray celebrated the return of his speakers on Thursday morning, a week after having them confiscated under a new law that aims to cut down on loud protests.

Categories
Stranger than Fiction

That’s not how feet work!

Look very carefully at the foot in the poster above. Whoever Photoshopped it clearly didn’t.

Categories
America The Current Situation

What’s with all these Republicans who want to kill kids?

The question Americans should all be asking is: “Are Republicans okay?” Because if Scott Adams and Debbie Lesko’s recent statements are any indication, the answer is a very resounding “Hell no!”

Scott Adams

As a techie, I used to enjoy Scott Adams’ work as the creator of the Dilbert comic strip. As a decent human being, I stopped enjoying them as Adams’ fame and fortune grew and he started revealing his true self to the world, from his opinion on women…

The reality is that women are treated differently by society for exactly the same reason that children and the mentally handicapped are treated differently. It’s just easier this way for everyone. You don’t argue with a four-year old about why he shouldn’t eat candy for dinner. You don’t punch a mentally handicapped guy even if he punches you first. And you don’t argue when a women tells you she’s only making 80 cents to your dollar. It’s the path of least resistance. You save your energy for more important battles.”

…to borderline Holocaust denialism…

I’d also like to know how the Holocaust death total of 6 million was determined. Is it the sort of number that is so well documented with actual names and perhaps a Nazi paper trail that no historian could doubt its accuracy, give or take ten thousand? Or is it like every other LRN (large round number) that someone pulled out of his ass and it became true by repetition? Does the figure include resistance fighters and civilians who died in the normal course of war, or just the Jews rounded up and killed systematically? No reasonable person doubts that the Holocaust happened, but wouldn’t you like to know how the exact number was calculated, just for context? Without that context, I don’t know if I should lump the people who think the Holocaust might have been exaggerated for political purposes with the Holocaust deniers. If they are equally nuts, I’d like to know that. I want context.

…to profiting from tragedy (and to put the awful cherry on top of the shit sundae, with blockchain) :

When a gunman opened fire at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy, California, on Sunday evening, killing at least three people, including a 6-year-old boy, and wounding 12 others, Dilbert creator Scott Adams apparently saw a juicy marketing opportunity for his blockchain app.

And now, we have Scott Adams’ tweets from this morning, which he made in response to the Fourth of July shooting in Highland Park:

Here’s the text from these tweets:

The Highland shooting and every Fentanyl overdose death among the young are teaching us the same lesson, and we refuse to learn it. It’s difficult, but I’m qualified to give you this lesson (unfortunately).

This won’t be easy to read.

When a young male (let’s say 14 to 19) is a danger to himself and others, society gives the supporting family two options:

1. Watch people die.

2. Kill your own son.

Those are your only options. I chose and watched my stepson die. I was relieved he took no one else with him.

If you think there is a third choice, in which your wisdom and tough love, along with government services, “fixes” that broken young man, you are living in a delusion.

There are no other options. You have to either murder your own son or watch him die and maybe kill others.

If one more person hallucinates to me about some “program” where teens are kidnapped and “fixed” and returned to their happy parents, I might explode. No such thing exists. You have two options. Only two. No help is coming. Only death and suffering.

You are probably twisting in your seat and you want to tell me all of your good ideas about how there really are services and ways to deal with such a teen. There are none. You haven’t been there. Many parents have looked for such help. I have lots of resources. Doesn’t help.

If I were to invent a solution to the dangerous young man problem, I think it would involve putting them all in one place so they could only hurt each other, not necessarily in jail, just away from society. Once they are separated from society (and drugs) maybe help is possible.

It isn’t legal to take a young man’s bodily autonomy just because he “seems dangerous” but that has to be considered at this point. Otherwise parents have two options. And you get more of what we are getting.

So those are the only choices: Kill or be killed. It’s bleak, it’s nihilistic, and it’s pretty on-brand.

Luckily, we’ve had at least one man who had a troubled youth speak up and say there are other ways and that paths to redemption actually do exist: James Gunn, the director of Guardians of the Galaxy, The Suicide Squad, and Peacemaker:

“Hey Scott Adams: As someone who was himself a violent teenager addicted to drugs & entered recovery with the help & love of his family, as well as someone who has seen dozens of other young men stay sober & become fruitful members of society, these are not the only two options,” Gunn tweeted.

Here’s another good response:

Debbie Lesko

Representative Debbie Lesko of Arizona gave a rather unhinged speech today when she took the floor of the House of Representatives to oppose a gun safety bill. Watch the video here:

She said:

“I have five grandchildren,” the congresswoman began in her Tuesday speech. “I would do anything—anything—to protect my five grandchildren. Including, as a last resort, shooting them, if I had to, to protect the lives of my grandchildren.” Growing more angry, Lesko then accused Democrats of trying to “take away my right to protect my grandchildren” and “the rights of law-abiding citizens to protect their own children.”

It’s all very “we had to destroy the village to save it.”

So the question remains: Are Republicans okay? Because some of the more vocal ones sound like death cultists.

Recommended reading

Categories
America The Current Situation The Good Fight

Just a reminder…

Black man wearing T-shirt that says “Stop pretending your racism is patriotism.”

For context:

Categories
America The Current Situation

Happy Independence Day (and a message from Captain America)

I’m wishing everyone a happy and safe Fourth of July, and sharing this excerpt from issue #1 of the 2021 comic book The United States of Captain America:

Tap to view at full size.

This is the white picket fence fallacy that, if we’re not careful, becomes nationalism. Jingoism.

That dream isn’t real. It never was.

Because that dream doesn’t get along nicely with reality. Other cultures. Immigrants. The poor. The suffering. People easily come to be seen as “different” or “unamerican.”

The white picket fence becomes a gate to keep others out.

A good dream is shared.

Shared radically. Shared with everyone.

When something isn’t shared, it can become the American Lie.

Tap to view at full size.

The Lie is a real problem. Because it comes in the form of an empty promise.

A while back, we told the world they could come here for a better life. But too often we turn our backs on them.

Instead of a dream, they get handed a raw deal.

Then there is the second dream.

This one’s real.

But we don’t hold it. Or own it. Heck, we can’t even touch it.

We reach for it.

We work. We toil. We struggle. We fight. Together.

We may never reach it, but we never stop trying.

That’s my dream.

 

Here’s to the dream. Have a great holiday, everyone!


Captain America in “Avengers: Endgame,” holding his shield and Mjolnir.

Also worth checking out: Happy Independence Day, superhero-style!

Categories
The Current Situation

Before you complain about U.S. gas prices…

Map of gasoline prices around the world for June 7. 2022.
Tap to view at full size.

There’s a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth about gas prices here in the U.S., but it’s not coming from me, because:

  1. Gas prices are a bargain here compared just about every other place on the planet, and
  2. My car use is so low that I go to the gas station only once every 4 – 5 weeks, and I regard my gas tank the same way cats regard their food bowls: half-full means empty.

In case you’re wondering how I get my errands and shopping done, I do most of them by doing about 10 kilometres each day on the conveyance pictured below:

Joey deVilla’s bike in front of a flower stand.
Tap to view at full size.
Categories
The Current Situation

Happy Canada Day! Enjoy some Canadian flags.

For the longest time, Canada didn’t have an official flag. Instead, it made unofficial use of its variant of the British Red Ensign, a red flag with the Union flag in the upper left-hand corner — the canton — and a Canadian-themed coat of arms in the rightmost area — the fly. From just after Confederation to 1921, the flag looked like this:

canadian red ensign 1

…and then from 1921 to 1957, it looked like this:

canadian red ensign 2

…and from 1957 to 1965, it looked like this:

canadian red ensign 3

Through the 20th century, there were attempts to get an official flag made, and it took the Great Canadian Flag Debate of 1964 — nearly 100 years after the formation of the country — to finally get a flag that was all our own. There was bitter debate over its design, which was captured nicely in this painting by Rex Woods, who could be described as Canada’s answer to Norman Rockwell:

picking a canadian flag
Tap to view at full size.

Of the designs featured in the paining, I’m kind of fond of the “psychedelic maple leaf” one:

psychedelic canadian flag

In the end, we got the simple, sharp, and iconic design that we know and love as the present-day Canadian flag. Happy Canada Day, everyone!

canadian flag