From Pine View Farm

Author's archive

Patriot Gamers 0

Thom argues nationalism and patriotism are not the same thing and that nationalism is inimical to patriotism. He quotes the French president:

President Macron said that nationalism is a betrayal. “By pursuing our own interests first with no regard to others, we erase the very thing that a nation hold most precious, that which gives it life and what makes it great, its moral values.”

He also points out that America was founded on an idea, however imperfectly that idea may have been implemented, not on white DNA. He argues that today’s Republican Party has forsaken patriotism for (white) nationalism. And, to steal a phrase from Mark Twain that my two or three regular readers know quite well, Thom hears an echo a rhyme from history.

Listen to his reasoning.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Yet another oxymoronic “responsible gun owner” feels compelled to flaunt his portable phallus in public.

“It appears the suspect drove through Mocksville firing a handgun and then traveled I-40 eastbound from the Hwy. 601 exit,” (Davie County, N. C., Sheriff J.D.–edl) Hartman reported. “The suspect then fired rounds and struck a driver and truck.”

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A Picture Is Worth 0

Venn Diagram showing

Via Juanita Jean’s.

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Courting Disaster 0

Empty suits.

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QOTD 0

Booker T. Washington:

No greater injury can be done to any youth than to let him feel that because he belongs to this or that race he will be advanced in life regardless of his own merits or efforts.

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Errata 0

(I have made this post a “sticky” so it will appear at the top of the page until I unstick it in a few days.)

(Unstuck 2024-08-05.)

In preparing a post that will appear tomorrow (WordPress allows you to schedule future posts), I learned that I have been misquoting Mark Twain, fortunately in a way that did not alter the intent of what he said. He did not say that history “often echoes,” he said that it “often rhymes.”

Using the blog’s “search” feature, I went back and fixed my mistakes (I reserve the right to fix my mistakes). I can’t say that I got all of them, but I think I got most of them.

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Republican Family Values 0

Donald Trump’s nephew speaks with ABC News about his uncle.

Via The Root, which has commentary.

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Vaccine Nation 0

At The Seattle Times, physicians and medical school professsors Christopher A. Sanford and Paul Pottinger debunk de anti-vaxxer bunk.

I find the article commendable not because it breaks new ground. It does not. But it thoroughly demolishes the four primary anti-vaxx lies in one succinct piece.

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The Disinformation Superhighway 0

Rebecca Watson draws a line between intentional dis- and misinformation on the Disinformation Superhighway and what she refers to as sh*tposting (which I can best define as sort of stupid wisecracks intended as “humor”). She uses as a starting point the J. D. Vance couch slur and how it went from a casual and completely fabricated post on the site that used to be known as Twitter to a torrent of tripe (warning: some language).

Or you can read the transcript.

Afterthought:

Methinks the primary take-away here is that “social” media isn’t.

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Donning His Robes 0

Frame One:  Donald Trump raises a cross as an onlooker says,

Click to view the original image.

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Weird Times 0

Thom responds to a caller who thinks that calling Trump and Vance “weird” is a bad tactic by pointing out that calling Trump weird is an understatement.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Another case of courtesy on the concrete.

We are a society of stupid.

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Twits Own Twitter X Offenders 0

Elon Mush has a new suit.

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QOTD 0

J. B. Priestley:

Living in an age of advertisement, we are perpetually disillusioned. The perfect life is spread before us every day, but it changes and withers at a touch.

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A Tune for the Times 0

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“I Don’t Care If It’s True, It’s What I Believe” 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Jessica Koehler explores why persons cling to beliefs even when they are demonstrably false, aka “belief persistence,” and offers some techniques for combating it. A snippet:

Politics is a domain rife with belief perseverance. Political beliefs are often deeply ingrained and tied to one’s identity, making them particularly resistant to change. This is evident in how people consume news and information. Individuals tend to gravitate towards media sources that align with their existing political beliefs, reinforcing their viewpoints while dismissing opposing perspectives.

Given the debased state of dis coarse discourse, this is a valuable read; I commend it to your attention.

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A Question of Identity 0

PoliticalProf.

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The Self-Made Man 0

Title:  Weirdo Welfare.  Frame One, captioned

Click to view the original image.

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“The Gorilla Code” 0

Sam and the crew take a deep dive into the Republican world of weird.

Words fail me.

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Republican Thought Police 0

In Republican World, historical fact is a “divisive concept.”

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