From Pine View Farm

July, 2017 archive

Upgrade 0

Mageia v. 6 with the Plasma Desktop and the Oxygen color scheme.
The wallpaper is from my own library.

I spent time yesterday upgrading my laptop from Mageia v. 5 to Mageia v. 6.

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Immunity Impunity 0

We are told that, “if you see something, say something.”

Well, that certainly worked out nicely for this lady.

What the hell sickness has infected the police?

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If One Standard Is Good, Two Must Be Better 0

Congressman Elijah Cummings: For Republican, there was no allegation too small to investigate with respect to Secretary Clinton.  Now, there is no scandal too big to ignore for Donald Trump.

Via Job’s Anger.

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QOTD 0

Lawrence Tribe:

There are a lot of things that fit on a bumper sticker in terms of either liberty or equality or progress that when made more concrete just don’t pan out.

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In Flight 0

Some more pictures from my brother in Virginia’s Northern Neck:

Eagle in flight

Eagle in flight

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Following the Trail of Crumbs 0

Frame One:  A furious Donald Trump says,


Click for the original image.

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Bargaining with the Devilish 0

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

It is polite to throw your grandchildren under the bus. Politeness must be a Family Value.

Originally, both grandparents stated that their 10-year-old grandson shot the pistol twice after being asked to retrieve it for the grandfather. One of the rounds ended up hitting the grandfather in the leg.

But the investigation continued and deputies managed to interview the 10-year-old boy after his mother contacted them.

The boy stated that his grandparents were arguing which led to Hawkins getting the pistol and shooting towards her husband. The boy told deputies that his grandmother “did not mean to” shoot his grandfather.

You can’t make this stuff up, at least, you can’t if you are sane.

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In the Shadows 0

Inset:  Republican Elephant says to man holding


Click for the original image.

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Credulity Gap 0

Brian Greenspun stands amazed at the willing, compliant credulity of the Trumpettes. A snippet:

It is easier to believe that a baby can take over a year to be born than it is to believe that the Russians did not interfere in our elections to help Donald Trump win the White House. And that Trump’s friends, associates and/or family were up to their elbows in that effort.

I don’t know if what happened is criminal, yet. That is what the special counsel will determine. Criminal or not — maybe the Trump team really is just incompetent and stupid — what we are watching in real time couldn’t even be conceived of in the minds of Hollywood’s most creative writers.

But, beyond all of this, what is criminal to me is that practically every Republican voter and elected official believes it is OK and patriotically American to just accept what Trump says even though what he says is now totally and demonstrably untrue.

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Russian Impulses 0

Shaun Mullen follows the money trail. A snippet:

Beginning in 1984, over 30 years before he ran for president, Trump began tapping into what would become an extensive network of contacts with corrupt businessmen, mobsters and money launderers from the former Soviet Union, Russia and their satellite states to make deals ranging from real-estate sales to beauty pageants sponsorships to bailing out his frequently ailing enterprises.

It is tempting to say that Trump built that network himself as his business empire grew, but in reality members of the network more often used him as a convenient patsy. This has been especially true of money launderers.

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QOTD 0

Barbara Tuchman:

War is the unfolding of miscalculations.

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Palette Cleanser 0

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Conn Game 0

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The New Populism 0

We often hear the term “populism” applied to right-wing political movements. Frankly, I don’t think “populist” is an accurate term. These movements appeal to the fears of the populace, often embracing nationalist and racist themes to stoke those fears.

They are not “populist” in the same way the American political movement called “Populism” was; that was a movement of farmers and workers, primarily in the upper Midwest, which wished to limit the power of industrialists a century ago. I suspect the news media have adopted the term “populist” as a gentler alternative to “fascist” or, perhaps more descriptive, “fascistic.”

At the Boston Review, Rogers Brubaker explores the appeal and spread of these movements. Here’s a bit:

This extraordinary populist moment did not, of course, emerge from nowhere. It was prepared by two sets of structural transformations which have steadily expanded opportunities for populism over the last several decades.

The weakening of parties and party systems and changes in the relation between media and politics have fostered a kind of generic populism, a heightened tendency—shared by both the left and the right—to address “the people” directly. Party membership and loyalty have plummeted, and in many countries parties that had long dominated the political system have collapsed. This has encouraged politicians to appeal to the people as a whole rather than to specific social constituencies represented by parties.

The pervasive “mediatization of politics,” the intensifying commercialization of the media, and the accelerated development of new communications technologies have likewise made politicians less dependent on parties and more inclined to appeal directly to “the people.” They have also encouraged a populist style of communication, characterized by dramatization, confrontation, negativity, emotionalization, personalization, visualization, and hyper-simplification.

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All That Was Old Is New Again 0

Keith Elkon has seen it before.

People of color pulled from the streets and thrown into paddy wagons. Relentless attacks on the “liberal press.” Persistent distortion of truths, nationalism and patriotism. That is the apartheid South Africa I remember and the country and system of injustice that I left in 1976. Not an act of courage, an act of defeat. The courageous stayed on and opposed the regime in whatever way they could. The courageous were persecuted, prosecuted, put under house arrest and some disappeared.

How did such a system of injustice become law of the land? The answer is that a simple and powerful tactic — fear — the “swart gevaar” won over the white electorate. Swart gevaar is an Afrikaans term literally meaning “black danger.”

Follow the link the rest.

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Return of the Know Nothings 0

Excerpt:

. . . this is only the second time in the history of the United States that being stupid is a political virtue.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Always be polite when attending the show.

According to the Adams County Sheriff’s Office, one man was shot while attending the Tanner Gun Show Saturday,

Witnesses told CBS4’s Dillon Thomas the man was shot by another attendee, unintentionally.

“There was a bang, and then a gentleman screamed,” one witness, who wished not to be identified, said. “I saw a man bleeding from the lower right leg.”

The story goes on to say that one of the persons present suggested that the remedy for such incidents is always to have a first aid kit handy because you never know when some gun nut will shoot another gun nut because stupid.

The stupid.

It burns.

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Twin Towers 0

Picture of Eiffel Tower labeled


Click to see the image at its original location.

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Tales of the Trumpling–Snapshots of Trickle-Down Trumpery 0

Hospitality suit (emphasis added).

An Airbnb host who canceled a woman’s reservation using a racist remark has been ordered to pay $5,000 in damages for racial discrimination and take a course in Asian American studies.

Dyne Suh, a 26-year-old law clerk, had booked Tami Barker’s mountain cabin in Big Bear, California, for a skiing weekend with friends in February, but Barker canceled the reservation by text message minutes before they arrived,stating: “I wouldn’t rent it to u if u were the last person on earth” and “One word says it all. Asian”.

(snip)

When Suh said she’d complain to Airbnb about the racist remark, Barker replied: “It’s why we have Trump … and I will not allow this country to be told what to do by foreigners.”

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