From Pine View Farm

July, 2024 archive

The Courage of His Conniptions 0

Methinks this sets some kind of new record for weasel-wording.

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QOTD 0

Salmon Rushdie:

It matters, it always matters, to name rubbish as rubbish … to do otherwise is to legitimize it.

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Break Time 0

Off to drink liberally.

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The Wannabe 0

Donald Trump says,

Click for the original image.

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Law for Sale 0

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What’s in a Name? 0

Apparently, in this case, getting a job interview.

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Patriot Gamers 0

Frame One, captioned

Click to view the original image.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Yet another oxymoronic “responsible gun owner.” . . . Yet another child . . . .

The child was immediately transported to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries and was treated.

CCSO (Clay County, Florida, Sheriff’s Office–ed,) said a preliminary investigation revealed the child found the parent’s handgun and accidentally discharged the firearm. Nobody else was injured.

Just another day in NRA Paradise.

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Fly the Fiendly Skies 0

They are getting fiendlier every day.

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QOTD 0

Henry Rollins:

More guns equaling more safety is a slippery slope, and what makes it so is human blood.

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Dog Gone It 0

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Alphabet Slop 0

As I zipped through drug commercials on the DVR–and there are sure lots of them since advertising prescription drugs to the public was allowed–I theorized that drug companies made up drug names by pouring letters into two big bins like the ones used for lottery numbers–one bin for vowels and one for consonants–then pulled out letters at random from each.

Now comes Roger Kreuz, writing at Psychology Today Blogs, to explain that there is indeed a system to the synthesis of multi-syllabic pharmaceutical gibberish. For example:

Drug companies use marketing consultants to help them create brand names for their wares. These are typically two syllables or more in length, and the letters H, J, K, and Y are mostly avoided because they aren’t used in all languages that employ the Roman alphabet.

Follow the link for an insight to the psychology of branding.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Steve M. notes a disparity in the press coverage, which leads him to remark upon what he argues is a longstanding trend. I’m not sure I agree with all his conclusions, but, given that today’s reportage is sweating bullets over Biden’s being three years older than Trump while ignoring (or, at least, de-emphasizing) Trump’s raving falsehoods and fantastic fabrications, methinks his piece is worth a read.

Here’s a bit of his article:

But even if you believe that Trump’s brain is full of failing neurons rather than right-wing disinformation, it’s hard to believe that the media has a categorical bias toward portraying major-party candidates as coherent. If that were the case, we wouldn’t have had months of stories in the media questioning the mental fitness of Joe Biden.

What we have instead is a bias toward normalizing Republicans, a process that’s usually accompanied by an “othering” of Democrats. This has been going on for decades: Walter Mondale was a gloomy wimp, Michael Dukakis was an effete Ivy League weirdo, Al Gore was a prissy egghead, Hillary Clinton was a cackling ballbuster. Their opponents were Real Americans, fond of country music, pickup trucks, and plain-spoken common sense.

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“When People Show You Who They Are, Believe Them the First Time,”* Reprise 0

A woman and a black man stocks.  Woman says,

Via Job’s Anger.

______________

*Maya Angelou.

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“When People Show You Who They Are, Believe Them the First Time”* 0

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Gene Collier takes a close look at the implications of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025. He finds it–er–less than attractive.

Indeed, he characterizes it as a “MAGA Manifesto.”

Follow the first link for 900 pages of secessionist propaganda said project.

Follow the second to learn why Collier sees it as a “MAGA Manifesto.”

Aside:

I not exactly sure what heritage the “Heritage” Foundation is celebrating, but it sounds not unlike the legacy of one of my late relatives.
_____________

*Maya Angelou.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

As we all know, politeness takes practice.

At around 5 p.m. on Friday, July 5, the man was shot in the abdomen by a rifle that discharged when another man was attempting to unload it at the George Nourse Gun Range south of Nampa, the Canyon County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release. The man died at the scene after life-saving measures were unsuccessful.

One more time, “responsible gun owner” is an oxymoron.

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Denial Is Not Just a River in Egypt 0

According the Stephanie Hayes at the Tampa Bay Times, it’s also Florida’s approach to the reality of climate change.

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QOTD 0

Paddy Chayefsky:

Television is democracy at its ugliest.

Afterthought:

I wonder what he would thought about “social” media.

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A Tune for the Times 0

Mangy Fetlocks stands aghast marvels at right-wing evangelical they-call-themselves Christians embrace of Trump.

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Misinformation Multiplication 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Robert N. McCauley takes a look at a recent book by Paul Thagard, Falsehoods Fly: Why Misinformation Spreads and How to Stop It. I commend his piece to your attention, especially now, when one can spout unsourced anything. A snippet (emphasis added):

Making stuff up often works because, as Thagard notes, people tend to believe what they are told unless something is clearly untoward either about the statement itself or about the person making it. Since, currently, so many get so much of their information from social media, people typically haven’t a clue about who originally advanced most of the claims that they encounter. Consequently, just as with hearsay, unless the stuff that people make up is obviously faulty, recipients are unlikely to bring their critical faculties to bear. Thagard observes that one of the less attractive features of the new AI systems is precisely their ability to make things up (known as AI “hallucinations”).

Afterthought:

You can’t “consider the source” when you can’t identify the source.

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