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Messages - Starling

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1
News / Re: Trump disapproval
« on: April 04, 2021, 05:28:03 pm »
The Republican Party Is Now in Its End Stages
The GOP has become, in form if not in content, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of the late 1970s.



Quote
We are living in a time of bad metaphors. Everything is fascism, or socialism; Hitler’s Germany, or Stalin’s Soviet Union. Republicans, especially, want their followers to believe that America is on the verge of a dramatic time, a moment of great conflict such as 1968—or perhaps, even worse, 1860. (The drama is the point, of course. No one ever says, “We’re living through 1955.”)

Ironically, the GOP is indeed replicating another political party in another time, but not as the heroes they imagine themselves to be. The Republican Party has become, in form if not in content, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of the late 1970s.

I can already hear the howls about invidious comparisons. I do not mean that modern American Republicans are communists. Rather, I mean that the Republicans have entered their own kind of end-stage Bolshevism, as members of a party that is now exhausted by its failures, cynical about its own ideology, authoritarian by reflex, controlled as a personality cult by a failing old man, and looking for new adventures to rejuvenate its fortunes.

No one thinks much about the Soviet Union in the late 1970s, and no one really should. This was a time referred to by the last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, as the vremia zastoia—“the era of stagnation.” By that point, the Soviet Communist Party was a spent force, and ideological conviction was mostly for chumps and fanatics. A handful of party ideologues and the senior officers of the Soviet military might still have believed in “Marxism-Leninism”—the melding of aspirational communism to one-party dictatorship—but by and large, Soviet citizens knew that the party’s formulations about the rights of all people were just window dressing for rule by a small circle of old men in the Kremlin.

“The party” itself was not a party in any Western sense, but a vehicle for a cabal of elites, with a cult of personality at its center. The Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was an utterly mediocre man, but by the late 1970s he had cemented his grip on the Communist Party by elevating opportunists and cronies around him who insisted, publicly and privately, that Brezhnev was a heroic genius. Factories and streets and even a city were named for him, and he promoted himself to the top military rank of “Marshal of the Soviet Union.” He awarded himself so many honors and medals that, in a common Soviet joke of the time, a small earthquake in Moscow was said to have been caused by Brezhnev’s medal-festooned military overcoat falling off its hanger.

The elite leaders of this supposedly classless society were corrupt plutocrats, a mafia dressed in Marxism. The party was infested by careerists, and its grip on power was defended by propagandists who used rote phrases such as “real socialism” and “Western imperialism” so often that almost anyone could write an editorial in Pravda or Red Star merely by playing a kind of Soviet version of Mad Libs. News was tightly controlled. Soviet radio, television, and newspaper figures plowed on through stories that were utterly detached from reality, regularly extolling the successes of Soviet agriculture even as the country was forced to buy food from the capitalists (including the hated Americans).

Members of the Communist Party who questioned anything, or expressed any sign of unorthodoxy, could be denounced by name, or more likely, simply fired. They would not be executed—this was not Stalinism, after all—but some were left to rot in obscurity in some make-work exile job, eventually retiring as a forgotten “Comrade Pensioner.” The deal was clear: Pump the party’s nonsense and enjoy the good life, or squawk and be sent to manage a library in Kazakhstan.

This should all sound familiar.

The Republican Party has, for years, ignored the ideas and principles it once espoused, to the point where the 2020 GOP convention simply dispensed with the fiction of a platform and instead declared the party to be whatever Comrade—excuse me, President—Donald Trump said it was.

Like Brezhnev, Trump has grown in status to become a heroic figure among his supporters. If the Republicans could create the rank of “Marshal of the American Republic” and strike a medal for a “Hero of American Culture,” Trump would have them both by now.

A GOP that once prided itself on its intellectual debates is now ruled by the turgid formulations of what the Soviets would have called their “leading cadres,” including ideological watchdogs such as Tucker Carlson and Mark Levin. Like their Soviet predecessors, a host of dull and dogmatic cable outlets, screechy radio talkers, and poorly written magazines crank out the same kind of fill-in-the-blanks screeds full of delusional accusations, replacing “NATO” and “revanchism” with “antifa” and “radicalism.”

Falling in line, just as in the old Communist Party, is rewarded, and independence is punished. The anger directed at Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger makes the stilted ideological criticisms of last century’s Soviet propagandists seem almost genteel by comparison. (At least Soviet families under Brezhnev didn’t add three-page handwritten denouncements to official party reprimands.)

This comparison is more than a metaphor; it is a warning. A dying party can still be a dangerous party. The Communist leaders in those last years of political sclerosis arrayed a new generation of nuclear missiles against NATO, invaded Afghanistan, tightened the screws on Jews [a broken clock is right twice a day] and other dissidents, lied about why they shot down a civilian 747 airliner, and, near the end, came close to starting World War III out of sheer paranoia.

The Republican Party is, for now, more of a danger to the United States than to the world. But like the last Soviet-era holdouts in the Kremlin, its cadres are growing more aggressive and paranoid. They blame spies and provocateurs for the Capitol riot, and they are obsessed with last summer’s protests (indeed, they are fixated on all criminals and rioters other than their own) to a point that now echoes the old Soviet lingo about “antisocial elements” and “hooligans.” They blame their failures at the ballot box not on their own shortcomings, but on fraud and sabotage as the justification for a redoubled crackdown on democracy.

Another lesson from all this history is that the Republicans have no path to reform. Like their Soviet counterparts, their party is too far gone. Gorbachev tried to reform the Soviet Communist Party, and he remains reviled among the Soviet faithful to this day. Similar efforts by the remaining handful of reasonable Republicans are unlikely to fare any better. The Republican Party, to take a phrase from the early Soviet leader Leon Trotsky, should now be deposited where it belongs: in the “dustbin of history.”

Quoting Trotsky at the end... eh, it makes a point, but Trotsky should also wind up in said dustbin.

2
Issues / Re: Uniting Americans
« on: April 04, 2021, 05:15:22 pm »
Amtrak releases map of expanded US rail network it says it can build with $80 billion from Biden's infrastructure plan


https://www.businessinsider.com/map-amtrak-could-build-expanded-rail-network-biden-infrastructure-plan-2021-4

https://news.yahoo.com/amtrak-releases-map-expanded-us-102634534.html

Quote
  • Amtrak has released a map of a proposed expanded US rail network.
  • It says it could be built with $80 billion from President Biden's $2 trillion infrastructure plan.
  • The company said the new network could expand or improve service for about 20 million people.

Amtrak has released a map of an expanded US rail network that it says it can build with $80 billion from President Joe Biden's $2 trillion infrastructure plan.

The light-blue lines represent what would be new services, while the orange lines show services that would be extended.

Amtrak said it could create more than 30 new routes and connect 160 new communities, and expand or improve rail service for some 20 million people. Materials prepped for the announcement said the plan would bolster transportation options for diverse populations throughout the country.

The new routes include cities that haven't before been connected to the national rail service, including western outposts like Las Vegas and Phoenix, Amtrak said.

It would also break ground on routes throughout the southern US, including ones to Nashville, Tennessee; Montgomery, Alabama; and Macon, Georgia.

Biden unveiled his $2 trillion plan on Wednesday, as the first part of a likely $4 trillion plan.

The first part is called the American Jobs Plan, and plans federal spending on infrastructure like roads, bridges, and ports, and on cutting US carbon emissions.

Biden called it a "once-in-a-generation investment in America."

Amtrak said that its proposal would be more energy efficient than people driving or flying, and that it would bring economic benefits to regions.

It also said it would serve the US's growing population and fill in "gaps" left by falling numbers of bus and plane routes.

Amtrak CEO Bill Flynn said in a statement shared with Insider: "President Biden's infrastructure plan is what this nation has been waiting for. Amtrak must rebuild and improve the Northeast Corridor, our National Network and expand our service to more of America."

"With this federal investment, Amtrak will create jobs and improve equity across cities, regions, and the entire country — and we are ready to deliver," he added. "America needs a rail network that offers frequent, reliable, sustainable and equitable train service. Now is our time, let's make rail the solution."

As a US senator, Biden traveled from Delaware to Washington, DC, every day, earning him the nickname "Amtrak Joe."

Republicans say they will probably vote against any tax increases that would finance the project.

3
Issues / Decolonizing Cinema
« on: March 29, 2021, 07:27:33 pm »
Colonialism & The Lost World
https://youtu.be/lyczktZVbzA

An excellent vlog. Stays within PC, yet makes very valid points that show a good direction.
An overview of the 5 major screen adaptations of Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World" with a focus on colonialist tropes and Western bias.

Opening quote:
"...a deep sympathy for (indigenous) people as an ideal while being hostile
towards those (Natives) who fall short of that construct." ~Linda Tuhiwai Smith

Critical Points Made:
*9:13* - a take down of "A Patriots' History of the United States" which is described as a "a self-congratulatory white supremacist fantasy fable" and a fave of Steve Bannon.
NOTE: The common opposing piece (not mentioned in the vlog) "A People's History of the United States" by Howard Zinn (Jew) is not mentioned.

*10:15* - Facts about Christopher Columbus, including the one that many of his own men hated him for his treatment of Americans. Columbus was arrested, stripped of his titles, and imprisoned by the Spanish Empire itself.

*11:31* - "The first whites to explore many parts of the Americas therefore would have encountered places that were already depopulated. As a result... all colonial population estimates were too low. Many of them, put together just after epidemics [due to plagues from cattle herding "explorers"], would have represented population nadirs, not approximations of pre-contact numbers." ~ Charles C. Mann, "1491" (2005)

*11:58* - Tawantinsuyu, the name the "Inca" used for themselves.
They were hit with the first smallpox epidemic in 1524, seven years BEFORE meeting Europeans.
Half of them died.

*12:56* - town names explained --> basically Europeans arrived onto already cultivated land.

*25:22* - a quote from one of Columbus's men:
"While I was in the boat, I captured a very beautiful woman, whom the Lord Admiral [Columbus, there's his title] gave to me. When I had taken her to my cabin she was naked - as was their custom. I was filled with a desire to take my pleasure with her and attempted to satisfy my desire. She was unwilling, and so treated me with her nails that I wished I had never begun. I them took a piece of rope and whipped her soundly, and she let forth such incredible screams that you would not have believed your ears. Eventually we came to such terms, I assure you, that you would have thought she had been brought up in a school for ****."
This was during Columbus's second voyage and shortly before his arrest.
And to think, it was ONE OF THESE GUYS that grew to hate Columbus.

*27:18* - Take down of the "white savior" trope
"The Desire to make contact with those bodies deemed Other [aka goy?], with no apparent will to dominate assuages the guilt of the past... even take the form of a defiant gesture where one denies accountability and historical connection" ~bell hooks (aka, Gloria Jean Watkins)

*28:07* - "advancedness"

*28:05* - Native tech and tools, it was BETTER than European stuff.

*29:05* - "Natives didn't yet even invent the wheel" = total bullshit. They did, just on a small scale (kids' toys) and didn't have horse and cattle carts since the in dense jungle, mountains, streams, rivers, etc it's just easier to carry stuff.

*29:39* - Tenochtichlan had a bigger population that Paris and better food security. Americans were generally very well fed, tall, and muscular. Incoming Spaniards and Anglos were hairier and shorter (lol).

*29:52* - Africa was very well developed (aka "advanced") for its people's lifestyle, they had EVERYTHING they needed and they made it all themselves.

*30:55* - intro to "How Europe Underdeveloped Africa" by Walter Rodney
"Most African societies raised the cultivation of their own particular (food) staple to a fine art. Even the widespread resort to shifting cultivation with burning and light hoeing was not as childish as the first European colonists supposed... and when the colonists started upsettig the thin top-soil the result was disastrous."

*31:34* - "Mono-culture was a colonialist invention... In Africa, this concetration on one or two cash-crops for sale abroad had many harmful effects. Sometimes, cash-crops were grown to the exclusion of staple food - thus causing famines."

*32:00* - "Zimbabwe was a zone of mixed farming... Irrigation and terracing reached considerable proportions. There was single dam or aqueduct comparable to in Asia or Ancient Rome, but countless small streams were diverted and made to flow around hills in a manner that indicated an awareness of the scientific principle governing the motion of water. In effect, the people of Zimbabwe had produced 'hydrologists,' through their understanding of the material environment."

*33:26* - The vlogger's own best quote:
"...if you read more than two books about the history of capitalism, you'll learn there's no such thing as an 'under-developed' country, only and over-exploited one."

*38:40* - It was Indigenous men taking "white brides" but rather Western men taking Indigenous brides, yet the "The Lost World" (1999) makes it seem like the former.

*42:24* - "The Lost World" (2001) and it's themes of Western religion. Interesting take.
"The Christian missionaries were as much part of the colonizing forces as were the explorers, traders and soldiers. The church's role was primarily to preserve the social relation of colonialism, as an extension of the role it played in preserving the social relations of capitalism in Europe. Therefore, the Christian church stressed humility, docility and acceptance."
     ~Walter Rodney in "How Europe Underdeveloped Africa"

NOTE: What's not mentioned is that Old Testament part, the root is the Jewish religion and feeling "chosen" and thus eshewing the simpler and humbler vague Buddhist-like parable and stories that Jesus told in favor of bowing to YHWH.

*45:20* - intro to "Decolonizing Methodologies" by Linda Tuhiwai Smith
"The ways in which scientific research is implicated in the worst excesses of colonialism remains a powerful remembered history for many of the world's colonized peoples... just knowing that someone measured out 'faculties' by filling the skulls of our anscestors with millet seeds and compared the amount of millet seed to the capacity for mental thought offends our sense of who and what we are."

About the "Charter of the Indigenous Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forests" from 1993:
"The Declaration calls on governments and states 'to develop policies and practices which recognize indigenous peoples as the guardians of their customary knowledge and has the right to protect and control dissemination of that knowledge and that indigenous peoples have the right to create new knowledge based on cultural traditions.'"

Search link to actual Declaration:
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22Charter+of+the+Indigenous+Tribal+Peoples+of+the+Tropical+Forests%22&t=ffsb&ia=web

*46:41* - "...belief in the ideal that benefitting mankind is indeed a primary outcome of scientific research is as much a reflection of ideology as it is of academic research. It becomes so taken for granted that many researchers simply assume they as individuals embody this ideal and are natural representatives of it when they work with other communities."

A final point made in the 2001 version, and also here by Linda Tuhiwai Smith
*50:20* - "Moreover, it is also important to question that most fundamental belief of all, that individual researchers have an inherent right to knowledge and truth."

4
Issues / Re: Christian and Muslim Unity
« on: February 09, 2021, 10:55:42 pm »
The Islamic Tartan

https://www.islamictartan.com/gallery.php

Scotland has tailored a version of one of its national garments to include Muslims.









The colors, patterns, and overall design has effectively joined two cultural groups into one nation.

Nationalism like it should be.


5
News / Re: State subverters
« on: January 16, 2021, 09:06:41 pm »
G. Edward Griffin on dangers of Communism (1969 lecture)

The Communists, thus the False Left, will try to divide American society along lines of race (as per conventional categorization)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwwNH_r2muw

6
True Left vs False Left / Get mad?
« on: January 16, 2021, 08:58:29 pm »
The True Left has been too passive, while the False Left often goes on rampages along with their Rightist mirror images... however what can the True Left do?

Maybe... get "Mad as Hell!"

Classic scene from Network (1976) but this very thing also happened in Germany in 1932, albeit much more eloquently and with much more inspiration. This version borders on Proud Boy-style sheer aggression.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRuS3dxKK9U

Also of note is the "The World is a Corporation scene"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35DSdw7dHjs

At 1:56 - "The Arabs have taken billions of dollars out of this country..." and then it can hit you... director Sidney Lumet and writer Paddy Chayefsky were Jews, thus they implicated the wrong people in the background money meddling. One of the cynical lead characters is even named Diana Christiansen to further drive the movies viewpoint, the world sucks but it's never the fault of the "God's Chosen."

The lesson is therefore partly what is said - the failures of capitalism - but also what isn't said - who are the string pullers, and then full circle back to what is said - how those string pullers describe the world's problems in films such as this: skillful misinformation.

EDIT: I just noticed this would probably be better placed in "True Left Breakthrough: Hate".

7
True Left vs False Left / Re: State subverters
« on: January 16, 2021, 07:55:00 pm »
Sheldon Adelson, Trump-mega donor, is dead.

In the video, Adelson can be seen lamenting that he served in the US military rather than the IDF and is proud his kids are in the IDF.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyaMRwj-7co

8
News / Re: Climate, Weather, and Climate Effects, 2020 and Beyond
« on: January 16, 2021, 07:51:19 pm »
Impact of Roads and Urbanization
http://iqc.ou.edu/urbanchange

Interactive images on the website, see how US cities looks before mass urbanization (and thus proletariatization).

9
Colonial Era / Re: Trump disapproval
« on: January 03, 2021, 05:42:16 pm »
Want to understand Trump? Look at George Wallace
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/opinion/outlook/article/Want-to-understand-Trump-Look-at-George-Wallace-13254362.php


Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace is shown in this Oct. 19, 1964 file photo speaking in Glen Burnie, Md. at a rally supporting then Republican presidential candidate Sen. Barry Goldwater. [Goldwater was a Jew]
Wallace, the one-time firebrand segregationist who was paralyzed by a would-be assassin's bullet as he campaigned for the presidency in 1972, died Sunday, Sept. 13, 1998. He was 79.


Quote

In late September 1968, presidential election polls showed that third-party candidate George Wallace's campaign was surging. With the support of a quarter of white voters, Wallace was within single digits of the Democratic nominee, Vice President Hubert Humphrey. Wallace's dominance in Southern states threatened to prevent any candidate from securing an electoral college majority, which would throw the November election into the House of Representatives.

His was an extraordinary rise. In his inaugural speech as Alabama governor just five years earlier, Wallace had promised “segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.” He then gained national attention by personally standing in a schoolhouse door at the University of Alabama to block the admission of two black students.

By 1968, he seldom used explicitly racist language but instead demanded “law and order” and railed against “crime,” “drugs,” “welfare mothers,” “forced busing” and “big city thugs.” He created the racially encoded language that still haunts our politics.

So when President Trump whips up rallies with his thinly veiled racist attacks on brown-skinned immigrants, Muslims and unpatriotic blacks, it is not a new development. The racial divide has been a political tool for those willing to use it for 50 years. As former President Obama pointed out in his Sept. 7 speech: “It did not start with Donald Trump. He is a symptom, not the cause. He's just capitalizing on resentments that politicians have been fanning for years.”

In 1968, the white backlash to the civil rights movement and the ‘60s urban riots drew voters to Wallace. But others took note - particularly Richard Nixon's campaign advisor Kevin Phillips who, in his book “The Emerging Republican Majority,” saw the potential of a major partisan realignment. Over the next six years, President Nixon adapted a more subtle version of the Wallace message, appealing to what he called “the silent majority.” In the years that followed, white voters in the once solidly Democratic South became the bedrock of the GOP.

The Republican Party's Southern strategy initially focused on shifting voters with a segregationist bent to the party, but it proved adaptable to other whites uneasy with the increasing role of minorities in American life and politics. These appeals resurfaced many times over the years, most memorably in the infamous Willie Horton ad during George H.W. Bush's 1988 campaign, but also in the symbolism of Ronald Reagan's decision to make his first 1980 campaign appearance at the Neshoba County Fair in Philadelphia, Miss. - where three civil rights workers were murdered in 1964. With the election of Obama and a growing awareness that whites will eventually be a minority in America, the ground for such appeals has stayed quite fertile.

When Trump descended from Trump Tower in 2015, he immediately set himself apart from the gaggle of GOP presidential contenders by replacing the coy racial language of his predecessors with an unfiltered bullhorn. He has railed against prominent black leaders and athletes, talked about brown-skinned immigrants as murderers and rapists, and insisted dark-skinned Muslims constitute such a threat that we need to ban travel from entire countries.

Wallace's bid for the presidency faltered in its final weeks, but a very small shift of voters in four states would have deadlocked the race. Wallace poured gasoline on the fire of racial division first, but Trump managed to carry that flame all the way into the White House. Who would have predicted that 50 years after the 1968 election, polls would show that more than half of Americans think their president is a racist?

Many factors have contributed to today's tribalistic politics, but race remains the bedrock of that division. Transcending racism is essential if our government is to break out of its current paralysis. If we do not succeed and Wallace's legacy of dividing us by race continues to shape American political life, then perhaps he won after all.

JJ had an excellent essay on Dixie that included a section on Wallace.

10
News / Re: Trump disapproval
« on: December 21, 2020, 08:27:21 am »
From Herd Immunity to Criminal Liability for Trump & Pence for Avoidable Coronavirus Deaths

Donald Trump lied to the American people about the dangers posed by the Coronavirus, as we learned from recordings disclosed by Bob Woodward. And Mike Pence, head of the coronavirus task force stood by silently while Trump lied to and endangered We the people, making Pence equally liable for avoidable coronavirus deaths.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DI9982IKpO4

11
News / Re: Biden disapproval
« on: December 11, 2020, 07:33:56 am »

13
Issues / Re: Climate, Weather, and Climate Effects, 2020 and Beyond
« on: November 20, 2020, 01:50:57 am »
Korean Natural Farming
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_natural_farming
  • Use the nutrients contained within the seeds
  • Use indigenous microorganisms (IMO's)
  • Maximize inborn potential with fewer inputs
  • Avoid commercial fertilizers
  • Avoid tilling
  • No use of livestock waste
In Hawaii, crop productivity increased 2-fold with the use of KNF, while reducing water use by 30% and eliminating the use of pesticides proved to be a superior cover crop on degraded Hawaii fields.

More about this style of farming in Hawaii:
https://naturalfarminghawaii.net/
https://hawaiianparadisecoop.wordpress.com/2013/02/13/the-basics-of-korean-natural-farming-methods/

In South Korea, Natural Farming has been embraced by the South Korean government after one county experimented and every farmer in the county practiced it for a year. These rice farmers not only had bigger yields than usual, but saved money on their inputs and sold their rice for a premium. Where they practice Natural Farming it has had the added benefit of cleaning up the waterways, rivers and even coastal waters.https://web.archive.org/web/20140628024150/http://www.kalapanaorganics.com%3a80/natural-farming-with-indigenous-microorganisms/natural-farming/

The Basics of Korean Natural Farming (KNP)https://hawaiianparadisecoop.wordpress.com/2013/02/13/the-basics-of-korean-natural-farming-methods/

14
News / Re: Climate, Weather, and Climate Effects, 2020 and Beyond
« on: November 11, 2020, 03:13:18 am »
Food systems in a zero-deforestation world: Dietary change is more important than intensification for climate targets in 2050
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969720328709

15
True Left vs False Left / Re: Western Democracy
« on: November 11, 2020, 03:08:24 am »
                    It's not a democracy, one of those little fish is the leader.



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