• scrounging your next insight

    From waltkowaski@1:229/2 to All on Wednesday, May 23, 2018 09:47:44
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    no one ever has a real answer BECAUSE
    they just don't know.

    how does it feel not knowing?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Wednesday, May 23, 2018 18:40:42
    From: slider@anashram.com

    no one ever has a real answer BECAUSE
    they just don't know.

    how does it feel not knowing?

    ### - not 'rationally' knowing/conceiving ya mean?

    like an inner silence prevails i suppose...

    'coz ya still know something, sometimes more profound than you'd ever rationally come up with!

    'what' you know is of a different order though...

    a different 'way' of knowing what then appears to be equally self-evident?

    a bit like in lucid dreaming perhaps; that 'mood' of the dreamer you
    awaken with?

    or possibly like tripping without the acid, although that sounds a little severe ;)

    i.e., if you've ever smoked a joint and got high (not too high, just
    nicely high) then you already know everything about it! like ever remember
    a time when ya gots high and everything just felt right with yourself &
    the world? and you really enjoyed it? (forget the times ya didn't heh) -
    well it's like that! a nice peaceful easy feeling! as the eagles were wont
    to say :)

    livin' in the Now here boss! :)

    (or at least tryin' to heh, 'coz i fall off my perch all the time haha...)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwqHarJnQP8

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Denisovan@1:229/2 to All on Thursday, May 24, 2018 14:11:28
    From: david.j.worrell@gmail.com

    Fergus Laing

    Fergus Laing is a beast of a man
    He stitches up and fleeces
    He wants to manicure the world
    And sell it off in pieces
    He likes to build his towers high
    He blocks the sun out of the sky
    In the penthouse the champagne’s dry
    And slightly gassy

    Fergus Laing he works so hard
    A'busy as a bee is
    Fergus Laing has 17 friends
    All as dull as he is
    A'17 friends, a'17 wives
    All the perfect shape and size
    They wag their tails and bat their eyes
    Just like Lassie

    Fergus Laing he builds and builds
    Yet small is his erection
    Fergus Laing has a fine head of hair
    When the wind’s in the right direction
    The wind's in the right direction

    Fergus Laing and his 17 friends
    They live inside a bubble
    There they withdraw and shut the door
    At any sign of trouble
    Should the peasants wail and vent
    And ask him where the money went
    He’ll simply say, it’s all been spent
    On being classy

    Fergus’ buildings reach the sky
    Until you cannot see ‘em
    He thinks the old stuff he pulls down
    Belongs in a museum
    His own fair home is a nut ward
    And every jewel a city yard
    Hung with Picasso, hung with Brouard
    But nothing brassy

    Fergus Laing he builds and builds
    Yet small is his erection
    Fergus Laing has a fine head of hair
    When the wind’s in the right direction
    The wind's in the right direction

    ***

    "Tosser? Wanker?" :)

    Better for watching:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xc7x9tLFexw

    Better for listening:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0n-zSeqB-0

    ***

    If you like Thompson as I do, you could try my Spotify playlist: https://open.spotify.com/user/1291310352/playlist/7MLvpZ45qwRdeda4Uuv38k?si=_k8Wez82RsuP-KYZtFJi_A

    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From waltkowaski@1:229/2 to All on Thursday, May 24, 2018 15:31:52
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    i guess this day in history (50 years ago)
    Jumpin' Jack Flash came out and zimmy was
    27 years old.

    Me? I was 19, just freshly inducted into
    the US Army. I remember hearing Jumpin' Jack
    Flash on this juke box at the PX. This drill
    sergeant told me i could drink 2 beers as fast as
    i could or at least until the song was over.
    Yeah it's alright now, in fact, it's a real
    gas to still be around 50 years later. Hail hail
    sons of bitches !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From waltkowaski@1:229/2 to All on Thursday, May 24, 2018 17:49:04
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    actually (in the spirit of being truthful & correct)
    i was actually sucked into the Army on 5-27-68.
    A few weeks later i was over at the PX for some
    quick purchases of whatever. Thank God that place
    had some brewskis. That song lifted me up. I was
    feelin' pretty low down. It's good to feel better
    after feelin' so god damn shitty. How low was my
    assemblage point? Fucking low down man, low down.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Denisovan@1:229/2 to All on Friday, May 25, 2018 09:55:08
    From: david.j.worrell@gmail.com

    At that time, I was still heavily immersed in the 1960's equivalent
    of a 'Norman Rockwell' Midwestern suburban American childhood. :)

    Getting back to today's insanity...

    Trump’s Lawyer and Chief of Staff Appear at Briefings
    on F.B.I.’s Russia Informant

    By Nicholas Fandos and Katie Benner
    May 24, 2018

    WASHINGTON — President Trump’s chief of staff and a White House lawyer representing the president in the Russia investigation were present on Thursday
    at the start of two classified meetings requested by members of Congress to review sensitive
    material about the F.B.I.’s use of an informant in the inquiry.

    The two men left both meetings after sharing introductory remarks “to relay the president’s desire for as much openness as possible under the law” and before officials began to brief the lawmakers, the White House said in a statement.

    But the presence of John F. Kelly, the chief of staff, and Emmet T. Flood, the president’s lawyer, infuriated Democrats, and legal experts said their visit,
    at the least, could give off the appearance that the White House abused its authority to gain
    insight into an investigation that implicates the president.

    The president’s legal team was unapologetic. “We are certainly entitled to know” what information the government has on the F.B.I. informant, Rudolph W.
    Giuliani, another lawyer representing Mr. Trump in the investigation, said in an interview. The
    meeting “cuts off a long subpoena,” he said, referring to a legal fight for
    the information.

    At least two lawmakers participating in the briefings told Mr. Flood to his face that his presence was inappropriate.

    “Although he did not participate in the meetings which followed, as the White
    House’s attorney handling the special counsel’s investigation, his involvement — in any capacity — was entirely improper,” Representative Adam B. Schiff of
    California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said in a statement.

    House Republicans close to the president, led by Representative Devin Nunes of California, the committee’s chairman, had been pressing for weeks for access to material related to a law enforcement informant who had approached at least three Trump
    campaign advisers who had been in contact with suspected Russian agents. People
    familiar with the matter said that the purpose of using the informant — a common F.B.I. tool — was to glean information about what the aides knew about
    the Russian
    efforts to hack into Democratic emails, not to spy on Mr. Trump’s campaign.

    But the issue exploded when Mr. Trump accused the F.B.I., without evidence, of planting a spy in his campaign. He demanded in recent days that the Justice Department investigate the matter and turn over records to Congress, despite warnings from law
    enforcement officials in his administration that sharing the documents would put the informant and foreign intelligence partners at risk.

    Law enforcement and intelligence officials did not provide documents to the lawmakers on Thursday, but they did provide information about the use of the informant, according to two people familiar with the matter. They spoke on the condition of anonymity
    to discuss a classified meeting.

    Republicans close to Mr. Nunes made clear in the run-up to the meetings that they would not be satisfied unless officials turned over documents. Neither Mr.
    Nunes nor lawmakers close to him spoke publicly after Thursday’s sessions.

    Democrats who attended said after the meetings that the F.B.I. had done nothing
    wrong by employing the informant, an American academic who served in several Republican administrations and has taught more recently in Britain.

    “Nothing we heard today has changed our view that there is no evidence to support any allegation that the F.B.I. or any intelligence agency placed a ‘spy’ in the Trump campaign, or otherwise failed to follow appropriate procedures and protocols,”
    Mr. Schiff told reporters on behalf of the Democrats in the briefing. He did not take questions.

    White House officials had at first arranged for only Mr. Nunes to be briefed. But Republican Senate leaders, including Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, and Richard M. Burr of North Carolina, the Intelligence Committee chairman, pressed
    the White House to change the audience to the so-called Gang of Eight, the select bipartisan group with whom the government’s most sensitive intelligence is shared.

    Mr. McConnell said in an interview on Thursday that the Gang of Eight meeting was an “appropriate way to convey whatever information the administration had
    to convey,” but he declined to critique Mr. Trump’s charges of illegal spying.

    As Mr. Trump continued to fan unsubstantiated claims that partisan Democrats had planted a spy in his campaign, the logistics for the meetings shifted several times.

    Ultimately, Mr. Schiff was allowed to attend a morning session that had previously been offered to just Mr. Nunes, Speaker Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin and another Republican congressman. The Gang of Eight met later Thursday afternoon on Capitol Hill.

    Mr. Flood’s presence at the meetings was entirely unexpected. While Mr. Kelly
    helped arrange the meetings at Mr. Trump’s request, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, had said no White House staff members would attend. Guidance
    circulated by the Justice Department late Wednesday did not include Mr. Flood among the invitees.

    “For the record, the President’s Chief of Staff and his attorney in an ongoing criminal investigation into the President’s campaign have no business
    showing up to a classified intelligence briefing,” Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, the top
    Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said on Twitter.

    When Democrats confronted Mr. Flood in the Gang of Eight meeting, Mr. Kelly intervened and dismissed their criticism, according to one of the officials familiar with the meeting.

    Democrats tried to start their own inquiry. Representative Jerrold Nadler of New York, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, made a formal request for the Justice Department to investigate the disclosure of the confidential informant’s
    name and existence to the news media.

    While there is no constitutional provision that says the president’s personal
    lawyer cannot make a statement at a classified briefing, legal scholars expressed misgivings.

    “Even if Flood wasn’t there for any operative parts of the meeting, the optics are disquieting,” said Stephen I. Vladeck, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law. “Rather than being sensitive to the clear potential conflict this
    creates, the president is driving a truck through the middle of it. Historically, a president would be very careful to avoid the appearance of a conflict, as opposed to relishing in it.”

    Mr. Ryan, who has been criticized for not reining in House Republican attacks on the Russia inquiry and federal law enforcement, defended the unusual meetings.

    Inherent in the Intelligence Committee’s work “is the responsibility to ask
    tough questions of the executive branch,” he said in a statement. “That is why we have insisted and will continue to insist on Congress’s constitutional
    right to
    information necessary for the conduct of oversight.”

    Mr. Nunes, a loyal ally of Mr. Trump who advised his presidential transition, has been quiet about what exactly he hoped to learn about the informant, saying
    only that his late-April request was part of an oversight investigation into potential political
    bias and abuse of power within the Justice Department as it relates to the Russia investigation.

    It was the latest in a series of bold demands for classified documents and testimony related to the Russia inquiry — and far from his first open confrontation with top Republican officials in the department. And it echoed another episode, from last
    spring, in which Mr. Trump falsely claimed that President Barack Obama wiretapped Trump Tower, and Mr. Nunes went public with information that he said
    showed the Obama administration had “incidentally” collected intelligence on Trump associates.

    Democrats say that the latest episode — including the president’s involvement — is the most recent gambit by Mr. Nunes and Mr. Trump to undermine the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, and gain information about his inquiry.

    Many of Mr. Nunes’s targets were in the room for the meeting: Christopher A. Wray, the F.B.I. director; Rod J. Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general; and Dan Coats, the director of national intelligence, along with other law enforcement and
    intelligence officials.

    Mr. Trump continued to rail against law enforcement on Twitter on Thursday, repeating his unsubstantiated claims. “Large dollars were paid to the Spy, far beyond normal,” he said, without citing evidence, before referring to the
    matter as “one of
    the biggest political scandals in U.S. history.”

    Five former top American intelligence officials who have worked for Democratic and Republican administrations, including Leon E. Panetta and Gen. Michael V. Hayden, warned on Wednesday that House Republicans were putting at risk the tradition of
    bipartisan oversight of intelligence.

    “When congressional oversight is overly partisan — or focused on undermining important counterintelligence investigations — we worry about inappropriate political influence on the investigators and the erosion of a bipartisan approach to
    intelligence and national security,” they wrote in an open letter.

    ***

    Yep. And Trump continues to prove that he's a LYING sack of shit. :)
    And I'd bet that's apparent even to most of the Republicans by now.

    Repeating this part:
    "Mr. Nunes, a loyal ally of Mr. Trump who advised his presidential
    transition, has been quiet about what exactly he hoped to learn
    about the informant"

    That's because there's nothing much to learn about the informant.
    They're simply doing everything possible, including lying, to try
    to undermine the special investigation.

    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Denisovan@1:229/2 to All on Friday, May 25, 2018 19:00:38
    From: david.j.worrell@gmail.com

    The Trouble With Normal
    Bruce Cockburn

    Strikes across the frontier and strikes for higher wage
    Planet lurches to the right as ideologies engage
    Suddenly it's repression, moratorium on rights
    What did they think the politics of panic would invite?
    Person in the street shrugs -- "Security comes first"
    But the trouble with normal is it always gets worse
    But the trouble with normal is it always gets worse

    Callous men in business costume speak computerese
    Play pinball with the Third World trying to keep it on its knees
    Their single crop starvation plans put sugar in your tea
    And the local Third World's kept on reservations you don't see
    "It'll all go back to normal if we put our nation first"
    But the trouble with normal is it always gets worse
    But the trouble with normal is it always gets worse

    Fashionable fascism dominates the scene
    When ends don't meet it's easier to justify the means
    Tenants get the dregs and landlords get the cream
    As the grinding devolution of the democratic dream
    Brings us men in gas masks dancing while the shells burst
    The trouble with normal is it always gets worse

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4pBsnvRpJlQ

    ***

    "It'll all go back to normal if we put our nation first"
    - Bruce Cockburn (1983)

    Yep. Thirty-five years later with 'America first'.
    And you're right Bruce; it's still gettin' worse.

    ***

    America Last: Trump’s Attack on the Amazon Job Machine http://tinyurl.com/yd3e3cca

    By Timothy Egan
    May 25, 2018

    President Trump has declared war on Amazon, the nation’s second most valuable
    company. Amazon is creating more jobs than all but a handful of entire states. And nearly every major city in the country is vying to land the second headquarters of this
    global retailer and the 50,000 high-paying positions it promises to bring.

    It is perhaps the biggest job engine in the United States, and the president is
    using the power of his office to hurt it. And he’s doing this while going out
    of his way to help Chinese jobs, those at the rogue telecom giant ZTE.

    “Too many jobs in China lost,” Trump tweeted. He said that in the midst of a dubious round of deal-making that resulted in a promise from him to help the foreign phone company and coincided with a pledge from China of a $500 million loan to a Trump-
    linked property. That deal looks very much like a bribe, as my colleague Paul Krugman noted.

    But let’s back up and take a look at the Amazon assaults. For added perspective, just substitute “Obama” for “Trump” and consider how it would look.

    Amazon is no saint, certainly, with low wages at some warehouses and a business
    strategy that has hurt many small retailers while helping others. All the major
    tech companies could use a clamp of regulation to restrain their intrusions into daily life
    and commerce. But Mr. Trump isn’t the least bit concerned about any of that. Those issues are too complex for him.

    He sees the world as a brute with power. Everything goes through a love-me, hate-me prism. Sycophants are rewarded. Dissidents are crushed. Diplomacy, as he just showed with his laughable, incoherent dance with North Korea, is much harder.

    Trump hates Jeff Bezos, the founder and chairman of Amazon. It’s possible he hates him for his success; Bezos transformed a mailbox bookseller into the world’s largest online retailer. There are far more Amazon Prime members in this country than
    people who voted for Trump. As a businessman, Trump stumbled through multiple bankruptcies, defrauded students at a phony “university” and even ran a casino into the ground.

    But the more likely reason Trump hates Bezos is that he owns The Washington Post, which has a much different way of covering the president than Fox News, where Trump gets most of his misinformation.

    The Post is protected by the First Amendment, as is the neighborhood blog, the fact-deficient world of talk radio and random opinions of every citizen. So, instead of going after the newspaper, Trump is going after its owner — who has nothing to do
    with the news operation, as Martin Baron, the executive editor of The Post has said.

    Trump reportedly pushed the postmaster general, Megan Brennan, to double the rates that the Postal Service charges Amazon for shipping — even though those
    rates are bound by contract and are beneficial to the struggling agency. A case
    can even be made
    that if it weren’t for Amazon, the Postal Service might be out of business.

    “He’s off the hook on this,” Vanity Fair quoted one insider as saying. “It’s war.”

    This is what unrestrained strongmen do: use the state to punish — or silence — their enemies. It’s the same thing Trump is doing by demanding that the Justice Department investigate the people who are investigating him.

    Trump couldn’t be more clear on this point. The free press, he says, is the “enemy of the people.” His aim, he told Lesley Stahl of “60 Minutes,” is “to discredit you all and demean you all so when you write negative stories about me no one
    will believe you.”

    A newspaper to Trump’s liking is The National Enquirer, whose publisher, David Pecker, is a Trump lackey, doing dirty work to protect the president from
    the embarrassment of his personal behavior.

    Autocrats reward friends. In Trump’s promising to lift restrictions on ZTE — which was punished for doing business with North Korea and Iran — the United States got completely rolled by China. But in turn, China put money on the table that would
    help the Trump family business. Country last, Trump first.

    When Trump was just a no-class developer who used his private fixers to go after his enemies, and lied five ways before breakfast, it was of no consequence to the rest of us. No more.

    “If our leaders seek to conceal the truth, or we as people become accepting of alternative realities that are no longer grounded in facts, then we as American citizens are on a path to relinquishing our freedom.”

    So said former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. It was too little, too late. But better than the complicity-by-silence of Republicans in Congress. Paul Ryan, your spine is calling you. Mitch McConnell, your past words are here for pickup and in need of
    some defense.

    Anyone who thought autocracy would arrive with back-room deals or sleight-of-hand machinations at midnight should think again. Trump crosses a new line every week, in plain sight. Democracy dies in sunlight.

    ***

    "The Free Press is the "enemy of the people" - Donald Trump

    "Ignorance is strength" Trump is literally 'Orwellian'. :O
    Orwell's 1984 - just a year after Cockburn's 1983.
    Are we still making American 'great'... again?

    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)