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  • Saturday Morning I’m Worried As Hell Links

    I have always laughed at my mother’s living situation, in the Pines of Del Mar Gables Phase II condos in lovely Del Boca Vista; it’s not a place, it’s a stereotype. At the moment, though, as Florida is about the get the blowjob of the century, I’m not laughing so much. She is one of those old Jewish ladies who isn’t going to let a little rain and wind keep her away from canasta, mah jongg,  and the condo clubhouse. So you’ll pardon the lack of my usual “he’s not that funny” commentary. That disclaimer given, here’s the links for the morning for all you non-Floridians who are still planted on terra firma.

    WaPo points out that there’s a new kind of racism involved in immigration. “Illegal Immigration: It’s Not Just Beaners Any More.”

    SP and I spent last night at an upscale cocktail bar where a couple friends of ours were playing a gig. And we found out about this when they played a cover of It Must Be Love. Fuck. Well, at least we still have Lou Reed.

    Irrespective of the merits and demerits of the case, I am VERY uncomfortable with the idea of judges inserting themselves into employment disputes. And while I’m at it, fuck the Cowboys and Jerry Jones anyway. On the other hand, I love this, but I’m a sick fuck.

    Poor David Puddy, he was born too soon.

    And I’ll leave with a link to a song by someone you’ve never heard of, but should have if there were justice in this world. But there isn’t.

  • ZARDOZ FRIDAY NIGHT LINKS

    ZARDOZ SPEAKS TO YOU, HIS CHOSEN ONES. HOPEFULLY HIS CHOSEN ONES HAVE LEFT THE BRUTAL STATE OF FLORIDA’S COASTAL AREAS. ZARDOZ WOULD DIRECT YOU TO TAKE SHELTER BEHIND THE FORCE FIELD PROTECTING THE VORTEX. FAILING THAT, AT LEAST AVOID LOW GROUND. ZARDOZ HAS LIFTED YOU FROM BRUTALITY, TO GO FORTH AND SNARK. HE WOULD NOT SEE YOU HARMED.

    AND TO SHOW FURTHER FAVOR ON HIS CHOSEN ONES, ZARDOZ GIVES YOU THE GIFT OF THE LINK:

    • CHOSEN ONES IN CANADA WERE GOING TO CLEANSE BRUTALS, BUT THEN THEY PREPARED TO GET HIGH?
    • THIS BRUTAL IS NOT ONE OF THE CHOSEN ONES.
    • SOME BRUTALS CANNOT HANDLE BIG MONEY.
    • ZARDOZ PREFERS TECHNOLOGY FROM THE TABERNACLE, NOT FROM APPLE.

    ZARDOZ HAS SPOKEN!

  • Friday Afternoon Apocalypse Links

    A REAL Heather

    It looks like the Road Warrior on my FB feed. I haven’t sawn off my shotgun just yet, but I am getting the bunker ready. Everyone in Florida stay safe. The rest of you Glibs go do something appropriately stupid and dangerous for us this weekend. I’m sure there will be some epic Florida Man stories to come out of this one. Hopefully, the funny and slightly painful, not the all-time Darwin Award winning. Let’s do… the links!

    Is there nothing Hollywood won’t chew up and spit out an inferior version of? The musical was bad enough, but for fuck’s sake? These people are the new Heathers? Not a one could carry Heather Chandler’s jock-strap.

    Well shit

    A small reminder that Floridian aren’t the only ones suffering. (Not a Patriots link)

    Latest Fox News report on Great Korea. I was 90% certain they got confused by DPRK News Service, but apparently not. So sexist to only call a female politician a “political prostitute”.

    They say music makes sex better. They’ve never accidentally left their whole music library on random during sex.

    Should I go with the stupidly obvious, or just pretty obvious, or the old, tired standard?

  • Deconstructing Nick Sarwark’s Gibberish: Episode 1

     

    I have been chewing on this (non?) argument off and on all afternoon.

    “Words that mean things.”

    He says (@13:21):
    “If we’re libertarians, if we don’t believe that Government force should be used to suppress any kind of view, any kind of free speech, then it is incumbent upon us to speak out about views that are repugnant.”

    My instincts tell me this doesn’t make any sense. I could be wrong, but here’s my thinking why:

    1. The idea of ‘an obligation to speak against (other people’s) views’ is the first problem.

    I appreciate the whole ‘rights and duties’ thing, which suggests that every liberty comes with associated responsibilities…but I can’t see it extending so far as to compel speech or require people to share in some collective judgments.

    2. The second part is more of a question-begging bit: who, exactly, found those views repugnant, again? “We”? When did “we” make that collective decision?

    He assumes that certain views are de-facto unacceptable and therefore must be ‘responded’ to … but how do we know what is unacceptable in the first place unless these ideas are shared and debated and individual decisions made about them? Repressing certain ideas at first sight seems to make that process impossible.

    3. Which i suppose leads to problem 3: ‘what form of response’ is obligated?

    And why is “ignoring” things you don’t agree with not just as (if not more) effective? Because dumb-ideas can only transition from ‘dumb’ to ‘dangerous’ when they are being actively spread. And nothing spreads bad ideas quite like repression. Just ask any teenager.

    If the specific thing he were talking about here – “Neo-Nazism” – were in fact in genuine danger of becoming a widespread, popular political movement, I’d grant that his argument had some practical merit… but which still had nothing to do with libertarianism in particular. It would be more “Jesus Christ, we’d better stop the Nazis before they throw us all in gas chambers”.

    But it seems to me that he’s suggesting that a mere-assembly of a few-dozen racist yokels every now and then (if that) actually DOES merit thousands of liberty-minded people descending on them to silence them, because ‘repugnant’ speech must not be allowed to go unchecked.

    Basically, I find that argument monumentally stupid on the face of it. But I’m interested in hearing different takes from the wise and thoughtful Gliberati. Hence, I thought I’d post the question rather than just comment.

    More episodes may follow, depending on gibberish-levels.

  • Friday (Thank God) Morning Links

    A bunch of New England Patriots players must have homes in The Bahamas or something.  Because their heads were elsewhere last night as the Chiefs beat the piss out of them to start the season. And of course I have the Patriots defense in my FFL.  Meanwhile, Sloane Stephens knocked off Venus Williams (the gracious one of the two Williams sisters) and Madison Keys  also won to set up a 15 vs unseeded finals at the US Open.

    On the diamond, The Yanks took care of the Orioles. The Nats topped the Phillies. The Cubbies topped the Pirates. The BIG RED MACHINE fell. The Padres beat the Cards while the Rockies beat the Dodgers, who have lost 10 of 11 now, and got a little separation again in the NL Wild Card race. The Twinks did the same while tripping up the Royals and the Indians reeled off their 15th straight win.

    That last few weeks of the season is gonna be a nail-biter for some of you (Looking at the Twin Cities and the Denver contingent). I’ll enjoy the excitement as the Astros battle to see who gets home field in the AL now that Cleveland is en fuego.

    Nothing else in the world of sport, unless you count hurricane survival as a sport.  But that’s not a sport, that’s news.  And for real news, we need…the links!

    Go away!

    The main story hasn’t changed, unfortunately. There are still a few different tracks, and none of them spare Florida’s Miami-Dade area. Please stay safe out there, Florida Glibs.

    Harvey: asshole. Irma: asshole. Actually that couldn’t be further from the truth. (Read this if your day needs brightening!)

    A data breach at credit reporting agency Equifax could potentially effect 40% of Americans. That’s right. The breach made 143 million Americans credit info accessible.  And if that didn’t concern you, maybe the fact that a trio of executives at the company sold off $2m in their stocks in the immediate aftermath of the breach but before it was made public. The stock has since tumbled 13%. If only they were Congresspeople, then they wouldn’t have a problem. But since they’re not, this could potentially be messy.

    An 8.0 earthquake hit a remote area of Mexico. “Remote” being the operative word, otherwise it would have been calamitous. Death toll at 5 so far.

    Maybe USAToday could worry less about doxxing country club members and focus their energy on real, obvious cronyism and influence peddling. Nah, that’s like real journalism and stuff. Also principles over principals isn’t their bag, baby.

    Palava. You don do bad bad thing.

    For Kenya, one witch doctor and three men don enter hot water. Naked witch doctors in the street. One with a snake around his neck. Car thieves.  Yeah, this one has it all.

    I’m sure there will be no abuse whatsoever with this proposal. This plan sounds worse than the one in the last link.

    So many options for the last song of the week. Hope I chose wisely.

    Persevere.

  • Week 2 College Football Preview

    This is sloopy’s mandatory link, I had hoped to replace it with “How many days since Indiana beat Ohio State” and link to a very small number, but then the second half happened.

    Last weekend had some amazing games.  And no, I don’t want to talk about the last one.  This weekend won’t live up to it, but I could be wrong.  That is why they play the games.

    Dubious Rivalry of the Week

    Buffalo @ Army, West Point, NY

    It’s the battle for NY state, except that part that Syracuse controls.  Buffalo leads the series 3-2.

    Tailgate of the Week

    This is what happens when someone who doesn’t follow sports “helps.”

    Rice @ UTEP, El Paso, TX

    This is Rice’s second trip to tailgate of the week, possibly because they are a nice side dish.

    Sun Bowl Stadium is carved out of the rocks in El Paso, creating a free upper deck for fans willing to climb the hills.  And this section comes with special amenities you don’t find in most stadiums.

    Beer:  Give Ode Brewing a try.  I would.

    Booze:  Hand Job

    1 oz Vodka

    1 oz Tequila

    1 oz Banana Liqueur

    1 oz Irish Cream

    Shake over ice, strain into cocktail glass.

    Game of the Century of the Week

    Auburn @ Auburn-With-a-Lake, Clemson, SC

    Auburn and Clemson are the exact same school.   The only way to tell them apart is to see if you can spot the lake.  If so, you are in Clemson.

    The all time record is a surprisingly unbalanced 34-14-2.  I would tell you who leads the series, but it really doesn’t matter as most of the games were played before 19-dickety-4.  Since Nixon’s reelection, they are an even 3-3.

    I will point out that my choice last week was much better than the overhyped snooze fest that was being hyped by everyone else.

    Top 25

     The “bug” last week was not in my software, but one of my orphans screwed up the data entry.  A few beatings took care of that and way are back to normal.

    1. LSU 4.820
    2. South Carolina 4.751  +1
    3. Mississippi St 4.692  +1
    4. Duke 4.672  +1
    5. Auburn 4.646  +1
    6. UCLA 4.629  +4
    7. Clemson 4.618
    8. Mississippi 4.595  +1
    9. Georgia 4.594  +2
    10. “Cheer harder!”

      Notre Dame 4.566  +2

    11. Alabama 4.563  +2
    12. Utah 4.561  NR
    13. Michigan 4.504  +2
    14. Arizona St 4.501  NR
    15. Nebraska 4.498  +5
    16. Boston College 4.495
    17. Pittsburgh 4.481
    18. California 4.472  NR
    19. Iowa 4.471  +4
    20. Illinois 4.469  +1
    21. Michigan St 4.458  NR
    22. Tennessee 4.457  -3
    23. Oregon 4.454  NR
    24. Maryland 4.451
    25. Syracuse 4.450

    Falling out: Georgia Tech, Texas A&M, Purdue, Texas Tech, Texas

  • Thursday Afternoon Links

    With disaster porn completely consuming the news cycle, now is the time for us to stage a coup in a small nation and declare Glibertopia open for business! Or we could get ready to help our fellows as best we can over the next week or so. You make the call. We also have robc’s football guide coming later today. My beloved team(s) both underperformed last week by… a lot. I expect tonight’s guide will not be kind to them. And rightly so! Let’s us proceed to… the links!

    Sodium fuse 1 foot off the ground to a propane tank I moved indoors to “protect” from flying debris

    Swedes find well preserved flag ship right where they buried it. They just forgot they where that was.

    I have had the interview this is making fun of. Several times. “We need someone with three years experience on a technology that was released last year” is my other favorite.

    I can’t tell whether this is a paranoid schizophrenic medication non-compliance episode or just a bunch of utter bullshit. What I can tell is that if this is the best the Bannonites have to strike back against the Generals with, the coup is over.

    Amazon is literally going rent-seeking for its 2nd US Headquarters building. 

    In what I assume is a Filipino take on both nepotism and public-private partnership, Duterte’s son has been linked to a $125M drug shipment. “What is good in life? Duterte?” “To murder the competitors of your children. To see innocent people executed so your son can get dictator rich. To hear the lamentations of drug warriors worldwide as they scream in betrayal.”

     

    I was listening to way more depressing music. This one is kind of weird. But fun.

  • An Apologia for the Non-Interventionists that Voted Trump

     

    Non-interventionists of every stripe from libertarians to paleo conservatives to standard anti-war types have had their dreams dashed this past week after the president announced a troop surge in Afghanistan.  To be fair, the president had already been offering mixed results to non-interventionists.  Some actions were commendable, such as ending the CIA program that was arming Syrian opposition groups (BBC News), while others were the same interventionist impulses that we’ve seen from every post-World War II administration, such as bombing Syrian airfields (CNN).  But even those who justified their support for President Trump’s election by noting his less militaristic foreign policy never truly believed that he would fulfill their long held dreams of closing overseas military bases, and ending American support for quasi-wars undertaken by our allies (such as the conflicts in Yemen or Syria).  Writing in the American Conservative (a publication founded by anti-war conservatives opposed to the Iraq War) Robert Merry noted that based off of polling “it seems that the preponderance of public opinion ran counter to both of those foreign policy philosophies [neoconservative and liberal interventionism]. Donald Trump, in his often crude manner, captured this opposition view.”

    Relationship status: It’s complicated.

    With Trump, it was believed, we would finally have a conversation about our relationship with Russia, which some have argued has been overly hostile and counterproductive since the end of the Cold War (The National Interest and the American Conservative).  With Trump we could finally ask the question of whether it is worthwhile to pledge open-ended military support, through NATO expansion, to countries such as Montenegro with little benefit to our own security.  With Trump we could finally discuss the cost, both financially and morally, of engaging in and supporting barbaric wars against Yemen and Syria (to name a few), which pose no threat to our country.  With Trump, some dreamed, we might finally come to debate the words of President Eisenhower who warned of the unchecked powers being acquired by the ‘military-industrial complex’ or, even better, we might rediscover President Washington’s warning about ‘foreign entanglements’.  But, why did these non-interventionists hope that these conversations might be possible, but only with Trump?

    President Trump is not a principled or moral man.  He is a thrice married, petty man who finds it more important to engage in school yard taunts with his opponents rather than arguing over policy.  He is no scholar, as he himself has admitted that he rarely reads (The New Republic) and, with regards to foreign policy, he has said that “I’m speaking with myself [about foreign policy], number one, because I have a very good brain and I’ve said a lot of things” (POLITICO).  He is, on nearly every issue, malleable.  But, since the 1980’s, when Trump first flirted with the idea of running for political office, he has been consistent on two topics: foreign affairs and trade.  As early as 1987, during the height of the Cold War, Trump stated that the US “should stop paying to defend countries that can afford to defend themselves” and advocated for nuclear disarmament (NY Times).  During the 2016 campaign, Trump’s advocacy for non-interventionism became a topic of debate, as it was alleged that he had voiced support for the Iraq War, based upon an exchange between himself and Howard Stern.  Some Republicans who had voted against the Iraq War, such as former representative John Hostettler, defended the real estate magnate and said “Last night, in the midst of the first presidential debate, the moderator prefaced a question about Sen. Clinton’s vote to authorize the Iraq War with the suggestion that Donald Trump’s comments to a shock jock prior to Sen. Clinton’s vote was equivalent to that vote” (Washington Examiner).  There is little evidence to suggest that Trump was ever an interventionist, whereas he has made statements in the past and during the 2016 campaign that delighted non-interventionist advocates throughout the country, such as his skepticism about NATO commitments and opposition to continued military involvement in Syria.  Even his recent declaration about a troop surge in Afghanistan was preceded by numerous reports stating that Trump was rebuffing the requests of his generals, and fellow Republicans, who were requesting that surge (The Intercept and POLITICO).  It is quite logical to understand why some non-interventionists saw him as a preferable option than the status quo offered by his opponents.

    Yet some supposed non-interventionists have gone about berating others who had hoped (and some still hope) that, at the very least, the Trump administration would be nominally better than sixteen years of intense interventionism.  These supposed non-interventionists have gone about declaring that they have been vindicated and they have begun pondering whether those who oppose war and voted for Trump are ‘gullible’ (Reason).  This is a rather odd assertion to be made, considering that most of these people did not vote for even a nominal non-interventionist in 2016.  Of Trump’s 2016 opponents, only Jill Stein was more stringently opposed to adventurism overseas than him.  Yet, beyond Stein, the other two major candidates were significantly more predisposed to war than Trump.  Specifically, I would highlight the Libertarian Party candidate, Gary Johnson, who was the preferred choice for many of the supposed non-interventionists that are sneering now.

    … Also complicated.

    In 2012, when Johnson first ran for the presidency, he offered a mixed bag with regards to foreign policy in an interview with the Daily Caller.  He suggested a 43% reduction in defense spending, but he also said that “he supports America’s efforts to aid African troops in tracking down Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony and that he wouldn’t rule out leaving behind American bases in Afghanistan” (Daily Caller).  Around the same time, in an interview with the Weekly Standard, Johnson also said that he supported the notion of the US waging war on humanitarian grounds (Weekly Standard).  These positions are almost indistinguishable from the long-forgotten breed of warmonger once known as the ‘Rockefeller Republican’.  Make war, but on the cheap.  As if cost is the only issue to consider when waging unnecessary wars.  More recently, in 2016, Johnson tried to avoid foreign policy issues and became less hawkish and more non-interventionist in his attitude to conflicts.  He told CNN in 2016, that in order to solve the conflict in Syria he believed that “There is only one solution to Syria, and that’s being hand in hand with Russia diplomatically to solve that” (CNN).  A position, ironically enough, that was nearly indistinguishable from that of Trump.  But beyond a few flubs, of which the media exaggerated, Johnson spent little time discussing his foreign policy vision in 2016.  So if the contention of these supposed non-interventionists sneering at Trump voters now is that Trump’s past statements, and those during the 2016 race, were not sufficient enough to conclude that Trump would be a non-interventionist than why were Johnson’s decidedly pro-interventionist positions supposed to have made him a better alternative?  The only ‘gullible’ voters in 2016 were those who refused to accept what they were hearing.

    At this time, it would appear that President Trump is behaving as a standard Republican president with regards to foreign policy, with a few exceptions.  Nine months into his administration, we cannot determine if Trump will correct his way and become non-interventionist or continue with the interventionist foreign policy that has dominated Washington since the end of World War II.  More likely than not, Trump will end up being more restrained, in some regards, than his two immediate predecessors.  Which, some might argue, is still preferable than a continuation of the status quo.  In hindsight, it appears that the only moral vote a non-interventionist could have made in the 2016 election was to either vote for Jill Stein or abstain.  But at the time, in November 2016, there was good reason for non-interventionists to be hopeful about the prospect of a Trump presidency.  And no one should fault them for the choice that they made, based upon the information that they had available at the time.

     

  • Hurricane Central

    Glibs,

    Having been inspired by sloopy’s efforts, the travails of our FL Glibs, and remembering my own fun with Katrina and Rita:

    Take the $%#&ing tent down! Rita is a comin’!

    I have decided to post a few things here – and this can be the place our Glibs involved with the various storms and their aftermath can keep us updated on their SAFETY (first and foremost) needs, wants, etc.

    First, the givings of teh monies. Charitable giving is a wonderful example of voluntary action. But how do you know your donation is going to go to help people, not for administrative overhead, bloated salaries and cocktailz? Start here. My short advice – yes to the Salvation Army, no to the Red Cross.

    Second, the storms that are currently churning around. Where are they going? Try here, for the latest. As a minarchist, this is one of the government agencies I can approve of…

     

    And for once, I am NOT going to bitch about people posting their own links in here – I want your links to helpful sites, information, stories – whatever you think will help.

    And FL and TX Glibs – please let us know, if you can, how you are doing. Please stay safe as you can. Things can be replaced. You cannot.