Archive for January, 2024

China Invaded . . . And Won!  Oh Well. (January 29, 2024)

Posted in China, Economy, Kleptocracy, Trade on January 29, 2024 by e-commentary.org

. . .

K          “How does one explain why there is such a fuss over China possibly invading Taiwan when there was so little effusion over China invading the USA.”

J          “And winning.”

. . .

K          “For most of our adult life, the American economy has been and is being destroyed, disemboweled and dismembered.  A crook like Harry Stonecipher destroyed, disemboweled and dismembered a brilliant American jewel – Boeing.  A thug like Jack Welch destroyed, disemboweled and dismembered a shining American icon – General Electric.  Destruction from within a company.  And economic criminals like ‘Mitts’ Romney and Paul Singer and so many others destroyed companies from without.”

J          “In the patois of our age, would ‘Domestic Economic Terrorist’ appropriately describe them?”

K          “And then they get appointed to a presidential cabinet position or even run for or get into the White House.”

 . . .

K          “Those in power are only concerned with Washington and Wall Street not with Waukesha and Wabash.”

J          “Our friend the ‘War and Wall Street Party’ grinds on and over and around and through us.”

. . .

K          “Look at how it was accomplished.  With the active cooperation and complicity of the Ruling Class of the United States, China invaded the Greater Midwest writ large of America. . . and took over.  The invasion was undertaken not with people and bullets but instead with United States politicians/businessmen and plant closings.  The good people in the Greater Midwest writ large know that they have been conquered and vanquished.  China also stormed the beaches and invaded the two Golden Coasts . . . and took over.  However, the fools on the two Golden Coasts do not know that they too have been conquered and vanquished.”

. . .

J          “Someone was sounding that message more than five years ago.  The Mandarin language class on Tuesday nights prepares one to interpret the conversations of the prison guards at the re-education camp.  And some of us will be quickly identified and shipped to the re-education camp.  Or shot on sight.” 

. . .    

[See the e-commentary at Mitt’s “Destructive Destruction”: The Bane of Capitalism (July 9, 2012) and Volkswagen (VW).  The Bottom Half Of The German Engineering Class Must Go Somewhere.  Boeing? (July 1, 2019).]

Bumper stickers of the week:

We could be getting into trouble

Three “D” USA Economic Policy:  Destroy, Disembowel and Dismember

Edward Hopper:  The Mirror For Our Age (January 22, 2024)

Posted in Art, Society on January 22, 2024 by e-commentary.org

. . .

J          “Edward Hopper.  Top of the list.  He captures and distills the disconnection and alienation of the nation . . . in his time . . . and in our time . . . in a subtle haunting and disturbing way.”

. . .

K          “Everyone knows.  Something is wrong.  Something is amiss.  Something is fetid and festering.  Yet everyone knows they do not know everything.  Everyone knows they may not know specifically, but they do know that they know generally.  That certain uncertainty is toxic and crippling and debilitating and alienating.”

J          “If you pay attention, you really can see it and hear it and feel it and smell it . . . and even taste it.”

. . .

J          “Photoshop a Fondle Slab into every other paw.  Etch a tattoo or two on their torso, too.  Turn the top hats into backwards baseball caps.  Modify the visages from resigned acceptance to coiled and undigested anger.”

K          “He captures the loneliness and emptiness and the milieu with a quiet dignity.”

. . .

J          “Even if not a thing is changed, his work captures his age and our age . . . and our restrained outrage.”  

. . .

[See the recent e-commentary at On Friendship Today:  Flat, Fried, Frayed, Frazzled, Frozen, Fractured, Fissured, Fatigued, Finished?  Oh, And Happy Thanksgiving! (November 20, 2023) and The Other Sabot To Drop (April 18, 2022) and some vintage observations at The Residue of Unrelenting Fear: PTSD Afflicts The Populace (August 28, 2006) and Depleted Uranium Disease (DUD) (March 30, 2009); see the January e-commentary on the Fondle Slab at “Monitoring The Masses:  The Card And The Chip (January 12, 2015)” Revisited:  The “Fondle Slab” Enslaves Us All (January 28, 2019).]

Bumper sticker of the week:

When all this social distance stuff is over, I still want people to stay away from me.

MLK, Jr. (January 15, 2024)

Posted in Civil Rights/Civil Liberties, Race, Society, War on January 15, 2024 by e-commentary.org

Take five minutes to reflect . . . and then go on with the demands of life.

Bumper sticker of the week:

“The evils of capitalism are as real as the evils of militarism and racism.  The problems of racial injustice and economic injustice cannot be solved without a radical redistribution of political and economic power.”  MLK, Jr.

January 6:  The Country Needs An Impartial And Objective Inquiry (January 8, 2024)

Posted in Collapse, Corruption, Elections on January 8, 2024 by e-commentary.org

. . .

K          “Then I had no doubt.  Now I do.  A more reasoned and seasoned analysis has slowly supplanted a quick emotional reaction.  And I have had time to learn more, talk with many others and give it more thought.”

J          “Three years later, I have no doubt.  It was an insurrection.”

. . . 

K          “Someone who voted and will vote for Biden and anyone else foisted on this country by the DNC pulled me aside and confessed that he is deeply troubled that his law enforcement friends on the inside told him they were expressly ordered to stand down and not call for reinforcements in the face of a disorderly group.  A piece of uncontroverted evidence from his trusted old home boys shared over coffee still rattles him three years later.  He is on the first step on the road to Truth, but he admits that he does not and will not take another step.”

J          “No one on the inside forced them to climb the walls and break through the barriers and enter the building.  Someone on the outside encouraged them to climb the walls and break through the barriers and enter the building.”

. . .

K          “I worked near Jenkins Hill fifty years ago when Washington, D.C. was a sleepy southern town with modest security and muggy summers.  In 1974, a few harmless citizens started chanting for a change in our Southeast Asian war policy at the southwest base of the Hill.  The area is north of Independence Avenue and just west of First Street, Southwest.  I was in the Rayburn Building and saw the walls pivot open and discharge phalanxes of SWAT teams that barged through the crowd and charged outside to confront the citizens.  I was asked to and did immediately leave the building and was positioned outside to chronicle the confrontation.  The police presence was so overwhelming and the citizens were so well mannered that nothing came of it.  The police allowed the citizens to flash signs and chant for change but not enter the building.  No one was hurt.  No one was arrested.  The First Amendment was not bruised.  Since those bucolic days, the level of security – visible and largely hidden – has mushroomed and created an impregnable fortress with fluted columns on the Hill.”

J          “I vaguely recall getting drafted by someone on a blustery, nasty, rainy and chilly Saturday morning to attend a demonstration to get the country out of Iraq.  We walked from the Capitol South Metro station to the same southwest side of the Hill.  The police had designated an area to congregate surrounded by a circular ring of blue motor scooters, officers astride horses and two rows of officers equipped for war.  A few speakers spoke to the fifty or so folks without incident and then everyone disbanded to go home and get dry and warm.  The Metro was dry and warm.  The police do know how to put the populace in their place.”

K          “I have been charged by one of those phalanxes . . . and felt sympathy for the horses.”

. . .

K          “After the riots broke out after King was terminated in 1968, I remember the newspaper picture of members of the 82nd Airborne drilling multiple triangles of holes to bolt tripods to the top of the western wall of the Capitol.  The rioters were approaching street by street from the northwest.”

J          “They meant business.  They need to mean business.  It can be a mean business.”

. . .     

K          “I believe everyone should be required to take off his or her shoes and to wear some more formal attire to enter, so you can put me down as one who does not countenance anyone breaking anything or breaching an entrance without permission.”

J          “From what I saw, no one even wiped his or her shoes before entering.”

. . .

K          “If I had not been subject to a self-imposed Covid travel embargo, I would have been there in person on the Mall with my reporter’s notebook and Steve Job’s Hasselblad on January 6, 2021 to chronicle the event.”

. . .

K          “We need to include a discussion of the Tractorcade events of February 5, 1979 on the agenda.  I did not have a camera then.  Or a cell phone.  That was quite a spectacle.  The snow rained on their parade.”

. . .

K          “Keep it simple.  Occam’s Razor comes into play again yet is applied differently than in your prior application.  There is one rule in this situation that has no exception:  No one gets into the Capitol unless allowed into the Capitol by those in the Capitol.  If you knew nothing about the situation and applied only Occam’s Razor, any plausible explanation must comport with this one fundamental rule. The Capitol is Joint Base House-Senate.”

J          “I restate my case.  No one on the inside forced them to climb the walls and break through the barriers and enter the building.  Someone on the outside encouraged them to climb the walls and break through the barriers and enter the building.”

. . .

K          “There is more to the story.  For the sake of the country, the country needs to empanel an impartial committee to provide an inquiry into what went on that day.  Keep in mind the people we are dealing with up there, Democrats and Republicans.  On their best day, they are ruthless and amoral.  Many of them could get the Devil to gag.  Everything is always more complex than it initially appears.”

J          “Or more simple.”

. . .

[See the e-commentary at On Riots And Rampages (January 11, 2021).]

Bumper stickers of the week:

Be skeptical

Be very skeptical

Be profoundly skeptical

The Capitol is Joint Base House-Senate

Near the end of the movie “Rancho Deluxe”, Slim Pickens said to Henry Dean Stanton:  “Son, all large-scale crime is always an inside job.”