Tuesday, February 25, 2025

I hadn't thought about this road hazard...

 

From American Truckers on X.com, we learn this.  Click the image for a larger, readable view.



I don't regularly drive on ice and snow (thank you, Texas weather!), but from my (very) limited exposure to it, I know I don't do well under those driving conditions.  I'd never considered the hazards of commercial vehicles, particularly 18-wheeler truck/trailer combinations, when their drivers have the same problem.  Now that drivers can come in from Mexico (where snow isn't exactly commonplace, to put it mildly) and drive all the way to the US/Canadian border or even further north, I can see that would make for . . . interesting times on the highway.

How about you, readers?  Have any of you run into this problem (hopefully not literally!)?  If so, please tell us about it in Comments.  It might help keep all of us safer on the road.

Peter


This is not only morally sickening, it's a criminal misuse of taxpayer dollars

 

British apologist G. K. Chesterton is renowned for the premise that "The first effect of not believing in God is to believe in anything".  He never used those exact words, but several times in his writings that principle is clearly stated.

We've just been shown another example of what happens when human beings decide there's nothing Divine in which to believe, and that therefore anything goes.  This time it's in our intelligence services.


The “intelligence community” is one of the most powerful parts of the American national security apparatus. In theory, it works tirelessly to keep the nation safe. But according to internal documents that we obtained, some intelligence agency employees have another on-the-job priority: sex chats.

We have cultivated sources within the National Security Agency—one current employee and one former employee—who have provided chat logs from the NSA’s Intelink messaging program. According to an NSA press official, “All NSA employees sign agreements stating that publishing non-mission related material on Intelink is a usage violation and will result in disciplinary action.” Nonetheless, these logs, dating back two years, are lurid, featuring wide-ranging discussions of sex, kink, polyamory, and castration.

. . .

These revelations come at a moment of heightened scrutiny for the intelligence community. President Donald Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard have each made the case that the intelligence agencies have gone “woke,” prioritizing left-wing activism over national security. These chat logs confirm their suspicions and raise fundamental questions about competence and professionalism.

According to our sources, the sex chats were legitimized as part of the NSA’s commitment to “diversity, equity and inclusion.” Activists within the agency used LGBTQ+ “employee resource groups” to turn their kinks and pathologies into official work duties. According to the current NSA employee, these groups “spent all day" recruiting activists and holding meetings with titles such as “Privilege,” “Ally Awareness,” “Pride,” and “Transgender Community Inclusion.” And they did so with the full support of NSA leadership, which declared that DEI was “not only mission critical, but mission imperative.”

In this case, “diversity” was not a byword for racialism, but rather a euphemism for sex talk.


There's more at the link, much of it a lot more explicit than the excerpts I published above.  Read at your own risk.

As the article points out, this is a violation of policy and a disciplinary offense;  but that didn't stop those involved from discarding every rule and regulation and indulging their, shall we say, baser natures.  I doubt very much whether any of them adhere to any major religious belief (except perhaps Satanism), because their attitude and conduct transgresses the moral teaching of every such religion of which I'm aware.  I think this is a very clear example of believing in themselves and what feels good, rather than a higher power and what is morally or philosophically good.

There are those who say that doesn't matter;  that such individuals can't be blackmailed or shamed into providing intelligence to foreign powers and enemies of our country, because nowadays society accepts their ways and nobody cares any more.  Allow me to assure you, that's not the case.  Firstly, society isn't nearly as open across the country as it is in a few selected areas where people with such tendencies have chosen to congregate.  Secondly, even those who cast discretion to the winds and throw themselves wholeheartedly into such a lifestyle still don't want to lose people in their lives who are important to them - parents, siblings, close friends - but who may not accept or tolerate their lifestyle.  They can be embarrassed or shamed into cooperating with such enemies.  I know it.  As chaplain in a high-security penitentiary, one comes across . . . I won't say "is exposed to" for fear of misunderstandings . . . one comes across such people from time to time, serving years, even decades behind bars because their misdeeds and "secret lives" finally caught up with them.  They're pretty miserable critters, let me assure you.  I doubt very much that they'd tell you it was all worth it.

I hope and trust that everyone involved in this perversion will be identified, tracked down, and disciplined to the fullest possible extent, and will also lose their security clearances and associated career prospects.  I don't say that out of a spirit of vengefulness, but because I want to minimize any further damage they might do to our country, and end any they may already have done.  For those of us who are people of faith - any faith - I also suggest that we pray for those involved, because if anyone needs repentance and conversion, they do!










Peter

EDITED TO ADD:  Jeff Childers has some trenchant thoughts on the matter.


The response was swift, not to say coordinated. Within hours, Director Gabbard roundly condemned the spooks’ sexy chatting:

It used to be that harboring bizarre sexual kinks and revolting fetishes was an automatic disqualifier for top-secret clearance. Standards have obviously fallen faster than Senator McConnell navigating a steep marble stairway. I would go farther than most and suggest these concupiscient chatterers probably suffer from diagnosable mental illnesses, which apparently was a pathway to advancement in the Biden Administration’s intelligence agencies.

. . .

It was a devastating, carefully calculated takedown. Frankly, it explains a lot. But in the battlefield of public perception, this grotesque disclosure of what the NSA’s disobedient employees have been doing in secret will justify nearly any change that Tulsi Gabbard needs to make to reorganize the intelligence agencies.

This might be remembered as the moment when the public finally glimpsed the rot festering behind the glass and concrete walls of the intelligence fortress. A glimpse raising an even bigger, more uncomfortable question: If this is what we’re allowed to see—what’s still hidden?


There's more at the link.

That's a very good question, isn't it?


Monday, February 24, 2025

The money-laundering trail

 

I've never been a fan of Glenn Beck, but now and again he comes up with a very interesting insight or analysis of what's going on.  He's just taken a look at the flow of money from the "Deep State", quite legally through Congressional approval, to layer after layer of non-government organizations (NGO's).  He accurately calls it money laundering.

Take a look at this video.  It's only twelve minutes long, and very informative.




This is what's being revealed by D.O.G.E.'s "deep dive" into government expenditure.  We're finding tax dollars popping up in all sorts of unexpected (and inappropriate) areas.  Independent analysts like Datarepublican on X are taking that raw data, running it through spreadsheets and AI programs, and uncovering the trail of a tax dollar from place to place and organization to organization.  It's a long, complex process, and it's nowhere near complete yet.  It'll take months to uncover the money trail . . . but it must be done if we're to deep-six the Deep State.

Don't get impatient with the process if there are no new earth-shattering revelations, the way there were in the first couple of weeks of President Trump's term.  The process goes on, and digs deeper and deeper every day.  My worry is that the impatient American public will get bored with waiting, and demand something new and exciting every day.  That's unlikely to happen.  Instead, I suspect that after six months to a year, we're going to see a very, very large organization chart appear, tracing the links between all sorts of organizations.  There will also be flowcharts (or equivalents) showing how tax dollars made their way from government to private organizations, and why, and what they did with it.

I think we're also going to see just how much money certain congressional representatives and Senators have directed to their favored causes, and how much of that has come back to them in so-called "kickbacks" or "consulting fees" or "donations to re-election expenses".  I wonder how many of our legislators will face criminal charges as a result?  I won't be surprised to learn the number reaches into three figures.

That, of course, means that legislators (and their allies in the mainstream media) will be frantic to shut down the investigations, or mislead them, before they can be identified as guilty parties.  It's going to be like a cockroach-infested kitchen in the small hours of the morning when the light is suddenly switched on.  The panic and scurrying for cover of our political insects - on both sides of the aisle - should be epic . . .

Peter


Memes that made me laugh 250

 

A quarter of a millennium (numerically, not annually) of memes!

As always, gathered from around the Internet over the past week.  Click any image for a larger view.











Sunday, February 23, 2025

Sunday morning music

 

Ever heard of "dwarf metal"?


The question almost isn’t “Did you know there was such a thing as Dwarf Metal” but rather “How did it take so long for this to come into being?”

Like mithril forming under the earth’s crust, Dwarf Metal (also referred to as Dwarven Metal) began in the mind of young Francesco Cavalieri, from Pontedera, Italy. Growing up on a steady diet of Tolkien, World of Warcraft, and MTV’s Headbanger’s Ball, Cavalieri and his mates found a way to combine all their loves into a completely unique metal sub-genre.

. . .

Looking for a way to “stand out from the crowd,” Cavalieri and his bandmates tapped into their other childhood obsessions. “I played World of Warcraft. And then the Lord of the Rings movies were released in 2001. These years changed my life,” says Cavalieri. “I realized that I wanted to be a warrior!”

The band—now called Wind Rose after the way of graphically presenting wind and weather conditions for use in navigation—started out as a progressive power metal band, keeping its true intentions hidden while they established their cred.

. . .

Cavalieri, along with bandmates Claudio Falconcini (guitar), Federico Meranda (keyboards), Cristiano Bertocchi (bass), and Federico Gatti (drums), then began honing their stage presentation, enlisting the help of LARP costume-makers to create their dwarven armor. However, they quickly realized they needed to find a middle ground between cosplay and actual battle-ready armaments. “You see these people at Blizzcon and Comic Con with just the most beautiful armor,” says Cavalieri. “But it’s too big and fragile for us to use onstage. It’s not made for our kind of work!”

Wind Rose then recorded a cover of a 2010 parody song called “Diggy Diggy Hole,” written by UK-based comedy podcast YOGSCAST. The original song reached 50 million people worldwide on YouTube, and Cavalieri saw it as a way to give the band more visibility and show that they have a sense of humor about what they’re doing. “It’s a song about dwarfs! And it’s a funny song we can have some fun playing onstage.”


There's more at the link.  Interesting reading.

We've played that original version of "Diggy Diggy Hole" here before, as well as Wind Rose's original version of it.  In case you've forgotten, here's how it started.




Knowing that background, I was nevertheless amazed to see Wind Rose perform the song live as their closing number at the Legends Of Rock 2024 concert in Villena, Spain, in front of thousands of cheering metal fans complete with a circular mosh pit.  The original composers of the song could surely never have dreamed of this!




Still recovering from that last one, I found that Wind Rose had gone so far as to record a combined metal/disco/techno remix of "Diggy Diggy Hole" during the COVID lockdown a few years ago.  I've never encountered that mixture before, and I'm not sure I want to again:  but, for posterity and completeness, here it is.




There you are - a uniquely "underground music" start to your Sunday!

Peter


Friday, February 21, 2025

Heh

 

Found on Gab:


A Coolidge anecdote is that at a state fair, Mrs. Coolidge and her party came across an exhibit of chickens. The man who owned the chickens informed Mrs. Coolidge, “That rooster can perform his services six or seven times a day,” to which Mrs. Coolidge replied, “See to it that the President is given that information!”

When President Coolidge came to the same exhibit sometime later, the owner told him, “Mrs. Coolidge wanted me to tell you that that rooster can perform his services six or seven times a day.” Coolidge thought for a moment and then asked, “Same chicken every time?” to which the owner said, “No, Mr. President, different chickens.”

Coolidge then said, “See to it that Mrs. Coolidge is given that information!”




Peter


Larry Correia brings the smackdown to wannabe auditors

 

The inimitable Larry Correia, best-selling author and friend, has written another outstanding (and rather profane) rant against those who presume to know what's involved in an audit, such as those currently being conducted of the operations of government administration.  (Being a chartered accountant and a forensic auditor, he knows whereof he speaks.)  Here are some excerpts.


Watching everybody I know on the left pontificating about the proper way to conduct audits, after getting their accounting degrees from the University of Internet this week, is absolute cringe for me.

Guys, listen, I say this with love… You don’t know **** about **** and it’s fucking embarrassing. Just stop. You sound like idiots.

So now, as a guy who used to be an auditor, who has defended companies from dozens of audits from different government agencies, I’ll try to correct some of your incredibly stupid NPC talking points you keep endlessly barfing up.

. . .

But but but Elon is posting things on Twitter that aren’t 100% perfectly accurate according to liberal fact checkers from liberal news organizations which up until recently have been receiving large amounts of tax payer money for phony baloney reasons!

So what?

The stuff that’s been made public so far is what’s called findings. Findings aren’t the final report. That takes time. And you’ll probably never see those final reports because again, say it with me, INTERNAL. The only way you’ll ever see the complete detailed final report for any given agency is Donald Trump feels like it. Same as any CEO can drop whatever internal company info he feels like.

But DOGE is going TOO FAST! Well no ****. They are on a tight time frame. The republicans control everything right now (barely, and many of them are every bit as corrupt as the dems) only the government is ******* huge, Trump got elected on cutting it, and mid terms are in two years.

. . .

The time for a gentle, caring, measured (slow), careful pruning of government to only remove the bad tissue with a scalpel was generations ago. We are now at the axe and TQ time before the patient dies. Yeah, that sucks, but that’s what happens when you procrastinate going to the doctors while a cancerous tumor the size of a ******* watermelon grows out your back.

. . .

Will government programs you like get cut? Absolutely. Will this suck for a lot of people? Yes. Will good hard working employees get cut along with the legions of useless ******* dregs? Yup. Is this still necessary so our entire nation doesn’t collapse into utter dog **** under the weight of the all consuming federal leviathan, where to survive we huddle in the ruins eating rats cooked over piles of burning dollar bills? Also yes.

They’re called budget cuts because they hurt. If they were pleasant they would be called budget tickles.

. . .

If a company’s records were full of broken bullshit, the government would assume the worst, fine the ever living **** out of you, and possibly send you to jail. Because the government’s default assumption when a company’s books are all ****** up is that it is on purpose to hide fraud.

Except when our government’s books are filled with things like 30 million dollars to fund a Transsexual Peruvian Orchestra, and 99% of that money never made it out of northern Virginia, we’re supposed to assume that’s just nice fluffy goodness, and HOW DARE YOU assume there’s anything dishonest going on.


There's more at the link.

Refer to this morning's cartoon for the likely, devoutly-to-be-wished consequences of such audits . . .





Peter


And not before time...

 

Found on MeWe:







Peter


Thursday, February 20, 2025

Defense cuts? You betcha!

 

I note that Defense Secretary Hegseth has asked the US military to prepare for budget cuts of about 8% a year over the next five years.  That sounds like a tall order, but I think it's entirely feasible if he takes an axe to the bureaucracy, waste and "gilding the lily" that's rampant in our armed forces at present.  Examples:

  • The Constellation-class frigate program was supposed to use an existing design, with minimal modification.  After "tinkering" by the Navy, it now has less than 15% commonality with its source design.  It's also three years late and 40% over budget.  At this point, it might be better to "reset" the entire program, go back to its original design roots, and cancel everything over and above that.
  • The F-35, which after years of tinkering and ten years in service is still not at its full, originally specified operational capability, and is costing so much that it's soaking up funds needed for other aircraft projects.
  • The US Navy has less than 300 ships in active service, and about 230 admirals of various grades - approximately 1.3 ships per admiral.  If we adjust things so that we have just 2 ships per admiral, that would reduce the "deadwood" by about eighty admirals - and I'm sure that's just the beginning of what could be achieved.  The other services could do likewise.  For decades, Air Force wings were commanded by colonels.  Today, some are commanded by brigadier-generals.  Why?  Why not go back to the old way and save all those general officer salaries and benefits?
To be fair, some of the armed forces' problems are caused by the politicians to whom they answer.  The catastrophic withdrawal (should that be "undignified scramble for the exits"?) from Afghanistan left behind tens of billions of dollars of weapons and equipment, much of which is now allegedly being made available to terrorists elsewhere in the world.  It should never have happened, but the Biden administration rode roughshod over military and strategic considerations, causing the havoc that ensued.

I hope that as far as weapon design and procurement goes, the armed forces will seriously consider Elon Musk's approach to new technology.  Build a "first-pass" attempt and test it.  It'll probably fail.  Find out why, fix that, and see what else can be improved.  Build a "second-pass" attempt and test it.  Ditto.  After a few iterations, you're likely to see greatly improved results - and you'll get them fast, instead of having to wait years for theoretical designers to try to make sure everything's safe on paper before they allow anything to actually be made.

I'd also like to see something like Armscor's approach to weapons design in South Africa.  When a new weapon was required, a design was chosen and developed to pre-production standards:  then the engineers who'd built it, and who would oversee production, were expected to take it into a combat zone and test it under fire.  Most of them, of course, had seen military service as conscripts, so they weren't unused to the idea, but it was nonetheless amusing to hear their comments when something proved less than satisfactory while the enemy was shooting at them.  (I learned a few new words that way.)  It also made sure that the actual production models were as good as they could be, with very few surprises (unpleasant or otherwise) for the troops using them.

A good example was the first field test of South Africa's ZT3 anti-tank missile, today known as the Ingwe.  Based on the US TOW missile, which was then developed into a laser-guided version, MAPATS, by an Israeli company, the ZT3 was sent into combat in 1987, mounted on a Ratel IFV, as a final test before full production began.  A few Angolan T-55's duly turned up, and fire was exchanged.  Unfortunately, in some cases the missile's laser guidance system, designed to seek out a laser beam being projected onto the target and follow it, instead found the hot, bright African sun a much more interesting illumination - so some missiles took off skyward, pursued by the highly indignant epithets of the engineers and servicemen trying to defend themselves.  Others worked.  You can hear ten minutes of audio from that actual combat at this link.

I'm afraid a "waste mindset" has permeated through much of the US military these days.  "We don't have to worry - the taxpayer will foot the bill!"  I don't think that's accurate any more . . . and I hope our armed forces can change their ways, and become leaner and meaner than before.

Peter


Heh

 

From X.com:



It's funny, of course, but the reality is that fraudulent Social Security payouts are the least of our worries.  With a "valid" (i.e. in-the-system, unquestioned) Social Security number, anyone can apply for bank accounts, loans, subsidies, food stamps, and a host of other benefits - even voting in US elections.  It's the key that opens many doors, and allows someone to defraud us through all of them.  That's why having sixty-plus-million Social Security Numbers more than the entire population of the USA is so dangerous.  It's not the numbers - it's the doors they open to fraud.

Peter


Cut funding for "Big Ag"? Sounds fair to me.

 

From The Hill:


Brooke Rollins, our new secretary of Agriculture, is promising to reform the department and create “effective and efficient nutrition programs.” On her first day she “pledged to bring greater efficiency to USDA” and “stop wasteful spending.”

If she’s serious about eliminating waste, she’ll take a hard look at the wasteful mandates and billions of U.S. tax dollars that go directly to agricultural corporations every year.

What do we get for this huge investment of public funds? Mostly an industry that benefits a few large corporations and perpetuates a cycle of overproduction and waste. Wasteful mandates and spending actually add additional costs to Americans on top of our tax dollars, including billions in increased food, fuel, and medical costs, and environmental harm.

Rollins has a big opportunity for change.    

Despite spending $20 billion a year of our tax dollars on farm subsidies, Americans never see most U.S. agriculture products. We only eat about 37 percent of major crops produced. The remainder are feeding the pockets of large agriculture corporations — diverted to industrial processes that overproduce fuel and feed or exported out of the country and entangled in tariff battles.  

Take the biofuel industry: Congress subsidizes biofuels through the Renewable Fuel Standard, which requires all fuel refiners to include billions of gallons of corn and soy-based biofuels in gasoline and diesel — far more than what the market demands ... What biofuel subsidies have done is increase consumer costs. In a recent report, the Environmental Protection Agency estimates that the Renewable Fuel Standard increases our food and fuel costs by over $8 billion per year.

. . .

Agricultural subsidies have ballooned out of control largely because of the myth of the bucolic family farm. No one wants to hurt the hard-working, multi-generational small farmer who is just trying to earn an honest living.  

But this isn’t the reality of American agriculture today. Our agriculture industry is dominated by a small number of industrial-scale corporations that benefit from the vast majority of subsidies.


There's more at the link.

I could get behind this in a big way.  Just for a start, how about abolishing the ethanol mandate for gasoline?  By eliminating it, we'd save literally billions of dollars a year buying a product that is not scientifically or economically necessary - in fact, using it and blending it with "raw" fuels costs us quite a bit more per gallon than we'd otherwise have to pay.  And guess what?  All that ethanol subsidy money goes to "Big Ag" - firms like Archer Daniels Midland and their ilk, corporate "farmers" that own thousands of square miles of American farmland and exploit it for their benefit, not ours.

I hope a way can be found to help small farmers, whether families or small corporations like LLC's, to stay on the land and get access to the latest technology.  That way, not only can they grow the food we need, but they can provide employment for themselves and many others.  That will also breathe new life into otherwise dying small towns and farm communities.

There's a place for "Big Ag", I'm sure . . . but not at taxpayers' expense.  Let them fund their own operations.

Peter