Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Joe Biden: Hillary Clinton Version 2020

Former Vice-President Joe Biden is running for the White House.

Contain your enthusiasm.

Yes, Biden announced his candidacy yesterday, and had his first campaign stop in Pittsburgh, before going being scheduled to visit some of the early primary states in the immediate future.

Biden will bring into this presidential race all of the excitement that Hillary Clinton brought to the masses in 2016. 


Really, there are some striking similarities. Both are mainstream Democrats, middle of the road politicians who are well-established Washington insiders. Both supported the Iraq invasion in 2003, and look how well that worked out! Both like their big corporate sponsors, and Biden is cozy with them to the point that he was once jokingly referred to as “the senator from MBNA.” And both take a condescending attitude towards young people.

Hillary famously quipped that Bernie supporters were living in their parent's basement. 

Here is something that Biden recently said in response to being asked if he felt that millennials have it tough:

"The younger generation now tells me how tough things are. Give me a break. No, no, I have no empathy for it. Give me a break."

Nice, huh?


Of course, student debt is a crushing burden for young people graduating college these days, and this is far and away the most expensive country in the world to attend college in. In fact, it goes beyond that, because Americans have more debt than any other nation in the world. We also have the highest costs for healthcare in the world. All of this is because of the undue influence of big banks and major corporations over Washington politicians, and let us remember that Biden is one of those politicians, which means he is greatly contributing to all of these things that make life in America worse, not better. He had his time, he had his chance. We know his answers to these questions, and we understand how condescension is indicative of who he is, and what he represents.

Plus, those major corporations have greatly contributed to the greenhouse gases that have warmed the planet, and made the future feel decidedly grimmer than it should feel.

Biden's answer to these concerns?

Again, let's repeat:

"Give me a break."

Biden represents the de facto Washington elites, the establishment Democrats who want the Democratic Party to be as close to Reagan Republicans as they can be. Maybe they are not as blatant in their elitism and idiocy as Donald Trump is, but do not mistake their criticism of Trump for real change, because it is not.What it represents is a kinder, more articulate way of defending the same status quo that Trump champions, even though Trump and his rabid supporters would likely balk at this notion.

But the idea that Biden represents some real change, and that he could bring real hope, let alone any change, to Americans, when we need it the most?

Well, let's borrow Biden's own words, shall we?

"Give me a break."

~ Joe Biden



Joe Biden is the Hillary Clinton of 2020 Americans want outsiders, reformers, and fresh faces, not politicians with decades of baggage. By Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesiasmatt@vox.com  Updated Apr 25, 2019,







Quote by Biden on Millennials taken by the following:

Joe Biden trashes Millennials: 'Give me a break' By Eric Ting, SFGATE, Friday, January 12, 2018:



Woodstock 50 Festival is Officially Cancelled




Well, this one is over before it even started.

Woodstock 50 - the concert that was supposed to both commemorate the original Woodstock, as well as be the new Woodstock Festival for the present generation, has been canceled by it's sponsors.

This one was supposed to take place in Watkins Glen, New York, on August 16th-18th.  It was supposed to more or less be an answer to the nonsense that is dominating headlines today, much like the original Woodstock turned out to be the showcase of the counterculture movement of the sixties, with the backdrops of headlines being dominated by the Vietnam War, the civil rights movement, seemingly worldwide revolutions, political assassinations, massive protests, and increased experimentation in music and art. 

These days, of course, the headlines seem even weirder. Who could have imagined just how weird everything would be in 2019?

But there will be no Woodstock to try and help define these strange times.

Truth be told, though, I am not sure that they should really try to duplicate Woodstock, anyway. It would not be the first time that they attempted to do it, after all. In 1994, they attempted it for the 25th anniversary, there were criticisms that it was all about money, as only tokens would serve as currency, with people locked into the grounds and forced to pay exorbitant prices for concessions and such. Then, they tried it yet again for the 30th anniversary, with this one being held at the former Griffiss Air Force Base. This, too, was transparently about money, and it was overshadowed by violence.

Neither of those so-called "Woodstock" festivals could really hold a candle to the original, either in terms of creative genius, nor in terms of representing a positive spirit and a glowing example of an alternative to the grim realities of the world. In fact, both in their own way, those "Woodstock" festivals were closer to being a reminded of some of the darker and more depressing realities of the modern world.

Billboard published a statement from Amplifi Live, a Dentsu Aegis division, that read in part:

"Despite our tremendous investment of time, effort and commitment, we don't believe the production of the festival can be executed as an event worthy of the Woodstock Brand name while also ensuring the health and safety of the artists, partners and attendees. ... As a result and after careful consideration, Dentsu Aegis Network's Amplifi Live, a partner of Woodstock 50, has decided to cancel the festival. As difficult as it is, we believe this is the most prudent decision for all parties involved."

Hate to say it, because the original Woodstock took place well before I was born. Frankly, I would have loved to have been present during this concert, and initially, I was excited enough at the prospect of another Woodstock in 1994 that I entertained the idea of attending it.

Yet, my suspicions at the time, confirmed by the actual event, was that this would not at all be comparable nor as memorable as the first, and the "real," Woodstock. 

Frankly, Woodstock was a one-time thing. They tried it before, in 1994 and in 1999, and both fell well short of everything that the real Woodstock was and has continued to represent, even decades later.

Now, they tried yet again, and once again, predictably, this one fell short. Perhaps if the spirit of the thing transcended these mediocre times that we are living in, it might have had a chance to be memorable, although probably not quite on the level of the original one. Yet, this one fell so short of the mark as to not even get off the ground, and was canceled months before it even actually happened. 

Probably time to admit that the first one was just incredibly special, and will not likely be replicated. It was not really repeated on a memorable level either in 1994 or 1999, and it will not be repeated in the official 50th anniversary now in 2019.

There really was only one Woodstock, after all:


Woodstock Organizers Cancel 50th Anniversary Festival





Woodstock 50 Canceled By Its Investors by Anastasia Tsioulcas, April 29, 2019:



Some Accurate Descriptions of Donald Trump



Until very recently, I felt that one foreigner, a journalist from New Zealand, had nailed the essence of Donald Trump better than any other description that I had heard of. That would be Paul Thomas of the New Zealand Herald and here is what he said back in 2015, well before Trump's rise to the presidency was a reality, and looked anything but a foregone conclusion:

“Trump personifies everything the rest of the world despises about America: casual racism, crass materialism, relentless self-aggrandizement, vulgarity on an epic scale. He is the Ugly American in excelsis.”

Since first encountering it some time in 2015, that was, without a doubt,  the best description that I had heard about Donald Trump. 

But that changed this weekend, when I read something that a British writer said about Trump. Yes, Nate White had a most hilarious response to the question, "Why do some British people not like Donald Trump?"

It goes on, and is fairly lengthy. It is not a quick two or three line read, like that quote from Thomas. But here are some short quotes of White's description of Trump (my personal favorite, that Trump is a "Jabba the Hut of privilege," was something that I already used in the title of this particular blog entry):

"He is a Picasso of pettiness; a Shakespeare of shit." 

Yup. And here's White describing how the British cannot appreciate what passes as Trump's humour (had to use the British spelling):

"We like a laugh. And while Trump may be laughable, he has never once said anything wry, witty or even faintly amusing – not once, ever."

White goes on:

"He doesn’t even seem to understand what a joke is – his idea of a joke is a crass comment, an illiterate insult, a casual act of cruelty." 

Pretty much right on target, eh?

Since then, I have found a few other things that further define the essence of Donald Trump, and what he is all about and represents.

This one was very good, and was one of the best and most memorable descriptions encompassing all that Trump really amounts to when you strip away his support:


Cheri Jacobus ‏ Verified account   @CheriJacobus Follow Follow @CheriJacobus More Trump a poor person's idea of what a rich person is, dumb person's idea of what smart person is, weak person's idea of what strong person is  4:11 PM - 29 Jun 2017





Daniel Dale ‏ Verified account   @ddale8 Follow Follow @ddale8 More Things the president called people and entities before 8 AM today:
- Joe Scarborough "Psycho" and "Angry, Dumb and Sick"
- Democrats "totally insane"
- New York Times "Fake News" and "Enemy of the People"
- Paul Krugman "stupid" - Twitter "very discriminatory"
5:07 AM - 23 Apr 2019

This was one of the responses, and it made some headlines:

Juliet Wentworth @julietwentworth
Replying to @ddale8
Psychological projection is a defence mechanism in which the human ego defends itself against unconscious impulses or qualities (both positive and negative) by denying their existence in themselves while attributing them to others.
8:12 23 Apr 19 Twitter for Iphone



The Claypool Lennon Delirium - South of Reality Album Review











The Claypool Lennon Delirium ~ South of Reality

This was really an incredible album! I got it mostly out of curiosity, not knowing much about their story or the music. But it featured Sean Lennon, and I have long been intrigued by anybody who has any relation to the Beatles. Now granted, he was not himself a member of the Fab Four, obviously. Yet, he is John Lennon's son, and Lennon wrote a song about him that is, frankly, a truly beautiful song. Watch "Mr. Holland's Opus," and you might even tear up at that version of it.

Also, Les Claypool was always interesting and very different. I had seen Primus once at an Ozzfest, and they just seemed really weird. That was not a turnoff, yet their performance was not enough at that time to make me rush out and get an album, either. I did hear some of their stuff on the radio here and there, and I remember liking 'Too Many Puppies," although it seemed again to be a weird song, and it was difficult to tell what the song's lyrics were about. 

But it seemed like an interesting musical collaboration, and so I decided to give it a shot. It was the first music album that I bought in a long time, along with the new Voivod album. Funny, how I used to spend quite a bit of money on albums, and now, I hardly ever buy them anymore. But technology has changed, and there are relatively few music stores left even selling actual albums anymore.

Still, this one seemed like it might be worth it, and so I took the chance.

Boy, was I glad that I did! It is a phenomenal album! This really sounds different than anything that is out there right now, and I do not hear anyone else making music that sound quite like this. Truth be told, I have not felt this way about a new rock album in a long, long time. It felt good to be this excited some new rock album again, I do not remember feeling that way about a newly released album in a very long time. No exaggeration, it might have been in the nineties, the last time I was so moved by a new music album.

This sounds reminiscent of early Pink Floyd or early Genesis, during the psychedelic era for each band. It just came out earlier this year, yet it would not have sounded out of place half a century ago, during the height of the psychedelic era of the late sixties and early seventies. Hell, there is even a few seconds of a teaser of a famous Janis Joplin that fans would be hard pressed not to immediately identify.

Indeed, this duo produced the most imaginative album that I personally have heard in quite some time. And having seen them in concert earlier this month, it seems that I am not the only one who feels this way, that this band has managed to bring something new to rock music, if you will.

So, what is it that I like so much about this album? How can I measure each individual song, or try to summarize just what it is that makes this album - and this musical act more generally - special, and kind of reinvigorates hope for me that maybe rock music is not as dead as so many so-called experts are so quick to proclaim it?

Well, my words cannot do that. I will try to break down each song, but truth be told, the best way to really get an idea about how good this album is would be to get your hands on a copy, strap on some ear phones, and take a listen.

Now, of course, everyone has different tastes. For example, despite my own enthusiasm, my girlfriend was not a fan. She said that the singers - both Claypool and Lennon - sound almost cartoonish at certain points, even in the way that they talk. I had to concede the point, because I had heard similar criticisms - if that is the right word for it - of Claypool dating back to the early days of Primus. Hell, I saw one online comment suggesting that he sounded like a redneck Weird Al Yankowic, which was humorous, but I suspect it was not meant exactly as a compliment. And Sean Lennon sounds reminiscent of his father, but I remember George Harrison mentioning that he felt that sometimes the Beatles - particularly their speaking voices - sounded quite cartoonish in a way. When you listen to the album, there are indeed moments when the vocals sound almost like they are done in humorous and/or playfully mocking tone, although my guess is that this is intentional.

Of course, it must be said that perhaps you, the reader, will not appreciate it as much as I did. And that's fine. After all, we all have different tastes when it comes to music, and art more generally. As the saying goes, to each his (or her) own, right?

But this was the first album in a long time that I felt very strongly about in a long, long time. It restored my faith that some excellent music, even in the supposedly dead umbrella of rock genre that I grew up with, can still be made. There are points where, again, it sounds like you could be listening to Pink Floyd or Genesis at their very best. Sometimes, this album almost made me feel like I might have been listening to "A Trick of the Tail, " a "recent" album dating back quite a number of decades now, as opposed to something by a current rock act who's best days may still be well ahead of them, as opposed to decades behind them.

So, without further ado, here is a breakdown of a really great album - one produced in 2019! - as I review each song individually.



1. Little Fishes - The opening track starts out with soft bells, and then strange voices, before the guitars finally begin the music. It has a relatively soft and experimental sound initially, and then turns to a faster pace. This song starts out very upbeat, and then gets a bit heavier, both musically and lyrically, during the "Gone are the days" part:

Gone are the days 
When you can stick your toes in without a second thought 
Gone are the days 
When you can get your mind wet without the fear of rot

Fittingly for a spacey, psychedelic track, there is even a Star Wars allusion:

When will the youth get on its hind legs? 
Is the Golden Goose still laying 3D printed eggs? 
When will Ben Kenobi come 
And saber it all away?

The very end of this track actually reminded me quite a bit of some older Genesis.



2. Blood and Rockets 
Movement 1: Saga of Jack Parsons - 
Movement II - To the Moon

My guess is that they wanted to have a play on the band "Love and Rockets," with this title here, although I cannot say for sure. A soaring sound at times, with statement lyrics about how certain "boys" are playing with fire, and might bring an end to this world as we know it in the process:

How high (How high) Does your rocket fly? (Does your rocket fly?) 
You better be careful boys 
You just might (You just might) 
Set the world on fire (On fire) 
You better be careful boys 
You'll set the world on fire



3. South of Reality (Path of Totality) - Fast-paced music begins to slow down in time for the lyrics begin. The song describes a lunar eclipse, where somehow, the participants are not entirely captivated by the incredible astronomical event unfolding. 



4. Boriska - This song starts off with a question: "Will he understand us?" It closes with the same lyrics. Several different feels to this album, and perhaps the main part of it, with the lyrics, sounds more mainstream than much of the rest of the album. A solid track, with enough experimentation nonetheless to make this track really stand out. A very nice deviation right in the middle of the track to boot, before it returns back to the main sound.  



5. Easily Charmed by Fools - Another statement song about the sorry state of the world today, as the oft-repeated refrain "Desperate measures lead to desperate situations..." would reveal. It speaks about people who look only at the surface, and never dig deeper, allowing first impressions to dictate how they want to view the world. This song ends on an acoustic note, with still a note of psychedelia to it. But it reveals much of what is wrong with the world with insightful lyrics, as well: "Drawn to artificial light." A very enjoyable song.



6. Amethys Realm - Probably the most easily digestible track on the album for a mainstream audience. The lyrics seem to play with the idea of a woman falling for a literal vampire, with allusions to the undead. Musically, this is probably the most mainstream track, yet it does not really betray the more experimental, psychedelic sound of the album as a whole. Chances are, if you do not like this particular track, you very well might not like this album. 



7. Toadyman's Hour - A broken sound to begin this track, it quickly turns a bit on the bizarre sound. This might be the weirdest song on the album altogether. It has an unorthodox, almost eerie sound, with lyrics to match. But a solid track overall.



8. Cricket Chronicles Revisited  
Part One - Ask Your Doctor
Part Two - Psyde Effects

A very psychedelic sound to this one. Lennon's singing here sounds very reminiscent of his father's in this one. Very thought-provoking lyrics. At times, the lyrics (NOT the music) feel almost reminiscent of the Talking Heads:

Are you desensitized, sleep walking through life? 
Things you once enjoyed do not feel quite right? 
In the mirror you barely recognize 
Someone masquerading as your lovely wife? 

Then some piercing lyrical content that betrays a perceptive understanding of the confusing state of the world today:

Is your throat just a little bit too dry? 
Trouble looking anyone in the eye? 
Evil things are becoming normal life? 
Trouble remembering how to empathize?

Very cool song.



9. Like Fleas - A very upbeat, almost happy sounding track, which disguises the fact that they are actually singing about the end of humanity, specifically. That is what the title alludes to, as Mother Earth does everything it can to shake us off "like fleas on the back of a dog." Take a look at some of these lyrics:

They say Mother Earth is dying 
I don't see it quite that way 
As she spits out massive hurricanes 
To wash us all away

And this:

Like fleas on the back of a dog 
(Fleas on the back of a dog) 
Eventually we'll be shaken off 
(Ah, shaken off) 


All in all, a great album! Do yourself a favor and take a listen!

The Claypool Lennon Delirium ~ South of Reality


Monday, April 29, 2019

'Avengers: Endgame' Crushes Previous Records With $1.2 Billion Opening Weekend

Rarely do I ever pay attention to box office numbers, much less talk or write about them at any length.

Following this weekend, though, I am kind of forced to, because there was huge news on that front, and it did actually have an impact on me, personally.

You see, for months, my son has been talking about how 'Avengers: Endgame' was coming out soon. He talked about it so much, that I felt an obligation to try and get him to see it on the opening weekend.

However, this proved to be a very busy weekend for me, personally. I traveled hundreds of miles and back to help my parents more fully move into their new home, and had some other things, as well. Also, I wanted this to be a restful weekend, particularly on Sunday, as I am about to start a week working both of my jobs again (last week there was no school).  

But I found myself with an unexpected few hours off, and figured that maybe we could see the new Avengers movie.

At least that was what I thought, initially. But there were few tickets available to any of the showings, regardless of time. And so, eventually, I simply asked my son if he wanted to perhaps see the movie by himself, for me to buy him a ticket (close to the screen), drop him off with some money for snacks and a drink, and then pick him up well over three hours later, as this movie was supposed to be over three hours on it's own. Add the previews to that, and yes, it would be well over three hours. 

He decided that this was what he wanted, as he really, really wanted to see it on opening weekend.

It was the first time that he ever saw a movie in the theater by himself, and reminded me of my first time doing that, when my mom bought tickets to the new Transformers movie in either 1986 or 1987 (can't really remember what year it was anymore).

Clearly, this was a very hot movie, and will set a new bar for other blockbusters to try and reach!


'Avengers: Endgame' shatters records with $1.2 billion opening Frank Pallotta byline By Frank Pallotta, CNN Business  Updated 3:34 PM ET, Sun April 28, 2019:


Game of Thrones Season 8: Literally Dark Scenes Making Viewing & Following a Bit More Difficult Than Expected




No, I did not see the third episode of this season yet, at least as of the time of my reading and publishing this. Still looking for my shared version of this to fully clear, and hopefully, I will be able to watch it a bit later. Perhaps tonight, at latest.

However, one aspect of this show that I noticed from last week, and which apparently was more extreme in this weekend's episode, was how dark the scenes apparently were. Maybe the last time that I was following this series, this was not a problem,because I watched the first seven seasons on DVD. Perhaps the quality of it is not as good.

Yes, maybe that is it. Or, maybe they really are making these episodes dark (in a literal sense), and thus, hard to see.

That said, I did not really want to read this article, because it might have spoilers. So, just be warned that I myself did not read it, even though it just seemed interesting and worthy of sharing here.

Open this link at your own risk, if you want to avoid spoilers!





Game of Thrones battle was the biggest ever, but way too dark to see The Battle of Winterfell was epic and all, but viewers couldn't always grasp what the heck was going on.  BY  MARK SERRELS  APRIL 28, 2019:



Leading Scottish Politician Nicola Sturgeon Declares 'Climate Emergency' While Skepticism & Denial Continues to Dominate American Politics

Earth from Space with Stars

Photo courtesy of DonkeyHotey Flickr Page: https://www.flickr.com/photos/donkeyhotey/6143809369




The old button from the Environmental Club days which I just happened to find on Earth Day! It is a little beat up (particularly the ends of the ribbon), but no worse for the wear, I think. And it is one of the few items that I have left from those days, so it carries a lot of great memories for me! Nothing Changes Until You Do!



Here is a picture of a very similar logo, with the same message, that was on the t-shirt that I purchased from the BCC Environmental Club and, if memory serves me correctly, may even have helped to make. There were a few projects like that which club members, myself included, were regularly involved with. It has been so long, however, that I no longer recall specifically if I actually helped to make these or not, although I do believe so, since I remember seeing the process of the t-shirts being dyed. In any case, I loved this t-shirt, and have kept it ever since, even if I do not regularly wear it. Since it was part of my experience with the BCC Environmental Club days, as well as more generally having an environmental theme, it seemed appropriate to share it here. 



"Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's needs, but not every man's greed."

~Mahatma Gandhi


"Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present are certain to miss the future."
  
~John F. Kennedy  


“Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.”

~ Chief Si’ahl (Seattle) 



Okay, now this really will be my last Earth Day week-themed blog entry.

It was just that I found the contrast between how climate change is viewed in other English-speaking countries, versus how it is viewed (very skeptically by far too many) here in the United States as incredibly stark and revealing.

Nicola Sturgeon declared a "climate emergency" in Scotland, during the SNP conference.

Here is some of what she said during the conference:

The first minister said: "A few weeks ago, I met some of the young climate change campaigners who've gone on strike from school to raise awareness of their cause.  

"They want governments around the world to declare a climate emergency. They say that's what the science tells us. And they are right.  

"So today, as first minister of Scotland, I am declaring that there is a climate emergency. And Scotland will live up to our responsibility to tackle it." 

Meanwhile, here in the United States, the country that has, frankly, produced far and away more greenhouse gases that have contributed to climate change than any other nation in the world, we keep electing climate change skeptics to very high office, and they keep dictating the political arguments and actions, or lack thereof.

We now have someone in the White House who once tweeted that climate change was a hoax invented by the Chinese to hurt the American economy. Apparently, 97 percent of the world's scientists are in on this gigantic hoax.

It sounds crazy to imagine that people would actually believe that. Yet, tens of millions of Americans in fact do believe it. They take the word of elected officials, beholden to major energy players (and big polluters), who's biggest defense against the arguments that scientists make for climate change is that they themselves are not scientists. And it is to the detriment of us all. 

This is not to say the other countries have it absolutely right. We all seem to continue to practice very bad habits, and to force others, particularly future generations, to have to pay for our mistakes, to live with the results.

But nowhere is the selfishness and narrow-mindedness of such thinking as apparent and transparent as it is here in the United States.

Indeed, this is the kind of story, when it seems that literally, everyone else is getting it at least quite a bit more right than we Americans are, that makes me feel a bit of shame and embarrassment towards the United States of America today.

What have we become?





Here is the link to the article that I used in writing this blog entry, including the quotes used above (in yellow):

Nicola Sturgeon declares 'climate emergency' at SNP conference by BBC News, 28 April 2019:


Sunday, April 28, 2019

🌎 🌲 Final Earth Day Week Entry for 2019 🌲 🌎

Earth from Space with Stars

Photo courtesy of DonkeyHotey Flickr Page: https://www.flickr.com/photos/donkeyhotey/6143809369




The old button from the Environmental Club days which I just happened to find on Earth Day! It is a little beat up (particularly the ends of the ribbon), but no worse for the wear, I think. And it is one of the few items that I have left from those days, so it carries a lot of great memories for me! Nothing Changes Until You Do!



Here is a picture of a very similar logo, with the same message, that was on the t-shirt that I purchased from the BCC Environmental Club and, if memory serves me correctly, may even have helped to make. There were a few projects like that which club members, myself included, were regularly involved with. It has been so long, however, that I no longer recall specifically if I actually helped to make these or not, although I do believe so, since I remember seeing the process of the t-shirts being dyed. In any case, I loved this t-shirt, and have kept it ever since, even if I do not regularly wear it. Since it was part of my experience with the BCC Environmental Club days, as well as more generally having an environmental theme, it seemed appropriate to share it here. 



"Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's needs, but not every man's greed."

~Mahatma Gandhi


"Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present are certain to miss the future."
  
~John F. Kennedy  


“Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.”

~ Chief Si’ahl (Seattle) 


Each year, I try to do at least one article relating to Earth Day on the week either before or after Earth Day. This year, I opted for the week after.

Earth Day was now officially a week ago. So, maybe this will be the last one.

However, I do believe that every day should be "Earth Day." This is the holiday that the world desperately needs to not only understand, but truly appreciate, and do something to make it more meaningful.

Do something to truly make every single day "Earth Day."

So, while maybe the specific Earth Day week theme will now come to a close, I will continue, as I usually do, to post at least occasional articles on the health of the planet because of what we are doing to it, and how we should examine our behavior and, ultimately, change our ways. Have respect for this planet, for the intricate, delicate and, frankly, beautiful pattern of life on this planet.

Indeed, Earth Day might be done for this year in a literal sense, but let us hope that the best spirit behind this holiday keeps seeing the young green of the rising spring, melting the hearts and the ice of skeptical minds about the harm that we are doing to this planet. 

Below is an article about one of the most illogical "values" that we keep hearing about, this notion that everything should always "grow," by which is often meant profits and the presence of more people. Perhaps we should begin to seriously consider limiting growth, putting a cap on it at some point, rather than simply glorifying growth as somehow always positive and necessary. Clearly, that includes banks and corporations, as well.

There is also a Buzzfeed video found on Facebook that showed some of the horrors involving processed meat that seemed worth sharing here, as well.

Here is a list of some of the corporations that you might want to avoid (I know I will try to do so, personally):

Nestle, General Mills, Kraft Foods, Campbell's Hillshire Farms, and Heinz, all produce manufactured foods, and will not reveal where their meats come from.

Some disgusting things that can be found in some of these foods include (but is not necessarily limited to) silicon dioxide, arsenic, rat hairs.

Silicon dioxide can be found in meat at restaurant chains such as Wendy's and Taco Bell


The “Growth Is Good” Fallacy posted by Charles Bynum August 15, 2013

http://www.exposingthetruth.co/growth-is-good-fallacy/#axzz2cgQ5IZ3V




Buzzfeed Video:

White Supremacist Executed in Texas

Last week, there was an execution in Texas.
This, of course, is not an uncommon occurrence, because Texas is one of those state that clearly strongly believes in capital punishment.
However, one thing that stood out in this particular case is the nature of the crime that brought this man to meet his ultimate fate of state execution.
His name is John William King, and he was blatantly, even proudly, racist.
Slightly more than two decades ago, I remember hearing about this crime, and feeling shocked. It seems that it is not easy these days for crimes to truly shock people when they themselves are not personally affected,  and merely hear it on the news. Yet, this one stood out, just because of how brutal and heartless it was.
King and some like-minded friends of his, who were also avowed white supremacists, and each of whom had done some time in prison, went looking for trouble one night. And they found it, not surprisingly.
They saw a 49-year old black man who was walking to his home, and offered him a ride. They offered to drive him, and the man accepted. But they did not take him home. They took him into the woods and beat him mercilessly.
Then, they hooked him up to the back of their pick-up truck, and dragged him for three miles down a quiet, largely deserted local road. He died at some point during this torture.
Of course, these men were known to the local police as being rabid white supremacists, and they apparently were not smart enough to try and cover their tracks, leaving apparently obvious clues as to who had done it.
And so, they were imprisoned, and the state of Texas pursued the death penalty.
Last week, one of these men, John William King, was executed for his crime.
Perhaps it is at this point that it needs to be pointed out that I am not for the death penalty, and do not feel that the state can effectively correct a wrong with another wrong. An eye for an eye approach has not really worked in the past too well.
That said, I will hardly be crying for this man. Apparently, as I understand it, these three men responsible for his horrific crime were hardly repentant. One of them - I am not sure whether it was King or not - claimed that he had no regrets, and that he would do it all over again if he could, given the chance.
So, while I still stand opposed to the death penalty, I was not exactly sad. I still feel that a better punishment, if punishment is what we are seeking for such horrific crimes, is for someone to rot away in a jail cell for the duration of their lives, rather than get a death penalty that effectively will make them martyrs for like-minded white supremacists. But the world is not losing a bright light, or anything like that. To me, there is no reason to celebrate death, no matter what the circumstances. I know that we human beings do, too often. And I am not celebrating this death. Even the loss of seemingly hopeless cases should be a somber and sobering experience, and not a moment to rejoice. That is why, in my own lifetime, I did not join others in celebrating the deaths of men like the Ayatollah Khomeini, or Osama Bin Laden.
But I am not mourning this man's loss, either. Anyone who is so completely dehumanized, that he can torture an innocent man like that, and just out of sheer hatred and stupidity, just blatant ignorance, was beyond any hope, anyway.
So, good riddance.
If there is some kind of lesson from all of this, let us hope that we learn it. Otherwise, this simply serves as yet one more of a seemingly endless laundry list of examples of senseless violence and mindless hatred, taken to the extreme of unprovoked action and violence committed against innocent people. Let us hope that we can put this behind us, while not forgetting, if that is even possible.



John William King, Racist Who Dragged James Byrd Jr. to Death, Executed in Texas The Daily Beast By julia.arciga@thedailybeast.com (Julia Arciga) ,The Daily Beast•April 24, 2019


Saturday, April 27, 2019

Russian Government Official Claims that United States Can No Longer Be Trusted

Over the last few years - and one can argue it is more accurate to suggest that it has in fact been decades - many people feel that the political winds have been blowing so strangely lately in the United States, that the country is hardly recognizable.

One might wonder if this was the end game, so to speak, that Russia was looking for all along in interfering with American elections, and trying their best to put a clown like Donald Trump into the highest office in the land. Remember, the appeal of Trump for many was that his win would serve as a big "F U" to many establishment politicians and "the system," according to a certain logic. Other than being a kind of protest vote, however, Trump's policies are, in fact, further entrenching the rigged system. 

Trump had given voice some ideas that some extremists had been toying with, but which few had actually taken seriously. Things like pulling out of international agreements, like the Paris Climate Accord based on a skepticism towards climate change, or pulling out of the Iran Nuclear Deal, or pulling out of NAFTA and/or the TPP. Some countries, including China, actively tried to step up into leadership vacuums previously occupied by the United States. Indeed, upon meeting Trump in person, the Pope, of all people, looked visibly sick. And within hours of meeting with Trump, several European leaders declared publicly that they no longer felt that the United States was a reliable partner any longer.

That takes some doing! But that was the effect that Trump had. Hell, Trump even had the world community laughing to his face, quite literally, during an address before the United Nations. Increasingly  he was viewed as a joke by most people around the world, and by a growing number of people even within the United States. 

It all felt like a cruel joke.

And now, this rather convenient diagnosis by a Russian government official, outright suggesting that the United States is no longer a country that can be trusted. 

Indeed, if the Russian government did not orchestrate people to actively interfere in the American elections, than it is a wonder just how much of this seems to be playing into their hands. And frankly, who could really blame them? After all, Russians - particularly Vladimir Putin - justifiably felt that they owed the United States some payback after the American role in actively trying to bring the Soviet Union to it's knees during the Cold War, succeeding eventually, and then proclaiming themselves to have won the Cold War and seemingly rejoicing at the pain that a former superpower nation was going through in the aftermath of the end of the Cold War. Talk about American hubris. 

So, on some level, it is not too shocking that the Russians remained the one European nation that seemed not overly keen to get on too friendly terms with the West, and particularly with the United States. Relations did improve, to be sure. The ice from the Cold War melted quite a bit, particularly with Gorbachev and Reagan in the eighties, and Clinton and Yeltsin in the nineties. I even remember my father marveling at how much the world seemed to have changed when Clinton and Yeltsin both broke out laughing uncontrollably during a meeting.

Well, times have changed again, because Putin replaced Yelstin when 1999 ended, and 2000 began. And few would find it arguable, from that time onward, that relations between the two nations cooled considerably. Things began to reach new iciness in the aftermath of the Russian invasion and takeover of the Crimea and interference in Ukraine, which was shortly followed by Russia's interference in the American elections of 2016.

Turns out that Putin felt understandably bitter that Russia/the Soviet Union had fallen from grace, and lost it's superpower status. And so, he seemed to work with the specific intent of undermining America's own superpower status. If this seemed perhaps a laughable notion in 2000, when Putin first took over, and when the United States stood relatively tall still as the world's undisputed leading (and at the time, sole) superpower. But look around now, when China has risen at such an incredible rate, and when many world leaders have outright expressed their distrust of the United States shortly after meeting with Trump, claiming that it can no longer be viewed as a reliable partner. China quickly tried to position itself in a leadership position once Trump announced that he was pulling the United States out of the Paris Climate Accord. Europe is still trying to make the Iran Nuclear Deal work, even after Trump pulled the United States out of that. And indeed, many countries in the world are working out trade agreements between one another because of Trump, particularly since he initiated trade wars against so much of the rest of the world, whether they were viewed before as rivals or enemies, or even as allies. 

All of this can hardly fail to receive considerable notice from the world community.

And guess what? Turns out that the Russians, who clearly wanted Trump to become the next president in 2016, are now using all of this chaos that has really accelerated under Trump to undermine American authority and credibility around the world. 

At an annual address to Moscow's diplomatic academy, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hailed on Friday a new geopolitical era marked by "multipolarity," stating that "the emergence of new centers of power to maintain stability in the world requires the search for a balance of interests and compromises."

He said there was a shift in the center of global economic power to East from West, where a "liberal order" marked by globalization was "losing its attractiveness and is no more viewed as a perfect model for all."  "Unfortunately, our Western partners led by the United States do not want to agree on common approaches to solving problems," Lavrov continued, accusing Washington and its allies of trying to "preserve their centuries-old domination in world affairs despite objective trends in forming a polycentric world order."

He argued that these efforts were "contrary to the fact that now, purely economically and financially, the United States can no longer—singlehandedly or with its closest allies—resolve all issues in the global economy and world affairs.  

"In order to artificially retain their dominance, to regain indisputable positions, they employ various methods of pressure and blackmail to coerce economically and through the use of information," said Lavrov. 

Well, there you go!

It's enough to make you think that the Russians used our own collective national hubris against us, that they used our heavyweight status against us martial arts style, to make sure that we fell on the sword of our own thinking. We feel superior to the rest of the world, and this is what allowed our own standards domestically to keep sinking, and the bar kept getting lower and lower. It was inevitable that this would impact our relations with the rest of the world before too long, and this has now come to pass. The rest of the world sees our decline for what it is, and Trump has greatly hastened this decline. This has greatly contributed to the United States literally being viewed as a basket case and, increasingly, as a joke around the world. Hell, he was laughed at in front of the entire world during a United Nations address. Many of his decisions and actions are blasted around the world, and his supporters are enthusiastically applauding him every step of the way. 

If the Russians actually wanted to do everything in their rather limited power to undermine us, they could not have done a more brilliant job than getting us to do it to ourselves. Perhaps there is even some poetic justice to it all. 

One could be forgiven for the belief that this might have been the end game that they were working towards all along. 

Perhaps we got played, eh? 

But let's face it: this is not the fault of the Russians. This is something that we did entirely to ourselves, through a mixture of our own arrogance and ignorance. Nobody forced this on us. We did this to ourselves, every step of the way. Maybe, you could make the argument that the Russians helped to hasten our decline, but we collectively seemed in a hurry to get there ourselves.

It seems like we have gotten there now. 

Thanks Trump! And, of course, all of your wonderful, stomping, rowdy supporters, for bringing all of this "winning" to the United States. None of this could have come to pass without you!

As Charlie Sheen might say, "Winning!"




Here is the article that I used in writing this blog entry, and from which I obtained the quotes used above:

RUSSIA: WORLD NO LONGER TRUSTS U.S. TO LEAD, IT'S TIME OTHERS STEP IN TO STOP 'BLACKMAIL AND PRESSURE' BY TOM O'CONNOR ON 4/12/19



Julian Lennon at Peace With Late Father Now & Focuses on Spreading a Positive Earth Day Message


My son and I meeting Julian Lennon at the "Touch the Earth" book signing event on Saturday morning, April 15, 2017. It was a thrill to meet him!


Julian Lennon is receiving some considerable publicity lately. He released a new children's book right on time for Earth Day, and is currently on a book tour promoting it. Some of the proceeds from sales of the book are going to his charity, and it is interesting to note that the genesis of this charity actually had tied to his legendary father, John Lennon.

It really is no secret that there were tensions that existed between Julian Lennon and his famous father. While John Lennon famously made his love and pure adoration of his second son, Sean Lennon, a very public thing, particularly with the release of his incredible and moving song, Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy), relations with his first son, Julian, were quite a bit more strained. Reflecting on this all of these years later, Julian Lennon feels he understands why this happened the way that it did:

“He was young and didn’t know what the hell he was doing. That’s the reason I haven’t had children yet. I didn’t want to do the same thing. No, I’m not ready. I want to know who I am first.”

Speaking of his father, he said that while there was some bitterness about the past, he was trying to be positive and let go. While John Lennon famously spoke and sang beautifully of love, he was not all that great at giving love to his first-born son.

“Mum was more about love than Dad. He sang about it, he spoke about, but he never really gave it, at least not to me as his son."

Julian seems to be more at peace with this now. He recognized that he has a bit of a dark side, and he knows from which side of the family that he got this:

“The darker side definitely comes from Dad. Whenever I get too aggressive, which comes from Dad's side, I try to calm myself down, be more positive."

Lennon can now admit that he had some measure of jealousy towards his half-brother, Sean Lennon, because of how much more attention his father gave to Sean than he did to Julian:

“I remember thinking, when Dad gave up music for a couple of years to be with Sean, "Why couldn't he do that with me?" Those thoughts haunted me for a time.” 

But Julian had gotten together with Sean in 2007, and the two hit it off very well. This was something that Julian spoke of when I saw him recently at the Barnes and Noble in Union Square in New York City for a booksigning there. He said that they basically became best friends, and he still holds some hopes that the two of them can come together again possibly for some musical projects. Julian also mentioned that following his present book tour, he will sit down and try to lock himself inside of his studio, and finally produce another album, for the first time in many years.

Julian Lennon recalls the story of what got him to begin his charity, the White Feather Foundation:

“Many, many moons ago, I was on tour in Australia, and the [environmentally conscious protest] song ‘Saltwater’ was No. 1 over there in Asia at that time. And I was touring, and I was in Adelaide, and I was in the hotel, and the management of the hotel called me and said, ‘Mr. Lennon, there's an aboriginal tribe down here with 30 to 50 people and a couple of news crews.’ When Julian went downstairs, he encountered members of the indigenous Mirning tribe, and it was a fateful, spiritual moment that changed the course his life and even reconnected him to his dad, who died in 1980.  

“The elder of the tribe, who is this lovely woman, walked me in this sort of semi-circle of the tribe and handed me a white feather, a very large white feather, and said, ‘You have a voice. Can you help us?’ And it was a bit of a shocker, because Dad had said to me at one point that if anything should happen to him in his life, that a way in which he would communicate that he's OK, or that we're all going to be OK, would be in the form of a white feather. So, that was a bit of a freaky moment — and undeniable, in my book. Goosebumps, you know, for days.” 

 “I had no idea when I received the feather that that's what that meant, you know, starting a foundation, changing lives in that particular way.”

Lennon mentioned this story of how he was approached by an elder of an aboriginal tribe in Australia, and given a white feather. This game him chills, understandably. And so, Lennon was struck, and he eventually founded his charity, the White Feather Foundation. Some proceeds from this book go towards this charity, which tries to do good work and spread positive messages throughout the world.

He released his environmentally themed book on Earth Day, which has obvious significance. Lennon explains how he feels about Earth Day:

“I think the most important thing to take away this Earth Day is that love is everything. It really is. Love and forgiveness is the only way to positively move forward in life. So, cherish those around you, love them dearly, and love the place you live and the planet you live on.”







Here are the links to the two articles on Julian Lennon that I used in writing this piece, and from which I obtained the quotes used in the same:


Julian Lennon's afterlife Earth Day message from father gave him 'goosebumps for days'  Lyndsey ParkerEditor-in-Chief, Music,Yahoo Music•April 19, 2019:

https://news.yahoo.com/julian-lennons-afterlife-earth-day-message-from-father-gave-him-goosebumps-for-days-232346083.html?fbclid=IwAR3bPZDKwOnMTlnphY-1kF-cAYTsk5XCFOb6w4LiqVSSMmcOfkRpbL96Ihw






Julian Lennon blames father John for his lack of children John Lennon was such a bad father that he put his own son, Julian, off having children.•By Richard Eden, Mandrake, and Adam Lusher7:32AM GMT 04 Dec 2011:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/8933287/Julian-Lennon-blames-father-John-for-his-lack-of-children.html

Friday, April 26, 2019

Some Thoughts on Yesterday's 1st Round of the 2019 NFL Draft

Yesterday was the NFL Draft.

And while I am not such a huge sports fan that I feel a need to watch this live on television (frankly, I find it incredibly boring), nevertheless, I do like to look up later on and see which teams picked up what talent, and what positions were focused on. 

The top overall pick was Oklahoma quarterback Kyler Murray, who was selected first by the lowly Arizona Cardinals.

Obviously, I have a particular interest in seeing how my team, the New York Giants, and my second favorite team, the Jets, did.


New York Jets


With the third overall pick in the draft, the New York Jets selected Alabama Crimson Tide defensive tackle Quinnen Williams. He was a member of the dynasty Alabama team that has been at or close to the top for many years now.



New York Giants


As for the Giants, they actually had three picks in the first round. With the sixth overall pick, they took Duke quarterback Daniel Jones. I was a bit surprised that they took him that high in the draft, since he was not as highly rated as some other quarterbacks still available at that time. The G-Men also took Defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence from Clemson with the 17th pick, and Georgia cornerback DeAndre Baker with the 30th pick. 

Frankly, I am glad that they beefed up their defense a bit in this first round, yet was a bit disappointed that they did not put more emphasis on improving the offensive line, which has been a problem area for the team now for many years. Too many years, truth be told.

Let's see what happens in the next few rounds.

It is important to remember how some draft picks go by some teams, which I am hoping is something that the Giants will not have to endure with their selection of Jones so high in the draft. Let's hope that he pans out, although he apparently is a west coast offense specialist, and the G-Men do not have the west coast offense. 

If it comes back to bite them, it would not be the first time that teams have regretted their picks. Many teams infamously passed on quarterback Dan Marino in the 1983 draft, and on running back Emmitt Smith in the 1990 draft. 

More recently, the 49ers passed on acquiring quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who has become a legend in Green Bay, leading them to a Super Bowl XLV triumph, in which he was named the game's MVP. Rodgers, a native of the San Francisco area, quipped afterwards that the 49ers might soon regret not having taken him when asked by a reporter how it felt to be passed by them. Here is the exchange:

Reporter: How disappointed are you that you will not be a 49er?

Rodgers: Not as disappointed as the 49ers will be that they didn’t draft me.

Bold words!

It should be noted that the 49ers did knock out Rodgers and the Packers in two consecutive playoffs, in 2012 and 2013. That said, Rodgers has been playing at such an elite level for such a long time, that they most likely do regret it, as their quarterback pick that year, Alex Smith, did not pan out quite as well for them. 





Here is the link to the article from which I got the exchange quoted above between a reporter and Aaron Rodgers after the 49ers failed to select him as their quarterback during the 2005 draft, when they easily could have obtained him:

Watch Aaron Rodgers' epic message to 49ers after draft snub by Steven Ruiz | April 24, 2019:

https://ftw.usatoday.com/2019/04/aaron-rodgers-draft-snub-49ers-prediction