Cinerama: Winning the West

 

How The West Was Won couldn’t be made today in its original form, either technically or creatively. That’s a shame. It’s not like America was in a state of perfect harmony in 1962, but we were a proud, confident nation back then. With breathtaking Cinerama photography, audiences saw primordial America as a natural paradise. Small bands of native tribesmen and white traders were a modest burden on that land. As the timeline progresses (roughly 1835-’85) there’s awe for the thrilling struggles and physical achievements of the settlers and our young nation. Yet there’s also a sad nobility about the defeat of the native American that’s not sugary, not faked; it came from the heart of a nation that was mature enough to understand both sides of history’s truth.

That both-sides attitude would be almost inconceivable in today’s culture. This was 1962, so to be sure, it was slightly liberal for its day. Hollywood was going through one of its periodic (justified) fits of conscience about being “fair to the Indians”. By today’s standards, this epic falls far, far short of that standard. But by the standards of its time, it depicts the inevitable, tragic parts of the conquest of the American west in terms that seemed fair for ‘62, a step forward for Hollywood’s standards of historical honesty.

Quote of the Day for 8/11/24 from Twelfth Night, eventually

 

I spent my first year after high school at a local community college where I took a drama class. I didn’t audition for the first fall production, Bus Stop, because getting a part would mean quitting my weekend job at the movie theater (and all those free movies and free popcorn and soda), but when there were auditions for Twelfth Night, I decided to go for it.

I’ll admit when I first tried to read through the script I found it fairly incomprehensible. Cliff Notes helped me figure it out. As in many Shakespeare comedies, mistaken identities are central to the plot and star-crossed lovers abound. 

An instructor at the school directed the play and cast himself in the plum role of Malvolio. I’m pretty sure that was the entire reason the play was chosen that season. I was cast as Sir Andrew Aguecheek, the greatest fool in a play full of fools. In the last century, Alec Guinness, Christopher Plummer, and Paul Scofield, all played the role on stage, and Richard E. Grant in a film adaptation. I, um, wasn’t as good as those gentlemen. I may have done as poorly in the part as anyone who has ever attempted the role.

I Have to Get This Off My Chest

 

Dear President Trump,

Let me begin by saying that I will vote for you in November, even though I think trying to get you elected may be a fruitless effort. I don’t think you understand how people will make their choices for President, and I feel compelled to tell you what I think the outcome will be. I only ask that you give some thought to the possibilities that will work against you:

An EMT in Space

 

Melanie Mooney is an EMT in rural Indiana when she comes across an unusual accident scene while going home after a shift. Thinking it a downed experimental military jet, and being who she is, she renders aid to those inside. They prove to be space aliens straight out of a supermarket tabloid.

Interstellar Medic: The Long Run, by Patrick Chiles, opens as Melanie helps those inside a crashed “flying saucer.” It leads to an unusual job offer: to join the Galactic Union Medical Corps.

Melanie has a trait vanishingly rare among the sentient species in the Galactic Union. As she demonstrates dealing with the extraterrestrial accident victims, she can work and empathize with alien races. Most species prefer to provide medical care only to their own species. That makes it difficult to find galactic EMTs. The Galactic Union wants to give Melanie a try.

The Beginning of the End?

 

The title sounds a bit panicky, I know. But a few days ago I was alarmed by the title of this piece that appeared on the American Greatness site:

  “Whistleblower Report: Local LEOs Refuse to Share Information With FBI Due to ‘Disturbing Loss of Trust” The report was issued by The National Alliance of Retired and Active Duty FBI Special Agents and Analysts.

Feminization of society?

 

From Delmiro Junior, Photo ID: 2253076737. Via Shutterstock

I was watching a football game with a friend some years ago, and a defensive lineman knocked Tom Brady down.  Well, he reached around the guy who was blocking him and shoved Brady from behind, who then fell down.  The referee called roughing the passer.  My friend and I both played football in our youth, and we were offended by the destruction of the game we love.  I pointed out that football is a game of risk and reward.  If you want to send out more receivers and keep fewer guys in to block, then you’re risking your QB getting hurt.  It’s the job of the offensive coordinator to protect the QB, not the refs.  That’s what makes football interesting.

Can We Afford to Ignore the Low-Information Voters?

 

Much has been said about the strategy Trump needs to follow in order to gain traction in this political race, including avoiding personal insults and focusing on contrasting policies; the pitfalls the Left needs to avoid include telling the truth about Harris’ political positions and dodging requests for interviews.

But little has been said about the impact of the low-information voters—who they actually are—and they are increasing over time. This post will discuss the low-information profile, how difficult it will be to overcome, and the serious consequences if they remain uninformed.

Telegraph Road

 

There is a back story to the 1982 Dire Straits song Telegraph Road. A back story that still resonates in today’s political world of job promises, and a divide between those who work with their hands and those who believe that the only road to success comes from a college degree.

An early photo of Telegraph Road from Dearborn schools.

Jungle noise

 

I had a diverse career in medicine, as I have described before. I retired from full-time practice when I turned 50 at the end of 1999. (The artist known as Prince had nothing to do with choosing that date.) I spent several years trying to decide what to do going forward and none of those ideas panned out as I had hoped, but none of those ideas cost me much money.

Between 2008 and 2012 I worked as a traveling radiologist, working at hospitals that had fired their radiology group and then had to use guys like me to fill the void. I was very well paid and enjoyed all of it. I only worked one week out of two or three and had control of my schedule. I worked for most of those years in Joplin, MO, and would fly into Tulsa on Sunday night and then fly back the next Saturday morning. The airport in Tulsa had a large carport that contained the car rental companies. When I would pick up a car, there were strange noises broadcast through the garage. I told the attendant at the pickup point that it sounded like monkeys hollering. He said, yes indeed—it was the sound of monkeys and other jungle noises to try to keep the pigeons from crapping on all of the cars. I asked him if it worked. He just shrugged and asked, “What do you think?”

PragerU lawsuit against YouTube

 

Several years ago, YouTube started placing PragerU videos on a “filter” list, meaning they’re treated like pornography; deemed unsuitable for children and other sensitive audiences, and are thus banned from viewing on YouTube.  They’ve done this to over 100 PragerU videos so far, including videos about Martin Luther King and The Ten Commandments.  This is not demonetizing.  This is censorship, from a supposedly public forum.  PragerU’s lead attorney has posted a typical PragerU five-minute video, explaining the lawsuit PragerU has filed against YouTube.  He calls it the most important lawsuit in the world.  And he may be right.  Required watching — worth five minutes of your time:

Contemplating the marvels and the possible malevolence of the modern age while consuming a slightly warmed-over “Weird Burger.”

The Evil UK Regime

 

It is astonishing that the UK government is so committed to defending immigrants who rape and murder and “groom” and terrorize other people, that they are now threatening to arrest anyone in the world who so much as criticizes their current policy. The entire media has fallen in line, portraying Muslim gangs as “defenders,” those who stand for freedom and life as “racists and fascists.”

Even the centre-right Telegraph describes anyone who so much as identifies the religion of the latest murderer (who knifed three little girls to death) as “far-right.” They are arresting and imprisoning anyone who is so daring and revolutionary as to post an opinion on Facebook that does not agree with the Received Opinion.

Why Walz? My Guess is Imposter’s Syndrome.

 

Why did Kamala Harris pick Tim Walz?   Well, we know this:  It was not for the sake of “diversity.”  Not to tack toward the ideological “middle” for the general election, as is the traditional practice. Not for any discernible electoral advantage. So why?  My guess is that her choice was psychological as much as anything.  I say that because there are pretty odd things about these two that are hard to ignore.

Some facts:  We know that Kamala Harris goes through staffers at a 95% turnover rate.  We know that as California’s Attorney General, she expected to be greeted by staffers with, “Good morning, General.” We have seen that she responds very defensively to even the most gentle challenges from the press.  We know she has not exposed herself to any questioning from the press since Biden endorsed her for President.  When she speaks publicly, we know she is careful to speak only in zero-calorie word salads containing nothing substantive that might invite a difficult question.

Those Conniving Jews

 

It is worth noting that while Christians and Muslims generally desire that everyone should convert to their faith, Islam has a concept about Islamic lands that is inherently and necessarily expansionist. As per wiki:

In classical Islamic law, there are three major divisions of the world which are dar al-Islam (lit. territory of Islam), denoting regions where Islamic law prevails,[1] dar al-sulh (lit. territory of treaty) denoting non-Islamic lands which are at peace or have an armistice with a Muslim government,[2] and dar al-harb (lit. territory of war), denoting lands that share a border with dar al-Islam and have not concluded an armistice.[3]

There’s a lot of joy in the air. Or so we’re told by the Jolly Dad VP nominee Tim Walz. To step past the vibes for a moment, we talk with John H. Hinderaker, president of the Minneapolis-based Center of the American Experiment. He takes us through the methods and policies of Governor Walz, which reveal a less-than-pleasant character.

Plus, he sticks around with James, Steve, and “Lucretia” to discuss the 50th anniversary of Richard Nixon’s departure from the White House.

How to destroy a corporation (or a country) in 5 easy steps

 

Patrick Bet-David did an interesting podcast recently with Neil Howe (see video at end of this post).  Lots of interesting stuff here, but one part really caught my attention.  Bet-David described a concept from a book by Lawrence Miller which went something like this:  Every company/corporation goes through a similar life cycle.  You have a founder, with a great idea.  A sort of prophet, who inspires others to follow his lead.  And this leads to a predictable chain of events:

That founder attracts ‘barbarians’ – people who get things done, regardless of the obstacles faced by a small young company in a competitive environment.  Those barbarians then attract builders and explorers, who expand the company, build infrastructure, and grow the company.  The company gets too big for the founder to manage.  He hires administrators.  Those administrators attract lawmakers and bureaucrats.  The resulting flow of money and power attracts aristocrats.  And then everything collapses.

Bet-David then compared that cascade of events to the life cycle of a country.  He points out that America is very wealthy, yet many people feel that America as a country is over.  He implies that he thinks that they may be right, if Mr. Miller’s description of the life cycle of a corporation really does apply to countries as well.

Ann’s review of the week takes a deep dive into the selection of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as Kamala Harris’ running mate, the phony-baloney folksy persona he’s adopted and the ugly reality of it all.

Plus, a preview of her Substack interview with UK journalist and activist Tommy Robinson.

Harris-Walz, Darwin and the Media

 

The astonishingly low quality of leadership in the Democratic party is the fault of the misnamed “mainstream” media and their wealthy elite enablers. There is a simple Darwinian explanation for this dismal outcome.

In an earlier incarnation, the press functioned like a predator to remove unfit, corrupt, dishonest, or incompetent elected officials of both parties.  But that genera of journalistic species approaches extinction because of the loss of the full range of its primary food sources: newspaper classified ads, a solid flow of ad revenue for broadcast networks (with no cable competition), and expensive, glossy, highly professional ads for other print media.

Gather ’round and listen to a tale of a bad week and then take stock of things and realize better days could be just ahead.

But first, Kamala Harris made her first decision – a VP pick – and woo-boy, what a pick.

Sen. John Kennedy Queries A Biden Nominee, The Hon. Noel Wise, To Expose Her Prejudice Against Christians

 

As part of the confirmation process for the Biden nominees for federal judgeships, US senators are allowed to question and interview the nominees.

In the queries brought forward by both Sen. John Kennedy and Sen. Josh Hawley, the public has been able to witness the Biden nominee for a Federal judgeship, Noel Wise, having her own words handed back to her by the senators.

The tickets are set, and Americans are looking at a stark choice between two very different futures. Henry is joined by Michael Podhorzer — former political director of the AFL-CIO and author of the Weekend Reading substack. The two dive into the campaign framing between a MAGA or a normal election that past polling suggests will all but guarantee the outcome in November.

Plus, Henry rants on what Tim Walz’s selection tells us about the Harris campaign; and he takes a look at Ohio Democrat Sherrod Brown’s border ad where he poses as… a Republican.

Elite Arrogance, Rape & Suicidal Empathy

 

The late Joe Sobran once remarked that Ted Kennedy was so concerned about not imposing his religion on others that he did not impose it on himself.  That was a great line given the well-known antics of the late Massachusetts senator.  Sadly, it carries a broader applicability in that the elite culture in Western nations now bars the assertion of even the most obvious, uncontroversial civilizational values.  We can’t impose our own values.  We cannot celebrate the achievement of the most humanistic, most productive, most just legal culture in human history without being called xenophobic, bigoted, white supremacist, colonialist, etc.  Anti-western immigrants can flout basic values such as respect for women, fundamental property rights, and the rule of law without fear of pushback of any kind.  The institutional left in Britain, Canada, France, and the USA now deploy law enforcement power to crush those who sensibly call for exactly that needed pushback. We cannot assert, much less impose our values in our own countries.

There is a useful phrase found in The Parasitic Mind: How Infectious Ideas Are Killing Common Sense, by Gad Saad (2020): “suicidal empathy.”  It sums up the mindset of those who need to refrain from adverse judgment of conspicuously bad behavior by designated “victim” groups.  The astonishing arrogance of upscale white women who believe that the cognitive transformation of white people offered in tripe like DiAngelo’s White Fragility would simultaneously eliminate self-destructive behavior, educational dysfunction, and family breakdown in the black underclass.  It is rampant narcissism metastasized into magical thinking. 

Quote of the Day: Anti-Semitism Will Never Die

 

Jews survived all the defeats, expulsions, persecutions and pogroms, the centuries in which they were regarded as a pariah people, even the Holocaust itself, because they never gave up the faith that one day they would be free to live as Jews without fear. —Rabbi Jonathan Sacks

When Jews immigrated to America, I think they hoped that the worst discrimination they had experienced throughout the world was behind them. George Washington welcomed them to their new country; they could own land and prosper without limits. The future looked hopeful and bright. Even those who had small businesses were optimistic.