... not that the opinion of an obscure blogger down under amounts to a hill of beans in the scheme of things, but the pond's American friends are in a state of abject hysteria, and the Democrats as usual are fiddling while the blood-dimmed tide is loosed and a rough beast slouches towards Washington, and then there's the orange Jesus's Project 2025, the sequel to Project 1984, and while he denies any knowledge of it, he wishes his cronies all the best, which means the very worst, vexed to nightmare, and besides, watching Morning Joe rabbit on endlessly about Lincoln and endlessly repeat himself like a senile cable loon has become unendurable.
Look Joe, it's okay for doddering nonagenarians to get out and about and fuck the planet and blather on ... the Chairman Emeritus is doing it today in the lizard Oz, a nutter talking of nuts ...
... but the world needs somebody to take down the orange Jesus. Just the thought of banning all pornography should be enough to get the juices flowing ... and wait 'till they hear that sex should only be in marriage for purposes of procreation ...
Meanwhile, on another planet, maestro, a little mood music, or at least a little setting. For those who can get past the WaPo paywall, there was an excellent aggregation of stories ...
You won't find any of those in the lizard Oz. AP also delivered the goods, with tales of Vegas suffering, and we're not talking about pumping cash into the slots ...
AP also delivered the goods with tales of ice to go with the tales of fire ...
That should surely set the mood for a special treat ... a gaseous Groaning on the Friday ...
You can take Dame Groan off the Santos board, but you can't take the Santos out of the groaning, and so the reptiles featured a snap of dear sweet gas and a couple of reprobates ...
For all of that, it as a disappointing effort, with a standard gassing of all those who thought gas might not be helping...
As for the planet? Keep on gassing it, and paradise will await...
... but sadly after that offering of extra gas, there was just one last gasp of groaning to go ...
Having warmed up with a Groaning - so much warming - it was time for a jolly good nuking of the nukes and Malware with Ted ...
Just the snap of a smirking Malware was enough for the pond to declare Ted the winner ...
That snap of a power plant didn't placate Ted ...
Dear sweet long absent lord, no costings. Quelle surprise. Ted was feeling decidedly chill, more Alaska than Vegas ...
Apropos of all this, there was a lovely Wilcox to hand ...
Always wanting to support y'artz, the pond had to note the Wilcoxian reference ...
Pity Giotto forgot to include the cash in the paw. Every Catholic church needs brown envelopes to keep the Ponzi scheme running ...
The pond supposes it should now turn to the last of Ted's nuking, luckily short, but with a good gassing designed to delight Dame Groan...
Of course this is all just a preliminary to a good serve of erudite Islamophobia from the pompous, portentous Henry ...
The first rule of bigotry and bigots is to never let up, and our Henry knows how to maintain the rage.
... but our Henry knows what to rant about ... Mark Scott ... with bonus Hannah and that viperish woman ...
It wouldn't be a Henry offering without some arcane reference, and this day he turns medievalist ... not quite the same as Thucydides, but enough to produce a gagging or a hollow Sierra Madre laugh ...
When does a pompous blowhard become a caricature of himself? Around 1215 would be a good date ...
...Here is the offending passage from Gessen’s New Yorker article, In the Shadow of the Holocaust:
“But as in the Jewish ghettoes of Occupied Europe, there are no prison guards –Gaza is policed not by the occupiers but by a local force. Presumably, the more fitting term ‘ghetto’ would have drawn fire for comparing the predicament of besieged Gazans to that of ghettoized Jews. It also would have given us the language to describe what is happening in Gaza now. The ghetto is being liquidated.”
The irony is almost too thick to cut.
Hannah Arendt would not qualify for the Hannah Arendt prize. She would be cancelled in Germany today for her political position on Israel and opinions about contemporary Zionism, which she remained critical of from 1942 until her death in 1975. As a Jewish German woman who was forced to flee Germany in 1933, after being arrested and detained by the Gestapo, Arendt’s writing on Germany would be more controversial than Gessen’s own. The comparison from Gessen’s essay, which caused such uproar, closely echoes a passage from Arendt’s correspondence written from Jerusalem in 1955 to her husband Heinrich Blücher, which is far more damning:
“The galut-and-ghetto mentality is in full bloom. And the idiocy is right in front of everyone’s eyes: Here in Jerusalem I can barely go for a walk, because I might turn the wrong corner and find myself ‘abroad’, ie, in Arab territory. Essentially it’s the same everywhere. On top of that, they treat the Arabs, those still here, in a way that in itself would be enough to rally the whole world against Israel.”
Gessen’s comparison was more light-footed than Arendt’s, whose reflection appears eerily prescient, but their rhetorical tact wasn’t enough to stop the censors at the gate in Germany who police what one can and cannot say about Israel, cowing the Foundation into compliance...
And so on, and the hole in the bucket man does a pretty fine job as a member of the thought police ...
Yeah, love it or leave it, do it the way we do things around here, or disappear off to the cornfields. It's the 1215 way ... cue the darkness and the thick irony...
Politico: Your essay cited Hannah Arendt but a foundation affiliated with the German Green Party withdrew from awarding you the “Hannah Arendt Prize.” Did you find that ironic?
Gessen: The layers of irony are almost impossible to unravel. Hundreds of people at this point have said that Hannah Arendt would not be eligible for the Hannah Arendt Prize. But I was also corresponding with this philosopher, Susan Neiman — an Israeli citizen who lives in Germany who is a premier scholar of German politics of memory — and she wrote to me saying Arendt wouldn’t even be able to get a visa to come to Germany, if she needed a visa of course.
So, there’s that irony. But yes, my essay cites Arendt a lot because I read her as insisting that we make comparisons to the Holocaust and to Nazis and to totalitarianism all the time. Not in the sense that we need to level everything and say that everything is like everything else. But in the sense that with these things being the worst that humanity is capable of, we always have to be checking to see if we’re sliding into that darkness again.
Luckily there was only one small gobbet of darkness and nausea to go ... comically with a member of the reptile 'leets blathering about the 'leets.
In a nutshell? Just another dose of Henry bigotry dressed up in academic bile. Meanwhile, in another country...
No need to end in gloom however. The pond is sure that the infallible Pope and the immortal Rowe will lift the spirits and allow the pond to end on a high celebratory note...
Yves Smith must have coordinated with the newsroom at loonpond. "For masochists there were more personal tales ..." ... "You won't find any of those in the lizard Oz. AP also delivered the goods, with tales of Vegas suffering, and we're not talking about pumping cash into the slots ..."
"How hot was it (1): - "It’s so hot in NYC that the Third Ave Bridge over the Harlem River can’t fully open/close because the heat has expanded the steel. We saw workers using a saw to shave part of the steel down & fire boats shooting water on the bridge to cool it down — Jesse Hamilton (@JesseJHamilton) July 8, 2024
"How hot was it (2): - "Got a source who works for the airlines who's telling me that flights into the southwest are getting canceled due to heat. A lot of planes aren't certified for above 119°F/48.3°C so they get canceled or diverted. Source says this: — Josh Ellis (@jzellis) July 6, 2024
"How hot was it (3): - ""The manufacturer is citing extreme weather affecting production of the plastic used for these bottles as well as the sharp ️ in demand during the pandemic. This is directly related to SARS-CoV-2 as bacterial infections like bacteremia are often secondary to covid infection. — David Christopher (@MLS_Dave) July 8, 2024
- 'Can we air condition our way out of climate change? The Climate Brink
- "Peering Inside the Pandora’s Box of Oil and Gas Waste Inside Climate News
- "New study shows mysterious solar particle blasts can devastate the ozone layer, bathing Earth in radiation for years https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/07/links-7-11-2024.html
The culture newscorpse dropped... ~Gessen: "we always have to be checking to see if we’re sliding into that darkness again." ~Gessen Newscorpse: No we won't.
But as our reptile commenters frequently remind us, Anony, more people still die from cold than from heat so we should all be grateful. Nice to know about the bridge expansions and the air flight contractions though - something for us to look forward to. I wonder how the heat will affect the Sydney Harbour bridge.
"Please just go Joe ...". Oh I dunno, I kinda reckon that our American 'friends' really should have a second round of Trump since it's obvious that the first round got through to far too few of them. And if Trump wins - which is his limit of two terms in a lifetime - maybe it might stimulate some Americans to fight harder for their (so-called) democracy in future. And maybe not, but let's see ...
And anyway, maybe it would be a fitting end for the genocide tolerating old guy.
Agreed, DP, no need to end in gloom after reading Dame Groan: Batteries: how cheap can they get? "Sodium batteries will become ridiculously cheap. That in turn will revamp our electricity grid: local demand response will be key, resilience and grid stability will improve, grid reinforcements will become less of a costly bottleneck, and solar and wind will thrive. In terms of our energy system, batteries will change everything."
GB, I reckon SCOTUS will declare unconstitutional the amendment about 2 terms if Trump wins.
So our Dame Groan offers us the benefit of her remarkable experience of the gas industry. Well, of the gas industry that was, when, conveniently, it was found in parts of Australia 'On a road never cross'd 'cept by folk that are lost'. Now it tends to be sought on land already taken for other, highly productive, agricultural uses. But still requires, as our Dame emphasises, lots and lots of infrastructure.
Implicit in that, we suppose, is that gas infrastructure is nothing like those uniquely ugly towers and wires that carry electricity from renewables, which induces all manner of neuroses which will require revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR). And that is before we consider the genocide of galahs, and whales.
So the much greater tonnage of gas infrastructure, right at ground level, will be accepted without question by rural folk, just as they already accept, without the slightest demurral, effects like subsidence of their carefully contoured croplands, and odd bubbling in water courses, which are good fun to ignite when the family is having a picnic by the river.
Yeah, just like the towers and wires that were set up to carry electricity from localised coal generators out to the rest of the place. Lots of them in Melbourne.
But hang on, won't the similarly localised nuclear generators require the same ? Oh gosh:
Without a massive grid upgrade, the Coalition’s nuclear plan faces a high-voltage hurdle https://theconversation.com/without-a-massive-grid-upgrade-the-coalitions-nuclear-plan-faces-a-high-voltage-hurdle-233458
Yves Smith must have coordinated with the newsroom at loonpond.
ReplyDelete"For masochists there were more personal tales ..." ... "You won't find any of those in the lizard Oz. AP also delivered the goods, with tales of Vegas suffering, and we're not talking about pumping cash into the slots ..."
"How hot was it (1):
- "It’s so hot in NYC that the Third Ave Bridge over the Harlem River can’t fully open/close because the heat has expanded the steel. We saw workers using a saw to shave part of the steel down & fire boats shooting water on the bridge to cool it down
— Jesse Hamilton (@JesseJHamilton) July 8, 2024
"How hot was it (2):
- "Got a source who works for the airlines who's telling me that flights into the southwest are getting canceled due to heat. A lot of planes aren't certified for above 119°F/48.3°C so they get canceled or diverted.
Source says this:
— Josh Ellis (@jzellis) July 6, 2024
"How hot was it (3):
- ""The manufacturer is citing extreme weather affecting production of the plastic used for these bottles as well as the sharp
️ in demand during the pandemic. This is directly related to SARS-CoV-2 as bacterial infections like bacteremia are often secondary to covid infection.
— David Christopher
(@MLS_Dave) July 8, 2024
- 'Can we air condition our way out of climate change? The Climate Brink
- "Peering Inside the Pandora’s Box of Oil and Gas Waste Inside Climate News
- "New study shows mysterious solar particle blasts can devastate the ozone layer, bathing Earth in radiation for years
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/07/links-7-11-2024.html
The culture newscorpse dropped...
~Gessen: "we always have to be checking to see if we’re sliding into that darkness again." ~Gessen
Newscorpse: No we won't.
But as our reptile commenters frequently remind us, Anony, more people still die from cold than from heat so we should all be grateful. Nice to know about the bridge expansions and the air flight contractions though - something for us to look forward to. I wonder how the heat will affect the Sydney Harbour bridge.
Delete"Please just go Joe ...". Oh I dunno, I kinda reckon that our American 'friends' really should have a second round of Trump since it's obvious that the first round got through to far too few of them. And if Trump wins - which is his limit of two terms in a lifetime - maybe it might stimulate some Americans to fight harder for their (so-called) democracy in future. And maybe not, but let's see ...
ReplyDeleteAnd anyway, maybe it would be a fitting end for the genocide tolerating old guy.
Not tolerating but actively facilitating.
Delete"perhaps a song or two instead?" Though you are my sunshine, I am a man of constant sorrow ?
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteAgreed, DP, no need to end in gloom after reading Dame Groan: Batteries: how cheap can they get?
"Sodium batteries will become ridiculously cheap. That in turn will revamp our electricity grid: local demand response will be key, resilience and grid stability will improve, grid reinforcements will become less of a costly bottleneck, and solar and wind will thrive. In terms of our energy system, batteries will change everything."
GB, I reckon SCOTUS will declare unconstitutional the amendment about 2 terms if Trump wins.
You may be right, Joe; after all it didn't apply to FDR.
DeleteSo our Dame Groan offers us the benefit of her remarkable experience of the gas industry. Well, of the gas industry that was, when, conveniently, it was found in parts of Australia 'On a road never cross'd 'cept by folk that are lost'. Now it tends to be sought on land already taken for other, highly productive, agricultural uses. But still requires, as our Dame emphasises, lots and lots of infrastructure.
ReplyDeleteImplicit in that, we suppose, is that gas infrastructure is nothing like those uniquely ugly towers and wires that carry electricity from renewables, which induces all manner of neuroses which will require revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR). And that is before we consider the genocide of galahs, and whales.
So the much greater tonnage of gas infrastructure, right at ground level, will be accepted without question by rural folk, just as they already accept, without the slightest demurral, effects like subsidence of their carefully contoured croplands, and odd bubbling in water courses, which are good fun to ignite when the family is having a picnic by the river.
Yeah, just like the towers and wires that were set up to carry electricity from localised coal generators out to the rest of the place. Lots of them in Melbourne.
DeleteBut hang on, won't the similarly localised nuclear generators require the same ? Oh gosh:
Without a massive grid upgrade, the Coalition’s nuclear plan faces a high-voltage hurdle
https://theconversation.com/without-a-massive-grid-upgrade-the-coalitions-nuclear-plan-faces-a-high-voltage-hurdle-233458