Mar 6, 2020
Are We Being Selected Out?
Here's to all the savvy survivalists out there making sure they stock up and get ready for the COVID-19 pandemic while enjoying a nice buffet down at the Wood Grill, and the freebie samples at CostCo, and the communal bowls of pretzels at their local bar - all the stuff that everybody touches &/or sprinkles with their Respiratory Droplets with every cough and sneeze.
I just watched a cool video on human evolution, and I gotta say: we're here because of pure dumb luck - smart's got nuthin' to do with it.
hat tip = Facebook friend Linda M-M
Mar 5, 2020
Today's Tweet

Winner
🔸Ivana Trump = Starter wife— Hear Me Roar (@Stop_Trump20) March 5, 2020
🔹Marla Maples = Cheater wife
🔸Melania Trump = Mail-order-wife
🔹Ivanka Trump = Daughter wife
🔸Lindsey Graham, Mitch McConnell, Matt Gaetz = Side b*itches
Well, Crap
...kinda crap anyway. I'm going to make a radical assumption and say she'll be around to aggravate the fuck outa people who desperately need the fuck aggravated out of them for quite a while.
Hope so.
As for Elizabeth Warren? “When I hear her talk, I want to slap her, even when I agree with her.”
A version of that sentiment—Warren inspiring irrational animus among those whom she has sought as constituents—was a common refrain about the candidate, who announced today that she was suspending her campaign after a poor showing on Super Tuesday. This complaint tends to take on not the substance of Warren’s stated positions, but instead the style with which she delivers them. And it has been expressed by pundits as well as voters. Politico, in September, ran an article featuring quotes from Obama-administration officials calling Warren “sanctimonious” and a “narcissist.” The Boston Herald ran a story criticizing Warren’s “self-righteous, abrasive style.” The New York Times columnist Bret Stephens, in October, described Warren as “intensely alienating” and “a know-it-all.” Donny Deutsch, the MSNBC commentator, has dismissed Warren, the person and the candidate, as “unlikable”—and has attributedher failure to ingratiate herself to him as a result, specifically, of her “high-school principal” demeanor. (“This is not a gender thing,” Deutsch insisted, perhaps recognizing that his complaint might read as very much a gender thing. “This is just kind of [a] tone and manner thing.”)
It never fails. When somebody starts with "This is not a gender thing..." you know good-n-goddamned well it's a gender thing - so fuck you Donny Deutsch.
The money quote:
When I hear her talk, I want to slap her, even when I agree with her.
We're not doing ourselves any favors by foreclosing on half the available talent pool.
Today's Quote
One of the saddest lessons of history is this:
If we've been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We're no longer interested in finding out the truth.
It's simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we've been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back.
--Carl Sagan
A Bible Thing
But then the Protestants got hold of it during The Reformation in the 16th century, and fucked it up for all of us by plowing the road and making it possible for American Evangelicals to use their religion almost solely as a revenue generator, and for their pet coin-operated politicians to rationalize and institutionalize rent-seeking.
So it sounds good, but it just comes back on you when they point out that it's not a Christian Bible thing, it's a Muslim Quran thing. And it gets lost in the racism shouting match.
But then again, if Usury is, in fact, a sin - and the GOP always makes noise about adhering to religious teachings - why are they always so adamantly opposed to things like CFPB?
Why would Liz Warren's ideas about fair and honorable business practices be seen as such a threat?
It's a wonderment.
COVID-19 Update
I had to go through it a couple of times to get it, and to read the on-screen stuff, but the takeaway is: dose up every day with not more than 50 micrograms (mcg) or 2,000 iu (International Units) of a vitamin D supplement.
Mar 4, 2020
I ❤️ Virginia
WaPo:
Virginians showed up in record numbers for Tuesday's Democratic presidential primary, leading a national wave of strong voter turnout that analysts said is all about defeating President Trump.
Roughly 1.3 million Virginia voters cast ballots, about 21 percent of the electorate, according to unofficial results. That’s up from the previous record of about 986,000 votes and 18 percent of the electorate in 2008, when Barack Obama was challenging Hillary Clinton for the party’s nomination.
Back then, voters sensed history in Obama potentially becoming the first African American nominated by a major party. Tuesday’s turnout was different.
Exit polling showed that most voters were seeking a candidate — any candidate — to defeat Trump. Virginia, which has undergone a dramatic blue shift since Trump’s win in 2016, responded more eagerly than any other state. Its turnout represented a 69 percent increase over the 2016 primary, compared to an average jump of 33 percent across nine Super Tuesday states in which the vote count is complete or has been projected by Edison Media Research.
The second-biggest increase was 60 percent in Texas.
“The interest . . . in defeating Donald Trump is so intense that it’s almost unprecedented,” Richmond political scientist Bob Holsworth said.
Virginians showed up in record numbers for Tuesday's Democratic presidential primary, leading a national wave of strong voter turnout that analysts said is all about defeating President Trump.
Roughly 1.3 million Virginia voters cast ballots, about 21 percent of the electorate, according to unofficial results. That’s up from the previous record of about 986,000 votes and 18 percent of the electorate in 2008, when Barack Obama was challenging Hillary Clinton for the party’s nomination.
Back then, voters sensed history in Obama potentially becoming the first African American nominated by a major party. Tuesday’s turnout was different.
Exit polling showed that most voters were seeking a candidate — any candidate — to defeat Trump. Virginia, which has undergone a dramatic blue shift since Trump’s win in 2016, responded more eagerly than any other state. Its turnout represented a 69 percent increase over the 2016 primary, compared to an average jump of 33 percent across nine Super Tuesday states in which the vote count is complete or has been projected by Edison Media Research.
The second-biggest increase was 60 percent in Texas.
“The interest . . . in defeating Donald Trump is so intense that it’s almost unprecedented,” Richmond political scientist Bob Holsworth said.
Today's Tweet

"Give a little"
Trump’s decision not to divest from his businesses allowed him to bring in $434 million in personal revenue in 2018, and the Secret Service has spent at least as much taxpayer money at his resorts as he has donated in salary.— Robert Maguire (@RobertMaguire_) March 4, 2020
On the other hand, he gave $100k to HHS.
Hero. https://t.co/WnrOfjdv0O
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