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21
Editorial/Opinion/Blogs / The Trouble With World Government
« Last post by Fishrrman on Today at 07:34:45 pm »
https://www.theepochtimes.com/opinion/the-trouble-with-world-government-5649684

The Trouble With World Government

By Jeffrey A. Tucker
May 14, 2024

NOTE: when reading at The Epoch Times, either use your browser's "reader mode" (it has one), or, disable javascript using free add-ons or plugins.

Excerpts:
Well, at least that’s one setback for world government.

A court in Australia has told the government’s own eSafety Commission that Elon Musk is correct: One country cannot impose censorship on the world. The company X, formerly known as Twitter, must obey national law but not global law.

Mr. Musk seems to have won a very similar fight in Brazil, where a judge demanded not just a national but global takedown. X refused and won. For now.

This really does raise a serious issue: How big of a threat are these global government institutions?

Dreamy, dopey, and often scary intellectuals have dreamed of global government for centuries. If you are rich enough and smart enough, the idea seems to be the perennial temptation. The list of advocates includes people who otherwise have made notable contributions: Albert Einstein, Isaac Asimov, Walter Cronkite, Buckminster Fuller, and many others.
[...]
In 1919, H.G. Wells, inspired by the League, became so excited about the idea that he wrote a sweeping reinterpretation of world history that extended from the ninth century B.C. until that present moment. It was called “The Outline of History.”
The goal of the book was to turn on its head the popular Whig theory from the previous century, which saw history as the story of ever more freedom for individuals and away from powerful states. Wells told a story of tribes turning to nations and then to regions, with ever less power to the people and ever more to dictators and planners. His purpose was to chronicle and defend exactly this.

It was a huge bestseller at a time when the appetite for books was voracious because they were becoming affordable and there was a burning passion in the population for universal education. The thesis of his book, however valuable in some historical respects, was genuinely bizarre. He imagined a future world state ruled by a tiny elite of the smartest people who would plan all economies, information flows, migration patterns, and governance systems while crushing national ambitions, free enterprise, traditions, and constitutions.

It was crazy stuff and didn’t really happen. But the efforts never stopped among a certain class of intellectuals. Following World War II, we saw similar efforts, the U.N. being only one. In the agreement hammered out at Bretton Woods in 1944, we had forged the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), which were seen as the basis of a global planning apparatus, together with a new world monetary system.
[...]
No question that a nascent world government is in operation today. It is hugely influential over media, technology, and the operation of the internet. It is managing global money flows and asset prices. It aims to reduce national sovereignty to mere brand names of the same thing and make it impossible for the will of the voters to prevail in any policy outcomes. It consists of large and well-funded elites that swim between the public and private sectors and operate through foundations and nongovernmental organizations. It is utterly detached from democratic processes.

“Nothing more disastrous could happen in the field of international economic relations than the realization of such plans,” Ludwig von Mises wrote in 1944. “It would divide the nations into two groups—the exploiting and the exploited; those restricting output and charging monopoly prices, and those forced to pay monopoly prices. It would engender insoluble conflicts of interests and inevitably result in new wars.”

In other words, like all government actions, the results of a world government would end in the opposite of the promise: not peace but war, not prosperity but poverty, not health but sickness, not a better environment but a worse one. It would be a prison for the world and utterly unworkable. People of the world need to be on the lookout for what is happening and reject it whenever the opportunity presents itself to do so.

For this reason, we should cheer anytime global government impositions such as censorship experience a setback. Government in one country causes enough trouble. A unitary government ruling all countries would doom what’s left of civilization.

More at URL above...
22
Classic Rock Album of the Day- Deep Purple- Shades of Deep Purple- (1968) ** 1/2

Been having a good time lately reviewing and listening to bands who whisked through the breakthroughs and rapid fire changes of what constituted the transition of rock between 1964 and say about 1969.  There is no doubt that 100% pivoted on what the Beatles were doing.  But in retrospect, the way rock changed in those 5 years was breathtakingly rapid.  Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, The Who, and Led Zeppelin are maybe the some of the best examples of great bands that worked the formula to perfection.  None replicated the impact of the Beatles, but all 4 took an idea, ran with it, in a different way, and almost made genres upon themselves. 

Deep Purple, of course is centered around the great guitarist Richie Blackmore.  Blackmore did a fantastic job circumventing line up changes, that resulted in just enough of an incremental sound changes to keep the fans guessing, and in some cases, the music fresh.  In their debut album, and few subsequent, I think you will find both crtics and fans liking the original lineup, just for that classic sound.  A line up with Blackmore, Paice,  and Lord is the backbone of that heavy sound.  Their debut album is sorely missing a flailing screaming front man singer who seemed in this music era was needed to complete the rock and roll persona and experience.  That is why I believe this why Rod Evan's tenure was so short.  And neeless to say his foray into Captain Beyond was a disaster and it underscored his shortcomings a vocalist.

In Deep Purple terms, this is a substandard LP, but one has to be fascinated in hearing the progeny of the thought processes that even in their infancy can be plucked out of bits and pieces of this album.  In the department of adapting to the psychadaelia theming that all their peers were invoking, Purple was pretty much failing on that account.  Purple were great hard rockers.  Not a great band playing like an Iron Butterfly clone.   That is why about a 1/3 of this LP is filler, but one can't discount Hush, and "And the Address" as glimpses of what is to become.  Plus the fact that Blackmore had to rely on three staple covers to fill vinyl is not a good look.  They did the covers well, but others did them better.  Well maybe not Hush, and they pretty much cut that one out as their own. 

Fun Fact:  Yes' Rick Wakeman picked this LP as the greatest British LP ever made.   No idea why. 


Side 1-
-------------

And the Address-  Fine instrumental, and we get spared Rod Evans for a bit.  Has kind of psychadaelia MC5/Blue Cheer touch to it, but putting Lord, Paice, and Blackmore in a focused like jam session was a winner-  2

Hush-  As I mentioned it is a cover, but one that pretty much is associated with them instead of the originals.  Does anyone even remember Joe South?  Yes, this one's Purple's, just as much as All Along the Watchtower's is Hendrix'.   Song incorporates some psychadaelia, a prologue like heavy feel too, and enough hook to make it chart worthy.  In retrospect, if Hush hadn't charted, would we had even seen a second Deep Purple album.  Not so sure.  1

One More Rainy Day-  Very dated '60's effort that misses the mark. Song sounds like a slightly edgy Monkey's tune. 7

Prelude: Happiness/I'm So Glad- Kind of a Mix of Cream's, Ulysses, and mash up of Iron Butterfly, and the slightest tinge of King Crimson.  Even seems to have a hint of prog......   Prog?  Naw............    6

Side 2-
--------------

Mandrake Root- Kind of draws from that Sookie Sookie Steppenwolf melodic line, and with the same level of hard rocking late '60's flair.   Well played, and enough turns and innovation to make it a winner on this LP.  4

Help- Bizarre cover of the Beatle's classic.  Extra oddity points for picking one from early Beatles catalog.  A crooning sappy ballad of this upbeat number is worse than strange.  Bet Blackmore wanted this one back for a second opinion. 8

Love Help Me- Solid standard rocker, that really doesn't sound or come across as a Deep Purple.  Sure seems the band was struggling with what sound they wanted to go with.  Even this song, as uneven as it is, does have some redeeming moments with that quaint '60's vibe in what almost seems to be a schizophrenic LP. 5

Hey Joe-  I love this song, whoever sings it, and......of course Hendrix did it best.  I do like how Purple liluminated some strange but off beat angles to it though.  Spanish theming,sans Spaghetti Western like.....ramming right into the famous melodic line.  Nice.  3


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3sqPIGGwHg

I applaud you recognizing Deep Purple.  Didn't attend many R&R in my younger years, but DP was the only one I actually saw twice in concert.

BTW, my highlight concert I attended remains 1970 Jimi in San Antonio

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4SsM8pi0hw
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You just know that the so called journalist and editor that put this little bit of mental masturbation would never consider doing this themselves, this is directed at all the proletariat that are beneath their enlightened selves, you know all of America they consider stupid.

GMTA. Not one of these A$$holes will comply with their own bullcrap. Not one.

Besides, it's bullcrap. On demand hot water heaters use very little energy, and the same goes for gas or propane heaters. Very economical. It's electric hot water that costs so much.

I use gas hot water because I have hard water, and I refuse to filter it. But it doesn't even register on my gas bill in the summer time.

Maybe I should shower more...  :pondering:

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Elections 2024 / Donald Trump Doesn’t Need a DEI Running Mate
« Last post by Fishrrman on Today at 07:30:11 pm »
https://tomklingenstein.com/donald-trump-doesnt-need-a-dei-running-mate/

Donald Trump Doesn’t Need a DEI Running Mate
By Frank Cannon
May 14, 2024

Donald Trump is likely still far off from announcing his vice presidential pick, but his “friends” in the party elite are already working overtime to undermine the ticket.

Republicans may give lip service to competence and merit over the equity regime, but they don’t really believe it. When they can couch it in terms of political advice, the GOP elite are every bit as woke as the Democrats.

Every election cycle, the usual suspects crawl out of the woodwork to announce their criteria for the perfect running mate: competent, sure; helpful as a surrogate, yes; but above all, they say, the vice president must be “diverse”—which is to say, not a white man.

Just last week, The Hill quoted an anonymous GOP senator making this very case: “Even Trump is smart enough to say two white men on the Republican ticket in 2024 is a bad idea when you have really good alternatives.” Other senators agreed, and they’re not alone. This idea crops up in article after article after article.

We should remember where that logic landed Joe Biden. His diversity-first VP criteria saddled him with Kamala Harris, one of the worst vice presidents in modern history. Trump should be seeking a running mate who can contrast favorably with Kamala, rather than falling into the exact same trap.
[...]
The Republican Party needs to be the champion of competence and the opponent of race- and gender-based quotas. We should choose our leaders (or vice-leaders) based on the content of their characters and their aptitude for the job. This is already the way that normal people in the normal world operate. It is only elites in academia, business, and politics who see the world through the lens of race and sex.

Vice presidential DEI is not just a bad idea for good governance. It also clouds political judgment. This kind of analysis blinds Republican elites to the real strengths and weaknesses of candidates.

More at URL above...

Poster's comment:
The VP candidate should be a white male. Nuthin' else.
Mr. Trump will win or lose on his own.
The right VP will be in a strong position to continue Mr. Trump's policies after 2028.
Again, I suggest either J.D. Vance or Rand Paul.
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Every governmental agency is just as corrupt and lying as their leader Biden. 

3.4% annual YTD?  No one believes this.  I conduct and manage very detailed budgets and spending analyses.  And from my POV, inflation is still in the neighborhood of 9-10%

Biden is a bald faced liar.
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Praying for peacefulness.  :0001:
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Radio Shows / Re: Do you listen to podcasts? Any recommendations?
« Last post by deb on Today at 07:21:59 pm »

Good gosh no. I like my podcasts to be about different things. Lately other than my French podcast I have been listening to one about movies and tv.... or of course animal stories. Or old radio shows like Dragnet, or Jean Shepard or Bob and Ray

I want to think of happy things when I  am walking or going to the gym. no current affairs.

Thank you @roamer_1

For something entirely different, I recommend The Minimal Mom. She’s a young(ish) mom from the Midwest who promotes a minimal lifestyle. I’m needing to downsize (i.e. get rid of) a lot of stuff in my house. I’ve learned a lot from her.
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Radio Shows / Re: Do you listen to podcasts? Any recommendations?
« Last post by roamer_1 on Today at 07:21:08 pm »
Another weirdo one is Blurry Creatures on Spotify or Youtube, for sure, maybe elsewhere...

But that's all I have to prolly recommend... All the rest of my stuff is heavy philosophy and religion, or hillbilly.

A note though @Gefn ... If you are listening on your ph., then I might recommend staying in audio podcasts - Not youtube or the like, because the video that comes along with the audio is a whole lot of weight on your phone, and will wear down your battery pretty quickly. Pure audio sites will last a whole lot longer.
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They probably will shut off Trump's mic even when he's supposed to be the one answering the question.

There are a 1000 diff ways Trump can be f'ed with technically at a debate from sound, video, light, angles, etc.

Pedo Joe wouldn't have agreed, if there wasn't some kind of contingency plan to win.
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Interesting that it only says Trump's mic is muted when Biden is speaking.  Is Biden allowed to interrupt Trump at will?
They probably will shut off Trump's mic even when he's supposed to be the one answering the question.
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