Once a legitimate blog. Now just a collection of memes 'n menz.
And my life was forever changed.
From The Palmer Report:
There's a moment in a science fiction TV show called Avenue 5, in which the captain says "We just watched seven people stupid themselves to death." And yes, the title of this article is from The Office. What can I say? Those of us who are dutifully staying home during the pandemic are watching a lot of TV. As these past few days have played out in the real world, these lines keep coming back to me – because we're sadly seeing a whole lot of people stupiding themselves to death right now.
It's one thing to go to a grocery store right now, masked up, taking as many precautions as you can. It's a far less safe thing to eat in a restaurant right now, where you can't stay masked up while eating (if you must do this, please be as careful as possible). Then there is this whole other ballgame where a certain segment of people are tempting fate by doing the most risky and stupid things they can possibly do in a pandemic – and they're being egged on by the President of the United States.
We keep seeing the images of partiers crowding into confined spaces, smashed up against each other, in large numbers – and almost none of them are wearing masks. No matter where in the country this kind of incident happens, it's nearly a statistical given that at least one of the people in that crowd has brought coronavirus with them, which means that a large chunk of the others will leave with the virus. They'll take it back to their families, their communities, their workplaces. This is how the second coronavirus wave begins, while the first wave is still going on.
The amount of stupidity on display here is mind boggling. In every one of these images we're seeing of tightly packed mass crowds right now, a percentage of the people in each image will be in the hospital or dead within a couple weeks. That's frankly their problem. But first they're going to spread the virus around to a bunch of unsuspecting people in their community. That's unconscionable. And yet Donald Trump keeps egging them on to carry out this murder-suicide routine. When this is over, Trump must be criminally charged for these deaths.
As Ben and I were saying yesterday, the stupidity we see rearing its head on Memorial Day will start bearing its deadly fruit in about 2-3 weeks.
For me personally, grocery shopping is fine. Picking up take-out food or medications (conveniently located in my grocery store) is fine. But anything beyond that is just plain crazy until there is a proven vaccine in place and I've been innoculated.
I may end up spending the rest of the year at home.
WHY?!?
This movie scared the crap out of me when I first saw it opening night. The Cine Capri in Phoenix finally stopped showing Star Wars and this was something new, and definitely different from Luke Skywalker & Co.
Driving home, I kept looking in my rear view mirror because I expected it to pop up in the bed of my truck at any time.
The only other films to affect me this way were Poltergeist (I slept with the closet light on with door open for a week afterward) and Aliens (I came home, opened every door, and turned on every light in the damn apartment.)
I want to be fashionable as much as the next gay, and since it appears wearing masks in public (at least among people who actually care about others) is the new norm, these caught my attention.
You can get yours here. (He's currently sold out of these designs, but I'm sure he'll be getting more in soon. He's been overwhelmed with orders since he put these online.)
As odd as it may seem, I've never seen The Shining in a theater. In fact, I don't even remember hearing about it until I happened to stumble upon it while—unable to sleep for some reason—cable surfing at 2 am back in '81 (or maybe '82).
It scared the fuck out of me.
And while I know it's not faithful to King's source material, I still prefer it over all subsequent attempts to bring The Shining to the big screen.
From John Gruber:
I'm old enough to recall when wearing seat belts became mandatory. Roughly speaking, these laws spread quickly from state to state, starting with New York in 1984 and becoming the rule rather than the exception within a decade. ("Live free or die" New Hampshire is the only remaining state that doesn't require adults to wear a seat belt.)
I recall a similar sort of opposition to these laws as we see now with mandatory face masks. Opposition to compulsory seat belt laws always seemed crazy to me, because the evidence was so overwhelming that seat belts save lives and greatly reduce injuries that it was clearly worth making an exception to the principle, widely held in America, that the government generally shouldn't tell people what to do. But crazy or not, opposition there was. "Fuck you, I don't want to wear one, it's a free country." Word for word, the same sentiment then about seat belts as now about face masks.
One of the arguments against compulsory seat-belt-wearing was that sometimes wearing a seat belt makes things worse. "What if I'm in an accident and my seat belt gets jammed, trapping me in a burning car?" "I read about a guy who wasn't wearing a seatbelt and he walked away from a terrible accident because he was thrown out of the car before it was totaled."
I don't agree with it, but to some degree I get it: What right does a government that sells you lottery tickets have to tell you that your odds are better if you're wearing a seat belt?
But there's a fundamental difference between wearing a seat belt in a car and wearing a face mask in a store. A seat belt really only protects the wearer. There are tangential arguments that society as a whole benefits from fewer car crash deaths and injuries, but the primary reason we have laws requiring you to wear a seat belt is to protect you from harm. Face mask requirements aren't like that. They're more like laws banning smoking in restaurants and making drunk driving a serious crime — they protect us all from harm.
From earlier in my childhood, I recall ubiquitous signs at the entrances of stores and restaurants: "No shirt, no shoes, no service." There were variants, but that exact phrasing was common. I always considered those signs so strange, as I couldn't imagine why anyone would even want to go into a store or restaurant without a shirt or shoes, let alone need a sign telling them that doing so was not permitted, but I figured it must have been a problem with hippies or something. (There were a lot of old people complaining about hippies long after there were any hippies left to complain about.)
Basically, other than poolside or at a beach, anyone who wants to go into a public establishment barefoot or shirtless is an asshole. It seems pretty clear that the people today angrily objecting to mandatory face masks aren't really concerned with the epidemiological efficacy of masks. They're concerned with asserting their perceived entitlement to be an asshole. You don't need to hang a "No assholes allowed" sign to enforce it as a rule.
No apology from pastor of Butte County church where 180 were exposed to COVID-19
This is the reason you are not supposed to be gathering in groups. But don't listen to science you fucking idiots, listen to the raging orange moron in the White House. Because when the fuck has he ever been right about one fucking thing?
So many outbreaks have started in churches and a lot of our elders go to those churches.
And while we're witnessing Charles Darwin in action, be vigilant. Listen to your own self-preservation instinct. Regardless of what may be open, STAY THE FUCK HOME and WEAR A GODDAMNED MASK WHEN YOU HAVE TO GO OUT.
In addition, I see a Trump voter. I see a selfish narcissist who doesn't care about anything or anyone beyond himself. I see a sociopath. I see a Karen and a Kevin.
I also see Charles Darwin in action.
I will never again wonder how the German people embraced Hitler's madness so readily 80 years ago.
FOX is a "predetermined narratives" cable network categorized as an entertainment channel.
It's a special interest propaganda machine coordinating with the GOP. It is neither fair nor balanced.
And the Whiner-in-Chief wouldn't be crying about how unfair their polling was if he didn't realize that his base watches that wretched channel almost exclusively.