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| Favorite team: | LSU |
| Location: | new york city |
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| Number of Posts: | 3350 |
| Registered on: | 3/11/2005 |
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re: I need a good new coffee to try
Posted by epbart on 6/11/26 at 2:10 am to Lucky_Stryke
If you want to gamble on something different, Barnie's German Chocolate Cake coffee is the best flavored coffee I've ever had.
Barnies
For context, my wife, who prefers dark roast coffee served black (usually Peet's Major Dickason's blend and sometimes Illy) likes the Barnies, too, even though she doesn't usually like medium roast.
Most flavored coffees taste terrible to me-- like cheap chemicals-- but Barnies has been consistently good. Haven't tried their whole bean coffees, so can't speak to those.
Barnies
For context, my wife, who prefers dark roast coffee served black (usually Peet's Major Dickason's blend and sometimes Illy) likes the Barnies, too, even though she doesn't usually like medium roast.
Most flavored coffees taste terrible to me-- like cheap chemicals-- but Barnies has been consistently good. Haven't tried their whole bean coffees, so can't speak to those.
quote:
OT ballers only drink Kopi Luwak
One of my daughters did a teen tour in Asia a decade or so ago, and brought back a bag of the fermented civet shite bean coffee.
iirc, my wife found the idea a little too gross and might've had a sip, but otherwise left the bag for me. My memory is faded, but I think I remember it being a bit more subtle than regular coffee in some ways... not as acidic as light roasts or as bitter as dark roasts, and softened by the fermenting, which gave it a hard to describe earthy, gamey funk. More subtle than overwhelming and not bad, but I wouldn't go out of my way to get it again either.
re: Knicks play tonight. Will it be Trump’s fault if the Knicks lose tonight?
Posted by epbart on 6/10/26 at 12:22 pm to LivingstonLaw
quote:
Will it be Trump’s fault if the Knicks lose tonight?
Not really... at least not as much as his political opponents.
To the extent one is superstitious, then it's fair to recognize the role of Democrats in the jinx. They were so desperate to get on camera and criticize Trump for accepting Dolan's invite, saying it would be bad luck, that they quite literally spoke that jinx into existence. Then the fans who booed Trump gave it power.
quote:
He never once said he wouldn’t use the military. He actually boats about how he’s rebuilt the military to use it.
Correct.
It's not unreasonable to have a full, nuanced position which in conversation gets boiled down to an oversimplistic slogan-- "No New Wars" being the simple slogan that represents Trump's desire for a strong military and a willingness to use it to win, but without getting caught up in long lasting conflicts that achieve nothing over time.
I think the following quote attributed to Trump (pulled out of a convo I had with Grok about No New Wars a few months ago) is a more accurate summary of his position:
quote:
"I will not hesitate to deploy military force when there is no alternative. But if America fights, it must fight to win. I will never send our finest into battle unless necessary—and will only do so if we have a plan for victory. Our goal is peace and prosperity, not war and destruction."
The "No New Wars" claim by Trump during the 2024 election was a bit more of a retrospective claim about how he succeeded in his first term and was proud about it. While it was also a pledge of continuity of his philosophy from his first term, it was never an explicit statement that he would NOT use the military in his second term... anyone claiming this is being intentionally irrational and looking for an excuse to attack the man.
It is, of course, fair to question how well Trump is succeeding. I would call Venezuela and the previous strikes on Iranian nuke facilities as Trump's actions being consistent with his words. There is some risk that the current Iranian operation gets away from him.
If one is being truly fair, though-- people like the OP, Bunk, & many of the libs on here are not fair minded-- then it is important to realize Trump is fighting more than Iran. The media at home, every Democrat leader and some Republicans in Congress would rather see the US fail than win against Iran-- solely for the purpose of denying Trump a win... to hurt Trump and protect their own fiefdoms lobbyists help them build. They hamstring him at every turn and work to undermine him instead of supporting him... and America. If he only had a little more support from his own party, I think he might've advanced his agenda a lot more than he has already, and the bitchier sorts who like to harp on this topic might be less eager to carp as they do. Oh, well...
re: These Feds need to be locked up!
Posted by epbart on 6/4/26 at 4:07 pm to boosiebadazz
quote:
Eh, mostly good people.
Tacit insult of all J6'ers... but with enough wiggle room to deny it. Well done.
I suspect if one looked at protestors on Left and Right, you're going to find a higher than average proclivity towards actions that might get one in legal trouble... whether or not that ties in directly with a pattern of recidivism or not.
I mean, heck, when Kyle Rittenhouse shot 3 Leftist dudes, it turns out all 3 were criminals (I think one was a pedo, another had a record of violent assaults against family members, and the third had gun charges). That's a target rich environment for criminals if you shoot 3 protestors and all are criminals, no?
I looked up the article your tweet references:
lawfaremedia
Let's look at the language around some crimes...
quote:
Others have faced charges for physical assaults, illegal firearms possession, or other violent crimes. At least 20 have been charged with driving under the influence (DUI) of alcohol or drugs or public intoxication.
Interesting to lump gun charges between assaults or other violent crimes. Later, it goes on:
quote:
In 28 cases, Jan. 6 convicts have gotten in additional trouble because of guns. Several of these cases have involved law enforcement finding caches of weapons in the defendant’s possession during searches related to the Jan. 6 investigation.
... So, a good number weren't even doing anything with the guns and didn't take the guns anywhere. They just owned them (as many people do) and seems like the Feds, once they tracked these J6 people down, used this as a pretext to upgrade / tack on charges.
Given the above, and the number of frivolous non-violent charges pertaining to stuff like drug paraphernalia and bad life decision crimes like DUI, and the premise of all these people who are criminals and should not have been pardoned starts to fall apart.
Now let's compare this article by Lawfaremedia to their coverage of BLM in another article they wrote...
lawfaremedia
Per the title, prosecutors were too aggressive here for minor crimes.
And Trump and Barr urged prosecutors to charge protestors... and many prosecutors "obliged" (as if the President coerced them and it wasn't their job) to go after...
quote:
defendants who were protesting George Floyd’s death and who face charges for relatively minor offenses—such as damaging police vehicles, resisting arrest, carrying a Molotov cocktail and calling for riots on Facebook.
So having a gun at your home with no known intent to use it criminally makes one a violent criminal who should not have been released. But running around with Molotov cocktails, destroying cop cars, etc is "relatively minor" and prosecutors were aggressive in pursuing charges here.
Got it. Lol.
re: Maine dem senate nominee sent sexually explicit texts to as many as 12 women while married
Posted by epbart on 5/31/26 at 2:40 pm to Big Scrub TX
quote:
What's the story with him watching some video of a firefight in Afghanistan or something and pulling for the US soldier to get killed?
A Marine in Afghanistan exposed himself to enemy fire and got shot 4x. I haven't watched the video or looked into the details beyond the below article, but allegedly he did so intentionally to draw fire away from his fellow Marines/soldiers.
Platner crassly insulted the Marine, called him stupid, and said he didn't deserve to live.
fox article
Just another anecodate that suggests he's of low character-- trashing his fellow servicemen, who, if he was drawing fire in a different direction, was trying to do something honorable/courageous.
quote:
Backing up a trailer.
I avoid it like the plague.
On a related note... parallel parking.
I'm a better driver than my wife, in general, but she parallel parks better than me.
re: Maine dem senate nominee sent sexually explicit texts to as many as 12 women while married
Posted by epbart on 5/31/26 at 1:36 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
Interesting that the NYT is running this.
I freely admit that I consider Trump's personal indiscretions secondary to his vision and agenda. I'd certainly prefer a man of high integrity in office, but there aren't many, if any, who are both moral and have the force of will to get anything done. So, I'm content to vote for a man (Trump) who has some force of will to try and change things (understanding the other branches are working against him, and thus limiting him). In the same way, I'd rather choose a surgeon or attorney who is a flawed, sinful man over a less talented but moral man... if the sinful man is more competent and capable ensuring a positive outcome.
My point here is to say I'm not going to explicity shite on Platner for being a slimy piece of shite to his wife. I think Platner sucks in far more meaningful ways than just being sleazy. I'm more curious that the Left is going to turn a blind eye to his being an immoral a-hole when it tried to hammer Trump for it.
Again, interesting the NYT ran with this. I know they like to change the headlines / focus every 5 days or so. So maybe by reporting this early, they can say they reported it and ignore it down the home stretch when the potential to influence voters matters more. It would perhaps be more damaging to report it in October. Also gives Platner a chance to say he's worked through his issues (which will be bullshite).
I freely admit that I consider Trump's personal indiscretions secondary to his vision and agenda. I'd certainly prefer a man of high integrity in office, but there aren't many, if any, who are both moral and have the force of will to get anything done. So, I'm content to vote for a man (Trump) who has some force of will to try and change things (understanding the other branches are working against him, and thus limiting him). In the same way, I'd rather choose a surgeon or attorney who is a flawed, sinful man over a less talented but moral man... if the sinful man is more competent and capable ensuring a positive outcome.
My point here is to say I'm not going to explicity shite on Platner for being a slimy piece of shite to his wife. I think Platner sucks in far more meaningful ways than just being sleazy. I'm more curious that the Left is going to turn a blind eye to his being an immoral a-hole when it tried to hammer Trump for it.
Again, interesting the NYT ran with this. I know they like to change the headlines / focus every 5 days or so. So maybe by reporting this early, they can say they reported it and ignore it down the home stretch when the potential to influence voters matters more. It would perhaps be more damaging to report it in October. Also gives Platner a chance to say he's worked through his issues (which will be bullshite).
quote:
we could use him at safety
More of a Buck linebacker
re: Do you or know anyone that actually pays for OnlyFans?
Posted by epbart on 5/30/26 at 7:34 pm to SCLibertarian
quote:
I've always wondered if it was a large scale money laundering operation.
This has never crossed my mind, but it strikes me as potentially ingenious. An enterprising sort might establish a stable of accounts... short and long term for different agendas to clean and obscure money trails.
Of course, I think there are a number of legit onlyfans accounts... stories have trickled out here and there about a teacher, a policewoman, a housewife / mother to young kids, a quirky exhibitionist couple, etc who've capitalized on the platform. And there is the trailing bottom 10% or 20% of men who have disposable income or an inability to avoid racking up debt, and a difficulty with making connections IRL... or a misguided sense of wanting to be seen by the people they pay. Onlyfans is possibly a good proxy (outlet) for the sort of lonely guy too shy to make a move face to face, and too risk averse or proud to put himself on the line with a stripper, hooker, etc. It isn't real engagement, but the mirage of engagement might be better than nothing for some.
re: What do we do when the poles shift and all that sequestered carbon erupts out?
Posted by epbart on 5/29/26 at 11:24 am to Meauxjeaux
My carbon credits will protect me.
quote:
I noticed caffeine affect me differently this morning. I'll probably forego it the rest of the way.
I don't remember the caffeine hitting me differently, but everyone is a little different. I know I get caffeine withdrawal headaches if I don't drink coffee, and since long fasts carry their own headache risks, I don't want to compound that issue or get confused about the source of my discomfort.
If you really know you felt different in some way, perhaps you might consider cutting down the amount of coffee by a third of so, watering it down and drinking when warm vs hot, and drinking it more slowly (like half in the morning & half around noon) starting tomorrow and re-evaluate as the week goes on.
The longest I've done is 3 days. Like you, I made an allowance of black coffee. (There was no way I was going to fight caffeine withdrawal headaches at the same time... and a cup of black coffee only has something like 5 calories, which isn't enough to trigger the stomach to go into acid production mode.)
I can only speak to a 3 day fast...
- Day 1 is fairly easy. Have done 24-36 hour fasts numerous times. Almost seems easier if you're active (perhaps as a function of not having to sit still and your mind noticing you're hungry and nudging you to eat).
- Day 2: A few significant periods of very mild discomfort as the body goes through intermittent cylces of hunger pangs.
- Day 3: Aside from intermittent hunger pangs, there was a somewhat persistent low-grade brain fog and a mild unpleasant feeling in the body... a sort of weak / sluggish feeling. It wasn't debilitating or anything; more of a constant annoyance. I think this combo of brain fog & fatigue is part of what some people commonly call "keto flu".
One pro tip I read somewhere... probably some health bros on Twitter / X... is to take salt every day during a fast. This makes sense as your electrolytes can become severely depleted during a long fast-- especially if you're drinking a lot of water. I assume this explains my own keto flu on day 3 (I was not supplementing salt). This is a safety precaution that should absolutely be heeded. At a minimum, you should take some amount of salt, but really should find some way of supplementing potassium & magnesium as well. Running out of electrolytes can cause heart palpitations and possibly induce a heart attack.
I'm sure there are other good practices that aren't cheating for a 7 day fast, but I've never gone that long myself so haven't reasearched. I'm assuming you've at least done a few 1-3 days fasts already to somewhat prepare yourself for a longer fast. I don't think I would just jump into a 7 day.
Lastly, in case you don't know: don't binge eat at the end. You should ease back into eating with small amounts of healthy, lighter food.
quote:
What was it like and how did you do?
I can only speak to a 3 day fast...
- Day 1 is fairly easy. Have done 24-36 hour fasts numerous times. Almost seems easier if you're active (perhaps as a function of not having to sit still and your mind noticing you're hungry and nudging you to eat).
- Day 2: A few significant periods of very mild discomfort as the body goes through intermittent cylces of hunger pangs.
- Day 3: Aside from intermittent hunger pangs, there was a somewhat persistent low-grade brain fog and a mild unpleasant feeling in the body... a sort of weak / sluggish feeling. It wasn't debilitating or anything; more of a constant annoyance. I think this combo of brain fog & fatigue is part of what some people commonly call "keto flu".
One pro tip I read somewhere... probably some health bros on Twitter / X... is to take salt every day during a fast. This makes sense as your electrolytes can become severely depleted during a long fast-- especially if you're drinking a lot of water. I assume this explains my own keto flu on day 3 (I was not supplementing salt). This is a safety precaution that should absolutely be heeded. At a minimum, you should take some amount of salt, but really should find some way of supplementing potassium & magnesium as well. Running out of electrolytes can cause heart palpitations and possibly induce a heart attack.
I'm sure there are other good practices that aren't cheating for a 7 day fast, but I've never gone that long myself so haven't reasearched. I'm assuming you've at least done a few 1-3 days fasts already to somewhat prepare yourself for a longer fast. I don't think I would just jump into a 7 day.
Lastly, in case you don't know: don't binge eat at the end. You should ease back into eating with small amounts of healthy, lighter food.
re: Is the supped up golf cart craze dying?
Posted by epbart on 5/24/26 at 3:52 pm to fr33manator
quote:
Don't be a pedantic little bisque.
Sick burn. I bet he's gonna stew over that one.
re: Looks like fraud in the KY-04 race
Posted by epbart on 5/21/26 at 1:08 am to DyeHardDylan
There were anomalies in the 2020 election worth investigating. So, if you've got an actual argument that fraud happened here, I'm happy to hear it.
The Sam Parker guy you're citing may or may not be credible, but goes on to beg for money for his legal fees in post #6 of his thread (I guess Kash's girlfriend is suing him for defamation.), so that somewhat increases the odds this is clickbait to get money, but let's hear him out.
It seems, though, like the only thing the Sam guy in your OP says is Massie got more votes (19.1% more) in 2026 than 2024, and turnout was 100% more, so he doesn't understand how he could lose.
Hmm...
Someone else in the thread (a guy named Kurt) asks Grok for the # of registered voters in KY-04. Grok replies: 600,314 total voters and ~311k Republican. The May 19th primary had 105,361 votes cast... so while a 100% increase in votes from 2024 to 2026 might sound extraordinary when stated that way, in truth, a 100% increase in turnout means only slightly more than 1/3 of Republicans showed up this week. That might be high for a primary, but doesn't appear to be the type of cheating that happened in Arizona where turnout was strangely close to 100% in some areas...
If you can find counties or voting districts where unusual turnout happened, by all means bring it up. Otherwise, it doesn't sound like a big deal.
Here's that exchange / post I'm referencing, btw... if you care:
The same Kurt guy who asked Grok about #s of voters goes on to ask how Gallrein motivated people to show up since Massie supposedly had more small donors and Gallrein didn't draw crowds like Massie. Grok answers: it was the most expensive House primary in US history with ~$30M spent, a lot of TV ads, Trump's endorsement, and other factors driving greater than average turnout. And that this pattern seems consistent with other primaries that were high-profile and had high-spending.
So, in 2024, in a low pressure race against nobodies, Massie gets about 40k votes (approx 13% of 311k republican voters). The nobodies got approx 4%.
In 2026, in the most expensive primary in history in a hotly contested race for which people were motivated to show up, Massie gets 47.5k votes. While that's a 19.1% increase from 2024, it's still only ~15% of republican voters (47.5k / 311k), so it doesn't seem that odd.
If you disagree, please explain.
As I see it, this election was run far more efficiently than 2020. Shortly after the polls closed, the numbers were counted and Gallrein announced winner the same day... that's with a 100% increase in voter turnout over 2024. That didn't happen in 2020... where counting mysteriously stopped and restarted in the middle of the night in some places without poll watchers. In Philly, counting continued for something retarded like a week after election day.
Do you still think Sam's simplistic analysis suggests cheating? If so, how? If you think cheating was done another way... like Dominion machines and votes were flipped or illegal votes were counted, explain. I'd be happy to declare Gallrein's win as fraudulent if it proves elections aren't secure and leads to ditching crap voting machines and passing the Save Act.
So, what's your actual argument here?
The Sam Parker guy you're citing may or may not be credible, but goes on to beg for money for his legal fees in post #6 of his thread (I guess Kash's girlfriend is suing him for defamation.), so that somewhat increases the odds this is clickbait to get money, but let's hear him out.
It seems, though, like the only thing the Sam guy in your OP says is Massie got more votes (19.1% more) in 2026 than 2024, and turnout was 100% more, so he doesn't understand how he could lose.
Hmm...
Someone else in the thread (a guy named Kurt) asks Grok for the # of registered voters in KY-04. Grok replies: 600,314 total voters and ~311k Republican. The May 19th primary had 105,361 votes cast... so while a 100% increase in votes from 2024 to 2026 might sound extraordinary when stated that way, in truth, a 100% increase in turnout means only slightly more than 1/3 of Republicans showed up this week. That might be high for a primary, but doesn't appear to be the type of cheating that happened in Arizona where turnout was strangely close to 100% in some areas...
If you can find counties or voting districts where unusual turnout happened, by all means bring it up. Otherwise, it doesn't sound like a big deal.
Here's that exchange / post I'm referencing, btw... if you care:
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. The same Kurt guy who asked Grok about #s of voters goes on to ask how Gallrein motivated people to show up since Massie supposedly had more small donors and Gallrein didn't draw crowds like Massie. Grok answers: it was the most expensive House primary in US history with ~$30M spent, a lot of TV ads, Trump's endorsement, and other factors driving greater than average turnout. And that this pattern seems consistent with other primaries that were high-profile and had high-spending.
So, in 2024, in a low pressure race against nobodies, Massie gets about 40k votes (approx 13% of 311k republican voters). The nobodies got approx 4%.
In 2026, in the most expensive primary in history in a hotly contested race for which people were motivated to show up, Massie gets 47.5k votes. While that's a 19.1% increase from 2024, it's still only ~15% of republican voters (47.5k / 311k), so it doesn't seem that odd.
If you disagree, please explain.
As I see it, this election was run far more efficiently than 2020. Shortly after the polls closed, the numbers were counted and Gallrein announced winner the same day... that's with a 100% increase in voter turnout over 2024. That didn't happen in 2020... where counting mysteriously stopped and restarted in the middle of the night in some places without poll watchers. In Philly, counting continued for something retarded like a week after election day.
Do you still think Sam's simplistic analysis suggests cheating? If so, how? If you think cheating was done another way... like Dominion machines and votes were flipped or illegal votes were counted, explain. I'd be happy to declare Gallrein's win as fraudulent if it proves elections aren't secure and leads to ditching crap voting machines and passing the Save Act.
So, what's your actual argument here?
re: The Federalist Doesn’t Hold Back On Ken Paxton
Posted by epbart on 5/20/26 at 8:56 pm to biscuitsngravy
We're living in an age where we have to vote for people who are less than ideal... almost every race seems to be a variation of South Park's Giant Douche vs Turd Sandwich mockery of the 2016 election.
Do I think Paxton is a saint or the moral compass people should follow? No.
Do I think he's got some skeletons. Almost certainly. Few people at his level don't as they get drawn into alliances with groups and donors who all want something. Trump has associations I don't like. The Clintons and Obama have associations I don't like, etc. Newsom, AOC, Thune, Cornyn, and Talarico do, too.
Do I think Paxton will be a more reliable presence in the Senate than Cornyn? Yes... I'm inclined at this point to think Paxton will be more of an ally to Trump than Cornyn. And I do think that's important since Paxton voters are almost certainly Trump voters and helping Trump's agenda will advantage them. It would be dishonest to frame being a Trump ally as a bootlicker or anything of the sort if the relationship is based on a similar vision of trying to enact better voting laws, eliminating fraud, etc. In contrast, Cornyn is/was the typical establishment Republican who spoke like he cared, but always voted with establishment ideas... which are the various facets that grew out of Rockefeller republicanism in prior decades to advantage insders and sap American strength.
Looking at the worst of the charges against Paxton-- the securities fraud settlement-- they look even less serious than I might've thought. He didn't register as a securities agent with the state or disclose to investors his compensation. Oh, the horror! I think those kind of laws have value, but then again, so do insider trading laws, and congressmen don't seem to give a shite about that. In my opinion, insider trading is a little worse.
And when the SEC separately tried to do hammer Paxton on the same issue...
Reuters
... a judge said it wasn't a big issue either and dismissed it. Kind of gives credence to the thought that corrupt leadership in the government and republican leadership had it out for him more than him actually being a dishonorable character.
Do I think Paxton is a saint or the moral compass people should follow? No.
Do I think he's got some skeletons. Almost certainly. Few people at his level don't as they get drawn into alliances with groups and donors who all want something. Trump has associations I don't like. The Clintons and Obama have associations I don't like, etc. Newsom, AOC, Thune, Cornyn, and Talarico do, too.
Do I think Paxton will be a more reliable presence in the Senate than Cornyn? Yes... I'm inclined at this point to think Paxton will be more of an ally to Trump than Cornyn. And I do think that's important since Paxton voters are almost certainly Trump voters and helping Trump's agenda will advantage them. It would be dishonest to frame being a Trump ally as a bootlicker or anything of the sort if the relationship is based on a similar vision of trying to enact better voting laws, eliminating fraud, etc. In contrast, Cornyn is/was the typical establishment Republican who spoke like he cared, but always voted with establishment ideas... which are the various facets that grew out of Rockefeller republicanism in prior decades to advantage insders and sap American strength.
Looking at the worst of the charges against Paxton-- the securities fraud settlement-- they look even less serious than I might've thought. He didn't register as a securities agent with the state or disclose to investors his compensation. Oh, the horror! I think those kind of laws have value, but then again, so do insider trading laws, and congressmen don't seem to give a shite about that. In my opinion, insider trading is a little worse.
And when the SEC separately tried to do hammer Paxton on the same issue...
quote:
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had also sued Paxton for promoting Servergy stock without disclosing he was paid to do so. The case was dismissed in 2017, when a judge ruled Paxton was not required to disclose the payments.
Reuters
... a judge said it wasn't a big issue either and dismissed it. Kind of gives credence to the thought that corrupt leadership in the government and republican leadership had it out for him more than him actually being a dishonorable character.
quote:
But one thing for sure, if 60 fellow Texas republicans vote in favor of bringing the charges, that means that this guy is not well regarded among Texas republicans.
That's inaccurate as stated.
It would be fair to say that he is not liked by a large percentage of Republican party leaders in TX-- many of whom are aligned more to either Bush, Cornyn, and similar factions of the party.
It is not at all fair to confuse that with the sentiments of Texas republicans in general.
In many regards the will of everyday people is not represented by party leaders on either side. Something like 80% of Republicans, and similar numbers of the black community, want voter ID laws passed. Democat leaders are universally against it. Republican leaders are not much better.
re: Lane Kiffin has a play call named, "Gas Livvy Dunne"
Posted by epbart on 5/20/26 at 3:26 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
quote:
What does gas mean in this context
If I had to guess, I'd imagine something to do with playing tempo / hurry up... as in "hit the gas".
Pure speculation, of course.
re: Nuanced take on Massie from KY-04 voter
Posted by epbart on 5/20/26 at 3:09 pm to burger bearcat
quote:
To start, I ended up voting for Massie yesterday. I had waffled back and forth, the decision could have been a lot easier if they picked someone that seemed a little less NeoConish than Gallrein, but I probably could have gone either way. I had family and friends that went separated ways as well.
I will say that Massie losing was clearly his own doing. No one worked harder to get him out of office than Thomas Massie. He simply stopped trying to do his job and represent his constituents and work within the framework of our political system to push his ideas and agendas forward. He chose to go on a self-destructive mission, that often times looked to be driven more by personal qualms than any sort of principles.
The optics just simply were not there for him. It appeared he was doing everything in his power to make Trump ineffective, which was not going to fly in a district that overwhelmingly voted for Trump to get his agenda pushed.
This goes back to the classic problem with libertarianism. It’s great at offering critiques of existing policies. But absolutely terrible at coming up with concrete action plans “that will actually work in reality” on how to get their agenda passed.
Though this thread has derailed, just want to say I appreciate your attempt to add perspective.
If I lived in KY, I would've voted for Gallrein, but I don't dislike Massie. I used to like him quite a bit, but agree generally with your observation that he went on an almost inexplicable self-destructive mission.
I can't help but wonder if his previous wife might've had a better grounding effect on him, or if he sort of went off the rails when she died, or the new girlfriend/wife was a bad influence (relative to how he comported himself). Not trying to make excuses for him... just curious. Little things like not shaving after his wife passed are little things in and of themselves, but do point to some level of change.
Regardless, when he decided to take Trump's barbs personally (speculating) and attempted to play a PR game against Trump by grandstanding on some issues and trying to get in the spotlight more, he massively (Massievely? lol) screwed up. That's Trump's game, and if the Dems and the MSM haven't been able to unseat Trump with their relentless insults and attacks, I don't know what Massie thought he was going to accomplish. Maybe he started to like the attention / camera too much. Maybe he thought he could gain something more out of it. Whatever the case, he Icarus'd himself.
quote:
Paxton is widely regarded as a scummy scammer. The opening might be there for the Democrat.
Widely? In some circles maybe... But not as widely as your a-hole is also an opening for Democrats.
I've known about the attempted impeachment but really hadn't looked into them until you posted the article. As written, they look weaker than I thought... no wonder the attempt to impeach him failed.
quote:
Unfortunately, I can assure you there are exponentially more assholes than “suicidally empathetic” people in our civilization.
I’m a bit disappointed that you’re indulging the idea that a significant portion of society harms itself out of excessive empathy for the undeserving. There’s little evidence that this phenomenon exists at any meaningful scale, let alone to the extent that it warrants serious concern.
Your first paragraph is an over-generic abstraction that is unprovable as stated (I doubt we'll be able to agree on what an a-hole is, much less count them.). Worse than that, it's a rather shoddy example of a relative privation fallacy (a disengenuous appeal to a different problem to ignore the stated problem). It fails on many levels, not the least of which is that an a-hole can often be not only a productive member of society and good to his family, he might also do other good works that benefit others... he just might be a dick personally.
Your second paragraph is relevant, but your "little evidence that this phenomenon exists at any meaningful scale" quip is also disingenuous, though it's more of a dishonest reductive framing or minimization.
- The OP already gave a good example with the woman getting raped by the Haitian people she was trying to help. Of course, this isn't good enough for you.
- I can point out the woman who didn't want to put another black guy in jail in NYC last week, so she doesn't report the guy and he pushes an old man down the subway stairs and kills him a little later. Won't be enough for you.
- I can point out the recent story of Estíbaliz Kortazar, a left-wing activist in Spain, who let a North African migrant stay in her apartment as an act of humanitarian solidarity. He stopped paying rent, subjected her to psychological and sexual harassment, she fled in fear and he changed the locks and took over her home. Probably not enough for you.
- I could easily find dozens of stories of muslims raping girls in the UK and throughout Europe, and the criminal behavior is excused (with suicidal empathy for Islam and total disregard for the girls).
- I could probably find 50 to 100 other example: rape, murder, theft, assault, etc., here and abroad. You just don't really want to accept it because you're conditioned to not want to believe this is a problem.
The fact is that this phenomenon of suicidal empathy is not even a new thing. Before Saad's book and clever turn of phrase, it was already a well enough known archetype of human psychology that it had its own fable... the story of the frog and the scorpion.
I would like to think this is still a commonly known story, but just in case it's not (since the powers that be in education have tried to strip out common sense and morality), here's a summary:
A scorpion asks a frog for a ride across the river because it can't swim. Frog says no, he can't trust the scorpion not to sting him. Scorpion says "c'mon, if I do that then we'll both drown." Frog sees the logic and wants to believe so agrees. Halfway across the river, the scorpion stings him anyway and as they both start to sink the frog asks, "Why?" to which the scorpion says he couldn't help it. And they drown.
Like any fable, there is a moral to the story... And the issue isn't about the scorpion; the scorpion was acting according to its nature. The point is that the frog was dumb-- perhaps naively idealistic as suicidal empathy sorts appear to be-- to believe that trying to help the scorpion wasn't going to bite him in the arse-- almost literally.
If this psychological phenomenon has its own fable and has struck people as true and important enough to teach to kids throughout the world since this story arose some hundred years ago in Russia, then you're categorically and emphatically wrong about it not warranting serious concern. The new spin of suicidal empathy just speaks to the specific context of modern progressive politics that seeks to excuse bad behavior by criminals and illegal immigrants.
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And you call this suicidal empathy instead of poor discretion?
There are times when it's better to generalize a concept to understand it in different contexts. And there are times when it's better to be more precise with language. "Poor discretion" is too general in this case and speaks to many types of bad decision making beyond the specific political contexts Saad speaks to. It will not do. I've provided additional context to understand the psychological concept more broadly if that's really your concern. I don't believe understanding is your concern, though. I've seen enough of your posts to know you're a bit of a bleeding heart suicidal empathy sort yourself, so you're just clumsily picking around the corners of the argument in an effort to undermine it-- illogically. Suicidal empathy is appropriate in this context.
It isn't my intent to simply insult you here. You do have talent at creating threads with topics that get traction and go several pages, and different perspectives should be heard. And in one of your recent threads about one of your charges/patients/parolees/whatever lapsing his way into trouble, I noted NC_Tigah specifically being nice to you and encouraging you for trying to help people. He made me reconsider you as a poster, and you do deserve credit for trying to live to your values.
That being said, it doesn't make you right in this argument. If you read my reply here objectively, I don't see how you can argue with me in any meangingful way. Pretty much everything you've said here is argumentatively weak and presented in a way to irrationally minimize things. You might not like me saying that... I might not sound nice... I might even sound like an a-hole... but I'm arguing from a perspective of valuing morality and truth over feels. Truth matters, and that's sort of the point... Empathy is itself good, but so is being rational. Forsaking society and abandoning rationality to be "nice" is suicidal and it is a moral failure that serves nobody well.
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