From some crowd calling themselves “Eventbrite”, who usually send me stuff about classical concert dates and such:
So I took action:
Ordinarily I’d consider going just to cause trouble, but I need to clip my nails and wash my hair.
Trying not to start the public floggings
From some crowd calling themselves “Eventbrite”, who usually send me stuff about classical concert dates and such:
So I took action:
Ordinarily I’d consider going just to cause trouble, but I need to clip my nails and wash my hair.
Here’s some good news, for a change:
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose announced Wednesday that 97,795 voters were removed from the rolls after Ohio’s 88 county boards of elections identified the abandoned registrations as part of the maintenance process required by Ohio and federal law.
“Getting rid of bad voter data from the voter rolls helps prevent fraud, makes it easier for county boards of elections to do their jobs, and strengthens the confidence Ohioans place in our elections,” LaRose said. He then said: “And by the way, if anyone attempts to use one of these defunct registrations to vote in the next election, we’re going to execute them right there on the spot.”
Okay, I added that last sentence. But you know…
It appears that Coca-Cola has been somewhat stung by the criticism leveled at it by their silly support of bad practices, criticism such as:
…created by Yours Truly.
So now they’ve started reversing / backpedaling / retreating:
Coca-Cola, whose CEO denounced the Georgia voting bill, is now striking a conciliatory tone after coming under pressure from conservatives.
The soda giant, which is based in Atlanta, was absent from a list of more than 500 corporations and individuals that signed a statement condemning any election legislation that would “restrict” voters from having “an equal and fair opportunity to cast a ballot.” The missive was placed as a two-page Wednesday ad in the New York Times and Washington Post, with the effort being organized by the Black Economic Alliance.
Coca-Cola said in a statement to the Washington Examiner on Wednesday that the company “had not seen the letter” initiated by the alliance but is “certainly open to hearing their perspective.” It said it has supported the right to vote and that it will assess how to support voting rights.
“We believe the best way to make progress now is for everyone to come together to listen, respectfully share concerns and collaborate on a path forward. We remain open to productive conversations with advocacy groups and lawmakers who may have differing views,” the company said. “It’s time to find common ground. In the end, we all want the same thing – free and fair elections, the cornerstone of our democracy.”
Coca-Cola’s Wednesday remarks are notably less confrontational than its previous statements on the Georgia voting law.
Translated from corporate weaselspeak:
“Even after the New Coke fiasco, it appears that we still haven’t figured out that our primary market is conservative people, who seem to have a problem with a law which allows their own votes to be negated by a truckload of fraudulent votes. Who knew? Anyway, we’ll mark time on this one because we depend on these assholes to maintain our market share in the super-sweet battery-acid drink business.”
Message to all the other giant corporations who are diving into the Sea Of Wokedom, from conservatives like myself:
We may only be about 75 million in number, but we can still do damage to your company by using your products less and less, or else withholding our business altogether.
Apparently some professor in Vermont has caused all sorts of issues by refusing to kowtow to the “racial equity” scam, asking: “Would you please stop reducing my personhood to a racial category in your teachings?”
Predictably, calls have gone out for him to resign:
A petition calling for the resignation of Kindsvatter has earned over 3,400 signatures. The authors state that Kindsvatter’s statements are “harmful to our campus’ community of color.”
However:
A rival petition — which has garnered over 4,400 signatures — asks that Kindsvatter assume control of all diversity measures at the University of Vermont.
I think the will of the people should be obeyed.
And in an increasingly-rare show of testicular fortitude, our guy has refused to resign.
Apparently there’s a big hoo-hah about where Major League Baseball is going to play their so-called “All-Star” game this year because Georgia is an eeevil place because they want to prevent voter fraud such as happened in the 2020 elections. Other states have weighed in (notably Texas), and so on and so on.
In the first place, MLB should call the All-Star game what it really is — the Steroid Festival — but what really gives me the giggles is that they think that their sport, or any sport come to think of it, matters more than a pitcher’s mound of beans in the grand scheme of things.
I note with great pleasure that the PGA has not got involved in this wokism, because unlike baseball, they know which side their bread is buttered on. (Boycotting Georgia, when the Masters Tournament is played at Augusta? Don’t make me laugh.) Still on the subject of buttered bread, MLB seems to have forgotten who comprises their core fan base, and playing little wokester games is probably not high on the list of priorities for that group.
Couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of shills and fraudsters.
As for the rest of us — that growing number of people like myself who are becoming disaffected with corporate wokism and alienated from all the companies that practice it — where MLB plays their little All-Star game matters less than a flat tire on a pickup.
THIS is the moment more than 30 conspiracy theorists descended on a Tesco store without masks in a “selfish” protest.
Dozens of people flouted Covid restrictions and brazenly went about their shopping trip in the store in Chelmsford, Essex.
Basically, a bunch of people got fed up with all the bullshit about the Chinkvirus, and in a wonderful gesture, said “Fuck you!” to authority and went shopping without their masks.
There are a couple of things to take away from this. Despite the article’s blatant editorializing (calling them “conspiracy theorists” and calling what they did a “selfish protest”), this group of people could be characterized by a couple of factors:
Despite the bluster, Brits are usually quite a subservient lot — even without the Chinese Plague, they are bossed around by officialdom and petty bureaucrats on a day-to-day basis to a degree that would amaze most Americans — and also quite law-abiding (the two are not the same).
So for this to erupt is going to be quite worrisome to a whole bunch of the little Stasi-wannabes. And indeed, from the article:
The council and police are now working to find out how this maskless protest was able to happen.
…
“Organising a maskless shopping trip is not big, not clever but it is illegal.”
And a little editorializing and scolding from the article’s author:
Customers are required by law to wear masks inside all shops, unless they are exempt for medical reasons.
…
And social distancing must be enforced unless you are from the same household or bubble.
Well, Our Heroines didn’t actually care about the government’s fucking little “bubbles”, did they?
Here’s why this little activity got me thinking.
In his excellent article American Exodus, Angelo Codevilla makes a telling point (and read the whole damn thing). He says this about the stranglehold that today’s oligarchy (politicians, Press, corporations and technology companies) have over our society Over Here:
The federal government, the governments of states and localities run by the Democratic Party, along with the major corporations, the educational establishment, and the news media set strict but movable boundaries about what they may or may not say—on pain of being cast out, isolated from society’s mainstream. Using an ever-shifting variety of urgent excuses, which range from the coronavirus, to the threat of domestic terrorism, to catastrophic climate change, to the evils of racism, they issue edicts that they enforce through anti-democratic means—from social pressure and threats, to corporate censorship of digital platforms, to bureaucratic fiat. Nobody voted for this.
Then he offers up this little nugget:
Some sort of mostly peaceful exodus is within our powers to achieve.
…
We can withdraw our compliance, go our own way, and build anew.
And:
Our American exodus won’t be led by a Moses. The Republican Party, with the exception of a few national-level personages, may be as useless as ever. But politics is a collective activity, and the lack of top-down leadership notwithstanding, our exodus is already in progress, thanks to Americans’ legal structures and traditions of state and local autonomy, as well as our Tocquevillian taste for organizing ourselves into ad hoc groups for the common benefit.
…
Ordinary citizens who are oppressed by COVID-inspired overregulation have also organized themselves to take advantage of the fact that safety in numbers is the first rule of civil disobedience. Thus, hundreds of California restauranteurs jointly defied the governor’s order to keep them closed, and sued him. Joint action is also the key to transforming what the authorities want to treat as disciplinary or criminal matters into political ones.
And finally:
That is why going one’s own way, while paying no more attention to the woke than is absolutely necessary, should be the agenda of the country party, which in this case includes all of those who still feel an attachment to the ideals of republican citizenship that we once shared in common as Americans.
And returning to those doughty British women once more: there were only thirty. No doubt, the Filth will be going after them, aided no doubt by the many little Quislings that exist in today’s tattle-tale culture.
Now imagine if there weren’t thirty, but three thousand, spread across every store in town? Think the cops would be able to go after all of them? Here’s the kind of job facing the Brit authorities elsewhere in the country.
Codevilla calls it the American Exodus: the severing of ties by ordinary people like us with the foul bureaucrats, technocrats and their Leftist sympathizers in all the institutions.
Many weeks ago, I talked about my refusal to use Google products as much as is possible (Chrome, Google search, and so on), having no Twitter or Facebook accounts, and my absolute refusal to have anything to do with anti-2A corporations like Levi Strauss — to name but a few. I make no claim to be a groundbreaker in all this, of course — in fact, I admit to being something of a latecomer to the party — but this is something we need to do en masse from now on.
Withdraw from those societal institutions which are part of this totalitarianism.
Become homeschoolers if you have small kids, or offer to homeschool your grandchildren because the poison that is being dripped into their ears every day not just by state schools but lamentably even by some private schools is the poison that will infect future generations of Americans. And if you can’t do that, confront your schools and demand that they stop teaching children monstrosities like “critical race theory” (anti-White racism is what it is, and what you should call it). And by all means enlist your state legislators to your cause (as Ohio did).
We have to do something, anything; and even though what we each do may seem small and insignificant, those little grains of sand may turn into a landslide, if we all get involved.
And don’t forget to teach your children and grandchildren how to shoot. In times to come, it may be as important as knowing how to read and write.