Saturday, November 26, 2016

Trump and Our Russian Immigrants

The Russian immigrant population in the US has grown exponentially since the fall of the soviet union. The vast majority of these people are staunch Trump supporters. Understandably they are deeply anti-government, anti-socialist, anything. Of course they fail to realize that their highways, schools, mail services,  fire and police, medicare, medicaid, unemployment insurance, and the VA health care systems are all necessary socialist programs within a democracy  - so in fact the two can coexist - but after their experiences in soviet Russia any mention of the S word understandably over excites. That and they are used to a strong hand at the helm of government. Misunderstanding man-baby rhetoric, hollow boasting, and hate as strength, and as reform away from socialism has set them up to be dooped  by President Pussy-grabber - big-time. It is as unfortunate as it is dangerous.

Trump won on a ticket of hate, racism, fear, and xenophobia. An anti-immigrant agenda somehow doesn't seem to phase the Russian immigrants - after all he's not talking about Russians, he's talking about Muslims and Hispanics. They look at themselves as full fledged US citizens - as they should. Only problem is Trump's white America doesn't. Not even a little.

US citizens of Japanese descent were highly respected members of our society prior to WWII. They thought themselves Americans - right up to the point that they were stripped of their property and wealth and sent to concentration camps during WWII.

Can't happen again? Want to bet? Trump is unstable, has no experience in international diplomacy, and is extremely thin skinned and narcissistic. The perfect witches brew to lead to conflict with a bully like Putin. And if we become hostile to Russia - Trump's America will become hostile to its US citizens of Russian ancestry - I can guarantee it.

To my Russian immigrant friends and family. You are only a small turn of events away from being denied your rights as US citizens under this regime of hate and xenophobia. Ask yourselves has an agenda driven by hate, fear, racism, xenophobia ever, EVER, turned out well in the history of the world? Do not fool yourselves. This man is on your side only as long as it serves his purposes.


Sunday, November 13, 2016

To Mock Science

Americans love to make fun of their scientists while being completely and utterly dependent on them for nearly every aspect of their lives.

Lazy purposefully ignorant fools making fun of the people that have given them longer life, more comfortable lives, more meaningful lives.

Now we take it one step further and elect a president who does not understand science or listen to what the scientists are telling him. Reneging on Paris accords  because he thinks global warming a hoax. In truth he just finds it all inconvient standing in the way of greed and exploitation.

'On September 20, 2016, 376 members of the National Academy of Sciences, including 30 Nobel laureates, published an open letter to draw attention to the serious risks of climate change. The letter warns that the consequences of opting out of the Paris agreement would be severe and long-lasting for our planet’s climate and for the international credibility of the United States.'

An Open Letter Regarding Climate Change From
Concerned Members of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences

Human-caused climate change is not a belief, a hoax, or a conspiracy. It is a physical reality. Fossil fuels powered the Industrial Revolution. But the burning of oil, coal, and gas also caused most of the historical increase in atmospheric levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases. This increase in greenhouse gases is changing Earth’s climate.

Our fingerprints on the climate system are visible everywhere. They are seen in warming of the oceans, the land surface, and the lower atmosphere. They are identifiable in sea level rise, altered rainfall patterns, retreat of Arctic sea ice, ocean acidification, and many other aspects of the climate system. Human-caused climate change is not something far removed from our day-to-day experience, affecting only the remote Arctic. It is present here and now, in our own country, in our own states, and in our own communities.

During the Presidential primary campaign, claims were made that the Earth is not warming, or that warming is due to purely natural causes outside of human control. Such claims are inconsistent with reality.

Others argued that no action is warranted until we have absolute certainty about human impacts on climate. Absolute certainty is unattainable. We are certain beyond a reasonable doubt, however, that the problem of human-caused climate change is real, serious, and immediate, and that this problem poses significant risks: to our ability to thrive and build a better future, to national security, to human health and food production, and to the interconnected web of living systems.

The basic science of how greenhouse gases trap heat is clear, and has been for over a century. Ultimately, the strength of that basic science brought the governments of the world to Paris in December 2015. They went to Paris despite pronounced differences in systems of government, in national self-interest, in culpability for past emissions of greenhouse gases, and in vulnerability to future climate change. The leaders of over 190 countries recognized that the problem of human-caused climate change is a danger to present and future citizens of our planet. They made national commitments to address this problem. It was a small but historic and vital first step towards more enlightened stewardship of Earth’s climate system.

From studies of changes in temperature and sea level over the last million years, we know that the climate system has tipping points. Our proximity to these tipping points is uncertain. We know, however, that rapid warming of the planet increases the risk of crossing climatic points of no return, possibly setting in motion large-scale ocean circulation changes, the loss of major ice sheets, and species extinctions. The climatic consequences of exceeding such thresholds are not confined to the next one or two electoral cycles. They have lifetimes of many thousands of years.

The political system also has tipping points. Thus it is of great concern that the Republican nominee for President has advocated U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Accord. A “Parexit” would send a clear signal to the rest of the world: "The United States does not care about the global problem of human-caused climate change. You are on your own." Such a decision would make it far more difficult to develop effective global strategies for mitigating and adapting to climate change. The consequences of opting out of the global community would be severe and long-lasting – for our planet’s climate and for the international credibility of the United States.

The United States can and must be a major player in developing innovative solutions to the problem of reducing emissions of greenhouse gases. Nations that find innovative ways of decarbonizing energy systems and sequestering CO2 will be the economic leaders of the 21st century. Walking away from Paris makes it less likely that the U.S. will have a global leadership role, politically, economically, or morally. We cannot afford to cross that tipping point.

The following signers of this letter do so as individual NAS members and not on behalf of the NAS itself or their Institutions.

SIGNED BY:

Benjamin D. Santer, Member, National Academy of Sciences^
Kerry A. Emanuel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology^
George B. Field, Harvard University^
Ray Weymann, Carnegie Institution for Science Emeritus^
Peter C. Agre, Johns Hopkina Malaria Research Institute
Bruce Alberts, University of California San Francisco
Thomas D. Albright, The Salk institute for Biological Studies
Richard M. Amasino, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jim Anderson, Harvard University
Phillip W. Anderson, Princeton University
Roger Angel, University of Arizona
Luc E. Anselin, University of Chicago
Fred Anson, California Institute of Technology
David Arnett, Univerity of Arizona
Mary T. Kalin Arroyo, University of Chile
Greg Asner, Carnegie Institution for Science
Sir Michael Atiyah, University of Edinburgh
Tanya M. Atwater, University of California Santa Barbara
Francisco J. Ayala, University of California Irvine
George Backus, University of California San Diego
Neta Bahcall, Princeton University
Steven Balbus, University of Oxford
David Baltimore, California Institute of Technology
Allen Bard, University of Texas
Sir David Baulcombe, University of Cambridge
Adriaan Bax, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Barry J. Beaty, Colorado State University
Michael Bender, Princeton University
Charles L. Bennett, Johns Hopkins University
Michael V.L. Bennett, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Jeffrey L. Bennetzen, University of Georgia
John Bercaw, California Institute of Technology
May R. Berenbaum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Howard Berg, Harvard University
Robert Bergman, University of California Berkeley
Joseph Berry, Carnegie Institution for Science
Jacques E. Blamont, Centre National d' Etudes Spatiales
Roger Blandford, Stanford University
Michael R Botchan, University of California Berkeley
Ed A. Boyle, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Daniel Branton, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Winslow Briggs, Carnegie Institution for Science
Steven P. Briggs, University of California San Diego
Wallace Broecker, Columbia University
Axel T. Brunger, Stanford University
Douglas W. Burbank, University of California Santa Barbara
E. Margaret Burbidge, University of California San Diego Emerita
John Cairns, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Mark A. Cane, Columbia University
Claude Canizares, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Marian Carlson, Columbia University
John Carlson, Yale University
Stephen Carpenter, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Sean B. Carroll, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Emily A. Carter, Princeton University
Katherine Cashman, University of Bristol
Juan Carlos Castilla, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Anny Cazenave, Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales
Thure E. Cerling, University of Utah
Sylvia T. Ceyer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Martin Chalfie, Columbia University
F. Stuart Chapin, University of Alaska
Roger Chevalier, University of Virginia
Steven Chu, Stanford University
Ralph Cicerone, Professor Emeritus, University of California
David E. Clapham, Harvard Medical School
George Clark, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael T. Clegg, University of California Irvine
Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel
Jonathan J. Cole, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
Rita R. Colwell, University of Maryland
Karen S. Cook, Stanford University
Richard M. Cowling, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
James Cronin, University of Chicago
Paul J. Crutzen, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
Roy Curtiss III, University of Florida
Gretchen Daily, Stanford University
G. Brent Dalrymple, Oregon State University
Sir Partha Dasgupta, University of Cambridge
Earl W. Davie, University of Washington
Russ E. Davis, University of California San Diego
Marc Davis, University of California Berkeley
Ruth DeFries, Columbia University
Edward F. DeLong, University of Hawaii Manoa
David L. Denlinger, Ohio State University
George Denton, University of Maine
Donald DePaolo, Univerity of California Berkeley
Bob Dickinson, University of Texas
Rodolfo Dirzo, Stanford University
Michael J. Donoghue, Yale University
Russell F. Doolittle, University of California San Diego
Dennis A. Dougherty, California Institute of Technology
John E. Dowling, Harvard University
Bruce Draine, Princeton University
Alan Dressler, Carnegie Institution for Science
Thomas Dunne, University of California Santa Barbara
Joseph R. Ecker, Member, National Academy of Sciences
R. Lawrence Edwards, University of Minnesota
Paul Ehrlich, Stanford University
John M. Eiler, California Institute of Technology
David Eisenberg, University of California Los Angeles
Richard Eisenberg, University of Rochester
W. Gary Ernst, Stanford University
Mark Estelle, University of California San Diego
James A. Estes, University of California Santa Cruz
Paul Falkowski, Rutgers University
Nina V. Fedoroff, Pennsylvania State University Emerita
Juli Feigon, University of California Los Angeles
Joseph Felsenstein, University of Washington
Alex Filippenko, University of California Berkeley
Gerald D. Fischbach, Simons Foundation, Chief Scientist
Edmond H. Fischer, University of Washington
Donald Forsyth, Brown University
Stewart Fotheringham, Arizona State University
Wendy Freedman, University of Chicago
Katherine H. Freeman, Pennsylvania State University
Perry Allen Frey, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Margaret T. Fuller, Stanford University
Douglas J. Futuyma, Stony Brook University
Fred H. Gage, Salk Institute for Biological Research
Chris Garrett, University of Victoria
Neil Gehrels, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Reinhard Genzel, Max-Planck-Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik
Howard Georgi, Harvard University
Charles Gilbert, The Rockefeller University
Sheldon Glashow, Boston University
Roy Glauber, Harvard University
Alexander N. Glazer, University of California Berkeley
Peter H. Gleick, Pacific Institute
Stephen P. Goff, Columbia University
Robert B. Goldberg, University of California Los Angeles
Peter Goldreich, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Michael Goodchild, University of California Santa Barbara
Richard Goody, Harvard University
Fred Gould, North Carolina State University
Harry Gray, California Institute of Technology
Paul Greengard, Rockefeller University
Diane E. Griffin, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
David Gross, University of California Santa Barbara
Charles G. Gross, Princeton University
Carol A. Gross, University of California San Francisco
Timothy Grove, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Robert H. Grubbs, California Institute of Technology
Jim Gunn, Princeton University
Sarah Hake, Agricultural Research Service
Alexander Halliday, University of Oxford
Jim Hansen, Columbia University
Susan Hanson, Clark University
Stanley Hart, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Daniel L. Hartl, Harvard University
Dennis Hartmann, University of Washington
Robert Haselkorn, The University of Chicago
Alan Hastings, University of California Davis
Robert M. Hauser, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Stephen Hawking, Cambridge University
Wick C. Haxton, Univerity of California Berkeley
John Hayes, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Martha P. Haynes, Cornell University
Timothy Heckman, Johns Hopkins University
Carl Heiles, University of California Berkeley
Lars Hernquist, Harvard University
Dudley Herschbach, Harvard University
John G. Hildebrand, University of Arizona
David M. Hillis, University of Texas
Sarah Hobbie, University of Minnesota
Bert Hoelldobler, Arizona State University
Paul F. Hoffman, University of Victoria
Albrecht W. Hofmann, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
Sir Brian Hoskins, Imperial College London & University of Reading
Andre T. Jagendorf, Cornell University
Daniel H. Janzen, University of Pennsylvania
J.R. Jokipii, University of Arizona
Tom Jordan, University of Southern California
Jean Jouzel, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climate et de l'Environnement
William A. Jury, University of California Riverside
H. Ronald Kaback, University of California Los Angeles
Thomas Kailath, Stanford University
Peter M. Kareiva, University of California Los Angeles
David Karl, University of Hawaii
Harvey Karten, Professor Emeritus, University of California San Diego
Guinevere Kauffmann, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
Steve A. Kay, University of Southern California
Paul Kay, International Computer Science Institute
Peter Kelemen, Columbia University
Kenneth Kellermann, National Radio Astronomy Observatory
Donald Kennedy, Stanford University
Charles Kennel, University of California San Diego
Robert C. Kennicutt, Cambridge University
Wolfgang Ketterle, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Margaret Kidwell, University of Arizona
Susan W. Kieffer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Peter S. Kim, Stanford University
Patrick V. Kirch, University of California Berkeley
Margaret Kivelson, University of California Los Angeles
Daniel Kleppner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Catherine L. Kling, Iowa State University
Judith P. Klinman, University of California Berkeley
Eric I. Knudsen, Stanford University School of Medicine
Brian Koblika, Stanford University School of Medicine
M.A.R. Koehl, Univerity of California Berkeley
David Kohlstedt, University of Minnesota
Sir Hans Kornberg, Boston University
John Krebs, University of Oxford
Shrinivas Kulkarni, California Institute of Technology
J. Clark Lagarias, University of California Davis
Kurt Lambeck, Australian National University
Eric Lambin, Stanford University
Arthur Landy, Brown University
Charles H. Langmuir, Harvard University
Brian A. Larkins, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
John H. Law, University of Arizona Emeritus
Sir John Lawton, Former Chief Executive, UK Natural Environment Research Council
Yuan Lee, Academica Sinica Taiwan
Richard E. Lenski, Michigan State University
Simon Levin, Princeton University
Michael Levitt, Stanford University School of Medicine
Gene E. Likens, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
Laszlo Lorand, Feinberg Medical School Northwestern University Emeritus
C. Owen Lovejoy, Kent State University
Jane Lubchenco, Oregon State University
Jonathan I. Lunine, Cornell University
Michael Lynch, Indiana University
Akin Mabogunje, Foundation for Development and Environmental Initiatives
Trudy Mackay, North Carolina State University
Anthony P. Mahowald, University of Chicago
Syukuro Manabe, Princeton University
Joyce Marcus, University of Michigan
Rudolph A. Marcus, California Institute of Technology
Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University
Pamela A. Matson, Stanford University
Rowena G. Matthews, University of Michigan Emerita
Michel G. Mayor, University of Geneva
Bonnie J. McCay, Rutgers University
Richard McCray, University of Colorado
Bruce S. McEwen, Rockefeller University
Fred McLafferty, Cornell University
Jim McWilliams, University of California Los Angeles
Jerrold Meinwald, Cornell University
Jerry M. Melillo, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole
Henry J. Melosh, Purdue University
Sabeeha Merchant, University of California Los Angeles
Joachim Messing, Rutgers University
Mario Molina, University of California San Diego
Harold Mooney, Stanford University
Peter B. Moore, Yale University
James M. Moran, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Nancy Moran, University of Texas
M. Granger Morgan, Carnegie Mellon University
Ellen S. Mosley-Thompson, Ohio State University
Walter Munk, University of California San Diego
Royce Murray, Univeristy of North Carolina
Sidney Nagel, University of Chicago
Ramesh Narayan, Harvard University
Jeremy Nathans, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Eugene W. Nester, University of Washington
William T. Newsome, Stanford University
Richard P. Novick, New York University School of Medicine
Paul E. Olsen, Columbia University
Peter Olson, Johns Hopkins University
Neil D. Opdyke, University of Florida
Jeremiah Ostriker, Columbia University
Sarah Otto, University of British Columbia
Sir Ronald Oxburgh, Cambridge University
Stephen Pacala, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Norman R. Pace, University of Colorado
Richard D. Palmiter, University of Washington School of Medicine
Stephen Palumbi, Stanford University
Joseph Pedlosky, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Jim Peebles, Princeton University
Gordon Pettengill, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
S. George Philander, Princeton University
William Phillips, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Dolores R. Piperno, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Terry Plank, Columbia University
William H. Press, University of Texas
Frank Press, Member, National Academy of Sciences
George W. Preston, Carnegie Institution for Science
Peter H. Raven, Missouri Botanical Garden
Maureen E. Raymo, Columbia University
Martin Rees, Cambridge University
Peter Rhines, University of Washington
Frank Richter, University of Chicago
Robert E. Ricklefs, University of Missouri
Lynn M. Riddiford, University of Washington
George Rieke, University of Arizona
Marcia Rieke, University of Arizona
Adam Riess, Johns Hopkins University
Morton Roberts, National Radio Astronomy Observatory
Gene E. Robinson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
A. Kimball Romney, University of California Irvine
Michael Rosbash, Brandeis University
Mal Ruderman, Columbia University
Roberta L. Rudnick, University of California Santa Barbara
Gary Ruvkun, Massachusetts General Hospital
Roald Sagdeev, University of Maryland
Pedro A. Sanchez, Columbia University
David Sandwell, University of California San Diego
Joshua R. Sanes, Harvard University
Daniel L. Schacter, Harvard University
Paul Schechter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Randy W. Schekman, University of California Berkeley
Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
David W. Schindler, University of Alberta
Bill Schlesinger, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
Johanna Schmitt, University of California Davis
Robert J. Scholes, University of the Witswatersrand
Julian Schroeder, University of California San Diego
Gerald Schubert, Universty of California Los Angeles
Matthew P. Scott, President, Carnegie Institution for Science
Sara Seager, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Ronald R. Sederoff, North Carolina State University
Jeff Severinghaus, University of California San Diego
Irwin Shapiro, Harvard University
Carla J. Shatz, Stanford University
Peter Shearer, University of California San Diego
Frank Shu, University of California San Diego
Kerry Sieh, Nanyang Technological University
James Simons, Chairman, Simons Foundation
Norman H. Sleep, Stanford University
Susan Solomon, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Pamela S. Soltis, University of Florida
Alfred Sommer, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
David Spergel, Princeton University
Nicholas C. Spitzer, University of California San Diego
Charles Steidel, California Institute of Technology
Thomas A. Steitz, Yale University
Edward Stolper, California Institute of Technology
Howard A. Stone, Princeton University
Joan E. Strassmann, Washington University, St. Louis
Timothy Swager, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Lynn R. Sykes, Columbia University Emeritus
Harvey Tananbaum, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Joseph Taylor, Princeton University
Saul A. Teukolsky, Cornell University
David Hurst Thomas, American Museum of Natural History
Lonnie Thompson, Ohio State University
Kip Thorne, Member, National Academy of Sciences
James M. Tiedje, Michigan State University
Alar Toomre, Massachusetts Institute of technology
Scott Tremaine, Institute for Advanced Study
Susan Trumbore, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
James Tumlinson, Pennsylvania State University
Monica G. Turner, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Anthony Tyson, University of California Davis
Joan Selverstone, Valentine University of California Los Angeles
James L. Van Etten, University of Nebraska
Martha Vaughan, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Inder Verma, The Salk institute for Biological Studies
George Veronis, Yale University
Peter H. von Hippel, University of Oregon
Gerhard Wagner, Harvard Medical School
David B. Wake, University of California Berkeley
David Walker, Columbia University
John M. Wallace, University of Washington
E. Bruce Watson, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Steven Weinberg, University of Texas
Rainer Weiss, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
William J. Welch, University of California Berkeley
Mary Jane West-Eberhard, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Emerita
Simon D.M. White, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
Torsten N. Wiesel, President Emeritus, The Rockefeller University
Edward O. Wilson, Harvard University
Robert W. Wilson, Member, National Academy of Sciences
David Wineland, Member, National Academy of Sciences
Steven Wofsy, Harvard University
Julian Wolpert, Princeton University
John Wood, Member, National Academy of Sciences
George M. Woodwell, Woods Hole Research Center
Stanford E. Woosley, University of California Santa Cruz
Carl Wunsch, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Keith Yamamoto, University of California San Francisco
Martin Yanofsky, University of California San Diego
Tilahun Yilma, University of California Davis
William Young, University of California San Diego
Mary Lou Zoback, Stanford University
Maria T. Zuber, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
^ = letter organizer

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Im looking into New Zealand

Friday, November 11, 2016

Stupid Racists Fools

All across the country racists and xenophobes emboldened by Trump's election are committing hate crimes against blacks, Hispanics, Jews, Muslims. Stupid enough to believe they are in the majority and insulated from consequence.

Let me remind you of something.

49% of the country did not vote.
25% voted for Trump
Slightly more than 25% voted for Clinton.
Of those that voted for Trump at most 10% are haters and racists like you.

Guess what fools? You're surrounded and outnumbered by 90% of this country and there will be hell to pay. YOU are a minority. If I were you I'd go back into your shadows and holes and do it now. How dumb can you be?

Dammit, why are there so many stupid fools in this country?

Thursday, November 10, 2016

#NevermyPresident


Dodd Frank is an Act to promote the financial stability of the United States by improving accountability and transparency in the financial system, to end "too big to fail", to protect the American taxpayer by ending bailouts, to protect consumers from abusive financial services practices, and for other purposes
Trump wants to dismantle it. The most corrupt Presidency in US history is unfolding. The people who will suffer the most?

The people that voted for him. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Not My President

Not my President
America is not a country of racist, xenophobic haters.
I do not and will not accept Donald Trump as President
It would mean the end of my country.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

The End of America

Donald Trump has no moral compass. None.
He is unstable, deeply insecure, and narcissistic.
America you've put a shallow unstable weakling in charge, his finger on the nuclear button.
His only concern is himself.

Youve screwed us all but good.
This will not turn out well.

Your ignorance and utter stupidity takes my breath away.
We are all so screwed.
Lots of good stuff to follow.
Trumps presidency is extremely radical based in hate fear ignorance.
His degree of radicalism is not sustainable.
Its going to all blow up one way or another.
Nice job

Thankyou for destroying my daughters future.
Please ask your daughters to thank you as well.
Dont believe me? I really no longer care what you think.
Just stay tuned..... you're in for one hell if a final bumpy ride.
Mark my words.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Disgraced Ex Congressman Newt Gingrich Takes the Moral High Ground??

  1. Newt Gingrich, Representative (R-GA) and leader of the Republican Revolution of 1994,[73]resigned from the House after admitting in 1998 to having had an affair with a staffer while he was married to his second wife, and at the same time he was leading the impeachment of Bill Clinton for perjury regarding an affair with his intern Monica Lewinsky. (1998)[74][75]wikepedia 
Can you believe this pig? Trying to take the moral high ground, again, with a Clinton? Looking down his self righteous nose from the depths of his self made slime pit? Why is he even on the talk show circuit? He's a lying, disgraced, hippocritical pig. 

Saturday, November 5, 2016

A Thousand Years To Live

Neil deGrasse Tyson talked about his view of death with Larry King the other day.
'Would you want immortality?' asks Mr King.
 
To Mr Tyson, death gives meaning to life. A reason to do, now. To love, now. To accomplish, now. Immortality would lead to, 'why get up in the morning, there is always tomorrow'. He would not want immortality.

What about death? Is there existence after death? To Mr Tyson death is nothingness - he has no real objective evidence to the contrary. But he's ok with that. Except that of course he's really not. Give him a near death experience and see how calm he remains. But he does accept the inevitability of it - and to him that gives life meaning.

I couldn't agree more. Except that the entire discussion was based on our current capabilities, our current cultures, our current level of intelligence, our current mindset and biases. Mr King kept framing it in terms of current lifespans vs. immortality. But it is unlikely that anything that even remotely resembles us will ever attain immortality.

It is true that aging is for the most part a biologic process, not a consequence of time. As such it will be 'cured'. This will include age related processes - dementia, rigidity of thought, attenuation of creativity, the ability to learn, loss of energy and strength.

And since disease is disruption of normal biochemical processes, as we learn to manipulate genetic apparatus in our cells - all disease will be cured.

And so our live spans will be greatly increased. Immortality? - pretty doubtful. Catastrophic trauma will continue. Accidents and murder will limit human life - probably always, to about a thousand years.

And so the much more interesting question would have been would you want to live for a thousand years - the lifespan determined by your odds of dying traumatically if aging and disease did not factor?

Worried about getting up in the morning with so much time? Don't be. Along with scientific advancements to cure aging and disease will come enhancements in intelligence. And as our sphere of knowledge and intelligence expands so too the area of unknown surrounding it. A thousand years won't even begin to scratch the surface - so much to learn, to do, to accomplish, to live.

Friday, November 4, 2016

Mommies Never Lie

The elections have been dicked by Anthony Weiner because his sexual addiction makes it impossible for him to keep his penis in his pants, and Americans LOVE it.
Weiner, tee hee, wink, wink.
Donald Trump loves grabbing pussy. Tee hee hee - oh the outrage.
James Comey is clearly just a dick.

See the trend here?

Oh but where does that leave Clinton? Well exactly. I mean who invited the lying bitch in to ruin all the fun anyway?

America is a country of potty obsessed adolescents more fixated on sexual organs than nuclear weapons, world economies, and the well being of the earths 7 billion human inhabitants. A country of double standards - after all daddies are just being shrewd, but mommies never lie. 

Spoiled Soul Sucking No Talent Boobs Inherit the Earth

Listen to the sound of my soul as it is sucked out of my body through my ears
slowly, completely, as painfully as possible
As NPR asks the question

'Does art matter?'

Does art matter?

Does art matter?

Is this then how the apocalypse begins?
Spoiled soul sucking no talent boobs inherit the earth
and then we die?

Fuck you!

Fuck you!

Fuck you!


THE Secret of Life

Try to find peace in knowing you'll never be good enough. 👀

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

My Beloved Sister - Our Father's Death

My Dear Sister

To lose your mother and beloved father figure - his grandfather - suddenly at ages 16 and 17 - and then to suffer 4 years of near continual death, blood, gore, on the beaches of the south pacific at such a tender age, unimaginable. He came back from that and did what he was in effect told to do, repress and pretend. And so he built a new life on a foundation of running from demons and lies - about his past, his family, even where he was born - walking away from everyone in his family, even favored grandparents and uncles, in hopes of recreating his reality. Of course he needed to have faced his demons not try to bury them - and he needed help. Not going to happen in 1945. It emotionally crippled him, consumed him the rest of his life. He had nightmares of WWII right up until the day he died.

He taught me how to love a woman. I knew his gentle heart - knew it - but received precious little of it. It wasn't all bad. In the end I'm ok with it. I know he loved me - loathed me - but loved me - feeling was mutual.

My siblings and I are damaged goods - as everyone is each in their own way I suppose. Perhaps my family is in effect some of the last casualties of world war and horrible circumstance.

Thanks for being one of the good ones.

I really do love you.

Charlie

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Family

A father running from demons
self consumed, negative, suffering
paralyzed in a self made world

Thankful for what he could give
forever damaged by what he couldn't

A mother unable, perhaps unwilling to
comfort

Patterns repeated
Narrow confines of conditional love
You're dead to me always looming

Dysfunction, denial, angst
hate, anger, self loathing
a deep pervasive insecurity

Sprinkled with just enough good to keep one forever chasing
approval 

Family