Friday, April 14, 2023

Is This The Real Beginning Of The End Of The Little Blue Bird?


Remember
MySpaceVille



From the horse's mouth so to speak:

NPR will no longer post fresh content to its 52 official Twitter feeds, becoming the first major news organization to go silent on the social media platform. In explaining its decision, NPR cited Twitter's decision to first label the network "state-affiliated media," the same term it uses for propaganda outlets in Russia, China and other autocratic countries.

The decision by Twitter last week took the public radio network off guard. When queried by NPR tech reporter Bobby Allyn, Twitter owner Elon Musk asked how NPR functioned. Musk allowed that he might have gotten it wrong.

Twitter then revised its label on NPR's account to "government-funded media." The news organization says that is inaccurate and misleading, given that NPR is a private, nonprofit company with editorial independence. It receives less than 1 percent of its $300 million annual budget from the federally funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting...

{snip}

...NPR is instituting a "two-week grace period" so the staff who run the Twitter accounts can revise their social-media strategies...


If there's one thing that the short history of the interwebz has taught us, it's that digital things that you don't actually need to do digital things can disappear very quickly when folks find out that one of those digital things is no longer useful.

Now,  I don't know about you but the main reason I still check in over at Twitter somewhat regularly is to get the early jump on what's happening news wise before that same said news is later published/broadcast in its final herded form by traditional news outlets.

And a whole lot of that early news wiseyness comes from the folks who work for those traditional news outlets.

So.

If traditional news outlets start to pull their people from the platform?

Well...


______
And it's not just NPR that Mr. Musk has upset. The same issue has the BBC steaming. As for the New York Times?...Earlier this month Musk pulled the Gray Lady's checkmark and called it propaganda.


.

Thursday, April 13, 2023

Can Someone Please Tell Me...




WillTheConsNowFormBCCity?
Purple'NTealVille


Can someone please tell me what soccer league, exactly, the newly fangled 'BC United' team plays in?

Because I checked the Canadian Premier(s) League, and I can't find them there.

Nor do I see them in the semi-pro Canadian Soccer League.

Heckfire, I can't even find them in the U11-12, Division 3, Eight-A-Side-League.


.

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

And What About The Government-Funded Sewers?

TwoPeasInAFauxOutrage
PodVille


First, the following, from a man who self-identifies as 'one who tells lies for a living', about Mr. Musk's recent labelling of NPR as state-affiliated media:

..."By calling National Public Radio what it is, Elon Musk has used English as it was intended to be used in order to tell the truth. Of course NPR is state media. Have you listened to it? It has all the hallmarks -- repetitive dishonesty, authoritarian politics, unwavering devotion to the party in charge. Of course, that could describe virtually all media in this country. The difference is the state actually pays for NPR. "...


Second, the following, from a man who would like to be our next prime minister, about the CBC:

****

So...

What's next when it comes to the labelling and the shaming?

Denouncing state-funded sewers for carrying waste that originates in government-built washrooms?

Trashing state-funded highways for moving the government's mail?

Defunding state-funded hospitals for paying nurses who trained at government-funded post-secondary institutions?

Decrying state-funded libraries for helping folks who are receiving socialist disability supports?

Demanding the recall of any and all elected officials who cash government-funded paycheques?

Sheesh.


______
The double-plus-ungood irony in Mr. Carlson's baseless smears regarding NPR?...First, thanks to the  the 'Corporation for Public Broadcasting', which is mandated to raise a significant chunk of its budget from the private sector, and its own aggressive fundraising, NPR receives less than 1% government funding...Second, Mr. Carlson's father, Richard, became the CEO of said Corporation after he first served a stint as Ronald Reagan's director of the state-sponsored Voice of America.
Tip o' the Toque to reader Tim W. for the heads-up.


.

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Evidence? We Don't Need No Stinking Evidence!



Badges
TreasureVille



Well, well, well...

It turns out that the Algorithm of the Twits downgrades posts that contain links.

Fellow single shingle blogger Mike the Mad Biologist explains:

...Admittedly, Elongated Muskrat just tweets whatever daffy shite pops into his head, so he’s not big on the whole notion of evidence, but people should be aware that tweets with supporting evidence–and supporting evidence is what links are–get dinged by the algorithm...


In other words, evidence-free claims are more likely to go viral than the opposite.

Imagine that!


_____
Personally,
I am of the opinion that any site/app that uses algorithms to push content at users should be considered a publisher not a platform...Put another way, such pushers...errrrr...publishers should be responsible for any and everything posted on their sites that can be wurlitzered by the algorithms they control...



.

Sunday, April 09, 2023

I Have The Right To Take Stuff.



SomeThingsYouDoForMoney
EighteenMillionReasonsVille


The former president of the United States sat down for a recent interview with a former Adelphi University student not named Chuck D  and had this to say about certain documents he has either known or coveted:

Hannity: I've known you for decades...I can't imagine you ever saying, 'Bring me some of the boxes that we brought back from the White House. I'd like to look at them.'...Did you ever do that?"

Trump: "I would have the right to do that...There's nothing wrong with it.

Hannity: "But I know you, I don't think you would do it."

Trump: "I don't have a lot of time, but...I would have the right to do that...I would do that...Remember this...This is the, the 'Presidential Records Act'...I have the right to take stuff...Do you know, I think they paid Richard Nixon eighteen million dollars for what he had."


In other words, it's always about the money where a certain former president of the United States is concerned.

_____
Unlike
Chuck D, the good Mr. Sean Hannity never graduated from Adelphi University, a commuter school in Long Island New York, not to mention the other two post-secondary institutions he attended.
Ear worm buried in the sub-header machinery?....This.


.

Sunday, April 02, 2023

Here's To You Mr. Robinson.



MostOfAllYou'veGotTo
PlayItForTheKidsVille



Legendary Lotuslandian rock and roll DJ Red Robinson has passed away:

“With deep sadness and broken hearts, we bring the news that our beloved Dad, Red Robinson, passed this morning at 8:15am after a brief illness. We’re so glad we got to spend his final moments with him, and having his brother Bill there made it extra special.

Most people knew our Dad as a rock’n’roll DJ, a TV personality, an ad agency owner, a spokesperson, or through his philanthropic work. He was larger-than-life in a lot of ways, but to us he was a devoted father and grandfather, a loving husband to our late mom Carole, and a loyal friend to everybody.

Red’s departure leaves a huge hole in our lives, as well as the lives of everybody he touched in the worlds of radio, TV, music and entertainment. An event celebrating his amazing life will be announced soon, and we invite you to share your memories on Red’s Facebook, Twitter or Instagram pages.


Luckily, Mr. Robinson and Company worked diligently the last few years to get all kinds of his archived material up into the Digisphere at places like the social media sites listed above as well as on the Tubez and down at the audio clip-powered Podsville Station.

Below is a short history of Robinson's career, narrated by the man in himself, in which explains that he first got on the air at the age of 16 after he called into Al Jordan's 'Themes For Teens' show on CJOR in 1953 and did a Jimmy Stewart impression:




.

Friday, March 31, 2023

Quisling Kisses The Ring On Bended Knee (Again).



PleaseSir,MayIHaveSomeMore
PuddingFingersVille


From Gary Fineout, writing in Politico:

(Florida) Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday blasted the indictment of Donald Trump and vowed that the state “will not assist in the extradition”...

{snip}

...“The weaponization of the legal system to advance a political agenda turns the rule of law on its head. It is un-American,” DeSantis said...

{snippety-do-dah}

“I don’t know what goes into paying hush money to a porn star to secure silence over some type of alleged affair.” (Mr. DeSantis also said)...



Meanwhile, remember the following name:

Karen McDougal.

It may have nothing whatsoever to do with weather, but I'm betting it will show up down the road, post indictment, particularly when it comes to the actions of one of the previously immunized National Enquirer Bros.

OK?

.

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Write About COVID, Get Harassed (Part 2).


Yesterday I wrote about how, in addition to the much, much greater hardships faced by folks like Ms. Jody Vance and Dr. Florence Debarre in the face of relentless online harassment, I, too, have received a modicum of attention from the lunatic unhinged for having the temerity to write about the risk/reward ratios of COVID vaccines.

All of which is terrible.

But I can't even begin to imagine having to deal with the following, as recounted by North Carolina journalist Billy Ball, writing in The Atlantic:

My 6-year-old boy died in January. We lost him after a household accident, one likely brought on by a rare cerebral-swelling condition. Paramedics got his heart beating, but it was too late to save his brain. I could hold his hand, look at the small birthmark on it, comb his hair, and call out for him, but if he could hear me or feel me, he gave no sign. He had been a child in perpetual motion, but now we couldn’t get him to wiggle a finger.

My grief is profound, ragged, desperate. I cannot imagine how anything could feel worse.

But vaccine opponents on the internet, who somehow assumed that a COVID shot was responsible for my son’s death, thought my family’s pain was funny. “Lol. Yay for the jab. Right? Right?” wrote one person on Twitter. “Your decision to vaccinate your son resulted in his death,” wrote another. “This is all on YOU.” “Murder in the first.”

I’m a North Carolina–based journalist who specializes in countering misinformation on social media. I know that Twitter, Facebook, and other networks amplify bad information; that their algorithms feed on anger and division; that anonymity and distance bring out the worst in some people online. And yet I had never anticipated that anyone would mock and terrorize a grieving parent. I’ve now received thousands of harassing posts. Some people emailed me at work.

For the record, my son saw some of the finest pediatric-ICU doctors in the world. He was in fact vaccinated against COVID-19. None of his doctors deemed that relevant to his medical condition. They likened his death to a lightning strike.

Strangers online saw in our story a conspiracy—a cover-up of childhood fatalities caused by COVID vaccines, a ploy to protect Big Pharma.

To them, what happened to my son was not a tragedy. It was karma for suckered parents like me...



There is a sickness in our society, that while it may be viral, has nothing to do with spike proteins, lipid membranes or nucleotide codes. Regardless, it is a sickness that we have to start to treat meaningly, immediately, or we may soon all be consumed by it.


.

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Write about COVID, Get Harassed.



I must confess that I'm a little bit discombobulated these days.

It's no big deal, it's just that my bike is in the shop because I've once again worn the teeth down to the nub, on the cassette which is that little cluster of gears stuck right up against the back wheel.

My bike guy, S, says I've got to stop stomping down on the pedals in the higher gears, especially when I've got the chain on the big sprocket up front.

I told him I would try, but it was going to be difficult to stop myself from trying to keep up with the elderly hordes that go zooming past me on their eBikes every day.

Anyway, not having my bike means that I'm not getting the daily exercise that helps to tamp down my autonomic nervous system, especially on the sympathetic side of the ledger.

It also means that I've been taking the bus to and from the lab this week.

And, I've got to say, riding crowded buses always reminds me of how, in the great majority of instances, complete strangers manage to get along and are really very civil towards each other.

Of course, in the digital world, this isn't always the case, especially when it comes to all things COVID.

Take, for example, the case of local Lotuslandian broadcaster Jody Vance:

Vancouver broadcaster Jody Vance says she wants to see "something good" come from the years she spent fearing for her family's safety because of one man's relentless online harassment campaign.

Earlier this month, 53-year-old Richard Oliver pleaded guilty to criminal harassment for the violent and sexualized messages he sent to Vance, her colleagues and guests on her show...

{snip}

...The harassment charge concerned messages sent between March 2020 and September 2021, which were largely focused on Oliver's displeasure with Vance's reporting on the COVID-19 pandemic.

"The communications went beyond simply views and became aggressive and threatening in nature. They refer to things such as a 'day of reckoning,'" (Provincial Court Judge Peter) La Prairie wrote...


And then there is the case of Florence Debarre, the French evolutionary biologist who discovered that there were racoon dog sequences in the original Wuhan wet market DNA swabs, a finding which may turn out to support the zoonotic spillover hypothesis of how the SARS-CoV-2 originally infected people.

Now, to be very clear, Dr. Debarre was not offering the kind of opinions that a commercial broadcaster might that could upset some folks. In addition, Dr. Debarre was not out out there draping a zoonotic flag over a laboratory origin tombstone on social media. However, she was clear about the implication of her findings:

...Débarre stresses that other animal DNA was also found in the swabs, and that there is still no conclusive proof that raccoon dogs in the market were carrying the virus, or were the vehicle for its first spillover into humankind. “But now it cannot be denied that they were there,” she says...


And, for that she has been subject to a viscious onslaught online:

...Since the publication of her findings (on a pre-print server), Débarre has been set upon by online mobs and received threats to her safety. “Last night, I was crying over the horrible things I’m reading about myself on social media,” she says...

****

Now.

I obviously cannot possibly know how truly bad things got for Ms. Vance and Dr. Debarre.

And the examples you will see below are undoubtedly orders of magnitude milder than the the kind of crap Ms. Vance and Dr. Debarre had to deal with, if only because they are women.

However, I did have the temerity to write about the various COVID vaccines as they were being developed, starting back in the early 2021 when I wrote about that rare blood clotting disorder that was associated with the AZ virus-based vaccine. Not long after I started to write, carefully, about the risk/reward ratios of the RNA-based vaccines and soon thereafter the codswallop began to land on the doorstop of this blog in the form of nasty comments with some regularity.

At first I just deleted these missives from the comment threads and threw them in the trash. But it wasn't long before the volume was so overwhelming, and the narratives so unhinged, that I was forced to turn on the comment moderation feature for the first time since I started up this little F-troop listed blog way back in internet ancient times (i.e. 2004).

And with the moderation on, I also decided to archive things just in case something untoward happened down the road in the non-digital world. So far nothing like that has occurred, but now seems to be an opportune time to show you all some of this stuff so that you can see specific examples of what even a very small fish in a very, very small pond has to deal with:

____
I run a holistic medical private practice, and have a background in Molecular & Cell Biology, you NEVER EVER diagnose people of pathologies using a PCR test. EVER. It’s almost Biology 101, but science was thrown under the bus from the very beginning. I presume “it had to be this way” for us to see how corrupt the ENTIRE establishment really is. The swamp runs deep and wide indeed.
____ 
So-called authorities have disgraced themselves behind a new theology of degenerate “science” that veers back into superstition and necromancy. Proof that they don’t believe their own story shows in their desperate efforts to hide the data, confabulate numbers, ignore true facts, and lash out viciously at anyone who discloses their zealous deceits...

Be a real shame if something highly predictable were to happen to you because you are too compromised to do the right thing.
_____
Keep yourself firmly in the box, champ, or you might just suffer the loss of your cozy little sinecure doing nothing.
_______
Large numbers of injectees will see their health decline in coming weeks, and no amount of "variant" disinformation is going to change the obvious pattern.

Anybody hawking syringes under these circumstances should reasonably fear for their own safety.
____
A viral out-break with a minuscule death rate is not a pandemic, no matter how many times the w.h.o.Re$ change the definition.

Injuring and killing people who were at no risk is, however, a crime and justice will be meted out.
_____
Just keep boostin'...You'll eventually get what you deserve.


The above is just a small, but representative, sample of the more than 2,000 messages I archived through 2021 and 2022 (leaving aside some of the more personal stuff about my day job work and my cognitive abilities, not to mention the voluminous levels of lunatic fringe 'proof' demonstrating the existence of the 'plandemic').

The point is, do you see how unhinged and relentless these folks can be?

And do you see why, particularly because her harasser included a member of her family in his threat messages to her, Ms. Vance is, in my opinion at least, completely justified in initiating her civil suit now that that the criminal case is over?


.

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Why Voting, And The Legislation That Follows, Matters.


NotTheWorkOfAWellRegulated
MilitiaVille


The above is a graphic from the Financial Times, based on data accumulated by Mother Jones.

The red line, which was added by Brian Tyler Cohen, marks the date when Republicans ended the assault weapons ban in the United States.

Of course other things that could have been added to the header of this post are money, lobbying, complicit media outlets, and a certain 'association'.

And do not, for one minute, think that those three things are not at work, in some variation of the forms, above the 49th parallel also.


_____
Subheader?...This.


.

Monday, March 27, 2023

A Point Worth Considering.


ForAllItsFaults...
LittleBlueBirdVille



Doug Saunders is an international affairs columnist with the Globe and Mail.

Thomas Juneau is a faculty member in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa.

While they are talking about how it is important to deal with this at the governmental/legislative level, I think it is also a point that we all should consider when going about our business with our fellow Canadians:


OK?

.

Back On My Desktop...Like A Bad Penny You Can't Get Rid Of.

HeadsTheyWin
TailsWeLoseVille



Or...

Perhaps more to the point, like a cockroach that can neither be caught nor killed off (metaphorically, of course).

William Raushbaum et al. have that story in today's failing New York Times:

The former publisher of The National Enquirer testified on Monday before the Manhattan grand jury hearing evidence about Donald J. Trump’s role in a hush-money payment to a porn star, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The publisher, David Pecker, also testified in January, soon after the grand jury was impaneled by the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg. The grand jury has heard from at least nine witnesses — including Mr. Pecker, who has gone in twice — and is expected to vote on an indictment soon...



I spoke about Mr. Pecker and his potential role(s) in the Trump/Daniels/Legal Fee case in yesterday's audioblog.

Essentially, Pecker is the architect of many a 'catch and kill' operation wherein people's stories are bought up to bury them so that various and sundry 'celebrities' are not embarrassed. There has also been the whiff of back-end strong arming to boot.

But here's the thing...

In this specific case it appears that the good Mr. Pecker and his right hand man, a fine fellow named Dylan Howard went to Mr. Trump's then lawyer, the estimable Michael Cohen, and told him that he should be the bagman for the Daniels operation.

Hmmm...Wonder why?

Anyway, the discussion of other potential Pecker, Inc. catch and kill operations designed to shield good name of the double plus ungood Mr. Trump comes up at the 38 min mark of said audioblog, here...



.

Sunday, March 26, 2023

What's On My Desktop?...Audioblog for March 26, 2023.


ForThe
TreesVille


Once again, things started piling up on my desktop and, instead of writing all about it, I just sat down and babbled on awhile...

Here's the source material for most of said babbling:

Dan Fumano's Vancouver Sun piece from last October on the transition team behind the new regime at Vancouver city hall.


David Moscrop, writing in Jacobin, explaining why Canada needs more public housing not more renting.

Christopher Patterson and Lance Barrie in The Tyee/The Conversation making the case for the 15 minute city...Oxford, in the UK, explains its 'traffic filters' here.

More on the former guy's 'catch and kill'  grand master/mobsterish flash strategy to deal with potentially damaging stories, based on a 2018 piece in Vox by Andrew Prokop and Dylan Matthews.

You get a peerage!...And you get a peerage!...And you get a peerage!...Explained by Rowena Mason in The Guardian.

Uncle Neil tries to do what Pearl Jam couldn't when it comes to the ripping off of patrons when it comes to concert tickets...Ben Beaumont-Thomas, also in the Guardian, has that story....And, yes, that's Neil in Victoria a few weeks ago, singing for old growth forests, above.

Joyce Johnson, in Vanity Fair from 2007, on the night Jack Kerouac first read the New York Times review of the just published (and highly edited) version of 'On the Road' that changed his life for good (and bad?). 

Scott Simon speaking to the soon to retire Sylvia Poggioli on NPR's 'Weekend Edition Saturday'.

And a couple of new (to me at least) musical picks...Katy Kirby and The Beths.


____
Front and back, old guys reminiscing song snippets are from a cover of M. Ward's 'O'Brien's Nocturne'.


.

Saturday, March 25, 2023

What If Al Capone Had Convinced America That Tax Evasion Is Not A Crime?


MerrickGarlandIsNoMabelWalkerWillebrandt
SoFarVille


From Daniel Porazzo's chronology of the Capone trial:


****
So.

What's it all about this time Alfie?

Well, Amanda Marcotte notes the ways in which it appears that the prosecutor in the Stormy Daniels capture and kill hush money (and then claim the cost as a legal expense, allegedly) case looks to be vacillating in the face of the usual suspect's social media bombast that has been backed (and massively amplified) by wall-to-wall CorpMedia coverage:

...What’s frustrating is there’s reason to worry (District Attorney Alvin) Bragg is balking (at indicting Donald Trump). Despite all his chest-thumping about how he won’t be intimidated, Bragg is suddenly finding all sorts of reasons not to move forward to indictment. First he canceled the Wednesday grand jury meeting. Then, when they reconvened, he pivoted to another, unrelated case, pausing the hush money inquiry, quite possibly indefinitely...


Only time, and the rampaging herd of rabid cable news network 'legal experts', will tell I suppose.


_____
Who the heckfire is Mabel Walker Willebrandt, you may be asking?....Well, in the roaring twenties, back when mobsters ruled the US'ian prohibition roost with machine guns and bomb-backed impunity, Ms. Walker was the Assistant Attorney General known as 'Prohibition Portia' who came up with the quite successful 'follow the (taxable) money' strategy...Her life story is really something.


.

Friday, March 24, 2023

The Internet Archive Is Under Attack.


AllTheWay
BackVille


Most of us, especially reader NVG, who use the Internet Archive use the Wayback Machine which allows you to fight link rot and figure out exactly what was originally uploaded to the tubes.

But the Archive is much more than that:

We began in 1996 by archiving the Internet itself, a medium that was just beginning to grow in use. Like newspapers, the content published on the web was ephemeral - but unlike newspapers, no one was saving it. Today we have 26+ years of web history accessible through the Wayback Machine and we work with 1,000+ library and other partners through our Archive-It program to identify important web pages.

As our web archive grew, so did our commitment to providing digital versions of other published works. Today our archive contains: 

Anyone with a free account can upload media to the Internet Archive. We work with thousands of partners globally to save copies of their work into special collections...


And now, as you might expect, the Archive is under attack from the Mr. Potters and Greedheads of the publishing world who just can't fathom why someone should be allowed to do something of value that they can't get their hands on for their own aggrandizement:

The Internet Archive, a nonprofit library in San Francisco, has grown into one of the most important cultural institutions of the modern age. What began in 1996 as an audacious attempt to archive and preserve the World Wide Web has grown into a vast library of books, musical recordings and television shows, all digitized and available online, with a mission to provide “universal access to all knowledge.”

Right now, we are at a pivotal stage in a copyright infringement lawsuit against the Internet Archive, still pending, brought by four of the biggest for-profit publishers in the world, who have been trying to shut down core programs of the archive since the start of the pandemic...


In other words, anything that is good, especially if it enhances the public good, and is free of the profit motive must be destroyed to ensure that we, the public, don't start to demand such good things, unfettered and greed-free.


.