BookwormRoom runs a weekly illustrated gallery of photographs and memes. Over the weekend, she ran "The Crazy Times" edition, and here are two she posted:
Wednesday, May 26, 2021
Crazy Times Edition from Bookworm
Tuesday, May 25, 2021
Sports Illustrated goes “woke”
Eric Utter published a piece about Sports Illustrated over the weekend at American Thinker. I am not much of a sports fan, but his opening paragraphs offer a good summary of the cultural decline in America. And his article is a good follow-up to my blog yesterday on the future of arts communities – if there is a future. Mr. Utter begins:
The Left ruins everything.
Television. Movies. Economies. Cities. Lives. Religion. Comedy. Sports.
Everything. Literally everything.
It does so in many insidious ways.
It divides us with multiculturalism and critical race theory. It makes some
groups bitter, envious, and indolent by telling them they are victims of other
groups’ bigotry…and that there is nothing any of the groups can do about it. It
revises history, changes language, and restricts speech, all in an effort to
restrict thought. It brandishes “wokeism” as a weapon and “cancels” those
it dislikes. All of this has led to a more ignorant—and less fun—America.
The left has recently rendered
sports less a form of entertainment that can bring all of us together and more
of a vehicle to lecture and hector fans, in an attempt to hammer them into
strict conformity of thought. We have all seen this with anthem protests, BLM
messages, boycotts, etc., etc.
And now, even a once nearly-revered
sports publication, Sports Illustrated,
has completely given in to the mendacious minority mob that demands all things
be seen exclusively through the prism of race/class/gender/politics. Sports Illustrated, like nearly all
mainstream media, has leaned left for many years but has just recently
completely abandoned all balance and objectivity in an apparently desperate—if
puzzling—attempt at virtue-signaling.
. . .
Mr. Utter then goes into specifics based on the latest
issue. Read the rest of Mr. Utter’s
piece here.
# # #
Monday, May 24, 2021
The future belongs to those who show up
Mark Steyn has been on record for years pointing to demographics and birth rates as the primary issue facing civilization. In his column today, he revisits the issue, quoting liberally from his 2006 book America Alone. Mr. Steyn begins:
Happy
Whit Monday to my Commonwealth cousins throughout the Caribbean and the Pacific,
and to our readers in much of Continental Europe. And of course to my fellow
Canadians a happy if locked down Victoria Day. Enjoy it while you can.
Front
page news from yesterday's New York Times:
World
Is Facing First Long Slide in Its Population
Me
in my international bestseller fifteen years
ago:
The
single most important fact about the early 21st century is the rapid aging of
almost every developed nation other than the United States: Canada, Europe and
Japan are getting old fast, older than any functioning society has ever been
and faster than any has ever aged... These countries – or, more precisely,
these people – are going out of business.
The
Times front page yesterday:
All
over the world, countries are confronting population stagnation and a fertility
bust, a dizzying reversal unmatched in recorded history that will make first-birthday
parties a rarer sight than funerals, and empty homes a common eyesore.
Me
in 2006:
The
salient feature of Europe, Canada, Japan and Russia is that they're running out
of babies. What's happening in the developed world is one of the fastest demographic
evolutions in history... This isn't a projection: It's happening now. There's
no need to extrapolate, and if you do it gets a little freaky, but, just for
fun, here goes: By 2050, 60 per cent of Italians will have no brothers, no
sisters, no cousins, no aunts, no uncles. The big Italian family, with papa
pouring the vino and mama spooning out the pasta down an endless table of
grandparents and nieces and nephews, will be gone, no more, dead as the
dinosaurs. As Noël Coward remarked in another context, 'Funiculì, funiculà,
funic yourself.'
The
Times yesterday:
Maternity
wards are already shutting down in Italy. Ghost cities are appearing in
northeastern China. Universities in South Korea can't find enough students, and
in Germany, hundreds of thousands of properties have been razed, with the land
turned into parks.
Me
fifteen years ago:
[In
Japan] the shortage of children has led to a shortage of obstetricians...
[China's]
population will get old before it's got rich...
The
'experts' of the western world are slower to turn around than an ocean liner,
and in Europe they were still yakking about the 'population explosion' even as
their 1970s schoolhouses, built in anticipation of traditional Catholic
birthrates, were emptying through the Nineties and Oughts...
One
can talk airily about being flushed down the toilet of history, but even that's
easier said than done. In eastern Germany, rural communities are dying, and one
consequence is that village sewer systems are having a tough time adjusting to
the lack of use. Populations have fallen so dramatically there are too few
people flushing to keep the flow of waste moving...
The
Times yesterday:
The
strain of longer lives and low fertility, leading to fewer workers and more
retirees, threatens to upend how societies are organized — around the notion
that a surplus of young people will drive economies and help pay for the old.
It may also require a reconceptualization of family and nation. Imagine entire
regions where everyone is 70 or older...
Me
a decade-and-a-half ago:
Speaking
for myself... I'd rather date Debbie Reynolds than Angelina Jolie. But even to
put it in those terms is to become aware of how our assumptions about a
society's health – about its innovative and creative energies - are based on
its youthfulness. Picture the difference between a small northern mill town
where the mill's closed down and the young people have moved away and a growing
community in the Sun Belt. Which has the bigger range of stores and
restaurants, more work opportunities, better school choice? Which problem would
you rather have - managing growth or managing decline..?
In
theory, those countries will find their population halving every thirty-five
years or so. In practice, it will be quicker than that, as the savvier youngsters
figure there's no point sticking around a country that's turned into an
undertaker's waiting room. Not every pimply burger flipper wants to support
entire old folks' homes single-handed...
Everything
The New York Times finally got around to yesterday, I said in 2006. My
book was an international bestseller, including on the Times' own Top
Ten list. Yet it did not bother reviewing America Alone. . .
Read the rest here.
# # #
What will happen to Ohio's cultural icons?
In the ancient days of my youth, I spent many years in the
performing arts business. Cleveland area
theaters and other performing venues have been closed for over a year.
When the lockdowns and masks were rammed down our throats, I
immediately wondered how the arts communities would survive. Theater companies, opera companies,
orchestras, etc., and non-profit operations such as Playhouse Square always
have fund-raising challenges; they depend
on the goodwill and contributions of boards of trustees, and they are always
flirting with deficits. So I was
concerned after the lockdowns that one of the principal sources of cultural product
for, say, Playhouse Square, was the Broadway theater, and the Broadway theater was at risk.
Broadway has always been the sine qua non of legitimate and musical theater, both essentials in our American culture. So I was distressed but not entirely surprised to read a gloomy piece at American Thinker last week on the prospects for the Broadway stages. Here’s Alexander Nussbaum on the subject:
Bye-bye Broadway: A
grim prognosis for New York’s theaters
New York City Broadway theaters
closed on March 12, 2020. The closure was supposed to be for just one month.
Fourteen months later, the theaters are still closed. But now Governor Cuomo
has announced New York’s theaters are cleared for reopening, starting
September 14. No less than 23
plays are scheduled to open between September and November.
Theaters will be allowed to open at
“full capacity,” but with “social
distancing,” with “capacity limitations are only governed by the ability of
people to socially distance by six feet.” Maybe this makes sense to someone who
is “woke,” but it does not make sense to me. Theater seats are not exactly six
feet apart. In fact, a problem with Broadway’s theaters when they were open was
that, when most of the theaters were built, only a tiny percent of the
population was over 6 feet tall or over 250 pounds.
Broadway’s 41 theaters range in
capacity from 600 to just under 2,000, but more than 30 [theaters] seat more
than 1,000. A play has to be at close to 100% audience capacity to be
economically viable. Taking out seats would require drastically raising already
pre-Wuhan Virus sky high prices. Cuomo has hinted all theater patrons will
require proof of vaccination.
I keep hearing how resilient New
York City is and that it will be back. But I think New York City is finished
forever as a “world” capital; it is Karachi, Pakistan now – the biggest city
and commercial, not political, capital of a populous nation.
I’ll believe the Broadway theater
will be back and viable when I see it happen.
Mr. Nussbaum looks at the demographics, the economics
including the costs of a night out on the town, household income stats, and
especially tourism:
Sixty-five percent of attendees
were tourists. The theater thus depends on tourists.
Let’s us add that all together and
see how it can not mean anything else but the death of Broadway theater.
How is New York City, with its
defunded and demoralized NYPD and rising murder and shooting rate, going to
attract tourists? Attacking and killing the few tourists that
were still coming, is now in, in this woke BLM city. What is the difference
between New York and Mount Everest? Both have no culture, no economy, no
restaurants, no police, and are extremely dangerous. But Mount Everest will get
tourists.
Whites and the rich have fled the
city. With the economy demolished, who is left to afford the Broadway ticket
price, which because of fewer seats, will be even higher than the 145 dollars
the report quoted? Older people are still afraid to leave the house because of
the virus, and many did not survive Cuomo.
Read the full article here.
Those arts organizations that can survive to re-produce plays,
musicals, operas, or music already created might revert to the local community-theater
model, no longer dependent on huge grants and contributions from individuals and
companies, and no longer committed to union contracts. Another possible
outcome, as we sink further into socialism, will be a dreaded “partnership” between the
arts communities and the socialist state. Under that model, major government and corporate grants may roll in, but at a terrible price: a professional performance might be
great, but it’s more likely to be laced with, or used to advance state propaganda.
On the other hand, maybe Ohio audiences will tear a page from Texas. Headline from HotAir:
Two weeks ago 73,000 people watched a fight indoors in Texas.
What's happened with COVID since then?
# # #
Sunday, May 23, 2021
Patrick Hampton on Medical Tyranny
Whether you decide to get the COVID jab or not, the vaxx-passport - - or some other proof of vaccination, is yet another wedge that tyrants use to divide their subjects (that would be us). And it’s happening here and now. Patrick Hampton at Patriot Post adds to the discussion:
With mask mandates lifted in most
states, many Americans are enjoying their return to what they believe is
normal. But we are also seeing the true faces of those in power who seek to use
sensitive medical information — like vaccination status — to oppress others.
Private companies, organizations,
and educational institutions announce their plans as people return to the
office and classrooms — some requiring proof of full COVID-19 vaccination
before walking through their doors. Some businesses plan to even segregate the
vaccinated from the unvaccinated.
Not getting the “jab” is the new
Scarlet Letter. Once worn as a punitive mark to label someone as an adulterer
based on the American novel bearing the same name, those who are open about
their non-vaccinated status will be forced to exist on the fringes of society.
. . .
It’s not even about science anymore.
It’s about control and an allegiance to certain ideas — possibly
totalitarianism.
. . .
Read the rest of Mr. Hampton's article here. Previously posted and related CTP posts are here and here.
# # #
Saturday, May 22, 2021
Peter Skurkiss on Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (RINO-Ohio) (with UPDATE)
Peter Skurkiss at American Thinker asks whether “anti-Trump RINO Rep. Anthony Gonzalez [can] survive a primary challenge?” Gonzalez represents Ohio's 16th congressional district, which includes part of Northeast Ohio including Wayne County and parts of Cuyahoga, Medina, Summit, Portage and Stark Counties. Mr. Skurkiss begins:
You may recall that Rep.
Anthony Gonzalez (RINO-Ohio) is one
of ten Republican House members who voted to impeach President Trump after he
left office on the bogus charge that he had incited the riot in the nation's
capital on January 6. For this, Gonzalez was formally
censured in early May by the Ohio Republican Party and asked to
resign.
Far from being chastised,
Gonzalez continued
his vendetta against Trump and by extension MAGA
supporters. He next voted for the Democrat resolution to establish a
commission to investigate the January 6 fracas. Nancy Pelosi,
chief proponent of the commission, says the commission will be
"independent and bipartisan." Who in his right mind could
believe Pelosi on this? Was there anything remotely fair or honest
in the way Pelosi's House of Representatives held its two Trump impeachment trials?
In reality, the January 6
commission will function as a red herring designed to advance the Democrat
agenda going into the 2022 election. The commission will be to focus
media attention on the false Democrat argument that the events on January 6 constituted
an insurrection. By any objective standard, it did
not. All the ensuing kabuki theatrics will be a
replay of the Russian collusion hoax, with the corporate media aggressively
pushing the Democrat agenda. This will be done with the intent to
take the spotlight off the mounting failures of the
Harris/Biden administration. And for this, Gonzalez voted
"yes."
It is interesting to hear
Gonzalez's spurious argument as to why he shouldn't be purged from the
Republican Party or primaried. It's the usual trite blather: we need
to be a big tent party; we can't chase voters away; dissent is
healthy. There is some truth in all those sayings, but they miss the
point. Gonzalez conflates his treason to the GOP with legitimate
dissent. Nobody would have thought ill of Benedict Arnold if he had
merely disagreed with George Washington on tactics or strategy. But
Arnold went beyond the pale. He gave aid and comfort to the enemy,
just as Anthony Gonzalez has done. Gonzalez seemingly lacks the
wisdom to heed the words of Abraham Lincoln ("a house divide cannot
stand") or Jesus (Mark 3:25: "and if a house be divided against
itself, that house cannot stand").
Gonzalez is
in survival mode. He's throwing self-serving excuses
around in the hope that some might stick. Just as likely, he's also
auditioning for a lucrative post-political career in the
arms of those who first recruited him to come back to Ohio from California
to run for office. Gonzalez is angling to be the poster body purged
by the narrow, mean-spirited Republican Party. His big-money backers
will lap that up.
Skurkiss closes with a comparison to Jane Timken’s candidacy
for Portman’s Senate seat in the 2022 election:
As to Gonzalez's vote to impeach
President Trump, Timken was
initially soft on Gonzalez. . . . But now that [Josh] Mandel, a
MAGA man, has sharply criticized Timken for supporting Gonzalez, she has
abruptly changed her tune. She now is reported to favor Gonzalez out
of office. Some profile in courage that Timken is. .
. .
Anthony Gonzalez and Jane Timken
typify all that is wrong with the established Republican Party. The
sooner they and their ilk are driven from power, the stronger and better the
party will be. To be a big tent party does not require that
back-stabbers be tolerated.
That’s most of Mr. Skurkiss’s article, but click here for
the entire article.
Update from David M. Drucker at the Washington Examiner:
Republican Max Miller is poised
to ride an endorsement from Donald
Trump to victory over Rep. Anthony Gonzalez in a GOP primary in Ohio,
a contest unfolding as a clear test of the former president’s influence with
grassroots conservatives.
Miller, a 32-year-old former
Trump White House aide, was endorsed by the former president soon after announcing
for the Cleveland-area 16th Congressional District. Trump was intent on getting
revenge on Gonzalez, a second-term congressman among the 10 Republicans who
voted to impeach him in the waning days of his administration for allegedly
inciting the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
Trump’s swift endorsement of
Miller has, so far, kept other Republicans who might want to challenge
Gonzalez, 36, out of the race. Party insiders are skeptical that will change,
setting up a one-on-one contest between pro-Trump and anti-Trump candidates on
track to reveal how much punch the former president has in GOP primaries
post-White House.
More here.
# # #
Friday, May 21, 2021
Coercive Control: Fauci Speaks
We’ve all noticed (read: we are unable to avoid seeing or hearing) ads promoting COVID-19 vaccination. Ohio’s Governor DeWine added million dollar lotteries to vaccinated Ohioans in order to bribe encourage people to get the jab. Why are federal and state governments trying so hard to
promote an experimental vaccine? It
would seem that they might be pushing too hard.
And Megan Fox at PJ Media has a column on “The Age of Coercive Control: We’re in an Abusive Relationship with Our Government Now.” The full article is here, and it considers government over-reach on COVID-19 and other matters. But here are two headlines that reveal some of the carrots and sticks to force people to get the jab.
Ms. Fox looks at other ways that Americans are now being controlled,
including by “Monitoring Activities” and surveillance, isolation, financial
restrictions, and other controls. This blog linked to information on vaccination passports here. Tea
Party people want to get the information and then make up their own minds.
# # #