Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Thursday, January 28, 2021

Reddit influences the market.

From Twitter:

Shares of AMC Entertainment surge more than 200% as feverish buying continues from retail traders
On Wednesday morning, AMC Entertainment shares increased by more than 200% during premarket trading and hit more than $15 per share, nearly seven times the average analyst price target. AMC joins GameStop, BlackBerry, Bed Bath & Beyond, Etsy and a list of heavily shorted stocks that have recently seen eye-opening gains thanks to encouragement from individual investors on Reddit’s WallStreetBets. Hedge funds that are short on the other side have been rushing to cover their losses.
Photo via @Forbes

This is genuinely weird.

A Twitter comment from everybody's favorite liberal:

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez 

Gotta admit it’s really something to see Wall Streeters with a long history of treating our economy as a casino complain about a message board of posters also treating the market as a casino

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

Anyways, Tax the Rich

Something about this just won't be good.


Saturday, January 2, 2021

Resolute Progress. Weeding the Cyber Garden.


Weeding the cyber garden.

On a private theme, but harkening back to the last entry in the recent Resolutions post, I'll note the following.

I have a reddit account.

Reddit is pretty stupid.  It's like Twitter that way.  I have a Twitter account too, but it mostly serves only to popularize these blog posts.

Reddit, well I'm not sure why I got an account.  Probably because I was researching something historical and I tapped into a thread there.  There's a reddit sub on everything.

I like a couple of reddit sites, mostly those that deal with history.  But a few years ago I removed myself from posting on Asks Historians, which is moderated by people whose sole role, it seems, is to remove posts on a difficult to discern and dictatorial basis.  In checking into the moderators at that time I was quite unimpressed with their qualifications as "historians" and I packed up and left.  In that case the "historian" was a student working on a masters, I believe, in one of the highly rarified and highly irrelevant categories of any discipline that exists anymore, that one being a "woke" one that demonstrates a lack of understanding of the era upon which he was writing to start with.

About the same time I left all of the ones that dealt with the law.  I deal with that at work.  Why would I want to read about that when I'm not at work?

Today I packed up and left from a pile of reddit "subs" including an economic one on which I posted quite a bit.  Being on an economic sub was just an invitation to constant argument with people's whose views don't matter in any real sense in the larger world, but whose presence on a sub gives them a place to massage their often off centered egos and pretend like people are listening. To make it worse, economic subs tend to be flooded with teenage socialist and anarchists who aren't that in the real world, and those who have a completely Utopian view of the world such as, and I kid you note, Christian Monarchist who seek a restoration of a world that never existed.

Indeed, reddit is really characterized by its anonymity, which is true of the net in general, but particularly true of reddit.  Economic subs, for example should be populated by the fairly serious, but they tend to be populated by some who are really on the margins of the topics. Added to that, you never know if the person you are debating is a 60 year old PhD in economics or a 14 year old writing in their parents basement.  Indeed, the Socialist Anarchist Monarchist stands a good chance of being the 14 year old son of two orthopedic surgeons in suburban Detroit rather than a down and out machinist in Dresden.

I suspect, moreover, that this is true of all threads on serious topics of broad interest.  They probably all start out populated by a very few who care deeply, and know deeply, on the subject, but then the margins come in.  I'm a pretty serious Catholic, for example, but I avoid the Catholic reddit subs like the plague and from what I hear they're deeply rad trad, which probably leaves the orthodox normal in constant highly rarified debates.  The same with economic and political topics.  You may start of with the economics of subsidiarity but sooner or later you'll be debating with teenage socialists.  About that point the people who really cared about the topic leave.

Who needs it?

I sure don't.  

Needless argument only serves angst.  So, on day 2 of 2021, I've reduced my participation in that.

I also did that, I noted, by wiping out not only a whole bunch of reddit subs I had on my follow list, but a bunch of Twitter accounts I was following.  Twitter is even worse that reddit for its screaming irrelevancy but thanks to the times it's become something that is actually influential.  Our departing President hasn't helped that by posting on Twitter all of the time, but this didn't start with him.  

Following anything on Twitter is nearly a guaranteed way to end up disappointed in somebody.  For example, I like some cartoons quite a bit, and one of them is Dilbert.  I made the mistake of recently following, therefore, Scott Adams, who writes the cartoon.

I can't say I wasn't warned by eee gads, his political posts are the far edge of outright nuts.  Just a few days ago he was repeating the "won Georgia" fantasy that Donald Trump also posted on and it wasn't too long ago that Adams was insisting Trump would still be re-inaugurated on January 20.  I really don't care what Adams thinks on politics and now I wish I didn't.  I removed him a couple of days ago.  But after weeding the reddit patch, I went in and did the same on Twitter. Stuff than just causes angst has gone.

Our life is frittered away by detail. Simplify, simplify.

Thoreau. 

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

A Twitter Tour through the Superficial Zeitgeist

I have a Twitter account that really just serves as an advertisement for this site.

I don't know that a person should feel proud of that. Twitter is really stupid.  And one thing that having a Twitter account does is expose you to the really superficial Zeitgeist of the moment. . . every day.

When I checked in this morning a big Twitter story is that Jimmy Fallon was apologizing for a Saturday Night Live appearance he did in black face a decade or so ago.  I'm not going to look that up, but Fallon is an entertainer and Saturday Night Live has been bad for decades.  Black face should have gone out before it came in, but as this apparently has been around for a really long time, blowing up about it now seems a bit late.  Perhaps it might just be better to note that Saturday Night Live should be Exhibit A in the trial of the People v. Harvard Lampoon Not Being Funny.

Indeed, if that trial were to occur, one of the primary expert witnesses would have to be a sociologist on the topic of how, at any one time, alleged comedic geniuses are such only by societal acknowledgement, as many of them are truly never funny.  Charlie Chaplin is a good example.  Not funny.  Not even once.

Chaplin.  Not funny.

In the category of funny is Kathy Griffin, who is also blowing up Twitter today for a comment she said about injecting President Trump with air.

Griffin is occasionally funny.  I didn't hear the comment but it doesn't strike me as funny.  It also doesn't strike me as something that serious people need to waste much air time on.

President Trump for his part ought to stay off of Twitter, but was on complaining that Michelle Obama had gone golfing at the same time that he, Trump, is taking flak for golfing.

I don't golf and it strikes me as boring.  I realize that not everyone feels that way.  My mother was a superb golfer when young and taught me how to golf as a child.  It didn't take.


Rants about golfing, by whomever is making them, are really about something else.  Americans of both parties like to complain that the President is insensitive and lazy whenever he's seen not doing something that seems to be work. Democrats are complaining about Trump golfing as its an opportunity to complain about Trump.  Republicans complained about Obama golfing while he was President for the same reason.  

Driving by the golf course every morning I always look out upon it, but not because I like golf, but because I'm hoping the foxes will be back.


This year, it seems, Mr. and Mrs. Fox have chosen to have their brood elsewhere.  So, instead, I see that Americans are out golfing.

Well, at least that's being out, which seems to me to be okay.  The argument that we should shelter in our basements for the rest of eternity doesn't seem to me to be a sound one.  I get it, if you are in the former cow pasture that New Yorkers now call Central Park there's going to be a lot of people, as New York is crowded, and you ought to be careful and wear a mask. And that advice goes for other places as well, and I'm not saying otherwise.  

I'm just not too worked up about the golfing.

Or Griffin.

Billie Eilish is apparently worked up about body shaming which caused a lot of people to engage in virtue signaling by supporting her for being against body shaming.  

This is in some ways associated, I think, with a song (I think) in which the words "not my fault" appear" somewhere where she decries people who have judged her based on her clothing or appearance.  I'm not in that category as, perhaps to my discredit, I don't really care about Eilish at all, other than she's pretty clearly an object of fascination for being a certain sort of teenage/twentysomething idol in the same way that James Dean was, whom I also am pretty disinterested in.
What are you rebelling against? 
What have you got?
M'eh.

Eilish has been the subject of a lot of fascination because she wears bulky clothes.  In the video for her comments, song or whatever it is, she apparently strips down to a tank top in reaction to being the subject of a lot of fascination about what her wearing bulky clothing may mean.

The problem with that is that its almost guaranteed that a lot of her juvenile, and probably not so juvenile, fans will stop in to see the video not to bond with her statement, but because now they get to find out what she looks like under those threads.  It's sort of like protests here and there in which women go topless, but not nearly as extreme.  The message gets mixed.

That gets into the topic of decent clothing, of which there's an entire cul de sac on the web where people rage on that topic, some with really extreme views.  It's a tough topic to engage in, in regard to women, as standards applying to female dress change every few seconds, or so it seems.  Having said that, if you dress really oddly it tends to be the case that, no matter what you're saying, you're doing it to draw attention, in which case some of the attention will be unwelcome.  Eilish may deserve credit for slamming body shaming, but simply dressing in a less "look at how oddly I'm dressed" fashion right from the onset would probably have accomplished that more effectively.  Well, her video probably doesn't hurt. . . except to the extent juvenile males are checking into it the same way that they check into Sports Illustrated swimsuit editions.

All of which brings us back to this.  In this era of COVID 19 introspection, American culture, as reflected on Twitter, isn't looking too great.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

And as the race heats up, mud files, and Twitter tweats. . .

it's worth remembering the Russians.


Eh?

Yes, remember the Russians.

Or at least recall that the Russians were messing around in our election in 2016, and they did that in no small part through Facebook and Twitter.

See a lot of extreme stuff coming from those quarters, and people rising to the bait?

Well, it's worth recalling where extreme political stuff on the net tends to come from.  And just skip it.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Remembering how people work


Or how they get paid, actually.

For a long time, this blog has had a Wednesday post called "Mid Week At Work".  In that post we usually take a look at a job from the past, although sometimes they're a current item.  This time, its very much a current item.

What I'm not commenting on is the comments the President made earlier this week expressing the view that sometime around Easter he hoped to have the country back to work.  That's been controversial (Wyoming Congressman Liz Cheney, who counters President Trump a fair amount, came out with a statement saying we should listen to the medical experts, no matter what they say).  I'm not going to chip in on that and that would be a long post indeed.

Rather, what I'm going to comment on is the ill informed snottiness that circulates in some circles on this topic.

Now, first of all let me note that I have a Twitter account.  I have it solely to link in stuff from here to there in the thought that some folks who read it there will come back here. That's about it.  But the fact that I have one and that I've followed a few people, mostly agriculturalist and historians, means that I get to read a lot of ill informed drivel that some people will post.

Likewise, the same is true on Facebook.

Indeed, on Facebook a very nice man I've known for decades now posts daily posts about how the COVID 19 epidemic isn't really real.  I've seen other posts claiming the whole thing is a hoax.  It isn't.  It's a real pandemic.  People are really going to die. And while I myself was skeptical about the need to shut the entire country down at first, I think that's now been well established for this period we are in, which is most a state matter and not a Federal matter.

Okay, now with that background I now see people debating the "quarantine in place" policies, some of which were ordered in some places and others which have been self imposed.  For reasons I'll detail, later, maybe, in another post, I've been reluctantly on one the past several days myself.

Anyhow, with the President's comments there are now quite a few comments around about the need for the country to get back to work.  I saw one in the local paper this morning in a letter to the editor.  These comments vary in type and nature, but basically what they state is that if this keeps on we're going to destroy the economy (assuming we haven't already) and that is a disaster of such magnitude that it'd be better to ramp the economy back up and hope for the best and accept the risk that entails.

Now that can be debated one way or another, and I don't intend to do that. Rather, I'm commenting on the Twitter type comments of the opposite nature which just fly off the handle, which typically take this tone:
OH MY GOSH, you stupid selfish bastard, I'm self quarantining if our forefathers were able to handle World War Two, we can handle this, you genocidal madman.
Again, take that type of comment for what you will, but I'm tending to note that they are often posted by people who have jobs that are highly secure and if they sit on their butts inside their homes for weeks, it isn't going to really matter to them, or they work in an occupation, like I do, where work can continue, at least for awhile, from your home.

And that's the point to be noted here.

Note everyone has these kinds of jobs.

Waiters, bartenders, and the like don't.  If they aren't on location and picking up tips, they're going broke, and they don't do very well to start with.  Their employers probably don't keep paying them as they can't afford to.  And even if they are, they aren't picking up their tip income, as they never did.  This would be true for taxi drivers as well.

Some members of our economy do piece work, like mechanics.  People tend not to know this, but most automobile mechanics are paid by the job they perform based upon the average amount of time it takes to do it, they aren't paid by the hour.  And they aren't the only members of the economy who do piece work.

Lots of people in the modern economy work in the gig sector of the economy.  Uber drivers are probably the classic example.  They only make money if they are driving.  If they take a day off, they aren't paid. . . at all.  Right now, they're making no money whatsoever.

Uber drivers are an example of independent contractors, and there are a actually a huge number of independent contractors in the modern world.  A guy may be wearing the XYZ Oil Company hard hat at work, but he may very well be an independent contractor for them.  If he's not working, he's not getting paid.  He's not even easily eligible for unemployment as his is, after all, self employed.

Indeed, if you look at the State of Wyoming's closure list, it's pretty much a laundry list of those who can least afford a disruption in their regular employment states. Those people are taking a pounding.

The point?

When people get on their high horses, safe in their university research assistant position which is paid for by the state, whose pay is the same marching or fighting, they ought to recall that many people don't work that way.  There really are people who will go from getting by, to not getting by, to out the door, to homeless.  Many thousands more will have months and months to make up for this disaster.

This doesn't mean that orders should be lifted or lengthened.  It means that if you are sitting in your apartment secure and sound with the next three months off from the University of Land Grant, you ought to look across the city and remember there are a lot of people sitting in apartments right now worried how they're going to pay for the rent on April 1.  It's all well and good to compare you sitting at home to service in World War Two, but remember that the comparison you are making is to occupying a position in the Bureau of Statistics during the war, while urging that others hit the beaches at Tarawa.  You aren't, they are.

Does that make Trump's point?  No. Sacrifices are uneven.  But we should at least be aware they exist.

Sunday, February 2, 2020

More Random Acts of Randomness

The juvenile nature of Reddit

It's worth noting that anyone exposing an absolutely absurd idea with conviction on a platform such as Reddit, let's say, for example, that Western societies return to a monarchical form of government, are probably 15 year old kids typing from their laptops.  Yes, their unyielding belief is probably genuine, but its also a the youthful delusion of somebody who takes their position in the school forensic club way too seriously. 

The Twitter Convinced.

It's also worth recalling that all Twitter political debates, aren't. They're just mutual self affirming circles.

There's dignity in distance

Likewise, people who feel they must unburden their angst on Twitter should realize that you can't get any serious advice from anonymous strangers in 200 characters.  Such stuff caused me to dump the feed of a academic historian whose feed went from fascinating World War Two topics to a non stop critique of her Mid Western relatives and the lamentations over her divorce. 

There's a place for that, but it isn't Twitter.  If you must continually critique everyone you know and continually dump on your ex spouse in public, get a blog where you can at least do it in greater volume . . .but be prepared for intelligent counters as well.

The Republic has been this divided.

The next pundit idiot who comments that "the public in this country has never been so divided" should go to library and look up Bruce Catton and Shelby Foote.

Nobody knows if a Teen Talent has any.

It doesn't matter what pundits say about a person like Billie Eilish.  She's not famous because she's a massive singing talent, she's famous as she might be an attractive 18 year old who is the midst of a massive dopey teen meltdown more befitting somebody who is 15.  People like watching that for some reason.

Nobody really knows if a teen star has any talent until they're pushing 30, quite frankly, by which time they aren't the same person they were when they were 18, for which we should all be duly thankful.

Dryer sheets are completely pointless.

You really don't need to buy them. No, you don't.

Monday, January 27, 2020

Some random observations on a Monday morning . . .

on which I'm once again up way too early.

http://paintedbricksofcasperwyoming.blogspot.com/2016/11/houston-sidewalks.html

1.  Twitter Tantrums.

I have a Twitter account and indeed I'll hit the tab to link most of my posts there (they aren't all linked in there). That's a species of shameless blog promotion.

Anyhow the political rants on Twitter are generally moronic and apparently dominated by people who have the absolutely most hardcore views on everything.  All the time I'll see rants that start off with "I can't believe that my (put in opposite camp here) Twitter friends believe . . ."

If you repeatedly post that "you can't believe" that a lot of people whose feeds you are on hold something, they probably can't believe that you believe the opposite, and there's probably a reason for that.

2. Twitter Tantrums 2. Confirmation bias.

I saw a Twitter Tweet today by somebody who is mad that Trump keeps noting that the economy is doing well and states "it isn't for me".

It likely isn't doing well for that person, and a lot of other people, as at any one time a lot of people aren't doing well for a variety of reasons. One reason it isn't doing well for everyone now is that there's been huge economic and technological developments over the last several decades that make it tough on certain sectors of the economy.  Perhaps a person can argue that Trump should address this, or that he isn't addressing it correctly, but frankly no President since 1945 has addressed this really adequately.  Personalizing it in this fashion doesn't prove anything, as the economy actually really is doing well in the context of how our economy works.

Indeed, while I have a lot of economic opinions including ones I think would address this, I don't see any major candidate of the left or right who has any really novel ideas about this.  The worst ones in fact come from the left where the left is reviving a morbid fascination with the dead corpse of socialism, which we know is a really bad idea.

Also, let's face it, the economy doesn't do well for some people because of their life choices.

This has really become a huge topic of denial in the United States, but its true.  If you go down an unemployable path and, to compound it, if you engage in conduct of certain types, you will not do well.  I'm reminded in this instance of the Art History Major who appeared some years ago at the Occupy Wall Street event decrying that she couldn't earn sufficient income to pay off her student loans.  Of course she couldn't.  That has nothing to do with the economy as there will never be an economy which pays really high wages to everyone in Art History. That's not a reason not to pursue it, but your economic expectations, and your expenditures, in securing that goal should take that into account.

On this finally, every news item that even slightly backs your view isn't ground shaking and sure to convince your opponents of anything.

3. On Death.

Yesterday basketball player Kobe Bryant and his young daughter lost their lives with a group of other people in a helicopter accident.

This sort of things impacts me in odd ways that it didn't use to.  I'm in that category of people who, when I hear such things, usually silently say a prayer for the victims of such tragedies.  At the same time, however, I don't like the endless up to the moment reporting on it.

That may be really personal to me.  I work on things all the time where people have died or been badly injured and the tragic nature of it is really evident to me.  When last week the news was reported that Selena Shelley Faye Not Afraid's body had been found not far from a rest stop in Montana it really bothered me, and it still does.

But what I'm commenting on here is the none stop news coverage, and that really may be just me.

I was out when this was first reported on and when I came home, my wife mentioned it.  Again, as with Not Afraid, I was shocked and said a silent prayer to myself.  But soon the television came on and it was non stop reporting on the event.  At 5:00 I redirected the television to the nightly local news, which because it is a weekend and because the channels are not really local anymore but Cheyenne channels, it was the Cheyenne news, which I'm not hugely interested in. But when that was over, it was redirected back.

Finally about 6:30, while I was working on something that a net outage had kept me from working on the day prior, I had to intervene with "that has to stop".  If you work with materials in which there's a constant flood of tragic death, television reporting on it over and over is just too much.

On comments, I'll note, this one was the best I've seen:

Father Dan Beeman
@inthelineofmel
I'm not a basketball fan. But I always felt a bond with
@kobebryant
because I knew that he shared in the Eucharist and loved the Catholic faith. We'll now share in the banquet of the Lord together in another way. Praying for his soul and for those he loved.
I'm not a basketball fan at all, but in all the stuff I heard, I didn't know that Bryant was a religious man, let alone that we were coreligious.  It's interesting, and Father Beeman's observation tends to be the way I look at such things.

The stupidest observation I saw was also on Twitter where somebody posted "I wonder how many soldiers died defending freedom yesterday".  I don't know the answer to that but I bet its easily discernible.  Chances are that it may well be none as on most days the answer is none.

The point of the crabby commentator is supposed to be that soldiers are dying unheralded and unknown while a man who is only famous for playing a game is mourned.  Well, that's a stupid point of view.  There is a lot of attention paid by Americans to American casualties for one thing, and it isn't the case, as the comment implies, that the only death worth noting are those which are due to heroic sacrifice.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Wow, the day after a debate the Twitter Tweets are full bore ridiculous.

Seriously, dudes, a little prospective please.  It can't possibly be the case that all the candidates running are either Fred Rogers or Joseph Stalin.

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Asymmetrical War and Gross Overreaction

Dear readers, it is important to note that Pearl Harbor has not been struck by the Japanese in a second sneak attack.

Eh?

Well, the reason I note that is that event was the last one which caused the United States to declare war on anyone. Sure, we've fought several undeclared conflicts since then, one, or two, of which were illegally fought in that they required, in my view, a declaration of war, but there's no risk of "World War III".

None the less, some in the Press are even kicking around World War III headlines, which provides evidence of why people who are deeply informed on any one topic tend to take the Press with a very high dose of salt.

At the same time, we'd note, basically historical ignorance combined with people's basic love of panic, and people do love a good panic, is contributing to the complete and utter nonsense that's circulating right now.

Okay, what's this about and what's really going on, to the extent we know.

Death from above.  Starting with the Obama Administration and continuing now onto the Trump Administration individual enemies of the US and those near them have found themselves alive one moment and in eternity the next through strikes conducted by Predator drones, such as this one in Iraq.  Last week Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani found himself in the situation of flying into Baghdad to consult with those he lead in the name of the spread of Shia Islam to being in the next world and finding out if the 7th Century founder of Islam was right. .  or wrong. . . or perhaps a now greatly misunderstood Gnostic preacher who wasn't sending a message as now understood.

Last week President Trump, without informing Congress, ordered a drone strike on Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani.  Soleimani, in an acting of stunning hubris, flew into a nation where Iran maintains client militias in the Iranian's government effort to subvert the Middle East for the purpose of spreading the Shia theocracy, even while its own people are leaving Islam in droves and declaring they've had enough of the Shia theocracy.

Indeed, were the Iranian government lead by men with flexible minds overall, they'd democratize the country immediately, which would give Shia fundamentalism a much better chance of retaining influence in Iran, assuming its not too late, than their current course.  The course they're on right now will result in the secularization of the nation through disgust, sooner or later, and an educated Iranian population is already well into the process of pondering Islam's contradictions and problems.

But that's not the course of action they're going to take. They're going to go down with the ship, and make it worse for themselves.

And part of that is sponsoring guerrilla war against all sorts of forces and states in the region, including subverting the Iraqi government  and sponsoring militias there.

Gen. Qasem Soleimani had been instrumental in it and he met a fate he basically deserved.  

He deserved it as he was an instrument in a struggle that depended at its core on Iran's opponents not behaving like Iran.  And just like the rude motorist who finds himself cutoff by a tow truck driver who has had enough, Iran is complaining about it.

Citing Gasoline Alley may seem odd here, but in essence, Iran is behaving like Doc.

Iran of course feels this way as its been allowed to.  Western powers have restrained themselves from taking on the theocracy since its first creation, no matter how difficult that nation has been, for a variety of reasons.  And there's real logic to that approach.  Sooner or later, Iran's going to collapse under its own oppressive weight and the problem will be solved.

None of which means that anyone must tolerate their violent misbehavior in the meantime.

Which also doesn't mean that killing a top general of their's is wise

Indeed, all of this is very problematic.  For one thing, it's extremely odd to be using killer drones over the downtown street of a country you theoretically are aiding.  Indeed, as we are the guest, and they are the host, we presumably would want permission to act in this fashion.

We didn't get that, and we wouldn't have received it either.  Iran has strong influence in the Iraqi government.

Additionally, flat out killing an Iranian general in this fashion, while technologically impressive and oddly honest in a way as well, isn't really strategically sound for a variety of reasons, first and foremost of which is that overall any one general's ability to influence the long term outcome of a struggle is always questionable.  

Even if he is key, however, doing it outright will cause the Iranian people to rally to their government, no matter how much they might otherwise detest it.  Deeply Orthodox Russian soldiers fought for the atheistic Soviet Union heroically, as Mother Russia had been attacked.  

Red Army soldier, likely a Soviet Pole, and a Catholic, during World War Two.

And while it may be a bad or disturbing example, German soldiers fought tooth and nail during the final months of World War Two against the advancing Soviets.  Viet Cong solders, increasingly youthful as the war went on, fought hard in the 1970s for a cause they only understood loosely at best simply because the other side was there, in their concept of another side.

The point is that this actually may serve to prolong the struggle with Iran.

Which is why, if it was necessary, most nation's would have gone about this differently.  In Baghdad nobody would have though much of a couple of RPG rockets slamming into a car followed by concluding bursts of AKM (AK47) fire.  It'd look like another Iraqi militia had done it.

Indeed, a colleague of mine who had once been a Navy SEAL told me that in his day, for sidearms they carried Browning Hi Powers. They were used by so many nations at that time that if one was dropped, you could never tell what military had been there.

This assumes, of course, that it was necessary to kill Soleimani, which is a big assumption.  It's difficult for me to see how that would have been true.  Of course, the New York Times is now declaring he was no big deal, but the Times, like Chuck Todd, has become so partisan its lost all objectivity.  Suffice it to say, however, taking us to a higher level of conflict with Iran right now really raises some questions.

One question it doesn't raise is whether or not we're going into "World War III".

There's actually some outright moronic speculation of this type.  On Twitter, for example, the Twitter Twits are causing this to trend today:

Politics · Trending
#Iranattack
Trending with: #IranUsa, #WWIIl

That's just silly.

But perhaps not as silly as this:

Due to the spread of misinformation, our website is experiencing high traffic volumes at this time. If you are attempting to register or verify registration, please check back later today as we are working to resolve this issue. We appreciate your patience.

Eh gads, any narcissistic fool who seriously is calling the Selective Service as they think there's going to be a resumption of conscription is truly a bed wetter.  Head out of the phone bucko, and read some real history.

There isn't even going to be a conventional war between Iran and the United States.  Iran would loose it and they know that.  All of which makes the public freaking out about this downright dumb.

Indeed, probably the most amusing freak out was that of Rose McGowan. She's an actress, and therefore is part of the vapid set, who posted a gif of an Iranian flag with a sunny and a smiling bear, or something, on it, with this text:

Deaar #Iran, The USA has disrespected your country, your flag, your people. 52% of us humbly apologize. We want peace with your nation. We are being held hostage by a terrorist regime. We do not know how to escape. Please do not kill us. #Soleimani

That's really stupid.

That it was stupid became pretty obvious really quickly and she began to back-peddle enduing up with this:

Ok, so I freaked out because we may have any impending war. Sometimes it’s okay to freak out on those in power. It’s our right. That is what so many Brave soldiers have fought for. That is democracy. I do not want any more American soldiers killed. That’s it.

Oh horse sh**.  This was an example of vapidness blowing up on the commentator.  There's a lot of it around right now.  And its just not very smart.

There's going to be no conventional war with Iran.  We aren't going to engage in one, and the Iranians aren't either.  Neither side, in fact, could easily do it, but it it occurred, it would be the end of the Iranian theocracy, and they likely know deep down that its winding down anyhow and they don't want to accelerate that.  At some foreseeable point in the near future the Shiite mullahs of Iran will have the same level of influence on Iran that the Church of Sweden has over that county's affairs. That's not to say none, in either case, but it won't be what it is now.

Speculation about the effectiveness of the Iranian military has been rampant for a really long time, but the best evidence is that it isn't.  The common citation to their effectiveness is the example of their war that Iraq fought with Iran from 1980 to 1988 in which both sides actually demonstrated a raving level of military incompetence.

Fighting to a draw with modern weapons and World War One technology isn't an example of military prowess.  At that time Iran had a western trained 1970s vintage military with 1970s vintage military equipment and Iraq had a Soviet trained 1970s vintage military with 1970s vintage military equipment.  Both side managed to forget their training nearly immediately and fought with their respective 1970s equipment as if it was 1917.  

Iran still has 1970s equipment but now are largely internally trained and, in a conventional war, would be even less competent than they were in the 1980s, much like the Iraqis were in the 1990s and 2000s. And they likely have no illusion about being able to fight anyone.

Iranian F-14s in the 1980s. The F-14 was a great plane, but old airplanes with no parts don't stay great and technology has moved on.

Indeed, they don't really try. The Iranians like asymmetrical, irregular war, and that's what we'll likely see.  But we will see that.

Which does bring us back around to a more tense situation.  Will Iran try to close the Persian Gulf and what will the Europeans do if they do (they depend on it being open more than we do)?  Will Iran ramp up terrorism?

Indeed, the latter appears to be a certainty, as Iran has already stated that its retaliation will be "against military sites". That's worrying, but what that suggest is that they'll engage in asymmetrical war at a calculated level.  Basically, like Arab nations did with Israel for decades.  Just enough violence to not really provoke a war terminating their state.

All of which means that this will go on, most likely, for years. . . depending upon our reaction, which is proving to be the difficult one right now.  And that's the weird situation that Iran finds itself in.  Like a habitual rude driver, they suddenly find themselves having angered somebody who appears to be irrational and are now in the "oh crap. . . did that tow truck driver cut me off and is he getting out of the cab with a beer and a gun. . . ?"  Nobody knows what any reaction from the United States will be right now.

Including Americans.

But it won't involve World War Three and it won't involve conscription.

It'll be more analogous to the the long Arab Israeli struggle, at least for the time being.  Which means that panicked might have to do a little studying.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Time announces its person of the year


Thereby guaranteeing with its choice a second full day of ranting, raving, screaming, proclaiming, crying, yelling, showing, and self righteous accolades and condemnations on Twitter, Reddit and Facebook.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

And then there's December 10, 2019. . .

which I predict to be a particularly silly, self affirming, self righteous, day on Twitter and Facebook, as well as certain quarters of Reddit.

And I'm not even pointing fingers, I'd note, at any one side when I say that.


Monday, August 12, 2019

So, if in terms of combating Russian influence in the election cycle, there's one simple thing you can do. . .

which is not getting your news from Twitter, Facebook or any sort of social media.

Just don't.

Twitter, Reddit, Facebook, whatever.  The news there is junk.

Want news?  Get it from a local newspaper or a respected national one. And by that, I mean the print edition, not the online edition that has a zillion screaming comments.  Or get it from a respected radio source.  Get it from television, if you must (the least best alternative) but don't get it from the net.

That's the source that's easy to manipulate, which has been manipulated, and which is going to be manipulated.