Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Happy Shrove Tuesday, Pancake Day, Mardi Gras, Carnival, Fastnachtsdienstag.

Holy Ghost in Denver.  While you cannot see it in this photograph, opposite this wall is a row of confessionals.  Confessions are heard during Mass.

Shrove Tuesday.

Shrove derives from "shrive", which means to give absolution. So, while I don't know how many parishes offer confession the day prior to Ash Wednesday, that's what it refers to.

It's also called Shrovetide, the evening before the Shrove, which makes more sense, really, reflecting the penitential nature of Lent.


Pancake Day.

It's also Pancake Day in England and strongly English countries, for the custom of eating pancakes on this day.  Pancakes use a fair amount of fat in them and this was part of the Lenten practice of abstaining from fat during Lent.  It's also therefore one of the odd little ways where England's history as a once deeply Catholic nation is retained.

In Ireland the day is known as Máirt Inide, from the Latin initium (Jejūniī), "beginning of Lent".  It's still associated heavily with pancakes.  That's sort of indicative of Ireland's history of being heavily impacted by the English.

Of some interest here, potentially, the Anglican Church retains confession, but not the requirement that its members annual confess, like Catholics have.  Catholicism is now outstripping Anglicanism in actual practice in the UK.  It's often noted that Catholicism has declined in Ireland, a prediction that the Church made at the time of the Anglo Irish War when it did not want to become involved in the Irish government and was forced to against its will, but the Irish remain very heavily Catholic.

Mardi Gras in New Orleans in 1937.

Mardi Gras.

Of course, it's also Mardi Gras, or "Fat Tuesday", from the custom at one time of trying to use up all the fats in the house on this day, in French speaking countries. Contrary to American belief, Mardi Gras is in fact not unique to New Orleans but occurs everywhere that French speaking people are located.

Knights of Revelry parade down Royal Street in Mobile during the 2010 Mardi Gras season, By Carol M. Highsmith - This image is available from the United States Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID highsm.05396.This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11990882

American Mardi Gras, or rather American New Orleans Mardi Gras, has become heavily Americanized which means, like all American holidays, it's associated with booze.  It is always a big party wherever it occurs, but the weird boozy topless event is an American thing, not a real French thing or culturally French.

Carnival in Rome, 1650.

Carnival and Fastnachtsdienstag

Carnival, from the Medieval Latin carne vale, "farewell meat",  is the same holiday in other Romance Language speaking countries.  The same sort of linguistic intent is found in the German name for the day, Fastnachtsdienstag.  The latter reflects the fact that European Lutherans observe Lent, but in the same fashion as the Anglicans.  It's not associated with the same Canon Law that it is with Catholics, but the observance remains.

We've actually touched on all of this, fwiw, before.

All of these days reflected a period when the Lenten fast was much more severe than it currently is.  People were using up fats as they wouldn't keep for the forty days of Lent.  Now, in the Latin Rite, there's no restriction on using fats at all, the obligation to fast is just on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, when the obligation to abstain from meat also exist, during Lent.  All the Friday's of Lent are meatless for Catholics.

In the Eastern Rite of the Catholic Church the fasting rules are much more strict.  Starting on Pure Monday, yesterday,   As Catholic News Service explains it:

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — In the eyes of Latin-rite Catholics, the extent of Eastern Catholics’ Lenten fasting and abstinence is perceived as particularly strict.

The traditional Byzantine fast for Great Lent includes one meal a day from Monday to Friday, and abstinence from all animal products, including meat, fish with backbones, dairy products and eggs, as well as oil and wine for the entire period of Lent. Shellfish are permitted.

Fasting and abstinence are maintained on Saturdays, Sundays and on the eve of special feast days, although loosened to permit the use of oil and wine. On important feast days, such as the Annunciation and Palm Sunday, fish may be eaten.

“Oil and wine were restricted because, in the past, they were stored in animal skin,” explained Mother Theodora, the “hegumena” or abbess of the Byzantine Catholic Christ the Bridegroom Monastery in Burton, Ohio. “Though this is no longer the case, the tradition continues.”

There are varying degrees of fasting, from stricter to more lenient, depending on one’s work and state of health. Monks and nuns will often submit to the most strict fasting.

Holy Week is not considered part of Great Lent but “an additional, more intense time of fasting and prayer,” said Mother Theodora.

However, Eastern Catholics don’t plunge into fasting and abstinence cold turkey. “Meatfare” and “Cheesefare” weeks help them enter into the Great Fast gradually. By Meatfare Sunday, one week before the start of Lent, Eastern Catholics will have emptied their refrigerators and pantries of meat products. By Cheesefare Sunday, they will have cleared out all of their egg and dairy products, ready to enter into the Great Fast that evening, after Forgiveness Vespers.

In an effort to keep Eastern Christians faithful, yet creative, in the kitchen, cookbooks with fast-friendly recipes have been published.

By Laura Ieraci, Catholic News Service.  The rules for the Eastern Orthodox are similar, although I'm never certain of the degree to which the Orthodox are required to observe them.  Orthodox churches using the "Old Calendar" start Lent this year on February 23.

With all this, Catholics in the US enter Annual Question Time and the time of slightly difficult observances, the latter taking note of the fact that unlike some past times in the country, we're not likely to get killed or anything, so its nothing like it used to be.  Rather, as the US is not only heavily Protestant, but Puritan, Lenten practices baffle non Catholics.

Puritans disapproved of pretty much everything, including observing Christmas as a special day, so Lent was way beyond the Pale for them.  English culture, on the other hand, loved sports, so when the English dumped the Calvinist, which they did as soon as they could, their love of sports came roaring back. American culture has been impacted by English culture in every way, so Americans love sports but don't understand the Apostolic Faiths very well, in many instances, and in fact sometimes fail to realize that their own branches of Christianity are fairly recent innovations not reflecting the original Apostolic faith.

So for Lent, including its beginning, and its end in Holy Week, Americans just don't really have any observations, other than using Mardi Gras, like St. Patrick's Day, as an excuse to drink.  They way it shows up for Catholics, however, is that things that are fairly easy to observe in Catholic countries, like Holy Week or Ash Wednesday, are a lot tougher to do in the US, and of course, you'll be getting a lot of questions if you are Catholic about "why do you do that" and "why can't you . . .".

Chúc Mừng Năm Mới.

 


Tuesday, February 17, 1976. The ABA starts its descent. Abuna Theophilos, Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, arrested.

The American Bar Association (ABA) voted to amend its rules of ethics to allow lawyers to advertise their services. Initially, the ABA approved letting attorneys buy display ads in telephone directories (specifically, the "Yellow Pages" for business phone numbers), with limitations on what could be allowed in the ad.

It's been an absolute disaster.

I used to be a member of the ABA, which does provide some good services, but I ultimately dropped out as it truly had some "woke" sections to it that had little to do with reality.

Abuna Theophilos, Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, was removed from office by Ethiopia's military rulers and imprisoned.  He'd be murdered on August 14, 1979.

During his captivity he escaped on one occasion and  thought about seeking refuge in the Greek Embassy.  He decided instead to head for a monastery, but was captured en route.

The Clark National Forest and the Mark Twain National Forest, both in Missouri. were merged into one unit.

Last edition:

Blog Mirror: February 9, 1976: "Taxi Driver" Premieres

Monday, February 16, 2026

Mail Order Brides: When Wyoming Men Outnumbered Women 10-1, They ‘Imported Wives’

Newspaper ads soliciting potential spouses.  Somewhat amusing, I suppose, is the German working girl "anxious" to meet a mechanic, followed by an advertisement from a 36 year old mechanic looking for a "working girl". The typesetter had to have arranged that order intentionally.  

This is a topic that tends to fascinate people as a relic of the past:

Mail Order Brides: When Wyoming Men Outnumbered Women 10-1, They ‘Imported Wives’

The truth of the matter is, of course, that since the Internet arrived, mail ordering spouses has returned.  Witness the discussions on Reddit:

I am "mail order bride" ask me anything

20f Mail Order Bride, husband is 53 AMA

I'm 26 and married a mail order bride from Cambodia and I could not be happier - AMA

This, from a Thai in the AFA Reddit threads probably explains a lot of it currently:

If you want to get out of Thailand, you marry a foreigner. It's a better life for me, and my family as I bring them over. So my parents, my sisters and I are all here in the US now.

I met Paul online through a mail order bride agency when I was 16. We talked, and he flew here when I was 17 to meet me, and he met my family. He got the approval from my parents, and when I turned 18 we got married and he brought me to the US.

I have a nice house, a man who cares and takes care of me, and a good job. I don't think I would have this back in our home country. I'm glad for Paul, and everything he's done for us. So, I am happy.

Icky aspect of this aside. . . well maybe the whole thing is icky, this probably defines things in a way, then and now, for mail order brides.  Economic desperation.  Perhaps more then, a bit, than now, but both.

Men meeting their "mail order" spouse to be at Ellis Island.  These women were from Armenia, Turkey, Greece and Romania, and likely were all Eastern Orthodox.

This is a popular story for things like romance novels.  It's the topic of at least one movie, 1974's Zandy's Bride, which was based on a 1942 novel called The Stranger.  I suspect it was way less common than generally supposed, but I don't know.  Added to that, some of what we regard as "mail order" were actually very long distance courtships by correspondence.  I.e, they knew each other that way, which is apparently at least somewhat the case for modern mail order brides as well.

Gree, women entering the country to marry correspondent fiances.

The photos that were put up here, and the advertisement, show an aspect of this that was really significant at the time, and seems to be forgotten (including by current mail orders) that being religion and culture.  The Greek women, at least three of whom appear to be very young, were escaping poverty, but they were marrying into their own culture.  Pretty rough, but they were at least marrying somebody who spoke Greek and who was Greek Orthodox.  Likely all the women in the first photograph were marrying somebody from their own culture as well.  The advertisement, however, provides less of that, but some of it.  Some men were just looking for somebody to marry.  The Jewish man was looking for a Jewish woman, however.  The German working girl, on the other hand, wanted a "mechanic" (somebody who worked with machinery) and a comfortable small home.  Two men wanted widows for some reason, which would probably make sense if I knew the context (perhaps they wanted somebody who was used to be married and whom they didn't have to romance).  Even where culture wasn't referenced, chances are they would likely be ofose cultures.

Of course, if you go further back, you can find more peculiar examples, such as the French "King's Daughters" who were sent to Quebec.  Up to 1,000 of them were sent between 1663 and 1673, which followed prior private efforts starting in the 1640s.   The King's Daughters were actually vetted for their future role, and were held to scrupulous standards based on their "moral calibre" and physically fitness. Authorities in Quebec actually sent some back that were found not to be vigorous enough, which presumably was disappointing for them.

What all of this says we could debate.  Contrary to what some people like to assert, it's never been the case, ever, that regular people didn't marry for love.  They always have.  The thing is that modern people often have a hard time recognizing that in the conditions of earlier times.

Catholicism brought in the requirement that there be consent on the part of both parties in order for their to be a valid marriage, and after that marriage ages jumped to the current norms.  Chances are pretty good that the way most couples relationships developed looked a lot more like what's depicted in Flipped, set in the 1950s, than Dirty Dancing or something.  I.e, the ultimately married couple knew each other from childhood.  That still occurs, of course, particularly in some communities.  Doug Crowe's ribald A Growing Season references that being the case in ranching communities of the 1950s, and I'd seen the same thing as late as the 1990s.  But where women were in short supply, desperate times always called for desperate measures.

Photograph from Montana, 1901.  Clearly the man with the cat was the most eligible Batchelor.

Something that should be noted is that there was a pretty high incentive for women to marry prior to the 1920s, or even prior to the 1940s, in comparison to currently.  Obviously marriage remains, but to be a "spinster" prior to the mid 20th Century came with a massive set of problems for the woman and her family.  The classic Pride and Prejudice deals with this repeatedly as the failure of the Bennet sister to marry is creating an impending financial disaster for the family and Charlotte Lucas accepts a less than desirable proposal because, in part, she's a burden on her parents. Those concerns are subtle in the film, but they were real.  The "German working girl" in the advertisement above was likely looking at serving out a life's sentence as a domestic servant if she couldn't find somebody to marry.  Most women who weren't married lived at home, and when they aged into their 30s they were looking at taking on that role for increasingly elderly parents.

All of which raises the question, do you have a couple that met in your background this way?  It'd be almost impossible to know, I'd think.  Having said that, in thinking of it, my chances of being descended from a King's Daughter are fairly high and, while not really the same thing, one of my aunts who did a family genealogy claimed that one married couple we descend from did not speak the same language when they married, although her information was notoriously unreliable (the husband was Scottish, the wife Irish. . . I think they both clearly would have spoken English).  On my wife's side, my father in law told me once that one set of his grandparents were both from Ohio originally, but that they had not met there.  Somehow the bride was sent out to marry the groom, and they married.

The Squalor of the Epstein Class. Happy Presidents Day

 The first headline really capsulizes the situation.

The Squalor of the Epstein Class

Happy Presidents Day



Saturday, February 16, 1946. Potato consumption. Frozen food. Helicopters.

Frozen french fries were introduced by Maxson Food Systems of Long Island, New York.

From time to time, we'll have these a lot.

American per-capita potato consumption had interestingly declined since 1910, and was not measured at previous levels until 1962, when french fries were a fast-food restaurant staple.

I would not have guessed that, or frankly anything close to that.

Indeed a decline from 1910 to 1962 really surprises me.

I personally used to grow large volumes of potatoes, picking up where my later father had left off.  Maybe because its because I'm more Irish than most Irish, but I love them.

An item on frying fries:

Chugwater Fry-Off: Are Beef Tallow French Fries Really Better?

The first UN Security Council veto was made by the Soviet Union, killing a resolution concerning the withdrawal of British and French forces from Syria and Lebanon, while it still occupied parts of Iran.  Basically, the Soviet Union wanted the British and French out of Syria and Lebanon (which really was a French thing) while they still had their claws in Eastern Europe, North Korea, Sakhalin, and Iran.

They'd leave Iran, and with the fall of the Soviet Union, they'd leave many other places as well. With the Russo Ukrainian War, they're trying to claw their way back in, however ,and they've never left Sakahlian.

The Sikorsky S-51, the first helicopter sold for commercial rather than military use, although it received military use, was flown for the first time.


The chopper would be manufactured until the late 1950s.

By United States Navy - Scanned from Alexander, Joseph H., Fleet Operations in a Mobile War: September 1950-June 1951, Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy, 2001, p. 39., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=72961678

There was major news on the strike wave:


A Denver merchant noted the anniversary of Scouting:


Last edition:

Thursday, February 14, 1946. ENIAC.

Labels: 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Larry.

 


On duty for fifteen years.

CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 118th Edition. Why are the women discounted? The corruption of wealth. Hanging around in a cult will make you a weird cultist. New links and the fallen. A gift of cash on the floor of the legislature.

Ruslana Korshunova, a Russian model who had been to Epstein Island, and later went out a 9th story window.  Suicide was the official ruling.  Lots of Putin's enemies go out windows.  A lot of badly emotionally scared women kill themselves.

Why are the women not believed?

At some point in the past, due to sex scandals, it became common to demand that we don't doubt the women who claim they were assaulted or abused.

And for good reason.

The rumors about Playboy and things associated with it proved to be true. Rape, suicides, at least one young woman associated with it simply disappearing, a la The Limey, Hugh Hefner's out right perversions, 

It's not as if there weren't signs before. They were just ignored.  And the rich and powerful played along with it.

Including Bill Cosby, who was a frequent guest at the Playboy Mansion, and who turned out to be into drugging and raping women.  It's not as if there weren't rumors.

And there was Harvey Weinstein, about whom the knowledge of his demanding sex from starlets was pretty well known.

Weinstein, by the way, shows up in the Epstein files.

With each of these scandals, once they broke, women came forward after a first few brave ones broke the news.  It was emphasized at the time that women needed to believed when they claimed they were raped and abused.

It hasn't worked that way at all with Epstein.

Virginia Giuffre was flat out doubted when she came forward that she was provided to Prince Andrew by Epstein.  As time has gone by, it became more obvious that her claims were not lies.  Now she's dead, but it took pretty much all the way up to her death for her to be believed. And we now know that Andrew's association with Epstein is worse than at first imagined.

The Epstein files are packed with claims by young women against the rich and powerful. They include allegations of rape, but also murder.

And yet, the accusations are simply disregarded to a very large extent.

It's accepted, now, that Epstein provided young women to the rich and powerful, but the nameless rich and powerful.  So far, when direct accusations are made, they're shuffled aside.  Former model Carol Alt, for examples, says that while she was dating Epstein (showing some questionable decisions right there) she was groped by Trump while Epstein just stood there.

That accusation has simply gone nowhere.

Why?  Alt has no reason to make it up.

Those are, we might note, amongst the less grotesque that are associated with Trump, who is accused by some Epstein victims of outright rape, receiving a handjob from a teenage girl, and witnessing a murder of an infant.  All of which are simply totally discounted.

Are they false accusations, or perhaps simply mistaken ones?

They could very well be, but its interesting how they simply aren't taken seriously.

Bill Gates was accused of some things in the Epstein files that he denied and that appeared headed into being forgotten until Melissa Gates somewhat revived them, although she didn't actually say that what he was accused of, he did.

So, do we take all of these claims at face value?

If we don't, why not?

Granted, it's well demonstrated that every claim made by a woman against a man is not true. And some of these claims are outright fantastical.  But then, if you'd told me that Bill Cosby drugged women to rape them, I'd have claimed that was fantastical.  If you'd told me (even though it was publicly known), that one Playboy Centerfold posted things claiming Hefner was demonic on her apartment walls before killing herself, I'd have thought that fantastical.  At one point, if you'd told me that two of the Playboy centerfolds had been 17 years old when they were photographed, I'd thought that impossible.  If you'd told me that Prince Andrew was screwing a teenager procured for him by an American john, I'd have thought that fantastical.

If you'd told me some rich Floridan kept an island staffed with what amounted to teenage sex slaves, well I'd have thought that fantastical.

Trump we might note, is hardly free from being in the smoke where there is fire.  He has associations with men who have been ephebophiles that go way back.  A video recently surfaced of Trump at a 1991 beauty pageant dinner where he was the judge in which the servers were the very young models in very tight bathing suits. That's creepy in the extreme. A 2020 investigation by the Guardian revealed that the competition was used by Elite Model Agency founder John Casablancas and others to engage in sexual relationships with the vulnerable young models and that the competition was part of a broader network, sometimes with connections to Jeffrey Epstein, that placed young contestants in precarious situations with wealthy men.

Trump hasn't been directly accused, however, of raping anyone in association with that.  

Be that as it may, former contestants from Miss Teen USA (1997) and Miss USA (2006) have stated that Donald Trump entered the dressing rooms while they were changing.  Some were as young as 15 years old

Now, some of the stories in the Epstein files (the murder one in particular) are really wild.  

But some well within the realm of believability, which of course doesn't mean they're true. . . or that they should be immediately dismissed.

The corruption of wealth.

One common element of all of this is the absolute corrosion caused by wealth.  The singular aspect of Epstein island is that rich and powerful men wanted to go there, and that some of them wanted teenage sex slaves.

This isn't a new phenomenon of any sort.

We just posted on Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands 

I'm not saying he was something like an Epstein associate, or that he had the moral depravity of Donald Trump.  But noted in his story were two illegitimate children by mistresses.  Charles Lindbergh, who went from being an American hero, to disdained, to somewhat of a hero again had children by three German women in the 1950s and 1960s, including two women who were sisters.  All told, he had thirteen children, seven of which were illegitimate.  Keeping Elon Musk's genetic broadcasting straight is a difficult project at best, and he's now fighting with Ashely St. Clair, his most recent, um, whatever, over their son Romulus.  Bill Gates had one known affair.  It goes on and on.

And then we have Trump.

What we also have is ephebophilia, which is a primary sexual attraction to mid-to-late adolescents, 15 to 19 years of age.  Unlike pedophilia and is not classified as a mental disorder in the DSM.  And we have Hebephilia, the attraction to teens below that, which is classified as a mental disorder in the DSM.

Some of these girls are indicated to be pretty freaking young, although I haven't kept track of it.  It seems to me that I've seen references to at least one being 13, which is really freaking young and one was apparently 11 years old, which is absolutely horrific.  Most seem to be in the late teens, to the extent we know, but the operation  of U.S. law is keeping the identify of the girls secret, so we don't really know all that much about them.

We know it was really weird, however.

What we also know is that a respected scientist who studied ephebophilia found that most men of adult years would react to attractive females in that age range.  I.e., they'd notice an attractive female in the late teen age range, which is not at all the same as engaging in improper behavior with them.  The researcher himself was horrified to find that he did, but it makes some sense.  The 18 years of age brightline under U.S. law is somewhat artificially drawn and in fact it'd make sense to draw it higher, perhaps at 20 or 21 as it used to be for most things.  Playboy, as noted above, knew this and actually intentionally targeted down towards lower ages before nearly getting in trouble in Europe, which in the 1950s and 1960s had some very strict prohibitions on pornography.  Nonetheless more than one Playboy model was 17 years old when photographed, and others were just 18.  Eighteen years old is within the ephebophilia age range (and hence a good reason to boost such things up to 21).

We note that first and then go on to note that its been shown that men who have had about eight women sexually being to depress the age downwards.  I.e, their sexucal moral fences start to come down.  I don't know how this works for women, but it's known there is an effect on them as well, as as the "body count" increases the ability to form attachments decreases.

All this is because our species is naturally monogamous, with some slight collieries that have to do with death.  In a non disrupted state of nature we know that a strong bond forms between a couple that has known only each other, and it can be so intense that if ruptured, usually by death, a second one never forms.  We also know that a fair number of people are plagued by thoughts of their "first", as that's where the bond biochemically formed and they're incapable of getting over it.  What we noted above is that the more biology is ignored in this fashion, the looser the bond becomes.  Men that "cheat" tend to keep on cheating, no matter what, and at the eight number, they start to look downwards to younger bodies.  With women what seems to occur is that they simply lose the ability to stick with anyone, and as the number becomes higher, the more superficial and temporary their relationship become, even if the relationships form children.

As with a lot of things, as nature is violated, there are consequences.

Part of our natures is that when we were all aboriginal the wolf was always at the door.   That formed an instinct towards acquisition.  Maybe we could store up enough to last through the winter, when there were winters.  When we became more settled due to agriculture, that mean we could store up wealth.  Storing up a lot of wealth allowed at some point for people to directly engage in two of the seven deadly sins, gluttony and greed, with greed being the most obvious.  In a debased society, allows a person to engage in unrestrained lust as well.

In other words, love of money truly is the root of all evil.

Castrati

In a moral and just society, people would police their own avarice or society would police it for them.  

It's pretty clear that we don't live in a moral and just society.

After the horrors of the Weinstein crimes were releveled, there was a period of time in which progressives started creating a moral code that looked a lot like the original Christian moral code.  Weird, eh?  Anyhow, it's interesting here as it accepted that some sort of societal rebuilding needed to occur.

It does need to occur, but frankly what should be evident is that the curbs are going to have to be built in to take the food off the table.  What that means is taxes.

Ever since Ronald Reagan introduced the utterly bogus trickle down economic theory Americans have run around hating taxes and giving tax breaks to the super wealthy.  There's something frankly morally wrong with people who obtain vast amounts of wealth and then retain it, as opposed to people who obtain vast amounts and then apply it.  Indeed, a lot of people who obtain huge amounts of wealth, like Epstein Island level, seem to apply it to the Seven Deadly Sins, pride: greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, and sloth.  

These people could be helped to avoid this fate, and I'm sincere about that, if they were simply taxed to prohibit it.  There's no reasons that people should be billionaires.  There's frankly no reason why a person should own more than one home, or at least not very expensive homes.

Of course, if we taxed people to keep them within a range of reason, say no more than $10M in personal wealth, many would scream that they were going to move to . . . wherever.  Let them go.

Most wouldn't, frankly.  Whatever is wrong with this class of people so that they must keep acquiring is so off base that they'll keep doing what they're doing that generates the wealth no matter what.

I'd note that just the other day Mehmet Oz, government figure, was running around suggesting that people should go to work earlier in life and work longer into life to help address the budget.  Helpful suggestions like this are always given by people who are nowhere near retirement or who don't work in dangerous jobs, so the recommendations are pretty much crap.    Be that as it may, if the administration can suggest that, and if it can be lead by a guy who is almost 80 and demented, well then we can tax the rich and expect them to like it.

They need to be, so they don't spend their money being destructive.

Hanging around in a cult will make you a weird cultist. 

Joe Epstein was really good at getting photographs of those who came to seek his favor.  So good at it, you have to wonder if that was part of a plan to make marks out of those people.

Will take down (Pope) Francis, The Clintons, Xi, Francis, EU – come on brother.

Steve Bannon

The Trump administration, and those who surround Trump, are deeply perverted.   Which takes us to this:





One of the things a lot of people are now starting to notice about the Trump Administration is how downright weird it is, and how weird many of its central figures are.

It's been lurking there all along, and its more than a little bit of what caused people who were conservatives, but not MAGA, to really feel uneasy, in varying degrees, about hardcore deep MAGA.

Steve Bannon is, in my view, a disheveled creep.  Both inside the MAGA movement and outside of it, he seems just filled with hate.  Bannon claims to be a Traditionalist Catholic, but he's been married and divorced three times, placing him well outside of what the Church tolerates in this area.  And here we see he wanted to "take down" Pope Francis.

Pope Francis was a controversial Pope in the United States.  I was not personally a fan of Pope Francis, but he drew more criticism from Americans than he deserved.  I really wasn't a fan of his synodality movement, which lingers on, but which I suspect will sort of die a quiet death.  

At any rate, what we're finding out as the Epstein files get released is not only did he have a lot of associations with the very rich and powerful, those relationships carried on well past the point where there's any benign explanation for it.  Bannon hoping to take down world figures with Epstein's help.  Lutnick taking his family to Lolita Island.  It just goes on and on.  

It's really not possible to believe that all these people didn't know that sex slaves were on the menu.  It's hard to believe that most of them didn't know that.  More likely, they just didn't care.

Which leads to this:

The Trump admin posted that yesterday, on Valentine's day.

The use of the term "Daddy's Home" is openly perverse.  It's a sick joke that has heavy sexual and abusive, and sexcually abusvie overtones and always has.  In a lot of contexts, it has a heavy homosexual overtone.  All of that is true here.  Trump's the "daddy" to a large group of people who seem in that fashion.  It's perverse.

Also perverse is Trump's obsession with weight.

On Valentine's Day the Trump Administration posted a cartoon of Gov. J. B. Pritzker mowing down junk food.

Pritzker is a stout guy, but he's one of those stout guys who looks like he's fairly fit.  One of the things about weign in American culture is an overarching belief that everyone who is overweight is a slob, which just isn't true.

Now, it's not good to be overweight.  74% of Americans are overweight.  Donald Trump is quite overweight.

Indeed, there's something really weird at work here, as Trump looks fat and flaccid.  Pritzker looks overweight but fairly fit.  Chris Christie, who Trump likes to poke fun of due to his weight, is in between.  

A fat guy call other fat guys fat, is pretty weird.

Another example of our Twenty Fifth Law of Human Behavior came out last week in the form of a totally unhinged Congressional rant by Pam Bondi.  It was spectacularly weird.  

Bondi went from supposedly having some sort of Epstein stuff in her desk to not having anything to being in charge of an agency that redacted a huge amount of stuff.  Clearly, the government had a lot of stuff, and every time more of it is revealed, we learn of additional powerful men, some in government, who had connections with the teenage sex slave broker.  The Trump Administration has been in full blown panic about it for months and keeps hoping it can order everyone to move on.

What Bondi did was just fly off the handle, actually arguing that we should be paying attention to the Dow Industrial Average rather than raped teenagers.

Bondi is 60 years old but doesn't look it.  Like other members of the "family values" party, she's been married twice and divorced twice.  All of a sudden her visage is catching up with her age.  Stress will do that, and being cruel is stressful.

Bondi wouldn't look at the rape victims.  I've long said that the biggest enemy of women achieving full equality in our society is other women.  

Well, look at the Dow. . . 

New links and the fallen.

I've added a lot of new links in different categories here recently.  I never post when I've done that, but I have.  I've also been moving links that have been long dormant over to the inactive blog list.  Basically, if there haven't been any posts in over five years, I move them over there.

I always wonder why an active blog suddenly stops posting.  Sometimes, reading them, I'm pretty sure it's death.

I took two blogs in the military section out.  One is the Duffle Blog.  It's supposed to be comedic, but it just wasn't very funny, so it came down.  The other one was Mandatory Fun Day.

I loved Mandatory Fun Day when I was first made aware of it, but recently it's been off.  I suspect I knew what was going on, but the most recently entry confirmed it, that being the one where the blogger notes he's getting out of the military soon.  I suspect that he's taking a twenty year retirement.  Many members of the military do.

The reason it seemed off, however, is that for some time posts with his wife and children, or even references to them, just flat out stopped.  His wife and four daughters had appeared fairly regularly.  Commentors on the post on his getting out of the military started asking about them, and then one confirmed  what I'd suspected.  The couple divorced.

Being a married military couple with children is reputedly hard, due to long deployments.  Without anyone saying it, frankly, the situation has gotten worse since the inclusion of women in the military.  Cheating by soldiers has always been a problem, and cheating by married people in offices where they were close together has been a problem for a long time.  But take people away from their spouse for a year or more and plop them down somewhere where they're working cheek to jowl seven days a week, well. . . 

I don't know what happened with Austin Von Letkemann and his wife Katie, but apparently a year or two ago Mrs. Von Letkemann, who had her own creator content (TikTok?) accused him openly of cheating on her and they divorced soon thereafter.  I hadn't really followed them personally, but that opened up that content and it's really sad.  He's obviously always been a weight lifter, but he's gone form a fairly robust size to huge, which I'll comment on in a moment. She was originally a cute young woman but not what you'd regard as a bombshell and was fairly overweight.  They were a cute couple.  At some point she started working on her appearance and she's somehow gone to bombshell, of a certain type.  Contemporary bombshell, I guess, of the same type that people who think Erika Kirk is a bombshell.

Erika Kirk.  This is a certain sort of contemporary look.

She's also extremely angry and is making it plain she's never marrying again and that she feels really abused to be cheated on as she's now a single mother with four girls.  I don't blame her a bit.

Which I suppose makes these comments somewhat inappropriate.

Kate von Letkemann is a really attractive woman.  She has the Erika Kirk look, but is genuinely much better looking than Kirk.  Therefore this will seem a bit odd.

She was always very pretty, and I suspect when they married, she was extremely pretty  But in their early photos she went from cute to pretty.  She had auburn hair, and obviously relished her role as a mother of four.

At some  point she became a very blond, blond and had a tummy tuck. She's really made up like a doll now.

I wish people didn't do that.  Just look yourself.

And that leads me to Lt. Austin Von Letkemann.

Von Letkemann was always up front about suffering from anxiety.  Based on his videos, he must suffer from it quite a bit.  Some of the stuff he sells on his page would be of such a nature that I'd tend to call for a welfare check if he was a friend of mine.  I've wondered for a long time how a serviceman could get away with posting what he' posts, and now he's announced that he's a short timer.  

An Army officer who retires as a lieutenant is a very unusual thing.

Anyhow, during the time during which he's been doing is Vlog he's become massive as a weightlifter.

I've known some guys who lifted weights, some weightlifters, and some really big weightlifters over the years.  When guys get super huge, they tend to get obsessed with their size, normally, although I know a couple of instances in which this was not true.

Guys getting obsessed with their size is a bit odd, and it's actually not very manly.  Quite the opposite, actually.

Perhaps its vanity, but when weight lifting goes from wanting to maintain strength to "look how beautiful I am" it crosses a certain threshold.  Perhaps what that threshold is, in both of the instances noted here, is the threshold of nature.  A powerfully built man whose within the realm of reason can hold that strength and build for actual use, whether its work, being in the outdoors, or combat.  Once you get huge, however, its beyond the practical and into appearance.  There are no gyms out in the prairie or in the trenches.

The display of big builds is also really strongly associated with homosexuality.  Back in the day when there were book catalogs that came by mail I used to get them and they often had huge selections of books.  If you thumbed through them, and they had books on everything, once you go to the ones displaying weightlifters on the cover they were heavily geared toward homosexual men.  I suppose that makes some sort of sense.  Even where not the vanity level of this class of lifters is a bit much.  I once had the unfortunate experience of being a silent listener to a group of them discussing women, and how they avoided those who weren't as beautiful as they were for, um, services.  It was an immoral discussion in general, but it was weird in particular.

On Twitter I used to get the feeds of a guy who was an Eastern European agrarian farmer.  It was weird, as he was so far beyond the Pale, but somewhat interesting.  It devolved into photos of himself and his physique.  That may be why I don't get it anymore.  That's, um, odd.

Anyhow, if you go back a few years, he was obviously very fit and moderately tattooed and she was pretty and obviously very happy.  His t-shirts fit loosely, like most men wear them.  Now his t-shirts are tight and he's heavily tatted up, and very big, and she's all dolled up following a tummy tuck.

Sad situation.

None of which explains why I took Mandatory Fun Day down.  I basically did as its content had sort of run out  It's become more of a commentary on world events, and some of it is pretty good.  However, it's also the case that recently a lot of them lead in with a short comment on some cheesecake TikTok tart.  Indeed, that's what lead me to suspect that something had happened.  A guy living at home with four daughters and a wife probably shouldn't be, and probably isn't, looking at TikTok tarts.  You either have to go looking for that, or its just coming up on your feed as you are looking at that.  Most wives would resent it and it's not a good thing to role model, in any fashion, to young women.  It's not content I need here.

Accidental renaissance.

Linked in from the Jackson Hole Guide:  "Rebecca Bextel hands a check to Rock Springs Republican Rep. Darin McCann on Monday during the 68th Wyoming Legislature’s budget session in Cheyenne. KARLEE PROVENZA/COURTESY PHOTO"

How darned dumb do you have to be to hand out checks on the Legislative floor?

It wasn't a lot of money, but it was money, and now there's a criminal investigation.  I don't think the investigation will go anywhere, but this really doesn't say much for Bextel, who is of course in the carpetbagger class of the far right.  The donor explained more of the story, he's a carpetbagger too, with a "oh shucks" type of response.  He apparently thought that Bextel wouldn't do something this darned dumb, but then why didn't he just mail the checks rather than have a third party deliver them?  That wasn't smart.

I think these really are campaign donations. There's no crime here.  But it does reveal a lot about a group of people who railed about traditional politics as they play, well, traditional politics, with a difference.  They're pretty heavily carpetbagger backed with much of their money, like many of their candidates, coming from outside of the state.

Related threads:

Secrets of Playboy

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CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 117th Edition. Sen. Lummis wakes up from a long winter's nap.

Monday, February 15, 1926. King wins a by-election.

Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King won a by-election for the representative for Prince Albert, Saskatchewan district, ending the situation of a Prime Minister governing without his own seat in the Parliament

Air mail through a commercial air carrier was accomplished in the U.S. for the firs time.

Ford Motors was the contracted carrier.


Mehmet Celal Bey, Turkish Ottoman administrator who declined to carry out orders during the Armenian genocide, died at age 62.  He paid for his refusal with his official position.'

He compared himself to "a person sitting by the side of a river, with absolute no means of saving anyone. Blood was flowing in the river and thousands of innocent children, irreproachable old people, helpless women, strong young men, were streaming down this river towards oblivion. Anyone I could save with my bare hands I saved, and the others, I think they streamed down the river never to return."

In another context, he'd be regarded as a "righteous amongst the nations"

Last edition:

Sunday, February 14, 1926. The Bamberg Conference.

Monday, February 15, 1876. Texas adopts its current constitution.

Texas adopted its current state constitution.

FWIW, most states change constitutions fairly frequently.

Last edition.

Thursday, February 10, 1876. Terry ordered to take action against Sioux.