Wednesday, October 8, 2025
Idle Weiss
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Pictures of a Beautiful Instagram Page
Oh, dear, I haven't commented on this blog for three days, does that mean I have to comment on something now? Ugh . . .. I've been rendered senseless by Trump flooding the zone with authoritarianism, which is probably his objective, and so tonight, I think I'll offer a casual and relatively light post. My readership has spiked of late, and so I really need to keep up this blog somehow.
Tonight I want to talk about my Instagram page. When I first started posting on Instagram a few years ago, I had no theme or common thread I was projecting, only random posts about favorite cars, favorite bands, favorite actresses . . . you get the idea. I remember hoping I could use my Instagram account to pressure Volkswagen to restore the base Golf to the North American market, though that idea fell by the wayside. Soon after Trump regained power, I fell into a constant theme . . . since early March, I have put up three posts at a time on my Instagram account, the first two being anti-Trump and anti-MAGA memes and every third post a picture of a beautiful woman - sometimes an actress but usually a model - as what I call "feminine-beauty relief" from the constant posting of Trump-related and MAGA-related memes. I post pictures of beautiful women to, as I put it, cleanse the palate of all of that MAGA stuff.
Saturday, October 4, 2025
Eric, We Hardly Knew Ya
New York City Mayor Eric Adams withdrew from the New York mayoral campaign.
Friday, October 3, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - October 3, 2025
"Squeeze Box" by the Who (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Thursday, October 2, 2025
Quantico
"Quantico," a corruption of a Doeg Indian word of unknown meaning, may take on the same sort of meeting for modern ears as "Nuremberg" has.
In a move that would have amused Ulysses S. Grant, Hegseth said that beards for flag officers such as generals and admirals would be banned.
However, mustaches are acceptable.
Trump, though not expected to speak at a meeting Hegseth called at his own discretion, showed up anyway for no reason other than to hear himself talk - and give the primary reason they had all been called them all to Quantico on that day, and it was not to reveal the solution to a mystery, like who's in the Epstein files. Trump announced that the military had a new enemy, an "enemy from within," defined largely as anyone who opposes Trump. He pledged to have troops in the streets of America's major cities to bring criminals to heel and use such dangerous cities to train the military to fight.
Gee, I feel safer already.
Thankfully, the flag officers gave Trump and Hegseth no more than polite, muted applause. They clapped their fingers. They were expected to obey Trump, but given how they love and honor the Constitution, I suspect that the first thing these generals and admirals do when Trump gives any one of them an illegal order is to march into the White House and arrest the bastard. Then they can dissolve Congress and hold new presidential and congressional elections.
Or, they could simply, dissolve the Union. Me, I know I want a divorce.
I assume Trump was speaking off the cuff, as usual. Oh, by the way, I need to make a clarification/correction regarding his United Nations speech The TelePrompTer went out before he started speaking, not during his speech, so he ended up winging all of it. Even more embarrassing than I thought.
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
I Support a Palestinian State
Monday, September 29, 2025
A Hanging Matter
Very soon.
Trump just issued an executive order calling Antifa a terrorist organization.
There's just one thing - Antifa is not a terrorist organization. It's not even an organization. It is a movement, like the Alice's Restaurant Anti-Massacree Movement, but it's not an organization. "Antifa" is just shorthand for "anti-fascist," which refers tot someone - anyone, really - who opposes Trump.
You know how apologists for overrated and overexposed pop divas that go by single names and play up what there is of their sexuality explain that they are feminists in their own way by being themselves and that feminism is anything you want it to be? The decree Trump signed pretty much defines Antifa as anything he wants it to be. He defines Antifa as anyone who expresses statements that are, among other things, anti-American, anti-capitalist, anti-Christian (Allahu akbar!), anti-family values (will Trump arrest himself?), and, well, anti-Trump. There's hardly anyone left outside MAGA who would be considered innocent. Trump is using this extremely broad definition of Antifa terrorism to go after liberal activist groups . . . and James Comey.
Sunday, September 28, 2025
Seceding From Seceding
Saturday, September 27, 2025
Garden State Mess
Friday, September 26, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - September 26, 2025
Thursday, September 25, 2025
Tell Donald To Shut Up!
Tuesday, September 23, 2025
Who Cares?
The Who - or what's left of them - are on the farewell tour that was supposed to have taken place 43 years ago.
That should have been the end of it, bar one last set at the London Live Aid concert in 1985. But in 1989, Townshend, Daltrey and Entwistle reunited to tour again (Jones had wisely moved on) and to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the release of their rock opera Tommy, rather than do the simple thing and remaster the original album for a new CD issue. (Would the three surviving Beatles have toured in 1987 to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of Sgt. Pepper?) As Jimmy Guterman and Owen O'Donnell later wrote, the remaining members of the Who got a whole ensemble of backup musicians to compensate for Keith Moon's absence, and they didn't even come close. The Who would tour again throughout the nineties and into the new century, even after the 2002 death of John Entwistle - which occurred in the middle of a Who tour - as well as continuing to perform Tommy on occasion even though the stage musical should have been enough. (Their current tour coincidentally - noncoincidentally? - intersects with the fiftieth anniversary of the Tommy movie directed by Ken Russell.) In the forty-odd years since they said they broke up, the Who have recorded only one studio album - 2006's Endless Wire, which got a modicum of attention before Who fans in Whoville returned to listening to Who Are You. Apart from Endless Wire, and solo albums, the Who have created no new music since their last album as a quartet.
Why is this so upsetting for me, as you can clearly tell by my tone? Because the Who's refusal to call it a day and step aside until Daltrey and Townshend became octogenarians is indicative of what rock and roll has become since the mid-eighties, which is precisely the time that rap and dance-diva pop began to take over the charts. The early 1980s found record sales in a depression and many veteran rock and roll acts getting long in the tooth, but a few newer artists still managed to break through and score a few hits, from traditional AOR performers like Billy Squier to spritely pop rockers like Men at Work to the Stray Cats, who seemed poised to bring back rockabilly the way the Rolling Stones brought back the blues. Heck, the Clash finally broke through on American radio and in the Billboard singles chart. The Clash opened for the Who on that 1982 tour, and Pete Townshend confided to Joe Strummer that he hoped the Clash would carry the torch that the Who were passing.
For various reasons (*cough cough*, MTV, *cough cough*, Russell Simmons, *cough cough*, radio conglomerates, *cough cough*), the 1980s rock and roll renewal that was supposed to mirror the earlier rock and roll renewal sparked by the British Invasion and the blues revival of the 1960s never happened, as veteran rock acts refused to step aside while younger acts strove to get attention even as rappers and pop divas started sucking up all the oxygen. Virtually the only signs of life in rock in the 1980s were the success of hair bands and pop-metal acts spewing out recycled riffs and lyrical clichés. U2, a postpunk band with a jagged sound no one had ever experienced before, were an exception. Pete Townshend even said that when he heard Dave "The Edge" Evans play guitar, he wanted to give up.
But he didn't. Rather than make a living editing books or writing avant-garde musicals, Townshend reunited the Who and turned them into an oldies act.
The Who are hardly the only veteran or "legacy" rock band to stick around or come back long after they promised to or should have hit the showers, and for younger rockers striving to get attention beyond college-indie radio play, that is unfortunate, but the Who are easily the worst offenders. We Who fans never considered them to be as good as the Rolling Stones. We considered them to be better than the Stones. Better. They were better instrumentalists, Roger Daltrey was (and still is) a better singer than Mick Jagger, and they were more innovative and experimental. And Pete Townshend's and John Entwistle's songs were more imaginative and multifaceted than Jagger's and Keith Richards' songs celebrating pride and joy and greed and sex ("Sha-dooby!"), and even when the Who themselves wrote songs celebrating pride and joy and greed and sex, such as the Entwistle composition "Trick of the Light" from Who Are You, they were more literary about it. The Who's reunion of its partial lineup for purely nostalgic reasons tarnishes the legacy and the accomplishments of the great band they used to be.
It would have been perfectly fine for Daltrey, Townshend, and Entwistle to continue recording solo albums and eventually fading away as new rockers took their place. However, their refusal to exit stage left at a time when rock, being overwhelmed by Madonna, rappers, and assorted Jackson family members, was starved for new talent that did not waste their time checking out their jumper-cable hair in the mirror or write tunes making Kiss songs sound like Cole Porter tunes by comparison was one of the reasons rock declined and fell like the Roman Empire. Note this: When the remainder of the Who's lineup regrouped in 1989, only one rock act - the insufferable Mötley Crüe - managed to have a number-one LP on the Billboard album chart. A year later, no rock act managed that.
Remember when I said that Townshend in 1982 expected the Clash to carry the torch of rock and roll going forward? In 1985, the same year the Who did what was supposed to be a one-shot reunion for Live Aid, the Clash, having fired Mick Jones, released a new album with two new members, Cut the Crap, and the title was so descriptive of the crap they had cut that the Clash broke up immediately thereafter. And who is opening for the Who on this final tour? The Joe Perry Project. Led by the same Joe Perry who played guitar for Aerosmith for the previous fifty years. Hardly a vote of confidence in rock and roll's future.
Ladies and gentlemen, the two old blokes you see on the stage today are not the Who. The Who as you originally knew them died forty years ago. Leave them to rest in peace. The two old blokes on stage now are a couple of music hall performers who occasionally put on a skit about a deaf, dumb and blind kid who sure plays the mean pinball. Compare that to Illinois indie rocker Stace England and his concept band Screen Syndicate, who performed their song cycle about B-movie actress Roberta Collins once - in 2014 - and didn't even reproduce it for disc in the studio until 2022.
Now that's rock and roll.
Monday, September 22, 2025
ABC Folds
So the people do have the power, after all.
This is a great victory for Kimmel, his fans, and free speech in general, but it's a personal loss for me - I already deleted recorded but unwatched first-season episodes of Tim Allen's sitcom "Shifting Gears," and now if I tune into his show at the start of the second season, I won't know what's going on unless I seek out the first-season episodes I haven't seen - i.e., most of them - and pay to binge-watch them. Ahh, I was never a fan of Kat Dennings anyway.
Saturday, September 20, 2025
Jimmy Kimmel
Friday, September 19, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - September 19, 2025
"To the Last Whale . . ." by David Crosby and Graham Nash (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
The Decline and Fall of America
Since I do not give money or support to any terrorist organization, I don't think I'll end up being forbidden to travel outside the country again. I may get fired from my job, but I can handle that. Why would I get fired for that? Because former (former!) MSNBC commentator Matthew Dowd lost his job for saying the exact . . . same . . . thing.
Meanwhile, the Vice President has announced that the administration will seek to shut down liberal-activist groups, and the Attorney General is planning to prosecute hate speech, which is defined as any speech that offends the right - like, say, advocating for more public transit. Trump is planning to sue anyone who questions his finances and his businessman acumen - shut them down to shut them up.
And if that doesn't work . . .
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Trump the Shark
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Charlie Kirk Is Dead
There are many reasons not to sentimentally eulogize Charlie Kirk, a right-wing activist I knew little about and cared about even less.
But among them are his observation that black women lack the brain power for high-level jobs, that Dr. Martin Luther King doesn't deserve to be honored and that the civil rights legislation was a mistake, and that Taylor Swift sucks. But the biggest reason not to sentimentally eulogize him - and here's something to ponder when you hear an Aretha Franklin song on the radio if it follows a cut from the brain-power-derived Toto ("all chops and no brains" - Dave Marsh) - is that he said the Second Amendment was worth the price of a few school shootings every now and then.
Bear in mind that Charlie Kirk was not only shot to death in Utah, but it happened on a university campus. A school.
Having said all that, I condemn the killing of Charlie Kirk for the same reason I don't want to see Tyler Robinson, the guy who shot him, get the death penalty for it - and also for the same reason I personally oppose abortion as a Catholic . . . because only God decides who lives and dies, and killing in all forms is wrong. That includes war deaths, because even though killing outside the rules of military engagement is referred to as "war crimes," the truth is, as I've said here before, that war crimes are a redundancy. All war is a crime.
None of this is good enough for Donald Trump, who has sought to make Kirk's assassination a cause célèbre among the right-wingers who support him to portray Kirk's opponents - who are also MAGA's opponents - as the enemy, and as an enemy that must be obliterated. Making Kirk a martyr is part of Trump's effort to squelch dissent against his dictatorship by any means available, at least until he can make dissent a capital offense. And even though Trump and his Trumpettes tried to bang the drum of derision against liberals by suggesting that a person of color or a non-heterosexual pulled the trigger, it turned out that the assassin was a white male member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints - the original iteration of Christian nationalism in America - who shot Kirk because Kirk wasn't far to the right enough.
Once the news broke that the suspect was in custody, Trump basked in the the triumph of the moment, and Federal Bureau of Investigation director Kash Patel took a victory lap. Except that family members turned in the assailant. Patel couldn't recognize a gunman even if you spotted the g, the m, the a, and both n's and let him buy a vowel.
And yet the demonization of Trump's opponents continues, if only because Trump is now blaming the atmosphere of disgust toward disgusting people who advocate for an exclusionary, reactionary society in America on his opposition. He's blaming liberals, democratic socialists, congressional Democrats, all other Democrats and who knows whom for Kirk's death by promoting their "radical" and "un-American" ideas and ideals in the public square . . . not that much different than when the Reverend Jerry Falwell opined that feminism and homosexuality were to blame for God removing His blessings from the United States and allowing 9/11 to happen.
This is a dangerous situation, where anyone who speaks up risks retribution and anyone who doesn't speak up risks being taken away when there's no one left to speak up for anyone else. All I have to say after all that is, I'm doubling down. I am for the secession of Democratic "blue" states. I believe that to remain in the Union isn't worth the violence that's coming. I believe that it's time for the blue states to get out.
Friday, September 12, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - September 12, 2025
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
Succession and Secession
Saturday, September 6, 2025
It's a Wonderful Presidency
Friday, September 5, 2025
Music Video Of the Week - September 5, 2025
Thursday, September 4, 2025
The Democrats Have Never Nominated a Woman for President
The Democrats have never nominated a woman for President.
I'll say it again: The Democrats have never nominated a woman for President!
I repeat! The Democrats have never nominated a woman for President!
So what about Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris? What, you actually think rank-and-file Democratic primary voters chose them? You're kidding, right?
Harris's nomination is easy to explain. When President Biden decided in July 2024 not to stand for re-election - a decision he should have made in March 2023 - the Democrats needed a new candidate and Kamala Harris was the obvious choice, she being the Vice President and all. She won the nomination on the first ballot at the convention, all right - which was pretty easy for her since she had no opposition on that ballot - but she became the first Democratic presidential candidate since Hubert Humphrey to win it without having competed in a single primary. And she suffered Humphrey's fate in the general election.
Only trouble is, there are no obvious female candidates for 2028, assuming the Democratic Party is not banned under martial law (coming to a city near you!) by then. Elizabeth Warren is too old, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is too young, Mikie Sherrill and Abigail Spanberger first have to win their respective gubernatorial elections (and I have doubts about Sherrill, for reasons I will revisit on this blog soon), Kirsten Gillibrand, a Generation X elder like myself, is too self-righteous, and Gretchen Whitmer is too busy hiding her face in a binder when Trump is around. (She should consider joining ICE after she leaves the Michigan governorship if she wants to stay masked and anonymous.)
And there's one other quality she must share with her male competition - she must be white and Protestant. After the debacle of trying to elect a half-black, half-South Asian woman married to a Jew, just electing a woman who's more of a so-called "real American" is going to be a heavy lift.
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
The Most Dangerous Man In America
It's not Donald Trump.
It's his Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., whose tenure in that post shows him to be incapable of delivering either.
The chaos comes from Kennedy's vaccine recommendations, which themselves are chaotic. On the particular question of COVID vaccines, Kennedy has declared that priority will be given to Americans 65 and over and those under 65 with underlying conditions. And, as feared, it appears that any Americans who do not qualify for a free COVID shot under the guidelines will not be allowed to get one even if they're willing to pay out of pocket. They are not available to anyone who doesn't qualify. You'll have more luck trying to buy the bones of John Merrick, the Elephant Man, from the London Hospital Medical College, as Michael Jackson (a psychopath like RFK Jr.) had tried to do, even doubling his bid for them. But, as he found out then and as those of us who want COVID shots but don't qualify under RFK Jr.'s rules are likely to find out, some things don't have a price. (Ironically, Trump believes otherwise.)
You know, that's another reason for me to hope that the 2028 Olympics get moved out of the U.S. The war on medical science, which medical science is clearly losing, is going to lead to a lot of Americans with severe respiratory diseases, some of whom could possibly attend Olympic events in Los Angeles while being asymptomatic and cause a mass contagion among foreign athletes and spectators. The Super Bowl, the most insufferably American of all sporting events, which takes place in the middle of winter, could also be an annual super-spreader event for COVID, the flu, and other nasty diseases.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been dismissed for his lack of medical expertise - he is, after all, an environmental lawyer. But that alone is not a detriment in running the Department of Health and Human Services. Xavier Becerra, his predecessor under President Biden, is also a lawyer, and he used his legal knowledge to cut through red tape and get COVID vaccines out as quickly as possible. If anything, being an environmental lawyer is an asset; who better than an environmental lawyer to understand how toxins and pollutants in the air and in our soil affects our health? But while Kennedy is best known for being an environmental lawyer, his reputation in the field of environmental law is based largely on easy-peasy cases he merely signed his name to, including cases that any shyster with a law degree from a correspondence course could have won. RFK Jr., who has campaigned for years against injecting kids with drugs, is, ironically, best known for something else; he's a recovered heroin addict. And he's a recovered heroin addict who ignores the basics of medical science and whose anti-medical-science policies are going to get us all sick and cause a lot of us to die needless deaths.
As far as getting a COVID shot is concerned, I propose that if you are under 65 and you want one badly enough - and who with a brain wouldn't? - the safest course of action is to tell your local pharmacist that you do in fact have an underlying condition. And trust me, you won't be lying.
The underlying condition we Americans have, whether or not we're 65 or older, is that Robert Francis Kennedy, Jr. is the nation's Health and Human Services Secretary.