Thursday, August 31, 2017
LISA GERMANO
Fiddle player for Little Johnny Cougar Melonhead back in his
commercial heyday, and then she realized she could do so much better on her own.
Her first album, while still very uncompromising, seemed a
little tentative and over-polished when compared to her later work. She went truly nutso on her next batch of
albums, HAPPINESS, GEEK THE GIRL and EXCERPTS FROM A LOVE CIRCUS. Brave, harrowing, original – all them there
good adjectives apply. This is the meat.
She stayed awesome after this trio, but her music seemed to
slowly get more fragile, introverted and claustrophobic. Intense, like suffocating on shimmery cobwebs. How can you not respect an artist
who released music on both 4AD and Young God?
Not sure if she’s still active, her website doesn’t appear to have been
updated recently, it’s been 4 ½ years since NO ELEPHANTS.
I recall not being overly thrilled with her OP8 project (w/
Giant Sand), but that was probably because it wasn’t Germano-esque enough for
my tastes. I’ll have to check it out again one of these days,
maybe i was just in a pissy mood that day.
It happens, even w/ us intellectual dilettantes.
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
SOMETHING HAPPENED
Heller’s 2nd novel, after CATCH-22,
and it’s a stunner. As good as, and probably
better, than 22. A novel about big-city corporate & suburban
home life, keeping up w/ the Smiths & Joneses and getting laid in the late
60s and early 70s of consumerist America, but its basic conceits are all still
pretty true today.
It’s funny, pissed-off,
paranoid, neurotic, ugly, sexually insecure, misogynistic, regretful,
self-loathing, narcissistic, perceptive, obtuse, bitter, jealous, petty and
vicious, frequently all at once.
It’s dense and it’s
layered and it’s pretty straightforward.
Bought my beat-up
paperback copy for a quarter at a yard sale 25 years ago, I still have it today. Worth every penny.
For me, Heller seemed to shoot his wad after these first 2 behemoths of awesomeness. Nothing I read by him after managed to hold my interest. Oh well.
some excellent reviews and thoughts on the book:
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Monday, August 28, 2017
COWARD. DICK. FUCKTARD.
.
Just a link, cuz the original article has all the tweets that seem to pass for news reporting these days.
Trump, who is completely incapable of discussing any subject without making it about himself, and who totally lacks the capacity for decisive action when others' lives are at stake.
"Trump's meandering Sunday morning tweetstorm never once mentioned Houston"
Sunday, August 27, 2017
jul29
the idea of beauty which
leads to the concept of fearthe butchered lands between
the dying oceans
feels like 23 again
feels like 17
the villages on fire and the
taste of gasoline when we kissed
told you i loved you and it
sounded like the truth but myfamily was a family of liars
my country is a
country of whores
false kings all feasting on the
bones of corpses and in the end
i am sorry for what we
never became
in the end we can only fuck the
hole in your sister’s broken heart and make it grow
into a subtle act of grace
AN AWESOME HEADLINE
Doesn't really even need a story to go with it.......
White House Staffers Found Viagra, Booze, Depends
in Bannon’s Desk
TRUMP - A BIG FAN OF CONCENTRATION CAMPS
Are you surprised? He's as big a shit-sucking fuckhole as Joe Arpaio.....
Concentration Camps Expert Says Trump Just Endorsed The Idea Of Them In U.S.
Donald Trump’s pardon of former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio amounts to an endorsement of the idea of concentration camps, says a journalist who has reported on the global history of the deadly facilities.
Arpaio referred to his own county jail as a “concentration camp.” For over two decades, he operated “Tent City,” where detainees were kept in brutal conditions, including temperatures soaring well above 100 degrees Farenheit. They were also forced to work on chain gangs and to wear pink undergarments as a form of humiliation. Arpaio was convicted in July of criminal contempt for ignoring a court order prohibiting the detention of people based on mere suspicions about their legal status.
In an email to HuffPost Saturday, Andrea Pitzer, the author of One Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps, defined a concentration camp as a “mass civilian detention outside the standard legal process, usually on the basis of race, ethnicity, or political activity.” While Pitzer said Tent City was a prison technically constructed to hold those convicted by law, it bore familiar elements to a concentration camp, including “brutal dehuminization.”
“Once Arpaio began neighborhood sweeps and traffic stops deliberately targeting Latinos, and then detaining them without charges, his whole enterprise tilted further toward being a concentration camp for that set of detainees,” she wrote. “And even for those who had been convicted of crimes, it was a harrowing, often deadly experience.”
Pitzer said Trump pardoning Arpaio legitimized the 85-year-old former sheriff’s operation.
“When it was just Arpaio and his deputies doing it, it was a freelance, loose-cannon operation. What happened yesterday is that the President of the United States put his position behind it and used executive power to bless these tactics,” she wrote. “Historically, when this kind of thing has happened, it’s encouraged other people to take up the same tactics. I think we need to hear from the Department of Justice whether official guidance is forthcoming about the use of these strategies by law enforcement.”
The White House said Friday Arpaio deserved a pardon because of his history in law enforcement. Trump has faced widespread criticism for his decision to pardon Arpaio, including from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).
Saturday, August 26, 2017
Friday, August 25, 2017
RAVENNA PRESS
Always awesome work available from here, Kathryn has been posting some new titles lately (and she's an excellent writer, too), but never forget the classics......
Thursday, August 24, 2017
a headful of soul
5000 miles away and drunk
and
how many more years untili don’t care anymore?
how many pieces of the
one true cross still need
to be foundbefore we can crucify each other?
or maybe you believe
that all pain fades
maybe i laugh while
the nails are driven home
if it gets to the point where
one of us has to bleed,i will always choose you
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
FUCKTARD NAZI SPEAKS, ASSWIPE JERKOFFS LISTEN
57 MOST OUTRAGEOUS QUOTES FROM HIS ARIZONA SPEECH
Analysis by Chris Cillizza, CNN Editor-at-large
So many people love me -- it's hard to fit them all in the building!
But, try!
3. "You know I'd love it if the cameras could show this
crowd, because it is rather incredible. It is incredible."
For the record: The cameras always show the crowd. Have for
months and years.
4. "We went to center stage almost from day one in the
debates. We love those debates."
The election ended 287 days ago, as of last night.
For a second, you might have been tricked into thinking that Trump was going to return to the message of unity and
justice he laid out at the start of his Afghanistan speech on Monday
night. Spoiler alert: He wasn't.
6. "We all share the same home, the same dreams and the
same hopes for a better future. A wound inflicted upon one member of our
community is a wound inflicted upon us all."
The second sentence of this is verbatim from his speech on Monday. But as the rest of Trump's
speech shows, these are just words to him. He reads them but doesn't understand
them. Or believe them.
7. "I see all those red hats and white hats. It's all
happening very fast. It's called: 'Make America Great Again.'"
Trump conflates a call to unity and an end to divisiveness with
supporting him. The country is coming together because lots of people at a
campaign rally have "MAGA" hats on!
8. "Just like (the media doesn't) want to report that I
spoke out forcefully against hatred, bigotry and violence and strongly
condemned the neo-Nazis, the White Supremacists, and the KKK."
[narrator voice]: He didn't.
9. "So here is my first statement when I heard about
Charlottesville -- and I have a home in Charlottesville, a lot of people don't
know."
Follow this logic: The media says I didn't condemn the white
supremacists and neo-Nazis in Charlottesville. I did -- because I have a house
there, which many people don't know.
10. "So here's what I said, really fast, here's what I said
on Saturday: 'We're closely following the terrible events unfolding in
Charlottesville, Virginia' -- this is me speaking. 'We condemn in the
strongest, possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and
violence.' That's me speaking on Saturday."
This is what he actually said (italics/bolding mine): "We
condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred,
bigotry and violence, on many sides. On many sides. It's been
going on for a long time in our country. Not Donald Trump, not Barack Obama.
This has been going on for a long, long time."
Which is not the same thing. At all.
11. "I think I can't do much better, right?"
No, you could have done much, much better. Just ask your own
party -- the vast majority of which condemned your Charlottesville comments.
Also, Trump is always doing great!
12. "I hope they're showing how many people are in this
room, but they won't"
[narrator voice]: They were.
13. "I call them anarchists. Because, believe me, we have
plenty of anarchists. They don't want to talk about the anarchists."
Believe me, I know anarchists. The best anarchists. Bigly.
14. "If you're reading a story about somebody, you don't
know. You assume it's honest, because it's like the failing New York Times,
which is like so bad. It's so bad."
I have no idea what Trump's point is here. But MAN, the New York
Times is failing, right?!?!?
15. "Or the Washington Post, which I call a lobbying tool
for Amazon, OK, that's a lobbying tool for Amazon."
Amazon doesn't own the Washington Post. Jeff Bezos does.
16. "Or CNN, which is so bad and so pathetic, and their
ratings are going down."
17. "I mean, CNN is really bad, but ABC this morning -- I
don't watch it much, but I'm watching in the morning, and they have little
George Stephanopoulos talking to Nikki Haley, right? Little George."
A few things: 1. Trump watches TV constantly. 2. "Little
George": Trump as bully-in-chief.
18. "I didn't say I love you because you're black, or I
love you because you're white, or I love you because you're from Japan, or
you're from China, or you're from Kenya, or you're from Scotland or Sweden. I
love all the people of our country."
19. "How about -- how about all week they're talking about
the massive crowds that are going to be outside. Where are they? Well, it's hot
out. It is hot. I think it's too warm."
It was warm! (105 or so.) But, again, multiple media reports --
including CNN's -- show that there were thousands of protesters.
20. "You know, they show up in the helmets and the black
masks, and they've got clubs and they've got everything -- Antifa!"
My favorite line of the speech -- especially "Antifa!"
which Trump shouts. (Also, you must watch this until the end.
Trust me.)
21. "Then I said, racism is evil. Do they report that I
said that racism is evil?"
[narrator voice]: They did.
22. "Now they only choose, you know, like a half a sentence
here or there and then they just go on this long rampage, or they put on these
real lightweights all around a table that nobody ever heard of, and they all
say what a bad guy I am."
This was the second paragraph of CNN's story about Trump's August 14 statement on
Charlottesville:
"Racism is evil -- and those who cause violence in its name
are criminals and thugs, including KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and
other hate groups are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans,"
Trump said in response to the attacks in Charlottesville, Virginia, over the
weekend.
23. "But, I mean do you ever see anything -- and then you
wonder why CNN is doing relatively poorly in the ratings"
See #16.
24. "But with me, they wanted me to say it, and I said it.
And I said it very clearly, but they refused to put it on."
The issue was that Trump said -- on Saturday, August 12, and
then again on Tuesday, August 15 -- that the violence and hate on display in
Charlottesville was "on many sides" and then that "both
sides" were responsible for it. And, the news media didn't condemn Trump
for that; it was his own party who did that.
25. "I hit him with neo-Nazi. I hit them with everything. I
got the white supremacists, the neo-Nazi. I got them all in there, let's say.
KKK, we have KKK. I got them all."
This is revealing in a way Trump doesn't mean it to be. He views
the naming of the KKK and the neo-Nazis who were responsible for this violence
as a box-checking exercise. I said their names -- so what's the problem?! (Of
course,Trump didn't call out these groups in his initial statement on Saturday,
which was the problem.)
26. "So then the last one, on Tuesday -- Tuesday I did
another one: 'We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display
of hatred, bigotry and violence. It has no place in America.'
Trump was actually quoting from his Saturday remarks in these
Tuesday comments. And, in that same August 15 press conference, he
said this: "I think there's blame on both sides. You look at -- you look
at both sides. I think there's blame on both sides. And I have no doubt about
it, and you don't have any doubt about it either."
27. "So that was my words."
Over 2,000 of them in fact. All dedicated to rewriting what he
actually said about Charlottesville.
28. "Now, you know, I was a good student. I always hear
about the elite. You know, the elite. They're elite? I went to better schools
than they did. I was a better student than they were. I live in a bigger, more
beautiful apartment, and I live in the White House, too, which is really
great."
Always remember this fundamental truth about Trump: He has
always felt like the guy on the outside looking in, the guy people wouldn't
accept in their social circles and wouldn't let into their club. Stuffing it in
all of their faces is the primal motivation for everything in his life. Hence
all the bragging about what he has and what he's done. Related: Trump and Ric Flair have a lot in common --
including the hair.
29. "The words were perfect. They only take out anything
they can think of, and for the most part, all they do is complain. But they
don't put on those words. And they don't put on me saying those words."
Trump is not sorry. Not ever. He has convinced himself that what
he said initially about Charlottesville was "perfect." And, I realize
this may be getting repetitive, but the media reported every word Trump said
about Charlottesville. Period. The end.
30. "And yes, by the way -- and yes, by the way, they are
trying to take away our history and our heritage. You see that."
This is demagogic language from Trump about the media.
"They" are trying to rob us of "our history and our
heritage." You don't have to look very hard to see racial and ethnic
coding in that language.
31. "I really think they don't like our country. I really
believe that."
Trump's claim that the media doesn't "like" America is
hugely offensive. Offensive and dangerous. Imagine ANY other president saying
anything close to this -- and what the reaction would be.
32. "Look back there, the live red lights. They're turning
those suckers off fast out there. They're turning those lights off fast."
[narrator voice]: They weren't.
33. "CNN does not want its falling viewership to watch what
I'm saying tonight, I can tell you."
See #16.
34. "If I don't have social media, I probably would not be
standing."
Same.
35. "They'll say, 'Donald Trump is in a Twitter-storm.'
These are sick people."
Your guess is as good as mine.
36. "You would think -- you would think they'd want to make
our country great again, and I honestly believe they don't. I honestly believe
it."
The media, in Trump's telling, is rooting against the country. Let me say again: Rhetoric like this is offensive, dishonest and dangerous.
The media, in Trump's telling, is rooting against the country. Let me say again: Rhetoric like this is offensive, dishonest and dangerous.
37. "The New York Times essentially apologized after I won
the election, because their coverage was so bad, and it was so wrong, and they
were losing so many subscribers that they practically apologized."
[narrator voice] They didn't.
38. "I must tell you, Fox has treated me fairly. Fox
treated me fairly."
"I am watching two clown announcers on @FoxNews as they try
to build up failed presidential candidate #LittleMarco. Fox News is in the
bag!" -- Donald Trump, March 2016
39. "How good is Hannity? How good is Hannity? And he's a
great guy, and he's an honest guy. And 'Fox and Friends in the Morning' is the
best show, and it's the absolute, most honest show, and it's the show I
watch."
Simple truth: Trump likes Hannity and "Fox and
Friends" because they say nice things about him. He likes people who like him.
40. "Oh, those cameras are going off. Wow. That's the one
thing, they're very nervous to have me on live television."
[narrator voice] They weren't. And, they aren't.
41. "I'm a person that wants to tell the truth. I'm an
honest person, and what I'm saying, you know is exactly right."
According to the Washington Post, Trump has made more than 1,000
misstatements since being sworn in as president on January 20.
42. "You've got people outside, but not very many."
He is obsessed with crowd size. Obsessed.
43. "So, was Sheriff Joe convicted for doing his job?"
44. "He should have had a jury, but you know what? I'll
make a prediction. I think he's going to be just fine, OK?"
The "pardon" tease! Make sure to stay tuned for next
week's episode!
45. "It was like 115 degrees. I'm out signing autographs
for an hour. I was there. That was a hot day."
It was hot. But I am still very popular. Extremely popular.
Believe me.
(And for what it's worth, CNN White House reporter Kevin Liptak
emails: "It was 106 degrees and he spent no more than 25 minutes shaking
hands.")
46. "But believe me, if we have to close down our
government, we're building that wall."
"Let me say it again, no more government shutdowns."
-- Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, August 2015
47. "'Extreme vetting' -- I came up with that term."
...he says proudly.
48. "And we have to speak to Mitch and we have to speak to
everybody."
49. "But, you know, they all said, Mr. President, your
speech was so good last night, please, please, Mr. President don't mention any
names. So I won't. I won't. No I won't vote -- one vote away, I will not
mention any names. Very presidential, isn't' it? Very presidential."
This is Trump taking a shot at John McCain, who is currently
battling brain cancer, for voting against the repeal and replace health care
legislation. It's also Trump showing how closely he reads press coverage and
how he likes to openly flout suggestions of being more
"presidential."
50. "And nobody wants me to talk about your other senator,
who's weak on borders, weak on crime, so I won't talk about him. Nobody wants
me to talk about him. Nobody knows who the hell he is."
Jeff Flake is a sitting Republican senator. Trump is running him
down in his home state at a campaign rally less than a week removed from
touting one of his primary challengers on Twitter.
51. "Did you see Gruber got fired yesterday? He got fired
because he defrauded somebody or something. Something very bad happened. Check
it out. Something happened."
Jonathan Gruber didn't get "fired." The Vermont attorney general's
office settled a case with him after a two-plus year investigation into whether
he had committed billing fraud.
52. "One vote -- speak to your senator, please. Speak to
your senator."
McCain cast one of the deciding votes on health care. But he's not
going to name names!
53. "I think we've gotten more than anybody, including
Harry Truman, who was number one, but they will tell you we've got none."
This claim is -- wait for it -- not entirely true.
54. "But Kim Jong Un, I respect the fact that I believe he
is starting to respect us. I respect that fact very much. Respect that
fact."
Respect. That. Fact.
55. "I don't believe that any president has accomplished as
much as this president in the first six or seven months. I really don't believe
it."
Trump believes that by saying things, he wills them into existence and truth.
Trump believes that by saying things, he wills them into existence and truth.
He doesn't.
56. "They're trying to take away our culture. They are
trying to take away our history."
[dog whistle]
57. "So I think we'll end up probably terminating NAFTA at
some point, OK? Probably."
Way to throw a major policy pronouncement into the end of a speech while negotiations are ongoing!
Way to throw a major policy pronouncement into the end of a speech while negotiations are ongoing!
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