Tuesday, October 13, 2015
at this moment, the kochtopus is the only viable resistance to the deep state
By CNu at October 13, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Kochtopus , micro-insurgencies
Monday, October 12, 2015
no love for the bloody, cruel conquered or the bloody cruel conquerors...,
By CNu at October 12, 2015 0 comments
Labels: American Original , History's Mysteries , necropolitics , Race and Ethnicity
you can start building that wall any time now...,
By CNu at October 12, 2015 0 comments
Labels: ethology , History's Mysteries , necropolitics , Race and Ethnicity
Sunday, October 11, 2015
another hopefully the last long-winded stream of consciousness ramble signifying nothing...,
By CNu at October 11, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , not a good look
overseer execution of tamir rice was reasonable?
By CNu at October 11, 2015 0 comments
Labels: doesn't end well , necropolitics , Rule of Law , shameless
Saturday, October 10, 2015
or else what?
- WE want Justice for Blacks in America who have given America 460 years of sweat and blood to make her rich and powerful.
- We want an immediate end to police brutality and mob attacks.
- WE want Justice for the Native American Indians.
- We want Justice for the Mexican and Latinos.
- We want Justice for Women.
- We want Justice for the Poor.
- We want Justice for the Incarcerated.
- We want Justice for Veterans.
- We want Land
By CNu at October 10, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , Race and Ethnicity
reconquista been underway for a minute...,
By CNu at October 10, 2015 0 comments
Labels: civil war , musical chairs , neofeudalism , Race and Ethnicity , What Now?
Friday, October 09, 2015
the scientist and the church
By CNu at October 09, 2015 0 comments
Labels: ethology , Peak Capitalism , truth , What IT DO Shawty...
male general intelligence does not increase female sexual attraction...,
By CNu at October 09, 2015 0 comments
Labels: ethology , killer-ape , truth , What IT DO Shawty...
totally misses the point: N-1 is an in-group marker for human breeding populations...,
By CNu at October 09, 2015 0 comments
Labels: ethology , scientific morality , truth , What IT DO Shawty...
Thursday, October 08, 2015
N-1 a literal diseased state?
The modern anthropological view on religion is that it is a cultural meme that replicates through social communication [44]. While the meme itself may influence behavior, religious icons are known to be vectors of infectious diseases [45]. Most major religions have rituals that are likely to promote the transmission of infections. This includes circumcision [46], Christian common communion chalice [46], the Hindu ‘side-roll’[46] and Islamic ritual ablution [46] as well as the Hajj congregation in Mecca [47]. For example, the latter is specifically associated with outbreaks of meningococcal disease [48].
Thus it is possible that various religious practices could represent biomemes: manifestations of a symbiosis between informational memes [54] and biological organisms. This concept is somewhat similar to the fictional midichlorians of the Jedi Order from the popular series “Star Wars”[55].
Two particular parts of the human body seem to be most promising for the search of behavior-altering parasites. First of all, the human gut microbiome may be of interest in light of the microbiome-gut-brain axis concept. Another promising area to search for behavioraltering parasites is the human brain. Several organisms that can bypass the mammalian blood–brain barrier and produce a latent infection without obvious symptoms are currently known. In mice with latent toxoplasmosis, Toxoplasma gondii cysts can be found in various regions of the brain, especially in the olfactory bulb, the entorhinal, somatosensory, motor and orbital, frontal association and visual cortices, the hippocampus and the amygdala [56]. In humans the brain also appears to be an important site for Toxoplasma gondii cyst formation and the parasite is capable of infecting a variety of brain cells, including astrocytes and neurons [57-59].
By CNu at October 08, 2015 0 comments
Labels: microbiome , microcosmos , Tard Bidnis , What IT DO Shawty...
behavioral transplants: tards are full of _______ - but there may be a simple solution...,
By CNu at October 08, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery
the business model consists in fleecing credulous geeks with more money than sense...,
By CNu at October 08, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery
Wednesday, October 07, 2015
open thread - do my "smart" frog friends feel the west coast pot getting hot yet?
Overseers in every municipality are being put to the test to maintain civility. City councils are passing severe ordinances which prohibit camping, sitting on sidewalks, curbs or the ground, no loitering, no panhandling etc. The Mount Shasta situation has been exasperated given two years with no snow, so what was once a very inhospitable winter climate just a few years ago, now affords year round camping and hanging outdoors.
Rationing 2000 gallons over five or six days is tough.
"It’s hard,” she said.
It takes $38 million dollars from the state’s Emergency Drought Relief Program to pay for the town’s drinking water and fill residents’ water tanks. (1700 residents)
Isn't anyone else surprised or annoyed that a household in Central California can't make it on 2500 gallons of H2O each week?
Isn't anyone else incredulous that California is paying $38,000,000 to truck water to just 1700 folks?
Who was it that said, "Are humans smarter than yeast?"
By CNu at October 07, 2015 0 comments
Labels: reality casualties , wikileaks wednesday
they not getting mine!!!
Business has been brisk for Larry Hyatt, owner of Hyatt Guns in North Carolina, since the Oregon community college shooting last week that left 10 people dead, including the 26-year-old suspect.
Mr Hyatt saw an even bigger surge in customers after the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut that left 26 people dead, including 20 children, before the gunman killed himself.
...
However, the calls for tighter gun laws lead to an increase in weapons sales. “Once the public hears the president on the news say we need more gun controls, it tends to drive sales,” said Mr Hyatt, who owns one of the largest gun retailers in the US. “People think, if I don’t get a gun now, it might be difficult to get one in the future. The store is crowded.”
“We don’t want our business to be based on tragedy but we have to deal with what we have no control over,” Mr Hyatt said. “And after these shootings and then the calls for tougher gun laws, we see a buying rush.”
By CNu at October 07, 2015 0 comments
Labels: American Original , killer-ape , What IT DO Shawty...
more whiskey, bacon, and whyte wymyn for me...,
By CNu at October 07, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Cathedral , Tard Bidnis
Tuesday, October 06, 2015
cali overseers been putting in work, but with 40 million of y'all, it's just a drop in the bucket...,
By CNu at October 06, 2015 0 comments
Labels: musical chairs , quorum sensing? , Rule of Law
40 million of you fractious humans foolishly packed into the desert make a fascinating study in peak resource collapse
A bit ago I wrote, regarding climate and tipping points:
The concept of "tipping point" — a change beyond which there's no turning back — comes up a lot in climate discussions. An obvious tipping point involves polar ice. If the earth keeps warming — both in the atmosphere and in the ocean — at some point a full and permanent melt of Arctic and Antarctic ice is inevitable. Permanent ice first started forming in the Antarctic about 35 million years ago, thanks to global cooling which crossed a tipping point for ice formation. That's not very long ago. During the 200 million years before that, the earth was too warm for permanent ice to form, at least as far as we know.
We're now going the other direction, rewarming the earth, and permanent ice is increasingly disappearing, as you'd expect. At some point, permanent ice will be gone. At some point before that, its loss will be inevitable. Like the passengers in the car above, its end may not have come — yet — but there's no turning back....
I think the American Southwest is beyond a tipping point for available fresh water. I've written several times — for example, here — that California and the Southwest have passed "peak water," that the most water available to the region is what's available now. We can mitigate the severity of decline in supply (i.e., arrest the decline at a less-bad place by arresting its cause), and we can adapt to whatever consequences can't be mitigated.
But we can no longer go back to plentiful fresh water from the Colorado River watershed. That day is gone, and in fact, I suspect most in the region know it, even though it's not yet reflected in real estate prices.
"For the first time in 120 years, winter average minimum temperature in the Sierra Nevada was above freezing"
My comment, that "most in the region know it," is anecdotal. What you're about to read below isn't. Hunter Cutting, writing at Huffington Post, notes (my emphasis):
With Californians crossing their fingers in hopes of a super El Niño to help end the state's historic drought, California's water agency just delivered some startling news: for the first time in 120 years of record keeping, the winter average minimum temperature in the Sierra Nevada was above freezing. And across the state, the last 12 months were the warmest on record. This explains why the Sierra Nevada snow pack that provides nearly 30% of the state's water stood at its lowest level in at least 500 years this last winter despite precipitation levels that, while low, still came in above recent record lows. The few winter storms of the past two years were warmer than average and tended to produce rain, not snow. And what snow fell melted away almost immediately.
Thresholds matter when it comes to climate change. A small increase in temperature can have a huge impact on natural systems and human infrastructure designed to cope with current weather patterns and extremes. Only a few inches of extra rain can top a levee protecting against flood. Only a degree of warming can be the difference between ice-up and navigable water, between snow pack and bare ground.
By CNu at October 06, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Irreplaceable Natural Material Resources , reality casualties , What Now?
really bad karma to go from one unsustainable dustbowl to another...,
By CNu at October 06, 2015 0 comments
Labels: FAIL , Irreplaceable Natural Material Resources , Living Memory , What Now?
Monday, October 05, 2015
net of suicides, the hon.bro.preznit's telling a bald-faced whopper
By CNu at October 05, 2015 0 comments
Labels: agenda , elite , establishment , Obamamandian Imperative
is the 2nd amendment a gun-control amendment?
The right the Court announces [in Heller] was not “enshrined” in the Second Amendment by the Framers; it is the product of today’s law-changing decision. . . . Until today, it has been understood that legislatures may regulate the civilian use and misuse of firearms so long as they do not interfere with the preservation of a well-regulated militia. The Court’s announcement of a new constitutional right to own and use firearms for private purposes upsets that settled understanding . . .
By CNu at October 05, 2015 0 comments
single mothers of delta males are causing these mass shootings...,
By CNu at October 05, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Ass Clownery , Cathedral
Sunday, October 04, 2015
hyparchic folding and reality mechanics at the microcosmic scale
By CNu at October 04, 2015 0 comments
Labels: as above-so below , computationalism , microcosmos
Saturday, October 03, 2015
homo evolutis
By CNu at October 03, 2015 0 comments
Labels: What Now?
Friday, October 02, 2015
why the negro/black digest had to go, and why black media is no mo....,
In many of his works, Amartya Sen has correctly pointed out the links that exist between many kinds of freedom. One of the most important is the connection between democratic participation, political freedom, and the structure of the media. This is important because Sen argues that direct or representative democracy prevents catastrophic famine. (Sen 1999, 2009) He has also forcefully argued that political participation is important in its own right.
In order to reap the full benefits of democracy, Sen has argued that it is crucial have a free press that allows for the free flow of ideas. The free press helps a society decide which policies to pursue, since these discussions lead to the direct consideration of the goals that society thinks are worthwhile. These discussions also shape a society, because they inform citizens how it might be best to pursue goals that are already settled on. On this point, I agree with Sen.
However, there is a problem. Authors like Robert McChesney have argued that the ownership structure of media companies limits debate over economic and political policy. In the U.S., the primary concern seems to be the potential for corporate censorship, while in other parts of the world the main problem appears to be government censorship.
For the U.S., the argument goes like this. Media companies such as Disney, Fox, and Turner have direct economic interests. Large media companies are large corporations, and they sell advertising to other large corporations. Management of these large corporations has the responsibility to run the firms as profitably as they can. This is both a competitive requirement, and in some ways a legal one. One could argue that these firms have to please two masters, their shareholders and their audience. Management is often legally bound to serve shareholders first in case of a conflict between shareholder interests and other competing interests, such as those of employees or the audience. The corporate structure of these firms gives them an economic incentive to consider the financial consequences to the corporation of any particular story, regardless of its truth or potential social importance even if they maintain a strict separation between the news division and other divisions. Important aspects of any debate over social, political, and economic policy may be sidestepped because of corporate organization and the accompanying incentives. For example, Stromberg (2004) developed a model that describes the links between the mass media, political competition, and the resulting public policy. The emergence of the mass media “may introduce a bias in favor of groups that are valuable to advertisers, which might introduce a bias against the poor and the old.” (Stromberg 2004, 281)
By CNu at October 02, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Living Memory , presstitution
works progress administration 2.0
Public works become closely interlinked to social programs in contemporary democracies under the tension of various kinds of identity politics of exclusion and inclusion. It has the potential to alleviate these tensions and contrariwise, if badly conceived such programs can also heighten such tensions. This paper explores new frontiers of public works program from this viewpoint; and investigates how public work programs can be effective in combating labour market problems in economically and socially meaningful ways. The paper consists of six parts. The second part, after this introduction, reviews briefly the theoretical debate of market mechanism and unemployment related to classical and Keynesian paradigms regarding voluntary and involuntary unemployment and their policy implications. Section three draws a clear distinction between Keynesian demand management and new public works programs with emphasis on the distinction between demand side and supply side of the problem. Section four focuses on two issues which could be the basis for demarcating new employment policies, i.e. public works programs with and without skill components relating it to questions of benefits, externality and labour productivity. Section five discusses the principle of finance sharing of public works programs and its possible effects on inflation and private investment. In the last section, we conclude with a discussion of possible inclusion benefits of newly designed public works programs.
By CNu at October 02, 2015 0 comments
Labels: People Centric Leadership
much inequality has been caused by politically-induced decisions
The interaction between exogenous and endogenous drivers of inequality is of particular interest. At first sight the global trend towards increasing inequality across developed and developing economies suggests that exogenous forces are the main driver of inequality. However, the impact of exogenous drivers can be counteracted or reinforced by national policies and are thus highly country-specific. For example the experience of most countries in Latin America which successfully reduced inequality while being subject to the same exogenous drivers as other countries, suggests that countries do have the means to reduce inequality. One major influence on inequality are the policies adopted (or not adopted) by the respective governments. Those vary considerably across regions and countries and alter the distribution of income significantly. It is argued that the political dimension as an endogenous driver of inequality has been neglected to the benefit of economic-based explanations. Some political scientists and sociologists have explored possible political explanations of increasing inequality (DiNardo, Fortin, and Lemieux 1995; Bartels 2010; DiPrete 2007; Rosenthal 2004), while economists have mostly neglected the role of the political.
How and to what extent the political dimension has contributed to increasing inequality has been under-researched. In order to analyse the political causes of increasing inequality the U.S. has been chosen as a case study. The research question reads as follows: Which factors are the main drivers of income inequality in the U.S.? The U.S. is of particular interest because the country has experienced a sharp increase of inequality relative to other countries. In addition to that the U.S. is one of the few countries where continuous and reliable data is available. This enables the analysis and comparison of the changing patterns of income inequality from the early 1950s onwards.
Partly, as it is argued, inequality has been caused by politically induced decisions. Certain policies, such as the decreased support for unions and tax cuts favouring the relatively well-off and corporations, have benefitted a small minority of the population at the expense of the majority and have thus contributed to widening income inequality. It is argued that this particular type of income inequality leads to representational inequality. High and persisting inequality in the U.S. has contributed to the strengthening of an economic elite who have a vested interest and the means to influence policies accordingly which increases and perpetuates inequality. This in turn reduces the purchasing power of the majority of the U.S. population (and hence aggregate demand). Thus, growth stalls also due to decreasing means of purchasing goods and services for the majority, or, contributes to economic and financial instability because the stagnating real wages are compensated by increasing accumulation of debts (Onaran and Galanis 2013, 88).
By CNu at October 02, 2015 0 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy , neofeudalism , What IT DO Shawty...
Thursday, October 01, 2015
give it a minute pedro, believe me, you ain't seen NOTHIN yet...,
By CNu at October 01, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , musical chairs , niggerization
illinois politricians dumber than yeast...,
By CNu at October 01, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Casualties , musical chairs , What Now?
chiraq 311 callers will get used to new delhi english with a hindi accent...,
By CNu at October 01, 2015 0 comments
Labels: contraction , corporatism , professional and managerial frauds
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
BURN THE WITCH!!! she consorteth with the devil and slaughtereth the innocent....,
By CNu at September 30, 2015 0 comments
Labels: Bibtardism , not a good look , Tard Bidnis
watching the necropolitical manueverings of so-called western democracies...,
By CNu at September 30, 2015 0 comments
Labels: medieval , micro-insurgencies , necropolitics , wikileaks wednesday
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theatlantic | The Ku Klux Klan, Ronald Reagan, and, for most of its history, the NRA all worked to control guns. The Founding Fathers...
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Video - John Marco Allegro in an interview with Van Kooten & De Bie. TSMATC | Describing the growth of the mushroom ( boletos), P...
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dailybeast | Of all the problems in America today, none is both as obvious and as overlooked as the colossal human catastrophe that is our...