From earlier today...


I refuse to 'other' those who for whatever reason haven't vaxed.

I refuse to participate in the President's 'Minute Of Hate' on my fellow Americans.
I refuse to divide this country into the HAVES and the HAVE NOTS.
This is not normal.
This is not good.

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One commenter said this: David Burkhead
"like they're vermin". The word you're looking for is "untermenschen".

What if... (update 1.1)

What if Biden's* latest vaccine mandate is more than just a drive to vaccinate everyone?

To vax or to not to vax is a complex decision best left to the individual and their personal circumstances.  While I may not agree with either absolutist position... it is just that - a personal decision.  Name, Shame, Require is not a persuasive method of increasing those vaccinated.  I am 100% opposed to REQUIRED vaccinations for this virus.

With views on the virus so political for no reason other than to be political and 'FUCK ORANGE MAGGOTS!!', what if this is just a thinly veiled political purge?

The breakdown of those supposedly not wanting the vax in popular culture are Trump voters and those who lean Trump, even though it is much more complex than that.

If you require all government employees to vax or lose their job, those who are principled will quit rather than vax, you have effectively set up a soft purge.  Disagree and still vax?  They broke your will and compromised you.

Why defund the police when you can get the smart ones to quit?  No social influencer can remain among the unvaxed

Have a company with over 100?  Is it cheaper to vax (at government expense) or purge everyone unvaxed?  How much time, effort, production time to test everyone?  It's a simple business decision made under coercion. 

Cost of documentation and compliance? That's for little companies to worry about!

Want an acquiescent military Require under punishment this vax.  Hesitant or opposed - there is the doorSupposedly this has happened.

https://grabien.com/story.php?id=349545

Purge the gatekeepers to the officer ranks and you prevent a coup or countercoup...

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This virus is here.

It isn't going away.

Messaging has been horrendous

You can't vax your way out anymore, that is long gone.

Minimize your exposure - like the flu - protect the vulnerable.

We are NOT going to EVER have ZERO infections and ZERO deaths. 

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What to do?

ResistEvery way possibleTo the gates of hell!!

You know what kind of companies are small-ish but employ over 100 workers?  Trucking companies. They can shut down, take extended breaks, or stop driving into areas that require a vax card, and where does that leave you when you need to stock up on TP?  How about an active strike by blocking roads?  Pretty easy to shut down most metro areas with a few dozen trucks. 

That is just one example... now use the same model for port workers or worse.

The establishment GOP will 'SUE THEM!!1!', but that takes time, effort, and lots of fundraising (interesting how that works).  They are not serious.  Direct action?  Depends on your definition of it is, I suppose.  Protesting seems to have worked in Portland.  This is where I start drawing lines, but it also seems that no one else has the same civil constraints I do.

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We live in troubling times, and it only takes a single spark to get things going.  A shooting of an unvaxed protester, mass firings due to vax status, a clever pundit to turn a phrase... things can change fast and some know it.

I have pleaded in the past for those pushing the boundaries to step back, because the pendulum always swings back and gains momentum.

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Is the Republic in trouble? 


 


Five years ago, I gave it a 1% chance (black swans, you know...), but now I am up to +10%.

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UPDATE:
There are many exceptions to these rules.  Again, it is political patronage run amok that postal workers and certain teachers are exempt, but not kids and postal patrons.  The politics of this is just aggravating.
\



There is something wrong with the President. Info below:

 This is a thing - Showtime:

"The best description I've found is
"The ability (probably sub-conscious) to be able to suppress the symptoms of dementia for short periods of time when social occasions demand it. Usually this is in the presence of authority figures, medical staff and relatives who they do not see often. It takes a great deal of mental effort, can only be maintained for short periods of time (which gets less as the dementia progresses) and leaves them exhausted afterwards.""

He has a 'shuffle' when he walks:
"While patients with Alzheimer's disease typically have quantitative gait impairment, those with other forms of dementia often manifest more overt, qualitative changes to walking."



The result of this is many fold.
1) Constitutional crisis may occur when the 25th Amendment starts getting seriously discussed. Guaranteed it is being discussed right now at the highest levels.
2) Loss of faith with allies. Briton and Germany are already openly discussing that the USA is an unreliable partner. Long term, this will cause conflict... European jockeying for power will lead to conflict on the continent not seen in 70+ years of American leadership. Throw Russia in there as a spoiler and it starts getting ugly fast.
3) China - already gearing up for war on Taiwan. Like your iPhone, computer, internet? It is a lot tougher to have those things when all the chips and assembly are done in one of those two locations. Onshoring is a thing, but it has a LOT of catching up to do.
4) Domestically, who is in charge? If Congress had it's act together, they would regain some or all of their power that they ceded to the Executive branch. They won't, so again, who is in charge?
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Short term (3-4 years) it is going to be UGLY.

This stuff used to be a joke...

 https://notthebee.com/article/this-is-a-real-quote-from-a-major-health-website-really-im-not-joking

But no more.

This is a real quote from a major health website. Really -- I'm not joking!

Article Image

The headline wasn't clickbait. This is a real article from health website Healthline.

The article is a long, nauseating piece on the specifics of lesbian sex and various terms. I wouldn't recommend it as a wholesome, moral read.

This one quote is just a blurb in the wider article, but it highlights the actual insanity underpinning the entire woke worldview.

How is it possible for two women to get pregnant by each other, you ask?

Why, one of them is a man, of course! Try to keep up, you bigot.

If one partner is transgender and has a penis and the other is cisgender and has a vagina, they can have penis-in-vagina sex.

In many cases, this means that pregnancy is possible.

Yes, you did just witness reality unravel before your eyes.

What a laughable clown show we're living in!

Boiling The Frog In South Africa

 https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/boiling-the-frog-in-south-africa/


President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa is now claiming that the unrest that has wracked his country since July 9 is an organized insurrection. “It is clear now that the events of the past week were nothing less than a deliberate, coordinated, and well-planned attack on our democracy,” he said in an address to the nation. Twelve “persons of interest” have been identified, he said, and at least one of these ringleaders has already been taken into custody.

It would be convenient for Ramaphosa if this eruption of lawlessness, which has left more than 200 dead and threatened food and gas supplies in the provinces of Gauteng and KwaZulu Natal, were the work of a dozen malcontents. It would even be tolerable if it were a political protest aimed at freeing former president Jacob Zuma, whose arrest in connection with corruption charges was the spark for the riots.

Unfortunately, talk of an “insurrection” is a distraction from the real cause of the violence, which is deeper and harder to solve. South African society has been lurching toward dysfunction for a long time. This month’s violence is a sign that the country’s chronic problems may have finally reached a breaking point.

Since the beginning of African National Congress (ANC) rule in 1994, South Africa has been the anticolonial movement’s great success story. While other African countries fell victim to coups and civil wars, South Africa carried on. Yes, it was a one-party state, corruption was rife, violent crime was out of control, and unemployment hovered between 25 and 33 percent—but somehow the country muddled through.

Alas, muddling through is a tactic that can only work for so long. There are about 14 million registered taxpayers in South Africa, out of a population of nearly 60 million. The bulk of income tax revenue comes from just 574,000 individuals. The ANC’s wager has always been that this tiny tax base could be squeezed for all it’s worth in order to fund lavish social benefits for the rest of the population.

Ramaphosa has articulated this gamble explicitly, according to the posthumous memoir of Mario Oriani-Ambrosini, a longtime MP for the Inkatha Freedom Party who died in 2014. During negotiations over the post-apartheid constitution in 1994, Ambrosini wrote, “Ramaphosa told me of the ANC’s 25-year strategy to deal with the whites: it would be like boiling a frog alive, which is done by raising the temperature very slowly.” Under majority rule, “the black majority would pass laws transferring wealth, land, and economic power from white to black slowly and incrementally, until the whites lost all they had gained in South Africa, but without taking too much from them at any given time to cause them to rebel or fight.”

Ramaphosa got the timing right, give or take a few years, but he forgot about the third option: Rather than fight or stay and be boiled, the white minority could always just pick up and leave. When Nelson Mandela came to power, doomsayers predicted a mass exodus similar to that of the Algerian pieds-noirs. Contrary to forecasts, millions of white South Africans stayed, either because they were committed to making the “Rainbow Nation” experiment work or simply because they were too settled to emigrate. That generation is now dying, and their children are constrained by no such inertia.

For a long time, South Africa’s natural resource wealth worked in the ANC’s favor. Gold and diamonds are where they are; you can’t outsource a mine the way you can a factory. However, in 2020, AngloGold Ashanti, a successor company of Anglo American, sold its last remaining operations in South Africa, which meant the end of an unbroken streak that had lasted since Ernest Oppenheimer founded the company a century ago. Even a mining firm’s patience has limits.

The taxpaying minority’s endurance might be greater if in exchange for their money they received basic services, but these days they cannot even count on the electricity staying on. Every suburban home in Johannesburg has a generator in case of “load shedding,” or unscheduled blackouts. Most also have high walls topped with barbed wire or motion sensors. With the police unable or unwilling to do anything about break-ins and robberies, home security has become a luxury for those who can afford to buy their own. South Africa has three times as many private security guards as police.

Last week, Defense Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula admitted that government forces did not even try to protect shopping malls from looters because they assumed private security would take care of it. “It never occurred to us that we should move to areas such as malls, particularly because in malls, anywhere, there is always a contract between business itself and private security companies,” she explained. Even if order is restored, a dangerous lesson has been learned about the state’s inability to perform the basic functions of government in a crisis.

When the historian R.W. Johnson published his book How Long Will South Africa Survive? in 2015, he was mocked for his sensationalist title. All of the problems cited in the book—corruption, tribal tensions, a bloated public sector, gangsterism, political assassinations—had been around for years without turning South Africa into a failed state, critics said. But time may yet prove Johnson right. Ramaphosa is a weak president, well suited to a caretaker regime. If he pardons Zuma, as some have urged him to do, he might be able to end the current violence and restore the pre-COVID status quo. The question is how long that status quo can last. It is not sustainable forever.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Helen Andrews is a senior editor at The American Conservative, and the author of BOOMERS: The Men and Women Who Promised Freedom and Delivered Disaster (Sentinel, January 2021). She has worked at the Washington Examiner and National Review, and as a think tank researcher at the Centre for Independent Studies in Sydney, Australia. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Religious Studies from Yale University. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, First Things, The Claremont Review of Books, Hedgehog Review, and many others. You can follow her on Twitter at @herandrews.