Well, well, well....it looks like the Musk-Trump Bromance is now over, and MAGA is becoming a circular firing squad as we speak. Get your popcorn 🍿 🍿 🍿 🍿 🍿 😁 😁 😁 😁 😁
(Mic drop)
For those who weren't born Republican, Democrat, or yesterday. We have one and only one agenda: liberty and justice for all. What's yours?
Well, well, well....it looks like the Musk-Trump Bromance is now over, and MAGA is becoming a circular firing squad as we speak. Get your popcorn 🍿 🍿 🍿 🍿 🍿 😁 😁 😁 😁 😁
(Mic drop)
Read this and weep. Then call and email your senators, yesterday! And the senators of other states as well. It's still not too late to stop this from becoming the new law of the land, but that window is closing very, very fast!
One very important philosophical principle is that of Chesterton's Fence, by author G.K. Chesterton.
Per Wikipedia:
"Chesterton's fence" is the principle that reforms should not be made until the reasoning behind the existing state of affairs is understood. The quotation is from Chesterton's 1929 book, The Thing: Why I Am a Catholic, in the chapter, "The Drift from Domesticity":
In the matter of reforming things, as distinct from deforming them, there is one plain and simple principle; a principle which will probably be called a paradox. There exists in such a case a certain institution or law; let us say, for the sake of simplicity, a fence or gate erected across a road. The more modern type of reformer goes gaily up to it and says, "I don't see the use of this; let us clear it away." To which the more intelligent type of reformer will do well to answer: "If you don't see the use of it, I certainly won't let you clear it away. Go away and think. Then, when you can come back and tell me that you do see the use of it, I may allow you to destroy it."
In other words, before you remove or destroy a fence (or policy), make sure you know why it was put up in the first place. That's just common sense.
(Hey DOGE, are you listening? Seriously!)
Of course, the apocryphal "Five Monkeys Experiment" is a good foil to counterbalance that principle. That is, sometimes various policies really have outlived their usefulness, were rotten from the start, and/or do far more harm than good. And wisdom is to know the difference between the two cases.
(The latter pitfall is sometimes called "status quo bias".)
Today's "conservatives", especially Trump, Musk, and MAGA Republicans, are really not conservatives at all, since they really aren't conserving anything. Rather, they are reactionaries and regressives who want to "turn back the clock" to a bygone golden age that never really existed, and are essentially the mirror image of radicals, as they seek to make truly drastic changes. The rash, arbitrary, and wholesale gutting of long-standing government agencies and programs by DOGE under Musk and Trump is but one of many glaring examples of such regressive radicalism, and is thus a willingness to tear down every fence in Chesterton just to manufacture chaos. Or "move fast and break things", as Zuckerberg would call it. And it needs to stop. NOW.
Seriously, Elon, lay off the ketamine and SLOW DOWN! Better yet, STEP DOWN, as NO ONE ever elected you.
Where are the real conservatives when you need them? Because we know THEY would respect Chesterton's Fence.
It is truly stranger than fiction what has happened to our country. Mass deportations, mass firings, chaos manufacturing, tariffs and trade wars, alienating our allies, selling Ukraine down the river to Putin, and so on. And so many Americans are still apparently cool with it, cheering it on, or are callously indifferent to it.
Seriously, WTF is wrong with you? Even President Ronald Reagan is likely spinning in his grave right now.
Today is President's Day, and today we would like to "honor" (to use the term VERY loosely), our two new Co-Presidents: Elon Musk and Vladimir Putin, along with their orange lapdog puppet that they thoroughly own now:
Well, it's finally official. America's new dark age has begun. President Muskrat and his orange puppet and their cronies have taken over, and they basically hold all of the cards now that all three branches of the federal government are doing their bidding. The ONE thing they lack is a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, having less than 60 seats, but that is not much consolation. Especially given how utterly obsequious practically everyone even remotely in Trump's orbit has been lately. I mean, in the previous several months, Congress couldn't even manage to get the No Kings Act passed, which would have limited Trump's power.
Trump wasted no time with his executive pen on Days 1 and 2 of his second term. From pardoning January 6th insurrectionists to cracking down at the border (and attempting mass deportations) to unconstitutionally attempting to end birthright citizenship (!) to pulling out of the Paris climate accords and pulling out of the WHO to rescinding many of Biden's executive orders, to so many other things. Some of the things he is doing are already facing pushback and/or legal challenges which can tie things up for a while, while other things can have near-immediate impacts, mostly negative and often very negative indeed. And other things are just plain silly, like him renaming the Gulf of Mexico the "Gulf of America", for example.
And they're just getting warmed up!
Oh, and by the way, did you see Muskrat giving...wait for it...what looked suspiciously like a Nazi salute (sorry, "Roman" salute), not once, but twice in a row to the innauseation crowd? If it quacks like a duck....
(Remember, the road to fascism is invariably paved with, "Calm down, you're overreacting!", followed by, "Meh, I wasn't really using my civil rights anyway".)
January 20, 2025 will very likely go down in history as "the day that democracy died". But to be brutally honest, it has been on life support for quite a while now, and now the plug has finally been pulled. America has long been an oligarchy, and is now a full-blown plutocracy and kleptocracy without any semblance of shame or any attempt to disguise it any longer. And with increasingly neo-fascist leanings too.
This is, sadly, to be expected in a society that has become so desensitized that it has clearly forgotten how to shudder.
One can only hope that it's always darkest before the dawn. But after seeing so many false dawns in the past, that outlook has gotten rather, well, darker lately.
Winter is coming, in more ways than one. The winter of our discontent, that is. And actually, it's already here now.
It is now 2025, and this year the TSAP will not waste any time giving our annual State of the Planet Address as we do every year. Yes, we know it is a bit of a downer to say the least. So sit down, take off your rose-colored glasses, and read on:
Our planet is in grave danger, and has been for quite some time now. We face several serious long term problems: climate change, deforestation, desertification, loss of biodiversity, overharvesting, energy crises, and of course pollution of many kinds. Polar ice caps are melting. Rainforests have been shrinking by 50 acres per minute. Numerous species are going extinct every year. Soil is eroding rapidly. Food shortages have occurred in several countries in recent years. Weather has been getting crazier each year thanks to climate change. We have had numerous and often record-breaking wildfires, floods followed by long periods of drought, and a "storm of the century" at least once a year for the past several years. And it is only getting worse every year. In fact, 2024 is now officially the hottest year on record. Look no further than the three record-breaking storms in the past 20 years: Katrina (2005, highest storm surge), Sandy (2012, largest diameter), and then Harvey (2017, a 1000-year flood, and overall worst hurricane on record), followed by Irma and Maria which devastated Puerto Rico, for a taste of the not-too-distant future. And that was before Hurricane Michael devastated a rather large chunk of Florida. And the wild weather continues to this very day, with Hurricane Helene having recently ravaged Appalachia (which is typically spared hurricanes), and with the truly horrible and unprecedented Los Angeles wildfires still raging now being essentially a microcosm of what is to come to the world as a whole if we continue on this path of wanton planetary destruction.It's 2025 now, five full years after the "novel coronavirus" that became known as COVID-19 made its official debut. Aside from a few dead-enders and true believers here and there, nearly everyone has long since moved on from the pandemic, which officially ended somewhere between the second half of 2022 and the end of the first half of 2023, depending on the country and whose source you follow.
And just recently, a pair of new studies came out that were pretty damning indeed about practically everything that was done during the pandemic in terms of countermeasures. That's in addition to all of the other studies we at the TSAP have cited over the years.
One new multi-country study found that school closures were basically useless or worse than useless, at least in the long run. Specifically, they found no correlation between school reopenings during ether Delta or Omicron, and trends in adult Covid deaths and hospitalizations. This is especially damning to the narrative because the biggest justification they had was that the school closures weren't to protect the kids themselves so much as to protect the adults around them, consequences to the kids themselves (and boy, were there plenty!) being a mere afterthought. Thus, even on their very own Machiavellian and cold utilitarian terms of essentially using children and teens as human shields to protect adults, such medium- to long-term school closures have clearly been shown to be an EPIC FAIL, and need to be permanently removed from any serious consideration going forward.
Another study, this one in Japan (arguably the mask and jab champions of the world), found that the jabs were also quite counterproductive indeed in terms of contracting the virus. That is, the odds of contracting Covid actually increased with the number of jab doses, which is negative efficacy. Wow. And adjusting for confounders only made this perverse correlation even stronger:
The odds of contracting COVID-19 were higher among vaccinated individuals compared to unvaccinated individuals, with an unadjusted OR of 1.65 (95% CI: 1.27-2.14, p < 0.001) and an adjusted OR of 1.85 (95% CI: 1.33-2.57, p < 0.001).
That explains how Japan, a country with one of the highest jab rates in the world, has had roughly a DOZEN waves (!) of the virus, give or take depending on who's counting, and how the biggest (and deadliest) waves of them all didn't come until AFTER the jabs. Let that sink in. Oops, maybe they should have thought of that possibility BEFORE bringing these jabs to market in the first place.
But wait, there's more! That same Japanese study also looked at other behaviors as well. As one Redditor, MembraneAnomaly, put it so well:
This bit is very interesting:
Preventive behaviors assessed included regular gargling, mask-wearing, bathing frequency, avoiding crowded places, room ventilation, eating habits, sleep patterns, exercise habits, and maintaining humidity in living spaces.
Behavioral analysis indicated that a reduced frequency of bathing and exercising was significantly associated with higher COVID-19 infection rates (p < 0.05).
Now look at the table under "Demographic characteristics" to find p-values for the association between reducing bathing and exercise and contracting COVID (0.016 and 0.01), compared to mask-wearing (0.644) and avoiding crowds (0.664). Nuff said! Stay healthy, exercise, keep clean - and dump the mask!
Great advice indeed, which is basically what used to be called common sense. Which unfortunately, is not nearly as common as it should be. (For those who are unfamiliar with what p-values mean, this means that the effect of masks, even in the land of mask champions, was statistically insignificant, indistinguishable from being due to chance.)
And just in case anyone cries "but source control!", the fact that Japan has still had a dozen or so waves even with all of that masking really puts the lie to that specious claim too.
So jabs and masks are also revealed once again to be useless, and in the case of the former, worse than useless. Again, masking for the general population should also be permanently removed from any serious consideration going forward, and any vaccines in the future for any disease need to be properly designed and properly tested before we even THINK about unleashing them on the public, and certainly never forced or coerced in any way.
And just like with masks, we have already completely laid waste long ago to any case for lockdowns and business closures and and stuff like that as well. Those were the easiest to debunk, in fact. And again, going forward, those need to be removed from any serious consideration as well.
And so once again, like the song says, the official Covid narrative goes up in flames...in 24 frames.
(Mic drop)
UPDATE: One of the very few bright spots in the new Trump regime is that RFK Jr. (if confirmed) would of course be a decent bulwark against this sort of thing happening again under his watch. And while Trump himself is not exactly trustworthy, to put it mildly, he did begin the process of pulling the USA out of the World Health Organization.
Well, it's official. Net Neutrality has been struck down by the 6th Circuit US Court of Appeals on January 2, 2025. While Big Tech, and Big Business in general, are celebrating this as a victory and salivating like a Pavlov's Dog, make no mistake, this is a major loss for We the People. Now internet service providers can rig the internet in favor some people or entities over others via blocking access or varying speeds as "fast and slow lanes". Gee, what could possibly go wrong?
(Meanwhile, at the same time, various vain and illiberal attempts to "childproof" the internet with mandatory age verification have met with varying degrees of legal success.)
2025 seems to be starting out on the wrong foot already, and of course the new dark age will begin in earnest on January 20, 2025 when Trump is re-inaugurated as President of the United States. All with his puppet master Muskrat, the richest person in the world (and in literally all of recorded history) pulling his strings. Grifters gonna graft, believe me.
We will admit, while we at the TSAP have always loathed Trump, a few years ago, we thought that Muskrat was a real-life Tony Stark. Now it is obvious that he is more like Doctor Octopus on ketamine, only worse. And Trump? Well, he is more like Ganondorf, the villain from the Legend of Zelda series. And the current moment in history is reminiscent of the part of Ocarina of Time when Ganondorf snuck in and took over, casting Hyrule into a new and horrible dark age. Like Ganondorf, King Of Evil, Trump is the epitome of toxic masculinity, while Link the hero is the epitome of TONIC masculinity. Unfortunately at this juncture in the real world, Link seems to be nowhere to be found these days, and Kamala Harris, the closest equivalent to Princess Zelda, will be out of power completely as VP on January 20.
Buckle up, as we are in for a VERY wild ride!
This is of course temporary, so while it will provide a much needed "digital detox" for millions of people, it will not actually solve the collective action problem of Big Tech and the "Social Dilemma". But after that, here are some things that actually will, in descending order of priority and effectiveness:
The first two items on the list in particular would of course be vehemently opposed by Big Tech. That's because their whole business model depends on creepy surveillance advertising and creepy algorithms, and thus incentivizing addiction for profit. They would thus have to switch to the (gasp!) DuckDuckGo model if these items were done. (Plays world's smallest violin) That would of course be tantamount to throwing the One Ring into the fires of Mount Doom, in J.R.R Tolkien's Lord of the Rings.
Other good ideas we would endorse are a voluntary smartphone buyback program (similar to gun buybacks), and perhaps even paying people to voluntarily delete or deactivate their social media accounts for a time. That would accomplish far more than any realistic mandatory measures would.
Another possible idea is simply to slow down by design the pace of these social media platforms. Much like #OneClickSafer mentioned above, adding a little bit of friction to an otherwise frictionless system can help tame the very real dark side of that system. I mean, would you willingly drive on a frictionless surface (such as ice)? Of course you wouldn't.
Note that internet connection speeds are more than ten times faster (!) today on average than in 2010. That leaves a LOT of room for adding back friction!
And finally, the idea of banning certain questionable design features (infinite scroll, autoplay, etc.) may be controversial in terms of whether such features are protected by the First Amendment, but we believe that those features per se are not automatically protected, unless the ban is deliberately abused to censor specific content. If such bans are truly content-neutal, we are fine with that.
We must remember that, at the end of the day, Big Tech is NOT our friend. But neither are the illiberal control freak zealots. These measures that we endorse will actually make both sides quite angry indeed. And if nothing else, it will certainly help Americans of all ages finally snap out of the collective trance we have (more or less) all been under since the "Like Button Apocalypse" launched in 2009, and social media went fully mainstream shortly thereafter.
So what are we waiting for?