SATURDAY: "What a piece of work is a [person]!"

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2025

Human dysfunction explained: Leave it to Shakespeare to place such words in a character's mouth!

In this instance, the character was Hamlet himself. The leading authority on the speech starts to explain:

What a piece of work is a man

"What a piece of work is a man!" is a phrase within a monologue by Prince Hamlet in William Shakespeare's play Hamlet. Hamlet is reflecting, at first admiringly, and then despairingly, on the human condition. 

Hamlet is reflecting on the human condition. As he starts, he seems to be describing a condition which would today be called (clinical) depression. 

The Mayo Clinic calls it "major depressive disorder." It's a very dangerous condition. As the leading authority notes, Hamlet's soliloquy starts like this:

Hamlet's monologue:
I have of late, (but wherefore I know not) lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises; and indeed, it goes so heavily with my disposition; that this goodly frame the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory; this most excellent canopy the air, look you, this brave o'er hanging firmament, this majestical roof, fretted with golden fire: why, it appeareth no other thing to me, than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapors. 

Our point is not to dwell upon Hamlet's state of mind, whose origin he can't explain. We want to move ahead to the famous portrait he offers next:

What a piece of work is a man, How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty, In form and moving how express and admirable, In action how like an Angel, In apprehension how like a god, The beauty of the world, The paragon of animals. And yet to me, what is this quintessence of dust? Man delights not me; no, nor Woman neither; though by your smiling you seem to say so.

Women get folded in at the end. But what kind of creature is a human? In his despair, Hamlet finds himself moving away from the standard glorified imagery about how big-brained we humans are.

This morning, we join Hamlet's question to a question asked by Don Corleone:

How did it [ever] get this far?

In a famous scene from a 1972 feature film, Don Corleone is asking about a war among Gotham's five families. Today, we ask the question about our failing nation and its rapidly failing experiment:

How did we ever make it this far? When we look a the moral and intellectual breakdowns taking place all around us, it's hard to believe that the experiment ever managed to get this far.

At issue are the imagined mental faculties cited by Hamlet in his ironic proclamation. More specifically, we refer to the crazy statements being made by the chief executive, and we refer to the ugly inanity being voiced by the disordered though telegenic child he chose as his press secretary.

We refer to Speaker Johnson's most recent statement about Blue America—more precisely, about the people he's aggressively casting as fiendish others. We think back to that other disordered person's recent statement:

The Democratic Party is the party of Satan.

The various voices inside Silo Red are defining a state of tribal war. Over here, within Silo Blue, our biggest news orgs chose to disappear that statement by the sitting president. What a piece of work are such women and men!

Also, the sitting vice president! We don't think we've ever seen a public figures so disordered, or so changed, at the age of 40, from the genial fellow he had seemed to be only ten years before. 

Below, we'll quote from his 2016 memoir, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis, to show you where this may have begun. But amid all this, we also take you to the top of the academic pile. 

We refer to a tiny chunk of an obituary written by a Times reporter. That reporter isn't a specialist. The Times report starts like this:

John Searle, Philosopher Who Wrestled With A.I., Dies at 93

John R. Searle, an uncompromising and wide-ranging philosopher who was best known for a thought experiment he formulated, decades before the rise of ChatGPT, to disprove that a computer program by itself could ever achieve consciousness, died on Sept. 16 in Safety Harbor, Fla., west of Tampa. He was 93.

His son Tom confirmed the death, in a hospital, adding that Professor Searle’s health had declined since a bout with coronavirus last year.

Professor Searle, who taught at the University of California, Berkeley, for 60 years, was the rare philosopher who could proudly declare, “I’m not subtle.”

He brought ironic humor and bluntness to subjects as diverse as the politics of higher education, the nature of consciousness and the merits of textual deconstruction as a philosophical style.

Professor Searle was uncompromising, but did his work make sense? We won't be quoting his actual work. Instead, we'll refer to this later passage from the Times obit:

Professor Searle did stick fiercely to his positions, but he was also thrilled by hard problems. He spent decades writing about the nature of consciousness.

“What you’ve got in your skull is about a kilogram and a half, three pounds of this gook,” he told Harry Kreisler, the host of the U.C. Berkeley interview series “Conversations With History.” “How can that have all these thoughts and feelings and anxieties and aspirations? How can all of the variety of our conscious life be produced by this squishy stuff blasting away at the synapses?”

Professor Searle sought to solve the long-running debate over the division between the mind and the body by dispensing with the duality altogether. He argued that mental experiences like pain, ecstasy and drunkenness were all neurobiological phenomena, caused by firing neurons. Consciousness is not, he said, a separate substance of its own: It is a state the brain is in, like liquidity is the state of the molecules in a glass of water.

Searle wrote at the very top of Blue America's academic pile. That passage, waved into print at the top Blue America's journalistic pile, doesn't make a lick of sense—but what a piece of work is a human! We humans aren't built to see that!

Remember—we're looking at a passage in which Professor Searle is being quoted and paraphrased by someone who's a journalist. That said, editors waved that passage into print, presumably imagining that the passage made sense.

It doesn't. It's the type of high-end bafflegab Professor Horwich was writing about when he said this about that, for the Times, in discussing the later Wittgenstein:

Was Wittgenstein Right?

[...]

It’s taken for granted that there is deep understanding to be obtained of the nature of consciousness, of how knowledge of the external world is possible, of whether our decisions can be truly free, of the structure of any just society, and so on—and that philosophy’s job is to provide such understanding. Isn’t that why we are so fascinated by it?

If so, then we are duped and bound to be disappointed, says Wittgenstein. For these are mere pseudo-problems, the misbegotten products of linguistic illusion and muddled thinking.

Say what? At the highest platforms of academia, have our "philosophers" merely been producing "the misbegotten products of linguistic illusion and muddled thinking?" 

What kinds of "linguistic illusion" could possibly be producing that effect? How could some such claim possibly be accurate?

That, of course, is a very good question, but there is exactly zero point in trying to spell the answer out.  Meanwhile, down there on the darkling plain where Speaker Johnson and press secretaries live, disordered people spread their tribal poisons around as what once was taken to be a nation rapidly sees things fall apart.

No one tops JD Vance for this tribal dysfunction. How did the genial Vance of age 30 end up, ten years later, as the bomb-thrower he currently is? 

Below, you see part of Vance's own account concerning the way he grew up. Our submission would be this:

Many people who grow up this way will likely be profoundly damaged. In this passage from his 2015 best-selling book, Mamaw and Papaw are his maternal grandparents. Jimmy is his uncle, one of Mamaw and Papas's kids:

Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis

(page 42) 

I couldn't believe that mild-mannered Papaw, whom I adored as a child, was such a violent drunk. His behavior was due at least partly to Mamaw’s disposition. She was a violent nondrunk. And she channeled her frustrations into the most productive activity imaginable: covert war. When Papaw passed out on the couch, she'd cut his pants with scissors so they’d burst at the seam when he next sat down. Or she’d steal his wallet and hide it in the oven just to piss him off. When he came home from work and demanded fresh dinner, she'd carefully prepare a plate of fresh garbage. If he was in a fighting mood, she’d fight back. In short, she devoted herself to making his drunken life a living hell.

If Jimmy’s youth shielded him from the signs of their deteriorating marriage for a bit, the problem soon reached an obvious nadir. Uncle Jimmy recalled one fight: “I could hear the furniture bumping and bumping, and they were really getting into it. They were both screaming. I went downstairs to beg them to stop.” But they didn’t stop. Mamaw grabbed a flower vase, hurled it, and—she always had a hell of an arm—hit Papaw right between the eyes. “It split his forehead wide open, and he was bleeding really badly when he got in his car and drove off. That’s what I went to school the next day thinking about.”

Mamaw told Papaw after a particularly violent night of drinking that if he ever came home drunk again, she'd kill him. A week later, he came home drunk again and fell asleep on the couch. Mamaw, never one to tell a lie, calmly retrieved a gasoline canister from the garage, poured it all over her husband, lit a match, and dropped it on his chest. When Papaw burst into flames, their eleven-year-old daughter jumped into action to put out the fire and save his life. Miraculously, Papaw survived the episode with only mild burns.

Because they were hill people, they had to keep their two lives separate. No outsiders could know about the familial strife—with outsiders defined very broadly. When Jimmy turned eighteen, he took a job at Armco and moved out immediately. Not long after he left, Aunt Wee found herself in the middle of one particularly bad fight, and Papaw punched her in the face. The blow, though accidental, left a nasty black eye. When Jimmy—her own brother—returned home for a visit, Aunt Wee was made to hide in the basement. Because Jimmy didn’t live with the family anymore, he was not to know about the inner workings of the house. “That’s just how everyone, especially Mamaw, dealt with things,’ Aunt Wee said. “It was just too embarrassing.

We've long advised you to pity the child-—the child who was forced to endure that environment. For the record, the book he produced at age 30 wasn't especially well-written, the way the reviewers all said. 

As a case in point, you may note the cheeky way he describes his grandmother's violent madness, seeming to tiptoe past the idea that he himself had been affected by this massive dysfunction in any particular way.

At any rate, that was the younger Vance's account of the time when Mamaw set her husband on fire as he lay there sleeping. What a piece of work is a human being! 

That said, according to Vance's account, Mamaw was the moral exemplar in his gruesomely dysfunctional family. Even today, he fashions Mamaw as the person who kept him sane when he was a child and a teen.

That's the way he grew up. As for the sitting commander, his niece, a Ph.D. wielding clinical psychologist, says that he had the misfortune to be born to a father who was "a high-functioning sociopath."

She notes the fact that sociopathy is believed to be heritable. Like others before her, she describes the president displaying behaviors which are treated as necessary diagnostic symptoms by the time he was 12.

At the highest platform of Blue academia, Professor Searle seemed to think—or seemed to be willing to say--that when a person feels pain, it's really that person's brain which is feeling the pain.

You're right—that doesn't make any sense. What a piece of work is a high-ranking "philosopher!"

Today, a well-known nation is falling apart. Speaking to a very large audience, jugglers and clowns run roughshod at the Fox News Channel—and on Blue America's highest journalistic platforms, Blue American leadership cadres agree to look away.

Is there a way to get back out of all this? Everything is always possible, but things are falling apart very, very fast. What a piece of work is the creature which functions like this:

"Where I come from, we only talk so long. After that, we start to hit."
—Professor Brabender

One final point:

A we look at the president's cabinet, it seems to us that we may be seeing (serious) "mental disorder" (formerly, "mental illness") pretty much all around.

For better or worse, Blue journalists refuse to discuss such possibilities. Tommy Christopher (Mediaite) is a good, decent person, but we were puzzled by what he says about President Trump in this recent opinion piece:

Two Sick WTF Trump Moments That the Media Completely Ignored

A pair of President Donald Trump’s most revealing “WTF” moments were completely ignored by a news media that has become too numb or too afraid to give them the attention they deserve.

In the expanse of Trump’s lifetime of WTF-isms, there are categories within categories. With the focus on his dead pal Jeffrey Epstein, the creepy-pervy subcategory has gotten a lot of attention this year—but not nearly enough from the mainstream media.

[...]

But there’s another category that I have a hard time describing because I want to take care to avoid the pitfall of diagnosing Trump. Mental illness is too serious and important to be trivialized into a hot take—or any other temperature of take. Because whatever makes Trump this way, it can’t be chalked up to mental illness.

Christopher's piece continues from there. That said, "Whatever makes Trump this way, it can’t be chalked up to mental illness?"

Almost surely, it's too late for any of this to make any sort of a difference. But whatever is going on with the president, it can't be chalked up to "mental illness?"

What a piece of work is a good, decent person! Just as a provisional matter, why on God's green earth not?

Next week: American cartoon?


104 comments:

  1. No Kings rallies today. Check for times.

    For the trumptards, More Bags of Cash rallies. Ongoing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So, are you saying no rallies today, Soros-monkey? What happened, your lord and master ran out of money?

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    2. Please stop using the term 'Soros-monkey'. It's very demeaning to me. - Scott

      ("Bessent worked for the firm of liberal philanthropist George Soros from 1991 to 2000, and again from 2011 to 2015. He served as the firm's chief investment officer during his second term.")

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    3. 11:30,
      Go back to beating off over the size of Hunter Biden's penis.
      The grown-ups are discussing politics.

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    4. It could always be worse. Imagine if some kid from a Republican family hadn't shot that piece of shit Charlie Kirk to death.

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    5. I had not realized that there were some many Hamas-supporting, Antifa, Marxists! Reporting from the war-ravaged Portland.

      Delete
    6. Hamas, Antifa, and Marx,
      More energetic than quarks,
      They fly like larks,
      They strike bright sparks,
      And they they take over our parks.

      Delete


  2. This looks to me like a super-long utterly insane steam of consciousness.

    Are you not pretending to do media criticism anymore? Is it just random meaningless observations now?

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  3. On a very important day for those who love our country, this is all Somerby has to offer? We already know Vance is a lying putz who made up his hillbilly upbringing. Just another America hating jagoff Republican.

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  4. "Hillbilly Elegy" was written by a mental adolescent.

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  5. “At the highest platform of Blue academia, Professor Searle seemed to think—or seemed to be willing to say--that when a person feels pain, it's really that person's brain which is feeling the pain.

    “You're right—that doesn't make any sense. What a piece of work is a high-ranking ‘philosopher’!"

    Bob, I’ll have to part ways with you on this, because your tone is either dismissive, or somehow sarcastic. Of course we all “feel” with our brain. As a materialist myself, I tend to wander in the camps of Dr. Searle. Otherwise, enjoyed the essay.

    Leroy

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    1. "Of course we all “feel” with our brain."

      Meh. Coming from the same materialistic standpoint, no, this is not right. We don't "feel" anything with our brain alone. We "feel" with our whole body.

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    2. Physical and emotional pain use the same neural circuits in the brain (aside from the pain receptors themselves). It is why people somaticize emotional pain and use pain in the body as a metaphor for emotional pain.

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    3. Philosophers are not the experts to read about pain. Look at what neuroscientists and psychologists know. These are empirical scientists. Philosophers are not empirical (they don’t study actual people or brains).

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    4. Descartes, a mathematician and philosopher, created the brain-body duality. It does not exist in reality. Trying to separate the two is idiotic. The reason he made them separate is that he was trying to figure out how God communicates with people and where the soul resides. He decided that the spirit or soul belong to God, reside in the pituitary glad in the brain and are distinct from the body. God gave man reason in order to know God. Women are more dominated by their bodies, feelings and pain and are thus less able to reason and less in communication with God. That's why Catholics have no female priests, why women were not able to serve in Parliament or own property, needed a chaperone to go out of the house, etc etc.

      Perpetuating a mind-body duality by subordinating the body to the brain (as in animals and women who are driven by instinct, not reason) relies on discarded and obsolete theory that has been set aside by actual scientists in this time period. The social implications of Descartes and other philosophers are still causing damage in society by excusing subordination of women. Scientists today propose that it is all body (no soul or spirit) with the brain and body working together as a system, not brain controlling body, or all brain and no body. The nervous system includes not just the brain but also the spinal cord and peripheral nerves extending to the fingertips/toes to feel pain, touch, hot/cold, texture, etc. The brain identifies where the sensation is coming from.

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  6. Late in his career, John Seattle was disciplined for sexual misconduct.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Searle

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    Replies
    1. Who's John Seattle? Never heard of him.

      Leroy

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    2. I carefully typed Searle, but spell-check got me.

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    3. Anonymouse 1:01pm, caught feeling with his hands?

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    4. It actually sounds pretty bad. Read the Wikipedia article. And dismiss his philosophy.

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  7. Late in his career, John Searle was disciplined for sexual misconduct.

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    Replies
    1. Here’s the Wikipedia link again.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Searle

      Delete
  8. It's no longer safe to be a Jew in the UK "A Jewish lawyer wearing a Star of David was arrested after police alleged the symbol had “antagonised” pro-Palestine protesters.

    Police interview footage obtained by The Telegraph shows a detective accusing the Jewish man of openly wearing a Star of David that could cause “offence”.

    The suspect, who was handcuffed and detained by police for almost ten hours, told The Telegraph his arrest appeared to be an attempt by the Metropolitan Police to “criminalise the wearing of a Star of David”.

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    1. Quaker in a BasementOctober 18, 2025 at 2:17 PM

      Does that help you understand how it feels to be black or Hispanic in the US?

      (Don't worry. It's rhetorical. I know better.)

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    2. Squeal louder.
      The lawyer is lucky he isn't in a Salvadoran gulag.

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    3. Ten hours?
      Is that how long they hold terrorists in the UK?

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    4. More:
      "The Metropolitan Police deny that his arrest was prompted by the Star of David, and said the man was arrested for allegedly 'repeatedly breaching' an order to keep opposing protest groups apart.


      "They claim he got 'very close' to the pro-Palestine protesters on multiple occasions, and alleged his actions went 'beyond observing to provoking', leading them to designate him as 'actively participating as a protester', therefore binding him to conditions of the Public Order Act."

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    5. Young Republican: "I love Hitler"

      Dickhead in Cal: "chirp.....chirp....chirp....

      Young Republican: "you're giving to [sic] much credit and expecting the Jew to be honest"

      Dickhead in Cal: "chirp.....chirp....chirp....

      Young Republican: "He also hates the Jews" (with a heart)

      Dickhead in Cal: "chirp.....chirp....chirp...

      misinformation from a story in the UK

      Dickhead in Cal: they're “criminalizing the wearing of a Star of David”.

      Go take a flying fuck, dickhead.

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    6. David, make Aliyah. I’m serious.

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    7. Quaker - of course. That’s why I went to DC to hear MLK talk many years ago. It’s why I donated many thousands of dollars to civil rights organizations.

      Liberals like to pretend that conservatives are racists, or, at least, anti blacks. That’s bullshit.

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    8. The Republican Party couldn't denounce the bigotry of Young Republicans, even if they wanted to.
      What are they going to do, lose every one of their voters?

      Delete
    9. David in Cal,
      FYI, we aren't all as gullible as you pretend you are.

      Delete
    10. Quaker - Yes. That's why I bussed to DC to hear MLK speak. It's why I donated thousands of dollars to civil rights groups.

      Liberals like to pretend that conservatives are racists, or, at least, unconcerned about the plight of black Americans. That's bullshit. In many cases, it's the reverse. E.g., lower educational achievement is a real problem for blacks. Conservative racism is not. Dems protect blacks against the non-existent problem of conservative racism, but they oppose school choice, which put's them on the wrong side of a real problem.

      Delete
    11. White liberals live with enormous inferiority complexes. Their advocacy of black issues is based on their racist belief that blacks are as inferior as they see themselves to be. It couldn't be more obvious that in reality they know nothing about and could care less about blacks.

      Delete
    12. David in Cal,
      Good luck convincing the monkeys and watermelon people that conservative racism is a non-existent problem.
      Let us know how that goes.

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    13. 7:16,
      If you really want to own the libs, protect black people's voting rights.

      Delete
    14. Trump won a whopping 16% of black voters last election. MAGAts may need some help with the math, including a self-described retired actuary in his 8th decade. 84% of blacks did not vote for the right wing candidate last election. So 7:16 has a remarkable claim here: that white liberals champion black issues because they are racist. The pretzel logic required to arrive at that conclusion is pure MAGAt. Since the claim is that white liberals know nothing about and could care less about blacks, why don't the blacks pick up on this and vote differently? Cling to your 16% (which Trump said was 40%) last election as if that was some kind of victory. Blacks overwhelmingly do not vote for republicans, why? I will let you sort that out and, for a good laugh, give your opinion.

      Delete
    15. " ...the nonexistent problem of conservative racism..."
      Conservative racism , since you like to name drop MLK, has a very long history of maligning that man stretching from William F. Buckley Jr. to Charlie Kirk. The outpouring of post mortem conservative support for a mouthpiece of racism like Charlie Kirk establishes the fact that at best republicans have a large contingency for which that trait has no negative connotations. The Civil Rights Act was a bad idea? Sure, we're good with that. Accomplished Black women stole the places deserved by whites? Absolutely. MLK was a bad man? Who would think otherwise? No wonder a contingency of 24-31 year old republicans in NY are, after all is said and done, republican. But don't worry too much about that, their contempt is not strictly racist but includes the Jews. Kirk had a few things to say about that sorry group as well.

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    16. Is it OK for @8:39 to make a racist post, as long as s/he's pretending that she's quoting some imaginary, hypothetical conservative? Is it possible that @8:39 enjoys writing racist words?

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    17. DiC, please check the news. The quotes were from texts written by a recently disbanded group of NY young republicans. Try to keep up. Geez.

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    18. And they had a few very nasty things to say about the Jews. This came out in a panel discussion led by Chris Cuomo on News Nation. A self described best buddy of Charlie Kirk was asked no less than three times by podcaster Adam Mockler whether he would publicly condemn the Nazis in view of the posts that were uncovered, to which he repeatedly replied "we can talk about that", never managing the simple answer yes. But go ahead and turn a blind eye to the rot that festers in the youth of your party. It's all about, and only about, those leftist college campuses. Charlie Kirk was a white Christian nationalist and there was always a following for the kind of rhetoric that spews from such people, especially at bottom tier college campuses he frequented for " debates".

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    19. David in Cal,
      Are you suggesting that calling black people "monkeys" and "watermelon people" is racist, RINO?

      Delete
    20. "Is it OK for @8:39 to make a racist post, as long as s/he's pretending that she's quoting some imaginary, hypothetical conservative? Is it possible that @8:39 enjoys writing racist words?"

      Is it possible you don't have the facts straight yet again?

      "Yes, leaked chats from Young Republican leaders included the use of the racist term "watermelon people" to refer to Black people."

      "Yes, a leaked Young Republicans chat included racist messages that referred to Black people as "monkeys"."

      Delete
  9. The Republican Party couldn't denounce the bigotry of Young Republicans, even if they wanted to.
    What are they going to do, lose every one of their voters?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Quaker in a BasementOctober 18, 2025 at 2:28 PM

    "The various voices inside Silo Red are defining a state of tribal war. Over here, within Silo Blue, our biggest news orgs chose to disappear that statement by the sitting president."

    As we have recently seen, publishing the words of Silo Red verbatim is a fireable offense.

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    1. Spot on, Quaker.

      But let's correct the record, our biggest news orgs did report on that statement from Trump, and more importantly it was widely covered by independent media which dwarfs the viewership/readership of what Somerby seems to mean by "Blue America" - corporate news media.

      Delete
  11. A few days ago I complained that the "No Kings" demonstration was opposition to an individual person. Someone disputed that assertion. If this were a peace march, demonstrators might be chanting,
    "Ducks, ducks, geese, geese. We are all supporting peace."
    If it were for civil rights, they might be chanting
    "Honks, honks, quacks, quacks. We want equal rights for blacks."
    But, they're actually chanting
    "Hey, hey, ho, ho, Donald Trump has got to go."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lots of signs I saw were anti-fascists. That sounds like more than one individual to me.
      In fact, it sounds like the entire Republican Party.

      Delete
    2. Yes, and those giant signs that I would see in Eastern Oregon that said, "Joe and the Hoe Have Got to Go", were just thoughtful political commentary.
      What's wrong with protesting against an addled, vindictive, wannabe dictator? What is that you find objectionable. The man is a fucking menace to humanity. What's wrong with pointing that out? Yes, Trump and his lackeys have got to go. There were plenty of signs skewering Stephen Miller and Vance. Hopefully, that puts your mind at ease and will stop your pearl-clutching.
      It is fascinating how you can find the most trivial, meaningless detail and zoom in on it, as if it were a great revelation. Let's discuss Trump's lawlessness.

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    3. What a piece of work is David!

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    4. What's wrong is that Trump, as President, isn't as bad as liberals claim. As a person, he's not nice. He's vindictive, dishonest, and narcissistic. But, as President, his results have been OK. If "Trump is awful" is the central Dems campaign issue, what will they campaign on in 2026 if Trump wins the Nobel Peace Prize and the economy is OK?

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    5. They said the same thing about Stalin.

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    6. David in Cal,
      Perhaps liberals have been exaggerating to make a larger point. I've heard a gigantic bigot on the internet claim that's very effective.

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    7. What a piece of shit is David!

      Fixed for accuracy.

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    8. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    9. He's vindictive, dishonest, and narcissistic.
      And he brought all of it to presidency. He uses his official position to exact revenge, enrich himself, and he abrogated the powers of congress to appropriate funds. Trump created his own paramilitary force. I am certain that ICE were to murder someone in broad daylight, they would not be charged. It already happened in Chicago. If there's any doubt about that, Trump has given us a glimpse by pardoning Santos.
      We had people kidnapped from American soil and sent a foreign gulag. Trump ordered people killed in international waters. It's all beyond the pale. Even if I were to agree with any of his policies, I would still want him impeached.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IrUiCmd-rnc

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    10. Ilya,
      You wouldn't want Trump impeached if he was giving you the bigotry you crave like a child craves candy.
      Just saying.

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    11. Trump is currently lobbying the Europeans for the Nobel prize, and will likely continue to embarrass himself as he ratchets up what pressure he can exert as POTUS, but DiC is living in full on MAGA cult world if he thinks that a Nobel prize will be awarded to a clown who has threatened the EU militarily and economically. Trump has as much of a chance at annexing Greenland or making Canada the 51st state as winning the Nobel prize. They are laughing at "Daddy" over there and nothing he can do at this point will erase his sidling up to communist dictators and destabilizing the Alliance with his actions and rhetoric. So no, we won't be holding our breath waiting for the Donald to get a call from Oslo any time in the future.

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    12. You wouldn't want Trump impeached if he was giving you the bigotry you crave like a child craves candy.
      Eh? Sorry, I don't follow.

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    13. Ilya,
      Those who Trump gives the bigotry they crave, (Republican voters), wouldn't want to see Trump impeached.

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    14. All I heard yesterday was hey, ho, Donald Trump is a fucking whore.

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    15. Got it, Anon@4:39. There's a significant element of that.

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  12. I wish Somerby would stop dabbling in psychiatry. There is a distinction made between situational depression and major depression which is a chronic condition often unrelated to events in one’s life. Hamlet says lately he has lost his mirth, implying he was not depressed before. In the play, his father has died and he believes his mother is consorting with a usurper who murdered him. Then his girlfriend Ophelia commits suicide. Lots of reasons to feel sad. That makes this unlikely to be major depression.

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    1. 18 people die in the play Hamlet.

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    2. Shakespeare loaded his script with violence because he didn’t have the talent to engage the audience with an intelligent story.

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    3. wiki says, "In Shakespeare's "Hamlet," a total of eight characters die: King Hamlet, Polonius, Ophelia, Laertes, Queen Gertrude, Claudius, Rosencrantz, and Guildenstern, along with Hamlet himself."

      The number of deaths in MacBeth is nine.

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    4. Only eight or nine? I take it back. Shakespeare was a great writer.

      Delete
    5. wiki says, "David in Cal is a fascist tool."

      Delete
    6. I saw Macbeth twice, 18 people died.

      Delete
    7. Shakespeare was wrong.

      Delete
  13. “ WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—In a blistering comment on Friday, House Speaker Mike Johnson accused participants in Saturday’s No Kings protests of “blatantly exercising their First Amendment rights.”

    “When the framers of the Constitution wrote the First Amendment, they did not intend people to take it literally,” Johnson said. “And yet, that is precisely what the far-left lunatics and Antifa members are conspiring to do.”

    Johnson said that he and his fellow Republicans would push for a repeal of the First Amendment to “prevent it from being exploited by evildoers in the future.”

    “We’d be so much better off without the First Amendment,” he said. “The Second Amendment would move up to No. 1, which is where it belongs.”

    ReplyDelete
  14. Tonight, Trump's Truth Social account posted an AI video of Trump flying a fighter jet painted with the label "King Trump" which flies over protesting Americans and dumping shit on them.

    Seriously, there's something deeply wrong with him.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Republicans love it. There’s something deeply wrong with
      them.

      Delete
    2. There’s something deeply wrong with me.

      Delete
    3. Once you stop to think the felon has the mind of a six year old, it all makes a tiny bit of sense, as long as you stop to think his guardians are shit at their jobs too.

      Delete
    4. The No Kings protest was primarily made up of aging white people. Just like the neurotic commenters here are aging white men who are addicted to doom scrolling low quality partisan content (and have been years and even decades.)

      Younger people aren’t that excited by a “movement” whose primary objective is to restore establishment Dems to power. Faux outrage over an AI video posted on social media gets exactly zero traction with young people or anyone outside of the aging white partisan doom scroll bubble.

      At long last, is that really not completely obvious to you?

      Delete
    5. Nazi bitches are obvious to me.

      Delete
    6. Dementia addled old men in orange face our obvious to me.

      Delete
    7. Hey David, the link is in the President's House at 1 Truth Social, you fucking fake ass lying POS.

      Delete
    8. The idea that there were mainly old people is fake. If you look at any of the photos, there are many more young people than elderly. This is a variation on the "Biden is too old" right wing talking point. It worked with him, so they think we don't have eyes and ears to see who was protesting.

      My understanding is that the primary objective of the No Kings march is to warn Trump that our nation will not tolerate his efforts to make himself a king or dictator of our country. There are Republicans in this movement, not just Democrats and Independents and non-voters and unaffiliated people.

      The "traction" with the video is the disrespect Trump shows to his own people. Young people are certainly sensitive about being dissed and can tell when someone has no respect for them (or any of us). The young are the ones worrying about finding jobs, finding an affordable place to live, having the money to marry or raise a family or buy a house. The young care about the environment. They may not worry about their own health care but they don't want to be stuck caring for grandma or grandpa in declining health. Young people don't want to be drafted into a stupid, preventable war started by Trump out of vanity. Young people don't find Trump cute or funny.

      Delete
    9. 1:01,
      Squeal louder, snowflake.

      Delete
    10. Lazy David: Are you seriously unable to find this on your own? OK, fine, Open wide....

      https://www.mediaite.com/media/news/trump-posts-bizarre-ai-video-in-which-he-airdrops-feces-on-no-kings-protesters/

      Delete
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    Reply
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    ReplyDelete

  16. Thank you "no kings" Democrats for the opportunity to produce Vance's great video. Thanks for the laughs. It's perfect.

    https://bsky.app/profile/jd-vance-1.bsky.social

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Vance's couch is cheating on him with a table.

      Delete
    2. When Vance saw Meema put PeePa on fire he said, "We don't need no water, let the motherfucker burn
      Burn motherfucker, burn"

      He was a great kid. Shame what happened to him after he met that foreign born woman.

      Delete
    3. 5:53,

      watched the video. Where were the laughs?

      Delete
    4. Usha Vance was born in San Diego.

      Delete
  17. The most important thing happening yesterday was the No Kings protest. Somerby doesn't mention it at all, much less encouraging people to attend. Here is Tom Sullivan's (Digby) description of the press coverage:

    "In an attention economy and a war for attention, opponents of fascism are outgunned but not outnumbered. Indivisible and MoveOn estimate that 7 million people took to the streets for more than 2,700 No Kings rallies on Saturday in 50 states. Kudos to Indivisible, MoveOn and other groups that organized this huge event.

    Strangely (or not so strangely), The New York Times places a couple of pictures below the fold on Page One and plops its coverage on Page 23. This after an estimated 100,000 filled the streets of Manhattan. The protests don’t even merit a photo on the landing page, just one line. The Washington Post print edition announces the protests with its top headline and photos. But its landing page places the story below an “exclusive” about Marco Rubio. Politico buries its coverage down the left sidebar and focuses on Trump’s attacks on “No Kings.” The Guardian did better.

    Good luck finding coverage on Fox News. Although despite the administration’s preemptive efforts to brand protesters as violent, Fox reports, “there were no reports of violence or arrests at the afternoon rallies amid the ongoing government shutdown.” CNN notes that the protests were “largely peaceful,” but a closer look reveals that the few reported arrests on Saturday were not directly related to the rallies."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Also "amusing" - not a single mention on this morning's newstalk of the demented orange posting a video of him wearing a crown in a fighter jet dumping shit on people in the streets. I guess he finally decided to start acting Presidential. (I'm so old I remember when this was a weekly pronouncement from the press, now they just ignore or sane wash the nasty fucking jagoff's demented idiocracy .)

      Delete
    2. In the video, he isn't wearing his air mask correctly. It doesn't cover his nose and mouth. Kind of like the way Republicans used to wear their covid masks. I get it that they want him to be identifiable in the video as Trump, or maybe they weren't skilled enough using photoshop or AI to show the mask properly, but it makes him look more foolish that he doesn't seem to have real piloting skills.

      Delete
  18. Notice that Somerby does not quote Wittgenstein but Professor Horwich, just as he quote Professor Knox and not Homer or the Iliad. Because Somerby quotes these sources in support of semi-political statements (such as that civilizations only survive if they can meet force with greater force), it seems to me he ought to examine the politics and any biases of the professors, not Homer or Wittgenstein (who can speak for themselves but are not the ones being quoted).

    ReplyDelete
  19. Are the No Kings rallies effective politics? In the past, parties made this kind of effort nearer to the election, but I suspect this may be effective politics. People who took the trouble to demonstrate will take thet trouble to vote. Also, with Trump seemingly controlling every day's news, it gives his opponents something to talk about.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Previous studies focusing on the Vietnam War show that protests did make a difference and resulted in the war ending.

      The goal of the No Kings protests is not only to affect the midterm elections but to embolden Republicans to restrain Trump's worst impulses out of concern about public reaction. It may also strengthen the spine of the Supreme Court justices to know that the public opposes Trump and is concerned about his many abuses. All of us who attended a protest yesterday feel better knowing that so many others are with us in our dismay.

      Your idea that we opponents of Trump would have nothing to talk about without such protests is ridiculous. We are talking daily about the illegality of his actions, the need for the courts to control his actions, the corruption of Trump himself, his family, his cronies and the way the nation is being looted, the contents of the Epstein files and Trump's role in hiding what Epstein/Maxwell and others did. The coming collapse of the economy. The likelihood of war in Latin America, the failure of the ceasefire in Gaza, the war in Ukraine and Trump's alliance with Putin against Ukraine. Our own healthcare premiums. The shutdown. There is plenty for the opposition to Trump to talk about.

      Your contention that this is just performative in order to get in the news, and not a monumental rise of the American people against Trump and in opposition to his actions, is a Republican talking point that bears no resemblance to reality. It matters when 5-7 million people gather peacefully to show our disgust with what Trump is doing!

      Delete
    2. I saw three black people at the protest in Denver.

      Delete
    3. That's three more than you'll see at a Republican National Convention.

      Delete
    4. "In the past, parties made this kind of effort nearer to the election,"

      I remember the Tea Party rallies differently.

      Delete
  20. Somerby accepts Hillbilly Elegy as truth when it has been demonstrated to contain a bunch of lies. Why should we believe the stuff about Meemaw dousing her husband and setting him on fire, any more than any of the other proven lies in his book. Perhaps is social distance from what he describes arises because it is fiction, not anything he actually experienced.

    But at some point, if Somerby persists with this idea that bad childhood's warp people, then he will have to admit that there is something toxic in the childhoods of most of these Republicans. There are no psychologists or clinicians who believe that children are formed by their experiences to the degree that Somerby hypothesizes. One problem is that children who have grown up in proven shitholes transcend their early lives, develop coping skills, and become exemplary human beings. What makes the difference between someone who turns out like Trump and his sister who became a lawyer and judge (and is not a sociopath), Freddie who flew planes and was not a sociopath, Elizabeth Grau, who worked for Chase Bank and was not a sociopath, Robert Stewart Trump, who worked in the family real estate business, and was not a sociopath.

    This difficulty predicting how children will react to their life circumstances is part of the reason why we cannot call negative life experiences causative of any disorder. John McCain was tortured but did not become the grotesque human being that Trump is.

    But Vance's fake book is good enough explanation for Somerby, who is too lazy to read anything about psychology.

    Here are two easy-to-read books that might show Somerby that determinism is bunk:

    Learned Optimism: How to Change Your Mind and Your Life Paperback, Martin Seligman – January 3, 2006

    Resilience: The Science of Mastering Life's Greatest Challenges 3rd Edition, by Steven M. Southwick (Author), Dennis S. Charney (Author), Jonathan M. DePierro , 2023

    ReplyDelete
  21. Trump granted clemency to George Santos after Santos served just 3 months out of the 77 to which he was sentenced.

    How to account for this? Santos had no constituency clamoring for his release. Not even Santos claimed his trial had been unfair (although he bitched about the length of his sentence).

    The only explanation is that Santos is a habitual liar and a con man and Trump saw that, but for the grace of God, that could have been him.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. One suggested explanation is that Trump is preparing the way to release Ghislaine Maxwell and this is intended to get the public used to that eventuality. The idea is that her release may seem less outrageous if Santos is released first. My hope is that it won't work that way.

      Delete
  22. "Things are getting weird in the world of public health.



    Childhood vaccines are suddenly up for debate and fluoride is being called industrial waste. And somehow, everyone’s talking about acetaminophen.



    That can’t be true — right?



    In her new podcast That Can’t Be True, public health expert Dr. Chelsea Clinton takes on the myths and misinformation shaping our conversations about health. Each week, she’s joined by doctors, dietitians, and parenting experts to separate credible science from viral nonsense.



    Produced in partnership with Lemonada Media, That Can’t Be True digs into today’s most confusing health debates — from infant formula to supplements — and brings clarity to a noisy world of misinformation.



    So, pour a coffee (or a cocktail), tune in, and join us in learning how to fact-check your feed — and maybe even your group chat."

    Here is another Clinton doing something useful with her life to help other people:

    https://www.clintonfoundation.org/that-cant-be-true/

    ReplyDelete