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  • O BRASIL EH O QUE ME ENVENENA MAS EH O QUE ME CURA (LUIZ ANTONIO SIMAS)

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    Fragmentos de textos e imagens catadas nesta tela, capturadas desta web, varridas de jornais, revistas, livros, sons, filtradas pelos olhos e ouvidos e escorrendo pelos dedos para serem derramadas sobre as teclas... e viverem eterna e instanta neamente num logradouro digital. Desagua douro de pensa mentos.


    sábado, setembro 13, 2025

    Noah Hawley’s Alien: Earth​ Is Not Such a Tight Ship

     Timothy Olyphant in Alien: Earth

     

    "FX’s Alien: Earth shreds. In making the first-ever television show based on the Alien film franchise, creator Noah Hawley seems to have had one insight that overwhelmed all the rest: that Alien’s got kind of a heavy metal vibe. This sounds like a criticism, but I don’t necessarily mean it that way. Hawley’s televisual take on the Alien universe is faithful and unfaithful to the canon by turns. It sticks to the basic idea—a group of hapless humans and a handful of charmingly malevolent androids come into contact with a Xenomorph, a parasitic, nigh-unkillable alien bioweapon with a head so overtly phallic that you’d laugh if you weren’t being eviscerated—while ambitiously expanding the scope. It advances strong, strongly asserted ideas about where the most compelling corners of that universe are and how a television show, working at a different scale than film, might illuminate them. Hawley seems quite interested, for instance, in exploring unexplored aspects of the Alien aesthetic. Emerging from H.R. Giger’s perverse, byzantine, industrial Goth artwork, the Alien franchise is full of complex and malevolent piping, snaking alloys, machinelike humans, and humanlike machines."

     read review by  Philip Maciak

    Noah Hawley’s Alien: Earth​ Is Not Such a Tight Ship | The New Republic

    Charlie Kirk Was Trump’s Envoy to a New Generation

     

    An illustration featuring the White House, Charlie Kirk and a map of Utah Valley University.


    "Kirk was one of the most influential unelected people in America. He was not just a friend of the president’s family and a confidant to multiple Cabinet officials, but also an authority for millions of young people who flocked to his events and tuned in to his podcast, The Charlie Kirk Show. For Trump supporters, he was a crucial interpreter not just of politics but also of faith and family, a William F. Buckley Jr. updated for MAGA world."}

    READ MORE> Charlie Kirk Was Trump’s Envoy to a New Generation – DNyuz

    Kirk, Eastern Sentry & Bolsonaro

     

     
    Since a gunman murdered right-wing activist Charlie Kirk at an outdoor event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, both social media circles and the political sphere have been alight with accusations that “the Left” was responsible for the shooting. Prominent right-wing social media accounts called the Democratic Party “a domestic terror organization” and declared “WAR.” Billionaire Elon Musk posted: “The Left is the party of murder.” 
     
    From the Oval Office, President Donald J. Trump blamed the shooting on “the radical left” and vowed to “find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity, and to other political violence, including the organizations that fund it and support it, as well as those who go after our judges, law enforcement officials, and everyone else who brings order to our country.” 
     
    Without any information about the shooter, the media got in on the game, with the Wall Street Journal reporting yesterday that “[a]mmunition engraved with transgender and antifascist ideology was found inside the rifle authorities believe was used in Kirk’s shooting.” Bomb threats targeted Democratic politicians—primarily Black politicians—and historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs).
    Condemnation of the shooting was widespread. Perhaps eager to distance themselves from accusations that anyone who does not support MAGA endorses political violence, commenters portrayed Kirk as someone embracing the reasoned debate central to democracy, although he became famous by establishing a database designed to dox professors who expressed opinions he disliked so they would be silenced (I am included on this list).
     
    Meanwhile, it was not clear the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was up to the task of finding the killer. FBI director Kash Patel and deputy director Dan Bongino were both MAGA influencers with relatively little law-enforcement experience when Trump put them in charge of the agency. Once there, they focused on purging the agency of those they considered insufficiently loyal to Trump or “DEI hires.” In early August, they forced out the leader of the Salt Lake City, Utah, field office, Mehtab Syed, a decorated female Pakistani American counterterrorism agent. 
     
    Meanwhile, David J. Bier of the Cato Institute reported that one in five FBI agents have been diverted from their jobs to conduct immigration raids with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and just hours before the shooting, three former top officials at the FBI filed a lawsuit against Patel, the FBI, Attorney General Pam Bondi, the Department of Justice, and the president accusing them of unlawfully politicizing the FBI, purging it of anyone who had ever worked on a criminal investigation of Trump. The lawsuit suggests Bongino had an “intense focus on [using] his social media profiles to change his followers’ perceptions of the FBI.”
     
    As Quinta Jurecic reported today in The Atlantic, hours after the shooting, Patel’s personal social media account posted a picture of himself and Kirk; minutes later, Patel’s official FBI account posted that the shooter was already in custody and then, an hour and a half later, said the suspect had been released. Both Patel and Bongino appeared to be focused more on posting than on doing the work to find the shooter. 
     
    This morning, Trump announced on the Fox News Channel’s Fox & Friends that he had just heard “they have the person that they wanted.” That person turned out to be 22-year-old Utah native Tyler Robinson, who turned himself in to authorities after his father urged him to. Robinson's parents are registered Republicans; he was not affiliated with a political party and was an inactive voter. Over the past years, Robinson’s mother posted a number of pictures of him and his brothers posing with guns.
    Robinson had recently had a conversation with a family member about why they didn’t like Kirk’s viewpoints. Robinson appears to have admired the “Groypers,” led by Nick Fuentes, who complain that more mainstream organizations like Kirk’s Turning Point USA are not “pro-white” enough and have publicly harassed Kirk in the past. 
     
    Allison Gill of The Breakdown explained that the rumors the shooter had engraved anti-fascist rhetoric on some of the bullet casings found at the scene turned out to be a misunderstanding of terms from the video game Helldivers2. The claim that he had used “transgender ideology” was apparently a misreading of the headstamp “TRN” that marks ammunition as the product of Turkish manufacturer Turan. 
     
    Almost as soon as Robinson was identified, the tone of MAGA leader’s conversation about the shooting changed. Representative Nancy Mace (R-SC), who had used a slur to refer to the shooter as pro-transgender, posted on social media: “We know Charlie Kirk would want us to pray for such an evil, and lost individual like Tyler Robinson to find Jesus Christ. We will try to do the same.” 
     
    For his part, Trump seemed to have lost interest in Kirk even earlier. Yesterday evening, a reporter offered the president his condolences on the loss of his friend Kirk and asked Trump how he was holding up. The president answered, in full: “I think very good. And by the way, right there, you see all the trucks, they just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they've been trying to get, as you know, for about 150 years, and it's going to be a beauty. It’ll be an absolutely magnificent structure. And I just see all the trucks. We just started so it'll get done very nicely and it'll be one of the best anywhere in the world, actually. Thank you very much.”
     
    The day of Kirk’s murder, Russia sent 19 drones into Poland—some armed and some unarmed—testing the strength of the neighboring country. With the help of allies, Poland shot down four of them. Poland belongs to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), with whom the U.S. shares a mutual defense agreement meaning that if it is attacked, we will come to its aid. After the attack, Poland called an emergency meeting of the North Atlantic Council, the primary political decision-making body within NATO. U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker apparently did not attend. 
     
    Although Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, called the violation “intentional, not accidental,” Trump told reporters that Russia’s sending of drones into Poland “could’ve been a mistake.” Josh Kovensky of Talking Points Memo reported on Tuesday that on August 27, the Trump administration returned a plane full of Russian dissidents seeking asylum in the U.S. to Moscow, where at least some of them went directly from the plane into custody.  
    Today, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and Supreme Allied Commander Europe General Alexus G. Grynkewich announced that NATO is launching “Eastern Sentry,” an operation to bolster NATO’s defense against Russian incursions along NATO’s eastern flank. In what appeared to be an attempt to calm NATO allies’ concerns about Trump’s "mistake" comment, acting U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Dorothy Shea told the United Nations Security Council today the U.S. will “defend every inch of NATO territory.” “The United States stands by our NATO allies in the face of these alarming airspace violations,” she said. 
     
    If the U.S. is weakening ties to traditional defensive alliances, it is attempting to flex its muscles by going after alleged drug dealers with a newly dubbed “Department of War.” On September 2, Trump announced the U.S. had struck a boat he claimed was carrying drugs to the U.S., killing 11 civilians he claimed were “Tren de Aragua Narco terrorists.” The administration posted a video of the operation online.
     
    From the start, legal specialists noted that the U.S. made the strike without legal authority. Trump simply claimed the power to kill men he claimed were a danger to the U.S., advancing the argument that drug smuggling is the same thing as an imminent military attack on the U.S. and thus the laws of war are in force. Yesterday, that argument got even weaker when Charlie Savage and Helene Cooper of the New York Times reported that the men on the boat appeared to have been spooked by the military hardware over them and turned back to shore. “If someone is retreating, where’s the ‘imminent threat’ then?” Rear Admiral Donald J. Guter, a retired top judge advocate general for the Navy from 2000 to 2002, said to the reporters. 
     
    Today, Trump announced he was sending the National Guard not into Chicago, Illinois, where Mayor Brandon Johnson and Governor J.B. Pritzker have mounted strong opposition, but to Memphis, Tennessee. The Memphis Police Department noted: “Overall crime is at a 25-year low, with robbery, burglary, and larceny also reaching 25-year lows. Murder is at a six-year low, aggravated assault at a five-year low, and sexual assault at a twenty-year low" in the city. 
     
    Although Trump said he had the support of the mayor and the governor, Shelby County mayor Lee Harris asked Republican governor Bill Lee to “please reconsider, if this is on the table.” He said local government would welcome more state troopers to help fight crime, but “to have individuals with military fatigues, semi-automatic weapons and armored vehicles patrolling our streets is way too far, anti-democratic and anti-American.” 
     
    Lee released a statement saying he was set to speak with Trump about a “strategic mission” to use state law enforcement more effectively with an already established FBI mission in Memphis. 
     
    Meanwhile, yesterday four out of five justices on a panel of the Brazilian Supreme Court found former president Jair Bolsonaro, a close ally of Donald Trump, guilty of plotting a coup, attempting to overturn the country’s 2022 election, and committing violent acts against state institutions. They sentenced him to 27 years and three months in prison.

     

    A morte de Charles Kirk fará alguma diferença significativa na proliferação de discursos como o dele?

     

     


    OSMARCO VALADÃO

    Vamos começar uma lista de atentados politicamente motivados com o ataque contra Gabrielle Giffords, ex-congressista do Arizona, onde seis pessoas foram mortas, em 2011; o tiroteio em um treino de beisebol de congressistas que atingiu Steve Scalise, em 2017; a tentativa de sequestro da governadora Gretchen Whitmer, do Michigan, em 2020, por um grupo extremista planejava desencadear um "conflito nacional"; o ataque a Paul Pelosi, em 2022, marido da ex-presidente da Câmara Nancy Pelosi, agredido à marteladas; o ataque incendiário à residência do governador Josh Shapiro, da Pensilvânia, motivado pela posição do governador sobre o massacre palestino; as duas tentativas de assassinato contra Trump, em 2024; o assassinato de Brian Thompson, CEO da UnitedHealthcare, dezembro de 2024, por Luigi Magione; o assassinato de dois funcionários da embaixada de Israel em Washington, em maio de 2025, "por Gaza", segundo o assassino; o assassinato da deputada Melissa Hortman e seu marido, em Minnesota, e o ataque similar contra o senador estadual John Hoffman e sua esposa; e o recente assassinato de Charles Kirk por Tyler Robinson.
    A Reuters fala em mais de 300 casos de atos violentos com motivação política desde o ataque ao Capitólio em 2021. Outros dados dados indicam um aumento de 25% em ataques politicamente motivados em 2025, em comparação com anos anteriores.
    O que é importante notar nisso: o número de ataques contra vítimas progressistas é um pouco maior, mas não o bastante para afirmar que esses ataques são contra um lado ou outro. Todas as análises sérias apontam a retórica política divisiva, as câmaras de eco das redes sociais e o fácil acesso a armas de fogo como fatores que contribuem e incentivam essa pandemia.
    Eu acho que Charles Kirk não fará a menor falta, mas vocês acreditam mesmo que sua morte fará alguma diferença significativa na proliferação de discursos como o dele? Vocês viram alguma mudança significativa nas práticas dos planos de saúde causadas pela morte de Brian Thompson, ou alguma mudança na situação da Palestina que seja resultado dos assassinatos do funcionários de embaixada de Israel?
    O problema nisso não é quem você acha que merece ou não merece morrer. Duvido que você tenha uma lista tão longa e inclusiva quanto a minha. O problema é que nosso prazer catártico de assistir ao martírio de Kirk não resolve nada, os problemas continuam exatamente os mesmos, se tivermos sorte. Menos para a companhias de segurança privada, claro. A profissão do futuro não é alguma especialização em Inteligência Artificial, é guarda-costas.
    Robinson e Kirk parecem ser da mesma tribo, o que parece estar criando algum curto-circuito em algumas cabecinhas que nunca devem ter percebido a enorme diversidade de opiniões entre membros das duas grandes facções: nem todo crítico ao PT é bolsonarista e nem toda esquerda apoia Lula. Ancaps e fascistas são praticamente opostos, mas estão no espectro da direita. Comunistas e social-democratas estão no lado esquerdo. E frequentemente esse grupos odeiam mais os vizinhos do que os que estão do outro lado do campo de batalha. E nem vou começar a falar do tipo e da quantidade de traumas que alguém pode desenvolver criado por um xerife num Red State.
    "Existem mais coisas entre o céu e a terra... "
    Já li que Robinson discordava das posições de Kirk sobre Israel; já li que ele discordava de Kirk pedir o esclarecimento do caso Epstein; já li que Robinson não considerava Kirk "direita o bastante": afinal, o cara só achava que as coisas eram melhores quando os negros eram escravos. O que eu não li é de onde o pessoal tirou isso, porque eu não achei uma mísera palavra dita pelo próprio Robinson. As vozes nas cabeças das pessoas estão fazendo hora extra. Pelos fatos que temos, o motivo pode muito bem ter sido Kirk ter matado o cachorro de Robinson.
    Eu vou ter que concordar com o governador do Utah, Spencer Cox: "É isso que 250 anos nos trouxeram?" 
     
    Gooooooooooood Moooooooooooooooorniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnng, Vietnãããããããã!!!!

     

      

    TENORIO JR. - EMBALO (in memoriam)

    montagem


     

    sexta-feira, setembro 12, 2025

    PAQUETÁ


     

    Montagem


     

    The Logical Song - Supertramp

    {{

    When I was young, it seemed that life was so wonderfulA miracle, oh, it was beautiful, magicalAnd all the birds in the trees, well they'd be singing so happilyOh, joyfully, oh, playfully watching meBut then they sent me away to teach me how to be sensibleLogical, oh, responsible, practicalAnd then they showed me a world where I could be so dependableOh, clinical, oh, intellectual, cynical

    IN MEMORIAM RICK DAVIES 

    quarta-feira, setembro 10, 2025

    Jesus pulsa demonios


     

    IN FUX WE TRUST

    CRIS VECTOR 
     

     
     
    AROEIRA
     

     
    RICO 
      

     

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    Péricles Cavalcanti - De Alma e de Sangue (Part. Tulipa Ruiz e Juliana Khel)

    Procissão de São Pedro


     

    Toni Platão "Mares da Espanha" Clássico da querida Angela Ro Ro



    IN MEMORIAM
    ]
    Loucura é loucura, não me compreendaLoucura é loucura, pior é a emendaLoucura é loucura, não me repreendaEu amei demaisEu amei demais

    terça-feira, setembro 09, 2025

    The Mothers of Invention - Billy The Mountain



    in memoriam MARK VOLMAN

    Billy was a mountain
    Ethell was a tree
    Growing off of his shoulder

    2 imagens opostas






     

    Angela Ro Ro: a dor de ser e viver -

     Angela Ro Ro: a dor de ser e viver

     "De todas as lésbicas da MPB anteriores ou contemporâneas suas, ela foi a única a dar a cara a tapa, abrindo caminho para Cássia Eller e Mart’nália. Por isso mesmo, ela é a grande referência artística principalmente para gays, lésbicas e travestis nascidos na década de 1970. Era, ao mesmo tempo, o exemplo dos efeitos devastadores da homofobia na vida de uma pessoa pública, honesta que queria ser em relação ao seu amor. A imprensa homofóbica sempre buscava reduzi-la a seus “escândalos”, mas, como escreveu Caetano Veloso em letra dedicada a ela, seu grande escândalo era sua solidão, cujo fundamento era a lesbofobia de que era vítima.

    Esse mecanismo cruel de transformar nossa existência em “escândalo” produzia e ainda produz solidão. E não foi diferente com Angela: cada vez que ela ria alto demais, amava sem esconder, bebia demais ou falava o que pensava, a sociedade encontrava um pretexto para reduzi-la à caricatura da “lésbica descontrolada”, apagando sua genialidade musical. A homofobia é sofisticada em suas estratégias de silenciamento: nos permite estar, mas não nos deixa brilhar."

     leia artigo de JEAN WYLLIS 

    Angela Ro Ro: a dor de ser e viver - Revista Cult

    Tarcisio alem de burro é covarde

     

    MARIO BAGG


     

    Ninguém ensaiou (Haroldo Lobo e Benedito Lacerda) – Aracy de Almeida e Regional de Benedito Lacerda (1944)

    segunda-feira, setembro 08, 2025


     

    Supertramp - School (in memoriam rick davies)



    I can see you in the morning when you go to school
    Don't forget your books, you know you've got to learn the golden rule
    Teacher tells you stop your play and get on with your work
    And be like Johnnie, too good, well don't you know he never shirks?
    He's coming along

    How to Try, and Fail, to Carry Out a Coup

     

     A large of people holding signs and Brazilian flags.

     "To piece together the case against Mr. Bolsonaro, The New York Times reviewed dozens of hours of testimony and hundreds of pages of police and prosecution documents from an investigation spanning nearly two years." 

    read report by ANA IONOVA  

     

    VERISSIMO


     VERISSIMO

    Marcadores:

    The trumpeter waiting to mark Bolsonaro’s judgment day |

     

     

    "When Jair Bolsonaro was Brazil’s far-right president, the guerrilla trumpeter Fabiano Leitão would stalk him around the capital, Brasília, to taunt him with renditions of the anti-fascist anthem Bella Ciao.

    In March, when Bolsonaro was charged with plotting a coup, Leitão changed his tune and began provoking the ex-president by serenading him with Chopin’s Funeral March. “It symbolises his political demise, which is what we want to see,” said the 46-year-old musician."


    read report by Tom Phillips 

    ‘I’m holding his political wake’: the trumpeter waiting to mark Bolsonaro’s judgment day | Jair Bolsonaro | The Guardian

    He Faced Down Trump. Now Comes His Biggest Challenge.

     Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva wearing a dark suit and looking ahead.

     "The wind may be at Mr. Lula’s back, but considerable challenges remain. For one, the coalition that led him back to office three years ago is extremely fragile. His party alone cannot deliver a majority in today’s fragmented political system. Victory next year will require stitching together a broad alliance ranging from the center-left to pragmatic conservatives, the same unwieldy bloc that sustained his comeback in 2022. That means tending constantly to centrist governors, congressional leaders and business groups, whom the current crop of would-be opposition candidates are also courting. Can Mr. Lula convince centrists that democracy is on the ballot even if Mr. Bolsonaro is not?"

    " Mr. Lula’s will depend on whether he can keep the economy steady enough to blunt attacks on his management and frame the election as a referendum on democracy itself. He has already begun to do so, presenting himself as the bulwark against foreign interference and authoritarian relapse. If he can make 2026 about whether Brazil continues as an independent, pluralist society or veers back toward a pattern of democratic erosion that defers to the interests of the United States, he stands a decent chance."

    READ ANALYSIS BY ANDRE PAGLIARINI 

    Prestenção



    AROEIRA

     

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    Bolsonarismo é uma deficiencia mental que...

     

    MARIO BAGG
     

    Angela Ro Ro - Gota de Sangue [1979]



    beba comigo a gota de sangue final

    domingo, setembro 07, 2025


     

    Silvio Tendler


     

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    Why R. Crumb Worked With a Biographer

     The photo portrays two bearded men, R. Crumb and Dan Nadel, seated next to each other at a restaurant. Crumb wears a gray fedora.

     "Unlike paintings or novels, comics hit the beholder with a double whammy of visual and verbal expression, and the result can electrify as swiftly as it can alienate. Over the decades, many have been alienated by Crumb, whose Dürer-level hand is attached to a mind that rages and leers as often as it probes and theorizes.

    Part of Nadel’s motivation, he said, was to contextualize a figure who had zigzagged from the margins to the mainstream and back. “There was this idea that Crumb was a bad boy breaking all the rules of the form,” he said. “Actually he’s a traditionalist who figured out a way to use the language of comics to say entirely new things — to deal with adulthood in America in a frank and confrontational way, while maintaining unbelievable formal rigor.”

    To write the book, Nadel submerged himself in a colossal archive. Because Crumb doesn’t own a computer or smartphone, he reads email on printouts provided by his assistant, Maggie. He then composes a response by hand, which Maggie types and sends. Hard copies of both messages are then filed in boxes. Nadel estimated that he had read between 3,000 and 4,000 pages of correspondence alone.

    You buried me in paper,” Nadel said over coffee and French fries. “I didn’t know how I’d swim through it all.”

     READ THE INTERVIEW BY MOLLY YOUNG

     The photograph portrays a gallery wall of framed images.

     

    VITRA - The Brazilian Artist Who Listens to Minerals

     A woman with tight braids, wearing a suit that is half regular fabric and half shaggy fringe, stands against a rust-colored wall.

     

     "“We have a culture that is made from iron,” Vitra said. “What our ancestors lived inside the mines made us the way we are now.” People in Minas Gerais, she said, were shaped by a legacy of watching out for others and forming survival strategies in mines where labor was exploited and collapses were frequent. Her grandfather, she added, attributed his longevity to the prayer to Saint George — who is associated in Afro-Brazilian religion with Ogun, the spirit of iron and metallurgy — that he kept tucked in his helmet. “Iron is very much in my history,” she said.

    The daughter of a carpenter and a teacher, Vitra grew up in Contagem, a city in the Belo Horizonte agglomeration known for its concentration of heavy industry. Now, at 30, she has emerged as one of the most visible and distinctive — in Brazil and abroad — of a wave of young Black Brazilian artists who are finding new languages with which to explore their histories and connect to the world.

    She places her region’s materials — particularly iron ore and copper — at the heart of elegant, often room-scaled installations, their characteristic reddish tones set against deep blue fabric or painted backgrounds. The compositions extend to beads, ceramics, glass and clean-drawn lines on various surfaces. They favor symmetry, with a ritual feel that nods to Afro-Brazilian religion — the metal arrows, the talismans — but also to broader and nonspecific sacred geometries."

    Read report Siddhartha Mitter

     In two artworks, small pieces resembling arrowheads hang from thick cords and are mounted on a white wall. Larger pieces resembling clay pots are on the floor.

     

    DAVID GANZ & QUARTETO GUERRA PEIXE – MOJAVE (TOM JOBIM)

    JAGUAR (1968)


    JAGUAR

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    Sao Pedro


     

    The Mud Shark (Live At Fillmore East , June 1971)



    IN MEMORIAM MARK VOLMAN 

    The origins of the mud shark are as follows: there's a motel in seattle, washington called the edgewater inn. the edgewater inn's built on a pier.. so that means that when you look out your windYou don't see any dirt -- it's got a bay or something out in your backyard, ,, and to make it even more interesting, in the lobby of the aforementioned motel there's a bait and tackle shop where thIdents can go down whenever they want to, and rent a fishing pole and some preserved minnows and schlep back up to their rooms, open the window, stick their little pole outside and within a fewEs actually catch a fish of some sort that they can bring into their motel room and do whatever they want with it......

    Chipocalypse Now: why Trump is putting troops on the streets

     

    Heather Cox Richardson >

     
    Today the social media account of President Donald J. Trump posted an AI-generated image of Trump as if he were Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore from the 1979 film Apocalypse Now in front of the Chicago skyline with military helicopters and flames and the caption “Chipocalypse Now.” Kilgore loved the war in Vietnam in which he was engaged; his most famous line was “I love the smell of napalm in the morning.”

    Over the image, Trump’s social media post read: “‘I love the smell of deportations in the morning…’ Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.” The words were followed by three helicopter emojis, symbols the right wing uses to represent former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet’s goons’ disappearing political opponents by pushing them out of helicopters.

    Although it has become trite to speculate about what Republicans would say if a Democratic president engaged in the behavior Trump exhibits daily, this open attack of the president on an American city is a new level of unhinged. Mehdi Hasan of Zeteo wrote: “The president of the United States just declared war, actual military war, not a metaphorical one, on a major American city, and one governed by his political opponents.” He added, accurately: “In any other period, this would be impeachment-worthy.”

    Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker called attention to the gravity of Trump’s post: “The President of the United States is threatening to go to war with an American city. This is not a joke. This is not normal. Donald Trump isn’t a strongman, he’s a scared man. Illinois won’t be intimidated by a wannabe dictator.” Under the words “Know your rights, Illinois,” and “Stay safe and stay informed,” the governor’s social media account posted information about Americans’ rights in both English and Spanish.

    Trump’s threats against American citizens are outrageous, but they also feel desperate. Trump’s popularity is tanking, the economy is faltering, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is facing a chorus of calls to resign or be fired, and the American people are taking to the streets. Thousands of people turned out today in Washington, D.C., for the “We Are All D.C.” march to protest the presence of troops in the city, and in Chicago for the “Chicago Says No Trump No Troops” protest. The protests are notable for the seas of signs the peaceful protesters carry.

    And then, with Congress back in session, there is the resurgence of the issue of Trump’s appearance in the Epstein files. Last week, the White House warned Republicans that voting to release the Epstein files “would be viewed as a very hostile act to the administration.” Yesterday, Trump reiterated his claim that the agitation for the release of the files is a “Democrat HOAX…in order to deflect and distract from the great success of a Republican President.”

    Also yesterday, lawyers for the Justice Department asked a federal judge to keep the names of two associates who received large payments from Epstein in 2018 secret. Days before the payments, the Miami Herald had started to examine the sweetheart deal Epstein got in 2008. One associate received a payment of $100,000, and the second received $250,000. As part of his plea deal, Tom Winter of NBC News reports, Epstein got a guarantee that the associates would not be prosecuted.

    Last night, Trump hosted the inaugural dinner of what the White House is calling the “Rose Garden Club” in the newly-paved White House Rose Garden, telling those assembled that they were there because they are loyal to the president. “You’re the ones that I never had to call at 4:00 in the morning,” Trump told them. “You are the ones that have been my friends, and you know what I’m talking about."

    Yesterday, talking to reporters about the Epstein files, House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said that Trump was “an FBI informant to try to take this stuff down.” The idea that Trump was secretly working to bring Epstein down is common fare among conspiracy theorists, but as Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo suggests, Johnson’s embrace of it might well be an attempt to spin material in the files before it becomes public.

    Marshall notes that journalist Michael Wolff, who interviewed Epstein at length during Trump’s first presidency, says that Epstein suspected it was Trump who told the authorities about his systemic sexual assault of girls. But if so, Marshall explains, this is damning rather than exonerating.

    It’s pretty well known that Trump and Epstein had a falling out in 2004 after Trump went behind Epstein’s back to buy an estate in South Florida that Epstein wanted. But at the time, Trump was headed toward bankruptcy, and it was not clear where he was getting the money to buy the estate.

    Marshall calls attention to a recent interview in which Wolff said that Epstein suspected Trump was laundering money for a Russian oligarch—and indeed, Trump did flip the property to a Russian oligarch for a profit of more than $50 million a few years after buying it—and threatened to sue Trump, bringing the money laundering to light. At that point, the Epstein investigation began.

    According to Wolff, Epstein believed Trump had notified the police about what was going on at Epstein’s house, which he knew because he was a frequent visitor. Marshall speculates that Johnson mentioned that Trump was an informant because that information could well be in the files the Department of Justice has, and they’re trying to spin it ahead of time to make it sound like Trump was a hero. But both Wolff and Marshall note that if indeed Trump turned the FBI onto Epstein, it shows he knew what was taking place at Epstein’s properties.

    Johnson’s claim that Trump was an FBI informant suggests Trump’s team is worried that as more and more people get access to the files, it will be increasingly difficult to hide what’s in them. Trump's demand for Republicans’ loyalty suggests that at least some of them are starting to recalculate it. And that, in turn, might have something to do with why he is putting troops in the streets. 

    Tambú e Candogueiro - Kiko Dinucci e banda Afromacarronico


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    Damien Jurado- Male Customer #1(Demo)-2010



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