79 Replies to “August 9, 2020 – Reader Tips”

  1. Gangnam style, we were so young and innocent.

    3.7B views at 4 mins. Something like 2800 person years.

    1. I never could figure out its appeal, but, then, I gave up on popular culture years ago.

      1. Strange isn’t it? The ‘riding a horse’move that Psy uses constantly for the gangnum style dance video should be worthy of a mocking clip from somebody but i haven’t been able to find anything.

      1. So was I. I was having dental work done at the university clinic and I recall the student who attended to me actually liking that rubbish.

        1. Whenever I hear the opening lines, I always sing: “Nope, Nope, Nope-Nope!!” On my over to change the station!
          That’s half the worlds population that has watched this particular version, probably the rest of the worlds population has seen it in other versions.. That’s an infection rate the corona virus dreams about !
          Imagine if the same amount of people were to watch an educational video instead…

        1. If you scroll down there’s a bit of a story about the singer Kyu Sakamoto and a translation of the words.
          The sixties music biz was firing on all cylinders and you could sell anything.

          1. Well, it was during the disco era.  That demonstrated to me that there’s no limit to bad taste.

          1. To SDA Film Buffs…

            Coming to a theatre near you November 25, 2020 is…
            the next James Bond movie, “No Time To Die” with Daniel Craig, as Bond.
            Here’s more info from “Esquire” —
            https://tinyurl.com/y6zkpmmv

            For your enjoyment: 50 Years of James BOND / Compilation of the Great Theme Songs
            with Movie Clips (1 Hour)
            https://youtu.be/bxCZQi4upIE

            B A D R:

            The following is a continuation from other thread:
            Personal favourite theme songs from James Bond movies, no links due to limits:
            The hauntingly beautiful instrumental part in “You Only Live Twice”, also, other songs: “Nobody Does It Better” from “The Spy Who Loved Me” (Carly Simon) and “For Your Eyes Only” (Sheena Easton)

          2. This was a set up!
            Robert, Robert, Robert!
            We’re on to you.
            How you gonna psyche us out next time?

          3. Nancy:

            I’m not surprised that you like the opening to the theme from You Only Live Twice. John Barry composed the score for that.

            Marvin Hamlisch wrote the music for The Spy Who Loved Me. While the opening song is worth listening to, Hamlisch never really impressed me as a composer, for some reason. (Mind you, I have similar feelings about Johannes Brahms, while there are numerous classical music listeners who would disagree with me.)

            For Your Eyes Only was a Bill Conti production. He’s best known for Rocky. Unfortunately, he fell short of that standard with that soundtrack and there read at least one comment on IMDB that agreed with me. Fortunately, he redeemed himself with me with The Right Stuff.

            Now let’s move outside the official Bond canon. The soundtrack for Never Say Never Again was written by Michel Legrand, another composer who I consider over-rated. Frankly, I thought it was like the movie itself: absolutely dreadful.

            Then, of course, there’s the first movie version of Casino Royale, and the less said about it, the better.

            Of the post-Barry composers (The Living Daylights being his last Bond movie), I was impressed by David Arnold, at least for the Brosnan flicks. He composed the theme for the TV series Sherlock and I particularly like his soundtrack for the Kurt Russell-James Spader movie Stargate.

          4. @9:04 B A
            How nice of you to have put all this info together!
            I liked Marvin Hamlisch’s “The Sting” and Michel Legrand’s music in the movie,”The Summer of ’42” to name a couple. The latter wrote over 200 theme pieces for movies and TV, stuff for piano and strings. He was likely was constricted by time. He put out so much in so little time. His dad was a composer so likely much was expected of him.

            Since you mentioned you liked the music from Stargate, I thought I’d put it here for you.  
            Sadly I never saw the movie. Music’s great!

            In thanks,
            David Arnold: “Stargate – Suite” ·
            Korynta · Prague Film Orchestra
            https://youtu.be/ZzmRFBoux9w

            “The Right Stuff | Soundtrack Suite (Bill Conti)
            https://youtu.be/apxtkMQrZGs
            (Academy Award – best original music score)

            P.S.
            I’m glad Conti didn’t write for New Kids On The Block, they put out a single “The Right Stuff”… it’s what pops up on a search, ha!

    1. Austin, socialism’s Texas enclave. Why? Just like Redmonton, it is ta government town.

  2. I lived in Austin in the 60s. Evidently the practice of first cousins marrying has continued to dilute the iq. Maybe the addition of so many kalifornians hasn’t helped matters.

  3. During the war, while persecuting all belief in the God of the Americans, the government of the Japanese Empire permitted cultists of the Church of Rome to continue eating and drinking to their own damnation in mockery of the Lord’s Supper in public—believing, correctly, that the belief that God’s representative on earth was an Italian ponce best known for licking the boots of Mussolini was no real threat to public order in the Empire. Urakami “Cathedral,” in 1945, was the largest Roman temple in Asia.

    On this day seventy-five years ago, the Lord saw fit to have Fat Man explode 500 meters from the “Cathedral,” levelling it in an instant. The Roman cultists in the “Cathedral” gathered for Mass who were not roasted alive by the heat were crushed to death. It’s unlikely many realized what had hit them before they found themselves in Gehenna.

    This Sunday, thank the God of Israel for humbling the enemies of Israel and of His Son Jesus Christ, and destroying the abominations they erect in the name of their idols and false prophets.

    And thank Him for the atomic bomb.

    1. Truman never wavered or regretted his decision to use the A bomb. The planned for invasion of the Japanese mainland would have resulted in millions of additional deaths of mainly Japanese civilians. The decision was especially appropriate since the Japanese army had declared that the homeland would be defended to the last death.

      1. The scary part about that was that the Japanese guessed, correctly as it turned out, where the Allied forces were going to land and moved troops into those areas. The term “slaughter” would have been an understatement.

        Here’s an ironic twist to that. Several years ago, I heard a story on the BBC World Service in which a Japanese veteran was interviewed and he was thankful that the bombs were dropped. He knew what was coming and he knew he would likely have been killed had the invasions taken place. The bombs saved his life.

        1. “The scary part about that was that the Japanese guessed, correctly as it turned out…”

          There’s even scarier – or at least, mote infuriating deductions than that. I have the url for an article that shows the Japanese were very good at comm intercept – they could not break the American codes, but the encoded part of American messages was preceded by the callsigns of the sender and intended recipient; and by callsign analysis, the Japanese knew something was up.

          A new group of callsigns showed-up on Saipan / Tinian; the usual blocks were 100 callsigns each, and could be traced to existing bomber groups. There were very few callsigns assigned in the 600-block, and they operated in 2’s and 3’s. The Japanese were researching atom bombs without much success, as were the Germans; but if anybody had the industrial muscle to make the concept work, it was the Americans. Some of the strategic thinkers argued that the 600-block of bombers was obviously for a very special purpose, and quite possibly to drop atomic bombs.

          Then Hiroshima got bombed and sure enough, a few 600-block callsigns were HFDF’d coming north over Japan that morning. One heartbreaking interview was featured at that point; the bomb’s target was an army HQ. A teenage girl was on duty in the HQ, and when the alert was called-in she went into the HQ’s bomb shelter with the other ops personnel. She survived the blast without problems, but all her classmates were being mustered on the parade square outside – none of them survived. She was haunted by the question, why were the air raid sirens not sounded? – if they had been, many more people would have been in shelters, and many more would have survived. All of her schoolmates would have.

          { – End Part 1 – I’m making these shorter because I posted the whole story twice, three days ago – and in neither case did it upload. SB Part 2 – }

          1. – Part 2 –

            Well, a few days later, the callsign became active again – and HFDF showed it inbound the Home Islands. Japan had rapidly worked-out responses to another such bombing, and the coincidences with the bombing of Hiroshima were duly noted – the aircraft was even using the exact same callsign, I believe it was V627 (don’t have the url immediately to-hand).

            One of the things the Japanese had set-up was a system of fighter aircraft on runway alert. They had a couple of late-war fighter aircraft types that had shot-down B-29’s; notably the Shiden-kai, which was a match for the Hellcat and Corsair. There was one standing alert on an airbase near Nagasaki; its pilot was interviewed for the article, he was the person I got the info from that shooting-down B-29’s, while a very tough proposition, could be done.

            The comm intercept guys sounded the alarm, and got right onto the blower to Tokyo. Another flight from that callsign block was coming north over the Home Islands again – we must launch the interceptors, right away. High HQ got the information, and dithered. The alert was not sounded, the fighters did not launch.

            They interviewed the pilot of that Shiden standing alert near Nagasaki that morning, and told him the information that the Nagasaki bomber had been detected coming north, but that he’s never been given the launch order. I gotta’ tell you, I thought I knew how to do rage and disgust – I’m a mere amateur; this guy showed how it’s done.

            And how perfectly infuriating, BTW – I’m trying to open my Quotes page to look-up the url, and WordImperfect refuses to recognise RTF…

        2. There were right up to the last couple of days factions fighting each other over Japans direction. Roughly the Army vs everone else. They had 1 million men in China and near that throughout the Pacific.
          Ideoligically there was great support for a final battle on Japan, and if failed then better a Okinawa/Johnstown type mass self extinction.

          Best book on this is second volume, Hell To Pay. Allied planners then expected 1 million allied casualties. Just a naval blockade would require 1,000 ships.
          Due to the war disruption of asian economics, 1-200k were dying of starvation alone every month.

      2. James D Hornfischer “America at total war in the Pacific 1944-45”

        Goes into the background of those decisions including the re-assessments after Saipan

      3. The estimate I saw was that 1 million Americans would’ve been killed in invading and pacifying the Home Islands, and it was this that Truman used to justify dropping the ‘Big One’. He was certainly right.

        1. War is Hell. All the remembering is about Japanese dead not those who died because of the Japanese Military. The Rape of Nanking eliminates any sympathy.

          1. In her column, stupid Ann Landers once summarized WWII by two words, Holocaust and Hiroshima. As though those were the only two atrocities committed in that war, and of equal culpability.
            And it seems that any mention of Hiroshima and Nakasaki still demands, once again, apologists to exculpate American action, as though they were unique events without looking at the larger context. On the other hand, Japan has never even apologized for all her atrocities, nor seemingly asked to. As though they never really happened, and she was only a victim. The Rape of Nanking is known because it happened before foreign witnesses, but it can be multiply by thousands or tens of thousands.
            I mentioned below what I personally went through. I try to not get overworked on something that happened almost eighty years ago. But yes, any time that the word Hiroshima is mentioned as Japanese victimhood and American guilt, it is difficult not to have my blood boil.

        2. The report I read of the staff estimate was as many as a quarter of a million casualties (i.e. wounded and killed) would have been incurred just establishing the beachhead.

          General LeMay would have continued the firebombing of the whole country to avoid having to fight that ground war, if there hadn’t been an atomic bomb. Even before the invasion many times more Japanese would have been burned alive in the wreckage of their homes than were instantly vaporised by the atom bomb.

      4. War is hell. Civilian casualty is worse hell. Only a racist and religious bigot like Santayana’s Ghost (SG for short, nee AC) would rejoice at innocent civilians attending Mass are killed. Surely of all people in Japan, they were least likely to support her war efforts. They would not believe the Emperor was God, for one thing. And SG is completely wrong about the ultimate destination of those innocents.
        However, if the Second World War was such hell, whose fault was it? Germany occupied Sudetenland and Japan occupied Manchuria way before it ever got started, and the allies either allowed them to happen (in Europe) or were powerless to stop them (in Asia.) The historical lessons that you meet aggression with force were forgotten, and thus emboldened, Germany and Japan decided to occupy the rest of Europe and Asia, respectively.
        We can all agree that dropping the atomic bombs, on the whole, saved a lot of lives, military and civilian. The act was not done in viciousness, but as a necessary part of the war, to stop far worse killing. The carpet bombing of Dresden inflicted more civilian deaths, but few remember it, except readers of Slaughter House Five. The collateral civilian deaths are regrettable, but those who died can best blame their own governments. If the atomic bombs were dropped with the intention of killing people, they won’t have been dropped on small hamlets but in the middle of Tokyo.
        But not so in the rest of Asia. The triumphant Japanese military in the Philippines, Burma, and China committed the worst actions against civilians in the modern era. Read the Rape of Nanking. Perhaps you can, I never could get past the introduction, it was so horrible. The Japanese made the mistake of doing it in front of foreign embassies in the then capital of China. But how many thousands of Nanking were there? Personally I was born on the Burma Road, with my family fleeing from the Japanese invasion of Rangoon. My parents told me they had to carry me, several hours old, and my mother hours after giving birth, from a civilian hospital that was bombed, and that Japanese fighters strafed lines of peasants walking along the road. None of those actions had any military values whatsoever. Or any moral justification whatsoever.

        1. Truth. The horrors of war (in general) and the Second World War (in particular) are barely even taught anymore; it upsets the UN narrative you see, that we all are just exactly the same and brothers and sisters under the skin and ready, nay eager to live together in perfect peace and harmony, and all we really need are omnipotent world socialism (with the UN at our head, of course), a universal gun ban and free stuff.

          I’ve read conflicting reports about how many Chinese the Japanese murdered – the consensus is 10 million. But the other consensus I read was 50 million – that’s how many Chinese the Japanese captured or took prisoner during the war, and at the end of it, they released all they had left – fifty. Their motto in China was “burn all, kill all, steal all” – and they pursued it as their sacred duty to the Emperor. And we haven’t even mentioned their biowarfare unit, Unit 731 yet, or the experiments they performed over hapless masses of Chinese peasants by dropping plane-loads of fleas carrying bubonic plague – Halabja on steroids. Every single one of them should’ve stretched hemp – instead they were snapped-up by various countries’ biowarfare units after the war.

          It sickens me.

          1. Speaking of germ experiments, the Japanese massively conducted them in occupied Manchuria.
            They exposed the captured Chinese to anthrax, then treated them with different treatments, including of course the scientifically de rigueur placebo. That was not the only experiment.
            While the Allies executed Tojo, not only did they not punish Emperor Hirohito, they allowed him to rule over his empire, on the theory that he was entirely innocent, and only the puppet of Tojo. Au contraire. Not only was he aware of the experiments, he was avidly interested in them, and wrote many directives to Manchuria demanding the periodic reports of the results.
            When Hirohito lay dying, at least one British tabloid had the headline “Hell is awaiting this evil emperor.” Japan was so incensed they demanded Great Britain to close down the tabloid. The British authorities blandly replied that they were sorry they couldn’t do that, since GB respects freedom of the press. (That was more than 30 years ago. Things have changed. They don’t any more apparently, being so woke now, even Boris.)

    2. Ghosts are angry spirits….
      “But in the midst of the devastation, near the hypocenter of the attack, eight Jesuit missionaries who were in their rectory survived. Four of the priests whose lives were spared are known by name: Father Hugo Lassalle, Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge, Father Hubert Schiffer and Father Hubert Cieslik sustained only minor injuries from shattered windows. None suffered hearing loss from the explosion. Their church, Our Lady of the Assumption, suffered the destruction of its stained glass windows but did not fall; it was one of only a few buildings left standing in the midst of widespread destruction.

      Not only were the clerics kept safe from the initial blast — they suffered no ill effects from the harmful radiation. Doctors who cared for them after the blast warned that radiation poisoning to which they had been exposed would cause serious lesions, illness and even death. But 200 medical exams in the ensuing years showed no ill effects, confounding the doctors who had predicted dire consequences.” https://www.ncregister.com/blog/kschiffer/the-jesuit-priests-who-survived-hiroshima

      And then,

      “On August 9, 1945, another atomic bomb was dropped—this time on Nagasaki, the city known as the Japanese capital of Catholicism since nearly two-thirds of Japan’s Catholics lived there. Nagasaki was devastated. The Franciscan Convent built by St. Maximilian Kolbe, however, remained standing.

      The Polish saint, martyred in the concentration camp at Auschwitz during that same war, had decided to build the convent in a location that many thought was poorly chosen because it was not near the center of the city. Despite this criticism, Maximilian insisted on a plot of land located behind a mountain.

      It was that mountain, in fact, that protected the convent when the atomic bomb destroyed the city, killing nearly 70,000 people.

      In the midst of such horrible death and destruction, God—apparently at least in part due to Mary’s intercession—protected those missionaries, but surely not only for their own sake. They lived so they could minister to the injured, sick, and dying from the attack. They lived so they could be witnesses to the world of the horrors of war and specifically of nuclear weapons, witnesses to God’s power and mercy, and witnesses to the importance and power of prayer.”
      https://aleteia.org/2019/08/21/the-two-churches-that-survived-the-atomic-bombs-in-hiroshima-and-nagasaki/

      1. +++ C. This has to happen wherever people are threatened by the anti everything crowd.

    1. +1. In the absence of police equally applying laws, this is what will end Antifa and BLM violence.

    1. What does my post have to do with cops? Do you understand that it was judges that overruled the jury verdict and that cops played no role?

    2. Just another “Charter of Rights” fiasco. Some ‘Rights’ are more worthy than others.

    3. Another example of Canada’s staggeringly poor legal system. 4 years have gone by and this attempt to financially break the accused continues. The lefties will proceed with this until they get the verdict they want.

    1. A bit more digging (OK – speculation!) around that

      Toss this in for a “special” or two or three

      The usual Merlin 24 in a Lancaster was 1510 hp at 9250 feet.

      By that time they had the 2 speed 2 stage Merlins.

      The Merlin 113 was 1435 hp at 27000 feet as in late Mosquitos

      And somewhat tricked up Lancasters were hauling 10 ton Grand Slams up to around 20,000 feet so 5 tons would have been easy. So AVRO had some practice.

      And then

      “B.VI

      Nine aircraft converted from B.IIIs. Fitted with Merlin 85/87 which had two-stage superchargers, giving much improved high altitude performance. The B VI could achieve a maximum speed of 313 mph (505 km/h) at 18,200 ft (5,550 m) at 65,000 lb (29,500 kg) takeoff weight and a service ceiling of 28,500 ft (8,690 m) at the same weight. Climb to 28,000 ft (8,500 m) at 65,000 lb (29,500 kg) takeoff weight was accomplished in 44.8 minutes with a maximum climb rate of 1,080 ft/min (5.5 m/s) at 1,000 ft (305 m).[70] A Lancaster B VI was dived to a maximum indicated speed of 350 mph (565 km/h), or Mach 0.72 at 25,000 ft (7,620 m) in June 1944.[71] The Merlin 85/87 series engines were fitted with annular cowlings similar to the Avro Lincoln and three bladed paddle-type propellers were fitted. These aircraft were used by only Pathfinder units; by No. 7 Squadron RAF, No. 83 Squadron RAF, No. 405 Squadron RCAF and by No. 635 Squadron RAF. Often used as a “Master Bomber” the B VIs were allocated to RAF Bomber Command apart from two that were retained by Rolls-Royce for installation and flight testing.[72] Their dorsal and nose turrets were removed and faired-over. The more powerful engines proved troublesome in service and were disliked by ground maintenance staff for their rough running and propensity to ‘surge and hunt’, making synchronisation impossible. This was caused by variations in the fuel/air mixture and over time would damage the engine.[73] The B VI was withdrawn from operational service in November 1944 and surviving aircraft were used by Rolls-Royce, the Royal Aircraft Establishment and the Bomb Ballistics Unit (BBU) for various testing and experimental duties.[citation needed]”

      (My bold)

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_Lancaster#Variants

  4. Blackie’s Toronto Star reports that our Great Leader will be taking another week’s vacation. Well, its not like anything is going on right now.

    1. During my time in the oil industry, we called what he’s doing right now something else, and that involved canines. I’ll leave it to the imaginations of SDAers to figure out what I mean.

      1. My old driller would say “lets have less seduction and more production around her.”

  5. Blackie’s Sunday Toronto Star gives the full story on how our Great Leader is going to remake Canada. Yes the Star talked privately to PMO insiders, and our little dictator isn’t going to let this China virus situation go to waste. He plans major changes when it comes to socialism, racism, feminism, and global warming scams. And with interest rates so low, he will borrow tons of money to pay for these efforts.

    1. …and the Bank of Canada will buy up the tons of questionable government bonds, and raise the BoC’s balance sheet to unheard-of levels. After all, Trudeau-money is free for the asking.

      1. It’s called “Modern Economic Theory” don’t ya know. Just print whatever cash you need. Easy! What could possibly go wrong?

    2. “he will borrow tons of money…”

      Not much longer, he won’t; peering into my beer-soaked crystal ball (no relation to Lucille), I foresee a downgrading of Canada’s credit rating in the near future, followed by much hysterics from the PMO and then another quick downgrade. But do not fret, loyal welfare bvms – if he can’t borrow the money, Little Potato will just print as much as he wants.

      – I mean, why not? – the Canadian dollar is almost worthless now, and #Wexit will complete the task. We’re going down below 50c American, and we’re never coming back. I just hope he gives all that aid he promised to Beirut soon, or they’ll refuse it.

      1. …and in my small, self-managed RRIF portfolio, I m buying gold shares. My portfolio is up nicely. For retirees who need the income, I recommend CGXF-T and HEP-T gold ETFs. Both average about 5% in annual dividends, and hold large gold and silver producing companies. You can’t go wrong.

    3. Let us be clear. These are UN plans — Trudeau is lucky if he was even consulted. Canadians, of course, hav no choice whether or not these things are priorities for them. Democracy no longer exists in our country.

  6. Fireside Chat Ep. 146 — The Left Is Weaponizing Medicine
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5kqlzjByQI
    —————————————————————————————————————————————-
    L- The anti-HCQ is soon to be overwhelmed by the growing weight of evidence. A civil suit takes time but the simply having the evidence made public the prov. and fed. government in Canada will cave to a popular pro-science revolt. Sask. has a prov. election this fall. Start the challenge now. The weight of evidence brought into public awareness will carry the day.

    Reduce the unnecessary deaths and suffering, get the medical system and the economy back to speed.

    Marxist science or Medical science?

    A self-governing people: free speech, Natural Justice, scientific method, is this a hill to die on?
    Our obligation is to keep firing facts at them until facts win or are totally outlawed, e.i. C.C.P.

    A self-governing people aim for the truth. They keep firing with facts, until it sets them or their descendents free. Transcendental values, the foundation of Western Civilization.

  7. This document is from a German extra-parliamentary committee that has looked at the question of whether reaction to the Covid virus has been too extreme. Looks like it has been:
    https://acu2020.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Text-ACU-english-1.pdfhttps://acu2020.org/english-versions/

    Interesting site for anyone who speaks German, but a few things are available in English translation. The site is attempting to gather views from experts in a contest where expert positions opposed to the official narrative about Covid are routinely suppressed.

    1. Powerful stuff in the above link. From a virologist, Prof. Haditsh on the committee:
      “This investigation is necessary because inappropriate decisions have been made irresponsibly from the outset, either grossly negligently or deliberately, without the necessary duty of care, that is to say without even the slightest consideration for collateral damage – decisions that have also undermined fundamental democratic rights and trampled all over ethical duties.

      My personal motivation for participating in this is basically that I am a specialist in microbiology, virology, and infection epidemiology, and that, from a professional point of view, I am deeply appalled by the completely unobjective, unprofessional approach in this matter.
      Some people will now wonder what I mean by “unobjective, unprofessional approach”. What I mean by this includes the basically ongoing sketching of worst case scenarios, fear-mongering, and creation of inappropriate comparisons, also in the media. ”
      ——-
      Sound familiar?
      This is from Germany where they know about tyranny.

  8. Anybody here remember Laural and Hardy?
    The punchline being “Look what you made me do”as the fat guy beats up the little guy.
    Being beyond parody Stockton University,USA has made this policy.

    “Dailyda had used a photo of President Trump as his Zoom background image during a July virtual class which offended fellow students, who subsequently filed complaints. Dailyda later removed himself from the chat in order to “avoid continued conflict,” Stockton acknowledged.

    Administrators at the publicly-funded university wrote in an incident report that the image of the president had caused students “to feel offended, disrespected, and taunted” during class.”

    Yes indeedy an “IMAGE” caused students to….
    Just like the Son’s of the Desert Pedophile,our poor students are not responsible for their own cognitive functions.
    So if these critters can be “Made to feel” by showing them an Image,what value is their opinion on anything?
    What is the point of “educating” such defectives?

    If you are so gullible and unformed,that a visual signal can override your logic systems..
    What use are you ?
    What value can you have?
    Even to yourself?
    Such a mental defective cannot function in a complex civil society.
    They “FEELZ” they do not think.
    Our survival requires that such monsters do not run loose in society,we must banish them .
    I can see the case for segregation,Liberal/Progressive Enclaves,to limit the damage to the productive parts of our technological paradise.

    1. “That can be useful when the right time comes…” Captain Ramius (Hunt for Red October) sensing his crew’s fear of sabotage.

  9. In case you didn’t know, this is international whiny indian day. Call your local scrap yard and have them dump a rusted out car on your front lawn, scatter a few empty beer cans around, and your ready to celebrate.

    1. And don’t forget to constantly apologize to them for stealing their land and promise to rename everything.

  10. Big Chief Gay Eagle With No Balls took some time away from his two week vacation at Harrington Lake, to recognize whiny indian day. Trudeau issued a statement that we must continue the fight to stop racist Canadian bastards from persecuting indians. He also announced a 12 million dollar grant to whiny indian organizations in Ontario to promote tourism. Perhaps they can have buses take tourists to view the blockades and riots currently at Caledonia Ont.

    1. they can have buses take tourists to view the blockades and riots

      Ah, yes. There’s nothing like natives observing their ancestral traditions, is there?

  11. A little more coming out of Beirut,

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/08/italian-explosives-expert-beirut-blasts-massive-red-cloud-indicative-lithium-metal-propellant-military-missiles-explosives-storage-facility/

    So, like the Corona virus fiasco, who do you believe. In the videos of the explosion the little flashes occurring within the building looked more like small arms ammunition cooking off, not like fireworks, and now a more believable explanation of the reason for the explosion than 2,700 tons of ammonia nitrate.

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