Monday, 24 January 2022
What/Which party?
Thursday, 20 January 2022
That interview
For example:
- ignoring social norms and laws, or breaking rules at school or work, overstepping social boundaries, stealing, stalking and harassing others, and destroying property
- dishonesty and deceit, including using false identities and manipulating others for personal gain
- difficulty controlling impulses and planning for the future, or acting without considering the consequences
- aggressive or aggravated behavior, including frequent fights or physical conflict with others
- disregard for personal safety, or the safety of others
- difficulty managing responsibilities, including showing up at work, handling tasks, or paying rent and bills
- little to no guilt or remorse, or a tendency to justify actions that negatively affect others
- come across as arrogant or superior, with firmly fixed opinions
- use humor, intelligence, and charisma to manipulate
- seem charming at first, until their self-interest becomes clear
People with ASPD generally find it challenging to maintain friendships, relationships, and other mutually fulfilling connections. This difficulty may stem from traits, like:
- low empathy and emotional intelligence
- difficulty learning from mistakes
- lack of concern for the safety of others
- a tendency to intimidate and threaten in order to maintain control
Wednesday, 19 January 2022
how to thwart an investigation
Tuesday, 18 January 2022
under attack? use chaff.
Monday, 17 January 2022
Can't we just draw a white line around it?
- There's the Missing Inaction of the Levelling Up White Paper.
- Energy price hikes with their predicted hardships
- Unusually high inflation at up to 6-9%
- The National Insurance £12billion addition to the tax burden.
- The greater hidden consequences from Brexit.
- Chumocracy handouts to combat COVID
- Partying so much the place needs redecorating.
Thursday, 13 January 2022
party man
Who cares? It's just another lie to add to the accumulation. Although it can also backfire, when Scottish politicians rally around Ross. And it says much for Rees-Mogg's loyalty that he trashes his own Party leadership north of the border.
Add to that Gove's unapplauded speech about Johnson at 1922 Committee, and we see the fractures.
Loathesome men supporting one another, although it's entirely possible that they are both running dual agendas.
Johnson's advisors are telling him to wait for an air gap around the various stories and create something else personality-centred about someone else.
I notice cross briefings about Sue Gray are emerging. It looks to me like desperate flailing, but Johnson is remarkably resilient. I suppose he'll have a pop at the Civil Service too, who he'll suddenly remember were at his party.
Wednesday, 12 January 2022
how was I supposed to know it was a party?
Tuesday, 11 January 2022
Monday, 10 January 2022
crickey, here comes Queech!!
1) He'll get away with the £12 billion NI increase (£230m million a week) to support NHS and care services. Those red and white spray cans have been well and truly hidden.
2) Through schoolboy skulduggery, the mysterious redecoration payments for his flat and other alleged misdemeanours will be trivialised, dodged, and then forgotten. And as I write this, the parliamentary commissioner for standards has announced he will be 'spared' an investigation into his controversial refurbishment.
3)The parties at Downing Street illustrate that an investigation to identify spoken truths may be simpler than one to find falsehoods.
4) He'll draft a a new egotistical project in the back of his Best Book called the Great Exhibition 2, or similar. Aside from being a cunning way to wash incoming donations, it can get an accidental Boris' branding (eg The Boris Bash).
5) The extra Bank Holiday and the raucous festivities associated with the renamed Brexit Day will be enough to swamp Labour and other party messaging ahead of an election.
6) The loss of the financial services sector from London won't get reported despite Amsterdam outpacing London in equity trading.
7) Two dozen large financial services firms will move £1.3tn of assets from the UK. Nothing to do with Brexit, of course.
8) Euronext, the EU’s largest stock market operator, will move the trading data centres from Basildon to Bergamo.
9) His chums' favourite, the €90tn derivatives clearing business, will stay in London, as a handy tuck box for the wealthy.
10) The cost of living increases at 7-9% will be the clearest indicator that he has not taken back control and his geography of the north will be seen as far as Uxbridge.
11) He will exploit the shift from pandemic to endemic and use Speech Day to look as if he masterminded COVID's defeat.
12) His Latin teacher will seek reassurance that his Greek is just as bad.
Sunday, 9 January 2022
Parable
The dystopian book club is starting to meet again, the next time will be Thursday, at a local pub. Having read about dystopia for a couple of years, the real thing then descended and we were blocked from holding the usual get-togethers. I've noticed that a few sporadic sessions took place, scattered around local pubs, but it looks as if now it will settle back into a rhythm.
First up is Parable of the Sower, by Octavia E. Butler. She wrote it in 1995, but it stands up well against the prevailing conditions in today's world. She describes pandemics and the violence of gun culture in a fractured and disintegrating world.
The protagonist of the story is keeping a diary, and we see her thoughts about collapsing power and the ways that those with nothing to lose will play against the remnants of a system.
Butler portrays a rope unravelling a thread at a time. As things get worse, you start to dread turning the page to see what unfortunate scene gets depicted as one sinks further into the novel.
"Prodigy is, at its essence, adaptability and persistent, positive obsession. Without persistence, what remains is an enthusiasm of the moment. Without adaptability, what remains may be channeled into destructive fanaticism. Without positive obsession, there is nothing at all. EARTHSEED: THE BOOKS OF THE LIVING by Lauren Oya Olamina"
It is some diary. More an account of the deteriorating conditions on earth, or more specifically around Los Angeles, as the last remnants of shelter become corrupted. How people who move to the outside get viscerally damaged. There's feral dogs and raging men with Glocks outside of the so-called gated community. But the gates are more-or-less symbolic because strangers with wants can assail the walls at any time. Firestarters can easily thieve from what has been created.
Lauren Oya Olamina also has a condition known as hyper-empathy, where she can feel what those around her are feeling, even among animals. It creates new descriptions, but seemed to me to be under utilised in the story telling, like a dormant super-power.
All the while the mega-Corporations are busily buying the cities and towns, to create something akin to that feature of modern-day China - the company towns - operated by people who are effectively slaves.
This all sets up the imperative to move from Earth. A new planet and positive change. The book of verses being written by Olamina is Earthseed: The Book of the Living. She notes how it contrasts with the Tibetan and the Egyptian Books of the Dead.
And there is a matter of factness to the descriptions of prevailing conditions. Whether it is shooting a new satellite toward Mars, handling the aftermath of a Pyro induced fire, or seeking more ammunition for the handguns, there is a levelling of tone which persists through the described aftermath of a fire created as a diversion to rob properties.
Butler has run the clock forward in the writing of this novel. Even without the internet's spinnery, we get a sense of the acceleration of earth toward an end-game. Just when we think it can't get worse, Butler quietly offers us an alternative.