Wednesday, 5 June 2024

Ricky September

The individual Act of Obedience 
is the cornerstone not only 
of The Strength of 
Authoritarian Society 
but also of its weakness.
Today, we acknowledge 
a really terrible loss. 

Cedric Diggory was, as you all know, 
exceptionally hard-working 
infinitely fair-minded 
and, most importantly, 
a fierce, fierce friend. 

Now, I Think, therefore, 
you have the right to know 
exactly how he died. 

You see, Cedric Diggory was 
murdered by Lord Voldemort

The Ministry of Magic does not 
wish me to tell you this. 
But not to do so, I think, would 
be an insult to his memory. 

Now, the pain we all feel 
at this dreadful loss 
reminds meand reminds us
that while we may come 
from different places and 
speak in different tongues
our hearts beat as one. 

In light of recent events 
the bonds of friendship 
we've made this year will be 
more important than ever. 

Remember that, and Cedric Diggory 
will not have died in vain. 

You remember that, and 
we'll celebrate a boy who 
was kind and honestand 
brave and true, right 
to the very end. 


Through a bullhorn, a police captain began to shout,
 
 CLEAR THE PLAZA CLEAR THE PLAZA.
 
The first reports of the annihilation camps were passed on to the OSS by a Swiss businessman evaluated as being one of the most trustworthy informants on affairs in Nazi Europe. The State Department decided that the stories were not confirmed

That was early in 1943. By autumn of that year, more urgent reports from the same source transmitted still through the OSS forced a major policy conference. It was again decided that the reports were not True. 

As winter began, the English government asked for another conference to discuss similar reports from their own intelligence networks and from the government of Rumania. The delegates met in Bermuda for a warm, sunny weekend, and decided that the reports were not True; they returned to their work refreshed and tanned. The death trains continued to roll. 

Early in 1944, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, was reached by dissenters in the State Department, examined the evidence, and forced a meeting with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Shaken by the assertions in Morgenthau's documents, Roosevelt pledged that he would act at once. 

He never did

It was said later that the State Department convinced him, once again, of their own analysis: the reports simply were not true. 

When Mr. Hitler said Veminichtung he had not really meant Vemichtung. An author, Ben Hecht, then placed an ad in the New York Times, presenting the evidence to the public; a group of prominent rabbis attacked him for alarming Jews unnecessarily and undermining confidence in America's Chief Executive during wartime. 

Finally, late that year, American and Russian troops began liberating the camps, and General Eisenbower insisted that news photographers take detailed movies which were released to the whole world. In the interval between the first suppressed report by the Swiss businessman and the liberation of the first camp, six million people had died.

"That's what we call a Bavarian Fire Drill," Simon explained to Joe. (It was another time; he was driving another Volkswagen. In fact, it was the night of April 23 and they were going to meet Tobias Knight at the UN building.) "It was one official named Winifred who'd been transferred from the Justice Department to a key State Department desk where every bit of evidence passed for evaluation. 

But the same principles apply everywhere. 


For instance — we're half an hour early for the meeting anyhow — I'll give you an illustration right now." They were approaching the corner of Forty-third Street and Third Avenue and Simon had observed that the streetlight was changing to red. As he stopped the car, he opened the door and said to Joe, "Follow me."

Puzzled, Joe got out as Simon ran to the car behind them, beat on the hood with his hand and shouted "Bavarian Fire Drill! Out!" He made vigorous but ambiguous motions with his hands and ran to the car next back. Joe saw the first subject look dubiously at his companion and then open the door and get out, obediently trailing behind Simon's urgent and somber figure.

 "Bavarian Fire Drill! Out!" Simon was already shouting at the third car back.
 
As Joe trotted along, occasionally adding his own voice to persuade the more dubious drivers, every car gradually emptied and people formed a neat line heading back toward Lexington Avenue. Simon then ducked between two cars and began jogging toward the front of the -line at Third Avenue again, shouting to everybody, "Complete circle! Stay in line!" Obediently, everyone followed in a great circle back to their own cars, reentering from the side opposite to that from which they had left. Simon and Joe climbed back into the VW, the light changed, and they sped ahead.
 
 "You see?" Simon asked. 

"Use words they've been conditioned to since childhood — 'fire drill,' 'stay in line,' like that — and never look back to see if they're obeying. 

They'll follow

Well, that's the way the Illuminati guaranteed that the Final Solution wouldn't be interrupted. Winifred, one guy who had been around long enough to have an impressive title, and his scrawl 'Evaluation: dubious' on the bottom of each memo . . . and six million died. 

Hilarious, isn't it?"

And Joe remembered from the little book by Hagbard Celine, Never Whistle While You're Pissing (privately printed, and distributed only to members of the JAMs and the Legion of Dynamic Discord): "The individual act of obedience is the cornerstone not only of the strength of authoritarian society but also of its weakness."

(On November 23, 1970, the body of Stanislaus Oedipuski, forty-six, of West living Park Road, was found floating in the Chicago river. Death, according to the police laboratory, did not result from drowning but from beating about the head and shoulders with a square-ended object. 

The first inquiries by homicide detectives revealed that Oedipuski had been a member of God's Lightning and the theory was formed that a conflict between the dead man and his former colleagues might have resulted in his being snuffed with their Wooden crosses. 

Further investigation revealed that Oedipuski had been a construction worker and until very recently well liked on his job, behaving in a normal, down-to-earth manner, bitching about the government, cursing the lazy bums on Welfare, hating n*ggers, shouting obscene remarks at good-looking dolls who passed construction sites and — when the odds were safely above the 8-to-l level— joining other middle-aged workers in attacking and beating young men with long hair, peace buttons, or other un-American stigmata. 

Then, about a month before, all that had changed. He began bitching about The Bosses as well as The Government — almost sounding like a communist at times; when somebody else cussed the crumb-bums on Welfare, Stan remarked thoughtfully, "Well, you know, our union keeps them from getting jobs, fellows, so what else can they do but go on Welfare? Steal?" 

He even said once, when some of the guys were good-humoredly giving the finger and making other gallant noises and signals toward a passing eighteen-year-old girl, "Hey, you know, that might really be embarrassing and scaring her . . . !" 

Worse yet, his own hair begun to grow surprisingly long in the back, and his wife told friends that he didn't look at TV much anymore but instead sat in a chair most evenings reading books. The Police found that was indeed true, and his small library — gathered in less than a month — was remarkable indeed, featuring works on astronomy, sociology, Oriental mysticism, Darwin's Origin of the Species, detective novels by Raymond Chandler, Alice in Wonderland, and a college-level text on number theory with the section on primes heavily marked with notes in the margin; the gallant, and now pathetic, tracks of a mind that was beginning to grow after four decades of stagnation, and then had been abruptly stomped. Most mysterious of all was the card found in the dead man's pocket, which although waterlogged, could still be read. 

One side said 
 
 THERE IS NO ENEMY ANYWHERE
 
 
 and the other side, even more mysteriously, was inscribed :
 
 
 
 
The Police might have tried to decipher this, but then they discovered that Oedipuski had resigned from God's Lightning — giving his fellow members a lecture on Tolerance in the process — the night before his death. 

That closed the case, definitely

Homicide did not investigate murders clearly connected with God's Lightning, since the Red Squad had its own personal accommodation with that burgeoning organization. 

"Poor motherfucker," a detective said, looking at Oedipuski's photographs; and closed the file forever

Nobody ever reopened it, or traced the change in the dead man back to his attendance at the meeting, one month before, of KCUF at the Sheraton-Chicago, where the punch was spiked with AUM.)
 
 
 
In the act of conception, of course, the father contributes 23 chromosomes and the mother contributes another 23. In the I Ching, hexagram 23 has connotations of "sinking" or "breaking apart," shades of the unfortunate Captain Clarks...

Tuesday, 4 June 2024

The Power Of Music On The Brain

Power Of Music On The Brain | Dementia & Parkinson's

(original) Man In Nursing Home Reacts To Hearing Music From His Era

Monday, 3 June 2024

The Old Man





Frank Black, The Sheriff :
Hush! No quick moves. Move back. Move back.

(He spots The Old Man watching 
them on the rim of The Ravine)

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
Call off Your Dogs.

The Old Man :
They ain't My Dogs. 

The Old Man :
Hey. Huh. What are you doing here? 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
I think you're supposed to tell me
The winnebago? 

The Old Man :
They left it for you to have a look. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
What did you do with the bodies? 

The Old Man :
Well, they were tended to 
and sent to their family. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
And the explanation was

The Old Man :
Did you happen to catch the may 1997 
"Morbidity and mortality weekly report"
It indicates that injuries from dog attacks 
increased 37% in the last decade. 
4.7 million people in the U.S. 
were bitten by dogs in 1994. 
About a million needed medical care, 
compared to half a million in 1986. 

It's my job to keep an eye on information l
ike that as "The Day" nears. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
Is that what you do for The Millennium? 

The Old Man :
The Group or The Event? 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
The photographs, my name in your journal, 
the gravestones in the ravine. 

The Old Man :
What makes you think 
they're gravestones

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
The Snake, The Ouroboros... 
It was used as a secret symbol 
in early christian graves. 
The markers, rough obelisks. 

The Old Man :
So you've been looking into The Group. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
Apparently not enough

The Old Man :
Apparently

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
Were those the graves of past members? 

The Old Man :
Do you know the significance 
of The Ouroboros? 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
The snake is symbolic of divine life. 
It embraces cyclical systems... 
Unity, multiplicity, evolution, 
involution, birth, death. 

The Old Man :
Hmm. That's all you need to know for now
Frank, about The Millennium Group. 
The reason you're here is to 
learn about The Event. 
"When I looked for good, 
then evil came unto me. 
When I waited for the light, 
then came darkness." 
The Circle is about as good 
as it's gonna get
No beginning, no end, no boundaries
yet nothing but what lies 
inside the circle and 
what lies outside

Go stand by that rock. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
(afraid of The Dogs) No, no, no, no. 

The Old Man :
Serial killers, spree killers, mass murderers... 
It's all just societal, genetic. 
Inevitability

You have no idea about true evil. 


Now go stand by that rock. 

(Frank approaches The Boundary Stones)

The Old Man :
No. One more step

(The Dogs back down, retreat and leave)

The Old Man :
Well, you passed. 

This is like matter itself, Frank. 
Neither good nor evil can be destroyed, 
and both will always be here. 
It's meant to be. 
"The Lord hath made all things for himself. 
Yea, even the wicked for the day of evil." 

Our role is to achieve equilibrium
And as we do that, we must respect evil, 
and we must make evil respect us
But... At times such as now, events indicate 
that we're losing balance
and time is running out

Well, it's good to meet ya. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
The Dogs... That's why 
they're coming into town, because 
Michael Beebee built His House 
in an area that upset The Balance. 
The townspeople don't have 
any idea of this, do they? 

The Old Man :
It's over their damn heads, Frank. 
Their fear shrinks the world 
to the size of nothing 
but their own lives. 
It blinds them to anything 
beyond their own houses
All they think is, 
"Why me? Please, just leave me alone."
 All they hope is, it'll go away
but it won't go away. 

That's why people like you are sent here. 
You have a gift, Frank. 
But, unlike a bad tie at christmas, 
your gift is unreturnable

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
I don't have the gift anymore. 
The images, things I see... 
My personal life... 
Has upset the balance. 

The Old Man :
It'll come back. And when it does
you'll think it's diminished, but, actually, 
it'll be greater than before. 
You're moving to a 
new plane, Franklin. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
They'll kill Michael. 

The Old Man :
Surprised it ain't happened already

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
How can I respect that? 

The Old Man :
Well, I can't respect him
My neighbour did nothing to help his
or our, situation but run away. 
And from crime, of all things. 

Crime is not evil

Any of us would steal if we were hungry
and any of us might even kill 
if we were without hope

So we confront evil. 
There isn't much time, and we can't 
waste time on one ignorant man. 

Frank Black, The Sheriff :
You could teach him. Hmph. 

The Old Man :
Well, then I haven't taught you

Frank Black, The Sheriff : 
(walks off, annoyed
My Name is not "Franklin".

Sunday, 2 June 2024

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

Sally Dumont :
I read that interview you did. 
Sounds like you felt sorry for him. 


Frank Black :
I feel sorry for Sally Dumont and 
the man who died here tonight. 
I'm just working to find out 
why he does it. 

Why he kills horses

Normally I would say that they were 
used as a proxy for someone he hates... 
A Mother, a Father, an abusive, 
controlling figure. 

Sally Dumont :
"Normally", huh? [snickers

Frank Black :
I just don't think that that's the case here. 
I think the horses are 
An End unto themselves.
 Why do you think he does it? 

Sally Dumont :
Well, for a lot of girls, their 
first love was a horse. 

Frank Black :
You're saying he's jealous
That the horses cut him 
off from women
From sexual intimacy? 

Sally Dumont :
Were any of the dead horses drugged

Frank Black :
No. Why? 

Sally Dumont :
They just stand there and 
let him do this to them. 
They could really damage him. 
They could kill him 
with a single kick. 

But they just stand there
It's because they're reared 
to Trust in Man

I've seen horses trapped in 
the killing box at the slaughterhouse. 
They can smell the blood and 
the death of the animal that 
was in that box before them. 

But despite that, 
they Trust in Man. 

Their Executioner is standing 
above them with a bolt gun, and 
they look to him for help, and 
he fires a steel bolt straight 
into their heads. 

I know why they stand still for him.



Where are they headed? 

Claudia
Slaughterhouse.

Frank Black :
Foals? 

Claudia
Yeah, they're from the P.M.U. Farms. 
We're the only state that still has them.

Frank Black :
P.M.U.?

Claudia
"Pregnant Mare's Urine." 
It's rich in estrogen, which is the main element in hormone replacement therapy. 
It's also the most prescribed pharmaceutical in the united states. 

In North America, up to 80,000 mares 
are kept pregnant, and their urine collected 
so that women can stay healthier longer. 
But each time a mare gets pregnant, 
she has a foal. 

The quickest way to make money off of 
80,000 foals is to kill them and 
sell The Meat to Japan and Europe. 

Frank Black :
The horses that were attacked... 
They were usually mares
How many of these farms are in this state? 

As far as anybody can tell, 
we've got about 15 farms 
in the west end of the state. 

Many of them have shut down. 

There were four in our area. Haverly, july '94. Redner, october '95. Borgsen, december '94 and sandberg, january '95. 

Peter Watts :
Forensics, on the apron, showed 
human sweat and horse urine.
The urine was rich in estrogen.
The guy could've worked on 
any one of these farms. 

Frank Black :
I think he lived on one of these farms. 
Part of the ritual is wearing clothes 
that bring him back to that time. 

Peter Watts :
If he grew up on a P.M.U. Farm, 
his earliest memories would've been of horses 
held captive, foals slaughtered. 

He learned that's how food was 
put on his table, clothes on his back. 
Farm closes, he loses his livelihood
He loses the means to 
gratify his impulses. 

Frank, a lot of people work on these farms. They're decent, ordinary people. 

I'm not talking about decent, ordinary people. I'm talking about one man with a twisted mind. 

First horse attack was in february '95. 
Which one closed nearest that? Borgsen, december '94. Sandberg would have been the nearest... January '95, one month before the first attack. The phone call to you, Frank, came from prefix 774. That's this area. Borgsen.

Panic is a Common Hazard at Sea

Well, don't you think, sir, that 
when his subordinates all agree that 
The Ship is going down that The Captain 
ought to listen to them?  
It's very common for some subordinate officers 
to think The Ship is sinking when 
all that's happening is a little weather. 

Panic is a common hazard at sea. 
The highest function of Command is to override 
and listen to nothing but The Voice 
of his own professional judgment.


Call Captain Southard. 

State your name, rank 
and present station. 

Capt. Southard :
Randolph SouthardCaptain, 
US Navy operations officer, Fifth Fleet. 

You understand that you've been called 
as an expert witness on Avenger-
class ship handling? 


Capt. Southard :
I do. 

State your qualifications

Capt. Southard :
Some 20 years on smaller combatants, 
ten years of commanding all types, including 
ships ranging up to guided missile destroyers. 

To clarify for the members, will you use the map marked 
"Exhibit A" to illustrate the position of the Caine 
when she encountered the storm? 

Capt. Southard :
The Caine was approximately here
The Storm hit from the northeast, heading southwest. 

Vessels of the task force steered south 
in an attempt to outrun The Weather. 

The Caine, in her spot on the right flank 
of the sweep pattern, caught 
the worst of it. 

Rather than steering with the wind aft, 
she turned north into the wind and seized. 

That was the situation in the strait 
on the day in question. 

Thank you, Captain. 

You may be seated. Trial counsel, you may proceed. 

Thank you. 

Captain, let's say that, hypothetically, 
you're the one who's in command of the vessel. 
A cyclone blows up without warning traveling west 
and you're directly in the path of it. 
The wind keeps increasing, its direction holding steady from the north. Soon your wind is force ten to 12 and your seas are mountainous. 

Under the circumstances
what would you do? 

Capt. Southard :
Well, I'd execute the classic Navy maneuver 
known as getting the hell out of there. 

And how would you go about that, Captain? 

Capt. Southard :
Well, it's almost rule of thumb
You say the winds from the north are 90 knots, 
center of the cyclone coming at you from the west. 
The best course is south. 
You might have to head a couple of points 
one way or the other, depending on your seas, 
but there's only one way out of that mess... south

But then you have a terribly strong 
stern wind, don't you? 

Capt. Southard :
What about it? 

Well, can a small vessel ride safely going downwind in such conditions? 

Capt. Southard :
She'll ride just as well going downwind as upwind. 
In fact, with your high freeboard going forward, 
a smaller vessel tends to back in the wind. 

Other things being equal, she'll do 
slightly better going downwind. 

How about turning north in those circumstances 
and heading into the wind? 

Capt. Southard :
Well, that would be dubious and dangerous
not to mention idiotic


Why, sir? 

Capt. Southard :
Well, you're heading yourself right back 
into the path of the cyclone. 
Unless you're interested in sinking, that's not smart. 


That's all, sir. 

Captain, have you ever conned 
A Ship at The Centre of A Cyclone? 

Capt. Southard :
NegativeBeen on the fringes often, 
but always managed to avoid the center. 

And have you ever commanded 
a mine countermeasures ship? 

Capt. Southard :
Negative


Okay, this trial, sir, concerns an Avenger-class MCM at the center of a very dangerous storm. 


I'm aware of that. 

Capt. Southard :
I've had MCMs under my command, and 
I've read the book on them. 
They don't differ from smaller-class vessels 
in terms of characteristics and 
handling in rough weather. 

I only ask these questions, sir, because you are 
the only expert ship-handling witness, and 
I believe the extent of your expert knowledge 
should be clear to the court. 

Capt. Southard :
Well, I've handled these ships in almost every conceivable situation for the last ten years. 
Haven't handled a mine countermeasures
at the center of a cyclone,
 but I don't know who the hell has 
besides the skipper of The Caine. 
That's a thousand-to-one shot. 

Then would you state, without reservation, that the same rules hold for an MCM at the center of a cyclone? 

Capt. Southard :
At the center of a cyclone, there 
are no hard and fast rules. 
That's one situation where it's all 
up to the commanding officer. 
Too many things happen too fast. 

You remember the hypothetical question 
put to you by trial counsel about the storm, yes? 

Capt. Southard :
I do. 

I want you to assume in that situation that 
The Wind and The Seas become bigger. 
They become bigger than anything... 
Anything you have ever experienced. 

You have lost Control of your ship, sir. 

You actually believe she could sink. 
You are in the worst-case scenario. 
Do you bring around north into the wind, 
or do you continue south, stern to the wind? 

Capt. Southard :
You're getting very extreme.

 Yes, sir, I am. Would you prefer not to answer the question? 

Capt. Southard :
I'll answer it. 


Please. 

Capt. Southard :
In the worst-case scenario, 
I'd come around the north, 
into the wind, if I could. But only 
in the worst-case scenario. 


Why? 

Capt. Southard :
Because the engines in your rudder 
have the best chance that way. 
That's why. It's your last chance 
to keep control of Your Ship. 

But aren't you heading back 
into the centre of The Storm? 

Capt. Southard :
First things first. If you're on the verge of sinking
you about as bad off as you can get
Mind you, you said worst-case scenario. 

I did, sir. Thank you very much. 
No further questions. 

Captain, who, in your opinion, 
is the best judge as to whether A Ship 
is in the worst-case scenario? 

Capt. Southard :
There's only one judge. 
The commanding officer. 

Why, sir? 

Capt. Southard :
The Navy made him Captain 'cause 
his knowledge of The Sea and of ships 
is better than anyone else's on The Ship. 

It's very common for some subordinate officers 
to think The Ship is sinking when 
all that's happening is a little weather. 

Well, don't you think, sir, that 
when his subordinates all agree that 
The Ship is going down that The Captain 
ought to listen to them

Capt. Southard :
Negative. Panic is a common hazard at sea. 
The highest function of Command is to override 
and listen to nothing but The Voice 
of his own professional judgment.

Time & Propinquity : Eats, Shoots & Leaves

Time & Propinquity : Eats, Shoots & Leaves

Geraldo Rivera :
"That's the most shocking thing 
I have ever seen in The Movies --"

-- on the occasion of the first ever televised 
broadcast of The Zapruder Film.
And he is talking about the gore, 
not the implications of the gore,
which he can't even begin to deal with.


Why We Go to the Movies | Dennis Quaid


"Jim Garrison, who really put forward "The" JFK "Conspiracy Theory" -- 
he had this principle which he called 'Time and Propinquity';

What that really means is [that] you'll never find out 
what the real power are doing because it would be too hidden 
you'll never find the true narrative because they always hide it;

What you have to look for, he said are patterns on the surface, 
little links and coincidences that are like telltale shoots 
coming up showing you the the the hidden power underneath and 
I think in a way, he was sort of one of the ideologists of our time 
because if you look at the internet nowthat's what everyone does 
they spend their days and their nights scrolling through the internet 
looking for patterns, links coincidences -- and funnily enough, 
that's exactly how artificial intelligence works."




In February, 1967, Jim Garrison, the New Orleans district attorney, wrote a five-page memo called “Time and Propinquity: Factors in Phase I,” which revealed some of the spurious connections he was making in his attempt to outline what he believed was the true nature of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. 

Garrison believed that the best way to uncover well-hidden conspiracies was by noticing seeming coincidences — when two people happened to live a few blocks from each other or when someone ran a bar around the corner from where a cache of heroin was seized — and assembling a pattern from the resulting swamp of names, addresses, and dates. 

A few years ago, the British Filmmaker Adam Curtis came across Garrison’s memo in “The Prankster and the Conspiracy,” a book by the zine writer and self-described crackpot historian Adam Gorightly. 

At the time, Curtis was trying to make sense of the political fracturing and rampant disinformation that accompanied the election of Donald Trump and, in his own country, the Brexit vote. 

“Normally, I hate conspiracy theories. I find them boring,” Curtis told me recently. 

“Then I stumbled on ‘Time and Propinquity’ and I just thought, Yes. . . . Fragments. That’s how people think now. They make associations, and there’s no Meaning. 

That’s The World we live in.” 

 "This theory was going to have a very powerful effect in the future because it would lead to a profound shift in how many people understood The World,” he says. 

“Because what it said was that, in a dark world of hidden power, you couldn’t expect everything to make sense, that it was pointless to try and understand the Meaning of why something happened, because that would always be concealed. 

What you looked for were the patterns.”