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  • Jeffery David Sachs Is a Sanctimonious Prick

    O, what a marvel it appeared to me,
    ⁠When I beheld three faces on his head!
    ⁠The one in front, and that vermilion was;
    Two were the others, that were joined with this
    ⁠Above the middle part of either shoulder,
    ⁠And they were joined together at the crest;
    And the right-hand one seemed ‘twixt white and yellow;
    ⁠The left was such to look upon as those
    ⁠Who come from where the Nile falls valley-ward.
    Underneath each came forth two mighty wings,
    ⁠Such as befitting were so great a bird;
    ⁠Sails of the sea I never saw so large.
    No feathers had they, but as of a bat
    ⁠Their fashion was; and he was waving them,
    ⁠So that three winds proceeded forth therefrom.
    Thereby Cocytus wholly was congealed.
    ⁠With six eyes did he weep, and down three chins
    ⁠Trickled the tear-drops and the bloody drivel.
    At every mouth he with his teeth was crunching
    ⁠A sinner, in the manner of a brake,
    ⁠So that he three of them tormented thus.
    To him in front the biting was as naught
    ⁠Unto the clawing, for sometimes the spine
    ⁠Utterly stripped of all the skin remained. ⁠

    The Divine Comedy, Canto 34, lines 37-60 (Alighieri, trans. Longfellow, 1867)

    Today, in an op-ed penned for CNN, Jeffery Sachs reminded all and sundry that he is an vile, unrepentant prick. As the avatar of the demoness Abyzou made manifest in flesh, Sachs used his op-ed as an opportunity to weave the textual fabric of self-righteousness to clothe the emaciated and decrepit form of his morality. Having donned the cloak of sanctimony, Sachs proceeded to list the ways in which he would use armed violence to redistribute the wealth of Bezos, Zuckerberg, Page, Brin, and Gates to satisfy his own prerogatives.

    Sachs, in all his munificence, states that he would first give these robber barons of the Silicone Age the opportunity to “voluntarily” donate 1% (and who among us could argue with a mere one percent?) of their net worth per annum, but admits that “when they don’t, governments should put on a 1% net worth levy to fund the basic health and education needs of the world’s poorest people.” Not content to employ the legal monopoly of violence held by government to strong-arm Elon Musk into giving up his rocketships, (and by “strong-arm” I mean “asphyxiate for not paying taxes” all Eric Garner-style) Sachs concluded his jeremiad with the dire prediction that the Neanderthal-browed, proletarian mob, having been whipped into frenzy by the populist murmurings of Donald Trump, will storm the campuses of SpaceX and Blue Origin looking for blood:

    The mega-rich expect the adulation of the masses and often get it. Yet the forbearance of society for the antics of the mega-rich will soon wear thin. Too many people are suffering, too many lower-skilled workers are losing their jobs and earnings, too much wealth is being frivolously squandered, and too much power over our lives is being asserted by big tech and other corporate giants.

    Donald Trump channeled the rising unhappiness into his electoral victory, but his trade wars and tax cuts for the rich only widen the divide. Real answers depend on redirecting the mega-wealth towards those in urgent need.

    Nevertheless, like a mafioso “convincing” a shop owner to contribute to his protection racket, Sachs offers us a way out, “[f]or those who don’t do so voluntarily, governments should put a levy on mega-wealth.” Let us be mindful, however, that when we pay indulgences to the Church of Sachs, what constitutes “mega-wealth” would be, of course, determined by its high priest: Jeffery David Sachs, the Quetelet Professor of Sustainable Development at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs and Professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia’s School of Public Health. Oh, what burden must rest upon his wrinkled brow! How fortunate are we to be living in an age where we can hear, from his honeyed lips, the pronouncements of our philosopher-king, Sachs! Indeed, have no fear! For once we have achieved Sachsian utopia, he assures us that “there will be enough time and wealth to reach for the stars.”


    In the ancient mythology of Mediterranean and Mesopotamian cultures, envy was thought to manifest as harm to the person envied through the “evil eye.” Indeed, the Latin word for envy, “invidia” originates from the verb “invideo“(i.e., in+video); literally meaning “to look into/against”, but having the connotations of “being envious of,” being prejudiced against,” or “wishing harm upon.” To combat the baneful influence of the invidious evil eye, people in these cultures wore protective amulets. (And many still do!) One of the most common and powerful amulets against the evil eye was known in Latin as a fascinus.

    Pictured: An example of a fascinus.

    While our cultural mores may have fallen so far that we may scratch our heads over the import of a flying phallus creature, our ancestors knew that this is a perfect example of sympathetic magic, that is ‘like produces, or wards off, like’. And what better way to combat giant pricks like Jeffery Sachs than with a giant prick?

    Having read this article, you may, perchance, wish to purchase a fascinus. If so, you may start here. And if you have less propriety than I do, you may wish to use this as your shipping address.

    And, if you found this article fascinating, there’s a reason for that.

    Pictured: Glibertarians.com Founder Action Figures (L to R – OMWC, Swiss Servator, jesse.in.mb). Available at the Glibertarians.com Gift Shop: Collect them all!
  • Money is a Bitch

     

    Author’s note: This isn’t an essay. It’s an excerpt from one of my books. I don’t say much here on Glibs that is particularly thoughtful because I’ve already said it either in a book or on my blog. I work out what I think while I’m writing. I try not to be didactic in my storytelling, but I probably am.

    This is a post-argument conversation between our (tidge naïve) bond trader math professor hero Jack and (street savvy) concert pianist music professor heroine Daisy while they are cooped up in a tiny dark room and tiny bed together. They’re both irritated over sex and why they aren’t having it right that moment.

    • • •

    “Talk to me about something.”

    “What,” he snapped.

    “Money.”

    His eyes popped open. “What about her?”

    “That. You called money ‘her.’ You did it yesterday, too. You talk about money like it’s a person.”

    Shit, the second he thought she couldn’t surprise him, she turned around and did. He swung his foot up into bed again and laid on his back. She turned on her side and rested her hand on his chest.

    “Money,” he began slowly, thinking. He hadn’t given this lecture in years because the people he taught were too analytical for anything but the math. They wanted skills, not philosophy. “Isn’t a person. She’s an entity. One who’s quiet and restful when she’s being kept in balance, well tended, appreciated. One who’ll rip you to shreds if you do something that upsets her equilibrium, not because she’s pissed off, but because that’s just her nature. She must be in balance. Like a ship. She’s fine when the weather’s good, but she’ll still sink if you’re not tending her, making little repairs so they don’t become big problems. When a storm comes along, she has a hard time getting back into balance.”

    “What’s the ocean?” she asked softly.

    “People. The ocean, the weather cannot be controlled but you’re forced out into it. The ship can be controlled to a certain extent, but you have to pay attention. No ship comes out of a storm without damage, without loss, but someone is going to pay for the repairs or the loss.”

    “But what about rich people?”

    “‘People’ is the operative word,” he said, winding up with the promise of a decent conversation with somebody who might understand after all. “That money is carefully tended, yes, but anything can happen. There are few things that can bankrupt the superwealthy. But economies can collapse. More and more worthless pieces of paper can be printed. A government can come in and take it all away from you. A revolution could happen and then you become Marie Antoinette. Those are things people do, though we talk about them in the collective. Economies. Currency. Governments. Revolutions. People make up those things.”

    “What about Mother Nature?”

    “She’s the supreme bitch and I don’t fuck with her, either. Coffee. Grain. Cocoa. Oranges. Hell, no, I’m not touching anything Mother Nature can get her hands on, but she’s not part of this discussion.”

    “Okay. But if the ocean is people and not Mother Nature, then the metaphor still isn’t complete,” she returned, shocking him again. Even if people did humor him or even understand him to this point, they dropped out of the conversation, thinking it was complete. “Ships sink and then disintegrate.”

    “But then,” he said throatily, suddenly very turned on and running a fingertip softly down her naked, lush body, “what you have left is wealth.”

    “Huh?”

    “Wealth is knowledge. The knowledge that she was there, the knowledge of how to build another ship. Wealth isn’t paper money or gold or anything else you can barter. Wealth is being able to live a fairly decent life without having to worry about any of that. Wealth is having what you need and being happy with what you have and the knowledge to replenish.”

    Silence. For a long time. While her thumb stroked his belly. It wasn’t his nipple, wasn’t his dick, wasn’t his lips, but fuck a duck, it felt good. “By that definition,” she finally said. Slowly. “Diogenes was wealthy.”

    He wanted to kiss her. Right now.

    “No,” he said, feeling her body twitch a little in surprise. “Diogenes was the ballast in the ship of money.”

    “Um … but strangers gave Diogenes whatever he had and he was happy with it.”

    God, he wanted to kiss and lick her from her chipped-neon-green-painted toes to the end of the longest strand of her hair. They were naked now. He could do that.

    Maybe not. Because now he had things to say to someone who got him.

    “Diogenes wasn’t happy with what he had because he wasn’t happy with what everybody else had. Diogenes made a virtue of poverty, which was stupid, because if nobody has anything, everybody dies. For real. That’s it. But strangers gave to him for whatever reason. Maybe giving made them happy. Maybe seeing him sitting there made them feel guilty for what they had that he didn’t. Maybe they believed in what he taught and wanted to support him in that. Doesn’t matter why. Diogenes’s philosophy was shit. His father was a banker, did you know that?”

    “No.”

    Jack laughed. “Yeah. So money stayed in balance because people gave. When you have too much ballast or too much cargo on the deck, money is out of balance.”

    For once in his meager acquaintance with Daisy, she was the one who was stumped. Unprepared. Unlearned. He liked this feeling, the feeling of meeting her on an intellectual field and having the edge. “Where do you fit into that?”

    “I’m the guy up in the ropes walking on the beams and taking up the sails or dropping them or whatever they do up there. Trying to keep her moving when the wind’s against her. Trying to keep her steady when the storms are coming.”

    “You love her.”

    And now he wanted to make love to Daisy all fucking night long, which he couldn’t do because she was still pissy about the clothes.

    “I do,” he answered, “but not like most people mean it. ‘I love money.’ No, I love her as an entity, as a philosophy, a concept of balance. Like a ledger.”

    “Mmm, okay. Then I have a question for you.”

    “Shoot.”

    “Where do underground economies and black markets fit on the ship of money? They exist. They have to serve some purpose or, by your description, the ship wouldn’t be balanced at all.”

    His mind went blank. Totally and completely blank. He was speechless. A fucking piano teacher had blindsided him with his own philosophical musings. “Daisy,” he said throatily. “Either you stop being so fucking brilliant or I’m going to jack off right here.”

    She chuckled softly. “Answer the question.”

    “I dunno,” he admitted easily. “Econ isn’t my specialty, so I never thought about it. I’ve never seen it. Until I got here.”

    “The way I look at it is Diogenes isn’t the ballast. The black market is the ballast. Hidden, but important. Rocks, sand, ordinary things that do as much to keep the ship sailing as the sails do. The stuff that keeps the ship steady when the storm really starts rolling. Diogenes is on some deck inside the ship, being taken care of from the top and the bottom. And when the ship breaks up and sinks, the ballast floats to the bottom of the ocean, under all the people. But they’re still doing what they do. Sitting there, minding their own business, which is business. Pure business. Providing shelter to the deep sea creatures. Hiding them from predators. Feeding them when the ocean—people—makes moss grow on them.”

    He said nothing. His chest was too tight and his dick too hard and his body too tense. She couldn’t talk and have sex at the same time. The stuff that dried her up got him hard and ready to whisper sweet economic philosophies in her ear while stroking in and out, slow and steady.

    “People still come to power,” he finally said. “Even in the underground. Organized crime. Gangs. Using fear and intimidation.”

    “The same thing the IRS uses.”

    “What?”

    “You do understand the IRS is holding a gun to your head, right? Why do you comply? Because if you don’t, you’ll get thrown in jail. If you do anything somebody in power doesn’t like, they can use the IRS to somehow get to you. You don’t pay taxes because you’re ethical. You pay them because you have no choice. You believe it’s immoral not to follow the law, yes?”

    “More or less, yes.”

    “Have you ever considered that the law and regulations are immoral?”

    “Stealing is immoral,” he said, irritated that she was diverting from the interesting part of the conversation.

    “That is a natural law,” she replied. “The IRS is a manmade institution designed to control the populace. And by providing receipts, filing 1099s, W-2s, you are complicit in that control. You don’t have to report all that. You do it because you want the write-off and that’s where your thinking ends, but it’s not about you. The black markets, the underground, would rather take its chances with an enemy they can see and fight if they have to, to get ahead, to climb the economic ladder. No, I misspoke. They’re building their own ladder.

    “Topside, with small businesses, they’re regulated to death. Margins are slim to none. One bad month can make them homeless. In a storm, you can hang on to whatever’s up there. Diogenes can cower somewhere inside the ship before it goes down. I, the black market, the ballast, can function anywhere under any circumstances. The mom’n’pops, the ones paying taxes and licenses like they’re supposed to because they’re ethical, the ones who really take care of Diogenes, but might also be paying protection money, they’re the ones who get washed overboard first. Almost nothing to hang on to. No walls to keep them safer until the storm passes.”

    He was silent for a long, long time, turning all those concepts over in his head, so many of them packed into a few sentences, things he’d never thought about. But she was wrong about one thing. “I have to report wages. It is about me.”

    “I won’t dispute that for you or any company like yours, you’d have to give the appearance of it. But it’d be easy to pay people from an offshore account—”

    “That’s illegal.”

    “But is immoral?”

    He almost said yes automatically but stopped. Was it?

    “Do you eat the cost of your employees’ withholding? Pay their share of the social security as well as yours? You could. If you have independent contractors, you can just not send them a 1099 and nobody would ever know because they aren’t going to report it and if they did, they do it from their internal bookkeeping. Likely they wouldn’t notice you didn’t send them a 1099 at all. You do it because it’s a write-off that feels like an obligation.”

    “I’d go bankrupt inside six months if I did that,” he protested.

    “And that’s how the IRS makes sure you’re complicit. Think about it. Your bottom line would improve if you could just pay people what they earned.”

    She was fucking with his mind.

    “That’s how the underground economy works. Do you know how many of your colleagues use illegal aliens to clean their houses and watch their kids? No, you don’t, because your domestics are on the record and you make sure all the T’s are crossed and the I’s are dotted. It wouldn’t occur to you to do anything else or that eighty percent of your peers hire under the table.”

    “Okay, but exploiting those people is immoral.”

    “Then you have to ask yourself if employing those people under the table is more or less immoral than letting them starve.”

    “They choose to come here.”

    “In hopes of a better future. Jack, look. I’m not trying to defend something you think is immoral or convert you. I want you to think about what the ballast really is.”

    The only thing he could really think about at the moment was how Daisy was so much more than someone who listened to him even if she didn’t understand some things, but asked questions until she did, which meant she was listening. And then could give him something entirely new.

    Not new information. Information was cheap and easy once one knew where to find it. New concepts. New principles. New philosophies. She made him think and thinking was his most favorite thing to do.

    But when she didn’t say anything more, his thinking gradually turned to feeling—feeling her hand on his chest, caressing more, massaging, looking for the knots, going deeper into his muscles. It felt so good, he didn’t know whether he wanted her to keep doing that or give him the handjob his dick was begging for.

    “There are more things involved in the balance you’re looking for,” she whispered, pressing her lips to his cheek. “It’s not just the money. Ethics don’t start with laws and stop with accurate numbers in a ledger. Morality and ethics involve people, and at your core, you just don’t like people.”

  • Wednesday Afternoon Links of Insomnia

    Today, I got nothing. I haven’t slept more than 5 hours in 3 or 4 nights. Not really sure at this point. I haven’t started having any squiggles at the edge of my vision or auditory hallucinations yet, but the coffee isn’t doing it for me anymore. So if tomorrow’s links are gibberish, either I didn’t get any sleep or I’m just making less sense than usual. One day, one day, I will finish a project working steadily over the whole time. On that day, I will probably be terminated. Maybe the day after. Oh well, less than 3 weeks to deadline. Maybe tonight I’ll be too tired to worry about what didn’t get done.

    Main page image courtesy of the super-awesome Hyperbole and a Half, who has not updated in years, but if you never read it, or haven’t read it in a while, is worth your time — and you will probably recognize some famous internet memes if you read much, because it is just that awesome.

    Of all the horrible things that Net Neutrality has wrought, allowing the US to move from 12th to 6th fastest in speed at which racist, sexist filth can be downloaded over the interwebz has to be the worst!

    Good news out of AZ, where the cops have really started adopting turning on their body cams — to record office trysts. You goddam moron. No matter WHY you are recording something, it is still evidence.

    This Florida Man’s way to Heaven is definitely greased. “Authorities say a worker has died after falling into a vat of oil at a facility near Walt Disney World.”

    Oh lawd. Elizabeth Warren launches “Accountable Capitalism” campaign. In which “Warren wants to create an Office of United States Corporations inside the Department of Commerce and require any corporation with revenue over $1 billion — only a few thousand companies, but a large share of overall employment and economic activity — to obtain a federal charter of corporate citizenship.”  Which is not the school-days definition of fascism “government control over a corporate economy” by some magic handwaving. What in the everloving fuck? I guess that’s one way to pop the stock market bubble.

    Here’s something from the Pogues for all you pogues.

  • The Hat and the Hair: Episode 92

     

    “Omarosa, my sweet dark berry…” Donald whispered.

    “She recorded you, Donald,” the hat said in a low Iago hiss.

    “Maybe she just wanted to hear my voice again,” Donald said.

    “Recorded, Donald, like with a machine,” the hat said. “She tried to Nixon you, bro.”

    “But I didn’t fire her, The General fired her, I didn’t have anything to do with it. I don’t know why she’s so mad at me. She was my chocolate Wonder Girl…”

    “She looks like a man, Donald, a big black man in lipstick and a wig.”

    “You just don’t like strong women,” Donald pouted.

    “I just like my women to not have a penis,” the hat said.

    The hair snorted from the floor.

    “She didn’t have a penis,” Donald insisted. “She didn’t. She was the sweetest pink inside.”

    “They’re all pink inside, Donald, and they will all betray you in the end… Ivana, Marla, Stormy, Karen… all whores, Donald.”

    “And she said I said the bad word,” Donald whined. He turned to the side in his office chair and pulled his legs in. He was pantless and his scrotum swayed queasily above the hair as it struggled to inch away.

    “Mark says he destroyed the tapes, Donald,” the hat said.

    “There are no tapes,” Donald said. “There never were any tapes. I would never say the bad word. It’s bad word.”

    “Of course not, Donald,” the hat said.

    “The bad word isn’t even in my vocabulary,” Donald whispered. “Donald would never call someone a n[beep]r.”

    “You don’t have to beep it out, Donald,” the hat said. “It’s just us here. And we’ve looked everywhere for recording devices.”

    “I didn’t beep it out,” Donald said, shaking, his balls quivering.

    “You said ‘beep’, Donald,” the hat said. “I heard you.”

    “I didn’t say anything,” Donald said, getting angry. He stood up suddenly, his shirttails mercifully swinging down to hide his penis. “If I want to say ‘n[beep]r,’ I say ‘n[beep]r.’”

    “What the fuck⸮” the hair asked.

    “N[beep]R!” Donald yelled. “N[beep]R! N[beep]R! N[beep]R! N[beep]R! N[beep]R! What is happening‽”

    The hair spread himself flat on the floor like a threatened starfish.

    “Donald, it’s just a word,” the hat said. “Stop self-censoring.”

    “I’m not!” Donald screeched. He began running in circles around his desk, yelling “N[beep]R! N[beep]R! N[beep]R!” while his penis flapped against his gunt and grundle forlornly.

    “N[beep]R!” the hat said. “Oh, no! It’s me too! What the hell is going on‽” he screamed in horror.

    “N[beep]r,” Donald said helplessly and slumped to the floor. “N[beep]r,” he said quietly and began to weep.

    The hair bunched into a loose ball and let the air conditioner floor vents roll him gently out of the room.

  • Wednesday Morning Links

    The World Champion Houston Astros are in a free fall. That’s all I have to say about their fifth loss in a row and second consecutive terrible outing by Justin Verlander.  Their lead is down to one game after the loss to the Rockies.  Crap. Elsewhere, the Brewers blanked the Cubs, the Orioles beat the Mets, the Yanks beat the Rays, the Red Sox topped the Phillies, hey look the White Sox beat the Tigers(!), The Indians massacred the Reds, the Braves beat the Marlins, the D-backs topped the Rangers, the MINNESOOOOOODA TWIIIIIINS topped the Pirates, the Blue Jays beat Kansas City, the Cards beat the Pats, the As topped theMariners, the Giants beat the Dodgers again and the Angels took out the Padres.

    In addition to our very own robc, today’s birthday boys and girls (and whatever else people call ximselvez) include such luminaries as: French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, chef extraordinaire Julia Child, Canadian jazzman Oscar Peterson, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, bassist Bill Pinkney, drummer Peter York, musician Tom Johnston, NFLPA hack Gene Upshaw, writer Stieg Larsson, wife Linda Gates, “actor” and filmmaker Ben Affleck, and selfie-taker Jennifer Lawrence.

    One can only imagine the smell at that event.

    Its also the day Ignatius Loyola formed the Jesuits, the Mayflower set said, New Zealand’s All-Blacks played their first international rugby match and defeated Australia 22-3 (1903), the Panama Canal opened (under budget!), “The Wizard Of OZ” premiered, India gained her Independence, the Beatles played Shea Stadium, the Woodstock festival opened, Nixon froze prices and wages, “Apocalypse Now” opened, and Nolan Ryan earned his 324th and final MLB victory.

    Now on to…the links!

    Its a shitty job, but someone has to do it. This is what its come to in the once-fine city.

    What Facebook thinks of free speech

    Facebook gets honest about their feelings on the media. What I don’t get is this: who the hell gets their news from Facebook?  Are there really people who do that? Seriously?

    If you’re gonna commit disability fraud, you might want to keep a lower profiled  than this. My guess is that she’ll get a couple years of probation and have to pay restitution (which she won’t pay).  But damn, talk about hubris.

    So, a child’s dead body, plenty of evidence that they’re training terrorists, a definite flight risk unless under constant surveillance, and you still grant them bail?  For context, Paul Manafort is on 24-hour isolation as his tax evasion trial continues.

    A much better idea than their shitty French fries

    I’ll just post this without comment so Swissy can narrow his gaze. The rest of you enjoy as well.

    Laquan McDonald’s mother ordered to testify or be banned from courtroom during trial for the man who killed her son. I don’t understand why the dumbass serving the subpoena can’t just find an easier way to get it to her. I also wonder if they’ll allow 100 Chicago cops in uniform to pack the courtroom and stare at the jury throughout the trial.

    I’m shocked! Shocked to find funny business going on on Tinder. Seriously, “She’s Crafty” should be heeded by both men and women n these trying times.

    The defense rested yesterday without calling a single witness, so now the Paul Manafort trial will move to closing arguments today. I’m curious to find out what other exotic clothing and accessories he owns when the prosecution further lays out their politically-motivated case.

    Here you go, friends.

    Now go out there and make the most of today!

  • Cut the Cord! Vive la Révolution!

     

    Cord cutting is a very libertarian movement. It’s all about the individual choosing what they want to watch and when they want to watch it. It’s about giving your money to targeted companies and not subsidizing those you disagree with. It’s about the end of intrusive commercials. This started off as a younger generation trend, but has been rapidly picking up steam and the cable companies are hemorrhaging subscribers across all age groups. While a few dinosaur CEOs are still holding out, other television companies sense the impending death of the bundled cable model and are trying to develop their own streaming services.

    In its purest spirit, cord cutting does not include ‘TV-lite’ streaming packages like Sling. I view these as being similar to methadone for the heroin addict. You still have to abide by the set viewing schedule, have commercials, and have to financially support channels you don’t watch. Just let it go. You won’t even know it’s there after a week. I usually bring a Roku with me when I travel because I can’t even stand to watch cable tv in hotels anymore.

    If you still want to watch traditional TV after cutting the cord, you’ll need to buy a package like Sling. I’ve heard PlayStation Vue is the best of these, but again, that’s like saying a can of Boyardee is better than a gas station hotdog. Shift out of that mindset entirely and get yourself a steak. I also know there will be questions about sports packages. I don’t watch sports so don’t really know the details here. I believe MLB, NASCAR, and NHL have their own packages, and ESPN is creating one. They all eventually will.

    What you’ll need

    High speed internet- At least 8 Mbps. More is better, especially with multiple devices.

    Streaming platform device- My opinion is that Roku is the best. They give you access to the greatest number of apps (called channels) within the platform. Both Apple and Amazon used to (and may still) restrict major competitors from their streaming platform. Roku doesn’t have this conflict of interest in their business model. There are also other options that include a Smart TV or gaming console. Make sure that the device is capable of handling 4K and HDR if your tv has this capability.

    Subscription Apps or Channel Services- These are what you use to watch content. Content services are usually purchased on a monthly basis. Three different channels provide more content than a person can ever watch. Unlike with traditional Cable companies who drag you through the ringer, it’s extremely easy to cancel and add these channels online with a single mouse click, so some people even cycle through different services as new content is added. Some channels will make every episode in a season available at once to let you binge (Netflix), while others post new episodes as they air on traditional TV (Hulu, HBO Now).

    Netflix This is the staple in most streaming households. There is an incredible amount of programming available for $10/month. Most of the licensed content is so-so, but their original shows are quite good.

    Amazon Prime Meh. Their content is subpar and probably the worst value of all the major streaming channels. Definitely not worth it for $10/month. If you already have this for free-shipping and Prime Music, then it’s worth checking in every now and then.

    Hulu About $10/month for the commercial free version. This one depends on what you like. Hulu is the original joint venture of several traditional TV channels and their programming reflects that. There’s a lot of reality shows, dramas, and sitcoms that have new episodes available the day after they are broadcasted. It’s not something I would keep, but my wife really enjoys it.

    Premium Channels HBO Now/ Showtime/ Starz/ Cinemax It’s worth keeping at least one of these and they are easy to cycle through. Prices range from $8-15/month, though you can get discounts too. We have HBO Now and enjoy the original programming (Sopranos, The Wire, Game of Thrones) and movie selection.

    VuduVudu is my favorite and probably most underrated channel. It’s a movie streaming service that lets you keep your own library of movies online to freely access from anywhere in the world. If you have a dvd collection you can actually add these to your streaming library. Adding regular dvds are $1 or upgrade to the high definition version for $2. They also have great deals on movies to purchase and add to your library. You can also rent 4K versions of new releases for a few dollars. Vudu does not have a service fee.

    This right here will be the death of the cinema. My family watched Jurassic World last week on our 65’’4k HDR TV with surround sound. It was far superior in quality to anything at the theater, and we could have our food and drinks. I haven’t set foot in a movie theater in over a decade, and it’s very likely my kids never will.

    YouTube There is a lot of free content on YouTube that especially appeals to kids. Mine really like this show type called Surprise Eggs which, is pretty much as it sounds…. strangers open eggs with toys inside. I don’t know, I don’t get it, but it’s like crack to them. YouTube also offers a paid subscription model, but I think this is more of a younger generation thing and don’t know anything about it.

    PornHub- Just kidding, this isn’t available as an app. Umm, let me take that back. As I researched this to make sure I was providing accurate information, I learned PornHub does in fact have an app available for Roku. Adult apps are banned from the Roku Channel Store, but it can be added manually using the channel code. Be sure to wipe down the remote after viewing.

    Traditional TV Channel Apps- As I mentioned above, the execs at many traditional tv companies have seen the writing on the wall of the future of cable tv. Their response has been to start innovating their own streaming package. These will be similar to Netflix (i.e., commercial-free and on demand) and not at all like Sling, Playstation Vue, etc. Disney is working on one now that has an anticipated release of 2019 or 2020. There is also a streaming service available now for younger kids called NOGGIN that has shows like Backyardigans, Paw Patrol, etc for $8/month. Scrips (Travel Channel, TLC, Food Network) and Discovery have recently merged companies and are creating their own streaming channel that should be available for $5/month in 2019.

    Digital antenna This will let you pick up over the air broadcasts. Enjoy it, Grandpa.

    I’ll end this by noting a common criticism of cord cutting is that it becomes as expensive as cable once you start purchasing individual streaming channels. At the cost of Internet plus $30 bucks for Netflix, HBO, and Hulu (plus free Vudu and YouTube), I don’t think this is the case at all. Even if it cost the same amount, so what?! Cord cutting is commercial free and let’s you watch what you want when you want it, so the value is immensely higher even at the same cost. I can’t imagine paying money to watch commercials. You may also hear your friendly Cable Company Rep offer to throw in a TV package for the same price as you’re paying now for just Internet. Don’t believe them. The price will jack up after one year and there will be a large number of add-on fees and taxes applicable immediately.

    Cut the Cord! Vive la Révolution!

  • Tuesday Afternoon Links of Annoyance

    I really hate work-dodgers. It just annoys the shit out of me to see someone who is basically absent, late, or useless. The only thing more annoying than that is when a work-dodger decides that they need some piece of information from me RIGHT NOW when I’m working 10+ hour days and several hours on the weekend. I’m pretty ruthless about “is this going to get me to deadline?” (Which, this is not, but its kind of a sanity restorer in the mid-afternoon, so I will claim if there’s blowback) So I’m annoyed when a person misses a meeting due to a personal day and then tries to impose on me for the notes with our mutual boss in copy. The first draft of my answer said, “should have brought yourself to the meeting if you want to know what happened”, but PTO is rightly sacred. It’s your time (and also your responsibility to make sure your work gets taken care of). My final answer said, “I don’t have time to type up a summary for you, talk to this other person who attended and sent a summary email.”

    Anyhow, enough about my work life, you want links.

    Mr. Lizard, your skinsuit department is getting careless. Not only did they did they do a bad job with the skin, but they also made a careless mistake falsifying this Florida candidate’s educational record.

    This disaster of an article posits Americans own less stuff because of media digitization and ride-sharing, takes winding detour into a confused “if American kids don’t have stuff, how will they learn to respect property rights”, and brings it all to a close with an incoherent cry for stronger Right to Repair protections. Its like this person has been listening to people much smarter have conversations and brought out this pastiche of misconceptions.

    Nebraska does to convicted murderer what celebrities pay good money to do to themselves. And, I’m just spitballing here, but it seems like there’s an underserved market in either a fentanyl rapid test, or a 3rd party who certifies drugs as fentanyl free and enforces their brand integrity by any means necessary.

    Texas Man passes Florida Man citizenship test, will probably find himself a guest of the State.

     

    “Whaddya mean I don’t support your system? I go to court when I have to.”

  • YouTubers of Interest

    YouTube, despite its corporate leadership being very regressive, has become a hub for alternative viewpoints regarding current political and cultural events. I thought I’d do a writeup about YouTubers who create content I believe would be of interest to Glibs. The video creators are mainly concerned with current events from a political and/or philosophical perspective, however a few make videos about popular culture or general interest topics as well.

    This article is not meant to be either authoritative or comprehensive (and there will be follow ups regarding these or other YouTubers), but rather a jumping off point for commentators to add both their own perspectives on those I’ve listed, disagreements with my opinions, as well as discussing YouTubers I’ve omitted either through ignorance or difference in perspective.

    So here, in no particular order, are some of my YouTubers of interest:

    Liberty Doll – A Libertarian woman with a Judy Greer-esque 40’s-50s’ nerd chic vibe, she often discusses 2A issues, including the recent 3D printing kerfluffle. She also discusses current events, liberty issues, as well as feminism and other anti-liberty philosophies.

    Styxhexenhammer666 – A former Satanist and current mystic/spiritualist, Styx creates a lot of content about current political events, both foreign and domestic (including Trump). He occasionally has a slightly unusual take on matters which doesn’t always jibe with the standard libertarian view.  He’s done a couple series of non-political videos. They are mostly related to the occult, but he also has a series of garden videos.

    Matt Christiansen – His perspective is (in my view) somewhere between classical liberal and libertarian. Unlike many video producers, he doesn’t see the need to inject a hyper personality, instead stating the facts (and unleashing his acerbic wit) in his calm midwestern inflection. The videos might be on Trump or, say, pointing out the current stupidity in Portland. He also does the Beauty and the Beta podcast/livestream with Blonde in the Belly of the Beast. Blonde is an attractive woman who, over the past few years, moved from libertarianism to a much more conservative / identitarian perspective. (Think an American Lauren Southern without the public provocation).

     Sargon of Akkad / The Thinkery – One of the bigger names in the anti-SJW ‘skeptic’ YouTube community, Sargon generally holds classical liberal views. He’s able to court controversy even beyond the standard regressive community (a few Glibs have been quite critical). As a UK resident, his perspective is mainly focused on Britain. In addition to his videos on the Islamization of the UK and Europe, he also has videos about recent events.

    Karen Straughn / Honey Badger Radio – Karen and the others at Honey Badger Radio focus on men’s rights issues and critiques of feminism. The mostly female group makes interesting videos pointing out the discrepancies in feminist narratives and the legal and existential realities related to gender issues, ‘male disposability’, and why men’s issues are generally not taken seriously in the larger society (including why women should care about men’s issues).

    Freedom Toons – Freedom Toons creates satirical cartoon videos from a libertarian perspective. Some of his targets have included modern journalism and free speech. These videos are short, so they’re good if you only have 5 minutes or so.

    Bearing / Patrick – An Australian shit poster, Bearing generally goes after leftists and SJWs with humor. A couple of his recent videos have included one on the fight between Australian senators David Leyenhjelm and Sarah H Young and another on Lauren Southern’s Australia visit. His girlfriend is YouTuber Sugartits, who makes similar content.

    Hard Bastard – He largely does videos regarding current events – such as the Cohen tapes – from a right of center perspective. A former Jehovah’s Witness, he often brings a slightly different view to his videos. His girlfriend is Aydin Paladin, who is (amazingly) a sociological graduate student with a general liberty focus. She mainly does videos on recent events, but also likes to delve into academic topics, both largely using that sociological framework. She has also worked with the Honey Badgers on a few of their videos. (Note: while I find her videos interesting, they are 1) academic, and 2) not short)

    The Pholosopher – A Chinese American Ancap woman, she’s about as libertarian as you can get. A huge 2A proponent, she enjoys appearing in her anti-gun control videos with her AR. She also makes videos about how the US government has messed up the Middle East, and that taxation is theft.

    Timcast – This will probably be one of my more controversial picks. Tim Pool is a former Vice reporter who is now trying to make a living as an independent reporter. As you’d suspect from someone who used to work with Vice, his politics are left of center. I include him because he does a couple things incredibly rare for journalists these days. He tries to get his facts correct, and he separates those facts from his evaluation of them. While he deeply dislikes Trump, he actually evaluates Trump’s actions on an individual basis rather than issue a blanket condemnation. I respect this.

    Ben Shapiro – While Shapiro is mostly conservative rather than libertarian, he’s a skilled debater and often interesting. Also, since I’ve pointed out the women here a few times, let me link to his interview with Mike Rowe for Kristen.

  • Tuesday Morning Links

    Well, the Braves tomahawk-chopped the Marlins twice. The Mets beat the Yankees. The Tigers topped the White Sox. The Indians scalped the Reds. The surging Cardinals beat the Nationals. The Rangers took down the Diamondbacks. The Royals beat the Blue Jays. The Athletics sank the Mariners. The Angels beat the Padres. And the Giants took down their rival Dodgers. Fortunately the World Champion Houston Astros got a day off.

    That’s pretty much it for sports. Except for using sports to point out how much of a nanny state England is. What a bunch of douchebags.

    Rusty Wallace doing what he does best: wrecking

    Do we have any birthday boys or girls?  If so, you share this date with none other than: everyone’s favorite huckleberry Doc Holliday, TV inventor John Logie Baird, baseball’s Hall Of Fame manager Earl Weaver, rocker David Crosby, funnyman Steve Martin, romance novelist Danielle Steele, The Far Side creator Gary Larson, driver and target of chicken bones and beer cans Rusty Wallace, basketball star Magic Johnson, actress Halle Berry, strange-voiced Mila Kunis, and alleged virgin Tim Tebow.

    Its also the day Kublai Khan wished he had doppler radar because he lost 3500 ships in a typhoon, Henry David Thoreau was jailed for refusing to pay taxes, the last public execution in the United States was held (in 1936), the Japs unconditionally surrendered and WW2 came to a close, “I Got You Babe” went to #1, Pete Rose (who would later voluntarily accept a lifetime ban from MLB) passed Hank Aaron for most all-time at bats, and Winnie Mandela was sued by the South African government.

    And with that, we head into…the links!

    Russians 11-year old kids hack into mock version of Florida’s election system.  Nice work there.  Maybe instead of blaming outside actors, you’ll secure your own system…and simply use paper ballots and voter ID to ensure both accuracy and integrity of the process, huh?

    A battle of wits between a potato and a pizza

    Papa John’s is circling the wagons and hoping to make it through its current crisis intact. Although with shares off 25% and people having a short memory, maybe now is the time to buy it up.

    A scathing, and timely, media takedown of…the media. But its from the NY Post, so I doubt anybody in the bubble will heed any of the warnings. Besides, they’re too busy saving the world from the free exchange of ideas and information. At least according to them they are.

    Does the plaintiff even have standing? I say neigh. Others say yes.

    I guess this Alderman never heard of multitasking. Or he’s just pandering to his base. Either way, its still a shitshow in that city.

    Asshole

    And speaking of pandering politicians…this one might win the award for biggest asshole of the year.  Because, you know, anyone that thanks the people who dropped their tax rate from 38 to 20% is in league with white nationalists, or something.  Either way, this guy is an asshole who doesn’t realize or doesn’t care that there are actual people who work at these places. And they vote.

    Adios, douche-nugget.

    You know what you do with turds? You flush them.*.

    *Except in San Francisco where you step around or over them because they’re on the sidewalk. But be careful not to run your foot through a heroin needle. Because they’re all over as well.

    And in what should be a bigger story than it is, the Indian rupee hit an all-time low against the dollar. But global currency meltdowns aren’t as important as whether or not Trump is on a recording in the WH. Because “media priorities” aren’t important news, they’re hot takes that generate clicks.

    Anyway, enjoy this bit of greatness from a wonderful band.

    Now go out there and have a great day!

  • Stop the (Aero)Presses

    Hello again, my caffeinated friends.  I’ve peeled a few Koch dollars off my pimp roll and bought an AeroPress for review.  I set the trusty French press aside and have been using the Aeropress for the last 2 months.  Will it replace the French press for good?  Does it make better espresso than my Moka Pot?  Is it smoother than the cold press?  Well, read on friends and find out along with my world famous…ok, vaguely remembered by a small cadre of weirdos, pro/con list!

    AeroPress Starter Kit
    AeroPress starter kit.  The barrel, plunger, filter cap, stirrer and funnel combine for easy storage.

     

    What is an AeroPress you may be asking yourself.  It is a basically an oversized syringe with a filter.  Medium ground coffee is place inside the barrel and filled with hot water (175 F) to make a regular cup of coffee.  The water and coffee steep for 60 seconds and then you invert whole apparatus over your favorite mug and press the coffee out through a paper filter, then top off the mug with hot water. If the barista prefers espresso, use a fine grind with the same water temperature and steep time, but don’t dilute with hot water.  This deceptively simple device does allow for great variety in preparation through adjustments in water temperature, grind, steep time and how hard or soft you press the plunger.  In fact there are AeroPress world competitions to see which coffee enthusiasts can coax the best cup of Joe out of the simple and inexpensive appliance.  I give you The World AeroPress Championship for you super coffee nerds. *looks around* Just me, huh?

    So what do I think after living with the AeroPress for 2 months?  It makes a damn fine cup of coffee in under 2 minutes.  For those who don’t want to make a morning ritual of your coffee habit and just want caffeine coursing through your veins ASAP, this is a good option.  Clean up is a breeze.  After pressing the coffee all that is left is a mostly dry coffee puck.  Just shoot it into the trash can and rinse the plunger. Easy Peasy, Lemon Squeezy.  I’m not usually a fan of paper filters, but a good pre-rinse with hot water seems to eliminate the paper taste.  The filters are inexpensive and they give you enough when you buy the press starter kit that you don’t feel cheated.

    As much as I like the AeroPress, it can’t do it all.  It can’t rival the low acid smoothness of the cold brew system and it lacks the volume of the Moka pot for espresso, though I do prefer the taste of AeroPress espresso.  The AeroPress also can’t be set on a timer like most drip systems and is not well suited to making large volumes of coffee.

    So the big question, “Does it replace the French Press?”  For me, it doesn’t because I want the most pure expression of each bean that I roast.  I’m willing to trade a clean cup of coffee for the unfiltered experience. That being said, if you are the sole coffee drinker in your home, like easy clean up, don’t want to spend a ton of money, don’t have much storage space, and enjoy experimenting with grind, temperature, etc. the AeroPress is hard to beat.


    How to Use
    (Disclaimer: These are not the instructions provided by AeroPress; this is the inverted method, which I find superior)

    Step 1. Fill with ground coffee. (pro-tip* wet the rubber plunger before placing in barrel to reduce friction/extend life).


    Step 2. Fill with hot water and stir.


    Step 3. Attach filter.


    Step 4. After 1 minute steep, invert over mug.


    Step 5. Press gently until you hear air escaping.


    Step 6. Top off mug with hot water.


    Step 7.  Remove filter cap and press plunger to eject coffee puck into trash. Rinse AeroPress.


    Pros

    • cost – $33.90 starter kit that includes 350 filters
    • reliability –  so simple it is unlikely to fail in any way
    • flexibility – nearly infinite ways to make coffee
    • storage – takes up very little counter/cabinet space
    • taste – it does a really good job of extracting flavor.
    • clean – super easy clean up
    • easy to use – full disclosure* I did make a large mess when I put the coffee in wrong while sleepy
    • cup – really clean cup of coffee. no muddy coffee (sediment)

    Cons

    • filters – some people prefer unfiltered coffee
    • consumables – although not very expensive, you do have to buy replacement filters
    • serving size –  the isn’t the go to for a large dinner party
    • aesthetics – not something you want to proudly display
    • accessibility –  this might be a stretch, but if a person has arthritis or limited hand strength, the plunger may be difficult to press.