“We are Forerunners. Guardians of all that exists. The roots of the Galaxy have grown deep under our careful tending. Where there is life, the wisdom of our countless generations has saturated the soil. Our strength is a luminous sun, towards which all intelligence blossoms… And the impervious shelter, beneath which it has prospered.”

Monday morning bisexuals be bonkers

by | Jul 20, 2020 | Mondays, Uncategorized | 6 comments

Tired Monday Quotes. QuotesGram

It’s Monday again, and damn but I’m tired. The weekend was a bit nuts for a variety of reasons, and by the time I settled in for the evening with a LARGE dose of dark German beer, I was pretty much half in the sack. The beer and subsequent shot of single-malt Scotch did me in pretty quickly, which is why there was no podcast yesterday. It’ll be up tomorrow instead.

Of course, it’s no fun to wake up and realise that it’s MONDAY and you have to get on with the week. So to make it all a bit less miserable, the usual Great Mondaydact Browser Buster is here to help you out.

We start with some body-language analysis of none other than Ms Amber Heard, the bisexual broad currently involved in Johnny Depp’s major libel suit against The Sun tabloid in the UK. Now, Mr. Depp alleges that The Sun has published scurrilous and false statements about him that have substantially damaged his reputation by making him out to be a wife-beater and domestic abuser, when in reality, it was Ms Heard who was the abusive one.

I’m not going to go over all of the shenanigans exposed in the public hearings and depositions and so on, but it is worth looking at Ms Heard’s body language when she talks about her “ordeal”:

Basically, as Ms Heard’s body language shows, and as the narrator of that video shows – she’s LYING.

Johnny Depp almost surely did not abuse Ms Heard. Instead, Ms Heard made up a whole bunch of shit, lied about it in public, hitched herself to the PoundMeToo bandwagon, and tried really hard to ruin her ex-husband’s life.

Not only that, but she’s bisexual, which means, of course, SHE’S BUGSHIT NUTS.

That’s not me making the claim, by the way. That’s what the data show. That’s what their own behaviour shows. The statistics prove that bisexual women are both abused, and abusive, at rates VASTLY higher than straight women and men.

Gentlemen, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, and again and again until people get the point:

DO NOT DATE BISEXUAL WOMEN. They’re nuts.

Far too many men have these weird fantasies about sleeping with a woman and her girlfriend. That’s just dumb. It’s idiotic. It’s a function of the extremely messed up state of our culture and the impact of hardcore porn upon male minds. Real life is not like that, and there’s no point in pretending that it is.

Stick to one woman. Find a good one, wife her up, have kids with her, and enjoy fulfilling and powerful deep intimacy with her. That’s all there is to it.

***

His Most Illustrious, Noble, August, Benevolent, and Legendary Celestial Majesty, the God-Emperor of Mankind, Donaldus Triumphus Magnus Astra, the First of His Name, the Lion of Midnight, may the Lord bless him and preserve him, held a pretty badass press conference recently in which he took on just about everyone, including the enemies of the people in front of him:

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#BasedTucker is based:

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Mark Dice is having an increasingly difficult time separating comedy from fact when it comes to liberaltards and all of the stupid shit and noxious gas (quite literally, in this case) that they expel:

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Dave from Blue Collar Logic looks at Hizzoner Duh Mayuh of NYFC beclowning himself due to Black Looming Menace:

And Jason looks at the way that LA schools have pitted themselves against their own students:

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Bill Whittle takes a deep look at whether this craziness that we are all currently living through is just “how it is”, and how it’s going to be:

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Plenty from our good friend The Male Brain this week, starting with a video from BPS about the rise of the soyboy:

The doomsayers keep messing up, and that’s only natural – after all, these days, there is no penalty for failing to learn from experience and stupidity:

Wisecrack explains how and why advertising has changed over the years:

If governments were honest about cashless welfare cards:

***

Paul Ramsey discusses the deplatforming of our friend Roosh and the spirit of destruction that motivates the wreckers (to borrow a term from Ayn Rand):

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Lord Razor of the Fist Clan explains how the Assassin’s Creed franchise got stuck way too far up its own ass and thereby destroyed itself:

Unlike El Jefe there, I absolutely HATED the gameplay mechanics of the first game. Oh sure, it was a good game, it was fun to play, but my GOD it was repetitive and boring. And that’s before we get to the AWFUL gameplay and combat system, which I truly despised.

I even wrote a whole article about it for the now sadly defunct Reaxxion site.

That being said… from what I have seen, the AC franchise has definitely dropped a long way from the heights of its past glories. And I don’t think they’ve hit rock bottom yet, either.

***

China Uncensored look in detail at the God-Emperor’s week spent hammering the living shit out of the Chinese:

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Related – Winston looks at the mass-stabbing crisis gripping China, which of course the Chinese don’t want to talk about:

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America Uncovered looks at the ways in which the God-Emperor’s policies are seriously damaging China’s economy:

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Jared Taylor from American Renaissance brought on very special guest Colin Flaherty, author of the superb, and frightening, book White Girl Bleed A Lot (which I highly recommend) to discuss the current, extremely parlous, state of race relations in the USA:

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Terrence Popp looks at the narrative behind the current unrest:

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Midnight’s Edge looks at the rumours swirling around the next James Bond film, The Woke Is Not Enough, and they are pretty awful:

***

Overlord Dicktor Van Doomcock shows us just what a colossal series of f***-ups Devil Mouse Wars made with The Fall of Skywalker, especially when compared to what George Lucas planned to do with basically the same material:

You know that you’ve seriously failed as a writer, producer, and director when JABBA THE LUCAS does a better job of figuring out how to stick the landing of his own bloated mess of a franchise than you can.

And that is precisely the position in which Jar Jar Abrams finds himself.

Remember, this is George freakin’ Lucas we’re talking about. The guy who gave us nearly two hours of boring intergalactic trade disputes, podracing, and JAR JAR F***ING BINKS in The Phantom Headcase. The guy who gave us two planks of wood playing the roles of Anakin Skywalker and Padme Amidala in Attack of the Groans.

The guy who gave us… well, actually, a pretty decent movie with Revenge of the Sith.

OK, I’ll give him that one. But still. George Lucas isn’t that good a director. He’s simply a brilliant visionary.

And because he understands STAR WARS – he is STAR WARS – he was able to come up with some sort of plot that unf***ed what Kathleen Kennedy, Ruin Johnson, and Jar Jar Abrams done f***ed up.

***

Gary from Nerdrotic tried, and failed, to take the trailer for Star Trek: Lower Decks seriously:

I tried watching it too. It is AWFUL. Which is precisely why ViacomCBS insisted on hiding the like/dislike ratio and disabled comments after a little while. They could see that the stupid thing was going down like a plate of cold sick among the fans and panicked.

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The Drinker takes a connoisseur’s look at Blade Runner 2049:

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Things are going from bad to worse to awful to hideous for the crazy bisexual Amber Heard:

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Your “Science is F***ING WEIRD” moment of the week from The Male Brain:

The LHCb collaboration at CERN has announced the discovery of a new exotic particle: a so-called “tetraquark”. The paper by more than 800 authors is yet to be evaluated by other scientists in a process called “peer review”, but has been presented at a seminar. It also meets the usual statistical threshold for claiming the discovery of a new particle.



The finding marks a major breakthrough in a search of almost 20 years, carried out in particle physics labs all over the world.



To understand what a tetraquark is and why the discovery is important, we need to step back in time to 1964, when particle physics was in the midst of a revolution. Beatlemania had just exploded, the Vietnam war was raging and two young radio astronomers in New Jersey had just discovered the strongest evidence ever for the Big Bang theory.



On the other side of the US, at the California Institute of Technology, and on the other side of the Atlantic, at CERN in Switzerland, two particle physicists were publishing two independent papers on the same subject. Both were about how to make sense of the enormous number of new particles that had been discovered over the past two decades.



Many physicists struggled to accept that so many elementary particles could exist in the universe, in what had become known as the “particle zoo”. George Zweig from CERN and Murray Gell-Mann from Caltech had struck upon the same solution. What if all these different particles were really made of smaller, unknown building blocks, in the same way that the hundred-odd elements in the periodic table are made of protons, neutrons and electrons? Zweig called these building blocks “aces”, while Gell-Mann chose the term that we still use today: “quarks”.



We now know that there are six different kinds of quarks – up, down, charm, strange, top, bottom. These particles also have respective antimatter companions with opposite charge, which can bind together according to simple rules based on symmetries. A particle made of a quark and an antiquark is called a “meson”; while three quarks bound together form “baryons”. The familiar protons and neutrons that make up the atomic nucleus are examples of baryons.



This classification scheme beautifully described the particle zoo of the 1960s. However, even in his original paper, Gell-Mann realised that other combinations of quarks might be possible. For example, two quarks and two antiquarks might stick together to form a “tetraquark”, while four quarks and an antiquark would make a “pentaquark”.

Physics is seriously quarked-up. Jus’ sayin’.

***

Your long read of the week comes from Russian Faith and presents a Russian Orthodox Christian’s point of view on America’s fate:


We have no common morality, no cohesive group, and have become such rugged individualists that we can’t get along with anyone. So we retreat, and atomize and withdraw further. Emotions rule us, we are soft in every way that we should be hardened. We are weak and prone to despondency and confusion. We don’t know where we came from or where we are going.



We accepted views of the world that have no meaning. Each of us has our own religion and therefore we are all atheists. We have abandoned discipline and discomfort, reading for television, fasting for gluttony, purity for lust, sacrifice for carnal pleasure, and we constantly do the same things, like alcoholics drinking the poison we know is killing us.



We inherently know what is good, right and pure. We know these things. We know we are called to stand up for right, we know gratuitous sex, violence, vulgarity, and materialism are evil. We know what they bring, we know what drugs bring, drinking too much, we all know these things. What we lack is power.



Like the alcoholic, we are powerless over the type of evil that rapes and murders children, literally traffics children for sexual deviancy and political power (e.g. Epstein). Evil that uses the manipulation and emotional appeal of Hollywood to turn lies into truth and evil into good.



Evil that promotes and defends the murder of innocents in dozens of countries for the propagation of a truly racist state. An evil that facilitates countless wars in the name of lies, every form of degeneracy – a people who rule the world by deceit. They hide the genocide of women and children in America, South Africa, and Palestine. They conceal the greatest atrocities ever perpetrated in the history of the world during the Bolshevik takeover of Russia.



We cannot fight fire with fire, we cannot learn their tactics and turn their methods against them. We cannot defeat this kind of evil. We cannot become these people, it wouldn’t be worth it. It would be better to die than to be like them.

While we certainly cannot become like these people, there is nothing wrong whatsoever with using their own rules and standards – such as they are – against them. Nor is there anything wrong at all with nailing them to their own crosses using nails of our own devising.

Big Tech is a perfect example. Many Big Tech platforms – Patreon, PayPal, Stripe, Teachable, and others – use the JAMS streamlined arbitration framework because they are required by law to provide consumers and users a way to seek redress in the event of a dispute with their companies. But they NEVER anticipated that this very same framework would be turned into a highly effective weapon against them.

They are discovering the extent and cost of their mistake right now. Patreon has a serious problem on its hands. They could have avoided a huge amount by way of legal fees and headaches and simply reinstated Owen Benjamin’s account. But they didn’t. Instead, they sued him and 72 of the original 90-something Bears who filed arbitration claims. And now they’re on the hook for potentially MILLIONS in legal fees and damages – which is money that they cannot afford to lose.

Patreon and other Big Tech companies may well take their fight against consumer rights all the way to the SCOTUS, and who knows what will happen there. But it will be a very interesting ride no matter what happens.

***

Linkage is good for you:

And some more from Dawn Pine:

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The Neo-Tsar talks a lot of sense and sets the record straight (as he sees it, anyway) when it comes to Russian history and Western interpretations thereof:

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History lessons of the week:

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Some clown decided to see what Noble 6’s last moments would be like in HALO: Reach, and got a bit carried away with the whole thing:

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Wazzocks gonna wazzock:

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Kitchen Nightmares with the Angry Scot:

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Comedy hour with the living legend, Jeff Foxworthy:

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Pics, guns, girls, starting with a few from The Male Brain:

#TUCKER2024!!!

Onward:

I’ve never understood the point of Goya Foods. I used to see a lot of their products on the shelves of the local supermarket in downtown Jersey City where I once lived. But hey, if their CEO is willing to take a stand against the howling morons of the liberaltard mob and praise the God-Emperor, then good for him.

They’re both wrong. It’s the Black Looming Menace.

Yep.

Yes, which is why I call them liberTOONians.

Take a moment about that one.

Headlines of the week indicate that Floriduh Man is lassoing kangaroos in his own backyard:

Your “Blew a Load” moment of the week:

Your “BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD!” moment of the week:

Your “One-Handed Driver” moment of the week:

Your “Who Says There’s No Fun in Islam?” moment of the week:

Your “GOATS FOR THE GOAT THRONE!!!” moment of the week:

Your “NUKE AUSTRALIA NOW!!!” moment of the week:

Your “Fraud-By-Mail” moment of the week:

Your “Skidmarks” moment of the week:

God Almighty, 2020 just keeps getting worse

***

Your dog of the week is the walking shag-pile carpet known as the Bergamasco Sheepdog:

5 Things to Know About Bergamascos

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Gym idiots time, and once again, TyBROne the Fitness Halfwit has managed to severely piss off people in the fitness community who actually know WTF they’re talking about with his stupidity:

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Gym beasts of the week show you what Strongman is really like:

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Buakaw Beatdown of the Week:

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Synthwave keeps things mellow:

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Nothing says “Rock out with your Glock out” quite like watching veterans firing at targets to recreate The Star-Spangled Banner:

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#HeavyMetalRiders

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And finally here’s your Instathot to get the week started. Her name is Christen Dye, age 30, from Memphis, TN, and currently based in Dallas. She calls herself a model, influencer, and blogger (*eyerolls*).

That’s all, folks. Back to the salt mines for the lot of you.

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6 Comments

  1. MrUNIVAC

    Heh, love that Breakfast Club meme. I'm technically one of the OG millennials (born in '82) but I think and act more like a Gen-Xer. I wonder if they'd adopt me.

    I read some blog post forever ago (which I've never been able to find again) that argued older millennials are fundamentally better off than those born after 1990 because we had to learn how to do everything the old way (e.g., look up library books with a card catalog) and the new way once computers and the internet took off.

    Galaxy's Edge (the Anspach/Cole books and NOT the Devil Mouse park) are better Star Wars than anything the Devil Mouse ever came up with.

    Reply
    • Didact

      I'm technically one of the OG millennials (born in '82) but I think and act more like a Gen-Xer. I wonder if they'd adopt me.

      Well, speaking as one of the elder Millennials, I've been told by GenXers that I'm nothing like the Millennial generation that I so despise and they don't think of me as one of my cohort. So it is possible. But it requires a certain deep-seated cynicism and an appreciation for oddball humour.

      I read some blog post forever ago (which I've never been able to find again) that argued older millennials are fundamentally better off than those born after 1990 because we had to learn how to do everything the old way (e.g., look up library books with a card catalog) and the new way once computers and the internet took off.

      Pretty much accurate. My sibling and I are separated by nearly a decade in age. Even though we theoretically come from the same cohort, our attitudes on a huge range of subjects simply could not be more different – including the place and role of technology in certain aspects of our lives.

      Galaxy's Edge (the Anspach/Cole books and NOT the Devil Mouse park) are better Star Wars than anything the Devil Mouse ever came up with.

      Yeah. The GE novels that Anspach and Cole write are more like STAR WARS from the Imperial stormtrooper's point of view, but actually really well written and really immersive. And the action is absolutely gripping.

      If Devil Mouse Wars was even HALF as good as those novels, there wouldn't be any need to resort to any Veil of the Force shenanigans to deep-six the awful new non-canonical shit that they've put out.

      Reply
  2. Luke

    I'm in two minds when it comes to the cashless welfare card. On the one hand, if a country is wealthy enough then it probably should support the less fortunate and who cares what they spend it on (injured soldiers, some poor buggered messed up in an industrial accident). But on the other hand it's not really their money, it came from someone who works their ass off to get ahead only for the state to seize a portion of their earnings and re-distribute it. So if the use of said money is restricted, too bad. (I'm thinking of the households with three generations living there, all on welfare for "back pain" or some such). Would it even be possible to genuinely support those who need it and not have such a system be rorted sideways?

    Reply
    • RMChris

      I sort of understand, but I lean heavily towards "go ahead and restrict what it can be spent on."
      IMO, it's supposed to help less fortunate survive until they can get back on their feet, not "cope" or kill themselves with unnecessary entertainment/escape mechanisms on someone else's dime.

      Reply
  3. JohnC

    Hey Didact what are thoughts on Gen X bosses?
    Gen X parenting?

    I know many blame the Baby boomers on this and that. I myself am a Gen Y.

    I have worked with Silent, Baby boomers, Gen X, Gen Y and now Z. I find the Baby Boomers would say a lot of crap on things like SJW things but really not mean it. As long as the company is making money.
    Gen X on the other hand push health, safety, anti bully and equality far more often in the workplaces and see it more important than money.

    I think what you are seeing in the world today in major companies in the USA is the rise of Gen X bosses. I could be wrong, but I don't think many companies are run by Gen Y at this moment in time. I think Gen X now are taking over the companies.

    Also parenting, my gosh the anti racism, anti bully campaign and the push for young girls in higher education by the Gen X's is amazing bad. Gen Y are now parenting but we are still at the early stage since many of us did not kids until we were 30s (I still don't have any at this moment in time). I went to school in the 90s and Baby boomers teachers are the type that will say something but don't care to push it hard. Gen X teachers are the type that if they say it they enforce it.

    Gen Y are the type that push the ideas to the limits until it fails hard and then move on to other ideas. That is why Gen Y try Veganism, Atheism, women working high careers and voting to the left at a higher rate when they were young compare to Gen X and Baby boomers.

    Again I could be wrong.

    Reply
  4. JohnC

    Also a thought many of the pastors in the US today are Gen X and what do we see. The stupid anti racism and pro rainbow flags.

    This is not to hate on the Generation X but to show that things don't get better just because the Baby boomers are retiring. The Baby boomer were and still are bad compare to the generations that come before them. And it is amazing that many of them still think the world owes them.

    Now that Gen X is in charge you would think that they would want to reverse some of the damage but instead they push it into high gear.
    I also don't believe that Gen Y or Z will do any better when they get into power.

    My prediction is that many companies today will over time give up higher positions to women of Gen Y. They (gen Y women in the positions) will then destroy the businesses.

    You can not put your faith in the Generations, since they are people.

    Also it sad to think that instead of trying to make positive changes now, many are relaying on the younger generations to fix the problems cause by their generations and the older ones. People had given up on Gen Y but i will tell you, Gen Z can not fix it (at least not on their own) and Generation Alpha will not fix it. It will take all generations to make sacrifices and a turn to God.

    Reply

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