Monday. Just… eughh. That being said, this weekend wasn’t all that much fun either, so perhaps it is all for the best that we are back to work. This week promises to be a hectic one for me, at least, but all I can say is, for the time being, it’s really damn boring.
Which, of course, is why the Great Mondaydact Browser Slayer is here – to make Monday go by a lot faster.
This Monday, let’s focus on the positive, with some powerful ideas to foment discipline and drive results:
The Mighty God-Emperor
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, correctly called the USSA exactly what it actually is, these days:
#BasedTucker is Based
Mar 20, 2023
Mar 21, 2023
Mar 22, 2023
Mar 23, 2023
Mar 24, 2023
Dawn of Battle
The Male Brain has scoured teh innarwebz for entertainment this week, and has come up with some great stuff. We start with a short from Content Machine, describing what Earth would look like if populated only by influenzas:
God help us all..
Here’s a new channel – Warp Zone, which does great “what-if” parodies:
Let’s have some JP Sears, who is so funny, he almost manages to make veganism respectable:
ALMOST.
WATOP reckons the ancient world doesn’t get enough credit for some of the technologies used back then:
Anyone who watched Graham Hancock‘s Ancient Apocalypse series on Netherflix, might be interested to draw the parallels between the ideas he expressed there, and the technologies seen above.
Poli-ticking Off
Mark Dice points out that the God-Emperor was right, once more, in his predictions about the current, appalling, state of America’s foreign policy:
The dynamic duo over at Redacted talk about the Deep State’s highly telling reaction to Seymour Hersh‘s fascinating piece on the American-sponsored destruction of the Nord Stream project:
Jackson Hinkle analyses the historic summit between Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping:
ะะตะด ะกะฒะฐัะปะธะฒัะน ะะพะฒะพัะธั!
Grandpa Grumpuss grumps, grumpily, about the implications of the epic summit that took place in Moscow a week ago:
Itโs All Greek To Us
The good gentlemen of The Duran offer up their own perspective on that summit, which is already changing the world:
China Syndrome
Matthew Tye, aka C-Milk, aka laowhy86, makes the extraordinarily dumb argument that the world is now in an “Allies vs Axis” situation – and that China and Russia are the new Nazis:
I get that he doesn’t like China. I share his dislike of the CPC and its methods. But you have to be really dumb to believe the CPC is somehow less legitimate, and less reflective of the will of the Chinese people, than the Uniparty elites who have bent America over a barrel and sodomised it by force for the past thirty years.
Moreover, you have to be wilfully blind and incredibly stupid to think that China actually wants to supplant America as the global hegemon. Neither the words nor the deeds of the CPC indicate anything of the sort. The Chinese simply want to build a global trading alliance that secures their supply lines by land, rather than leaving them vulnerable by sea to the US Navy. That is why they are building this immense One Belt One Road series of infrastructure projects across all of Eurasia and into Africa.
Sure, they are doing it to their economic benefit – of course they are. The Han Chinese are incredibly racist mercantilists from a low-trust culture who will happily screw over anyone they see fit, whenever they can, if it benefits them.
But they dislike war, and are utterly against the GloboHomoPaedoSatanry of the West. As far as I am concerned, that alone makes them far more worthy of support than the Small-Hat unreconstructed Trotskyites that rule over America right now.
Digging to China reckons the New Huangdi is reorganising the CPC to tighten his grip over the Chinese system:
The Bald Truth
Brian Berletic of The New Atlas breaks down the latest package of Western assistance to Banderastan, and finds it quite wanting:
Rulings from the Bench
Judge Andrew Napolitano had a very busy week interviewing a variety of interesting talking heads about the geopolitical situation, in the wake of the recent conflab between the Neo-Tsar and the New Huangdi. We start with a great discussion of the Moscow Summit by Col. Douglas Macgregor:
Maj. Scott Ritter offers up his own thoughts about the meaning of the big summit:
LTC Tony Schaffer on the same topic:
And retired CIA analyst, and common-sense proponent, Larry Johnson, explains how Chinese intervention might help bring about peace in Banderastan:
Righteous Rantery
Lord Razor of the Fist Clan explains what went wrong with Marvel:
PJW explains why voluntary racial segregation is now necessary for Whites to survive in diverse societies:
The inimitable, irrepressible Katie Hopkins talks climate-change wingnuttery in Oxford:
Bad Medicine
Dr. John Campbell reviews an interesting new study about the correlations between the not-vaxx and excess deaths:
Dr. Suneel Dhand is, I think rightly, furious with his profession for what it did to people during the Scamdemic:
Warriors of Faith
Tha Dizzle very graphically makes a point about the season of Ramitdown, the season of feasting – er, Ramadan, the time of fasting:
Dr. Jay Smith from PfanderFilms talks about the inconvenient realities of the famous “Birmingham Folios” with Al-Fadi from CIRA International:
Islam Critiqued breaks down one of the more absurd hadith from the Izzlamist sources:
Inspiring Philosophy looks at the archaeological and geological evidence for the true location of the Garden of Eden:
The Lioness of London, Hatun Tash, explains the way that Izzlamists react when they lose debates against actually skilled Christian apologists and polemicists – basically, like little bitches:
Manly Men of Manliness
Terrence Popp explains the Wages of Woke in the US military, which is struggling very badly to recruit people into its ranks that can actually do the job:
Joker from Better Bachelor notes the increasing pushback of Gen-Y (Shrillennials) and Gen-Z on the woke bullshit they’ve been peddled for so long:
Let’s not pop the champagne corks just yet. Those generations are still boned.
Man Talk absolutely wrecks a Latina puta named Cardi B:
A happily married man who makes over US$1M a year drops some HARD red-pill truths on the King Richez podcast:
The Fairer Side
Jedediah Bila did an absolutely epic livestream in which she discussed a recent episode of the Whatever podcast that really has to be seen to be believed:
Burn Paedowood to the Ground
The big news all over Paedowood right now is the sacking of one Victoria Alonso. Midnight’s Edge explains what happened and what it might mean:
Overlord Dicktor Van Doomcock is delighted by the Wages of Woke descending on Disney:
Gary from Nerdrotic reckons nothing can save the House of the Devil Mouse (which is what I’ve been saying for quite a while now):
Ryan Kinel looks at the initial box office numbers for John Wick 4:
The Drinker analysed the latest superhero flick, which apparently was completely pointless and boring – it wasn’t even offensive in any way:
Reading Too Much Into Things
Your “Science is F***ING WEIRD” moment of the week is from Dawn Pine, and looks at the extraterrestrial (as in, “found on an asteroid”, not “aliens did it”) origins of prebiotic molecules used in creating life on Earth:
The pristine sample from the near-Earth carbonaceous asteroid (162173) Ryugu collected by the Hayabusa2 spacecraft enabled us to analyze the pristine extraterrestrial material without uncontrolled exposure to the Earthโs atmosphere and biosphere. The initial analysis team for the soluble organic matter reported the detection of wide variety of organic molecules including racemic amino acids in the Ryugu samples. Here we report the detection of uracil, one of the four nucleobases in ribonucleic acid, in aqueous extracts from Ryugu samples. In addition, nicotinic acid (niacin, a B3ย vitamer), its derivatives, and imidazoles were detected in search for nitrogen heterocyclic molecules. The observed difference in the concentration of uracil between A0106 and C0107 may be related to the possible differences in the degree of alteration induced by energetic particles such as ultraviolet photons and cosmic rays. The present study strongly suggests that such molecules of prebiotic interest commonly formed in carbonaceous asteroids including Ryugu and were delivered to the early Earth.
We should note here that every single experiment thus far conducted, to try to replicate that “primordial soup” idea of prebiotic chemicals, amino acids, lipids, proteins, and sugars, that evolutionary biologists say was necessary for life on Earth, has, without exception, FAILED.
The tl;dr version of that paper is here in a news article:
March 21 (Reuters) – Two organic compounds essential for living organisms have been found in samples retrieved from the asteroid Ryugu, buttressing the notion that some ingredients crucial for the advent of life arrived on Earth aboard rocks from space billions of years ago.
Scientists said on Tuesday they detected uracil and niacin in rocks obtained by the Japanese Space Agency’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft from two sites on Ryugu in 2019. Uracil is one of the chemical building blocks for RNA, a molecule carrying directions for building and operating living organisms. Niacin, also called Vitamin B3 or nicotinic acid, is vital for their metabolism.
The Ryugu samples, which looked like dark-gray rubble, were transported 155 million miles (250 million km) back to Earth and returned to our planet’s surface in a sealed capsule that landed in 2020 in Australia’s remote outback for analysis in Japan.
Scientists long have pondered about the conditions necessary for life to arise after Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago. The new findings fit well with the hypothesis that bodies like comets, asteroids and meteorites that bombarded early Earth seeded the young planet with compounds that helped pave the way for the first microbes.
Scientists previously detected key organic molecules in carbon-rich meteorites found on Earth. But there was the question of whether these space rocks had been contaminated by exposure to the Earth’s environment after landing.
“Our key finding is that uracil and niacin, both of which are of biological significance, are indeed present in extraterrestrial environments and they may have been provided to the early Earth as a component of asteroids and meteorites. We suspect they had a role in prebiotic evolution on Earth and possibly for the emergence of first life,” said astrochemist Yasuhiro Oba of Hokkaido University in Japan, lead author of the research published in the journal Nature Communications.
“These molecules on Ryugu were recovered in a pristine extraterrestrial setting,” Oba said. “It was directly sampled on the asteroid Ryugu and returned to Earth, and finally to laboratories without any contact with terrestrial contaminants.”
Yourย long read of the week is also from The Male Brain, and consists of a thought-provoking article from :Ashley Rindsberg at TabletMag about the ways in which so-called “science journals” whored themselves out to that malignant little gnome, Fraudci:
It was this small handful of peer-reviewed science and medical journalsโand to a shocking extent just these threeโon which the consumer media based key narratives, like the idea that SARS-CoV-2 could not possibly have come from a lab. Boiled down, โthe scienceโ on a given issue was often conclusively reduced to whatever these journals published.
But for the establishment science publishing community, the pandemic also had an unintended consequence. Through journalistic investigations, often powered by FOIA requests that ensnared hundreds of email exchanges with scientists and science writers, a spotlight was turned on science journalism itself. Writers like Paul Thacker, a contributor to The BMJ, Emily Kopp, a reporter for the watchdog group U.S. Right to Know, Michael Balter, who has contributed dozens of pieces to Science magazine, and the powerful decentralized group of COVID investigators called DRASTIC, exposed the inner workings of an industry that claims to speak for science but often works for political and corporate interests.
In many instances, pandemic-related science journalism smacks of questionable motives. The most high-profile example of this was the now infamous letter by 27 scientists published in The Lancet on March 7, 2020, asserting that they โoverwhelmingly concludeโ that the pandemic had a natural origin, and condemning the suggestion that the virus emerged in a lab as โconspiracy theoriesโ that put scientists lives at risk. What the 27 scientists neglected to mention is that their statement was organized by Peter Daszak, a co-author of the letter who is also the president of the NGO that facilitated U.S. government funding to the lab in Wuhan that the FBI and Department of Energy have concluded is the likely source of the pandemic.
While Daszakโs Lancet letter resembled a partly savvy (and partly clumsy) effort at PR-style crisis management, a paper published in one of the worldโs most prestigious science journals would be both more significant in its impact and possibly more compromised in its creation. That paper, the aforementioned โThe Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2โ published in Nature Medicine, a peer-reviewed (and less prestigious) sister publication of Nature, in March of 2020, was authored by a distinguished but relatively young evolutionary biologist named Kristian Andersen, along with a number of equally accomplished virologists. The paper is filled with complex analyses of the SARS-CoV-2 genome, but in its short abstract it stated the upshot in language even a harried consumer journalist could easily grasp: โOur analyses clearly show that SARS-CoV-2 is not a laboratory construct or a purposefully manipulated virus.โ
Putting aside problems with that claim (for example, a wave-making preprint last year pointed to indications that SARS-CoV-2 was indeed made in a lab), the origins of this paper, which became a touchstone for those arguing against the lab-leak theory, were deeply unethical.
Most of the questions surrounding โProximal Originโ concern a Feb. 1, 2020, teleconference called by Fauci and joined by his boss, NIH then-Director Francis Collins, and other top scientists, including Andersen and a number of his โProximal Originโ co-authors.
As emails obtained from Freedom of Information requests revealed, Fauci arranged the call just days after receiving an email from Andersen expressing concerns he shared with several other prominent virologists that parts of the virus looked engineered. Andersen wrote that he and a few fellow researchers โall find the [SARS-CoV-2] genome inconsistent with expectations from evolutionary theory.โ
If that claim ever reached the public, it might have permanently altered the discourse surrounding the origins of the pandemic. But after the conversation with Fauci, it never did get out. Instead, Andersen, Holmes, and Gary (in addition to Andrew Rambaut) began circulating a draft of โProximal Originโ three days later, making claims that contradicted the findings Andersen had presented to Fauci in his initial email less than a week prior. Inย a Feb. 4 email to Peter Daszak, Andersen communicated that he and his co-authors had already begun circulating drafts of a paper proposing the exact oppositeโthat COVID-19 had emerged naturallyโwhich would become โProximal Origin.โ
Linkage is good for you:
- Pepe Escobar breaks down the ramifications of last week’s summit between the Neo-Tsar and the New Huangdi in Moscow, and they are DREADFUL for the West;
- Dmitry Trenin explains the core philosophy behind the Sino-Russian Alliance, which is now all but a de jure one, in the context of Franklin’s famous aphorism about hanging together or separately;
- Russia, continuing to enjoy an attack of concentrated common sense, has very sensibly banned the use of SWIFT for domestic money transfers;
- The New York F***ing Times is not even suitable for toilet paper, most of the time, but they DO print the truth on occasion, such as this article detailing the scams and bullshit running rife through the ranks of the AFU;
- Be afraid, be very afraid, for the Russians have now invented an AI weather girl – and she’s both hot AND terrifying;
- John Psmith reviews a rather good book about the catastrophic breakdown of law, order, and public sanitation in South Africa, and what that heralds for a West rapidly devolving into a similar situation;
- Speaking of a country reverting to the Dirt World, French MPs have been threatened with a trip to visit Madame Guillotine by the rioters currently running rampant in gay Paris;
- Gregory Hood wonders whether the US Army is even remotely capable of actual combat anymore (spoiler: NO);
- Jerome V. puts into words the extreme loss of faith and trust in “public institutions” that most of us have gone through over the past 3 years;
- John Derbyshire expounds on the rather unwelcome return of heretofore discredited Freudian psychoanalysis;
- Steven Tucker tries to explain the rapid proliferation of complete batshit craziness in our modren society;
- A. J. Smuskiewicz asks why conservatives are such morons, and I think he has a rather good point;
- If you are struggling with productivity during the day, thanks to the endless distractions of social media and mobile phones, try monk mode, as this developer did, and you might just find yourself more productive and happier;
And some more from Dawn Pine:
- The Fake President is failing spectacularly to maintain American hegemony, to the point where China is now supplanting the US in the Middle East – and probably for the better, too, given the USSA’s record;
- Some people have far too much free time on their hands – like this guy who did a study to see whether a propensity for swearing improves C code quality (having coded in C, I can say that swearing does seem to improve coding);
- Steven Tucker explains the ways in which Kellogg’s is using cereal to brainwash your kids into supporting the LGBTQWTFISTHISSHIT agenda;
- Just when you thought Greece couldn’t get any more broke – a woman on Rhodes received a parking ticket for 6 MILLION Euros, which tells you everything you need to know about their economy, really;
- You know we are DEEP inside Clown World when WMMA fighters feel the need to flash the fans just to get some likes for their OnlySimps pages;
- Everyone talks about the supposed “benefits” of net-zero, but no one ever considers the costs – and those might just be larger than the entire global economy;
- A mentally ill man wanted to prove that men really are better at everything, so he went and won a women’s cycling championship while pretending to be a hot-pocket;
- And speaking of crazy athletes, a French muay thai champion beat the ever-loving shit out of four policemen in Madrid and sent them to l’hopital;
MUH RUSHIAN KAHLOOOOOZHUN!!!
The Neo-Tsar explains what he thinks about the Chinese “peace plan” for the Banderastan War:
To be clear – the Chinese proposal IS NOT a peace plan. It is actually a statement of globally applicable principles. And it is far more coherent and sensible than anything the USSA has come up with for the past few decades, with its idiotic “rules-based international order”, which no one can define or explain to anyone else.
Those Who Fail To Learn From History…
History lessons of the week:
HALO Nation
Let’s watch slayergod Remy aka Mint Blitz do his thing:
Learning at the Master’s Feet
Nerd of the Rings does a special on the one and only Turgon:
Bring on the Grimdark
The latest trailer for the new edition of Warhammer 40K just dropped, and it is BRUTAL:
That’s Not Gone Well…
Wazzocks gonna wazzock:
Kitchen Nightmares with the Angry Scot:
Comedy hour:
Meme Warfare



















Animal Planet
Your aminules are adorkable moment of the week:
And also your animals are absolute DICKS moment of the week, to balance things out:
And finally, your “Meanwhile, in Russia” moment of the week:
The Lords of Steel
Gym beast props this week go to Jesus Olivares, who did his namesake proud with his epic lifts:
Ass-Kicking of the Eight Limbs
They See Me Rollin’…
Palate Cleansers
Shuffle Off
Jump-Starts
Gingervitis Injections
Livin’ in the Land of the Metal Gods

Deep Thots & Big Bazookas
This week’s Gun Bunnies and Instathot section can be conveniently rolled into one, thanks to a certain Marina Haines, who is well known for posting pictures all over her Instathot account of herself in tight outfits wielding guns.
I have no idea who she is, how old she is, what she does, etc., but honestly – who cares? She is the embodiment of the other LGBT – liquor, guns, bacon, and… well, y’know.
Right, lads, that’s it, back to work.








1 Comment
The two banes of my gym existence are:
1) The Smith machine, in general. People are more likely to hurt themselves with one of those than by doing the exercises in a real power rack.
2) The old guy with advanced Dadbod who throws 12 plates on the leg press machine (leaving none for anyone else) and then makes a big show of lifting them, as though he’s doing something difficult. This is especially annoying since I finally got up to 315 in Stronglifts and need 6 for myself. Do squats, you coward!