Friday Ephemera (710)
Incoming. || The gathering of mussels. || “The marshmallow you never thought possible.” || New Scientist bemoans “our negative views about cannibalism,” blames racism, colonialism. || Related: human bodies are, it turns out, of “comparatively low nutritional value.” || Ask her about her nipples. || Not entirely sure what’s happening, or not happening, here. || A big dollop of Round The Horne. || Hot and cold. || Details. || Last three weeks, a thread. || The thrill of polyester. || Answers on a postcard, please. || How to pack a suitcase in a manly way. || Creepy Peepies, 1967. || Garden scenes. || I think it’s safe to say he does this better than you do. || Baby ferals. || More fetishistic role-play for the kids. || And finally, why that laser umbrella you’ve been waiting for isn’t a thing yet.
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The science fiction writer Samuel R Delany invoked racism from the opposite direction: According to him, all those reports of cannibalism by European explorers were racist lies*: The natives did not actually practice cannibalism but the Europeans were always obsessively asking about cannibalism so the natives obliged them with false stories about “the people over the next hill”. Needless to say, Delany’s repeated contortions to find racism where it did not exist did not help his reputation among non-leftists.
* Never mind the extensive testimony and physical evidence. Gotta have reasons to hate whitey.
Deleted already.
Must I?
Use the Force, Luke.
I got nothing.
Use the electroweak force, Luke.
Anyone want to place bets on whether they ever become civilized human beings?
The wrinkles are going to be like nothing you’ve ever seen.
But how do you re-pack for the return journey?
I’d watch it.
On second thought, I think I’ll stay in the car and just pee in this bottle.
If interested, a (sometimes) daily dose of Randall Munroe can be found here.
Almost this old.
Affordable PC-based spreadsheets were a god-send.
Don’t forget to hover over the cartoons to see the commentary.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBtsi3CkfBE – “But people have always eaten people. What else is there to eat? If the Juju hadn’t meant us to eat people, he wouldn’t have made us of meat”. Malcolm Bradbury’s novel Eating People is Wrong , about mild campus liberals and the pains they go to to assure foreigners that they don’t find them funny (ha-ha or peculiar), takes its title from the song.
Baby ferals
Come back, Bernhard Goetz, all is forgiven.
I think it is still funny
“The marshmallow you never thought possible.”
Wonders never cease it’s SNL’s Shimmer. The next thing you know, they’ll have spray cheese in a can. (Perhaps wensleydale for pst314.)
“New Scientist bemoans “our negative views about cannibalism,”…“
I did a bit of a double-take at the illustration accompanying that, until I zoomed in and realised they were grilling feet, not…well, nevermind.
*keeps on waiting*
pst314: “On second thought, I think I’ll stay in the car and just pee in this bottle.”
But now seeing that a bottle may not be sufficient.
Morning, all.
Link restored. Reddit moderators deleting stuff seemingly for no reason, especially on Thursday night, really chafes my cheeks.
Outlook not so good.
It does seem to be the chief motivation. And to achieve that end, some contortion may be required. I was reminded, for instance, of a certain Guardian columnist:
It’s not so much thinking, or indeed theorising, as a weird compulsion.
somewhat related, a story I first saw in the early 1970s.
If you are unhappy…
The Other Half and I have been listening to episodes in the car on long journeys. They basically devised a format that allowed them, in effect, to tell the same jokes every week with minor variations – it’s basically a series of riffs. But if you like, say, the 60s Carry On films and farcical double entendre, there’s some amusement to be had.
I suppose it depends on whether you’re entertained by rustic songs about nadgers and futtocks, and splod cobbling. Or the camp duo Julian and Sandy as lawyers with “a criminal practice that takes up most of our time.” Or the tale of the enormous crumpet baked for Queen Victoria. Things of that kind.
SURPRISE!
Well, I frequently feel like the world is… you know… but it seldom has in such a forceful way. I say ‘seldom’ only because I have, unfortunately, had exactly that happen during diaper changes in the dim, dark, past. While not great, it was actually not as bad as being vomited on at 3:00 in the morning.
What a way to go.
“Deploy the weapon.”
An instructive tale for our Mary Can brethren:
I require a Doctor’s appointment. They have an online appointment booking system, because they are technologically contemporary. There are no available appointments in 2024 because they are only medievally competent.
I phoned up the surgery to request an appointment. After being on hold for 30 minutes, and interrogated as to my condition by the receptionist for 10 minutes, I was told there were no available appointments since it was necessary to telephone first thing in the morning.
This morning I rang the surgery at 07:00. The surgery was closed until 08:00. At 08:00 the line was engaged. (That’s “busy” to you Yanks). I re-dialled every 5 seconds continually until 08:25 when I entered the queue. I waited to speak to the receptionist for 25 minutes, explained my medical situation for 10 minutes and was then given an appointment for 14:00 today.
I have no reason to think my experience of the NHS is atypical. Soviet, yes. Atypical, no.
So if anyone recommends the British medical system to you might I suggest you spit right in their face?
Not atypical at all. Pretty much the norm, and increasingly so.
It’s the envy of the (third) world, you know.
A few years ago, I mentioned my attempt to return a set of crutches to the local NHS hospital on behalf of someone else – and how what I’d assumed would be a simple task became a 45-minute ordeal with farcical overtones, and which involved a trek of a half a mile or so, down endless corridors on multiple floors, from one department to another, then another, then another. While walking past posters stressing the importance of patients returning their crutches.
Ah, here we are – presented below in abbreviated form. If I repeat the whole saga, you’ll be gnawing at your own elbows:
I should stress I do not exaggerate for comic effect. This is what happened. And presumably, this is what happens every goddamn day.
It seems like anything run by government eventually becomes primarily a jobs program with the original purpose being secondary.
Having visited the hospital several times, as next of kin rather than a patient, my impression of the place is that, while there are competent and friendly doctors, surgeons and nurses, the admin staff is a very mixed bag and largely unfamiliar with notions of customer service or even common civility. As illustrated above.
Competence, too, is very hit and miss, and during my recent experience, escorting a patient, an important appointment notification was never sent, a set of records was accidentally deleted, and a set of x-rays was simply lost, never to be found. For just one patient with one ailment. None of which was regarded by the staff as particularly unusual or embarrassing. Which I suppose might explain the lack of any apology for wasting my time and effort, or indeed the time and effort of the patient.
And because the notion of customer service is apparently so alien, the result was of being made to feel like an inconvenience, as if we should be grateful for any attention at all, however belated and inept, because they’re doing us a favour, don’t you know.
I didn’t even go into the ludicrous need for this particular doctor’s appointment. Which I shall now do:
I have for years used an asthma relief inhaler on a regular but infrequent basis. Recently the surgery has begun pressuring me to adopt the twice-daily usage of a steroidal “preventative” inhaler. I leave it as an exercise to the reader as to why a doctor’s practice would be particularly keen on pressuring its patients into adopting a frequent, expensive, patented medication instead of an occasional, cheap, generic one. But I mention in passing that this surgery is affiliated with a pharmacy in the adjoining premises.
I have tried many of these steroidal inhalers and found them unsatisfactory. So I persist in requiring regular but infrequent prescriptions for my preferred inhaler.
A few months ago my repeating prescription was stopped. Apparently by the pharmacy.
I issued a request for the medication on the surgery’s online prescription system.
I received a message that I needed to obtain the permission of a clinician to allow this prescription to be fulfilled.
I contacted the surgery and was (eventually) told by the receptionist that she could request the medication for me. I heard nothing more.
I contacted the surgery and (eventually) arranged an appointment with their dedicated asthma nurse. She said she would arrange for my medication with one of the doctors. I heard nothing more.
I contacted the surgery and (eventually) arranged an appointment with one of their doctors. He argued with me for 15 minutes about the advantages to me of their expensive and no-doubt lucrative cortico-steroidal inhalers, but finally provided me with a prescription form and agreed to restore my automatic repeat prescriptions. I took this paper prescription to the chemist and obtained my medication, but heard nothing more and the repeat prescription was not restarted.
And so here we are – I continue my ongoing battle to obtain a medication which I prefer, which I require, and which I have been happily using for years. The only way of currently obtaining which seems to be to spend OVER A FUCKING HOUR EVERY TIME arranging an argument with a doctor so that they can fill out a paper form for me.
… the admin staff is a very mixed bag and largely unfamiliar with notions of customer service or even common civility.
Very likely your experience matches that of ours in the US&A.
To be completely accurate the “physician” line should include nurses, PAs, and anyone else directly involved in patient care which would raise the line, but not anywhere near the “admin” line.
The term “administrators” includes the likes of your magazine gazer, but not the army of social workers and their ilk who insinuated themselves into the system and added bloat of dubious value.
Ah, the ephemera! Let me first take the Weim Crime Syndicate on their post-breakfast walk so they stop mudging me and make a second cup of coffee so I can enjoy these links in peace and serenity.
[ Taps watch, peers over spectacles. ]
Similarly for any private sector monopoly, although the rot may take longer to spread and may manifest in different ways.
It’s a mystery why services with high call volumes do not take advantage of “leave a number and we’ll call you back” voicemail systems. Or maybe not a mystery: Bureaucratic inertia can explain a lot. And discouraged customers/clients who give up cease to be a burden to the system.
I’m more disappointed that my mobile phone doesn’t have an auto-redial-when-busy-then attract-your-attention function.
Perhaps more modern versions, which expect to deal with more modern health “care” systems, do?
I once individually vacuum-packed all my shirts and socks and underpants for a space-restricted ski-trip.
I returned wearing rather more clothes than I left in.
And probably smelling less appetising.
Incoming.
Yes, I laughed.
Baby ferals
The question raised in the tweet was “who let out society degrade to this level?” After reading this article in today’s New York Times, I would have to say, “Pretty much the majority of parents today.” (That link should get you behind the paywall)
[ Taps watch, peers over spectacles. ]
Did you know dogs prefer to poop on a north-south magnetic axis? You can’t hurry science!
No more Vice.
https://twitter.com/Slatzism/status/1760899400237273581
My brain has now suggested to me, as a band name, magnetic dog anus.
So thanks for that, I guess.
Why, it’s a mystery for our times. And yes, I laughed.
“RIP in peace” 🙄
It’s strange how so many disgusting jokes have come closer and closer to reality.
Unbelievable moral sewers of human beings. And I’m not even talking about the drooling perverts.The woman who wrings her hands about nonces knocking one out over the photos she publishes of her daughter in bikinis etc, but says the follower numbers are too good to shut it down.
There does seem to be a striking correlation between “trans woman” and “aggressive pervert”. Meanwhile I’ve yet to see a ‘trans man’ who isn’t a self-hating tragedy. That poor girl still looks obviously feminine, even after her surgical mutilation.
At some point, you’d think mobs and fire and piano wire would get involved but the only mobs I’ve seen recently have been demanding Jewish genocide.
David – next time put cannibalism link right after the feral children.
Nipples: sure, now you look just like a regular guy. This shows that it is a sickness (in case we needed another reminder) because a mastectomy does not need to remove nipples.
has anyone else noticed that when you go to X from a link here there are no comments on anything?
Colonialism: it is a truism of human history that wave after wave of people have “colonized” different areas, wiping out or assimilating the locals. Repeatedly. Studies in Europe have shown that in Sweden, for example, earlier groups several times were over run by more advanced groups, leaving no genetic trace behind. Humans did this to Neaderthal. More advanced is objectively more powerful than the more primitive.
This trope that all cultures are equally good/valuable is sickening. Tribal cultures were constantly at war, practiced infanticide, subjugated women. Charming. People died from a cut finger or mosquito bite.
Should we aspire to not subjugate people? Perhaps. Should we accept all cultures as equal? hahaha no
I’m guessing that’s because you don’t have, or haven’t logged into, an X account. If you do have an account, the replies are visible.
has anyone else noticed that when you go to X from a link here there are no comments on anything?
Yes. You have to be signed into an X account to see the whole thread. They started this about six months ago.
because a mastectomy does not need to remove nipples.
It cost an extra $1,500 to keep the nipples. Also, the non-binary types insist having no nipples helps prove the point.
The pretence seems to be that all cultures are, and always have been, not only congenial, but morally and culturally equal – geographically, across space, and historically, across time. Except, of course, for our own culture, which is, and always has been, somehow uniquely corrosive and depraved. As pretensions go, it’s unconvincing and weird, certainly. And often mouthed by the kinds of people to whom one shouldn’t entrust car keys – or the education of one’s children.
Sharing our tales of medical system incompetence, mine is minor but similar to this one. Wednesday morning I contacted my doctor’s office to get one last refill. No call back until 4:45 yesterday afternoon. I missed the call as I was in the shower but called back immediately , 4:50 in fact, only to be informed that the office was closed for the day. See, they close at 5:00. So…obviously. This was complicated somewhat by the useless app that told me that I still had one more refill available until May, 2024. Pharmacist says otherwise. Last time I had a similar issue, I ran out of my statin. Didn’t take it for three days. It was amazing how much better I felt without them. The more you know…
Have you noticed that these Deep Thinkers are always telling us to abandon our moral codes because someone somewhere thinks differently, but never tell foreigners that they should embrace Western customs and morals? Funny, that.
On long trips, especially ski trips or travel overseas, I take my crappiest t-shits, socks, etc and just throw them away rather than repack. Less laundry when you get home and forces me to get rid of stuff that I rarely wear anyway.
I’m just going to leave that there.
Because I can, that’s why.
Probably how I stumbled into getting a Twitter/X account. Ever since I started interacting with the thing, I have come to realize that I have no bloody idea how much of the UI works, or is even supposed to work.
Doctors/hospitals: where I live near Chicago the docs and hospitals are excellent. However, when my dad had a stroke in Atlanta and went to rehab, he had trouble swallowing (a common problem). Every day, they duly noted on his chart “did not eat breakfast or whatever meal” and weighed him periodically. No one noticed that he was losing weight–again a common problem after stroke. My brother finally noticed when he reached 115lbs and we took him for urgent feeding tube–which they screwed up and we had to get a stomach port. People die from incompetence.
Yes, but that’s not real.
Don’t know if anyone saw this little bit of subversion. The AI is definitely racist. What happens when asked to show chained greek philosophers or scholars eating watermelon:
Yes, I know. It’s obviously a joke. Which I used for shock value. But there are places in this world where that does happen. And there are pervs who seem to think this sort of thing is just fine, while the Deep Thinkers tell us that we must not despise the pervs.
Was rehab in a hospital or was it in some sort of care facility? The former would be particularly shocking, but I am no longer surprised when I read about incompetence and even callousness and cruelty in nursing homes.
[ Considers possibility of fish and chips. ]
As in, their chances now that the Islamists are in charge?
Or as in for supper?
As in can’t-be-arsed-to-cook-tonight.
“I always fast-forward through these parts of a movie…”
Seemingly endless fight scenes and chase scenes get boring–annoying, even. I was once invited to watch some Japanese animated adaptation of E E Doc Smith’s Lensman stories and walked out after a chase scene was still going on after about ten minutes. Novels often get butchered in this way.
I do chuckle at medical misadventure tales… it’s a if some believe that the patients are somehow the customers. But they’re not.
My dad was in a rehab center–not hospital. But the hospital was pretty incompetent too. They are the ones who put in a feeding tube (up the nose)–which took all day–and then didn’t restrain him so he pulled it out immediately. That is why the stomach port, which is surgery.
Gaah. When photography went digital, it did have an advantage that parents wouldn’t get visited by Child Protective Services after the Nosy Parker at the pharmacy rifled though the developed film and reported their pics of bathing a newborn infant.But now? Instant images with “social media” and it makes the stage mothers of old — e.g. Gypsy Rose Lee’s mom, Rose — look like paragons of virtue.
Did you know dogs prefer to poop on a north-south magnetic axis? You can’t hurry science!
No, they don’t.
[ Chomps fish and chips. ]
Yeah, I’m not sure about that. What there is, though, is an obvious opportunity for any “aggressive pervert” to take advantage of the moral latitude provided to those claiming to be a “trans women”. The result being that most aggressive perverts become “aggressive trans women”.
They’re certainly the women doing all the raping and the basketball beat-downs.
Yeah, no, get bent.
“why so many leftist women cheer on men in womenface as their own rights are destroyed.”
Women seem to be particularly susceptible to pathological empathy.
Journalists self-report high rates of mental health issues.
Stop, stop! A man can take only so much schadenfreude!
I attempted to read Dhalgren back in the day. I wouldn’t quote him for anything other than weird sex (which almost all that I remember from reading that novel back in the late 1970s).
I never finished Dhalgren either. (Spider Robinson called it Dullgrin.) Very strange, which I supposed reflected the writer’s mind. But oh so lit’rary according to Smart People. And if you think Dhalgren (published around 1975) had weird sex, don’t look at anything he wrote later: gay sadomasochism and extreme paraphilia, hints and more explicit mentions of child sex, etc. I’ve heard that some of his later novels are nothing but extremely creepy porn.
But to be fair, Delany did write some good stories, such as Nova, before he went off the deep end. And he has written some insightful literary criticism (also some that is crackpot as I mentioned.)
Which only goes to show that people can mixtures of good and evil, smart and stupid. David Brin is supposed to be a good writer (not to my taste, however) but on the other hand he has displayed foolish arrogance, such as when he cheerfully predicted that the internet would bring about the death of privacy–its complete eradication–and that this will be a good thing: How any thinking person could fail to see that this would mean tyranny at the hands of ruthless people is beyond me.
Oh thank goodness I’m not the only one to struggle to about the half way mark, set it aside and wonder “WHY is this getting accolades? I don’t get it.” I even waited a few years and tried again and yep, quit within a few chapters and dumped the book into my “donate” pile.
I fear that you’ll be shocked that I never attempted to read anything else he has written afterwards.
Probably not the ideal houseguest…
pst314
February 23, 2024 12:36 am
No. But you could get up a decent proposition betting on their lifespans.
This shows that it is a sickness (in case we needed another reminder) because a mastectomy does not need to remove nipples.
Not only that, but men have nipples! What are these women trying to become? Ken dolls? Are they going to go with molded plastic hair too?
Yes, I know. It’s obviously a joke. Which I used for shock value. But there are places in this world where that does happen
Cue for multiplicity of jokes about The Regimental Condom.
They offer the service of repositioning them in a more masculine location, which I guess requires some extra splicing.
[ Slurps coffee, checks positioning of nipples. ]
I have no reason to think my experience of the NHS is atypical. Soviet, yes. Atypical, no.
Here in Canada it’s a two week wait to get to see your own family doctor. You can usually go to a walkin clinic same day, but your family doctor will drop you because they don’t get to bill the state for that visit. Wait times in emergency rooms are now averaging north of 12 hours, which raises the ironic prospect of starving to death while waiting to be seen for your broken leg.
Women seem to be particularly susceptible to pathological empathy.
Sooner or later…
RE: the nipless creature, note the two-colour hairstyle, as if it’s trying to be a real-life anime character. And prancing around online showing off your mutilations is definitely a sign of a well-adjusted individual.
RE the NHS; it’s a perfect example of Jerry Pournelle’s Iron Law of Bureaucracy:
This states that in any bureaucratic organization there will be two kinds of people”
First, there will be those who are devoted to the goals of the organization. Examples are dedicated classroom teachers in an educational bureaucracy, many of the engineers and launch technicians and scientists at NASA, even some agricultural scientists and advisors in the former Soviet Union collective farming administration.
Secondly, there will be those dedicated to the organization itself. Examples are many of the administrators in the education system, many professors of education, many teachers union officials, much of the NASA headquarters staff, etc.
The Iron Law states that in every case the second group will gain and keep control of the organization. It will write the rules, and control promotions within the organization.
He’s surrounded by kids. Who does he want to “look sexy” for?
A middle-aged male teacher vamping around the school in tarty heels, while telling us “I like to look sexy,” is sending an unhappy signal, even if done as part of some wider ‘fun teacher’ role-play.
And for many modern male educators, looking “sexy” or “cute,” complete with painted nails and makeup – ostensibly for the benefit of other people’s children – seems more of a kink disguised as a kindness, a favour – and, entirely coincidentally, a basis for pretentious in-group applause.
Come to Stockwell, see the sights.
AI is amazing, it even got the non-binary pronouns right.