- Joined
- Sep 22, 2018
- Messages
- 41,998
- Location
- Moonbase Caligula
- SL Rez
- 2008
- Joined SLU
- 2009
- SLU Posts
- 55565
Oh oh how can this be?! I thought we'd moved beyond editing down broadcasted interviews.CBS News’s 60 Minutes cut out large portions of its interview with President Trump in which he rambled about his ballroom, how hot his Secret Service agents are, and how the No Kings protests are just like the Ku Klux Klan.
An analysis by Decoding Fox News revealed that many portions of the interview, which took place Sunday following the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, simply never made it to air.
Yup; if you've ever heard of the "Missing 411" thing that was all the rage a couple of years ago, it works exactly the same way.I was mildly curious after reading an alarmist headline on Reddit, but even in a post that took this theory seriously it was pretty damn obvious that there was nothing there. The term "scientist" is ludicrously broad to begin with, but it was really stretched in an attempt to group these disparate people together. There was no coherence to the work they were doing, or where they were doing it, or in the manner of their deaths. Then to stretch it over a span of years was further distortion.
Someone could make the same claim for "numerous medical workers have died or gone missing" and come up with 50 people that met that criteria in any metro area. I'm waiting for "numerous plumbers have died or gone missing" before I get too worried.
Oi Guv, u fokin wot mate???I like to say that if it wasn't for the French we would be speaking proper English.
Naaah, the accents diverged before the Revolution. Though if the Colonies had stayed part of the Empire, perhaps the properly Rhotic dialects would have become the prestige dialects again.I like to say that if it wasn't for the French we would be speaking proper English.
Had President Trump, we wondered, possibly been reading or at least thumbing through—just maybe—the works of … Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel?
Impossible. And yet. Hegel’s theory of “world-historical individuals,” men who redirected the course of humanity, focused on three figures: Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, and Napoleon Bonaparte. Hegel described them as unlikely “heroes of an Epoch” for upending established orders that had previously seemed fixed. They were “practical, political men” who were each condemned in their age for smashing norms and for other conduct “obnoxious to moral reprehension”—as Trump has been accused of, centuries later.
And though Trump has long compared himself to America’s two greatest presidents, we were recently told by two people who are in a position to know such things—a senior administration official and a longtime Trump confidant—that the president had, in private conversations, begun thinking about himself less as a peer of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, and more as an addition to Hegel’s immortal trifecta.
“He’s been talking recently about how he is the most powerful person to ever live,” the confidant told us. “He wants to be remembered as the one who did things that other people couldn’t do, because of his sheer power and force of will.”
In most countries there is a Broadcast News dialect that differs from most local dialects. Those I could see staying in sync. Beyond that there would still be a patchwork of spoken variations, same as there is now.Naaah, the accents diverged before the Revolution. Though if the Colonies had stayed part of the Empire, perhaps the properly Rhotic dialects would have become the prestige dialects again.
Yep, American english is actually MORE traditional. As I sometimes say, American English is slightly more akin to the language of Elizabeth I than Elizabeth II.In most countries there is a Broadcast News dialect that differs from most local dialects. Those I could see staying in sync. Beyond that there would still be a patchwork of spoken variations, same as there is now.
While you sometimes hear people joking that England is more traditional in usage, the fact is Webster consistently picked older words (Fall instead of Autumn) and spelling (-or over -our and -er instead of -re) and his dictionary cemented those choices in American usage.
theemptycity.com
There are, he suggests, various possible remedies (e.g. stay the case until Trump is no longer in office). It'll be interesting to see how the case develops.There is a legal principle so fundamental that it is sometimes described as one of the very rules of natural justice.
This principle is that a person should not be a judge in their own cause.
Here the application of the principle would be that a person should not settle a legal dispute with themselves. Indeed, one can fairly ask if there is a dispute at all in such circumstances.
"May Day, 2026"![]()
Trump is suing his own government for $10 billion
May Day, 2026 And he wants to negotiate with his own government for a settlement sum One thing about fundamental legal principles is that they are rarely expressly feature in litigation – at …theemptycity.com

"May Day, 2026"
The day of renewal!
![]()
That's the other May Day...![]()
Erik Loomis (@erikloomis.bsky.social)
Happy May Day!! I have an article with my 20 favorite leftist films in The Nation. Check it out! https://www.thenation.com/article/culture/may-day-films-labor-movies-solidarity-class-struggle/tnamp/bsky.app