Funny events in anti-woke world

Agema

Do everything and feel nothing
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I don't know about too old, Moore was 46 in his first Bond film and played him until he was 58.
In context, although Sean Connery returned to do Never Say Never Again in the early 80s, he also opined around the time that he was too old to play Bond: and Roger Moore was three years older than him. Roger Moore should have been retired after You Only Live Twice ~1980. For the last two movies, he was clearly not quite physically up to it and looking far too craggy.
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
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bluegate

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Silvanus

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I am sick of the biased 'progressive' Google Search results. If conservatives agree to get rid of Facebook/Meta, I say anyone left or center-right should agree to get rid of Google.

Oh deary me.

So, according to Robert Epstein, "The methodology of SEME [Search Engine Manipulation Effect] experiments adheres to the highest standards of research in the social and behavioral sciences."

So, I went and dug out one of the actual papers...


...And find that in these experiments, he's using a statistically insignificant sample size, and self-selected respondents. He's drawing conclusions which he happily applies to tens of millions of votes, from sample sizes of a few hundred.

He also doesn't actually provide the criteria by which he's deeming a source "biased" in favour of one candidate or the other. If one candidate lies about something, and the other doesn't, let's say a news source reports that. Is that source then deemed "biased" in favour of the latter candidate?

He's noting a switch in voting intention after respondents view search results. OK. But who's to say that's a result of "bias"? Perhaps reading accurate information about the two candidates would result in that voter choosing one or the other. Because they're just learning.

Suffice it to say this does not meet the "highest standards of research"; not even bloody close. I also find it hilarious that Epstein will confidently state that "SEME" is one of the most influential factors in electoral history... well he would say that; he coined it.
 

XsjadoBlayde

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Ron Watkins is worried about his children, his parental rights, and the dangers posed by “communist creeps” on school boards.

“The communist creeps at our school boards are now taking our parental rights away by teaching our children that they can be vaccinated without parental consent,” Watkins shouted at a school board meeting in Scottsdale, Arizona on Tuesday evening, adding that “communist school boards are now indoctrinating our children with transexual propaganda and teaching them to be racist against white people, by teaching racist Biden’s racist critical race theory.”


Of course schools are not teaching their kids to be racist or spreading “transexual propaganda,” whatever that means. Perhaps Watkins would know that if he had a child enrolled in an Arizona public school, which he doesn’t. Because he doesn’t have a child at all.





But for the QAnon influencer, and many within the conspiracy movement, actually having children is only a minor detail compared to the scale of the war they believe they are fighting against everything from vaccine mandates, critical race theory, and gender politics in schools all across the country.

For months now, QAnon influencers have been urging their followers to be more proactive in this battle and get involved at a local level. In most cases that means harassing and berating school boards, but increasingly, it also means joining them.

Watkins’ harassment of the Scottsdale board mirrors similar attacks taking place across the country as part of a grassroots campaign by QAnon believers to wrest control back from what they see as the liberal elite. But not content with just publicly berating school board members, Watkins unveiled another weapon in the QAnon arsenal.

During his speech, Watkins announced he was running for Congress, and was immediately ordered to stop speaking, because electioneering is not permitted at school board meetings in the district.

But Watkins was undeterred and shouted over one of the school board members to claim that if elected he would introduce legislation to stop the “communist creeps” from making “unconstitutional, tyrannical, liberty-destroying, anti-God policies.”



“I hereby give notice of my intent to file a claim against the bonds of this school board for enforcing unconstitutional policies against our children. If the school board does not immediately cease and desist with their unconstitutional policies, I intend to file a bond claim within five working days.”

What Watkins is talking about is a new tactic in the ever-increasing list of sovereign citizen-adjacent schemes that far-right extremists are embracing in their effort to harass public officials.

This one was dreamed up by Miki Klann, who attended the board meeting with Watkins on Tuesday and “served” board members with documents prior to Watkins’ remarks.


Klann’s scheme, called “Bonds for the Win,” is based on the lie that every public office holder must have a surety bond from a private company in order to hold office. Klann, whose Telegram bio features the QAnon slogan “Where we go one we go all,” promises followers that they can get these private companies to remove people from office. This is simply not the case.


The group is now preparing an all-out assault on school boards across the country, designed to tie up courts and bury officials in a never-ending avalanche of paperwork.

To help achieve this, Klann said in an audio chat with followers on Wednesday night, she is currently preparing a tutorial video explaining how her scheme works, in order to “redpill [people] and explain how this is a communist takeover and how we have a common enemy in the 1 percent globalist elite.”


She has also established Telegram channels for all 50 states to allow people to coordinate harassment campaigns across the country.

And Watkins is not the only QAnon influencer who is pushing Klann’s bogus bonds scheme.

Michael Protzman, known to his followers as Negative 48, has also been pushing the scheme hard on his Telegram channels, and a “Bonds for the Win” member made a guest appearance on one of his chats this week. Protzman is the antisemitic QAnon leader who has been holed up in Dallas for the last three months with dozens of followers awaiting the resurrection of John F Kennedy and his son JFK, Jr.

As a result of this and Watkins’ performance in Scottsdale, the group’s main Telegram channel has gained over 1,000 new members in the space of the last 24 hours.

Even though the scheme has no basis in law, a donation drive for “Bonds for the Win” hosted by Paypal has already raised almost $5,000 of its goal of $20,000. The money will be used to “build a team of professionals to assist people in obtaining and filing bond claims against their school districts and local authorities at no cost to them,” the donation page claims.

This week, the group has posted on its website templates of letters that members can send to their local school districts in 16 different states.

Also speaking at Tuesday’s meeting in Scottsdale was Leigh Dundas, a human rights lawyer who has become one of the biggest vaccine disinformation spreaders in the U.S. Dundas was also in Washington on Jan. 6, cheering on the Capitol insurrection.



Klann, Dundas, and Watkins are part of a much wider network of QAnon believers and influencers who are trying to infiltrate school boards across the country. A report out this week from Media Matters for America, a Washington-based media watchdog, catalogs the scale of the problem.

The report cited multiple reported instances of school board members and candidates supporting QAnon, including examples in Colorado, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin.

This push to target school boards is coming from the very top of the cult, and in particular from Michael Flynn, Trump’s disgraced former national security adviser who the QAnon faithful view as their unofficial leader.

Flynn’s mantra in recent months has been “Local action equals national impact.”

In a News Year’s message on his Telegram channel, where he has 310,000 followers, the former general wrote: “Yes, 2021 was an historic year for the nation. A time to see who is ready and willing to stand up for American values. 2022 will be an epic year and a renewal for American Independence … there is much to do. Get ready, get involved and I’ll say it again; Local Action = National Impact.”
 

Avnger

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Can't they just home school like a normal sovereign citizen
Of course not. It's not enough to ruin their own families' lives. There'd still be everyone else around them proving how wrong they were. If they can make everyone as ignorant, scared, and hateful as them, no one* will be able to tell them they've made a mistake.

*except for the extremely wealthy folks that are manipulating the morons and ensure their own children attend well-run private institutions
 

Cheetodust

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In dumber news:

https://www.ign.com/articles/fight-...hinese-version-is-actually-closer-to-his-book

The author of Fight Club speaks out about China censoring the ending... by pointing out that the Chinese (admittedly probably accidentally) got the ending closer to what he wrote, since his ending was changed for the movie.
Palahniuk is a weird guy. I like his books well enough but the cynicism of his protagonists reads to me like we're meant to view his characters negatively but he sometime makes me think he might have a closer worldview to the characters he creates than I would like to think.
 

Silvanus

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Palahniuk is a weird guy. I like his books well enough but the cynicism of his protagonists reads to me like we're meant to view his characters negatively but he sometime makes me think he might have a closer worldview to the characters he creates than I would like to think.
Not sure why you'd think that, honestly. The protagonist is depicted as dangerous, unhinged. He is able to whip up and inspire followers, but only among the shallow and directionless.

There's an analogy of repressed homo-eroticism, which perhaps has some crossover with the author's own experiences, but the outcomes and actions are not sympathetic.

Anyone who identifies with Tyler Durden is spectacularly missing the point, just like those who identify with Rick Sanchez or the Joker.