Delightful Life
M&M, Cascadian Lovers
- Pronouns
- She/Her/Her
i hoid aboot that poor guy, Max Azzarello, who burned himself to death outside the Trials 
such a horrorific waste
such a horrorific waste
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Sometimes, the schizo operates in a sort of shamanic mode, their right-brained intuition picking up gestalt understandings of reality that their left brains are helpless to interpret. The result is a different kind of babble: one in which the individual pieces make no sense at all, and are often flatly wrong, but which nevertheless have been arranged into a semi-coherent picture that is not so far off from the truth, and may even provide deep insight into it, may even be more true than how most people see the world.
Social stress is at the breaking point. There’s war and rumours of war: regional, global, and civil. The economy is falling apart: high interest rates, high inflation, low wages, low employment, a housing bubble that’s rendered housing unaffordable. The Gini coefficient is off the charts. Decades of unprecedented levels of internal migration and international immigration have shattered communities. Relations between the sexes have never been worse. Confidence in institutions is universally abysmal. People are atomized, alone and lonely, unable to trust and therefore disconnected from those around them, while simultaneously frightened and anxious.
We’re living in what Robert Anton Wilson called Chapel Perilous – a liminal conceptual twilight in which we can never be quite certain whether what we see is natural, supernatural, or a product of our own fevered imaginations.
We’re on edge, unsure what to believe, and unsure what’s coming next.
We’ve done the species-level equivalent of eating a fistful of peyote caps before going skydiving over a warzone in a country we’ve never even heard of.
Of course we’re going crazy. Who wouldn’t?
Some of us will go too crazy, and they will do crazy stuff, becoming a danger to themselves, to others, or to both. Maybe to you, maybe to those you love. Maybe the ones who go crazy will be the ones you love.
Maintaining some approximation of psychological stability in the coming years is going to be a challenge. There are, I think, certain principles that can be applied. Keeping yourself grounded, touching grass as it were. Staying connected to the actual human beings around you, not only online, but talking to the people physically there with you. Focusing on what and who you can see and touch, directly. Basic stuff.
The most important thing, I think, is epistemic. Don’t get too wrapped up in any one narrative. Don’t become too emotionally invested in any one, specific thing as The Truth.
My take on the above....no there's nothing wrong with influencing people through a campaign to get them to vote for you.Spoiler alert:
"There’s nothing wrong with trying to influence an election. It’s called democracy,” said his attorney, Todd Blanche. “They put something sinister on this idea, as if it’s a crime. You’ll learn it’s not."
Donald Trump has not been convicted of any crime.
As I have pointed out before, our system works differently. The PM is merely the leader of the majority party in the house, not a separately elected Chief Executive, and can be removed at any time by their party, at which point they also cease to be PM. I doubt a party would risk going into an election with that many issues and scandals hanging over their leader and certainly not with a criminal conviction. I am not sure, offhand, if there are any actual rules about people with criminal convictions holding public office federally but a PM who could not hold a seat for that (or other) reason would likely also be turfed.Would they also apply to anyone running for or holding the office of the Prime Minister of Canada?
Nice to see good old RAW again :3I read the manifesto he left behind on Substack.
View attachment 9256
For now, it hasn’t been taken down – likes, comments, and restacks are disabled, but the document itself is being left up to read.
It appears that he was schizophrenic. I don’t say that to be dismissive or cruel.
From other Substackers some comments I found insightful:
And I always thought if a US president was IMPEACHED, they had to be turfed, is that not true?As I have pointed out before, our system works differently. The PM is merely the leader of the majority party in the house, not a separately elected Chief Executive, and can be removed at any time by their party, at which point they also cease to be PM. I doubt a party would risk going into an election with that many issues and scandals hanging over their leader and certainly not with a criminal conviction. I am not sure, offhand, if there are any actual rules about people with criminal convictions holding public office federally but a PM who could not hold a seat for that (or other) reason would likely also be turfed.
Well if they have proof, why doesnt the opposition use it?Would they also apply to anyone running for or holding the office of the Prime Minister of Canada?
For instance concerns about foreign interference in Canadian elections, including allegations related to China.
They can't just be removed by their party on a simple vote of caucus or the membership as is the case in most parties here. Removing a US President requires impeachment in the House and conviction in a trial held before the Senate. Even if their party considers them a liability, they cannot simply vote them out of office midterm.And I always thought if a US president was IMPEACHED, they had to be turfed, is that not true?
There still has to be a voteAnd I always thought if a US president was IMPEACHED, they had to be turfed, is that not true?
So they must have a conviction also, makes sense.They can't just be removed by their party on a simple vote of caucus or the membership as is the case in most parties here. Removing a US President requires impeachment in the House and conviction in a trial held before the Senate. Even if their party considers them a liability, they cannot simply vote them out of office midterm.