(no subject)
Jul. 7th, 2020 09:15 pm1. Meme that worked on FB but I don't think works here.
Come up with a movie that starts with the letter L. And I'll give you a letter to repost said meme on your journal.
Curious to see if anyone responds or can come up with movies. L's not easy.
2. For Fans of Gary Larson's The Far Side (you know who you are), he's come up with three new cartoons.. I actually chuckled looking at them. HERE.
He says not to judge - he's experimenting.
3. New York Times Briefing this morning - with it's daily summary/round up of links from other publications stated the following interesting tid bit:
"At the center of his re-election message. He did so in two aggressive speeches over the weekend and defended the Confederate flag yesterday. “Almost every day in the last two weeks, Mr. Trump has sought to stoke white fear and resentment,” Maggie Haberman writes. (She’s also on today’s episode of The Daily.)
And yet this time seems different: The strategy isn’t working. Trump’s poll numbers are slumping, and some of his 2016 supporters cite racial issues as a reason they plan to vote for Joe Biden.
Why is the Southern strategy suddenly flailing? I count four main reasons:"
* The country is changing. It becomes more racially diverse each year. And most Americans under age 35 are quite liberal. The horror of the George Floyd video and the ensuing protest movement have also changed the minds of many Americans.
* People are afraid. Historically, many white Americans didn’t see how racism hurt them, Belcher said. But he now hears white voters in focus groups say they’re worried that the country is coming apart. “They talk about, if we continue on this trajectory, it’s going to be dismal for our kids,” he said.
*Trump has gone too far. Most white Americans remain moderate to conservative on immigration, affirmative action and more. But many also believe police departments are biased, and many don’t like symbols of slavery. Reagan offered an optimistic, patriotic message that let many voters downplay or overlook his racial appeals. Trump is practically forcing voters to take sides on racism, Terrance Woodbury, another Democratic strategist, told CNN’s Ron Brownstein.
*Voters are simply too unhappy with Trump’s handling of the coronavirus. “As long as that’s true,” The Times’s Nate Cohn told me, “I don’t see how he has the freedom to employ wedge issues.” Of course, the usual caveat applies: The campaign still has four months left.
For more: FiveThirtyEight’s Clare Malone has written a brief history of how the Republican Party “spent decades making itself white.” And The Times’s Emily Cochrane reports from Maine on Senator Susan Collins’s effort to win re-election despite Trump’s unpopularity there.
With any luck he'll take theRacist Republican Party down with him.
4. NASA Releases Decade Long Lapse of the Sun.
5. The NY Times keeps trying to scare me regarding the Virus. Honestly I'm finding their coverage confusing. Also, I don't need people to scare me regarding the virus - already scared, but mostly by how others are handling it. Super did put up the entire NY Forward Plan requirements in the lobby - posted. Also guidelines. I figure I'm safe in my apartment without additional air filters. Also safe doing laundry. No one congregates there.
And I've done laundry off and on for the past four months.
Come up with a movie that starts with the letter L. And I'll give you a letter to repost said meme on your journal.
Curious to see if anyone responds or can come up with movies. L's not easy.
2. For Fans of Gary Larson's The Far Side (you know who you are), he's come up with three new cartoons.. I actually chuckled looking at them. HERE.
He says not to judge - he's experimenting.
3. New York Times Briefing this morning - with it's daily summary/round up of links from other publications stated the following interesting tid bit:
"At the center of his re-election message. He did so in two aggressive speeches over the weekend and defended the Confederate flag yesterday. “Almost every day in the last two weeks, Mr. Trump has sought to stoke white fear and resentment,” Maggie Haberman writes. (She’s also on today’s episode of The Daily.)
And yet this time seems different: The strategy isn’t working. Trump’s poll numbers are slumping, and some of his 2016 supporters cite racial issues as a reason they plan to vote for Joe Biden.
Why is the Southern strategy suddenly flailing? I count four main reasons:"
* The country is changing. It becomes more racially diverse each year. And most Americans under age 35 are quite liberal. The horror of the George Floyd video and the ensuing protest movement have also changed the minds of many Americans.
* People are afraid. Historically, many white Americans didn’t see how racism hurt them, Belcher said. But he now hears white voters in focus groups say they’re worried that the country is coming apart. “They talk about, if we continue on this trajectory, it’s going to be dismal for our kids,” he said.
*Trump has gone too far. Most white Americans remain moderate to conservative on immigration, affirmative action and more. But many also believe police departments are biased, and many don’t like symbols of slavery. Reagan offered an optimistic, patriotic message that let many voters downplay or overlook his racial appeals. Trump is practically forcing voters to take sides on racism, Terrance Woodbury, another Democratic strategist, told CNN’s Ron Brownstein.
*Voters are simply too unhappy with Trump’s handling of the coronavirus. “As long as that’s true,” The Times’s Nate Cohn told me, “I don’t see how he has the freedom to employ wedge issues.” Of course, the usual caveat applies: The campaign still has four months left.
For more: FiveThirtyEight’s Clare Malone has written a brief history of how the Republican Party “spent decades making itself white.” And The Times’s Emily Cochrane reports from Maine on Senator Susan Collins’s effort to win re-election despite Trump’s unpopularity there.
With any luck he'll take the
4. NASA Releases Decade Long Lapse of the Sun.
5. The NY Times keeps trying to scare me regarding the Virus. Honestly I'm finding their coverage confusing. Also, I don't need people to scare me regarding the virus - already scared, but mostly by how others are handling it. Super did put up the entire NY Forward Plan requirements in the lobby - posted. Also guidelines. I figure I'm safe in my apartment without additional air filters. Also safe doing laundry. No one congregates there.
And I've done laundry off and on for the past four months.
no subject
Date: 2020-07-09 12:31 pm (UTC)Not everyone is an "energy empath" or someone who feels the energy from another. (Oprah clearly doesn't - she has no radar at all - she furthered not one but two narcissist/sociopath careers - Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz). Many loners are empaths - it's why we are loners actually. Kind of goes hand in hand. We pick up easily on the energy, body language, etc from others. Often places as well. I've been in places that I want to leave immediately, while a realtor or those around me will think "what's the problem? this place is fine" and I'm like - no it's not. And make an excuse to get out. Same with people - I pick up on it most of the time. Sometimes, I don't. But most of the time I do.
You can feel empathy but not be an empath. So they aren't the same thing.
Anyhow, you may be confusing narcissist with sociopath. A sociopath is a bit of a sadist, they are...hmmm, they are incapable of feeling emotion. Like the woman in the murder trial - they can mimic it but don't feel it. A narcissist does feel things, but is incapable of feeling empathy for others, the narcissist has a huge ego, actually they may be nothing but ego. There's nothing else.
A pundit posting in the local paper last week stated that he suspects the Trump of very recent times as becoming afflicted with "imposter syndrome"-- the realization that he is in way, way, way over his head, and that he's secretly hoping to lose the next election to free himself of it, while continuing the bluster and defiance to cover himself when he does.
They said the same thing about the last election. Except what they don't seem to understand is that Trump is a narcissist (and I think a sociopath). He needs the rallies, the power, the attention, and he gets all that as President of the Us. He sees the Presidency as the best reality television series ever. He does not care about any of the things that the political pundits think he cares about.
no subject
Date: 2020-07-09 02:52 pm (UTC)So, the moment he leaves office? Expect NY and the FBI to fight over who gets jurisdiction over his ass. NY has gotten permission finally to review his tax returns - they have a pending case against him for failure to file and pay income taxes. The reason he changed his place of residence to Florida is partly due to that. New York have over 100 cases pending against him. (Yes, NY hates him. He's not welcome here - his home state and birth state. LOL!)
no subject
Date: 2020-07-10 05:18 am (UTC)Yep, you and I are on the same page here. I was dubious about the imposter syndrome thing, but I thought I'd run it by you.
Many loners are empaths - it's why we are loners actually. Kind of goes hand in hand. We pick up easily on the energy, body language, etc from others. Often places as well. I've been in places that I want to leave immediately,
Dunno about the loner part, although it's true I largely am one. I don't know if I ever think of it as "energy" that I get from someone, when I use the word 'vibe' it's a shortcut term for body language, facial expression, and for me-- most of all-- the way they sound when they speak.
I'm not a musician, but I do often react emotionally to sound and music, and I have noticed that has intensified as I've aged. A few months ago I was watching a TV show, and a song came on, and a minute later I was crying. The song wasn't so much a sad song as just a very musically evocative one about not being able to go back and live in the past. Sucker just went right past my rational forebrain, and... whew.
I also have had the advantage of dealing with literally thousands of people in my working life, by way of all the service calls I've made to people's homes plus interaction with people right in the stores I've been employed by. I tend to latch on to their voices first, the tonal way they speak, then the facial expressions and body language.
Oh, and... boy, are you right about "some places". That hasn't happened all that often to me, but when it does... Oh yeah, get outta there!
no subject
Date: 2020-07-10 12:38 pm (UTC)The scientific term would be "vibration". If you consider that all living things are made of "energy" and "organic materials" - some call the "energy" - soul or spirit. When we die - the energy disperses. Where it goes? No one knows. (I'm going with the science not the religious or new age interpretations of what I've observed and read.)
So, some set off negative "vibrations". If I'm in a nasty mood - I'm setting off "bad vibrations" and people want to stay clear of me.
I think we do pick up on in music - music is vibration and sound waves. Visual images - which send off a different type of energy. And facial and body language.
But I also think it's not just one of the above, but possibly all? And situational? I mean, if someone is smiling at you, and cheerful and charming, but you're picking up the opposite while your friend doesn't - that picking up on a "vibration".