04.06.12

Baby Eat Pink Slime

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Rock 'n' Roll at 4:04 pm by George Smith

From the wire, on lean finely textured beef:

Larry Smith, with the Institute for Crisis Management public relations firm, said he’s not sure the makers of pink slime — including Cargill and BPI — will be able to overcome the public stigma against their product at this point.

“I can’t think of a single solitary message that a manufacturer could use that would resonate with anybody right now,” Smith said.

Hold on there, lil’ pardner! I have just the resonation for reinvigoration!

Baby Eat Pink Slime! A near perfect p.r. song. Surely one of the problems with the defenders of finely textured beef is: Those dudes can’t laugh at themselves! They’re too serious! Their product is ruined unless they can continue to sell to people with no choice, the US prison population.


Good news, lads! Good news! DD isn’t afraid to make a fool of himself on camera for the sake of a funny video.

The video illustrates the problem with the innovation that’s pink slime processing. It was “invented” as an answer to corporate farming in which hundreds of thousands of cattle stand in unbelievable amounts of excrement and the demonstrated lethal hazard it represents.

What to do about all that shit loaded with virulent bacteria? Add ammonia.

Some inventions just ain’t progress. In fact, some are proof the system
is just plain BAD

Don’t have a fit
Cause it’s mixed with shit
So you don’t get sick
All the time
You know it tastes just fine
Baby, eat pink slime


Now that’s gotta be worth a couple votes.

BAD 2.0: Marine Corps Tea Party Ninny imbroglio

Posted in Extremism at 9:18 am by George Smith

The Marine Corps recommended booting Tea Party ninny Gary Stein today. He’ll get some manner of bad conduct discharge if a general follows the recommendation. It’s a shame.

From the wire:

The government submitted screen grabs of Stein’s postings on one Facebook page he created called Armed Forces Tea Party, which the prosecutor said included the image of Obama on the “Jackass” movie poster. Stein also superimposed Obama’s image on a poster for “The Incredibles” movie that he changed to “The Horribles,” the prosecutor said.

Maybe Stein was a poor Marine. But, rest assured, he’s a much worse writer and speaker if his Facebook page is any measure.

I defy you to get more than a paragraph into this bit on Obamacare.
(You’ll need to have an account on Facebook to see it.)

And there’s the rub.

Without so much brain as earwax, it seems not to have occurred to Gary Stein yet that people without Facebook accounts can’t see his exercises in free speech. So if you want to maximize your audience you kind of have to run a website in tandem with it.

Stein has no such place.

This makes Stein and the Marine Corps’ fuss over his Facebook account
another shining example of BAD in America, something dull and incompetent passed off as a battle to preserve some stalwart man’s right to boldly speak his mind.

Like this, on his Facebook page, a picture of LA County commissioners with their heads on pikes, an objection to their support of some boycott of Arizona business.

While Stein’s Facebook page shows many fans he is not a man
for all markets in California.

A poster for something called the Northern California Sheriff’s Posse Call ireads “Northern California sheriffs are leading the way back to the Constitution …”

Leading one to infer that majority of the state, where most of the
people live, is lacking proper regard for the Constitution.

In line with this, Stein advocates taking a 10-hour on-line prerecorded course on the Constitution, offered by some random certificate mill.

“A free course called Constitution 101 from Hillsdale College…. I’m starting it today… Who is with me???” writes Stein.

It’s slightly reminiscent of the scene in Animal House where Bluto Blutarsky tries to lead his expelled buddies in a charge on Dean Wormer, except without the entertainment value and eventual rally.


After I visited Stein’s page Facebook started serving me ads for patriot hoarders like this one, telling you how to prepare for the coming national collapse, brought on by the presidency of the socialist Muslim in the White House.

“With these 37 food items you’ll attract like-minded patriots and be able to rebuild the nation on the principles of the Constitution and without all that liberal crap,” it tells me.

04.05.12

BAD 2.0: Lack of candor

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Extremism at 11:23 am by George Smith

From the wire, the Centers for Disease Control has determined the state of sex education in public schools in the the United States to be stagnant.

Sex education, the CDC states, is useful because it can reduce the risk of acquiring HIV as well as other sexually transmitted diseases. It can also contribute to less unwanted pregnancy.

The CDC does not ask school why no progress has been made in sex education. However, being scientists, many know exactly why.

And this is why the US leads in the sweepstakes of BAD in just about everything. One hallmark of BAD is that it is protected by a lack of candor in people who know better, who know exactly why something is doing poorly, but who are afraid to say so even when they are in a position that makes a difference.

In this case, stagnant sex education is the work of the irreversibly BAD Republican Party. It’s the party that hates science, hates everyone not like them, hates gay people, hates girls — women — being able to control their reproductive potential, and — therefore — really hates contraception.

We know this because of GOP Presidential contender Rick Santorum who, of course, is also BAD — witless and without any redeeming graces, pretended to be otherwise by stupid people and a party that encourages him, asking others to buy the idiot’s notion that he is someone worth respect and imitation.

From a Reuters story:

Between 2008 and 2010, the percentage of public schools teaching key topics on prevention did not increase in the 45 states surveyed, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

In middle schools, 11 states saw declines during the two-year period and no state saw an increase, the CDC said …

[The] question of how best to teach students about preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases remains a divisive issue in many areas, [one person told Reuters.]

“For many teachers, it’s often about fear, fear of controversy …”

Wayback Machine: The Joseph K Guide

Posted in Crazy Weapons, Culture of Lickspittle, Cyberterrorism, Phlogiston at 8:12 am by George Smith

The Joseph K Guide to Tech Terminology was an infrequent feature in Crypt Newsletter from the mid Nineties. It was a satirical collection of tech terms current to the time.

So if you weren’t around then, or remember it only faintly, a lot of it has aged out of relevance. It would mean nothing to anyone in their twenties, and a bit older, I suspect.

Anyway, I decided to rescue it from the Internet archive for my own purposes. Some notes added.


CRYPT NEWSLETTER’S “JOSEPH K” GUIDE: AN OCCASIONAL GLOSSARY TO TECH TERMINOLOGY

“This is not a psychotic episode, it is a cleansing moment
of clarity.”

–Howard Beale in “Network”

antilethal: Opposite the spirit of maximum lethality but still deadly.

Usage: The antilethal precision munition had incinerated only two hundred civilians when it landed on a bunker in downtown Baghdad so the generals could not understand why the international newsmedia became so irritated.

[Era First Gulf War. While the US military and groupie arms trade industry magazines employed it, it never stuck.]

————-

Associated Press: an international misinformation vendor. See Reuters.

Usage: An Associated Press wire news story told of Vice Miskovic, a Croat teenager who had downloaded the entire U.S. strategic arsenal into his home in Zadar through an Internet connection to Andersen Air Force Base on the island of Guam.

[Vice Miskovic was an actual Euro-hacker. Pretty much just a witless teenager, for a short period he became the object of great press exaggerations for, gosh, getting into some military networks. That never happened.]

————-

commerce: something indeterminate that’s always booming on the Internet, although no one you know has ever seen or benefited from it.

Usage: Representatives of a grotesquely hyped Internet start-up asserted that its commerce was tripling monthly in cyberspace even as the firm surreptitiously filed for protection from creditors under Chapter 11.

————-

computer virus: a small replicating computer program designed to spread autonomously; or, a marketing tool used by computer security experts and anti-virus software companies; or, something indeterminate responsible for making any computer or network behave weirdly.

Usage: Angered by the mystifying and increasingly nettlesome crashes of his new WIN95-equipped computer, Loy suspected a computer virus.

[Do you remember Windows 95? “Oh, the pain.” — Zachary Smith]
————-

consultant: U.S. Department of Defense or civil service free-lancer usually involved in a conflict of interest; or, a recently downsized employee of corporate America.

Usage: The consultant from Science Applications International Corporation enjoyed writing policy papers for the Pentagon’s Joint Chiefs that always cleverly ensured more DoD business for his firm.

Usage: Two years after being downsized by Acme Data Systems, Scroggins’ carefree life as an Internet consultant came to an end when he declared bankruptcy, was divorced by his wife and lost visitation rights to his children.

————-

content: an amorphous term encompassing material of utterly no value found on World Wide Web sites.

Usage: The mouthpiece for a conglomerate of entertainment magazines, whose readership encompassed a great number of gossip-hungry simpletons, vowed his company’s Web site would be content rich.

————-

cutting edge: hackneyed usage meant to convey a quality of hipness and intellectual excellence but, instead, standing for quite the opposite.

Usage: One editor at a stodgy newspaper declared his business and technology section cutting edge even though everyone knew it was only a forum for rewritten press releases issued by corporate America.

————-

cybercash: a fuzzy concept glossy magazines and Internet flacks claim will make everyone — except maybe you — wealthy in cyberspace. Not to be confused with cash money.

Usage: Wackerman dreamed of the cybercash riches he would reap from the sale of his electronic story of a shy but brilliant software engineer who saves the country from destruction at the hands of international terrorists and information warriors.

[Still true for most people.]

————-

The Daily Crapper: your local newspaper.

Usage: The Daily Crapper featured science and technology reporters who often turned in stories that claimed soon computers would be made of DNA and protein or that by the year 2006 the U.S. Army would defeat enemies through the clever use of telepathy and electric rays.

[Originally from around 1994, also still true. DNA computers and electric rays, coming any day now.]

————-

digerati: the celebrities of the ‘Net and/or computing industry; or, Robert Reich’s “symbolic analysts.” [But that’s another tale].

Usage: While the press releases and treatises of the digerati were of less value to the average American than a plate of singing maggots, the mainstream media always loved them.

————-

electronic bogeyman: a hacker, instrument of a hacker or anonymous source portrayed in the mainstream media as a menace to society. The electronic bogeyman must always be quoted making grandiose, unverifiable, or nutty claims (e.g., opening all the automatic garage doors in Anaheim, California at precisely 2:00 pm) about feats, usually malicious, that can be performed with a computer.

Usage: Reuters interviewed an electronic bogeyman from Taiwan who claimed his computer virus would corrupt data on Japanese computers if that country did not immediately surrender ownership of the Daioyu Islands in the East China Sea.

————-

electronic Pearl Harbor (or “EPH”): a bromide popularized by Alvin Toffler-types, ex-Cold War generals, assorted corporate windbags and hack journalists, to name a few. EPH is meant to signify a nebulous electronic doom looming over U.S. computer networks. In the real world, it’s a cue for the phrase “Watch your wallet!” since those wielding it are usually doing so in an attempt to convince taxpayers or consumers to fund ill-defined and/or top secret projects said to be aimed at protecting us from it.

Usage: Salesmen for the secretive Department of Defense contractor, Science Applications, were always good for quote saying that electronic Pearl Harbor had already happened, was happening even now, or would happen some day soon, depending on the needs of the reporters interviewing them.

[It’s not Science Applications anymore, a company most Americans have still never heard of unless they work for the military. Now it’s the Lockheeds and Northrop Grummans, much bigger fish in the ecosystem.]

————-

expert: instrument of journalists deployed to burnish whatever received wisdom is being passed on as news; or, instrument of journalists used to furnish stock criticisms for heretical or unpopular findings; or, someone frequently counted on by hack journalists to provide Delphic wisdom on a subject or subjects the expert knows little about.

Usage: The Hudson Institute expert was often asked for her comments on computer viruses and information warfare even though it had been shown she was computer illiterate.

[A real person. She died a few years ago.]

————-

fictive environment: a new description for psychological operations against an enemy; or, the creation of a world of information fraud surrounding consumers, marks or targets.

Usage: In the mid-Nineties, the business of a significant number of Americans armed with computers became the spinning of fictive environments, the aim of which was to defraud others of cash money.

————-

free speech: something everyone is required to defend, usually when practiced by the odious or students who’ve stepped in excrement.

Usage: As he studied the inside of a cramped Santa Ana jail cell, student Richard Machado concluded that the Orange County jury did not interpret the explanation that he only wanted to “start a dialogue” with Asian students when he mass e-mailed them a message that said “I will hunt down and kill your stupid asses” as a whimsical exercise in free speech.

[A Crypt Newsletter No-Prize if you can tell me what’s happened to this guy.]
————-

…for dummies: the trademark of a very successful line of books written for those who cannot read by those who cannot write.

Usage: The important editor wrote a querulous letter taking great umbrage at the satirical light in which his “…for dummies” books were portrayed.

————-

Golden Pizzle of Information: any authority figure accustomed to being publicized unquestioningly; or, computer experts fond of making dumbly obvious, fraudulent, indecipherable or insane statements which few dare to seriously question.

Usage: Assuming the leaden mantle of Golden Pizzle of Information, Vice Chairman Gary Fernandes of EDS Corp. told a rapt audience, “We have technical clutter. We speak in buzzwords and acronyms.”

[Replaced by Richard Clarke.]

————-

Good Times virus: A hoax believed to be true by many computer-using Americans.

Usage: Modzelewski was written up by for insubordination after laughing indiscreetly at a meeting in which the esteemed network consultant passed out memos on Good Times.

————-

hardware glitch: The cause of all human errors and oversights leading to down time and lost e-mail at national Internet Service Providers or Online Services.

Usage: America On-Line mouthpiece Tatiana Gau said a hardware glitch was responsible for the system-wide failure. Related: see computer virus.

————-

hacker: In this context, a young man very adept with computers and networks, possibly a pawn of Libya or North Korea.

Usage: Indeed it was good the hacker had been apprehended in his single apartment in Raleigh because the government feared he was only a step away from bringing down the entire system of international banking.

[Now since moved to China.]

————-

HERF weapon: Always suspected but never seen, the HERF – or High Energy Radio Frequency – gun is responsible for much nettlesome corporate computer failure nationwide, according to information warriors.

Usage: Dodson was relieved the computer security guru had been able to convince management that the corrupted data on the network was the work of an HERF weapon attack on the corporation, not the boobytrapped pornographic bit of software he had obtained from alt.sex.watersports.

[Seized the imagination of Newt Gingrich and spawned the Cult of Electromagnetic Pulse Crazy.]
————-

information wants to be free: tired hacker slogan formerly denoting that the flow of information is empowering and cannot be restricted; now a cliche usually spouted by a variety of dolts who employ it as a rationalization for ripping off others.

Usage: “Information wants to be free,” thought Vice Miskovic, a teenager from Zadar, Croatia, as he uploaded his Make Money Fast cash pyramid scheme to the Usenet.

[Make Money Fast was a Ponzi scheme and poor Vice, that was the best of his achievements in the real world.]
————-

information warfare: n. In this context, everything and nothing. What hackers, Libyan agents, rogue nations, international criminals, pariah states and pan-national groups of religious fundamentalists will conduct against America in the near future.

Usage: America On-Line was besieged by a series of vexing and seemingly pointless information warfare attacks conducted by teenage hackers armed with AOL Hell, a program that automated the sending of scrofulous electronic messages to other customers.

[Believe it or not, defense industry and DoD information warfare/cyberwar guys really did think Libyans were behind things back then. Ha-ha.]

————-

interactive: an adjective used to adorn computer and software products that are intrinsically worthless, unusable or both.

Usage: “Our interactive Web browser — the Microsoft Internet Explorer — is the only one of its kind that can unlock the magic of the Internet, revivify your moribund sex life, order your office activities, protect your children from pedophiles, and run a Ponzi scheme on the Usenet — all at the same time,” burbled Patty Stonedchik, head of Microsoft’s Multimedia Division.

[Patty Stonedchik was a real person, named changed only slightly. Maybe she’s still around.]

————-

international rule of law: that which is invoked when another country not in the West defies the military, political or business interests of the United States.

Usage: The Washington Post quoted sources at the Government Accounting Office who maintained that pariah states in the Third World, their exact identities classified, had broken the international rule of law by enlisting hackers to attack U.S. networks through the Internet.

————-

leftist: anyone in the U.S. who dares to be critical of authority figures.

Usage: From time to time, p.r. mouthpieces in the employ of giant defense contractors or bloated software firms would write and accuse Crypt Newsletter’s editor of being a leftist.

[Now it’s socialist.]

————-

libertarian: once a handy political label for those who believe in free markets and personal liberty; now a handy marketing tool for those who wish to lower taxes, disarm government employees and spend large amounts of money on anything published by Wired Ventures, Inc.

Usage: The mighty publisher of WIRED magazine galvanized a phalanx of Net libertarians into sending a million electronic mails to Congress in protest of Net censorship — where they were immediately deleted, unread, by college interns.

————-

mentufactury: A kind of pompous term for bullshitting, especially the variety associated with flacking for your information business, hardware, software or the Internet.

Usage: In the mid-Nineties, mentufactury became the primary export of American business resulting in a startling trade deficit disaster.

————-

meta-data: see pseudo-data.

————-

mutual assured annoyance (MAA): the state that exists when U.S. Department of Defense information warriors engage in secret combat with hackers or the information warriors of other nations.

Usage: Crystal often thought about the consequences that might befall him should his Air Force superiors ever discover that the best result his team of information warriors could hope for was mutual assured annoyance of the enemy.

————-

mouthpiece: A paid liar employed by corporations or institutions to emit “expert” commentary for the mainstream media or press releases. In press releases, often the mouthpiece will not even have actually said what he or she is quoted as saying, the quote being copy fabricated by a more eloquent marketroid hidden within the firm. See fictive environment and expert.

Usage: Marty Levecki, a mouthpiece for a giant defense contractor, told USA Today his firm’s consultants had discovered a dangerous computer hacker roaming freely through the Pentagon.

————-

Netizen: formerly, a term meaning citizen of the Net; now, an overused, unintentional pejorative describing a group of annoying computing technology-obsessed, mostly white, mostly male, blowhards.

Usage: Netizen Kane stamped his foot in glee as he used his skills in PC automation to send 1,000 e-mail copies of a windy, libertarian rant to Congressmen, the President and the press, where it was subsequently deleted, unread, by college interns.

————-

paradigm: pattern, an example, a model; or, a word used by people who believe their own press releases. See digerati.

Usage: The pronouncements of Bill Gates were the paradigm for the impenetrable phlogiston surrounding much of home and business computing.

————-

phlogiston: an imaginary element formerly believed to cause combustion; or, Crypt Newsletter’s euphemism for what comes out of the south end of a northbound bull; or, a primary American export commodity (see mentufactury).

Usage: Not even the powerful American newsmedia could rival the Usenet in the dissemination of phlogiston.

————-

pseudo-data: text, test results, charts, bar graphs, numbers and statistics produced by the convergence of mentufactury and technoquack. Sometimes known as advertising.

Usage: The driven and deeply neurotic marketing employees of the computer industry often tyrannized consumers with fraudulent and confusing broadcasts of pseudo-data disguised as information.

————-

remote viewing: use of psychic means to conjure up an accurate image of something not physically observable by the “remote viewer.”

Usage: The generals of U.S. Army intelligence were very impressed when the non-lethal weapons guru described Muammar Ghaddafi sitting in a dwelling somewhere near a sandy desert, all through the science of remote viewing.

[In 2009, they made a movie about ‘remote viewers’ called The Men Who Stare at Goats, starring George Clooney. It was a total failure.]

————-

Reuters: an international misinformation vendor.

Usage: A Reuters wire news story told of a computer virus factory discovered on the dark side of the Moon by business security consultants, Krakt & Zane.

————-

Road Ahead, The: a book for those who despise books, credited — ghost-written by some flunky, actually — to a man who also despises books. Related to and/or see “. . . for dummies.

Usage: Unable to unload the excessive printing of “The Road Ahead” in the continental United States, Bill Gates came up with the novel idea of arm-twisting Russian paupers wishful for his beneficence into purchasing copies for about 9 dollars, cash U.S.

————-

Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC): gigantic contractor for the Pentagon which most Americans have never heard of; or, a secret corporation that relies almost exclusively upon taxpayer dollars for profits.

Usage: “The ideal Science Applications International Corporation business project always involves classification so that outside audits, fraud investigations and meddlesome taxpayers can be side-stepped,” the SAIC vice-president patiently explained to the new hire.

————-

source: an anonymous lawyer, corporate salesman, Dept. of Defense consultant, employee of Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), civil servant or Pentagon apparatchik employed by reporters and editors to pump up flaccid news with impressive quantities of phlogiston. See phlogiston.

Usage: By employing the clever techniques of information warfare, it will be possible to remove future dictators from power without firing a shot, said the Pentagon source to the credulous journalist.

————-

Sun Tzu: ancient Chinese military philosopher — but now a useful marketing tool. Also overused source of quote for information warriors who cannot think of anything original to say.

Usage: The executives of the publishing firm thought the manuscript “Sun Tzu’s Power Web Publishing” was a potential blockbuster and planned to follow it with an entire line of “Sun Tzu” computer manuals.

Usage: “Sun Tzu was the first and greatest information warrior,” said the windbag from the National Defense University during an afternoon tea at the Pentagon. See also windbag.

[Now the favorite of every US military academic whose works are only read by those paid to do so. Which means everyone in the peer group.]

————-

superscientists: The engineers, technicians and researchers who develop weapons for the US military under the cover of black projects. In glossy mainstream magazines they appear always omniscient and generally anonymously.

Usage: The non-lethal weapons guru at Los Alamos National Laboratory provided sage guidance for a crack team of superscientists engaged in Project Beans R-Good4Heart, an effort to build an ultra/infra-sonic cannon capable of inducing ineradicable, debilitating flatus in crowds of hostile foreigners and terrorists.

[Produced the pain ray. And made designs and computer models for nuclear-fission powered drones.]

————-

Symantec: formerly, a company that developed utility software but now a conglomerate of squamous lawyers interested only in emitting press releases and launching meretricious suits against rivals and alleged enemies; or, a company that features a picture of a man on its product boxes who no longer has anything to do with the firm.

Usage: Angered that his company was compelled to compete with other firms in the marketplace, the Symantec CEO summoned a platoon of lawyers and tasked them with the goal of finding a way to sue retailers and consumers for having the temerity to deal with his rivals.

More usage: The box for Symantec’s Norton Anti-virus software featured a likeness of Peter Norton, a man who no longer worked for the company and who had once insisted computer viruses were urban myths.

[Obscure but true story.]
————-

technoquack: an individual, e.g. a consultant or member of the Alvin Toffler Army, who specializes in mentufactury; or, the speechifying of a technoquack or someone who hasn’t quite become one yet.

Usage: The technoquack from the MIT Media Lab enjoyed annoying readers of his books with periodic declarations that Americans yearned for more advertising disguised as news, not less.

————-

Victor von Doom: a.k.a Dr. Doom, an arch villain in the Marvel Comics universe often portrayed handcrafting a variety of directed energy weapons — ray guns — with which to smite enemies; now used by Crypt Newsletter as a catch-all designation for computer security snake-oil salesmen and assorted crackpots spreading freaky tales of non-existent electronic death rays.

Usage: Victor von Doom, a faculty member at the University of Gobble-Wallah in Brisbane, Australia, warned frightened businessmen that a raygun capable of surreptitiously smashing networked corporate computers from a distance of half a mile could be easily fashioned from parts including a cattle prod, two potato knishes, one TV antenna and four car batteries.

[A Crypt Newsletter/DD Blog No-Prize if you know what a Gobble-Wallah is.]

————-

windbag: see expert, source.

————-

Ziff-Davis: a marketing instrument of the computing industry masquerading as a conglomerate of journalistic effort.

Usage: The Ziff-Davis managing editor assigned his favorite witless flunky to write a puff piece on one vendor’s horribly buggy software after the vendor tithed $32,000 to the Z-D advertising department.

————-

“I am here to whip people, and whip them I shall.”
–The Whipper in Franz Kafka’s “The Trial”


Related: Bedpan Technician Training Schools Rejoice

04.04.12

BAD 2.0: Innovation

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 2:25 pm by George Smith

In Paul Fussell’s BAD, the title is defined:

BAD is … something phony, clumsy, witless, untalented, vacant or boring that many Americans can be persuaded is genuine, graceful, bright or fascinating.

That was in 1991. BAD was a thin book. Today it would be a set of encyclopedias.

Just about everything in America is now BAD.

The US military, despite being the largest, most well-equipped and capitalized of any in world history, is BAD. It smashes weakling countries and bombs the guilty as well as the innocent who have nothing in the desperate places of the world, delivering it all with a special brand of American pomposity that tolerates no soul-searching or regret.

It is thought to be led by men deemed the best and the brightest. So best and bright the majority of Americans cannot name one general, admiral, or even the guy who led the force that invaded Iraq a decade ago.

The Republican Party, for example, is irrevocably BAD. It is phony, witless, vacant, clumsy and a whole lot of other things one would never use to describe any group of genuinely good human beings.

iKit from Apple is BAD. In fact, it may be the apotheosis of BAD. It spread American BAD worldwide, like a plague of impetigo, inspiring a cult-like belief in people everywhere that its products are genuine, graceful, beautiful and fascinating when, upon close scrutiny, they are nothing of the kind.

Steve Jobs, among many others, turned “Innovation” into BAD by taking trivial applications in self-gratification and selling them in such pretentious wrapping that Americans are easily convinced they will be incomplete if they do not possess the things.

Another example of BAD is a story from the wires, seeking to show readers that Wal-Mart is seeking to unleash American innovators by opening its shelves to an army of cranks, crackpots and snake oil salesmen.

The company correctly, and cynically, knows how to exploit its audience by working its vulnerability to fads, fraudulent advertising, ripoff disguised as bargain and shit that doesn’t work.

One example, excerpted:

“We know there is a lot of innovation happening all over the country, great ideas that may be flying under the radar,” says Guha Jayachandran, the principal engineer at Wal-Mart’s online research group, Walmart Labs, who came up with the contest …

Four decades ago, Antonio Juarez of Highland, Calif., a believer in home remedies, was having lunch with a balding friend when he had an epiphany—thanks to the salad he happened to be eating.

“I grabbed the vinegar dressing, rubbed the stuff right into his head, and said, ‘Your hair is going to grow now!'” Mr. Juarez recalls.

The friend embraced the treatment, and a year later, his hair came back, Mr. Juarez claims.

Now 73, Mr. Juarez just recently started trying to market his revelatory product, called “Pelo Nuevo,” Spanish for new hair. There is a good reason: “I was broke,” he says.

“But this stuff really works,” adds Mr. Juarez, who says he has been wined and dined by prospective Chinese partners. “You can eat it, too. I don’t put that on the label, but it is true. I will put it against anything on the market right now.”

In fact, the Wal-Mart search for “innovation” is, in and of itself, a potential bait and switch designed to attract people like flies drawn to excrement. A close reading of the story informs Wal-Mart is not at all committed to actually putting any item it deems innovative in its stores.

“If the winner and the company can’t strike a deal on sale terms, the person will be awarded $12,500 instead,” reads the piece.

One must look very hard to find things that are not BAD now.

04.03.12

Sexing up or deception?

Posted in Bombing Paupers, Crazy Weapons, Culture of Lickspittle at 4:10 pm by George Smith

A piece that ran in the Guardian’s Comment is Free column is worth a quick superciliousness snort.

Covering Secrecy Blog’s recent release of a Sandia report on canceled plans for atom drones last week, the title is: US draws up plans for nuclear drones, by Nick Fielding.

Reporters and columnists don’t write headlines. But this one is deceptive and Fielding certainly knows it, having seen the Secrecy Blog post on the matter here.

The report, fairly obviously, states the drone technology which was the subject of design studies will never make it off the ground. And DD blog explained why here and at GlobalSecurity.Org.

The technology, although never directly named, is a propulsion energy source involving radio-decay, nuclear isotopes and fission products. And the reason Sandia boffins dropped it is because of an experience many years ago with the classified Timber Wind project, which involved nuclear propulsion in rocketry.

The bad publicity that resulted when Timber Wind was exposed by the Federation of American Scientists caused its cancellation. And while Sandia’s boffins of bad ideas couldn’t quite bring themselves to not take peeks at nuclear propulsion for drones, it’s also quite clear they recognized their projects were never going to be reality. For exactly the same reasons Timber Wind was scuttled.

Fielding’s piece for the Guardian makes no mention of any of this. It’s a big omission because it’s at the heart of the story. And, if ignored, it allows you to come to a conclusion that’s the opposite of reality but what’s conveyed in the Guardian, a much more sensational thing.

So the journalist finds someone you’ve never heard of to make a concerned noise about something that’s never going to happen:

“It’s pretty terrifying prospect,” said Chris Coles of Drone Wars UK, which campaigns against the increasing use of drones for both military and civilian purposes. “Drones are much less safe than other aircraft and tend to crash a lot. There is a major push by this industry to increase the use of drones and both the public and government are struggling to keep up with the implications …”

Using nuclear power would enable the Reaper not only to remain airborne for far longer, but to carry more missiles or surveillance equipment …

“Isn’t ‘sexed up’ the British term?” commented Steve Aftergood wryly in e-mail to DD.

Exactly so.

Going down with pink slime

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 9:12 am by George Smith

Some weekend quotes worth repeating, from the losing campaign to re-invigorate the image of pink slime. It’s easy to make jokes about the p.r. — ‘it’s un-American to not like pink slime’ or some variation on it. Further, subversion of pink slime is a conspiracy needing Congressional investigation.

Perhaps there could be something like the House Un-American Activities Committee called up, maybe called the House Investigation into the Liberal Gay Anti-Meat Agenda to Discredit Patriotic Finely Textured Beef.

From the wire:

“It’s clear this is a safe product,” [Iowar governor] Branstad said. “It’s a lean product, it helps reduce obesity and there is a spurious attack being levied against it by some groups. You can suspect who they might be. They are people who do not like meat.”

Reports over weekend showed that Beef Products’ top executives and workers have given $820,750 to congressional and presidential candidates over the past decade, with all but $28,400 going to Republicans. Branstad, a Republican, received $150,000 over the past two years from people tied to Beef Products, his spokesman Tim Albrecht said Monday.

Pink slime production has taken a huge hit.

By the numbers, from the Great Falls Tribune:

Beef Products’ plants in Iowa and Kansas each produced about 350,000 pounds of lean, finely textured beef per day, while the one in Texas produced about 200,000 pounds a day.

With these plants off-line, that 550,000 pounds/day of the stuff zeroed out.

Other manufacturers of pink slime, like Cargill, will not close plants because of the loss of demand.

“Cargill doesn’t plan closures or job cuts as it scales back output of finely textured beef at two plants in Texas, one in Nebraska and one in Kansas, Mike Martin, a spokesman for the Minneapolis-based company, said today in an e-mailed statement,” reads one newspaper here.

Interesting bit from an editorial run in Minnesota:

The resulting revulsion has caused grocery stores to say they won’t carry meat containing the product, and many schools, when given the option, are opting out.

The resulting loss of demand for the product affected Beef Products Inc., which has operations in Texas, Kansas and Waterloo, Iowa. Two hundred people lost their jobs.

Boyle, acting to defend the industry, used a press release to rail against the news media.

“Congratulations, ABC World News,” Boyle stated. “Your relentless coverage and uninformed criticism of a safe and wholesome beef product has now delivered a hook for yet another nightly news broadcast … The frenzy of misinformation that has swirled during the last several weeks gives new meaning to Winston Churchill’s great quote, `A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.'”

Feel sorry for the beef-packing industry if you care to. Certainly workers who at least temporarily lost their jobs as the result of the controversy are in a tough spot.

However, the people who may ultimately pay the greatest price for this product _ created simply to add a few pennies of extra profit per pound _ are the cattle producers who have worked so hard to build beef’s image …

Boyle’s tirade aside, consumers are indeed always right. They don’t want to eat “pink slime” or “finely textured ground beef” treated with ammonia. The media and misinformed scientists didn’t cause this debacle. Foisting a product on an uninformed public did.

We are left to hope that beef producers aren’t damaged by the fallout.

From DD blog last week:

Pink slime is yet more mess proving that those who manufacture odious things in America cannot be made to see them that way, even when their corporate noses are rubbed in it by mass opprobrium.

A relatively recent ‘innovation,’ pink slime only exists because Jack In the Box killed a bunch of people over a decade ago with E. coli-tainted hamburger. Pink slime was subsequently developed as a low cost ammonia-sterilized product taken from the more microbe-contaminated parts of the animal, later pushed and peddled as a meat sanitizer.

Of course, there have always been ways to provide beef not contaminated with killer E. coli. But it costs more and the profit margin is decreased.


A picture of the hamburger/taco stand DD frequents a couple times a week, Bobby’s, where beef is always on the menu.

“They are people who do not like meat, eh?”

04.02.12

Take some more pictures of blight, DD

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Made in China at 4:39 pm by George Smith

A perfect visual metaphor for our listless country: A broken piece of circuit board from a worthless bit of consumer electronics, made in China for Sony, amid leaves and litter on a concrete bridge over the pitiless super-highway bisecting Pasadena. Unless someone picks it up or strong wind blows it away, it could be there for the next ninety years, immutable.

When things have turned so rancid the regular news on food is how it is found to be chock full of antibiotics and stuff to sterilize it, “Our chickens don’t do drugs” on a dingy van with the hubcaps fallen off becomes a winning sales slogan.

On the same baking el Molino Street bridge with the broken circuit board, an enterprising band with no audience has put a sticker on a traffic light box. That’s probably cause for a $500 fine and/or five days in jail.

The sign conceals a small horrid-looking park where I’ve never seen anyone, put in place of a house that was abandoned ca. 2007-2008. Depreciative capital in action. No one will build anything worth seeing or using here in the rest of my lifetime.

I’ve never seen a blessed person in the place.

The future’s so bright, ya gotta wear shades. Black plastic made-in-China gadget made this song, written by Link Wray. DD’s coffee table creche kitsch.

Insults from the Bard. The only appropriate response, don’t you think?


Take a picture, DD

Posted in Census, Culture of Lickspittle, Extremism at 9:12 am by George Smith


Good news, lads! Good news! I found another pawn shop.

Nothing says economic fail better than a Cash for Gold shop under the glow of sodium light in the city at night. Liquidate your valuables now that you’re chronically unemployed. Or try to fence stolen goods. Your choice.

This was taken on one of my rounds, snapped on north Lake in Pasadena.

The shot including the boulevard was altered for sharpness, adding a grainy touch. The building was formerly a store selling religious books and pamphlets. It failed when the economy did in 2007-2008.

The next photo is one of the apartment complexes I worked during the 2010 census. On a very nice tree-lined street, it’s furnished corporate housing, a fancy way of describing only sort-of-posh rooming for transient indentured salaried workers.

It’s advertised as secure upscale living and keypad locks adorn most of its doors and gates.

It’s also like living in a tomb. The halls here were utterly silent, fully carpeted, windowless. Occasionally you could hear the wind whistling through those that featured small open spaces.

The apartments were fairly fortress-like, too, unless your idea of openess is a window installation with the blinds always down, one that looks out on a porch about one to one and a half square yards in area.

Management assiduously tried to defy census workers by trying to limit hours we might access the complex. However, the complex was built so that one had to cross the swimming pool area coming out of the lobby to the main quad. The swimming pool also featured a keypad and management gave its combination.

So despite all the keypad locks, the combination for every one was the same. That made it possible to simply bypass the lobby and management to get the work done, anyway.

[The census] showed the big fissures developing in American society – a large body becoming nothing but a servant class to the rich, ridiculously underpaid, often living under transient circumstances or in flophouses. — me, the Register


Good news, lads! Good news! Trespassers will be shot on sight. Survivors will be shot twice.

This is the lawn sign of a local right winger. Over the past three years, he’s unfurled a few head-turners. My favorite, although not for the reasons espoused by the owner, was one of a smiling Barack Obama in front of an artist’s conception of a bombed-out American city. Obviously, it brightened the neighborhood immensely. I wish I’d taken a photo but missed the opportunity.

And one day it was just gone.

The second part of the caption comes from another sign on the premises.


“We do know that more jobs are being created,” said Reich, professor of public policy of the University of California at Berkeley. “The problem is that the actual labor participation rate, the ratio of people who are in the labor force relative to the people who are eligible to work, it’s down to almost the lowest point it was during the great recession. We haven’t seen much pickup in that.” In February, it stood at 63.9 percent, which was down from 64.2 percent in February 2011, and significantly below the 66 percent levels of 2006 and 2007.

In addition, while the economy has been expanding for nearly three years and hiring is picking up, Reich notes, “we also see some major declines in terms of median wage. And that’s particularly true for the bottom 90 percent.”

In the past, economists argued that wage growth lagged in part because employers were spending more on benefits like health care and pensions. But that hasn’t been the case in the past few years. A recently released study from the National Institute for Health Care Reform shows that in 2010, the percentage of Americans with insurance who got insurance from employers fell to 53.5 percent …

“The ratio of profits to wages basically is the highest it has been. More corporate earnings are going to profits relative to wages than at any time since the government has been keeping track of this ratio since 1947. — from the wire

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