2025-11-30


Horseshit

celebrity gossip

  • Katy Perry sues disabled veteran for $5M over property dispute

    Katy Perry is suing an 85-year-old dying, disabled veteran over a long-standing property dispute. Perry is demanding $5 million in a lawsuit against the disabled veteran who owned a $15 million Montecito, California home she purchased more than five years ago. The Firework singer’s long-running housing dispute began in July 2020, when she and her ex Orlando Bloom purchased an eight-bedroom estate from Carl Westcott. Within days of the sale, Westcott, 86, a former army serviceman, sought to withdraw from the deal, arguing he lacked the mental capacity to comprehend the contract because he was on pain medication after back surgery when he signed. In December 2023, a judge eventually ruled in Perry’s favor, saying Westcott had offered no convincing evidence that he was incapable of consenting. Perry’s lawyer also said Westcott had a backup offer from Maria Shriver, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s former wife. The singer then countersued for $3.25 million, claiming losses from being unable to lease the property during the court battle, plus $2.2 million for alleged repair work to restore the home and $3 million in legal costs.


Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering

Robot uprising / Humanioid Helpers

  • China Issues Rare Bubble Warning Forming In Humanoid Robotics | ZeroHedge

    China's top economic-planning body, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), issued a rare warning earlier today about the emergence of bubble conditions in the country's humanoid robotics industry. This warning comes just as Elon Musk is planning to scale production of the Tesla Optimus robot next year. Bloomberg cites comments from NDRC spokeswoman Li Chao, who warned that more than 150 companies and startups are developing nearly identical robots, creating the risk of a classic investment bubble that could trigger a bust cycle and stifle real innovation.

Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation

  • Physicist Says Consciousness Might Be Part of the Universe, Not Just the Brain

  • Can the 'Lost Generation' be found?

    The negative stereotype of a Zoomer is a shiftless man, who plays too many video games. He is too coddled by parents and too afraid to strike out on his own. Zoomers rarely date supposedly out of fear that they would have to grow up, take charge, and head a household. Yet the opposite, sympathetic generalization of Gen Z seems more accurate. All through K-12, young men, particularly white males, have been demonized for their "toxic masculinity" that draws accusations of sexism, racism, and homophobia. In college, the majority of students are female. In contrast, white males — 9-10 percent of admittees in recent years at elite schools like Stanford and the Ivy League — are of no interest to college admission officers. So they are tagged not as unique individuals but as superfluous losers of the "wrong" race, gender, or sexual orientation. Gen Z men saw themselves scapegoated by professors and society for the sins of past generations — and on the wrong side of the preposterous reductionist binary of oppressors and the oppressed. Traditional pathways to adulthood — affordable homes, upwardly mobile and secure jobs, and safe and secure city and suburban living — had mostly vanished amid overregulation, overtaxation, and underpolicing. Orthodox and loud student advocates on campus — climate change, DEI, the Palestinians — had little to do with getting a job, raising a family, or buying a house.

Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts

  • Wacky fun physics ideas

    I don’t care for any of the PR touted baloney unified field theories by gentleman surfers or purple hair quaternion enthusiasts, which are about quirky personalities rather than quality of ideas. I’m also sick to death of anyone paying any attention to Avi Loeb, who sees flying saucers in every piece of space junk flying through the solar system. Anyone that hires a PR firm for his “results” is a fraud. Anyone who the media likes for other reasons is likely also a fraud. I do like weird science though. Stuff that makes you think, “hey what would happen if the universe was this way.” It might not be right, it might even be obviously retarded to people who work in the field, but considering that the post-1945 order is ending, we’d expect it to end in physics as well, just as it did post 1918. When the great upheavals happen in human history, previous certainties become less certain and things start to move in the arts and sciences. These are all theoretical noodlings, but at least they take the time to have an interesting thought. Anyway, in no particular order, here are some WEIRD SCIENCE papers and a few notes about each.

  • Riding the Autism Bicycle to Retraction Town

    If it isn’t immediately apparent, it’s nonsense. There’s a bit of a random bicycle with a torture-device for a seat; a small child points — at what, we can never know? — as his parent, in a feat of grand body horror, has become attached to a slab of concrete. There’s the Factor Fexcectorn, the word AUTISM seemingly pointing to a small orb that sits just outside someone’s brain and, of course, the ┐ Tol LIne storee, that most vile thing!

  • Americans no longer see four-year college degrees as worth the cost

Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO

  • The Moon gets written off as “ordinary,” but nothing about it is.

    A satellite that’s way too large for the planet it orbits. A density mismatch that suggests it didn’t form with Earth. A perfectly synchronized rotation so precise you only ever see one face. A stabilizing effect on Earth’s tilt so exact that without it, our climate would swing into chaos. Even NASA admits: the impact model still has gaps they can’t close. It’s the most improbable object in our entire sky. If we saw this with another planet, we’d treat it like a cosmic anomaly. Because that’s what it is.

Crypto con games

Economicon / Business / Finance

Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making

  • The Supreme Court Is About to Hear a Case That Could Rewrite Internet Access

    . In Cox Communications, Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment, the justices will decide whether an internet provider can be held responsible for failing to terminate subscribers accused of repeat copyright infringements. The ruling could determine whether access to the internet—today’s lifeline for education, work, and civic life—can be taken away as punishment for digital misdeeds. Cox’s indifference to repeat infringement is condemnable, but a sweeping ruling could harshly punish thousands for one company’s bad faith.

Trump

  • White House launches website exposing media bias

    The media misrepresented President Trump’s call for Members of Congress to be held accountable for inciting sedition by saying that he called for their “execution.” The Democrats and Fake News Media subversively implied that President Trump had issued illegal orders to service members. Every order President Trump has issued has been lawful. It is dangerous for sitting Members of Congress to incite insubordination in the United States’ military, and President Trump called for them to be held accountable.

Left Angst

  • Republicans get really mad

    when you point out the objective reality that the GOP is increasingly the party of inbred, sister-fucking, uneducated crackheads and the subhumans they claim to despise are actually the base of their own party

    • Wasn't the "liberal" position originally "no one is sub-human"?
  • U.S. peace plan for Ukraine formulated months ago by Kremlin operative

    • A Just Peace should be imposed from outside with no input from those involved int he conflict, then?
  • Make Money Not War: Trump's Real Plan for Peace in Ukraine

  • How ICE is becoming a secret police force

  • Oregon sues feds, saying USDA’s new SNAP guidance cuts legal immigrants

    Twenty-one other states joined Oregon in filing the lawsuit Wednesday in federal court in Eugene, arguing that the U.S. Department of Agriculture overstepped its authority when it issued an Oct. 31 memo telling states to cut off benefits for people who have long been eligible for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. In the lawsuit, Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield and the other Democratic attorneys general said the USDA memo goes further than what Congress approved and effectively blocks many lawful permanent residents from the SNAP program even though they qualify under the law. Those include refugees, asylum seekers and people admitted under humanitarian programs once they obtain a green card and meet the program’s income and residency rules.

Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security

External Security / Militaria / Diplomania

  • The Real-Life Hunt for Red October Happened 50 Years Ago

    The mutiny aboard a Soviet warship in November 1975 led to a chase across the Baltic Sea, involving everything the Soviets had available.

  • Fort Bragg Psychological Warfare Group Posts Chilling Video. ‘We Are Everywhere’

    The 1:17-second clip, posted Nov. 19 on social media, is a string of baffling clips, including old cartoons, masked figures hiding in plain sight and a group of people staring blankly at the viewer over the phrase: “We are everywhere.” “There is another force applied in combat that we generally don’t think of as a weapon of war. That weapon is words,” the video says. “Words are weapons. ... This is psychological warfare.” The video then beckons: “Join PSYOP.”

  • Hegseth order on first Caribbean boat strike, officials say: Kill them all - The Washington Post

    As two men clung to a stricken, burning ship targeted by SEAL Team 6, the Joint Special Operations commander followed the defense secretary’s order to leave no survivors

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth responded to a report that he ordered the military to kill all passengers aboard a boat suspected of ferrying drugs in the Caribbean Sea in September. According to The Washington Post, the Sept. 2 boat strike initially left two survivors clinging to the boat. The Post alleges Adm. Mitch Bradley, head of Special Operations Command, then ordered a second strike in order to comply with Hegseth's orders and to ensure the survivors couldn't call on other traffickers to retrieve them and their cargo. In a post on X on Friday, Hegseth said the strikes were intended to be "lethal, kinetic strikes." "Our current operations in the Caribbean are lawful under both U.S. and international law, with all actions in compliance with the law of armed conflict—and approved by the best military and civilian lawyers, up and down the chain of command," Hegseth said.

    If true, it is unclear why Bradley wouldn't have ordered troops to collect the survivors and their cargo from the water, as the military did in a subsequent strike when two survivors were taken aboard a Navy ship via helicopter. Those survivors were later repatriated to Ecuador and Colombia, although some legal experts said the survivors could have been prosecuted in federal court for smuggling narcotics.

  • Inside the deal-making power of the F-35: A weapon, a network, strategic lock-in

China

Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda