January 19, 2025
At the Sunday Night Café...
... you can write about anything you want.
No sunrise picture today. It was -4° at sunrise.
UPDATE, January 20th, 5:26 a.m.: It's -4° again this morning, and it's predicted to be -12° tomorrow at sunrise (with a "feels like" temperature of -29). I guess I'll stay in and watch the inauguration and the first 2 days of Trump, the Revenge Tour... or whatever it is. They've moved the inauguration inside, into the Rotunda, but I see the temperature in Washington today is in the mid-20s... and that's a hyphen, not a minus sign.
"And then... Covid hits, which was a giant radicalizing moment. And at that point, we had lived through eight years of what was increasingly clearly a social revolution."
"Very clearly, companies are basically being hijacked to engines of social change, social revolution. The employee base is going feral. There were cases in the Trump era where multiple companies I know felt like they were hours away from full-blown violent riots on their own campuses by their own employees. Things got really aggressive during that period. And so I go from watching Brian Williams every night and just being lied to 500 nights in a row to, basically, reading the Mueller report, reading the Horowitz I.G. report and being like, 'Oh, my God, none of this is true.' And then you try to explain to people, 'This isn’t true.' And then they get really mad at you because how can you possibly have any sympathy for a fascist?"
Says Marc Andreessen, in "How Democrats Drove Silicon Valley Into Trump’s Arms/Marc Andreessen explains the newest faction of conservatism" (NYT)(free-access link, because there is a lot of great material in this interview, with Ross Douthat).
Says Marc Andreessen, in "How Democrats Drove Silicon Valley Into Trump’s Arms/Marc Andreessen explains the newest faction of conservatism" (NYT)(free-access link, because there is a lot of great material in this interview, with Ross Douthat).
“I still have that throbbing feeling in my ear.”
Said Trump at his rally just now.
LATER: "We have to be protective of our geniuses. But that one is a good one" (about Elon Musk).
AND: It's funny that on the eve of the inauguration, Trump did a campaign-style rally. I remember thinking when he did a rally the night before the election that I was watching his last rally. I remember thinking it must be quite poignant for him. But here he is tonight, re-embodying Trump the Candidate, making the greatest comeback of all time. When it was all over and time to for "YMCA," we got The Village People in person....
TikTok is working in the app now.
UPDATE: I'd been enjoying TikTok for the last hour, and then when I re-opened the app, I saw this message:
Direct and specific credit given to Trump, who's getting called "President Trump" a little early, but okay.
Here's the NYT article on the subject: "TikTok Flickers Back to Life After Trump Says He Will Stall a Ban/Some users saw the social media app come back online on Sunday, following a shutdown when a federal law went into effect requiring a sale or ban."
It's less than one day. Trump will be President.
Meade has been watching the countdown clock and just sent me this screenshot:
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Here's the countdown clock, for your torment or amusement:
Trump inauguration
I'm able to watch TikTok on my desktop computers using Safari (and Chrome).
And the embedded Rand Paul video from yesterday is displayed in the blog post, even on my phone, and it plays. Screenshot from the phone, made just now:
AND: Here's an embed to watch:
Is something changing or were browsers never shut off? I don't know.
I'm reading and listening to "Curtis Yarvin Says Democracy Is Done. Powerful Conservatives Are Listening."
This is an interview in the NYT (free access link to the edited transcript/I listened to the full audio in the NYT audio app). Here's an excerpt. The boldface is the interviewer David Marchese:
You’re not willing to say that there were aspects of political life in the era of kings that were inferior or provided less liberty for people than political life does today? You did a thing that people often do where they confuse freedom with power. Free speech is a freedom. The right to vote is a form of power. So the assumption that you’re making is that through getting the vote in the early 20th century in England and America, women made life better for themselves.
Do you think it’s better that women got the vote? I don’t believe in voting at all.
Do you vote? No. Voting basically enables you to feel like you have a certain status. “What does this power mean to you?” is really the most important question. I think that what it means to most people today is that it makes them feel relevant. It makes them feel like they matter. There’s something deeply illusory about that sense of mattering that goes up against the important question of: We need a government that is actually good and that actually works, and we don’t have one.
Dave Chappelle does the opening monologue on "Saturday Night Live."
Here it is, from last night, all 17 minutes:
Taking down TikTok punched a hundred holes in my blog.
Where I had embedded video yesterday, it now looks like this:Every post that had an embedded TikTok video now looks empty like that and is missing its point. Every post where I linked to anything on TikTok has been turned — forcibly, by our government — into something that would not be posted.
I watched a lot of TikTok yesterday, so I saw how many many TikTok creators were saying goodbye to the audience they had drawn in over the years, and now, this morning, I'm seeing mainstream media articles about how these last goodbyes sounded. The NYT has the headline "In TikTok’s Final Hours, a Mix of Silliness and Sadness." And that headline made me angry, because I didn't see "silliness." I saw sadness, but the other thing I saw was outright anger — anger at the American government for shutting down a medium of free individual speech that was an important part of life for tens of millions of Americans. Even if much of TikTok could be labeled "silly," even silly speech matters — seriously — when the government comes and takes it away.
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