tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post5225718670437036481..comments2024-03-29T05:59:55.834-07:00Comments on CONTRARY BRIN: At the edge of war, remember what's basic... and look to the "Greatest Generation."David Brinhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14465315130418506525noreply@blogger.comBlogger96125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-74026055097488257622022-02-26T02:02:37.644-08:002022-02-26T02:02:37.644-08:00Re: Trump prosecution, bribery, blackmail and exto...Re: Trump prosecution, bribery, blackmail and extortion - <br /><br />In addition to murder, the methods listed above are the usual ways organized crime defends itself from prosecution. They also seem the most parsimonious explanations for why the Trump prosecution in the Southern District of New York has stalled. Cyrus Vance stepped down as DA, his successor Alvin Bragg has slow-walked the case, and now the two lead prosecutors Dunne and Pomerantz have unexpectedly resigned. Anyone got a better explanation? <br /><br />It certainly fits the tRumpian m.o.geroldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05140093281920523064noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-17143872962593427212022-02-24T21:22:14.835-08:002022-02-24T21:22:14.835-08:00Meanwhile, from CNN, could this be blackmail at wo...Meanwhile, from CNN, could this be blackmail at work?:<br /><br />=====================<br />The New York Times first reported the prosecutors' resignations. CNN has reached out to Pomerantz and Dunne for comment.<br /><br />The resignations come as the new Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, has "indicated to them that he had doubts about moving forward with a case against" former President Donald Trump, the Times said, citing conversations with people with knowledge of the matter.<br /><br />One person familiar with the investigation by the district attorney's office told CNN that Bragg appeared "disinterested" in his office's investigation into the Trump Organization while he was battling bad press stemming from a memo he had released detailing changes to prosecutorial policies.<br />The source called Dunne's and Pomerantz's departures a setback but said the investigation will move forward.<br /><br />"A case can be harmed by the team that's carrying it out leaving, but that doesn't mean that's the end," the source said. Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12972130383828143841noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-13160586724739800952022-02-20T17:14:02.146-08:002022-02-20T17:14:02.146-08:00onward!!onward!!David Brinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14465315130418506525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-48630088557403142942022-02-20T15:25:33.232-08:002022-02-20T15:25:33.232-08:00The price we settle upon simply must reflect your ...<i>The price we settle upon simply must reflect your fears I won't return it.</i><br /><br />Which is why student loans, which are repaid at rates greater than commercial loans, are charged higher interest rates than commercial loans.<br /><br />As the Brits say: pull the other one, it's got bells on.Roberthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04909011338723657265noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-64192754581179948182022-02-20T15:23:32.728-08:002022-02-20T15:23:32.728-08:00citizens opposed to government change their minds ...<i> citizens opposed to government change their minds when they reach a certain age and want, say, to be enrolled in Medicare</i><br /><br />Haven't you forgotten "keep your government hands off my Medicare"?<br /><br />https://www.huffpost.com/entry/get-your-goddamn-governme_b_252326Roberthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04909011338723657265noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-5532940005129867542022-02-20T15:08:17.903-08:002022-02-20T15:08:17.903-08:00onward
onwardonward<br /><br />onwardDavid Brinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14465315130418506525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-71281879378384770602022-02-20T12:06:10.682-08:002022-02-20T12:06:10.682-08:00Dr Brin:
Zack Snyder is a GENIUS at conveyin[g] o...Dr Brin:<br /><i><br />Zack Snyder is a GENIUS at conveyin[g] original graphic novel content faithfully onscreen! <br /></i><br /><br />And yet, I can't forgive Snyder for what he did to the <i>Batman</i> comic when he was the writer for a few years. Batman works (make that "worked") for me as the most regular-human of superheroes, with no unobtanium-derived powers other than his intellect, self-taught skills, and determination. Snyder felt the need to "explain" in story how Batman manages to always be about 30 years old despite having had adventures as early as 1939. Instead of just letting serial fiction be serial fiction, he went and introduced a concept that Bruce Wayne has found a way to make sure that clones of himself indoctrinated with past knowledge hatch every 20 years or so, insuring that no matter what happens to the individual, Gotham City will always have a Batman.<br /><br />Worse, he also explained the Joker's many returns from seeming-death by establishing in-story that the Joker's spine contains some sort of immortality serum, such that even when Commissioner Gordon literally blows the Joker's brains out the back of his head, he still regenerates and comes back to life.<br /><br />This sort of thing is exactly what I mean when I use Dave Sim's metaphor, "A kind of reverse alchemy, turning gold into lead."<br /><br /><i><br />Alas, while it was brilliant how he did it for the excellent WATCHMEN, he CHOSE to perform that wonder more often for monsters like Frank Miller.<br /></i><br /><br />I wonder, do you have any similar feelings of "monstrousness" toward Quentin Tarantino, who directed one segment of <i>Sin City</i>? I ask because your feelings about Miller reflect mine toward Tarantino. After once seeing <i>Resevoir Dogs</i>, I cannot bring myself to watch another Tarantino film, even the more famous ones. I can't even stand to listen to the song, "Stuck in the Middle With You" because of the association from that film.Larry Harthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01058877428309776731noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-82166718640158416692022-02-20T12:03:55.971-08:002022-02-20T12:03:55.971-08:00So many Rightists tell me Jesus is coming back, I ...So many Rightists tell me Jesus is coming back, I almost believe it. And also their message that we are “dehumanizing” ourselves. LoCum and Tree have gone into such—Beale in ‘Network’, too.<br />After the boss read him the riot act, Beale spent the rest of his career preaching about dehumanization.Alan Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17996922923136240709noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-16747659514537774972022-02-20T11:46:20.555-08:002022-02-20T11:46:20.555-08:00I somehow said:
Alf was just musing on the idea t...I somehow said:<br /><i><br />Alf<b> was just musing on the idea that money seems to work differently in large populations from its origins.<br /><br />I'd put the idea "There should be no billionaires" in the same family.</b>red Differ:<br /></i><br /><br />This was obviously a fat-finger of cutting and pasting. The bolded part above was supposed to be removed altogether.Larry Harthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01058877428309776731noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-64129687080494085492022-02-20T11:44:44.448-08:002022-02-20T11:44:44.448-08:00Alan Brooks:
But I’ve noticed how citizens oppose...Alan Brooks:<br /><i><br />But I’ve noticed how citizens opposed to government change their minds when they reach a certain age and want, say, to be enrolled in Medicare.<br /></i><br /><br />That seems to be about noticing that a benefit is for <b>themselves</b>, whereas before that, they perceived it as the government taxing them to provide benefits to other people (specifically to black people). Obamacare was a particular example of that, where much of the opposition viewed it somehow as "reparations".<br /><br />While I see it as a violation of universal American values, it isn't quite hypocrisy, because their consistent value is always "Government exists to protect my people, not to provide for their people."<br /><br />Although somewhat the same, it feels more blatant and inconsistent when Republicans who run on "taking back" their localities from the chaos and criminality they associate with BLM protesters--or really any protests in favor of justice and fairness--are openly in favor of chaos and criminality inherent in anti-COVID protests, or in an attack on the US Capitol.<br />Larry Harthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01058877428309776731noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-89179829598085977992022-02-20T11:12:43.547-08:002022-02-20T11:12:43.547-08:00AB: Foxites don’t ‘see the light” and start suppor...AB: Foxites don’t ‘see the light” and start supporting government. They redefine anything they like as “not-government.”<br /><br />LH: “I find that ironic, because my overwhelming impression of the Sin City movie (I never saw the sequel) was that it was the first comic-book movie I ever saw which was overwhelmingly faithful to the source material.”<br /><br />Absolutely right! Zack Snyder is a GENIUS at conveyinf original graphic novel content faithfully onscreen! Alas, while it was brilliant how he did it for the excellent WATCHMEN, he CHOSE to perform that wonder more often for monsters like Frank Miller. <br /><br />Robert, I rank NETWORK as one of the 50 greatest motion pictures of all time. Having said that, I also repudiate its harmful message here: My. TEDxUCSD talk on “The addictive plague of getting mad as hell.” http://tinyurl.com/wrathaddicts. (And the scientific background: http://www.davidbrin.com/nonfiction/addiction.html )<br /><br />DG: “A primary function of government should be protecting us untermenschen from the rapaciousness of the predator class.”<br /><br />The top defense of your stance is the moral one. But Randians and MAGAs shrug off that one. What they cannot shrug off is that the thing that has stifled competition for 6000 years and thus insured wretchedly bad governance was lordly cheating and repression of potential competitors from below. Protecting average folk from uber predators and ensuring the health + education + liberty of their children is the ONLY way to ensure that competition is even possible, let alone the fecud driver of prosperity and progress and science that it’s become…<br />…and that oligarchy shills like our pair here are devoted to ending.<br />David Brinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14465315130418506525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-58359826593888902022022-02-20T08:46:13.134-08:002022-02-20T08:46:13.134-08:00This boils down to; "If you can't compete...This boils down to; "If you can't compete, die." Case in point, "Every one should be responsible for their own self defense" means those of us who can't acquire self defense ability are doomed. The same for those of us who would rather spend that time and resources doing cool things like skiing. A primary function of government should be protecting us untermenschen from the rapaciousness of the predator class. Don Gisselbeckhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05770961482198971383noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-74519465090598951182022-02-20T07:48:40.125-08:002022-02-20T07:48:40.125-08:00https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/19/us/politics/wis...https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/19/us/politics/wisconsin-election-decertification.html<br /><i><br />...<br />Yet, Mr. Ramthun claims to have the grass-roots energy on his side. On Tuesday, he drew a crowd of about 250 people for a two-hour rally in the rotunda of the Wisconsin State Capitol [supporting the attempt to de-certify Wisconsin's 2020 electoral votes] .<br /><br />Terry Brand, the Republican Party chairman in rural Langlade County, chartered a bus for two dozen people for the three-hour ride. Mr. Brand in January oversaw the first county G.O.P. condemnation of Mr. Vos, calling for the leader’s resignation for blocking the decertification effort. At the rally, Mr. Brand stood holding a sign that said “Toss Vos.”<br /><br />“People are foaming at the mouth over this issue,” he said, listening intently as speakers offered both conspiracy theories and assurances to members of the crowd that they were of sound mind.<br /><br />“You’re not crazy,” Janel Brandtjen, the chairwoman of the Assembly’s elections committee, told the crowd.<br />...<br /></i><br /><br />There's something...I don't know what the right adjective is...when the person assuring the mob that they're not crazy <b>justifies</b> that evaluation with "People are foaming at the mouth over this issue."<br /><br />Larry Harthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01058877428309776731noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-59794663650120590952022-02-20T07:30:07.227-08:002022-02-20T07:30:07.227-08:00Robert remember What happened when Howard Beale in...<i>Robert remember What happened when Howard Beale in NETWORK began preaching something other than "I'm as mad as hell!"</i><br /><br />No. Can't remember what you never knew — and I never saw <i>Network</i>.Roberthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04909011338723657265noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-75720398159495613232022-02-20T07:26:59.903-08:002022-02-20T07:26:59.903-08:00Is LC dronephobic?
Nah. Just has a thing about ba...<i>Is LC dronephobic?</i><br /><br />Nah. Just has a thing about bagpipes…Roberthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04909011338723657265noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-35923461239945616482022-02-20T06:55:43.590-08:002022-02-20T06:55:43.590-08:00Alfred Differ again:
I worked in the financial in...Alfred Differ again:<br /><i><br />I worked in the financial industry for several years. Easily long enough to know that interest rates ARE prices. If I borrow your money, I'm paying a price to use it before returning it to you. The price we settle upon simply must reflect your fears I won't return it.<br /></i><br /><br />Don't they also reflect the profit the lender might expect to gain from some <b>other</b> use of that money? Or the profit the borrower expects from the use of that money? Or is that too idealistic a concept of what loans are for?<br /><br />* * * <br /><br />While I'm here...<br /><br />Dr Brin:<br /><i><br />"Sin City"? You all know what I think of the spectacularly evil Frank Miller.<br /></i><br /><br />Frank Miller wasn't spectacularly evil until 9/11. After that, everything became something representing European civilization vs Muslim terrorism. To the extent that in 2011 or so, he condemned "Occupy Wall Street" protesters by rhetorically asking whether they ever heard of al-Quaeda. The <i>300</i> movie which you detest is designed to cast the battle as Spartans as European Christian* civilization vs. Persians as Iranian Muslim terrorists.<br /><br />* Despite being set almost 500 years before Christ.<br /><br />Before 9/11, his "thing" was much more about artists as rebels.<br /><br />In a weird piece of irony, Miller was in the middle of producing a sequel to his fame-making "Dark Knight" Batman set of graphic novels when 9/11 happened. The first of three issues of the sequel had already been published, and in that story, Batman was clearly portrayed as a terrorist, fighting a guerrilla war against a corrupt government. The "president", visually mimicking George W Bush, was shown to be a hologram mouthing the words of fascist corporate leaders like Lex Luthor. There was a real "Abbie Hoffman as hero" vibe about the story.<br /><br />The tone of the next two (post-9/11) issued had to change radically to fit his new "Fascism Good; Terrorism Bad" mindset.<br />Larry Harthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01058877428309776731noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-34915789176589787362022-02-20T06:30:54.147-08:002022-02-20T06:30:54.147-08:00Alf was just musing on the idea that money seems t...Alf was just musing on the idea that money seems to work differently in large populations from its origins. <br /><br />I'd put the idea "There should be no billionaires" in the same family.red Differ:<br /><i><br />Gravity IS a hoax if you accept General Relativity. It's a fictitious force. It's just what seems to happen when you try to avoid your inertial path along the manifold. 8)<br /></i><br /><br />Hey, I'm the one who occasionally reminds us that, according to James Blish's <i>Cities in Flight</i> stories, gravity wasn't discovered until four years ago (having previously been <b>postulated</b> for millennia).<br /><br />But no matter how you explain it, the thing most humans call gravity still happens, whether you want it to or not.<br /><br /><i><br />As for Sin City, I've seen the movies, but avoided the graphic novels. They struck me as too dark for my optimistic soul. 8)<br /></i><br /><br />I find that ironic, because my overwhelming impression of the <i>Sin City</i> movie (I never saw the sequel) was that it was the first comic-book movie I ever saw which was overwhelmingly faithful to the source material. It literally felt like I was reading the graphic novel on the screen.<br /><br />Nonetheless, the writer, Frank Miller, must essentially agree with your assessment, because in 1999, he gave us what seemed like a hastily-conceived final arc of the series whose meta-narrative was that the writer himself was fighting to escape the soul-killing darkness of the series' setting.<br /><br />And then he went on to produce <i>300</i> and more Batman.Larry Harthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01058877428309776731noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-20655341070662730452022-02-20T02:14:29.517-08:002022-02-20T02:14:29.517-08:00Russians will open up to me about everything excep...Russians will open up to me about everything except a Russian interest in reclaiming the Baltics. They don’t reply regarding that subject either because they don’t know, or more likely, they don’t want to know.<br />——<br />LoCum and Tree will very probably change their minds someday. A common theme is ‘elitist scientists and managers are [playing God] and diminishing freedom’. Transhumanism/posthumanism are perceived as removing the meaning from life. But I’ve noticed how citizens opposed to government change their minds when they reach a certain age and want, say, to be enrolled in Medicare. It is similar to what Paul saw on the road to Damascus: he saw the Light. When citizens opposed to govt and expensive treatments + surgeries reach advanced ages, they see the Light—and govt becomes acceptable to them. Better & longer living via govt becomes acceptable.Alan Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17996922923136240709noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-72291802984172610342022-02-20T00:51:58.020-08:002022-02-20T00:51:58.020-08:00DB: it pains me to say it, but it seems that locum...DB: it pains me to say it, but it seems that locum actually brought up a good point. As cool as it would be to uplift dolphins, the first priority after decoding dna would be uplifting ourselves. Human genetics is buggy as hell, and we owe it to our descendants to clean it up. <br /><br />And not just debugging obvious errors leading to visible and demonstrable defects, but also increasing our obvious attributes like intelligence, physical ability and beauty. Yet I don't recall seeing mention of such genetic mods in your books; did I miss it? Or have you avoided that issue? geroldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05140093281920523064noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-74587294005595069272022-02-19T22:59:57.503-08:002022-02-19T22:59:57.503-08:00The world is awash in symbolism fetishes, few wors...The world is awash in symbolism fetishes, few worse than "anniversaries." Exactly 79 years ago today, Soviet (mostly Russian) armies liberated Kharkov (now Kharkiv) from Nazi occupation. It was a highwater moment for that winter offensive which started with the victory at Stalingrad and brought Russian tanks to the banks of the Dnieper. The river that Putin clearly wants to serve as the new border with a rump and castrated Ukraine. The city would change hands again, during those desperate struggles a lifetime ago, in battles that Russians have long sacralized.<br /><br />Yes, it appears that massive shelling at the Donbas is intended to draw all eyes there. But bear in mind that Kharkiv is just a stone's throw from Belgorod, where civilians have posted instagrams showing massive Russian tank forces building up and coiling to strike.<br /><br />Want irony? The Foxites in America have spent half a decade pouring "deepstate!!!" hate at the same dedicated men and women of the US Intel/FBI/military officer corps who arguably won the Cold War and the War on Terror and whose competence we now utterly depend upon. Meanwhile, liberals, who by now know that it is a worldwide putsch of despotic mafias that's trying to end our enlightenment, still cannot bring themselves to express support for those men and women in service.David Brinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14465315130418506525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-15206572125252193182022-02-19T22:59:26.378-08:002022-02-19T22:59:26.378-08:00Robert remember What happened when Howard Beale in...Robert remember What happened when Howard Beale in NETWORK began preaching something other than "I'm as mad as hell!"<br /><br />"Sin City"? You all know what I think of the spectacularly evil Frank Miller.<br /><br />David Brinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14465315130418506525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-22355945656815101872022-02-19T21:56:14.918-08:002022-02-19T21:56:14.918-08:00I refer to Locumranch as LC, as I think of him as ...I refer to Locumranch as LC, as I think of him as LoCum; and think of Treebeard as Tree. Not-bad handles: rustic. Don’t know them, but would surmise that they’re gullible, seeking ideals without being able to back the ideals up.<br />—-<br />Christians also don’t usually buttress their ideals. There’s too much ‘do as I say, not as I do’ and—worst of all—ulterior motives. ‘Do as I say, not as I do’ is at least fairly observable—ulterior motives are continually baffling. Spiritual poison.<br />The scriptures present no problem per se, because the basic message is outmoded nonetheless quite clear: lay down one’s life for Christ. Though life in the pre-‘modern’ centuries wasn’t always short, it was frequently nasty and brutish.<br />When someone needed surgery, they were obviously in Trouble. What passed for dentistry was a great deal more painful than dentistry is today, to say the least. Dying for Jesus didn’t appear to be such a bad deal.Alan Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17996922923136240709noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-67110282514857449842022-02-19T21:30:38.632-08:002022-02-19T21:30:38.632-08:00Pappenheimer,
My favorite dungeon master* had a n...Pappenheimer,<br /><br />My favorite dungeon master* had a neat trick for naming some of the demons with common phrases. Imagine a character wishing "to visit the fountain of eternal youth" and popping up next to a very annoyed demon whose true name was… "the fountain of eternal youth."<br /><br />The demon makers of his campaigns took special delight in giving the nastiest ones the most likely screw ups as names. That made sure the nastiest were always angry and directing their energies at the annoying pests who kept calling to them. How evil. 8)<br /><br />I've chuckled at the possibilities I've seen in the years since. It's a consistent source of amusement. Of course I copied the trick when I ran my own AD&D campaigns.<br /><br /><br /><br />* No doubt he lifted this from others, but there is nothing quite like running into it in live play.Alfred Differhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01170159981105973192noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-65233502159148561862022-02-19T21:14:28.146-08:002022-02-19T21:14:28.146-08:00Larry,
Gravity IS a hoax if you accept General Re...Larry,<br /><br />Gravity IS a hoax if you accept General Relativity. It's a fictitious force. It's just what seems to happen when you try to avoid your inertial path along the manifold. 8)<br /><br />Heh. Yah. I get what you were trying to do. Most any other force would do… except that one. Nuclear strong force maybe?<br /><br />Funny thing, though. Many physicists are trying to make them all fictitious.<br /><br />——<br /><br /><i>… I don't know any non-politician, non-pundit people who actually believe it.</i><br /><br />I do. Not TOO many, but enough that the idea manages to reproduce. <br /><br />Worse yet, though, is the family to which that idea belongs. A belief that rules of justice (many ideas enforced as rules) applicable to small bands of humans (<250) should be in use for large communities (>10,000). Rent control rests upon a just rule that sounds like "Thou shalt not gouge thy neighbor in their moment of housing need." The family of ideas represent extensions of indirect reciprocity and sound like good ideas, but they are at the root of thousands of years of aristocratic and priestly rule. The danger rests with the power necessary to enforce them in large communities.<br /><br />I'd put the idea "There should be no billionaires" in the same family.<br /><br />As for Sin City, I've seen the movies, but avoided the graphic novels. They struck me as too dark for my optimistic soul. 8)<br /><br />——<br /><br />80K crowns would be a wonderful price to pay to strip a rich man of all his wealth. Think of it as a way to fight evil rich people. All we'd have to do is borrow it and burn it. 8)<br /><br /><br />I worked in the financial industry for several years. Easily long enough to know that interest rates ARE prices. If I borrow your money, I'm paying a price to use it before returning it to you. The price we settle upon simply must reflect your fears I won't return it.<br /><br />To be specific, I worked in the sub-prime industry. We lent to B and C customers. These were people who were not believed to be frauds, but WERE suspected of being fiscally incompetent. <br /><br />1. If the rate for rich people with proven competence is 3% and you can't get anyone to lend to you below 9%, they are loudly proclaiming something about you.<br /><br />2. On the flip side, college students who can get low interest, unsecured debt aren't being sold the loans they make. Either someone else is backing the loans OR the lender is after something else that makes the risk of default worth it. <br /><br />What could that something else be? Unsecured debt is as bad as heroin and that first plastic card is your introduction to an addiction.<br /><br /><br />But we were talking about pernicious ideas on the memescape, right? That first credit card to someone less than 25 YO comes with a toothy beast attached at the other end. For some reason, many of us think this is still a good idea.Alfred Differhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01170159981105973192noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8587336.post-60547523737012212772022-02-19T20:21:01.553-08:002022-02-19T20:21:01.553-08:00Locumranch mentioned drones twice:
“obedient drone...Locumranch mentioned drones twice:<br />“obedient drones”, and “New Age drones.”<br />Is LC dronephobic?Alan Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17996922923136240709noreply@blogger.com