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The Unz Review • An Alternative Media Selection$
A Collection of Interesting, Important, and Controversial Perspectives Largely Excluded from the American Mainstream Media
 TeasersiSteve Blog
My Substack: SteveSailer.Net
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I started actively posting to my Substack at SteveSailer.Net last May and it’s been going very well. Drop on by and take a look.

 
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  1. I’ve been reading what I can on there. It’s not that I’m a cheap-ass. (I’ve been donating quite a bit to the John Birch Society and still VDare.) I comment enough on here, too much some would agree, so I didn’t want to open up another avenue for this vice. That’s all it is.

    7,000 subscribers – movin’ on up fast! Congratulations.

    I really hope you keep posting here at least a few times a week. I like the commenting crowd, though I know a number have made the switch over. Also, I REALLY LIKE Ron Unz’s commenting system too. Maybe Substack should think about implementing this functionality.

  2. J.Ross says:

    Is this the last Steve post on Unz?

    • Replies: @MEH 0910
  3. No Taki’s this week?

    • Replies: @Steve Sailer
  4. Steve, hearty congratulations on your Substack success. I read your articles ( the free stuff, anyway 🙂 ), and I like that you also keep posting here from time to time. I’ll stick to commenting here for as long as you keep posting: Unlike Substack (and other sites), Ron’s comments system here is great—the best there is for any existing blog format. Basically, what AEN said.

    • Replies: @mc23
  5. Times changes, right? I remember the olden days:

    https://web.archive.org/web/20020325114427/http://isteve.com/

    Too bad Steve Jobs never bought out your old domain. Since he didn’t (and probably won’t now) I was always kind of expected you to migrate back there.

    • Thanks: MEH 0910
    • Replies: @ScarletNumber
  6. SafeNow says:

    I really like the comments system here, and the crowd. And, the incredible variety of subjects…not just politics…also topics ranging from sports to architecture to movie reviews. I donate here because what I call “Sailer University and Pub” is superb. (and the amazing thing is, all this comes to us from a clothes closet.). But I will check-out Steve’s Substack.

    Respectfully,
    SafeNow
    College-Dining-Hall potwasher, Emeritus

  7. Bumpkin says:

    Is there an explanation forthcoming on why most of your posts have shifted there since last year? On the one hand, I don’t blame you, as Ron has not added any kind of paid option with a paywall here, which is just dumb as that is the model that most online content is moving to, as I’ve been telling him for years.

    On the other hand, let’s just say you have lost the confidence of most of your readership here, and Ron has noted a significant decline in your readers here as a result.

    I will not be following you to Substack, since they silently stopped allowing Kevin Barrett to make money there, through Stripe shutting him off and Substack only using that single payment option. I suspect they will come for your subscribers too at some point.

    I suggest you find some more open platform instead, especially since you gain almost no visibility by being on Substack itself. Maybe Ghost? I haven’t researched if they are any better, I’m sure there are other platforms out there for you to try too.

  8. Not Raul says:

    Congratulations on the Substack!

    I remember you from the old blog.

  9. Not Raul says:

    Snyder is a mere semi-finalist. Pfffft!

    And how can a “cult” have only four people? That’s grade inflation.

  10. dearieme says:

    I couldn’t help noticing that.

  11. Not Raul says:

    Ya ni los negros

  12. anon[114] • Disclaimer says:

    A lot of people come to unz.com/isteve not so much for what Steve has to say but more so for the comments, community and banter.

    When I first started reading Steve I actually read Steve. Then I kinda lost interest in what Steve had to say and just read the comments.

    If the comment system on Substack doesn’t allow true anonymity some commenters probably won’t make the transition. I don’t know of many sites that, like Unz Review, allow such a high degree of anonymity and are as permissively moderated. (This is either a feature of a bug depending on whether you’re principally trying to create a place where ideas can freely compete, on the one hand, or an echo chamber (or cheerleading squad like Reddit is for the (((left))), on the other.)

    When you are a subject of a regime which is as tyrannical and spiteful as the current (((regime))) which presently occupies the West is to its critics, the only way to find truly free and open discussion about the things that really matter (i.e., the (((regime))) itself, its true nature and its policies) is on a site that provides both permissive moderation and a high degree of anonymity.

    The most important feature of “free speech” has always been ensuring that dissenters can actually dissent and critique power. It’s not about enabling Howard Stern to monetize perversion – though that is what “free speech” has effectively transformed into – the wanton profusion of lewd puerile trash, and the silencing of critics of (((power))). (i.e., anarcho-tyranny for speech)

    Most comment sections on the internet that deal with politics turn into an echo chamber or cheerleading squad for one side. For whatever reason, Steve’s blog on TUR is not an echo chamber. You actually have a competition of ideas (and some find that that’s what makes it interesting). Why is this? Perhaps it’s the close proximity between OG isteve readers/fans, on the one hand, and readers of TUR’s other material, on the other. As I understand it, this was kinda the original idea behind TUR – to bring together writers (and, I suppose, commenters) who have been excluded from the mainstream on both (or all) ends of the ideological spectrum/space.

    (TUR is skewed right, of course, but that could simply be because the right is vastly more excluded from the mainstream than the left is – and there is nothing that is more excluded from the mainstream than criticism of Jews, their behavior and their power.)

    I hear that you can get permissive moderation and a pretty good level of anonymity somewhere like 4chan, but you can’t get the quality of discussion that you find here on TUR and unz.com/isteve.

    Steve himself has been made the subject of a fair bit of criticism. This is probably healthy (even if it doesn’t feel great). Not to sound cliche, but truth is found and forged in the fire competing ideas. Not the warm embrace of a den of sycophants and believers. To find that you can go to church/synagogue or visit the faculty lounge of your local university’s anthropology department or the newsroom (or comment section) at the NYTimes.

    Hopefully Steve’s comment section at Substack is as substantive and contentious as unz.com/isteve has been. (I would be surprised if it remains so (at least) on the pieces he reserves for his paid subscribers.)

  13. IHTG says:

    Can you publish another breakdown of the countries where your subscribers live?

  14. SF says:

    I finally got to where I could make a three digit contribution last year, only to find that the best stuff is over there. I’m really curious as to whether there has been more DEI hiring of air traffic controllers. You had a post about that a year or two back that I haven’t been able to relocate and your current thoughts are behind a paywall. Looks like controllers are 8% African American, which is high if it requires a 115 IQ, but perhaps a lot of qualified blacks get into this field through the military.

    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
    , @Ralph L
    , @Alden
  15. @Bumpkin

    Uh, because I’m hugely popular in general?

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
    , @Not Raul
  16. @Achmed E. Newman

    Also, I REALLY LIKE Ron Unz’s commenting system too. Maybe Substack should think about implementing this functionality.

    With the Whimming add-on?

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  17. @SafeNow

    Indeed you should.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  18. @R.G. Camara

    I am writing for Taki’s every other week.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  19. @Steve Sailer

    Which is why you’ve gone stale here.

    From last August:

    It didn’t take long after his arrival here at TUR to see that Mr. Sailer isn’t so much a dissident as a copium denmother for disaffected white guys who skew 40+ in age. In practically all other respects — and, thus, effectively in that one — he narrates or stands silent on behalf of the Establishment.

    This was obscured by the first few years of padding the HBD posts with sportsball, Hollywood, and pop music culture (anchored in his youth), which resonated with many of the target audience. When he got serious about the COVID dempanic and Ukraine warball commentary and adopted pets like Jack D, though, more than a few of the fellows noticed. And now, maybe so has he. Isn’t this

    Right now his finger is in the air to see which way the Twitter winds are blowing and what is the permissible bound of Conventioal Wisdom/Establishment narrative. My guess is that he will just ignore them.

    true in general?

    I keep seeing allusions to Mr. Sailer moving again, a fresh start on another platform. Deciding to appear at the Berkeley Castle and likewise joining the Diffident Right in shying away from topics like Palestine might be seen from a marketing perspective as great ways to reset the brand.

    Ron Unz has since been cucking to your disloyalty.

  20. @Achmed E. Newman

    +10 on Ron’s commenting system. The number and shall we say diversity of commenters on Substack is not what it is here.

    2) Steve, you got quoted here: https://www.tracingwoodgrains.com/p/the-full-story-of-the-faas-hiring

    • Thanks: MEH 0910
    • Replies: @AnotherDad
  21. @anon

    The most important feature of “free speech” has always been ensuring that dissenters can actually dissent and critique power. It’s not about enabling Howard Stern to monetize perversion – though that is what “free speech” has effectively transformed into – the wanton profusion of lewd puerile trash, and the silencing of critics of (((power))). (i.e., anarcho-tyranny for speech)

    Hear, hear! Well said.

  22. @anon

    Regarding the anonymity, Mr. errr, anon: I realize that giving even a real email address is not so big a deal as one can still sign up on tuta (for example, with a tutamail address) without giving out any other identifying info, such as yet another email address (there are real rabbit holes sometimes) or a real phone # for receiving a code.

    Here on this site, one can give out a fake address, which is great. This is embarrassing to write, but it took me a decade to realize something. “Why do they allow a fake one? Just keep it simple and don’t ask at all!” The thing is that an email address is unique. It’s the uniqueness that Mr. Unz’s software needs to make sure AnotherDad is not writing Jonathan Mason comments. (Yeah, like we couldn’t tell!)

    Sites like this one let the email sites do the work of creating this uniqueness, for real email addresses. There won’t be duplicates. If you give a fake one, it still has that format – making it easy for you to remember – but the site software could have used any code that is unique. People would likely forget that code and end up complaining to Ron Unz.

    • Agree: Jim Don Bob
    • Thanks: YetAnotherAnon
  23. Only Mr. Sailer could tell us here, but unfortunately, I think this may be the goodbye post on this site. I say that because I’ve noticed no direct marketing of the substack site here before, likely because Ron Unz would not like that. (Couldn’t blame him either.) Maybe there was a quota or deadline to fulfill/make, but something tells me this is probably it. I hope I’m wrong.*

    The 2nd latest substack post is more of the good stuff. It shows, however, that Mr. Sailer still does not see that wokeness (“Cancel Culture”), etc. was not just a fad that, whewww!, has passed. There are people who want this stuff – they are not all simply stupid, but there is evil behind it. We’d have had to fight it all another way had Donald Trump not become President and come out kicking ass and taking names!

    Maybe some people should give him same damn credit for this. Oh, but he’s lowbrow and all, so …

    .

    * If we’re left with one last thread going through thousands of comments, as with Audacious Epigone (many hundreds on his), that’ll be sad. For one thing, after 500, with the tweets embedded, the page will jump around for 5 or 10 minutes till it settles down. (Perhaps I need to close some tabs!)

    • Agree: Almost Missouri
    • Replies: @Ralph L
    , @LG5
    , @Hail
    , @Nicholas Stix
  24. Ralph L says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    no direct marketing of the substack site here before

    It’s pinned to the top of his X feed, which often shows up on the sidebar.
    Judging from the number of comments per post, Steve must still generate much of the traffic on Unz. I don’t see any ads here, so I don’t know how Unz makes money. USAID? FBI?

  25. Funny thing: Sailer said Jared Taylor had no chance because White people don’t want an Al Sharpton (a crude example of a racial advocate, meant to show how low-class it is, and intimidate Whites into not doing what every other group does. Using Abe Foxman as your example wouldn’t make it sound as déclassé).

    But Trump is the most Al Sharpton-y president we’ve ever had. Bush and Reagan sound like pansy cucks next to Trump. As it turns out, when White people are under threat, they don’t want the nice Establishment goober anymore. They want a pussy-grabber who praises Robert E Lee and talks about shithole countries. So you might wanna “update your priors” as the pretentious say.

    Trump constantly talks about the importance of GENES by the way.

    • Replies: @Reg Cæsar
    , @Mark G.
  26. Mr. Anon says:

    Liberal cat lady has herself sterilized to protest Trump:

    Not Kidding: Michigan State Rep Says She Sterilized Herself To Protest Trump

    https://freebeacon.com/democrats/not-kidding-michigan-state-rep-says-she-sterilized-herself-to-protest-trump/

    These people really are deranged.

  27. Bruno says:

    Are you intending to let your unz.com diary slowly die ?

  28. Why are M-to-F transgenders usually rightists?

    As with most bad things today, the trans thing only exists–in terms of being an issue that we normies are forced to pay attention to–because of minoritarianism.

    These perverts are annoying to normal people and ought to be just tossed out society. An Aleutian Island or the like. Baring that level of majoritarian sanity, anyone doing this ought to at least be understood to be mentally ill and unfit for any public attention or any sort of important role or leadership.

    • Agree: Radicalcenter
    • Thanks: TWS
  29. @AnotherDad

    Get a dose of ‘er in jackboot and kilt,
    She’s killer-diller when she’s dressed to the ‘ilt.
    She’s the kind of a gal
    Who makes good use of a veil,
    Yeah you could say she was attractively built.

  30. Cancel Culture is still alive

    “You could not pay me to marry outside of my ethnicity,” the account wrote in September.

    What exactly is Marko Elez’s ethnicity is not explained, however. *

    He appears to be some kind of white guy, so He Can’t Say That:

    But if he turns out to be of Jewish ethnicity, does he get his job back? Jews get to say that, don’t they? What exactly are the rules over who gets to declare they are endogamous and who does not?

    One of the ironic comedies of the decline of America–and through it the West–is how much of it is driven by one of the most ethnocentric peoples on the planet–Jews–bashing one of the most open and least ethnocentric–white gentiles–as “racist!”.

    ~~~

    Actually, we do have a moderately eugenic immigration policy.

    C’mon Steve don’t be daft. You’re supposed to be spreadsheet man. Even just going by IQ, importing a few million came-for-grad-school Indians and Chinese does is overwhelmed by the tens of millions of Mexicans, Central Americans, Haitians, Africans. Even if you mean only our “legal immigration” the “family reunification” and assorted bullshit categories–“refugees”, “TPS”–and bullshit visas–“agricultural worker”–far outweigh the “selected for college degree” categories.

    And on top of all that, yes taking in low-IQ people you know are going to be more fertile than the higher-IQ people you take in, also counts in terms of assessing whether the overall policy is “eugenic”.

    But the word “eugenic” has been made utterly terrifying.

    Key word “made”. Deliberately. Honest facts and clear thinking about genetics … the entire minoritarian narrative just falls apart. So it was, “hey, never let a holocaust go to waste.”

    • Agree: Achmed E. Newman
    • Replies: @AnotherDad
    , @Reg Cæsar
  31. J.Ross says:

    OT — USAID —
    Global Affairs Canada removed their entire database of international assistance programs.
    https://w05.international.gc.ca/projectbrowser-banqueprojets/?lang=eng

    What don’t they want you to know?

    Here’s the archive:
    https://web.archive.org/web/20241202222621/https://w05.international.gc.ca/projectbrowser-banqueprojets/filter-filtre

    • Replies: @Pericles
  32. @SafeNow

    Ron’s commenting system is so much better than what other sites have that I hope he has patented it. He can make a second fortune when everyone finally realizes that this unofficially banned site has cracked the commenting conundrum.

    • Agree: TWS, Mike Conrad
    • Replies: @kaganovitch
    , @jb
  33. 2024 vs. 2020: Trump gained most in Latino towns, Kamala in Whitopias

    Blacks have been the cudgel Jews used to beat whites over the head. Blacks–slavery, Jim Crow–is the one group that most whites will acknowledge was a screwup and many are embarrassed by and many do-gooder whites think somehow “must be fixed”. So that has been the core story, mythos in pushing the minoritarian ideology.

    But no one else particularly cares.

    People coming in with a more-or-less “clean slate” on blacks, and without the “racial guilt” of whites, and generally more ethnocentric themselves than white-gentiles, are not buying. Rather they tend to see blacks as they are. And especially those–like Latinos–who skew working class and pushed into some proximity with blacks, have even less use for this black deification.

    The Jews swinging and the white-gentiles doing their sackcloth and ashes routine taking their beating plus the blacks themselves are declining portion of the population.

    The Hispanics and whites and Asians who are sick of the deification and done with “blacks!” are an increasingly larger portion.

    • Replies: @anonymous
  34. Pfi$er $teve’s last substantive poast on UR mocked the 1.3% chance a comet hits Earth in a few years whilst he also daily shit the bed 2020-2022 viz a virus [sic] with 0.2% fatality. For the innumerates here, that comet is seven times more likely to kill you.

    Pfi$er $teve is a fraud.

    • Agree: Radicalcenter
    • Replies: @James B. Shearer
  35. LG5 says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Economics look favorable for the transition.
    Start with that 7,000 substack subscribers.
    At $10/month, that is enough to keep iSteve in Natty Light for a long time.
    Even at $5/month, and adjust all for the Substack vig.
    Still a tidy net.

    Side benefits could be better sleeping hygiene, more real life opportunities for golf.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  36. Art Deco says:
    @AnotherDad

    You don’t need to toss them anywhere.
    ==
    1. Restore freedom of contract and association in the private sector.
    ==
    2. Debar cross-dressers from public employment as a disciplinary problem.
    ==
    3. Ignore prison inmates and the like who want ‘accommodation’.
    ==
    4. Ignore school children who want ‘accommodation’, ignore their Muchausen mommies.
    ==
    5. End 3d party payments to medical professionals who perform these procedures.
    ==
    6. Go the extra mile and simply debar these procedures as a species of medical malpractice.
    ==
    7. Fire school teachers, school administrators, and social workers who promote this cr!p.
    ==
    The issue would largely disappear if it were not being promoted by public employees.

    • Agree: Gordo
    • Thanks: Radicalcenter
    • Replies: @JMcG
  37. Genghis Khan and the U.S. Deep State

    The worst spending is the spending that
    A) supports or propagandizes immigrationism or DIE or QWERTY crap
    and/or
    B) provides more comfy sinecures for Parasite Party voters to nest–protected from having a real job in the real world where they might actually learn something and grow up.

    Cutting all unnecessary spending is general sound good-governance, but chopping down this parasite enabling/propagating spending is essential.

    Not spending it would be best, but I’d rather the feds give money to Mongolia, or give it away in a lottery, or burn it to keep warm on winter nights, than spend it on parasite propagation and propaganda.

    • Agree: Old Prude
  38. SFG says:

    Well, I guess this is the end. Been fun, boys (and the occasional girl). Twinkie and AnotherDad, wish your family all the best. Buzz Mohawk, sorry for that time I pissed you off (still not sure what I did). Germ Theory of Disease, you had some awesome stories. Sorry I didn’t get half of your references. J. Ross, same. Never thought of Invisibles as prophetic before. Jack D and IHTG, thanks for your defense of the tribe, even if it I have to admit it was sometimes undeserved. (I mean, we still did Cultural Marxism, even if none of *us* perosonally did.) Reg Caesar, those anagrams always made me smile. Achmed E. Newman, Peak Stupidity was pretty funny.

    Tiny Duck, thanks for the entertainment.

    Albertosaurus, rest in peace.

    Hope you all find happiness whatever you think and make America great again.


    Video Link

    • Thanks: AnotherDad
    • Replies: @Hail
    , @Buzz Mohawk
    , @Twinkie
  39. Hail says: • Website
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Mr. Sailer still does not see that wokeness (“Cancel Culture”), etc. was not just a fad that, whewww!, has passed.

    See also my recent comment at Peak Stupidity (under a post on the ongoing debate mid-air collision over the Potomac River and its cause):

    I’ve argued with Steve Sailer commenters that Wokeness, in a reasonable definition of the term, cannot be said to originate in the early 2010s. People seem to like this ‘narrative,’ for some reason, but the “women in the military” push long predates the 2010s. [….]

    Those reading this, feel free to go to Peak Stupidity and read the rest of that commentary and responses. (For newcomers–read comments from the bottom-up; earliest comments are at bottom):

    The Pilots of PAT-25” (Peak Stupidity, Feb. 6, 2025)
    https://peakstupidity.com/index.php?post=3184

    ——

    And this earlier one, with the debate going strong on the cause of the mid-air collision and what Wokeness (may) hath wrought:

    Did D.I.E. cause 67 people to die?” (Peak Stupidity, Feb. 5, 2025)
    https://peakstupidity.com/index.php?post=3183

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman
    • Replies: @anonymous
    , @Jim Don Bob
  40. @Almost Missouri

    Ron’s commenting system is so much better than what other sites have that I hope he has patented it

    Indeed, Mr. Unz has lapped the competition. His system is well thought out, weighs the trade offs wisely, etc. Even his 3 comments per thread per hour rule prevents threads that have deteriorated into insult fests from becoming too annoying. His system is peerless, it’s in a class by itself. In fact it’s so good that I’m starting to suspect Mossad involvement…

  41. MGB says:

    Ego and $. both unz and sailer will be less interesting without the other. my apologies to isteve for being an ass in the past. best of luck in the future.

  42. • LOL: Achmed E. Newman
  43. DEI vs. Affirmative Action

    Again, “Woke” is just minoritarianism on drugs girls with smartphones.

    The level of nonsense that girls are willing to parrot is apparently quite high. And many private companies have realized that listening and capitulating to all the dumb shit the “girls with BAs” on staff spew is not a winner for their image nor customer loyalty nor just running the business.

    But again, if all that happens is woke excesses are peeled back a bit, then this is a wasted opportunity. Because it is minoritarianism itself–the core of the ideology that the nation’s majority, the productive normies, must bend over to accommodate all the various minority oddballs and weirdos–that is the cancer upon nation and civilization.

    ~~

    And you know I don’t much like your old style smiley AA stock photo either.

    And I doubt I’m alone.

    The pic peddles this lame “must have blacks!” narrative that is reality upside down. America was built by “boring”, “vanilla”, “white bread” guys. If you want to center someone … center us.

    And amusingly it does not even “look like America”! The immigration loons have insisted on rapidly “diversifying” America. This includes a huge Asian influx, and the pic dutiful tosses in an Asian girl. But the biggest element has been the rapid Latinization of America–from a couple million to now 60 million plus Latinos during my life–now the largest minority group. But the same people who brought us this immigration tsunami are themselves still locked into their tried beat-whitey-with-blacks routine. They don’t even seem to notice or care about the very people they waved in to diversify my stale pale ass. With predictable results–queue your Latinos swing toward Trump post.

    • Replies: @MGB
  44. @kaganovitch

    Indeed, Mr. Unz has lapped the competition… His system is peerless, it’s in a class by itself. In fact it’s so good that I’m starting to suspect Mossad involvement…

    If your device explodes when you’re typing a comment someday, you’ll know.

    • Replies: @Pericles
  45. @kaganovitch

    This is in reply to Almost MO too, as I compare this system to the Amazon one-click controversy of 25 years ago. They wanted to patent not the software code (fair enough, I guess – it’s IP at least) but the concept of “hey, I can mash one button instead of 2 or 3”! Amazon’s position was ludicrous.

    Now, Ron Unz put his work into this, so, yeah, it’d be nice if substack or whoever would pay him for having that same code running their comments. However, if they find a way to do this themselves, fine too. It’s not like a mousetrap – it’s just software.

    I remember when Mr. Unz made that rule and the equally good rule for # of responses in 8 hours IIRC. Perhaps he’s too busy now still buttressing his Americans did Covid and other Americans did every bad thing that ever happened theories or he’s watching more videos of cute western girls in China. (I’ll get back to you on your good question, A.M., later on.)

    • Replies: @Jonathan Mason
  46. Does the USA make a good colonial administrator?

    No. Not that there’s anything particularly good or bad about Americans doing it, but just that the whole ruling over other people thing sucks.

    If there is an actual lesson of the War it is “imperialism sucks” or “stay in your own nation”–not all the “tolerance” and “diversity” claptrap nonsense we’ve been force fed.

    One of Trump’s deficiencies is he’s a “big man” prone to the whole “big man” “must remake the map to leave my mark” nonsense that has been a recurrent plague upon mankind down through the ages. The upside, of course, is that Trump is–finally–going “big man”, “kicking ass and taking names” on all sorts of parasitic shit going on in the US. Trump 2, is already–just two weeks in–orders of magnitude better than Trump 1. So his random “Greenland!” spitballing isn’t bothering me on bit. Trump National Nuuk!

    ~~~

    It actually wouldn’t be a bad idea to “clean out” Gaza if it was part of a broader reordering of the Middle East.

    The main reason Europe had been peaceful after the War was nukes and the US Army. But also involved was that in the aftermath of all that nasty carnage and borders and people–painfully–moved around, the resulting nations were much more “one-peopleish” than pre-war.

    Example: a couple that are good friends of ours from grad school. The guy’s parents got the bum’s rush from the Sudetenland post-War. So our friend grew up in Bavaria, married a nice Bavarian gal. Been ten years since we’ve visited them there, but they got a couple of nice boys, have grandkids now. He’s lived a good life as a German, in Germany instead of being a troublesome minority in some other country. And–properly ensconced in their separate nations with a border–Germans and Czechs can get along fine.

    Unfortunately, no one–not even Trump–has a magic wand they can wave and get all those people sorted properly–Jews here, Christian Arabs over there, Shia Arabs over here, Sunnis over there, Kurds here, Druze there … It would cost less to do that in the long run than continued conflict.

    • Replies: @Mactoul
    , @Mactoul
    , @J.Ross
  47. Why are African-American births plummeting?

    I suspect for mostly the same reasons that births–and marriages–are plummeting in other demographics as well.

    Which in terms of the 2010 speedup, I would guess mostly comes down to “smartphones”. Smartphones seem to exacerbate the natural sexual differences between men and women. They really highlight and sharpen some unpleasant tendencies and behaviors of women. (And porn and video games tend to do so with young men.) It turns out that this technology–which you’d think “dating apps” would make it easy for men and women to get together–just further separates the sexes from each other.

    Now why would blacks births be slumping more than whites?

    — They had kept slightly higher birthrates, so some slumpage is just catching up.

    — Black men having other options lowers the birthrate for black women–whom men from other races really are not interested in.

    — The immigration tsunami has particularly negative impacts on the earnings of black men. There is very little–outside of the few who can make a living in sports/entertainment–that black men can do that Mexican guys can not do better/cheaper with less hassle. Fewer black men with “husband” or “dad” potential pushes down the birthrate of precisely the more on the ball black women.

    Whatever the cause, we should be encouraging it by ensuring birth control is freely available to black women and encouraging/incentivizing its use.

    ~~

    Finally–if we could ever stop the immigration lunacy!–the natural “breeder recovery” for whites/Americans would be led by conservative religious whites like the Amish, Mormons, kaganovitch style Orthodox Jews, Mormons, “Quiverfull” Christian types, trad Catholics, etc.

    But this sort of organized, conscientious, patriarchy really is not a black thing. Blacks suck at it.

    American sexual mores have–sadly–become much more “black”–disordered, chaotic. But–gladly–those sort of disordered sexual hookups seem to now be tailing off in fertility.

    Basically, if we could kill off the immigration loons and avoid downloading Steve’s “World’s Most Important Graph”, then the “breeder recovery” would be centered in conservative religious patriarchy and be making our future whiter and brighter.

  48. Hail says: • Website
    @SFG

    this is the end

    Substackization.

    An increasing amount of all serious writing-output has now been funneled to Substack. A few years ago people were heard celebrating this. The problem is, Substack is not really what people think it is.

    Substack works a lot like social-media sites. There is a feed and an “algorithm” at work. People are incentivized to put up cute, attention-getting “content” which can be shared widely. There is a huge surge of attention towards brand-new “content” and then it falls away and becomes semi-hidden to the typical end-user.

    The main “feed” at Substack-dot-com is not far off from what usual social-media “feeds” are like. Content you are shown is not really of your choosing. There is also a strange thing whereby Substack automatically signs you up to follow accounts it says “Oh, you’ll probably like this” (I think this kind of process is how Lex Fridman became so popular).

    Substack retains the air of seriousness, a degree of long-form-friendliness. A big difference with Twitter is that on Substack there is money being sent directly to writers. There is less a feeling that you’ve walked into the mind of a mentally unstable person, which has been true of Twitter for some time (perhaps all along, but really worrying by some point maybe in the late 2010s, and just depressingly obvious by the early 2020s).

    The problems of Substack’s monopoly power and content-consumption model remain. It’s not far off from being another social-media site, with many of the usual pathologies.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
    , @Ralph L
    , @jb
  49. JMcG says:
    @Art Deco

    Art, I don’t always agree with you, but If this comment section should go away, I’d like you to know that I really appreciate the thought and effort you put into so many of your posts.
    You’ve obviously given a great deal of thought to the problems besetting our country and importantly, to some solutions.
    You’re right up there with Buffalo Joe in my pantheon.
    Thank you.

    • Replies: @ScarletNumber
  50. Well, sort of on-topic. Isn’t Ibram X. Kendi a favorite target of Steve’s?

    City Journal posts ol’ Ibram’s obituary: https://www.city-journal.org/article/ibram-x-kendi-boston-university-antiracist-center?skip=1

    Wasn’t he last heard criticizing Israel? No mention of that.
    
    Of course that would have had nothing to do with his demise.

  51. @SFG

    Buzz Mohawk, sorry for that time I pissed you off (still not sure what I did).

    I don’t remember. All is forgiven, of you and all others here.

    Fellas, it’s been good to know ya.


    Video Link

    • Replies: @Dmon
  52. J.Ross says:
    @Hail

    Eah, Sturgeon rule. There are excellent writers in every age; this time, they’re at SubStack. Years ago, they’d be on their own blogs. Yeah there’s crap but as Dr Uwe Boll says you are on your own responsible to discriminate. As a Spanish anon noted during the recent TikTok kerfluffle (which had the effect of making him check out TikTok for the first time, Demicrats stay failing), there’s good stuff on there, and after he had viewed a few wholesome educational videos, their algorithm updated itself and stopped recommending thottery.

    • Replies: @Hail
  53. MGB says:
    @AnotherDad

    that is a great picture. like some goofy AI generated cartoon.

  54. Why don’t Santa Ana winds blow from Santa Ana?

    Uh … maybe because they aren’t named for Santa Ana–the city–but for winds blowing down the Santa Ana mountains? (Heck I learned this when I was a kid–2000 miles away in Cincinnati.)

    LOL, Steve, not everything is about you. About LA.

    And no “Death Valley Winds” is stupid. The winds have nothing to do with Death Valley, other than it is over in the intermoutain West. The winds are not blowing in Death Valley. Nor necessarily from the direction of Death Valley. Rather they are local–katabatic downslope winds generated by colder/denser air falling down a mountain slope and in the process heating up and ergo drying out (lower relative humidity at a higher temperature).

    If you’re such an LA homeboy that you don’t like “Santa Ana” as the catchall, you can give a separate name for each wind for the mountain range it is blowing down. Or you can call them the generic “Devil Winds”. Or you can tuck in your LA County parochialism and give Orange County the naming rights on this one.

  55. guest007 says:
    @AnotherDad

    Even though Steve does not seem to read many books, he should try to read an autobiography of a public autogynephilia. Steve would learn that most of them always leaned toward being a woman but tried to hide it. When in a normal M/F marriage, the wife almost always knew and even assisted in their private trans behavior. However, it does not seem that Steve wants any information that would contradict his belief that being autogynephilia is like a switch being turned on in midlife.

    • Replies: @TWS
  56. Ralph L says:
    @Hail

    Unz allowed me to check to see if he’d announced a terminal illness. SFG certainly comments less often than he once did.

  57. If Africa electrifies, do Africans stay home or leave?

    Quarantine.

    Whenever there’s a question about Africa the answer is always “quarantine”. Africans are going be Africans. We can not fix it. But we can easily–and must!–keep the problem from spreading further.

    • Agree: TWS
  58. @AnotherDad

    I suspect for mostly the same reasons that births–and marriages–are plummeting in other demographics as well.

    I would also speculate that maybe, through some mechanism we haven’t yet plumbed, we have collectively realized there are enough people now.

    I mean, modern populations are literally an order of magnitude greater than what they traditionally were. Nations have five to fifty times the populations they once did.

    There are a great many people. Maybe it’s time the numbers fell a bit — nicely, like with lower birthrates.

    Obviously, there can be too much of a good thing. You can’t have six helpless oldsters for every able-bodied twenty-something.

    But what’s wrong with 1.5 children per woman for a while? Assuming the pattern isn’t dysgenic, I really don’t see the problem with a US with 120 million people. Things worked fine when that was what we had.

    • Agree: Mark G., Old Prude, epebble, TWS
    • Replies: @AnotherDad
  59. J.Ross says:

    OT — I don’t think it’s this simple but this was definitely a major factor. Anon says:

    All it took to destroy the Democrat Party was some *very mild* criticism of israeli genocide. Jews withdrew their organization, media, and financial support and the Democrat Party died after 150 years.

    Let that sink in.

    I’m also not sure about the “mildness,” Democrats effectively said “I don’t care if your daughter gets kidnapped naked on the back of a truck with terrorists spitting on her and stoning her.”
    He’s talking about this:
    archive
    ph
    hVNFk
    A different anon observed:

    They’re doubling down on what lost them the election lol. They have no leadership whatsoever too. Who the %@#$ is the leader of the democrat party? Chuck Schumer?

  60. @AnotherDad

    ‘Whenever there’s a question about Africa the answer is always “quarantine”. Africans are going be Africans. We can not fix it. But we can easily–and must!–keep the problem from spreading further.’

    Morbid thought for the day: what about all the animals? Don’t you want lions and elephants and zebras and giraffes?

    Just keep letting the blacks breed and get modern medicine and those will all vanish.

    So…bar pharmaceuticals? After all, we could always tell ourselves they can learn to synthesize their own.

    Uh huh.

    • Replies: @MGB
  61. @AnotherDad

    BTW, I really, really like this JD Vance guy.

    Smart, level-headed, American thinking:

    After the reign of terror of unhinged girls and soy boys, we are now seeing actual male leadership again. What a breath of fresh, sane, rational air.

    • Agree: Colin Wright, MEH 0910
    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
    , @Colin Wright
  62. @AnotherDad

    I take it you didn’t sign up, A/D. How far back are you gonna go here? He’s been writing there at a decent clip for half a year at least. For me, I’ll just take it to my own site.

    I’m sure you know I’d have liked to read the DIE in the sky one, but I have a real beef with Mr. Sailer (admittedly not into economics) say that deflation is worse than inflation. (To me, that it’s a bad thing at all. It’s NOT!) That was in the pay-walled post about tariffs. Alas, I calmed down and sulked off to Peak Stupidity.

    • Replies: @AnotherDad
    , @Ralph L
  63. jb says:
    @Hail

    I worry about Substack as a choke point. What if they go woke? What if they go broke? A lot of writers are relying on them now.

    Also, I notice that Steve’s site doesn’t have a “substack.com” domain name. Does this mean that he is running his site on his own host using Substack’s software? (As I believe you can do with, e.g., WordPress). Would this at least partially insulate him from corporate Substack, and allow him to maintain his site if things go south?

    Also, not having any subscriptions, I wasn’t even aware that Substack has an algorithm and a feed. Hmm. Well, anyway, at least they don’t frontpage swine like “The World’s Most Censored Writer”!

  64. @Achmed E. Newman

    I take it you didn’t sign up, A/D. How far back are you gonna go here?

    No, I’m signed up, though I haven’t upgraded to paid.

    It’s just a lazy afternoon. AnotherMom’s out sitting/chatting with the neighbor gal on their dock. I didn’t get enough sleep last night and am a slug. Figured I could toss off some thoughts on Steve’s last week’s worth of posts to get some new conversation started here while I crash down toward a nap. (We’re what 500+ on the asteroid post now?)

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  65. vinteuil says:

    SS’s Substack is about what you’d expect – good on Human biodeversity – but when it comes to Everything really important in the past few years – Covid, the stolen election, Ukraine – you might as well check in with Jonah Goldberg.

  66. jb says:
    @Almost Missouri

    Ron’s comment system is by far the best I’ve seen anywhere. I’ve made that comment before and there were complaints that it was flaky, but I’ve run into very few problems myself.

  67. @AnotherDad

    I C. Yeah, I was going to answer Almost Missouri under that post, but the page would not settle down. Anyone else have that problem, or do I need to clean up this device?

    BTW, I don’t know if you’re on the west coast of Florida or the east, but, especially on the east, there are airports every 10 miles. Get your certificate. It sounds like you’ve got the money now. ;-}

    • Replies: @Adam Smith
  68. Not Raul says:
    @Steve Sailer

    Something I really respect about you is that you don’t try too hard to be popular.

    You know better than I do that a grifter in your position would change their blog to, “HoLoCAusT is FaKE! CoViD is FaKE! GAzA is FaKE! ThE DoLLaR is FaKE! FLouRiDE is FaKE! ANtarCTicA is FaKE! BUY MY LIVER DEFENDER VITAMINS! INVEST IN MY CRYPTO ASSET PORTFOLIO AI SPAC!” And be a lot more popular, wealthy, and with much less hate mail.

  69. @Bumpkin

    On the other hand, let’s just say you have lost the confidence of most of your readership here, and Ron has noted a significant decline in your readers here as a result.

    Are you an actual bumpkin or is the handle ironic? Because it seems like Steve has a lot of ruraloid, working-class guys who are mad he as a college educated suburbanite from L.A. isn’t indulging their fantasies about Satanic pedo rings or whatever the latest thing is.

    • Replies: @Bumpkin
  70. Ralph L says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Of course deflation is bad. You borrow money to produce something, and you can only sell the product for less than you planned, plus you have to pay back the loan, if you can, with money that’s more valuable. Food prices plummeted early in the Depression, and many farmers lost their land and livelihood. Businesses with large inventories went bust. Homeowners couldn’t pay their mortgages. Then the government tried to fix things and made them worse.

    • Agree: Not Raul, AnotherDad
    • Replies: @Mark G.
    , @Achmed E. Newman
  71. Corvinus says:
    @Steve Sailer

    Speaking of indeed, you should.

    “Cancel Culture is still alive”

    Patently false, Mr. Sailer. The WSJ published public comments made previously by a supposed government employee. He chose to resign as a result of the fallout. Then said person was brought back to his “job”.

    “edgy wisecracks”

    False characterization, Mr. Sailer. “Normalize Indian hate”. “Just for the record, I was racist before it was cool” and “I just want a eugenic immigration policy, is that too much to ask.

    It’s a grown ass man, not some “kid” engaging in “stupid social media activity”. Rather, he is a raptor testing fences, a man purposely seeing if he can make those comments without reprisal. He has been emboldened by yourself and others on the Interwebs to say whatever the hell he wants.

    But reality doesn’t work that way. You know that, Mr. Sailer. Free speech is never free. There are positive and negative consequences to one’s words. But your snark here gets in the way of common decency. I suppose you figure if the current target was Indians (dot, not feather), rather than the old standby Jews, it’s no big deal.

    So JD Vance the cuck further opens the Overton Window. “You could not pay me to marry outside of my ethnicity” is a direct shot at him. Yet, it’s only out of political necessity that Vance and his hot piece of ass Indian wife give the white dude a free pass. I’m certain that his kids will look forward to the future when some f—-head goes up to them and says his father is race traitor. Then Vance can intervene and meekly say “well, you made a mistake”, rather than punch the guy in the face in response to his wife and family being dishonored.

    What would your buddy Andrew Anglin say?

    Anyways, the bigger issue, of course, and one you dare not openly.and critically address, is how this guy, who just got reinstated, is one of two temporary appointees at Treasury connected to DOGE who was granted access to a highly sensitive Treasury system that processes trillions of dollars in payments every year. I thought you were a rule of law and law/order type of guy. If this was George Soros who installed members of Antifa to engage in similar conduct, and not Musk and his loyal band of sycophants called the Incel Clown Posse, you’d be NOTICING.

    So why not delve deeper into how “ [as] critics highlight legal and ethical issues surrounding DOGE’s seemingly unchecked pursuit of government austerity, Democrats in Congress are running into obstacles. A Democratic-led attempt to subpoena Musk about possible conflicts of interest over juggling his DOGE role with the six companies he operates was blocked by Republicans on Wednesday. Democratic Senators are issuing blistering statements, and writing letters to Musk’s companies demanding answers, but such moves are unlikely to result in testimony in Washington, as long as Republicans hold a majority in both chambers.”

    Answer—you’ve got closets to remodel and dog food to buy.

    • LOL: Moshe Def
  72. mc23 says:
    @Jenner Ickham Errican

    The commenting system on Unz is far better then twitter or other sites.

    • Agree: Not Raul
  73. Mactoul says:
    @AnotherDad

    Europeans have got themselves jumbled up again. Again you have a lot of Poles living in Germany and a lot of Ukrainians in Poland to mention wholesale movement of others. There are English living in Spain and France.
    Basically the entire continent is on move.
    So the simple picture you like isn’t reality anymore. It was artificial in 1945 and more artificial now.

    • Replies: @AnotherDad
  74. Mactoul says:
    @AnotherDad

    The Sudetans were not a troublesome minority making trouble in other people’s country. They were an anciently settled majority in Sudetenland which was given to Czechs as spoil of war.

    Your error lies in ignoring the fact the borders between the peoples are not given by God for all times but are negotiated through war. So each nation living peacefully in its own land is a pipe dream, a mirage.

    Plus the fact that some people don’t recognize some other people as a a separate people. Spanish don’t regard Basque as a separate people that need their own land and neither do the Chinese regard Tibetans.

    So, the nationalist prescription doesn’t work either. If anything, the imperial prescription is better for peace, harmony and prosperity.

  75. Attorney General Bondi just issued her first statement touching on 2A and the ATF.

    Video Link

    William Kirk discusses the matter of United States v. Peterson, a ruling from a 3 Judge panel in the 5th Circuit that leaves instrumentalities like suppressors very vulnerable for future regulation with this line of reasoning.

    Video Link

    The US Court of Appeals for Fifth Circuit issued a major ruling on suppressors under 2A.

    Video Link

  76. @Corvinus

    DJT, JD, and Elon just rehired the Big Balls kid, so you and the WSJ doxxing bitch can FOAD.

    • Thanks: William Badwhite
    • Replies: @Corvinus
  77. Anonymous[225] • Disclaimer says:

    Well it’s looking like “the falcon has heard the falconer” as more and more of the media are finally taking Steve Sailer’s longtime assessment of popular sociopath Ibram X. Kendi to heart.

    Better late than never, I suppose:

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/ibram-x-kendi-boston-university-antiracist-center?skip=1

    • Thanks: res, Not Raul
  78. Bumpkin says:
    @Alexander Turok

    Ironic, as I now live in a city that is considered more backwards.

    The problem with Steve, and perhaps you, is that he doesn’t follow the evidence where it leads on matters other than immigration, say how the Ukraine war was clearly provoked by US deep state trolls like Nuland over the last decade. His take on that war and some others like Covid or the Nordstream pipeline bombing have been so laughable that one suspects him of outright lying, ie trying to ingratiate himself with the establishment by mouthing their lies that he doesn’t believe. Jeff Sachs talks all the time about major reporters and officials he knows who have to do the same at their large institutions, Sailer clearly feels similar pressure at his small blog.

    Steve is big on IQ, but frankly my assessment of most of the “best and brightest” I’ve observed over the years is that they fall for almost as many dumb ideas as those less gifted, they just do it a little less and can create all kinds of convoluted but wrong rationale for why they do. I don’t exclude myself, as I once supported Bush II’s Iraq war and ignored the anti-vaxxers.

    You and Steve’d do better to not worry about who went to college, but to actually examine the evidence for these various positions and say what you think, then examine the rejoinders from those who disagree. Steve stopped doing that here, presumably because of the aforementioned outside pressure from above, so it’s time for him to decamp.

    • Agree: Greta Handel
    • Thanks: Moshe Def
  79. Mark G. says:
    @Ralph L

    “Of course deflation is bad.”

    Deflation is bad for people in debt like people who borrowed money for new businesses. This is largely the fault, though, of the previous inflationary era that distorted economic activity. In the late nineteen twenties, inflation created a huge stock market bubble.

    Inflation has created bubbles in recent decades like the nineties dotcom bubble and the mortgage bubble the next decade. We now are likely in a bubble that may pop that involves stocks and other assets like Bitcoin.

    The worst part of the inflation in recent decades is rising wages. On the surface this sounds good. However, the higher paid American workers can’t compete with lower paid foreign workers. Not many people understand that inflationary Federal Reserve policies have helped lead to the offshoring of industrial production and our large trade deficits. Our factory workers lose jobs but people who own assets that rise in value with inflation, like stocks or real estate, become wealthier.

  80. epebble says:

    I think Musk has won the best DEI win. Deserves a gold medal. It is a double benefit too.

    https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/02/boeing-has-informed-its-employees-that-nasa-may-cancel-sls-contracts/

    This was the moon project to launch a bunch of DEI astronauts to go walk on the moon and may be bring some dirt. Zero scientific value, besides ‘winning’ over China as they are planning a moonshot.

  81. Dmon says:
    @Dmon

    Or, for some of you guys who are not Ralph Mooney acolytes:

  82. @LG5

    Not all subscribers are paid subscribers, LG5. We discussed this in another thread a few months back – got no idea of the ratio. At 10% even, at this point, it’s OK money. He can write off the closet on his taxes too!

    • Replies: @Frau Katze
  83. anonymous[903] • Disclaimer says:
    @Hail

    Women were not forced on to the military. When they were allowed to join the regular armed forces sufficient numbers did so to allow the volunteer military to succeed. Without women volunteering to join, the draft would have had to be reinstated. Would you like to have been drafted, Mr. Hail? If not, thank a woman who joined up so you didn’t have to.
    Women served in combat long before they were legally allowed to — they volunteered to served in combat roles. They served knowing that they would not receive hazardous duty pay like their male comrades, nor receive CARs or CBIs when their male counterparts did. Or Purple Hearts.
    As far as women aviators, I’m surprised that you don’t realize all those who oppose women pilots are cherry picking. I thought better of you. I guess I was wrong.
    In any case, I am personally acquainted with a female who served as a Navy Corpsman who later went to OCS as a Navy Aviation Officer Candidate, flew helos because at the time she got her wings the Navy was long on fixed wing aviators and short on helo bubbas. After her first fleet tour she applied for transition to fighters and was accepted so her shore duty was going back to flight school for a fixed wing refresher then to advanced. Once that pipeline was completed it was on to Fleet Replacement Squadron and then back to sea.
    So here is a female who served on the ground with the Marines, flew helos and then fighters. What about her being female disqualified her for any of those roles she performed as well as her male counterparts? How was she “forced” onto the military when all the armed forces are suffering from a severe shortage of individuals capable of doing those jobs?
    You know, the US has been more or less continuously at war for just about all of this century. Did you serve? Did Sailer? Did this Achmed character? If not, why not? Why do you object to others doing what you were not willing to do? And if you think an unqualified person is allowed to be a “doc” or to pilot a military aircraft you are either an arrogant fool or a mental case.
    People like you all would probably be happier in an Islamic culture where you could keep women enslaved, rather than a Western Christian country, especially America, where women have worked side by side with their men to conquer the land and create this country.

  84. @Mark G.

    “…However, the higher paid American workers can’t compete with lower paid foreign workers. Not many people understand that inflationary Federal Reserve policies have helped lead to the offshoring of industrial production and our large trade deficits. …”

    This has more to do with the exchange rate than the domestic inflation rate. The dollar tends to have a high exchange rate because lots of foreigners would rather hold dollars than their local currency. I guess they haven’t got the memo that the dollar is about to become worthless.

  85. @Je Suis Omar Mateen

    “Pfi$er $teve’s last substantive poast on UR mocked the 1.3% chance a comet hits Earth in a few years whilst he also daily shit the bed 2020-2022 viz a virus [sic] with 0.2% fatality. For the innumerates here, that comet is seven times more likely to kill you.”

    Speaking of innumeracy this calculation assumes a comet hit would kill everyone on the earth. Suppose instead it would just kill anyone within 100 miles of where it hits and that it is equally likely to hit anywhere on the earth’s surface. Then your chance of being killed given a comet hit is about 1 in 6400. Combined with a 1.3% of hitting this is a probability of being killed of about .013/6400 = .000002 or 2 parts in a million. .2% on the other hand is 2 parts in a thousand. Which is a thousand times more not seven times less.

  86. @Achmed E. Newman

    You can tell the difference between paying and free subscribers in the comments.

    If you look at commenter’s avatar the paying commenters have a symbol overlaid on the avatar that looks sort of like a rosette (line drawing not solid).

    • Thanks: MEH 0910
    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  87. @AnotherDad

    “Why are African-American births plummeting?”

    I don’t believe that they are. This is propaganda that I have seen for several years that I believe is intended to put White patriots to sleep.

    The proportion of blacks in this country keeps on rising, while the proportion of Whites continues to sink.

    • Replies: @Ralph L
  88. Hail says: • Website
    @J.Ross

    There are excellent writers in every age; this time, they’re at SubStack

    My comment was, I think, only a superficial/partial criticism of the Substack model.

    Another problem, with “great writers being at Substack,” is the creation of a celebrity-journalist bubble. There are some writers who make fantastic money on Substack due to being celebrity-writers. People plug into the Substack-money-paying ‘ecosystem’ and crank out wealthy celebrity-journalists.

    One can easily see (or foresee) problems with this part of the Substack model.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  89. @Loyalty is The First Law of Morality

    But Trump is the most Al Sharpton-y president we’ve ever had.

    Who is his Tawana? His Crystal Mangum?

    They want a pussy-grabber

    Congratulations. Your standards are as low as any black’s. But we already knew that.

    Trump constantly talks about the importance of GENES by the way.

    His last campaign was pure “civic nationalism”. That’s what put him back in office, where he can do some good for a change. Geez, he bombed with whites making six figures, while improving with every other demographic. Kamala, not Donald, is the one who followed your (and Al’s) advice.

    It’s great that Trump is standing up for white farmers in South Africa, but he’s not doing this because they’re white; he’s doing it because they’re true victims.

    You’re no different from those “switcheroo” Democrats who claim credit for Republican policies their own forebears strenuously opposed.

    As for your perennial all-caps charge, the G-word…

    [MORE]

    2.5% of Gazans have been killed in the last 16 months. That’s pretty inefficient as far as “genocides” go. But there are almost exactly 100 times as many whites (just in the US) as there are Gazans. So your claim that whites are undergoing an even worse genocide, which basic arithmetic would put at a minimum of five million deaths, comes off as a tad Chicken-Littlish. Besides, you support legal abortion, a central component of any competent genocide. Just ask Heinrich Himmler and Leonardo Conti.

  90. Hail says: • Website
    @jb

    I wasn’t even aware that Substack has an algorithm and a feed

    Try visiting Substack.com main page.

    If you’ve ever plugged yourself in to any of the “Substack family of products” (and possibly even if not), even if NOT having an account signed in, tour browser will, due to data-tracking, successfully enmesh you in an algorithm-feed. It will guess what will get your time. This is part of the deal with Substack. And really all the big Internet “platforms” and the entire Internet, evident to varying degrees.

    The Internet had evolved into a kind of mind-control machine (“the attention economy”) by ca. 2020, when Substack enters the scene. Substack is not off that model, is my idea, although it seemed to be at first (around late 2020 is when, I believe, real momentum began towards Substack.) Part of the concern about “AI” is extrapolation from what the Internet had already become “pre-AI.”

    (Followers of my commentary on “the Corona-Panic” in 2020-2022 know I believe that was a key part of the entire thing. To simplify the idea: no Internet-driven disruption in info-flows (no “Internet mind-control-machine attention-economy, no pandemic.)

    There is great value in a ‘model’ in which a community specifically goes to a specific place for a specific purposes, rather than have their informational lives completely managed by fatcat Big Tech barons and their H1b minions and a global network of wires.

    • Replies: @Hail
    , @res
  91. J.Ross says:
    @Hail

    Yeah sure that’s all true but I assume that the rational consumer is seeking good content and not Current Thing.

    • Replies: @res
  92. J.Ross says:

    OT — Steve, I hear that your neighbor Kanye bought you a shirt, what’s that about?

  93. @Reg Cæsar

    Your standards are as low as any black’s.

    Loyalty to one’s own people is indeed a low benchmark. Sad so many don’t reach it.

    His last campaign was pure “civic nationalism”

    In many ways, yes. But these are early days and what’s important is the direction things are going in. Your side, the anti-White identity side, has lost.

    while improving with every other demographic

    Yeah, non-Whites prefer allying with a real White man, not a “race-blind” cuck.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  94. @AnotherDad

    one of the most ethnocentric peoples on the planet–Jews–

    Emma Lazarus was horrified by the wild horde of Eastern European Jews disembarking at Castle Garden, but nevertheless felt a bond with and an obligation toward them. She joined the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society to help civilize them. But ethnically, she was very distant from them. Something else was at work.

    Likewise with Netanyahu. He may be Ashkenazi, but his base isn’t. They’re scarcely of the same race, let alone ethnicity.

  95. Mark G. says:
    @Loyalty is The First Law of Morality

    I agree with you the Republican party should represent the interests of Whites and Trump made an attempt to do that but there were a couple of other factors involved in him winning.

    Trump seemed to make a concerted effort to appeal to male voters by appearing on media popular with them like the Joe Rogan show. While the percentage of Whites have dropped in this country, the percentage of males has not. The Republican party may in the future rely on the male vote to win elections.

    In addition to this, Trump made an effort to appeal to independent voters who are unhappy with both parties. This would include admirers of RFK Jr. and his opposition to Big Pharma, Tulsi Gabbard and her opposition to endless wars, and Elon Musk and his opposition to government overspending.

  96. Ralph L says:
    @Mark G.

    The stock market as a whole did horribly in our previous inflationary period, the 1970s. That was partly due to higher tax rates on capital gains begun in ’69 and repealed in ’78. It’s really annoying to pay any tax on entirely inflationary gains.

  97. anonymous[247] • Disclaimer says:
    @AnotherDad

    The Hispanics and whites and Asians who are sick of the deification and done with “blacks!” are an increasingly larger portion.

    More blacks than one might imagine are beginning to come around to the “blacks!” narrative, and the political party that authored and championed their own hamstringing since the sixties, thanks to YouTube.

    Don’t expect Thomas Sowell to directly implicate the Jews, however. Jews continue to be the third rail of politics. Like in Judo, the only way to defeat Jews in political power is to use the weight of their shitty rhetoric against them, when possible.

    Thomas Sowell is pretty good at that and, like in Malcolm X’s day, some black Americans are coming around:

  98. Ralph L says:
    @Nicholas Stix

    Steve’s data was for US-born black women. I believe that ~20% of US blacks are more fertile foreign born or born of immigrants, which is why the black proportion of the US didn’t drop with the yuge Hispanic/Asian influx. I assume this includes cat-eating illegals.

    • Agree: Achmed E. Newman
  99. @James B. Shearer

    To be fair I think that a comet strike would affect people way further out than 100 miles. Tunguska was an amazing stroke of fortune, except for the very few underneath it. It hit land so no tsunami, it mostly burned so no quakes, and chose one of the remotest places on earth.

    • Agree: Adam Smith
    • Replies: @Mr. Anon
  100. Old Prude says:
    @Greta Handel

    “a copium denmother for disaffected white guys who skew 40+ in age. ”

    Very nice. Captures it nicely, and I say that a disaffected white guy 40+ in age. Very nicely said.

    • Replies: @Steve Sailer
  101. Pericles says:
    @J.Ross

    The wicked flee when no man pursueth.

  102. Old Prude says:
    @AnotherDad

    The vast majority of M-F are only engaging in a perverted form of narcisstic bullying. They know they aren’t female. We know they aren’t female, and they know we know. But they will make us submit to their demands for access to women’s sports and women’s bathrooms by using the power of the State to bully us.

    They aren’t being bullied. We are!

  103. Pericles says:
    @Buzz Mohawk

    They should mount that thing at the entrance of the Israel embassy.

  104. Pericles says:
    @anonymous

    The name of that female Marine? Hillary Clinton, bigots.

  105. Old Prude says:
    @Corvinus

    Corvina, thanks for the post. It filled in a lot of blanks on a story I haven’t been following.

    If this is to be our final posts on Steve’s Unz blog, you went out with a bang.

  106. @Reg Cæsar

    Something else was at work.

    The suspense is killing us, Reg…

  107. Hooters is to open in the Bigg Market, Newcastle, a drink and debauchery kind of a place whose most famous literary habitués are The Fat Slags.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fat_Slags

    “They are depicted as overweight, eating large amounts of food, mainly chips, while also having a lot of casual sex.”

    Naturally the Guardian is horrified.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/feb/08/its-horrible-hooters-plots-british-breastaurant-expansion-via-newcastle

    “It’s horrible,” responded Jen Bagelman, 41, a professor of geography at Newcastle University who lives close by in the city centre. “We can do better than this.”

    Hooters has never really been successful in the UK – everyone likes a pretty barmaid, but maybe it’s a bit too obvious for us. The only other success story is the one in Nottingham – another place with a big drinking/partying scene.

    The Newcastle Hooters will have a capacity for 200 people, but Goard suggested the brand would raise the standard of outlet on the Bigg Market, perhaps Newcastle’s rowdiest street. The council has been seeking to regenerate the area after years of decline.

    Blimey. Never been there, but if Hooters will raise the tone of the Bigg Market, it must be quite a place.

  108. @Old Prude

    I’d assumed until last year that most of my readers were old fogeys my age who’d soon be dropping dead, until 2024 when I finally had a chance to meet them in person and most of them turned out to be a generation younger.

  109. @Steve Sailer

    Steve, why is everyone assuming you’ll stop posting here? Did I miss something?

  110. Old Prude says:
    @anonymous

    There were probably plenty of better qualified guys who would have liked to been a helo pilot or fighter jock, but were denied the chance because the slot went to this chick to fill the DEI/AA quota.

    Yeah, sure, anonymous, the Service Academies and flight schools are just starving for applicants, so they are forced to accept women and blacks.

    If we hadn’t been at war for the last forty years in pointless wars that did nothing to advance the prosperity and security of the country the military would have all the manpower required.

    But who wants to sign-up to get forced to participate in Gay Pride Month, then sent to some fly-blown crap-hole to get one’s legs blown off, while some chick flys around in Uncle Sugar’s toys?

    • Thanks: Hail
  111. Voltarde says:

    I’ll miss your posts on TUR and the comments that they elicit. Sorry, I’m too skittish/paranoid to follow you on SubStack or Twitter.

    So here’s a (silly O/T) goodbye post:

    Is Microsoft Excel the Next Big E-Sport?

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/20/us/microsoft-excel-world-championships.html

    And yes, there really is a World Dog Surfing Championships:

  112. MGB says:
    @Colin Wright

    So…bar pharmaceuticals? After all, we could always tell ourselves they can learn to synthesize their own.

    Seems they were smart enough to decline the Covid vax.

  113. Mike Tre says:
    @anonymous

    “Without women volunteering to join, the draft would have had to be reinstated. Would you like to have been drafted, Mr. Hail? If not, thank a woman who joined up so you didn’t have to.”

    LOL! This is some of the best lunacy I’ve read in quite some time.

    Speaking of deranged women, Rosie has indeed returned to UNZ, but steers clear of Sailer’s comments and thinly veiled and recycled feminist crap in the front page article comments.

  114. Wj says:
    @anonymous

    If you had served you would know that women in combat roles in the combat arms, tanks, infantry and artillery is a bad idea. Aerial warfare has been non existent sine Vietnam. Women can drop bombs from aircraft easily and it involves little risk.

    • Replies: @Ralph L
  115. Hail says: • Website
    @J.Ross

    A Trump Slump in immigration has happened before. The exact same happened in early 2017. It didn’t last; nothing about the Trump movement 2015-16 momentum lasted, not at all in the way the USA needed/needs.

    VDare’s pro-Trump cheerleader element, back in the late 2010s, jumped through hoops to make it seem Trump-I was a true hardliner on immigration after all, even though there was no wall, no mass deportations, no crackdowns on employers, no moves to eliminate “birthright citizenship,” no talk of shifting policy towards moratorium, no talk of a sensible and rational demographic-stabilization program (“for us and our posterity”). The overall impact of Trump-I, I think even pro-Trump fans today (and there are many still in elevated moods from the Slaying of Kamala a few months ago), was much less than should have been.

    The man is a performer. The deportations are staged as made-for-TV (or social-media) events. The tough-guy talk is still not backed up by actual surge in deportations. The annualized rate under Trump-II is the same, possibly lower, than under Biden. But he declares victory and demands to be given accolades, then picks big fights over nothing (more “performance”).

    The best that can be said about the so-called mass-deportation program supposedly ongoing is that either (1.) it’s not yet geared up (but when would it be a better time?); or, (2.) it’s really all about sending a message, not deporting brown bodies, and that the message will induce brown bodies to self-deport or future brown-bodies to never show up at all.

    There is a likelihood, I think, that this same man could offer a grand bargain of amnesty for most illegals in exchange for guarantees of accolades for himself, and guarantees about building and running that Mega Trump Resort along all the beachside property in Gaza (to be accessible to vetted global wealthy-elites on whom Jared signs off on, along with all Israelis and dual-citizens not of Muslim or Christian origin).

  116. Hail says: • Website
    @Hail

    Interesting commentary this week similar to some of my commentary:

    .
    Katherine Br*dsky:

    Substack’s…business goal, which is savvy, is to get bigger names with existing audiences to transfer over here and this is what they are incentivizing. However, it means that smaller publishers aren’t going to get the same boost and might be overlooked by audiences.

    .
    Richard K*slan:

    The problem with Substack is the absence of 1) editorial review and 2) curation. That is why the writing is generally very poor.

    Neither of the above can be accomplished without significant subscription revenue to pay professional editorial staff. Tech, the most perfect cost-free copyright theft mechanism ever invented, can never limit copying and therefore supply is endless.

    The only ones who can make money are the platforms, like vampires. That is the basis of streaming music. Writers made real money in the 1920s, when copyright laws were strong, enforced and when it cost a good deal to print pirates. But a century later, it is only possible for a very few. But the tech firms get free content! It’s a racket.

    .
    P. Nayland K*st:

    From what I can see, Hamish McKenzie [Substack co-founder] and the rest of the Substack leadership are succumbing to the saccharine allure of celebrity.

    A substantial number of the “names” who have been recruited to Substack honed their social media style on Twitter when it was the corporate media’s echo chamber, and which there is decided effort underway to recreate on Bluesky.

    Echo chambers are stagnant swamps—and while Elon Musk turning Twitter into X has ended the liberal media echo chamber, the sobering reality is that a MAGA echo chamber is every bit as stagnant.

    Which means recruiting these celebrity “names” means Substack is filling users’ feeds with insipid, anodyne, banal content that says nothing and accomplishes even less.

    I already know what these “names” have to say, which is to say I have full measure of just how boring they are.

    Substack would be far more successful and far more appealing if it would take a chance promoting the non-celebrities within its user community. Give the undiscovered diamonds in the rough a chance to reach a wider audience.

    That would be maintaining fidelity to Substack’s vision and to their corporate mission. Recruiting celebrity “names” is a betrayal of both.

    https://substack.com/@mysteriouskat/note/c-90578751

    • Replies: @res
  117. @jb

    Also, I notice that Steve’s site doesn’t have a “substack.com” domain name. Does this mean that he is running his site on his own host using Substack’s software?

    I don’t know how Substack does it, but you can redirect xxx.com to go anywhere you want. It’s just a bunch of DNS records and Apache configuration.

  118. Corvinus says:
    @Jim Don Bob

    “DJT, JD, and Elon just rehired the Big Balls kid, so you and the WSJ doxxing bitch can FOAD.”

    There wasn’t any doxxing. The guy publicly made comments on social media. There are consequences in life. The guy is lucky that he is allowed to come back.

    • Replies: @Mactoul
  119. @Old Prude

    The vast majority of M-F are only engaging in a perverted form of narcisstic bullying. They know they aren’t female. We know they aren’t female, and they know we know. But they will make us submit to their demands for access to women’s sports and women’s bathrooms by using the power of the State to bully us.

    Right. And how many have done the surgical transition rather than just flounce around like “Admiral” Rachel Levine? Very few, I’d wager.

    There was a guy in Arlington VA who was hanging around naked in the women’s room at a local pool and the usual libtards were all for his trans rights until they found out he was a registered sex offender.

    Trannies are an 80-20 issue with the public and it’s surprising that the Ds think this is a hill worth defending.

  120. Anon[168] • Disclaimer says:

    Steve Sailer is moving to Substack because he is an American boomer who still remembers the Cold War and doesn’t want to be associated with a pro-Chinese Communist Party platform, which the Unz Review has become in the past few years.

  121. Corvinus says:
    @Steve Sailer

    “until 2024 when I finally had a chance to meet them in person and most of them turned out to be a generation younger”

    Not according to one of my friends whom you signed their book.

    So, is this your last post here? Is this post your cagey way of saying goodbye on this site? How does Andrew Anglin feel about it?

    My vague impression is no, but I think you owe it to your fanboys and fangirls to say directly if it is.

  122. Corvinus says:
    @Hail

    “The man is a performer”

    This is why you and those who voted for him are suckers. Not saying Harris was any better, she wasn’t, but everything Trump does is TRANSactional.

    He pretends to care about flyover country. But in a heartbeat, he would sell them out.

    Look at how he is fellating Musk, his benefactor. I thought Bannon was going to find a way to get him removed from being his right hand man. Lol.

    Sailer knows this, but he is busy building up his brand to remodel his closet and buy more dog food.

    • Replies: @Hail
    , @Wj
  123. Art Deco says:
    @Mark G.

    Deflation is bad for people in debt like people who borrowed money for new businesses. This is largely the fault, though, of the previous inflationary era that distorted economic activity. In the late nineteen twenties, inflation created a huge stock market bubble.
    ==
    There was almost no inflation between 1922 and 1929. The stock market’s P/E ratios weren’t above the median until 1928. There’s nothing pathological about increases and declines in securities prices. One problem which was if I’m not mistaken peculiar in 1929 was the degree to which shareholders had relied on borrowed money to purchase their shares.

  124. @Achmed E. Newman

    Now, Ron Unz put his work into this, so, yeah, it’d be nice if substack or whoever would pay him for having that same code running their comments. However, if they find a way to do this themselves, fine too. It’s not like a mousetrap – it’s just software.

    I think Ron Unz has commented before that the system gradually evolved and that there is so much spaghetti code in the system that it could never be separated out or maintained as an independent product.

    However I don’t see why some software company doesn’t start from scratch and duplicate all its main features. It could easily become a global standard. Probably AI could write the code.

    Here is what AI says.

    Duplicating the commenting system used on *The Unz Review* (Ron Unz’s website) would depend on the level of functionality and moderation features you’d want to replicate. Based on the site’s existing system, here are some key aspects and how difficult they would be to implement:

    ### **Key Features of the Unz Review Commenting System**
    1. **Nested (Threaded) Comments** – Users can reply directly to specific comments.
    **Difficulty:** Medium. Most modern CMS platforms (WordPress, Discourse, etc.) support this natively.

    2. **User Authentication (Optional, Anonymity Allowed)** – Users can post under pseudonyms without registration.
    **Difficulty:** Low to Medium. Allowing guest comments is simple but increases spam/moderation challenges.

    3. **Comment Formatting (BBCode-like or Markdown)** – Users can bold text, italicize, insert links, and use block quotes.
    **Difficulty:** Medium. Libraries like Markdown.js or BBCode parsers can handle this.

    4. **Comment Sorting and Filtering** – Comments appear in a structured way (chronologically or by relevance).
    **Difficulty:** Medium. Sorting by timestamp or votes is straightforward with a database-backed system.

    5. **Upvoting and Downvoting** – Users can “Agree,” “Disagree,” or otherwise react to comments.
    **Difficulty:** Medium. Requires a database structure to track votes per comment.

    6. **Spam and Moderation Controls** – Includes flagged comments, admin moderation, and possibly auto-filtering for offensive content.
    **Difficulty:** High. Automated moderation (e.g., word filters, AI-based detection) can be complex.

    7. **Permanent Comment Links** – Each comment has a unique permalink for sharing.
    **Difficulty:** Low. Standard for most commenting systems.

    8. **Email Notifications (Optional)** – Users may be notified of replies.
    **Difficulty:** Medium to High. Requires backend email handling and user opt-in features.

    9. **Highlighting “Important” Comments (From Editors, VIP Users, etc.)** – Some comments are visually distinct.
    **Difficulty:** Medium. Requires a user role system.

    ### **Implementation Approaches**
    **Use Existing Platforms** (Easiest)
    **Disqus, Commento, Isso, or Remark42** – Ready-to-go third-party solutions.
    **WordPress + Comment Plugins** (e.g., wpDiscuz or Thrive Comments) – If running a WordPress site.

    **Custom Development** (More Control, More Work)
    **Backend:** PHP (Laravel), Python (Django/Flask), or Node.js.
    **Frontend:** Vanilla JavaScript, React, or Vue.js.
    **Database:** MySQL, PostgreSQL, or MongoDB for storing comments.
    **Moderation:** Akismet (for spam filtering), basic admin tools.

    ### **Overall Difficulty**
    **For a basic system:** **Moderate** (1-2 months for a skilled developer)
    **For an exact Unz-like system with moderation and features:** **High** (3-6 months or more, depending on complexity)

    Would you be looking to build a similar system for your own site?

    • Replies: @Pericles
  125. Corvinus says:
    @Bumpkin

    “Steve is big on IQ, but frankly my assessment of most of the “best and brightest” I’ve observed over the years is that they fall for almost as many dumb ideas as those less gifted”

    Right. But it is no surprise that Mr. Sailer hasn’t written post after post about the incompetent and brainless Department nominees by Trump. It would interfere with his brand building.

  126. Hail says: • Website
    @Corvinus

    you…are suckers.

    You know what would be funny?

    I’ll tell you what would be funny. It’s this: It’d be funny if Mr. Blumpf gets done his vow to deport Palestinians and gets more Palestinians but claims victory and moves on after a view deportations-for-show in the USA. More Palestinians permanently removed from Gaza (and the West Bank?) than illegal immigrants permanently removed from the USA.

    – 2,100,000?: Palestinians in Gaza (minus ca. 50,000 killed; ca. 125,000 wounded, of whom at least 25,000 are likely to die of wounds, or have already died, as they have not received treatment; generally, an untold net-loss of life-years for all causes, deprivation);

    – 1,250,000: Extrapolated total deportations of illegals in the USA under Trump-II (four years), based on the Jan 23 to Feb 3, 2025, illegal-alien detention rate (caveat: Yes, it may increase later; but why not now?).

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_deportation_of_illegal_immigrants_in_the_second_presidency_of_Donald_Trump#Statistics

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  127. @Ralph L

    Inflation rewards debtors and punishes those who would like to conservatively save the value of their lives of labor. Deflation does the opposite. “Neither a lender nor borrower be.”, said some guy in a Shakespeare play. Yes, of course there’s a reason to borrow when doing business, but the interest rates in a free market (without Gov’t interference) reflect the price of the use of that money.

    Your example of the Great Depression 1.0 was more of a bubble busting, due to FED messing with the money supply during the 1920s. Of course, there’s a lot more to it. Mr. Sailer’s example is from well before the FED, at the end of the 1800s. That was, gold production could not keep up with the demand for dollars.

    I started to write some more, Ralph, but I’ve been meaning to write a blog post on this subject for a long time. I’ll do that next week. Same for my reply about China to Almost Missouri. Trying to sucker people onto my blog? Well, sure, I guess …

  128. @Frau Katze

    I didn’t know that, Mrs. Katze, so thanks. (I would NEVER have known what that rosette meant. I’ve been really bad with understanding icons since the beginning of Windows!)

    However, there aren’t 7,000 commenters – maybe there are 100 (hopefully increasing…) That sample of paying vs. nonpaying is only for that small sample of commenters who, I hope, would lean toward being paying subscribers.

    If nothing else, if you really get into it, as I do here, you wouldn’t want to miss commenting on the many pay-walled posts.

  129. @Mactoul

    Certainly the rearrangement of borders following both World War I and the breakup of the Ottoman empire and World War II and the breakup of the British empire shaped the modern world.

    Eighty years after the end of World War II it is a ridiculous situation that the descendants of displaced Palestinians are still hanging out to dry in refugee camps with no homeland, but then they are making things worse for themselves due to poor decision-making.

    Even if the Jews did not have Israel, they would still have strongholds and considerable influence in the US, France, Canada, and the UK.

    Unfortunately when they were given quasi-independence in Gaza, the Palestinians were quickly overpowered by the Hamas crime syndicate and billions of dollars of international aid was funneled off and used to build tunnels and home-made fireworks instead of for infrastructure development and public works to build a model state that could have shown what Palestinians could really do.

    Things were going well with the opening of the Yasser Arafat airport in Gaza in 1998, which was attended by Bill Clinton, but not long after the Palestinians started the Second Intifada for what seemed to be really childish reasons, and that was the end of progress for the Palestinian people.

    Possibly the situation could be resolved if Hamas were all deported to Guantanamo Bay and the city redeveloped as an international protectorate where local Palestinians would have at least some kind of self rule, but with adult supervision to make sure that the rough kids did not take over the playground.

    Howeve the bottom line remains that the Israelis and the Palestinians hate each other, and probably always will. Even though both sides refuse to eat pork, they cannot see how much they have in common.

    • Replies: @mc23
  130. @Greta Handel

    Good point, Greta. I agree with you on this. It’s no fun like that – I was under that deal for half the time or so.

    For TUR, I’m pretty sure the “whimming” method, or lack thereof, is a setting for the blogger. I notice in threads of Ron Paul, who along with Pat Buchanan, when he was here, are syndicated so widely that they probably wouldn’t even know their columns are here, much less read comments, the setting has some short time duration (possibly just a wait time for whatever routine in the dBase or somewhere makes them active) to de-moderate comments. For Ron Paul it was always under an hour, IIRC.

    Paul Kersey might take DAYS sometimes, to get around to it. That’s no good. Some others, with perhaps fewer comments than iSteve has, might have the manual setting but are so excited “I GOT 3 COMMENTS!” that they de-moderate them very soon after they are submitted.

    Now, re substack, some of the people writing here now (e.g., Mr. Hail) would be able to tell you, but those wordpresses and blogspots, disqus, etc. systems have censorship that is built in. Not just racial/sex/tranny stuff that is “not cool” with somebody somewhere but even just too many links (when you aren’t told the rules), a minor cussword, etc. gets comments trashed. I don’t know how bas substack is about that. In that case, it may very well NOT be up to Steve Sailer on stevesailer.net.

  131. J.Ross says:
    @AnotherDad

    Curtis Yarvin makes the Gaza plan sound downright reasonable.

  132. Corvinus says:
    @Hail

    Trump loves Jews. But you still voted for him anyways against your own (white) interests. Isn’t that hilarious?

    And you know what’s even funnier? Conservatives claiming they champion privacy rights but enabling DOGE to run roughshod over them.

    —Various state law enforcement officials warned that DOGE, which stands for Department of Government Efficiency, has reportedly used a third-party, open-source artificial intelligence system to process data from other agencies recently, sparking fears that Treasury Department records could be mishandled.—

    Regardless, Trump is YOUR man.

  133. Dmon says:
    @anonymous

    The US Military has turned into history’s most expensive daycare program.
    https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/3662171/dod-reduces-on-base-child-care-fees-for-military-families/#:~:text=Improving%20access%20to%20child%20care,year%2C%20according%20to%202022%20figures.

    The DOD operates one of the largest employer-sponsored child care programs in the U.S., serving more than 160,000 children every year, according to 2022 figures.  

    From the chart, given that most of the participants will be in categories I-III, we’ll call the average weekly fee $61. The average weekly cost of daycare in the US, per Google AI is $343. So 82% of the cost is subsidized by the taxpayer. That’s before we even get to the lifetime medical benefits and hiring preferences for federal makework jobs.

    But of course, the US Military is the galaxy’s most formidable fighting force, having won a war as recently as 1990, so there must be a payoff in military readiness for having all these birthing persons in uniform:

    https://dailycaller.com/2017/03/01/exclusive-deployed-us-navy-has-a-pregnancy-problem-and-its-getting-worse/

    A record 16 out of 100 Navy women are reassigned from ships to shore duty due to pregnancy, according to data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act by The Daily Caller News Foundation’s Investigative Group.

    • Replies: @Mike Tre
  134. PRC influence operations bearing fruit…

    • Thanks: Hail
  135. @Jim Don Bob

    2) Steve, you got quoted here: https://www.tracingwoodgrains.com/p/the-full-story-of-the-faas-hiring

    Thanks JDB. I had a back-n-forth with another commenter a week or two back who was trying to blame the CTI (collegiate training initiative) as the ATC problem rather than Obama nuking the actual aptitude test (AT-SAT)–for, of course “adverse impact”–and putting in a racialize hiring metric. That’s just wrong. That system was working adequately.

    And had another back and forth with AEN last week who was pointing at Covid delay–which no doubt made things worse.

    But as this makes clear the culprit is clearly the Obama administration destroying the existing, decently functioning system with a good aptitude screen, with a “diversity” screen. The black controller organization cheating was just a cherry on top. Simply put the “diversity” screen just means a lot of mediocre candidates who
    — wash out in greater numbers
    — take a much longer time on the job being mentored–which sucks up seasoned controller’s time–before they can independently work
    — a poor/medicore performers on the job
    — can only be assigned to less busy centers/airports
    — have shorter careers as active controllers–i.e. get promoted to do management or quit

    The ATC shortage–including the failure to actively manage the airspace at DCA to the level necessary–is a product of the “diversity!” ideology being imposed on the FAA and ATC.

    • Agree: Houston 1992
    • Thanks: bomag
  136. @Achmed E. Newman

    I really hope you keep posting here at least a few times a week.

    Are you kidding? This post was Steve’s swan song from Unz

  137. @onetwothree

    I was always kind of expected you to migrate back there

    It was difficult to monetize a self-made blog like that; I’m not sure you can even monetize Blogspot

  138. res says:
    @Hail

    Agreed. One of the things I hate most about the current internet is the degree to which everyone tries to tell you what to read AND makes it hard to find what I want to read. Facebook seems like the best example of this. Always a challenge to find old comments I want to reread.

    How is Substack for allowing one to search effectively for content? I think that is one of the less heralded aspects of Ron’s comment system. Though that is still less powerful than I would like. Especially with the sheer volume of comments some of us have accumulated.

    P.S. A useful metric for this is whether one can search on the site itself or whether it is necessary to do a more general internet search targeted at the site.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  139. res says:
    @J.Ross

    I think the best we can expect of today’s “rational consumer” is that s/he seeks what is easy and most stimulating. If only that mapped to good content and not Current Thing.

  140. In Chinese history, the most tragic and resolute form of resistance comes from Generation Z, known as the “Lying Flat Generation.” They are the “peerless beauties” without mortgages, car loans, or descendants, choosing to forgo buying houses, cars, marriage, and having children – the “Four Empties.” (No money, no families!)

    “The depreciation of the Chinese yuan in 2025 will surpass expectations, triggering widespread panic and capital flight in China,” predicted the former president of the investment banking division at China Construction Bank, Zhai Shanying.

    US President Trump has ordered a 10% tariff increase on Chinese goods, starting February 4. It’s important to note that this is an additional tariff on top of the existing ones, with Chinese goods already facing an average of about 25% tariffs. With the new 10% increase, the total tariff on Chinese exports to the US will be around 35%. (Tariff EO on hold.)

    • Replies: @YetAnotherAnon
  141. res says:
    @Hail

    Any thoughts on comparing and contrasting the philosophies of Substack and The Unz Review?

    • Replies: @J.Ross
    , @Hail
  142. JMcG says:
    @anonymous

    Kara Hultgreen wasn’t qualified.
    It sure doesn’t look like Rebecca Lobach was qualified.
    If you don’t think standards have been lowered throughout the military to accommodate women and some minorities, then it’s you that is insane.
    Some are perfectly capable, but we’ll never know which, because lowering standards for some has tainted them all.

    • Agree: Jim Don Bob
    • Thanks: Hail
  143. Corvinus says:
    @Loyalty is The First Law of Morality

    “Loyalty to one’s own people is indeed a low benchmark. Sad so many don’t reach it.

    JFC, yes we do. YOU are saying there is only ONE exclusive loyalty—racial fealty. Every other loyalty that a person chooses that involves freedom of association you personally find odious. It’s beyond the pale on your part.

    “the anti-White”

    You’ve been asked to repeatedly define it and give specific examples. Instead, you utter it as if it just have extreme importance among normal whites.

    • Replies: @Mr. Anon
  144. @jb

    I never would have noticed this, but VoxDay’s Substack Sigma Game is hosted directly on the Substack domain, but Steve’s isn’t

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  145. J.Ross says:
    @res

    One of my least favorite parts of the Deluge (2020) was established search engines deliberately making search not work. Also the whole slew of good resources that got snuffed out at about the same time. Maybe now they’ll find a way back (as Second City Cop Blog for example already has) and search will be restored to its former functionality.
    Steve’s not letting it through but there’s a crucial observation by Literally Who on Twotter: this USAID story is not about one million dollars going to a ridiculous cause. It’s not about the ridiculous cause turning out to be a transparent embezzlement scheme. USAID and Total Society Initiative and “trusted sources” was about robbing you to blind you, making the Truman Show real, and using censorship, lawfare, harassing investigations, and pooh-poohing to enforce the boundaries of the Matrix. Everything has been fake for twenty years, the same period for which culture has been stagnant.

    • Replies: @Hail
  146. J.Ross says:
    @res

    How Much Money Can Andrew Anglin Make Writing or Would You Have Heard of Andrew Anglin If You Had To Pay For Him?

  147. @AnotherDad

    ‘…After the reign of terror of unhinged girls and soy boys, we are now seeing actual male leadership again. What a breath of fresh, sane, rational air.’

    The woman in front of me in the Walmart return line was an unhinged girl.

    We can define the problem group more precisely, if less palatably.

    After the reign of terror of unhinged girls and soy boys
    Jews, we are now seeing actual male leadership again. What a breath of fresh, sane, rational air.

    Really, that’s what it was. It’s time to admit it.

    …and until we do, we’ll just repeat the same cycle. After all, the Jews are still there: Miriam Adelson, Jared Kushner. And in the end, they’ll just lead us astray.

    As I say, this is unpleasant to face — but it has to be faced. Unless you really want to keep playing Charlie Brown and the football forever.

  148. Anonymous[184] • Disclaimer says:

    Good riddance old man. You’re way past your ‘best used by’ date.

    • Disagree: Curle
  149. Mr. Anon says:
    @Corvinus

    “the anti-White”

    You’ve been asked to repeatedly define it and give specific examples.

    An example of it is the swill that you spew here, you yammering piece of s**t.

    • LOL: deep anonymous
  150. Mr. Anon says:

    Propaganda at work: The WSJ goes out and finds one single solitary Trump voter (assuming he’s even telling the truth about that) who doesn’t like what Trump is doing during his first month in office and writes a story on it:

    ‘Not What We Signed Up For’: Trump Voter Rips Trump Policies To WSJ — Says ‘I Don’t Like Chaos’

    https://www.mediaite.com/news/not-what-we-signed-up-for-trump-voter-rips-trump-policies-to-wsj-says-i-dont-like-chaos/

    Then Mediaite touts the story and Drudge puts it up in big bold letters at the top of his webstite, as if this represents some kind of groundswell of opposition to Trump within the ranks of Republican voters.

    This is an example of how “The News” is manufactured.

    • Agree: YetAnotherAnon
    • Replies: @muggles
  151. @Colin Wright

    But what’s wrong with 1.5 children per woman for a while? Assuming the pattern isn’t dysgenic, I really don’t see the problem with a US with 120 million people. Things worked fine when that was what we had.

    Therein–bolded–lies your problem.

    And, of course, none of this works with the immigration loons doing their dirty work. If you nation’s people cut back on fertility, while waving people in … you are simply replaced. The nation killed.

    And 1.5 is far more dramatic than most people realize. Just two generations at 1.5 cuts your cohort size roughly in half (56%). This has already more or less happened for whites in most white countries. There is a huge difference in white cohort sizes–a bloated 50s and 60s born (peaks vary among nations) and now 50-70 year old cohorts supported by much smaller young cohorts.

    This dramatic population shift has just hidden because the overall populations have not moved much, because
    a) the older depression and war era dying off cohorts are smaller and replaced by the new smaller cohorts
    and
    b) immigration hiding the white collapse.
    But this is dramatically changing now as the larger post-War cohorts enter the prime death zone over the next couple decades.

    It is really not population–a lagging indicator–but these cohort sizes that really matter. And if you want a smaller but stable population you really have to “pull up!” now so you don’t crash.

    For example US white birth cohorts have been running 2 million-ish–generously defined–and are now below that. Two million would already be a stable population of just 160 million whites … *if* we immediately got back to replacement white fertility! But we’re no where near doing that. In fact, we haven’t even see an end to the plunge, we are still heading down.

    Yes, smaller populations would be goodness, if we did not have minoritarianism and ergo did not have the immigration insanity and the “discredited theory of eugenics” nonsense. Sadly we have both … and the white cohort size of America–and most Western nations–continues to plunge.

    Immigration is always #1. But we are in serious deep shit on the fertility issue as well. Both of these need immediate reversal.

    • Replies: @Colin Wright
    , @Travis
  152. Mr. Anon says:

    It’s funny how liberalism makes people stupid. Here are some liberal journalists reporting what is being said by liberal “mental health professionals” about what young women say about young men:

    Rise of the ‘ick’ damaging men’s mental health, experts claim

    The expression is used to describe a feeling of disgust or repulsion at a specific behaviour but therapists say it is no joke

    “Telling men they give you the “ick” is driving a hidden mental health crisis, experts have claimed.

    The expression is used to describe a feeling of disgust or repulsion at a specific behaviour and moved from a popular slang word to being recognised by the Cambridge Dictionary in 2024.

    It is particularly used by young women to describe things they find unattractive in men.

    Across social media, users have shared their lists of things young men and teenagers do that give them the dreaded ick.

    Wearing skinny jeans, running for the bus, putting on a baby voice and doing doggy paddle in a swimming pool are among the most commonly featured.”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/02/08/rise-of-ick-damaging-mens-mental-health-experts/

    If you read the article, it is pretty clear what is going on. Women are expressing disgust at behavior they see in men that is effeminate or childish. i.e. – they want men to be men.

  153. @AnotherDad

    Immigration is always #1. But we are in serious deep shit on the fertility issue as well. Both of these need immediate reversal.

    If you don’t watch out, the immigrants will stay, but you won’t get much increase in the birthrate of desirable whites (and plenty of them aren’t so desirable, to be frank). Paying tweakers to have kids won’t solve your problem.

    I note that you don’t object to declining population as such, but only to the proportion of whites in that population declining. I’ll even go so far as to assume you’ll agree that a United States with only 120 million people 90% of whom are white would be preferable to a United States with 500 million 40% of whom are white. Hey, the latter gets you twice as many whites…

    In any case, it tends to come down to specific measures. I’d advocate:

    1. Barring all immigration and deporting everyone who’s here illegally. I’ve heard that absent continued immigration, we would have reached zero ZPG and stabilized at about 200 million sometime around 1990. In point of fact, that’d be good enough for me.

    2. Insisting on contraceptive implants for anyone receiving public assistance. This should have a happily eugenic effect, and it’s really not violating anyone’s rights. You want kids? Get off public assistance.

    3. On the other hand, introduce a vigorous programme of tax incentives promoting fertility among the more-or-less functional. We could, for example, subsidize mortgages for anyone who has children and keeps having them.

    4. An end to promoting careers for women and disparaging motherhood. Here, see the role of Jewesses in promoting Seventies-style womens lib. The founders of that movement were horrified that the average coed of the Fifties wanted to find a nice man, settle down, and start having children.

    What’s wrong with that? She should want to do that. If she wants to be Julia Morgan or Amilia Earhart instead, fine — but don’t make her feel like she ought to. Note here that this change would involve confronting Jewish domination of the media. They’re not going to go for Mr. and Mrs. Cleaver taking back America and having five kids to boot.

    It’s worth noting that with what amounted to (3) and (4), Nazi Germany juiced its birthrate by 25% by 1938. This can be done — and their current image notwithstanding, the Nazis did it without coercive measures. They did it more with propaganda plus coupons for free furniture.

    Now you’ve got me arguing for increased fertility. Oh well. I’d say it’s a matter of altering the proportions rather than the aggregate total — and if the aggregate total sinks, I see that as a plus as well. I don’t actually want three hundred and fifty million Americans of any color.

    • Agree: AnotherDad
    • Replies: @AnotherDad
  154. @anonymous

    That whole comment is a load of crap.

    Without women volunteering to join, the draft would have had to be reinstated. Would you like to have been drafted, Mr. Hail? If not, thank a woman who joined up so you didn’t have to.

    Because they are held to lower standards, women take the good positions and promotions that would otherwise go to men. How many American men do not join the US military because they’d rather be warriors than be part of the big social experiment that the armed forces are now?

    American White men have grown up their whole lives knowing that they are prone to getting screwed out of promotions, jobs, and even whole careers due to the AA 60 years running. Perhaps, they feel they shouldn’t have to take that when “serving” Uncle Sam.

    If the Dieversity stupidity were ended, we might see more men sign up. Oh, wait, that’s what I just read.

    Did this Achmed character?

    I’d have been able to do many of the same jobs as some of these fat fucks I see at twice their ages. I can do more push-ups and probably shoot better than 90% of you “service people”.

    The quote marks are there because all you mercenaries are not “serving” Americans whatsoever. You’re in it for free skills training and the GI bill and VA benefits. People in the armed forces will freely admit this.

    Then I have people occasionally saying we should all applaud the brave diverse fat-ass “service”-men and woman on a plane, and I’ll just sit there. Had your platoon just gotten back from the Mexican border after having it out with the cartels or herding 100,000 invaders back across the Rio Grande, I’d be slapping the guys on the back. However, you’re not defending jack squat, when it comes to America or Americans.

    … where women have worked side by side with their men to conquer the land and create this country.

    They have NOT worked side-by-side. When men do men’s work and women do women’s work, things can get done. Otherwise you’re just in the way. Step off!

    • Agree: Colin Wright, JMcG, Adam Smith
    • Thanks: Hail, Old Prude
    • Replies: @Colin Wright
  155. Corvinus says:
    @ScarletNumber

    He and a bunch of 40 to 50 year-old married men are trying to recapture their youth on that Substack by perpetuating a made up hierarchy in which Fox day can claim he is at the top.

    • Troll: ScarletNumber
  156. TWS says:
    @guest007

    And none of these guys who lived a lie for at least half their life, didn’t write their biography to fit the narrative? Further, who cares? They are perverts.

  157. TWS says:
    @Corvinus

    How much guys like you get paid ultimately by US tax dollars? Do you need to hit certain points every day? Are you paid by engagement or ridiculousness?

  158. Anonymous[347] • Disclaimer says:
    @Bumpkin

    Yup, checks out: lots of bluster about Steve “falling for” the “establishment” on Ukraine/vaccines and ZERO evidence that YOU are someone who understands these issues or anything else.

    Also, I think it’s funny how you guys always accuse your skeptics of credentialism (as if Steve has blind faith in anyone “who went to college”, LOL) when selective credentialism is the first, middle, and last thing you guys turn to when actually challenged to support your opinions. “You think vaccines are safe? Well RFK doesn’t and he a LAWYER who ROIDS! And so does this DOCTOR who’s INTERNET FAMOUS!” Yeah, and your dad could beat up my dad. I don’t care.

    • LOL: Bumpkin
  159. @Hail

    ‘…(1.) it’s not yet geared up (but when would it be a better time?)…’

    Indeed. As someone who has some indirect contact with some illegals, I would say that they appear to be freaked.

    It has to be noted that most of these are not criminals in the sense of deliberately violating an enforced law. They’re here because they thought it was ‘okay.’ Now that it’s not, they’re frightened. These aren’t professional smugglers or anything. Psychologically, they’re like you and me; they’re no better at crime than most of us are.

    I say this not to excuse them, or to argue that we shouldn’t act. I say it to argue that we should act now, while they’re still scared. Throw some carrots out there. If you leave now, we’ll…whatever.

    Pay bluebook for their car. Give them a thousand dollars. Say we won’t record the fact they already came here once if they want to apply for a green card once they’re home.

    Make it easy to go — before they relax and realize it’s all a lot of hot air.

    • Agree: JMcG, Hail, AnotherDad
  160. @Corvinus

    Not according to one of my friends whom you signed their book.

    Nice English, stupid

    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @Patrick in SC
  161. @JMcG

    Big talk from someone who cowardly blocks their comments history from being viewed

    • Troll: Pericles
    • Replies: @Corvinus
  162. anonymous[306] • Disclaimer says:
    @Steve Sailer

    I’d assumed until last year that most of my readers were old fogeys my age who’d soon be dropping dead, until 2024 when I finally had a chance to meet them in person and most of them turned out to be a generation younger.

    You’re not an old fogey. You’re just rationalizing why you won’t work out at a gym three times a week. I’m your age, and I still go snow-skiing, water-skiing, JET-skiing, and take my Harley out on weekday mornings to bolsa chica when the traffic on PCH is low, and the highway is wide open. There aren’t even any Mexicans out there on the road at that time. They’re the biggest danger to motorcyclists by far.

    Riding through the California wetlands on one side of you, with the stunning Pacific ocean on the other side of you at 75 mph on a wide open highway is just as exhilarating as any video game, kids! Even at 65 years of age!

    Join a health club, work out three times a week with weights, lifting until muscle failure, take general supplements daily, and you can be like me, Steve!

    Steve? Steve?

    Blimey! He buggered off!

    Anyway… seriously, get a physical life. It’s highly likely to inform your literary life.

    Stomp into oblivion with intention, don’t rot into it, while whining.

    We are on earth for a limited time, then it’s infinity for us all. Be pathetic AFTER you die, I say!!

    • Replies: @Buzz Mohawk
    , @Anonymous
    , @Anon
  163. @James B. Shearer

    You make some good points. And I’m still not reading a fraud who feigns innumeracy – except to mock him.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  164. @Hail

    If / when we have a recession / stock
    market crash then Trump , to maintain popularity , will focus on no wars , the culture wars , defunding leftist universities , immigration control
    Trump is going to get a lot of credit from
    His base over defunding Samantha Power , media money laundering ; making vulnerable S African farmers refugee eligible is also smart and boosts his bases’s morale and undermines leftist narrative

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  165. Mike Tre says:
    @Dmon

    “A record 16 out of 100 Navy women are reassigned from ships to shore duty due to pregnancy, according to data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act by The Daily Caller News Foundation’s Investigative Group. ”

    And I would speculate that the number of pregnancies resulting from infidelity is at least 50%. The men who get caught doing this lose rank and usually their career; the women get lifetime benefits for the kid.

    • Replies: @Dmon
  166. @Achmed E. Newman

    Greetings, Achmed!

    the page would not settle down. Anyone else have that problem, or do I need to clean up this device?

    I just checked. No problems here.
    All 606 comments load right up.
    (Debian for the win.)

    You could try a different browser.
    (Especially one that doesn’t have six million tabs open.)
    That would probably help.

    Cheers!

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman
  167. @Hail

    Wokeness in the military has been going on for a long time. Colin Powell was a pretty good guy, but being (sorta) black was a huge leg up for him in getting to be Chairman of the JCS.

  168. @Achmed E. Newman

    ‘Because they are held to lower standards, women take the good positions and promotions that would otherwise go to men. How many American men do not join the US military because they’d rather be warriors than be part of the big social experiment that the armed forces are now?’

    There’s also the perfectly respectable motive that boys join the military because they want to demonstrate their manhood. Hey: at 66 it’s not a major regret of my life, but I wouldn’t mind being able to say I’d done four years in the Marines back in the day.

    So that’s all good (or mostly, anyway). But the motive is kind of eroded if girls are doing it too. It would be like joining the swim team to demonstrate your manhood. Nothing wrong with that either, but there goes the incentive.

    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
    , @kaganovitch
  169. muggles says:
    @Corvinus

    this guy, who just got reinstated, is one of two temporary appointees at Treasury connected to DOGE who was granted access to a highly sensitive Treasury system that processes trillions of dollars in payments every year.

    Just to comment on one of Corvey’s many off points, this “concern” is pure BS.

    Plenty of people have access to this “highly sensitive” system. The fact that the Elon guys aren’t on the federal payroll means nothing. If something goes missing, you can bet they would be the first ones investigated.

    This hue and cry is bogus.

    I’m speaking as someone who for professional reasons related to my job, had my personal info with the IRS hacked about ten years ago. This was from a supposedly secure special IRS website used by tax professionals. So, every year the IRS sends me and wife a letter with a new PIN number we have to use on our tax filings.

    A few volunteer auditors recruited by Elon isn’t going to be any special problem.

    The US Treasury/IRS payments system is a separate system Access to that hasn’t been granted and has never been hacked to my knowledge. That is the system banks and tax payment processers use.

    The IRS has already had several “political” tax return disclosure breaches in recent years.

    Various leftwing media targets have had their personal tax return data leaked by IRS personnel. So far none have been prosecuted, and the legacy media has gone unpunished for disclosing this illegally leaked personal data.

    Now, of course, these same medias outlets echo the laments of government bureaucrat drones who may be losing their jobs. This “privacy” concern is pure hypocrisy.

  170. Not Raul says:
    @Steve Sailer

    Will you have any events in Northern California this year?

    • Replies: @Steve Sailer
  171. @anonymous

    ‘…People like you all would probably be happier in an Islamic culture where you could keep women enslaved, rather than a Western Christian country, especially America, where women have worked side by side with their men to conquer the land and create this country.’

    Sounds good. Not particularly accurate, but hey.

    It sounds good.

  172. Not Raul says:
    @muggles

    Plenty of people have access to this “highly sensitive” system. The fact that the Elon guys aren’t on the federal payroll means nothing. If something goes missing, you can bet they would be the first ones investigated.

    By whom? The investigators are being pushed out.

  173. @anonymous

    Good on you, man, for calling out Steve for one if his many, stupid oversimplifications.

    He writes that he’d assumed that “…most of my readers were old fogeys my age who’d soon be dropping dead…”

    Well, I take that as an insult. It’s a weird one, because Steve is insulting himself. Maybe it’s just a, cough, ahem, “literary” statement. Maybe he feels that he must cater to his imagined, younger fans. (After all, he has, for apparently the first time in his life!) experienced what we in my college generation labeled “college Republicans.”

    Yes, Steve was surprised to meet boys in khakis and their gurls at his book signings. (Those signings carefully arranged by his Jewish handler.)

    That’s fine. But, you hit a nail on the head when you “Noticed” how Steve threw me and himself under the bus as “fogeys… who’d soon be dropping dead…”

    He is a whore. He will sell out his own generation. I have news for Steve: I am healthier than you, Mr. Sailer. I am better looking than you. I am much, much better spoken than you, as proven by my television, radio, voiceover and writing CAREER in Colorado! I never have had the pathetic health problems that you have had. (So much for your “HBD” superiority! I am superior to you, genetically!)

    I am one year behind Steve in age, and I am much more like you, dear commenter: very active, strong and healthy. My father died at the age of 85 — 20 full years beyond where Steve and I are now — and he chain-smoked and drank Scotch every day, like many American MEN! of his generation.

    Steve, quite frankly, is a pussy. Yes, he is what boys of my genration would call a pussy. He hides behind his shit, including his tacit approval of the powers that be. He thinks he is popular, when the latest chef I watch on YouTube has ten times as many subscribers.

    For Valentines Day, I will cook three recipes that I recently learned from that chef, he of 700,000 subscribers — ten times as many as Steve.

  174. Anonymous[366] • Disclaimer says:
    @anonymous

    Join a health club, work out three times a week with weights, lifting until muscle failure, take general supplements daily, and you can be like me, Steve!

    I know a 71-year old guy he can aspire to be as jacked as.

    • Replies: @Mike Tre
  175. Thomm says:

    Meh.

    Steve went to a highly ranked MBA program, graduating over 42 years ago. This was long before there was an MBA glut, and MBAs from highly-ranked institutions were fast-tracked to lucrative positions.

    Now, nearly half a century later, to have just 7000 Substack subscribers (out of which maybe 2% pay) is underwhelming, especially considering that this has been his full-time occupation for over a decade. If all the male classmates of Steve’s UCLA MBA call were ranked on success, Steve might be at or near the bottom.

    Richard Hanania has 30,000 Substack subscribers.
    Noah Smith has 328,000 Substack subscribers.

    • Replies: @Steve Sailer
  176. J.Ross says:

    OT — Somehow I missed this, we’ve been so focused on all the recent winning that this didn’t come up on right wing radio or the internet, it’s a week old, but it’s delicious: by way of Second City Cop Blog, The Beerick Obongo Presidential Library for Violent Teenagers Who Can’t Read Good is literally falling apart. Extensive cracks in brand new concrete.
    It’s like pottery.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/obama-library-behind-schedule-over-budget-and-mired-in-lawsuits/ar-AA1ycbNx

    • Thanks: Mike Tre
    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  177. J.Ross says:
    @Houston 1992

    There is only one way out of inflation and Reagan/Volcker proved it hurts but it works.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  178. Anonymous[184] • Disclaimer says:
    @Steve Sailer

    Steven Ernest Sailer
    born December 20, 1958 (age 66)

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Sailer

    Memento mori

    Age at death

    Enrico Fermi 53
    John von Neumann 53
    G.K. Chesterton 62
    Christopher Hitchens 62
    Evelyn Waugh 62
    Bob Ross 52
    Vince Lombardi 57
    Pierre de Fermat 57
    Steve McQueen 50
    Rene Descartes 53
    Blaise Pascal 39
    Ludwig Wittgenstein 62
    Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 61
    Saint Thomas Aquinas 49
    Dorothy Sayers 64
    C.S. Lewis 64
    James Gandolfini 51
    Steve Jobs 56
    Frank Zappa 52
    Bernhard Riemann 39
    Joseph Fourier 62
    Abraham Lincoln 56
    Patrick Swayze 57
    Benito Mussolini 61
    Adolf Hitler 56
    Jane Austen 41
    Charles Dickens 58
    Fyodor Dostoyevsky 59
    Nathaniel Hawthorne 59
    William Shakespeare 51 or 52
    Ernie Pyle 44
    George Eliot 61
    J. Robert Oppenheimer 62
    Wolfgang Pauli 58
    Edgar Allan Poe 40
    John Gotti 61
    Al Capone 48
    Louisa May Alcott 55
    F. Scott Fitzgerald 44
    Edna St. Vincent Millay 58
    Henry David Thoreau 44
    Friedrich Nietzsche 55
    Ernest Hemingway 61
    George Orwell 46
    James Fenimore Cooper 61
    Kate Chopin 53
    Emily Dickinson 55
    Jerry Garcia 53
    Babe Ruth 53
    Humphrey Bogart 57
    O. Henry 47
    Jack London 40
    William Faulkner 64
    Margaret Mitchell 48
    Flannery O’Connor 39
    Aristotle 61 or 62

  179. Steve, I wish you the best of luck at Substack. You deserve so much better than the troglodyte trolls on Unz. They are unworthy of you. Scraping the bottom of the IQ barrel to spit the same predictable responses and hate you for daring not to hold their own particular party line.

    • Replies: @JMcG
    , @Mike Tre
  180. tomv says:
    @Corvinus

    Not according to one of my friends whom you signed their book.

    What a grammatical wreck. Just as bad posts replace good posts, bad commenters drive out good commenters. C’est la vie.

  181. WDCB.org’s Juke Box Saturday Night for today features Vol. 2 of Glen Miller’s 1940 band, if anyone’s interested.

    Availible on their twi-week archive.
    https://wdcb.org/archive

  182. mc23 says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    The Palestinians have never, since the destruction of Judea, ever had a collective identity, always a collective of fiefdoms and city states. Those who have claimed leadership have been murderous incompetent. In the 1940’s before the destruction of Palestine they out numbered the Zionists 2-1 but were incapable of organization. If one tenth of them had taken up arms in combination with the outside Arab armies the forces of newly formed Jewish state would have been seriously outnumbered instead of enjoying a slight numerical superiority. In defeat they now seek destruction and victory instead of some sort of citizenship or partner status. As is said “Where there is no vision, the people perish…”

    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
  183. @Mike Tre

    Speaking of deranged women, Rosie has indeed returned to UNZ,

  184. @Je Suis Omar Mateen

    Look, guys, the both of ya’. It’s an asteroid, not a comet, so don’t anyone get his panties in a wad. And that’s a big difference, like the difference between Covid-19 and the flu, kinda … so …

    • Replies: @Je Suis Omar Mateen
  185. Mr. Anon says:
    @Reg Cæsar

    But ethnically, she was very distant from them. Something else was at work.

    Nonsense. She wasn’t “very” different from them. She was somewhat different from them. But still substantially similar in ethnic background. “Ethnic Group” is a perfectly good term to describe them. And they certainly – as a group – tend to act that way.

  186. Mr. Anon says:
    @YetAnotherAnon

    Tunguska was an amazing stroke of fortune, except for the very few underneath it. It hit land so no tsunami, it mostly burned so no quakes, and chose one of the remotest places on earth.

    The Tunguska event is now thought to have been caused by a stony asteroid. It disintegrated in the atmosphere, and the total kinetic energy of the bolide was somewhere in the range of tens of MT’s of TNT equivalent, distributed over a long track. The effect on the ground was something like a 10 MT H-bomb.

  187. Corvinus says:
    @ScarletNumber

    No matter how hard you try, you’re still a Gamma, whether it be here or in the eyes of Vox Day. You try way too hard to go above your natural station in life. Go grade your math papers for your seventh grade Rugrats.

    • Agree: Achmed E. Newman
    • Troll: ScarletNumber
    • Replies: @Curle
  188. @Achmed E. Newman

    Lol. Asteroid, hemorrhoid, intergalactic buttplug, I don’t care! By the way, $cience’s $acred model$ (TM) suggest we’re now at a whomping 2.2% odds of impact, so 11X or a full order of magnitude more deadly than ‘covid’.

    • Replies: @Corpse Tooth
    , @kaganovitch
  189. Substack subscriptions would make more sense at $2/mo per subscription. If I subscribe for paywall with 10 writers, which I could easily double, that would cost me $600 – $1200/yr. I can’t afford that.

    • Replies: @Steve Sailer
  190. Corvinus says:
    @muggles

    “Plenty of people have access to this “highly sensitive” system.”

    So why Musk and his Incel Insane Posse? A billionaire with an axe to grind. Dude, don’t be a shill.

    “The fact that the Elon guys aren’t on the federal payroll means nothing”

    It means everything. I thought you were opposed to the gummint invading your privacy.

    “I’m speaking as someone who for professional reasons related to my job, had my personal info with the IRS hacked about ten years ago.”

    Sure you did.

  191. Corvinus says:
    @Mike Tre

    Dude, she is your ex-wife. I get that she took you to the cleaners, but, after all, you did go to the pokey for attempting to put her in her place. One too many Andy Anglo articles you read gone too far.

  192. Mactoul says:
    @Corvinus

    What particularly obnoxious thing he wrote that made him unfit for civilized company?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  193. @Corvinus

    Not according to one of my friends whom (sic) you signed their book.

    Sure.

    As if you have any “friends.”

  194. @ScarletNumber

    Nice English, stupid

    I wonder if USAID supplements his SSI disability payment? (Mental disorder).

    • Agree: ScarletNumber
  195. Curle says:
    @Corvinus

    You try way too hard to go above your natural station in life.

    Says the clown who makes a spectacle of this anmbition each and every day.

    • Agree: ScarletNumber
    • Replies: @res
  196. Mark G. says:

    The Democrats used to be the party of the average person. That is no longer the case. In the last election they won the majority of the vote among voters who make over a hundred thousand dollars a year while losing the majority of voters who make less than that.

    Democrat John Fetterman was asked what the Democrats can do to win these voters back so the Democrats can win next time. His response was that Democrats need to stop calling average people names like “fascist” and stop talking down to people and scolding them. This sounds like good advice to me. There is likely to be a intraparty struggle between the more sensible types and the more insane Woke leftists to get control of the Democrat party.

    • Replies: @epebble
    , @J.Ross
  197. J.Ross says:

    OT — Winning — So much Winning — Also — Smith-Mundt — It’s all coming together — It’s all happening at once.

  198. epebble says:

    This

    Pretendian-American-Canadian has just had her comeuppance. Running away from ‘White’ may be dangerous.

  199. @Greta Handel

    “I keep seeing allusions to Mr. Sailer moving again, a fresh start on another platform. Deciding to appear at the Berkeley Castle and likewise joining the Diffident Right [sic] in shying away from topics like palestine [sic] might be seen from a marketing perspective as great ways to reset the brand.”

    There is no “palestine.”

    • Troll: Gordo
  200. @Corvinus

    Our side has young White men, which means your side is COOKED.

    The Old Establishment is mortally wounded. It used to have White men, somewhat cuckish but still effective.

    White men are better, stronger, faster – and now we are building loyalty to one another. You guys can’t compete.

    Bill Gates may be among the most effective of the remaining Old Establishment type. Look at him – kissing up to bulldykes like Kara Swisher and prostrating himself before Hillary Clinton! Both of his daughters have gone to non-White men.

    So much, for the Glory of the Old Establishment.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  201. epebble says:
    @Mark G.

    My suggestion to Democrats is to keep their mouth shut for two years. A magic will happen. Untrammeled (by Congress) DOGE will bite someone on the butt. Really hard. Like some crucial checks to some ‘privileged’ people might not be cut. Then the Democrats may ‘win’ by default. Not much of a strategy, but better than them opening their mouth. Some possible ‘opportunities’ for them: Tariff chaos may bring Stagflation. Debt limit extension infighting may lead to government shutdown or even rating lowering if some crucial payments get delayed. Tax cuts may lead to long bond collapse. Democrats are not out of luck.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  202. I’d prefer longform/shortform posts/essays where you freestyle without fear or favour but with an always provocative bent against the world.

    You’ve earned the right, haven’t you?

    Surely by now you’re all squared away to live comfortably on into alzheimers and don’t have to feed your family by appeasing Unz, or your commentariat?

    Or are you like Salvatore “Pussy” Bonpensiero and in too deep to be your true self without engaging homicidal maniacs to wreak their revenge?

    Steve, these are your best years: you’re at the peak of your game – writing.

    From 70 onwards it’s all down hill even if you’re lifting weights and doing methyl blue, horse tranq and exchanging your blood with 5 day old calves. It’s all over at 70, mate.

    Between here and then you are at the peak of your powers and what you MUST do is outpour the best of you into unmitigated freeform floods of your pent up brain to benefit the White races.

    You owe it to yourself.

  203. Ralph L says:
    @Wj

    A dozen or so male US pilots were shot down/ejected, captured, and raped during Desert Storm.

    • Replies: @Old Prude
    , @YetAnotherAnon
  204. Hail says: • Website
    @res

    comparing and contrasting the philosophies of Substack and The Unz Review

    It’s hard to say what The Unz Review is today.

    The Unz Review model is admirable — without reference to anything political — in that it harkens back to the “open Internet” era, I’d say. There is no direct mechanism of money-flow from consumers to producers going on here. Ron Unz has means, I don’t know how much money, but the website has been a personal project of his. On the other hand, he has probably not been the best possible editor of his own site. There are some serious problems that I won’t touch on at risk of making this comment too long.

    (Here in the mid-2020s, it should be remembered that Steve Sailer was a homeless, independent blogger whom no one would host, back in the early 2010s. (“Homeless” in the Internet sense; he had a mighty-fine closet all along.) I believe it was June 2014 that he moved to Unz.com. It’s possible his entire corpus might have been deleted from the Internet within a few years without Unz, in the era of perma-bannings for Racism.)

    Substack is a big business, and was born really in the mature-Internet era.

    If contrasting is the name of your game to which I’ve stepped in, remember this: Substack is very much a product of the Corona-Panic era. They say it was founded a few years before, but I think it was really winter 2020-21 where you really saw any kind of momentum begin.

    No one had heard of Zoom or Substack before the announcement that a terror-virus would probably kill hundreds of millions. without the introduction of a newly discovered set of sacred doctrines including cloth masks, social-distancing stickers on the floor, and Holy Lockdowns.

    (If you use the Unz-search function, you can confirm that Steve Sailer himself began using the word “Substack” in his writings regularly only in Feb/March 2021, and the first-ever use was on Aug. 31, 2020; the earliest appearances of the term from Sailer-commenters were a small handful in summer 2019; the ‘site’ may not have gone anywhere without the Corona-Panic.)

    (As you note, res, it’s a shame that Substack and Steve-Sailer-dot-net are so much less searchable than the Unz archives. “When did Steve Sailer first use the term/phrase xyz” will be much harder for items after mid-2024.)

    Substack, Ithink, has much less of the idealism that The Unz Review has had at its best. Substack came onto the scene with a veneer of idealism (along with the energy of the Corona-Panic era, Lockdowns will save souls). Substack doesn’t really deliver on the idealism front, and instead you get a series of walled gardens to which you need to pay bribes to guards to get in.

    Substack’s commenting system, I think, TENDS to discourages thoughtful comments and reward quick one-liner zingers. Another big impact on the commenting system, however, is baked deep into the entire Substack system, which as I say functions more like a social-media feed than the Unz Review ever did. There is a frenzy of activity to the newest posts and old ones are dropped away to levels apparently near-zero activity. Substack adopts the model of frenzied-activity as a goal. This is really “problematic,” because it tends to incentivize activity over quality, and is at the heart of the social-media-ization I mentioned.

    As for commenters and the value of a discussion-community. The Unz Review has paid the price for its openness. There is a huge amount of chaff here, outside the high-ground held by the hearty Sailer-commentariat.

    Or, rather, I should say “what remains of that Sailer-commentariat.” The great man himself has mostly abandoned his own decade-long home. (None except the loyalist-commenter Mr. J. I. Errican and one or two others, even noted the 10-year anniversary of the move-over, in mid-2024).

    Now we see many of the loyalists paranoid; some are seen hectically moving about hiding the family silver. The market-square continues to overflow with rumors: the great man, it is said, is plotting how best to order and carry out a St. Bartholomew’s Night-style massacre of the remaining commenters.

    • Thanks: res, Sam Malone
    • Replies: @res
  205. @Greta Handel

    Which is why you’ve gone stale here.

    I never could figure out if Steve was trying to align with conventional wisdom because that’s who he authentically is, or if it was a calculated marketing strategy to broaden his appeal. I still don’t know. Maybe Steve doesn’t even know.

    But I always thought he was making a marketing mistake anyway. You can watch cable news for the conventional wisdom. People on the internet like to explore controversial issues and hear strong, logical analysis of contrarian points of view. That’s why Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson are huge. My (admittedly non-expert) business advice would have been to lean into his old “dissident” reputation to generate a bigger following among people who were hungry for that stuff on other platforms.

    But for his whole “coming out” campaign, Steve instead went the opposite direction by avoiding any whiff of controversy, sticking to narrow issues, and adopting this whole persona of: “Aw shucks, I’m just a conventional guy who notices raw facts. I don’t have theories or opinions, I am just a neutral observer. Anyone who claims I was ever not mainstream is simply confused.”

    To my mind, he was basically doing everything possible to make himself less interesting. He once had a dedicated fan base that liked him precisely because they thought he was a smart contrarian. But he’s currently traded that brand in for a slightly larger but much less dedicated fan base. Hopefully that will work for him long term. But wide and shallow support has its own problems.

    Steve should have been an intellectual hero and leader in the whole “Vibeshift” heralded by Trump’s win. But he’s basically always been passive-aggressively anti-Trump and pro-Deep State (and gave up his anti-immigration stance a long time ago). So he’s just on the sidelines “noticing” events. Oh well, at least he’s hedged his bets for when the pendulum swings back to the Left someday and he can “notice” that, too.

    • Replies: @Hail
  206. Travis says:
    @AnotherDad

    Exactly. The White population in America has already collapsed since peaking in 1990, especially among the age cohort which matters most, whites under the age of 40

    In 1990 we had 120 million Whites under the age of 40. Today just 80 million whites under 40. The fertile white population has declined almost 40% in 35 years.

    Only Fertile whites females can have white babies. Today we have less than 40 million fertile white females, which will decline to 35 million by 2030. Back in 2010 ~2 million whites were born, this fell to ~1.8 million in 2019 and last year fell below 1.7 million white births.

    White fertility would need to increase to 3.2 to stabilize our population. A fertility rate if 2.1 would still result in a declining white population, since the median age of white females today is 49 years-old, thus we cannot expect 40 million fertile whites to maintain the current white population of 188 million unless they each have 3+ children before reaching 42 years—old.

  207. Hail says: • Website
    @J.Ross

    established search engines deliberately making search not work

    Since 2020, I’ve sometimes found the Unz-search function of more use than Google, on specific info for specific things.

    My own little website, HailToYou.wordpress.com, has often been effectively ghosted by Google. New posts would not appear. Direct searches would yield websites that mentioned Hail To You but not the website itself. Whatever paltry results did come up, most of the website had evidently been delisted. Weird results like the teaser-archives of June 2014 would come up but URLs of posts would not appear in Google-results at all.

    Yandex and others did a better job, but Google still has, as far as I know, near-monopoly-style power. Then you had the real heavy-hitters of the New Internet era, Youtube, Twitter, and others such as that, who would punish any use of links and often specifically ‘disappear’ links to Hail To You (I have been told), esp during the Corona-Panic era.

    Using LLMs to search for info about Hail To You has yielded the usual boilerplate: well-crafted astrology that seems plausible, but is never really specific and often not useful (informational “fool’s gold”). I don’t know how much the brownlisting(s)/blacklisting(s) of my site have affected the “training” the LLMs (“AI”) were getting in the late 2010s and early 2020s, since Hail To You was hit with these problems around late 2017.

    • Agree: J.Ross
  208. Mark G. says:
    @Bumpkin

    HBD writer Steve has not been as good on Covid and the Ukraine as he might have but a number of writers who have been good on these subjects pretty much ignore HBD. It has long been an observation concerning many libertarians that they do not take into account racial differences when formulating policy on a topic like immigration.

    HBD writer Charles Murray has been much like Steve on Covid and the Ukraine. HBD writer John Derbyshire has been somewhat better. He has written there is no reason for the U.S. to be involved in the Ukraine and no reason for us to be in NATO either. He also criticized the Chinese zero Covid policy, saying the harsh lockdowns caused too much economic destruction and prevented natural immunity from developing among the population from getting the disease.

    Writers like Steve Sailer and Charles Murray are still worth reading on HBD. Leftists dislike them and they are certainly on the political right and not on the left.

    • Agree: YetAnotherAnon
    • Replies: @Pat Hannagan
    , @Bumpkin
  209. @Mark G.

    Sailer’s HBD is only to formulate a plausible account for why Jews are disproportionately represented in powerful groups of government or government linked crime syndicates: it’s because they’re smarter than you.

    It’s HBD.

    QED.

  210. @Evan drince

    Sure, but I appeal most to higher brow readers who typically can afford to pay a lot.

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
    , @Corvinus
  211. @Thomm

    (out of which maybe 2% pay)

    LOL

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
    , @Thomm
  212. @Not Raul

    Does anybody want to pay me to go to Northern California to speak? There’s lots of money in Northern California, so it hardly seems impossible that somebody can scrape together a reasonable fee.

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
    , @Corvinus
  213. @Nicholas Stix

    Deflective flak, or did you just want to see this gem one last time?

    Nicholas Stix (December 18, 2014):

    I can’t respond to all your charges against the Irgun, but if they drove the Arabs (the term “Palestinians” had yet to be invented) out of Israel, I say, more power to them!

  214. I’ve enjoyed reading Steve’s work but no way am I going to pay, just to read one man, an amount of money that gets me a subscription to an entire magazine or newspaper’s worth of writers. Or better yet, money that’ll buy me about ten books on Kindle.

    • Replies: @Hail
    , @Moshe Def
  215. @Steve Sailer

    Does anybody want to pay me to go to Northern California to speak?

    You still haven’t Noticed that this depends on what you’ll say and skirt?

  216. @Colin Wright

    Thanks for the link. Note the year: 1899. In 1899, there was a Palestine, but it was renamed Israel. When people speak of “palestine” today, they mean “Israel,” as in the nation, all of whose Jews they intend on driving into the sea, and giving it to the arab nazis.

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
    , @Art Deco
  217. Hail says: • Website
    @International Jew

    It seems a two-tiered (or more-tiered) subscription system would be in order:

    – Tier 0: Access to half the Sailer-Substack material but not to the “paywalled” material.

    – Tier 1: Low annual fee, for access to all the paywalled material but NO other benefits.

    – Tier 2: Higher annual fee, for access to all the paywalled material AND other benefits. But also, implicitly, to accommodate those who want to be real Sailer-patrons, in lieu of the old-tyme Sailer Fundraising Drives.

    (We recall that Passage Press published two versions of the Noticing book, one “patrician edition” whic hwas overly expensive, and one of normal expense for a new book.)

    Another idea, for the sake of the balance of the universe: a time-delay mechanism that makes all the Sailer-paywall material flip to “open to the public” (Tier 0) after a certain number of days, say, 30 days and therefore also Googleable and so forth.

    Another idea, with a mind to Sailer-corpus completeness and archive-searchability: a problem with Substack, as res mentioned in a comment up there somewhere, is it’s hard to search for back-material with any kind of precision. Another mechanism by which there is long-time-delayed reposting (archiving) to an off-site area, especially one running on the Unz software for searchability and no b.s., would be ideal.

  218. @Nicholas Stix

    And do those who speak of “Israel” intend what you call for in #215 (subject to Whim)?

    Your “drive” jive is pretty revealing, too.

    • Agree: Colin Wright
  219. Anon[169] • Disclaimer says:
    @anonymous

    So you’re that a-hole waking me up with their f’ing motorcycle.

  220. Old Prude says:
    @Ralph L

    “captured and raped”

    Typical Arab behavior. This is why there won’t ever be peace in Gaza unless the Palestinians are pushed into the sea or dispersed amongst their fellow Arab savages.

    P.S. Not a Jew.

    • Replies: @newrouter
  221. @Steve Sailer

    Is that “higher brow” a natural trait or nurtured?

  222. @mc23

    Here is an excellent article (https://freebeacon.com/israel/the-historical-case-for-trumps-riviera/) on DJT’s plan for Gaza.

    An excerpt: …peoples who unleash unprovoked aggressive wars against their neighbors and are then defeated—as the Gazans have been on any conceivable metric—lose either their government or their sovereignty, or both.

    tl;dr: Start a war, lose a war, you don’t get to go back to square one and try again.

    • Replies: @YetAnotherAnon
  223. Corvinus says:
    @Steve Sailer

    “ higher brow readers”

    Code for sycophants.

    Speaking of higher BROs, aka the Incel Clown Posse, what are your thoughts?

    https://gizmodo.com/elon-musks-doge-running-highly-sensitive-government-data-through-ai-report-2000560381

  224. Mike Tre says:
    @Anonymous

    TRT being an obvious factor in RFK’s physical wellness. But remember boomers, testosterone is eeevil! RFK will probably die of roid rage any minute!!! Better to have soft bones and man boobs and a prostate the size of a grapefruit and take you statins!

  225. Mike Tre says:
    @For what it's worth

    I’ve got a trailer hitch that has a little bit chrome left on it. Would you be able to help me out with that?

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman
    • LOL: JMcG
    • Replies: @For what it's worth
  226. J.Ross says:
    @Mark G.

    Last time this happened (all of this has happened before and all of this will happen again), Terry MacAuliffe and Bill Clinton won big, by letting George HW Bush be the adult equivalent of a smart but disconnected nerd who can’t read a room, and by pretending to be basically the same thing as a Republican anyway. The left went nuts but nobody cared because at that time we were sane.

  227. Corvinus says:
    @Mactoul

    “What particularly obnoxious thing he wrote that made him unfit for civilized company?”

    You mean patently vile words unbecoming of a Christian such as yourself.

    “You could not pay me to marry outside of my ethnicity” was a direct shot at JD Vance and his hot piece of ass Indian (dot, not feather). Then Bsnce cucked, essentially saying it’s “no big deal”, rather than punch his square in the jaw to defend the honor of his family.

    Again, speech has consequences.

    John Derbyshire, champion of whites who pens on this fine opinion webzine, is married to a Chinese women. Is he a traitor to his ethnicity and race?

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
    , @Mactoul
  228. @Steve Sailer

    Ha, a while ago someone speculated on your earnings based on the P.S. rate being 100%, and you also LOLed. (You think money’s funny?) So, it’s somewhere between 2% and 100%. Now we’re making progress!

    Anyway, for your sake I hope it is a number like 20% or higher.

  229. @Old Prude

    ” engaging in a perverted form of narcisstic bullying”

    Amazingly a cis-female Guardian columnist has come out in favour of women not having to get changed in front of female impersonators.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/feb/09/no-woman-should-be-forced-to-change-her-clothes-in-front-of-a-trans-colleague

    Despite the law of the land enshrining that commonsense insight – that employers are obliged to provide separate changing facilities for their male and female employees – female staff working for this Scottish health board have been expected to share changing rooms with a male doctor who identifies as female. One nurse, Sandie Peggie, has brought an employment tribunal claim for harassment, sex discrimination and victimisation against the board, following her suspension after she raised concerns.

    Peggie shared her account of what happened with the tribunal last week. She initially talked to her line manager on a couple of occasions, including after Dr Beth Upton, the male doctor in question, walked into the room while she was partially undressed. Her manager said she passed on the nurse’s concerns but didn’t get anywhere; Peggie said that if she were put in that position again, she would need to address it with Upton. This is what happened a few months later, when she found herself needing to use the changing room after heavy menstrual bleeding.

    Peggie says she told Upton she felt embarrassed and intimidated; but the doctor claimed as much right to be there as she did. Peggie says she raised her previous experiences of sexual assault to try to engender understanding, and mentioned a recent case when a male prisoner had been put in a female prison. She described how she was “shaking with distress”. After this encounter, Upton put in a formal complaint, and Peggie was suspended for bullying and harassment.

    “when a doctor does go wrong he is the first of criminals. He has nerve and he has knowledge”

    As Steve has noticed before, many M->F trans are successful, combative types.

    A senior consultant sent an email to the whole department giving a one-sided account of what happened, to Peggie’s detriment, a few days afterwards. It transpired that Upton – who clearly took strong offence at two previous incidents when Peggie left the changing room after entering to find the doctor there – later made other potentially career-ending allegations in relation to Peggie and patient safety, which her lawyer has suggested, together with the complaint of bullying, are unfounded.

    See what I mean?

    And, of course, absolutely no one at her hospital wants to be the hateful transphobe who puts their head above the parapet to defend this poor nurse. Funny, it looks as if the last 20 years of what-would-you-do Holocaust education has been wasted.

    But there’s a little light in the sky, and amazingly it’s called Donald J Trump.

    There is a cautionary tale from across the Atlantic, where Democrats’ stubborn and unpopular defence of men’s rights to self-identify into women’s sport has dropped the unlikeliest of moral victories into President Donald Trump’s lap, allowing a man accused of serious sexual assault to somehow position himself as a defender of women’s rights. Abandoning basic common sense for unpopular policies that put women at risk does not go well for the left.

    • Replies: @Mike Tre
  230. @Corvinus

    John Derbyshire, champion of whites who pens on this fine opinion webzine

    Not anymore, apparently.

    So why is the Diffident Right packing up and out?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  231. I’ve no interest in subscribing to a Substack, for various reasons.

    Blogs like this have probably served their purpose anyway. With Trump at the helm, the time for complaining online is over, it’s time for real-world demolition of the leftist hegemony.

  232. @J.Ross

    We don’t have the kind of country that would buckle down and deal with it, as Jimmy Carter, Reagan (well, the results), and Mr. Volcker did anymore.

    That aside though, that is no longer a viable solution, Mr. Ross. Were the interest rates let or set to rise to even 10%, the interest on the $36,000,000,000,000 debt would be that easy to calculate $3.6 Trillion, about 75% roughly of the amount of income tax taken in.

    No, even if collected, which is not so much the point, tariffs can’t pull in a low fraction of the income tax confiscated errr, collected annually.

    Well, as per the old Allman Brothers’ song, there is still One Way Out, high and maybe hyper- inflation.

    • Replies: @Anon
  233. @Ralph L

    “captured, and raped during Desert Storm”

    Didn’t something similar happen to T.E. Lawrence in WW1 ?

    My impression is that a fair few Muslim guys have the same beliefs as US prison gangs – “it’s not gay if you’re the active participant“.

    • Replies: @Wielgus
  234. @Jim Don Bob

    ” Start a war, lose a war, you don’t get to go back to square one and try again.”

    1920 Germany would like to disagree with you.

    • Replies: @Art Deco
  235. Moshe Def says:
    @Greta Handel

    He’s basically a lazy Jack-D

  236. Moshe Def says:
    @International Jew

    It is basically just making fun of black people and talking sports in a high-brow way

  237. res says:
    @Curle

    Corvinus’s projection has been going off the charts lately.

    • Agree: J.Ross, ScarletNumber, Curle
    • LOL: Corvinus
  238. Corvinus says:
    @Loyalty is The First Law of Morality

    “Our side has young White men, which means your side is COOKED.”

    My side is with white people make their own decisions about race and culture.

    “It used to have White men, somewhat cuckish but still effective.”

    You mean like Marco Rubio and JD Vance.

    “White men are better, stronger, faster – and now we are building loyalty to one another.”

    You have few whites who are of the same mindset in adhering to absolute racial fealty.

    This is why you act like an alpha but are a gamma male.

  239. Corvinus says:
    @Steve Sailer

    Doesn’t your publisher know Peter Theil? Have him bankroll your barnstorming tour of Stockton and Eureka.

    Then, when Trump orders the U.S. to take over Gaza, you can headline at one of the posh resorts—it will take a couple of years to build, but you’ve got time. You will never have to think of remodeling closets or buying dog food ever again.

    • Replies: @Je Suis Omar Mateen
  240. Anon[323] • Disclaimer says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Only a Fool Would Say That

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  241. Corvinus says:
    @ScarletNumber

    Big talk from someone who routinely presses the troll button rather than engage in discourse.

    Do you tell your black middle school math kids that you are a race realist? Or is that something you hide from them? Better yet, do you create story problems that cagily display white superiority?

    • Troll: ScarletNumber
  242. res says:
    @Hail

    Thanks! That was full of insights.

    One thing I do need to note though. From 5/24/24.

    (None except the loyalist-commenter Mr. J. I. Errican and one or two others, even noted the 10-year anniversary of the move-over, in mid-2024).

    https://www.unz.com/isteve/video-of-my-speech-what-if-i-am-right/#comment-6580352

    AFAICT Steve started posting here in November 2013 at unz.com/ssailer

    I don’t think he fully migrated to here until June 2014 at unz.com/isteve
    Here are two of his welcome posts noting the move.
    https://www.unz.com/isteve/welcome-to-isteve-on-the-unz-review/
    https://www.unz.com/isteve/welcome-to-isteve-on-the-unz-review-2/

    Hey. That means Steve’s 10th anniversary here (for the full move dating from the welcome posts) is imminent. Cool.

    One more thing regarding this.

    Substack’s commenting system, I think, TENDS to discourages thoughtful comments and reward quick one-liner zingers. Another big impact on the commenting system, however, is baked deep into the entire Substack system, which as I say functions more like a social-media feed than the Unz Review ever did. There is a frenzy of activity to the newest posts and old ones are dropped away to levels apparently near-zero activity. Substack adopts the model of frenzied-activity as a goal. This is really “problematic,” because it tends to incentivize activity over quality, and is at the heart of the social-media-ization I mentioned.

    I agree with you, but I can’t put my finger on exactly why this is so (both points). What differences in the environment (commenting system, overseer, bloggers, etc.) cause the behavioral differences?

    P.S. Reviewing how this played out, I wonder if Ron and Steve had a ten year contract?

    P.P.S. My big questions concern who/what is driving Substack and why have they not been deplatformed? For example, have they been nerfed in Google search like TUR has? That makes me nervous about trusting the anonymity of comments there.

    • Replies: @Hail
    , @Hail
  243. @Colin Wright

    There’s also the perfectly respectable motive that boys join the military because they want to demonstrate their manhood.

    Right. And the same thing is true of some other occupations, like firefighters. We run into burning buildings, we’re tough guys.

    Then women come in and complain about this tough guy attitude that is the workplace calling it “toxic masculinity” (wtf that is), run to HR the first time some guy looks at them sideways, and then get out of the fire house into “management” as fast as they can. That’s how LA ended up with three lesbians in the top FD jobs.

    We had a tree fort when we were kids with a sign on the door saying, “No girls allowed”, and for good reason.

    • Agree: Achmed E. Newman
    • Replies: @Colin Wright
  244. Art Deco says:
    @Nicholas Stix

    There wasn’t a “Palestine” in 1899. There was a set of Ottoman subprefectures which were assembled 21 years later and called the ‘Mandate of Palestine’.

    • Replies: @epebble
    , @Mr. Anon
  245. MEH 0910 says:
    @Corvinus

    He has been emboldened by yourself and others on the Interwebs to say whatever the hell he wants.

    https://www.unz.com/isteve/mexicos-49-billion-man/#comment-194939

    Corvinus says:
    March 11, 2007 at 10:29 am GMT

    I hate Mexicans. They blame the evil American gringos for cheating them and becoming rich off the labor of others, even if the gringos are middle-class folks trying to get by, and give their own super-rich a bye.

    https://www.unz.com/isteve/army-getting-lower-iq-recruits/#comment-209730

    Corvinus says:
    January 26, 2008 at 3:11 pm GMT

    Unfortunately, the white supremacists on this board would rather have an empty country with a few white people than a vibrant superpower with the high IQ of the world working here.

    Last I checked, Latinos were not particularly bright. Neither are Africans, Muslims, or South Asians in general. And these are the exact same types of people who are reproducing like crazy.

    Countries with decent IQs (95 and above), on the other hand, are without exception below replacement level, and usually FAR below replacement level.

    Due to this extremely stark inverse correlation between IQ and fertility, the IQ of the world is sinking like an anvil. Idiocracy will be here in 2050, not 2500.

    https://www.unz.com/isteve/ted-kennedy-rip/#comment-260609

    Corvinus says:
    August 30, 2009 at 4:24 pm GMT

    These new incoming Catholics, from Mexico or South America or would they be from Africa?

    I dont see where you are going to get enough white Catholics from to keep you non-WASP show on the road.

    Agreed. I’m a white Catholic — a very conservative one, in fact — and I’d much rather marry an open-minded white Protestant than a mexican or filipina. Call it caste identity if you will, but I am in fact a white American and not just a “Catholic”.

    https://www.unz.com/isteve/leftist-eugenics/#comment-273687

    Corvinus says:
    December 4, 2009 at 11:08 am GMT

    I think we might think of a new term: Leftist dysgenics. The ultimate aim of this is a handful of smart, super-rich leftists with the brown masses serving as their pets. In this scenario, there is no room for regular white people.

    • Replies: @Hail
    , @Corvinus
    , @Greta Handel
  246. Bumpkin says:
    @Mark G.

    HBD writer Steve has not been as good on Covid and the Ukraine as he might have but a number of writers who have been good on these subjects pretty much ignore HBD. It has long been an observation concerning many libertarians that they do not take into account racial differences when formulating policy on a topic like immigration.

    The issue isn’t that Steve’s right or wrong on a particular issue, but that some of his non-HBD takes are so laughably stupid that he’s either lying or controlled. Another problem is that he doesn’t really listen to his readers on these issues and engage with their arguments at all, many of whom disagree with him about Covid and the Ukraine proxy war. This is a problem with Ron on the Covid lockdowns or vax too, he just doesn’t engage with those contrary arguments much.

    As for your defense of HBD generally, I agree with those authors on the importance of that topic, but I do think they overrate IQ and intelligence. Western civilization was the product of many factors, and population-level intelligence was only one of them, certainly not the most important. Probably more important was decentralization, with lone geniuses able to find niches to think and produce in corners of the many warring European states.

    Anyway, the internet is completely remaking today’s landscape, so high-talent immigration hardly even matters anymore, ie the current H1-B debate is a complete smokescreen. As for immigration across the southern border, it seems obvious that Biden was puppeted to open the floodgates for some political end, likely to make Trump popular when he shuts that down, only so he will have popular support when he starts WWIII with China.

    We are reaching the end stages of the US empire, which could end with a bang or a whimper.

  247. Hail says: • Website
    @MEH 0910

    I’ve unearthed another series of bold statements Corvinus may have released:

    I’m just a White boy, just looking for a place to do my thing.

    Some might call me a good-time fellow.
    I ain’t Black and I ain’t yellow!
    I’m just a White boy lookin’
    for a place to do my thing.

    I don’t want any “hand-out” living
    And want no part of anything THEY’re giving
    I’m proud! I’m White! And I’ve got a song to sing!

    See here:

    [MORE]

  248. epebble says:
    @Art Deco

    Philistia[a] was a confederation of five main cities or pentapolis in the Southwest Levant, made up of principally Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Ekron, Gath, and for a time, Jaffa (part of present-day Tel Aviv).[1][2]

    Scholars believe the Philistines were made up of people of an Aegean background that from roughly 1200 BC onwards settled in the area and mixed with the local Canaanite population,[3][4] and came to be known as Peleset, or Philistines. At its maximum territorial expansion, its territory may have stretched along the Canaanite coast from Arish in the Sinai (today’s Egypt) to the Yarkon River (today’s Tel Aviv), and as far inland as Ekron and Gath. Nebuchadnezzar II invaded Philistia in 604 BC, burned Ashkelon, and incorporated the territory in the Neo-Babylonian Empire; Philistia and its native population the Philistines disappear from the historic record after that year.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philistia

  249. Hail says: • Website
    @res

    I’d never heard of the November 2013 forays into Unz.com by someone (presumably Steve Sailer himself) writing under the name “ssailer.”

    I think Ron Unz ran Unz.com as a kind of pure hobby-project, not really public facing, until he invited Steve Sailer in June 2014 and then a handful of others around the same time. (Audacious Epigone was one, and retired from blogging, I believe on the “advice” of his wife, after his second or third child was born.)

    The pre-Sailer Unz Review was a little curation place for Ron’s own writings, like that influential essay on meritocracy and Harvard. It’s possible Ron Unz was personally always basically only interested in that, which explains his many (IMO) poor editorial decisions over his own website.

    — — —

    There have now been four Sailer-blog eras (plus a pre-blogging era), each sort of aligning with other mainstay activities of his writing. Correct me, anyone, if I’m missing anything big:

    (0.) 1990s: Sailer as an intellectual-commentariat gadfly but employed at a normal desk-job, and writing for fun, including letters-to-editor and columns for minor papers, and his big 1994 debut at the National Review with his “Why Lesbians are Not Gay” article (an interesting historical artifact in itself, looked back on after thirty years). Sometime in the end of the 1990s he is running an invitation-only HBD email list involving some important names.

    (1.) The iSteve-dot-com Era (the URL long gone), ca.1999?-2007: plus the start of column publishing in VDare and American Conservative and others.

    (2.) The iSteve Blogspot Era, ca. 2007 to May 2014, plus VDare and the start of Taki-Mag and others. He takes zero part in early social-media at this time, and there are similar number of plausible Bigfoot sightings in the period as video-interviews with him. For years, the only Youtube video of him was a 2010 interview with Craig Bodeker (a documentary-maker who set out to get to the bottom of who was right: those who argue race is real and important, or, otoh, those who want to race is not real or important but who believe Whites need to be crushed anyway).

    (3.) The Unz Era, June 2014 to ca. June 2024. By the end of 2010s, Sailer begins to become a Twitter user. He comes to develop a largely-frivolous social-media fanbase. (People interested in “playing” reality as a “video game.” Cheerings-on of Sailer from them similar to cheering on a top video-game player). Many of Sailer’s old-loyalists believe he deliberately moderated as his nominal public profile grew. Ironically, the reach of Unz-dot-com receded (in the political-censorship era), just as Sailer’s own footprint grew.

    (4.) The Substack Era, mid-2024 to present; plus the start of involvement (in 2023) with promotional and tour agents (in effect), including those associated with Passage Press; and the publication of a compendium of old writings in paper-book form.

    Each step of the way built on the others.

    Steve always had a high degree of respect for his “commenters.” Even in the isteve-dot-com era, which had no built-in commenting feature, he’d often republish reader emails.

    The best discussion-community was that of the Unz era. OTOH, it’s still too early to say what the Substack comment-community will shape up to be. I’ve given lots of reasons why I am on the skeptical side of Substack’s model already (and could give more).

    • Replies: @MEH 0910
    , @Hail
  250. Corvinus says:
    @Steve Sailer

    Speaking about writing fur Taki’s, so you post on your Substack an article from that publication offering insight into how Musk runs his business, but without any of the necessary connections to directly what is going on now in Washington.

    In other words, you punted. Go figure.

  251. Mr. Anon says:
    @Art Deco

    There wasn’t a “Palestine” in 1899. There was a set of Ottoman subprefectures which were assembled 21 years later and called the ‘Mandate of Palestine’.

    The term “Palestine” has been used for millennia to describe a region in the near-east. The exact boundaries of what was meant by the term have shifted or been vague, but there is no denying that it was a term used to describe a geographical region.

    • Replies: @Art Deco
  252. muggles says:
    @Mr. Anon

    I agree totally.

    The WSJ and AP (the major purveyors of bias, propaganda and fake news) love to use the word “chaos” and “concern”, etc. all vague criticisms of Trump and his policies.

    They never actually define what is meant here.

    Bureaucrats worrying about their jobs? Unhappy Swamp dwellers? “Nonprofit” moochers and their numerous PR people who are now threatened by being kicked off the FedGov tit?

    The sluggish Soviet Brezhnev era US Deep State resists positive change. Any effort to change the status quo is “chaos” and Media Megaphone lamentations by those whose money and power are threatened.

    Well, people voted against that by denying Ms. Word Salad her promotion.

    Trump long spoke in numerous rallies about what he intended to do on Day One. Now he is trying to do that.

    Some of it is weird and strange. (No, we don’t want Gaza or Gazans). But much of it is just common sense and what Americans voted for.

    Nearly all of Trump’s bold initiatives are affecting new bureaucracies and agencies which were set up in the past 30 years by RINO Republicans (“go along to get along”) and neo–Marxist Democrats who have hijacked the Democrat Party from traditional JFK type liberals.

    American private businesses rise and fall all the time. New ones rise and old ones are sold off or go bankrupt. Millions of employees lose their jobs and find new ones.

    That isn’t “chaos.”

    Per the Legacy Media Newspeak, Chaos = Democrats losing power over society.

    Legacy media will either change, reform or die. Can’t happen soon enough.

    • Agree: Mark G., Old Prude
    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
    , @Mark G.
  253. Hail says: • Website
    @res

    What differences in the [Substack] environment (commenting system, overseer, bloggers, etc.) cause the behavioral differences?

    There are a lot of little things, most of them deliberate choices by design that Substack thinks helps the good times continue to roll.

    About half the ways people engage with Substack, I don’t think they even see (most) comments. The default, I think, is to see exactly the top two comments only (and not even any of the replies to the top two comments). People then have to click through a maze of links to find the full list of all comments. Whereas if you got to the URL of this page (Unz-dot-com-slash-isteve-slash-nameofpost), you see all the comments all at once.

    Another thing is, my observation is that most users of Substack do not really follow specific people in order to read all their material. Jump back twenty years and a Sailer-reader had to make the conscious choice to “log on” to isteve-dot-com and read as little or as much as he wished.

    Today, most people are engaging with these things instead through getting bombarded, one way or another, with notifications. The flow is so steady that specific pieces of writing are implicitly disincentivized if even a single day old, in many cases. They drop off the feed. People don’t see them. So discussions dry up fast.

    In the case of today’s SteveSailer-dot-net, this is less a problem because a portion of his readers from the Unz Decade are used to holding substantial discussions. Most of the Substack model doesn’t want that, doesn’t encourage that.

    A strange thing happens with brand-new material at SteveSailer-dot-not: A new post can often be observed to get, say, 15 comments a mere thirty minutes after being published, and then only another +15 comments over the next 24-36 hours, and likely less than +15 more comments for the rest of time. Activity is highly front-loaded, much like Twitter. The early-arrivers are reacting to being zapped with notifications. There are comparatively fewer late-arrivers.

    The commentariat-culture at Substack soon enough teaches late-arrivers that their comments on ‘old’ posts will get little attention, so they don’t make them. There is also no way to search an individual commenter’s contributions at once.

    A lot of these little choices are disempowering to those forces that move towards shoring up a healthy commentariat. Plus a great deal of comments on any of the Sailer-Substack material come from tweets anyway, which are usually some species of ironic or sarcastic or weighed down by Internet-jargon and in-jokes and in-references.

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman, res
  254. Corvinus says:
    @MEH 0910

    LOL, we’ve been through this before.

    There was a commenter before me who had this handle on this fine opinion website who was a compete d—-, as you’ve unearthed his vile posts. Obviously, you agree with him. I do not. I repudiate these particular UnChristian comments.

    Anyways, before Uncle Ron’s commenting system came into form, I took over that handle. And since that time (2013 or 2014), you have my commenting history free from his perverted version of truth regarding race and Christianity.

    So thanks again, Digital Harpo, for showing your true colors as well.

    • LOL: MEH 0910
  255. @MEH 0910

    Wow, talk about rebranding!

    How’d you guys lose him?

  256. muggles says:
    @Buzz Mohawk

    Gosh Buzz, this comment here sounds like you’re off your meds.

    Trashing poor iSteve here and shamelessly bragging about your “manhood.”

    Seems a wee bit insecure. Though your prior boasts about all of the lovely mountain women in Colorado you’ve had, your great life now, etc, this post’s rage seems a bit forced.

    From posts, plenty here appear to be regular gym rats (myself) as well as boomers. Why trash iSteve just for assuming most here are Boomers? No shame in that; just means we are living well and still healthy.

    This post here of yours seems “off.” Unless you’ve been building up hostility for a while.

    Your sneering chest thumping today is off target.

    All of the Jew bashing here is bad enough, but if you hate it here so much, go brag about your superiority someplace else. Maybe Substack yearns for your latest cooking tips.

    I am disappointed with you. If you are just going to brag and sneer, get your own column here on Unz. The other neo Nazi Supermen won’t mind. You can all share the same three dozen fanboys here.

    • Thanks: Old Prude
    • Replies: @Buzz Mohawk
  257. @Corvinus

    Anyways, before Uncle Ron’s commenting system came into form, I took over that handle.

    Why? Or was that a mere coincidence?

    You’ve changed shticks at least one since, and have been a readily apparent troll for years.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  258. MEH 0910 says:
    @Hail

    (2.) The iSteve Blogspot Era, ca. 2007 to May 2014, plus VDare and the start of Taki-Mag and others.

    Steve had a commenter during that era, RKU, that some speculated was Ron Keeva Unz.

    • Thanks: Hail
    • Replies: @res
  259. @Corvinus

    ‘…his vile posts…’

    What’s vile about them?

    I don’t agree completely with all the ideas and sentiments, but they all seem intelligent, reasonable, and grounded in fact.

    Now, instead of just vilifying me as well, why don’t you pick one of the claims and explain exactly why it’s vile?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  260. Hail says: • Website
    @Hail

    For those of you fans of LLM-“AI” out there:

    I asked the Twitter-X-infobot (“Grok”) the following question:

    Q. When did Steve Sailer move to Unz.com?

    The LLM info-bot Grok told me it had “consulted 15 web pages and 1 post” and believed it had come up with an authoritative answer to the matter and could put it to rest. It “wrote back”:

    A. Steve Sailer moved to Unz.com in September 2015.

    A swing, and a miss.
    Definitely wrong.
    “Don’t quit your day job,” Mr. Grok, is our advice.

    (Notice that what the LLM is doing; it mirrored my phrasing of the question and dumped out some plausible-seeming wrong answer. It’s all just a numbers guessing game.)

    ___________

    By the way, the “1 post” (formerly known as “tweet”) the LLM ‘consulted’ was this:

    Steve Sailer
    @Steve_Sailer

    In case the ADL tosses us all off Twitter on Monday, you can follow me at the Unz Review: http://unz.com/isteve

    Dec 18, 2017

    6 replies (three invisible to me)
    31 Retweets
    98 Likes

    It appears that the X-LLM grabbed this completely-unrelated tweet (post), solely because it saw the text-string “Unz-dot-com” and said “Okay, this is good enough; close it down, squeeze out the info-sausage, and get this idiot out of here.”

    • Thanks: Kaganovitch
  261. @Greta Handel

    And do those who speak of “Israel” intend what you call for in #215 (subject to Whim)?

    Your “drive” jive is pretty revealing, too.

    Obviously, I need to add Nicholas Stix to my list of Zionists who post here.

    I know there’s Meamjojo. He’s blocked. The egregious ‘Thomm’ is fun to tear up whenever he makes an appearance, so he stays up. I have a curious liking for fiery Fran — she really does wear her heart on her sleeve, you have to give her that.

    A123…not much sport to be had there. He’s blocked. JackD.

    Any others? Was Art Deco one? I blocked him as well…but why?

  262. @Joe Stalin

    I await the collapse of the Chinese economy with interest. Perhaps it will be as real as the collapse of the Japanese economy and the ‘lost decades’ was.

    https://archive.ph/SEOwJ

    Japan’s current account surplus — the widest measure of its trade — totaled $196 billion in 2010, up more than threefold since 1989. By comparison, America’s current account deficit ballooned to $471 billion from $99 billion in that time. Although in the 1990s the conventional wisdom was that as a result of China’s rise Japan would be a major loser and the United States a major winner, it has not turned out that way. Japan has increased its exports to China more than 14-fold since 1989 and Chinese-Japanese bilateral trade remains in broad balance.
    As longtime Japan watchers like Ivan P. Hall and Clyde V. Prestowitz Jr. point out, the fallacy of the “lost decades” story is apparent to American visitors the moment they set foot in the country. Typically starting their journeys at such potent symbols of American infrastructural decay as Kennedy or Dulles airports, they land at Japanese airports that have been extensively expanded and modernized in recent years.
    William J. Holstein, a prominent Japan watcher since the early 1980s, recently visited the country for the first time in some years. “There’s a dramatic gap between what one reads in the United States and what one sees on the ground in Japan,” he said. “The Japanese are dressed better than Americans. They have the latest cars, including Porsches, Audis, Mercedes-Benzes and all the finest models. I have never seen so many spoiled pets. And the physical infrastructure of the country keeps improving and evolving.”

    The BBC has an interesting, and not too horribly biased, piece on Trump’s long term love affair with tariffs:

    [MORE]

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gp5pw654lo

    Before his 1998 Oprah appearance, Trump had spent almost $100,000 to release an “open letter” in full-page ads in three major US newspapers.

    The headline read: “There’s nothing wrong with America’s Foreign Defense Policy that a little backbone can’t cure.”

    In it, he said Japan and other nations had been taking advantage of the US for decades. He claimed “the Japanese, unimpeded by the huge costs of defending themselves (as long as the United States will do it for free), have built a strong and vibrant economy with unprecedented surpluses”.

    Trump believed the obvious solution was to “tax” these wealthy nations.

    “The world is laughing at America’s politicians as we protect ships we don’t own, carrying oil we don’t need, destined for allies who won’t help,” he wrote.

    But, as Eamonn Fingleton would point out, it’s not just saving on defence that’s made the Japanese economy strong. Little things like cartels, suppressed consumption, government direction of industry, barriers to imports and subsidies for exports also make a difference.

    Joseph LaVorgna, a chief economist of the National Economic Council during Trump’s first term, believes there’s been too narrow a focus on tariffs and not enough of an attempt to understand the big picture of what Trump is trying to accomplish.

    He says the president wants to galvanise domestic industry, in particular high-tech manufacturing.

    The administration, he explains, feels they can encourage more corporations to come to the US using tariffs, combined with deregulation, cheaper energy and lower corporate taxes, if enacted by Congress.

    “I think that President Trump understands something which is very important, being a businessman and being transactional, and that is free trade is great in theory but in the real world you need to have fair trade and that’s a level playing field.”

    He is betting Donald Trump is right. Few Republicans have publicly opposed the president as he demands loyalty to his agenda.

    Now this is where Mr Trump’s agenda is going to get tricky. Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan are pretty monocultural, high-IQ nations. Can the same be said of the United States?

    Those at the top will have the national interests of Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan uppermost in their minds. Can that be said of the Trump administration, with its seeming MIGILA (Make Israel Great In Land Area) priority?

    In the UK an entertaining blowhard with a love of luxury and women, Boris Johnson, came to power with a huge majority and proceeded to betray his voters with mass immigration on a scale that made Blair look like an amateur. He’s why there are Africans in small UK country towns. He’s also why the Tory vote collapsed at the last election.

    Let’s hope history won’t repeat itself.

  263. Mr. Anon says:
    @Corvinus

    There was a commenter before me who had this handle on this fine opinion website who was a compete d—-

    The only complete dick here is you, you poisonous toad.

    Actually “dickless” probably describes you better. You opine like the effeminate lady-boys who broadcast on NPR.

    • LOL: deep anonymous
    • Replies: @Corvinus
  264. @muggles

    You’re right. Just another drunken post.

    • Thanks: muggles
  265. @Mike Tre

    You’re a case in point for why Steve deserves better.

    • LOL: Mike Tre
    • Replies: @Mike Tre
  266. @Corvinus

    “Doesn’t your publisher know Peter Theil? Have him bankroll your barnstorming tour of Stockton and Eureka.”

    Lol, good one Corvi. And don’t forget Weed and Tracy while you’re in the ‘hood – lotsa USAID cutouts still have $$$$$$ left to shower on vax shills.

  267. Thomm says:
    @Steve Sailer

    It is a fact. SubStack officially says that at $50/yr, 5% of subscribers pay.

    Hence, at Steve’s $100/yr, it is safe to say that 2% of the 7000 are paid subscribers.

    Steve is unable to dispute that.

    And 7000 is a low number given how many years of full-time work Steve has put into his writing.

    The people I mentioned started much later, and yet :

    Richard Hanania has 30,000 Substack subscribers.
    Noah Smith has 328,000 Substack subscribers.

    • Replies: @res
  268. @muggles

    Very good comment here, Muggles.

    The WSJ and AP (the major purveyors of bias, propaganda and fake news) love to use the word “chaos” and “concern”, etc.

    I used to read the Wall Street Journal until I got wise to the “There shall be open borders” crap – this was over 25 years ago.

    Yes, they are the ones always praising the creative destruction in business. I understand the concept and don’t really disagree, but then how’d they feel right now, if the Wall Street Journal got creatively destroyed by new alt-right, truth-telling media, after the WSJ’s legacy of lies.

    A little bit whole lot of creative destruction in the Feral Gov’t will be a very good thing indeed! This is a new and highly-improved Trump compared to -45.

    • Replies: @AnotherDad
  269. @J.Ross

    When the Øb☭mabrary finally opens, there’ll be mostly black bums in there using the computers.

    The place will feature kids books such as When Aiden Became a Brother.

    There will be drag queen story hour after lunch on Wednesdays, featuring Big Mike when she isn’t out of town at HER compound on the Vinyed.

    There will be $100 million municipal bonds issued every 5 years for total renovations, yet the Micheal Keaton’s Dad-looking librarians won’t be able to answer the simple question “What’s new?”

    So, in other words, it’ll be like every other public library in America.

    .

    PS: Is it just coincidental that Andrew Anglin is wrapping up his blog on this site too?

  270. res says:
    @MEH 0910

    This 2012 comment is a nice foreshadowing of TUR. In multiple ways.
    https://www.unz.com/isteve/race-iq-and-wealth/#comment-406634

    Ben Tillman: No, smart people don’t impute the actions of stupid or malignant people to smart and benevolent people in the same field.

    Yes, exactly.

    After all, when you’re mining for something valuable—say gold—it’s perfectly acceptable if most of your ore isn’t gold, even 99% or so. People who restrict their activity to ore which is at least 50% pure gold don’t find a lot of mines to work.

    When exploring controversial topics inadequately covered by the mainstream media, the Internet constitutes a useful resource, even if most of the commentary is rather stupid or ignorant, just so long as you occasionally find a comment suggesting an important idea or fact you otherwise might never have considered. All it really takes is some solid effort at efficient filtration and analysis, and some patience in removing all the gravel, quartz, and fools’ gold. On the plus side, lots of the stupid and ignorant commentary can sometimes be quite amusing, or even provide useful insights into various forms of mental illness.

    Obviously, the central issue is the quality of the ore. Perhaps filtering ore which is 99% junk is acceptable, but 99.9% may just become a cost-ineffective waste of time.

    Frankly, this particular thread seems to consist of rather low-grade ore…

    • Thanks: Hail, MEH 0910
  271. J.Ross says:

    OT — Cole Porter was Yale and Harvard?

  272. @Achmed E. Newman

    Oooops, meant Alex P. Keaton’s, but still most of you probably don’t know what I’m getting at here…

    • Replies: @Reg Cæsar
  273. newrouter says:
    @Old Prude

    “Typical Arab behavior.”
    U.S. decries reported sexual abuse of Palestinian prisoners after graphic video aired on Israeli TV

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/israel-sexual-abuse-palestinian-prisoners-rcna165811

  274. vinteuil says:

    Andrew Anglin now says he’s “ready to wrap this up?”

    • Replies: @Reg Cæsar
  275. Dmon says:
    @Mike Tre

    Yeah, subjectively I would agree. Modern sexual harassment laws have basically turned every workplace in America (military or civilian) into a gynocracy in which the people who wield the ultimate power are those whom normal people would be least inclined to be led by (i.e., dykes and whores).
    Besides the obvious effects on readiness, combat efficiency and morale (basically, every male serviceman is forced to submit to blatant discrimination every day of his enlistment), the whole Women in the Military charade has endless ripple effects into the industrial sector. Here’s a personal example.
    As you know, any large military system consists of a set of LRUs (Line Replaceable Units). These are the smallest discrete hardware modules which are expected to be replaced by service personnel in a field location, such as a radar installation or a flight line. If the LRU is in a position such that the service man (we both know it’s not going to be a woman) is in a confined space, then it must conform to the one-man lift requirement. In the US military, the weight limit for a one-man lift to chest height is about 88 lbs – for a male. The weight limit for a one-woman lift to chest height is, however, half of that – about 44 lbs. The military says that this will cover everyone down to the 5th percentile female soldier, and since there can be no discrimination based on sex, 44lbs is effectively the one-person lift weight for all hardware.
    Now, as you and anyone else who has ever been in the military or worked a job that involved any sort of activity more strenuous than tapping on a keyboard knows, women do not lift heavy objects. If you try to get them to lift heavy objects, even if that is their literal job definition, you are opening yourself up to all sorts of grief. Eleventy-Star Admiral and Hero of the Trans-Galactic Union Rachel Levine xirself could not get a female servicewomyn to lift a heavy object. I have been in numerous military and civilian installations, and I have never seen a female removing a drawer from an equipment rack.

    So once upon a time, I was involved with a LRU that consisted of very high power electronics devices. In order to meet the hard and fast technical requirements, we absolutely could not get it to weigh less than 46 lbs. No problem, you say – any guy worth his salt can pull a 46 lb object with handles from a chest high position in a rack. You would be wrong, however. The military insisted that it had to meet the one-man lift requirement of the 5th percentile female soldier, even though everybody knew she would never be anywhere near the thing. So we spent some time, then some more time, then way more time trying to lose 2 lbs. Several million dollars later, all we could do was make the heat sink smaller (being liquid cooled, this meant that lots of screw holes for mounting circuit boards and other parts were now impinging on the newly located coolant channels, so all those screw holes had to be moved, meaning printed circuit boards had to be redesigned, etc. etc). After a great deal of (unnecessary) trouble, we met the weight limit and all our other requirements, with one caveat. As you might expect, less metal in the heat sink means everything runs hotter. For semiconductors, the rule is for every 10 degrees C hotter the junction temperature, you cut your Mean Time To Failure in half. Luckily, we had margin in this requirement. But the net result is that the company spent a bunch of extra money and the military customer took a reliability hit just so the massive insult to human nature that is feminism can continue. I guarantee you similar things go on every day all over the country. Feminism is one of the most destructive ideologies ever invented, which is saying alot.

  276. @Mr. Anon

    Liberal cat lady has herself sterilized to protest Trump:

    The sad parts are:

    1. She’s not all that bad-looking. I mean, not Playboy Centerfold material, but you wouldn’t be embarrassed to admit she’s your wife.

    2. She’s still young enough to have children.

    3. She’s white.

    4. She’s not so batshit crazy that she couldn’t maintain long enough to get herself elected.

    • Replies: @YetAnotherAnon
  277. Mactoul says:
    @Corvinus

    A statement about his personal preference only. Nobody’s honor is impunged.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  278. @Je Suis Omar Mateen

    The asteroid is timed to the reappearance of the Primordial Mothers. The Mothers will beget the androgynous human which will eventually evolve to a variant with reproductive processes and so on. This cycle presents itself after every cosmic catastrophe.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  279. @Buzz Mohawk

    Buzz, you can atone for this rather embarrassing drunken phone call by wiring me five thousand dollars. Five hundred of which I will pass on to your favorite Steve at his Northern California speaking engagement. In this scenario all hearts are mended.

  280. @vinteuil

    Andrew Anglin now says he’s “ready to wrap this up?”

    Was he on USAID?

    • Replies: @vinteuil
  281. @Achmed E. Newman

    Micheal Keaton’s Dad-looking librarians

    Oooops, meant Alex P. Keaton’s…

    Did you know that the actors who played Alex’s parents were born on the same day? Or that the mom’s real-life mom is who Whitney Houston was named for?

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  282. @Colin Wright

    It would be like joining the swim team to demonstrate your manhood. Nothing wrong with that either, but there goes the incentive.

    Didn’t stop Lia Thomas…

  283. @Je Suis Omar Mateen

    By the way, $cience’s $acred model$ (TM) suggest we’re now at a whomping 2.2% odds of impact, so 11X or a full order of magnitude more deadly than ‘covid’.

    Not exactly.

    • Replies: @epebble
  284. @Greta Handel

    Is that “higher brow” a natural trait or nurtured?

    Botox.

  285. epebble says:
    @kaganovitch

    2.2% is the probability of hitting earth. But earth is mostly ’empty’ of people. Hence, probability of hitting a densely populated urban area is much smaller. Earth has 200 million squares miles of area. Populated 100 urban places may be 200,000 square miles, giving a ratio of 0.001. So, probability of hitting a populated center falls to 0.002%. That is like a tragedy that kills may be 6,000 people in U.S. Horrible but not catastrophic considering that that many die every two months in road accidents (and in 3 weeks due to opioids).

    • Agree: Kaganovitch
  286. SF says:
    @Ralph L

    Thanks, I hadn’t checked Taki.

  287. Mark G. says:
    @muggles

    “neo-Marxist Democrats who have hijacked the Democrat party”

    Rather than Biden, this appears to have happened back under Obama. Obama was a stealth Marxist who followed a policy of “boil the frog slowly” in order to not attract attention. What has happened recently, though, is the Democrats were making changes too fast and people noticed it and reacted negatively by voting against it.

    A key concept of Obama involved diversity. In 2011 he signed an executive order to increase diversity within the federal government. As a federal government worker, this was when I first started hearing the phrase “diversity is our strength”. There was a slow increase in minorities in higher level positions rather than low level clerical positions. I started seeing more under qualified minorities get promotions. There was also more effort to promote identity months for various groups like Blacks, Asians, Hispanics or Native Americans.

    My new boss at the Department of Defense, Pete Hegseth, just said “diversity is our strength” is the dumbest phrase in military history. Strength comes from everyone working together on a shared goal and that should be the focus. The DoD just eliminated the various months celebrating various groups. As someone whose ancestry is two thirds British and 98% NW European, I always felt purposely snubbed in not having a month. It was my group that created the Declaration of Independence, Constitution and Bill of Rights. We did not have a month but have always had a day we celebrated, the Fourth of July. This is a day all Americans should celebrate.

  288. @Greta Handel

    “And do those who speak of Israel intend what you call for in #215 (subject to Whim)?”

    “Your ‘drive’ jive is pretty revealing, too.”

    I didn’t call for anything in #215. And nothing I said was “revealing,” because I said exactly what I meant. There’s nothing for anyone to interpret. You delude yourself, while posing as if you had powers of discernment.

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
  289. Pericles says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    Cloning Unz Comments seems quite feasible to me, but as I see it, ChatGPT is skipping past some of the greater difficulties. Not a cakewalk. Then again, one could also try to fix some annoyances while going at it. Good luck!

  290. @Hail

    “VDare’s pro-Trump cheerleader element, back in the late 2010s, jumped through hoops to make it seem Trump-I was a true hardliner on immigration after all, even though there was no wall, no mass deportations, no crackdowns on employers, no moves to eliminate ‘birthright citizenship,’ no talk of shifting policy towards moratorium, no talk of a sensible and rational demographic-stabilization program (‘for us and our posterity’). The overall impact of Trump-I, I think even pro-Trump fans today (and there are many still in elevated moods from the Slaying of Kamala a few months ago), was much less than should have been.”

    That was VDARE (1999-2024) founder Peter Brimelow. Although I worked for Peter for 19 years (2004-2023), I never drank the Kool-Aid he served up on Trump and immigration, once he was sworn into office in 2017.

    Did America Avoid Big Steal II, or Get It in a Way She Never Expected? (Revised)
    https://nicholasstixuncensored.blogspot.com/2024/12/did-america-avoid-big-steal-ii-or-get.html

    • Thanks: Hail
    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
  291. @Achmed E. Newman

    “PS: Is it just coincidental that Andrew Anglin is wrapping up his blog on this site too?”

    What a relief! I am so sick of hearing his claim that he’s “the world’s most censored writer.” Ron Unz has continued re-publishing Anglin’s blog here, two years after refusing to publish my work any more (surely after Peter Brimelow, who had purged me, asked him to stop, though Ron still permits me to comment).

  292. MEH 0910 says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    https://www.unz.com/aanglin/im-not-actually-quitting/

    I’m Not Actually Quitting
    Andrew Anglin • February 10, 2025
    […]
    The thing I want to make clear is that the site is not going away. I have a very particular set of skills. I can produce 50,000 words a week, all of them good. So I’m going to keep the site alive, posting longer, better essays every week, maybe two, one, three, whatever. I might also write shorter things about current events that I want to write about. More or less, it’s going to stop being a daily news site, and more of a blog.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  293. anonymous[572] • Disclaimer says:
    @Buzz Mohawk

    But, you hit a nail on the head when you “Noticed” how Steve threw me and himself under the bus as “fogeys… who’d soon be dropping dead…”

    He is a whore. He will sell out his own generation. I have news for Steve: I am healthier than you, Mr. Sailer. I am better looking than you. I am much, much better spoken than you, as proven by my television, radio, voiceover and writing CAREER in Colorado! I never have had the pathetic health problems that you have had. (So much for your “HBD” superiority! I am superior to you, genetically!)

    I am one year behind Steve in age, and I am much more like you, dear commenter: very active, strong and healthy. My father died at the age of 85 — 20 full years beyond where Steve and I are now — and he chain-smoked and drank Scotch every day, like many American MEN! of his generation.

    Uh…

    Being the guy who wrote what you’re responding to, I like and admire Steve, and enjoy the intellectual atmosphere/discourse of his comments section. As a progressive left wing journalist described it, “they’re racists, but they’re really intelligent racists!” That always makes me laugh.

    I was just ribbing him. I don’t subscribe to the rest of your critique, and as you describe yourself as a Republican, I can only find your conclusion that “Steve is a whore” to be asymmetrical to your claim. That is, republicans take for granted that life is grey, and a series of trade offs. I guess I could make a case for every single person in this comments section being a whore, if I saw the world as a zero/sum game. Zero/sum is the progressive liberal’s world, and a wretched one.

    Steve is allowed to disagree with some of us about COVID without a lot of cheap shots in return. He didn’t influence me whatsoever regarding my decision to never take the experimental concoction we still mislabel as a “vaccine.” His arguments didn’t fly, for me. If he keels over from a sudden stroke, heart attack, brain aneurysm, or succumbs to early onset Alzheimer’s (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38806183/) I win, I guess.

    I hope he’s right, in his case, and I’m right in mine.

    Anyway… be somewhat civil, because you’re a guest.

    To steal a quote, right now you’re like somebody walking into Steve’s house, jumping up on his dining room table, taking a dump, then asking what’s for dinner. It’s not a good look.

    You don’t have to be here. He doesn’t have to do this.

    Have some manners, sir.

    • Thanks: Nicholas Stix
  294. @Nicholas Stix

    And nothing I said was “revealing,” because I said exactly what I meant. There’s nothing for anyone to interpret.

    Fundamental.

    https://bible.knowing-jesus.com/topics/The-Lord-Will-Drive-Them-Out

  295. Wj says:
    @Corvinus

    The lunatic clown Harris was unacceptable in comparison to almost anyone else. Trump was the rational choice. The other GOP candidates were neocons. Even DeSantis. What are you going to do?

    • Agree: Mark G., Colin Wright
    • LOL: Corvinus
  296. @Achmed E. Newman

    I used to read the Wall Street Journal until I got wise to the “There shall be open borders” crap – this was over 25 years ago.

    That just breathtakingly insane was from Robert Bartley, who wasn’t even Jewish and grew up in my family’s Iowa heimat to boot!

    Seriously you grow up in post-War Iowa, then learn, have a bit of exposure–presumably–to the wider world and you can never figure out why Iowa is “nice”, neighborly, highly functional–more pleasant than say Alabama or New York City or Guadalajara or Baghdad–despite the Iowa winter?

    Bartley–presumably not a complete idiot–is just another example of how seemingly intelligent people, can develop these utterly silly and simplistic ideas about the world, develop their little ideology and then keep flogging it in the face of logic, reason and the flood tide empirical reality all yelling “you’re full of crap”. These people are fiercely loyal to their utopian ideology rather than their nation, their people … the welfare and future of their own children and posterity.

    People like that are the worse. Much worse than mere idiots or even criminals. The job of the intelligent people in a nation is to be intelligent–to be wise and in doing so help keep the nation healthy and its future bright. Instead they use their intelligence and position of authority to lead it over their utopian cliffs. They are the Jim Jones intellectuals. They deserve nothing but ignominy and contempt–and eternal damnation.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  297. @Hail

    A Trump Slump in immigration has happened before. The exact same happened in early 2017. It didn’t last; …

    VDare’s pro-Trump cheerleader element, back in the late 2010s, jumped through hoops to make it seem Trump-I was a true hardliner on immigration after all, even though there was no wall, no mass deportations, no crackdowns on employers, no moves to eliminate “birthright citizenship,” no talk of shifting policy towards moratorium, no talk of a sensible and rational demographic-stabilization program (“for us and our posterity”). …

    The man is a performer. …

    Hail, all this is true. Yeah, Trump is never going to be the Trump–bold highlight–our nation needs and should have.

    But seems to me the correct attitude right now should be support and positive encouragement, coupled with level-headed “wait and see”.

    We’re three weeks in and Trump II, is simply way more serious and positive in both rhetoric, signals and actual action. Sure Trump hasn’t deported all 10 million invaders the Biden-Mayorkas regime waved in. That was impossible logistically. Right now it’s the easiest stuff–people in legal queue for the boot. We’ll see what the follow through looks like. But at least the signaling–troops to the border, deportations, birth-right citizenship EO–is good.

    Beyond that the anti-DIE stuff, anti-anti-white racialism and now actually taking budgetary whacks at the minoritarian parasite support ecosystem. Overall, Trump in three weeks has been better for Americans and our posterity’s future, than anything any president has done my entire life.

    Positive thoughts, support for the good being done and encouragement to keep it going. Historical judgement can wait.

  298. epebble says:
    @Hail

    I did not have much confidence in him before, but I am liking it. He may be crazy in certain ways (Greenland, Canada, Gaza), but he seems to be able to shut up Congress and get his team of deconstructionists into Cabinet. That plus Musk’s aggressiveness towards dismantling is sounding hopeful. If he can take on the Military-Industrial complex and shut them down that will be the proof of his talent. At this rate, in four years, maybe he can bring back the federal government to about what it was before the bloat started due to Cold War. He seems to be our version of Gorbachev doing the unpleasant job of Perestroika. We should aspire to go from ‘The United States’ back to ‘These United States’.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  299. Hail says: • Website

    OT.

    Views on the strange behavior coming from Ye (formerly known as Kanye West)? He is now an ex-Trump supporter, as far as I can tell. He says he has reevaluated Hitler and wants to offer his new views on the matter.

    A few days ago, Ye published this on X:

    N*GGAS — NEWSFLASH — WHITE PEOPLE AND JEWISH PEOPLE ARE DIFFERENT. YOU CAN GET MONEY WITH JEWISH PEOPLE BUT THEY ALWAYS GONNA STEAL AND INVITE YOU OVER TO THE HOUSE ON FRIDAY. WHITE PEOPLE DO NOT F&CK WITH N*GGAS. THEY LEAVE THAT TO THE JEWS. IF YOU THINK YOU GETTING MONEY WITH A WHITE PERSON ITS NOT TRUE. THAT SO CALLED WHITE PERSON IS ACTUALLY JEWISH. JEWS HATE WHITES BECAUSE OF THE GERMANS FROM WORLD WAR 2.

    Q. Will Ron Unz step in and offer to publish Ye’s political essays?

    — — —

    He (Ye) bought a Super Bowl commercial, which is in effect an entry for “most bizarre Super Bowl commercial of all time”:

    Ye, like Elon Musk, has enough money to burn through on jokes, trolling, mental-health episodes, or whatever this is.

    Ye’s website (Yeezy.com) normally, I presume, sells a series of products related to his music and other products (his “brand”). Shortly before the Super Bowl all normal products removed from the Yeezy website except one: a Swastika t-shirt.

  300. Ralph L says:

    I wonder if Homan has gamed out deporting from red states and non-sanctuary cities first, making illegals flee to sanctuary cities in blue states, so their citizens feel the full impact of their bad voting and beg for some relief. I’m hoping for mass self-deporting, and that might be the best way to get there–eventually. If he deports just the violent criminals, people may become complacent again.

    I sure wish heads would roll in DC and state capitals off of the malicious people who allowed and encouraged crime, mostly perpetrated on their own black and brown voters.

  301. J.Ross says:

    OT — !

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman
    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
  302. @Colin Wright

    1. Barring all immigration and deporting everyone who’s here illegally. I’ve heard that absent continued immigration, we would have reached zero ZPG and stabilized at about 200 million sometime around 1990. In point of fact, that’d be good enough for me.

    2. Insisting on contraceptive implants for anyone receiving public assistance. This should have a happily eugenic effect, and it’s really not violating anyone’s rights. You want kids? Get off public assistance.

    3. On the other hand, introduce a vigorous programme of tax incentives promoting fertility among the more-or-less functional. We could, for example, subsidize mortgages for anyone who has children and keeps having them.

    4. An end to promoting careers for women and disparaging motherhood. Here, see the role of Jewesses in promoting Seventies-style womens lib. The founders of that movement were horrified that the average coed of the Fifties wanted to find a nice man, settle down, and start having children.

    This is a terrific list Colin. Pretty much my list.

    A few further thoughts:

    — The immigration stop is just so critical. You can worry about DIE, worry about the QUERTY craze. But effectively nothing good–or rather nothing good that will end up mattering–can happen in Western nations until that is ended.

    — My back of the envelope, the “absent recent immigration insanity” US population peak is more like around 250-260 million and would have happened more like the 2010s. (Basically, it would track but slightly lag what’s going on with US white-whites.)

    — The welfare case is eugenics that is ridiculously easily to sell to ordinary Americans. Basically, no one outside minoritarian anti-white loons and some religious loons, thinks women on welfare should be popping out kids. You don’t have to be HBD aware or alt-right. I’ve heard super-normie people calling that out as bullshit my whole life.

    — My suggestion for the fertility incentive program is just super-big tax deduction. And specifically a big deduction not a tax credit. No subsidy for low-productivity people having more children. But rather the goal is to basically lift the tax burden off middle and working class families, during their child raising years. (The higher your income, the more kids you need to escape taxes–it’s eugenic.) If you’re a middle class person raising a family of three or four kids–that is your job. The rich and well to do single and post-child old people like me can shoulder the tax burden. And singles and childless marrieds will look out on a tax landscape that is very encouraging. Tired of paying taxes … go ahead and start that family.

    I agree some specific family housing subsidy. I’d suggest basically zero rate loans up to some median home price amount for young couples who promise to start a family in say 3 years. And then maybe a booster, where the loan amount balloons with a third a child. (And perhaps more with bigger families.)

    — Agree on careerism and motherhood. I’ve seen surveys where even now young women’s desired family size averages to 2.3 or something, but they end up under-performing even that. Women aren’t naturally family averse. It takes lots of propaganda to create our dystopian fertility picture.

    We are all products of the culture and propaganda we are exposed to. But relative to men, women are even more so–more “obedient” and subject to social expectations. In any healthy nation/civilization those norms must–math–be pro-fertility. If you have a nation whose culture openly values itself, asserts that the nation is good and its survival and propagation virtuous and critical, and young men and women grow up with that ethos, then we can turn fertility around.

  303. @Anon

    Thank you so much for that, #323! I’d heard this story before but already kind of forgotten, and this guy goes a nice job with it. I’m a big Steely Dan fan. One thing I noticed in the video is that Donald Fagan and Walter Becker were the most 1970s looking guys of the 1970s. When it comes to creative skinny, long-haired, pot-smoking musical geniuses, I couldn’t imagine any other look.

    Speaking of Imagine, though this Steely Dan song did a nice job, one can go back a couple of Millennia to a man named Confucius, who made the point better than anyone has since:

    Confucius say: “Man who follow Renin, I imagine soon have no possession.”

    I’m sorry to keep repeating those words of wisdom, but that’s freaking funny, and if I keep getting no LOL‘s, this is gonna keep happening. You’ve been served.

  304. @AnotherDad

    Thank you for the name Robert Bartley, A/D. I didn’t take the time to go look up who he was before. I agree with your whole comment, but WTH is a heimat? (I know what an Iowa is, at least – it’s one big State-wide cornfield.)

    • Replies: @J.Ross
    , @kaganovitch
    , @Ralph L
  305. @MEH 0910

    That sure didn’t take long. I get it, though. As a blog addict and a member of at least one 12-step program, I am well familiar with how hard it is to quit.

  306. res says:
    @Thomm

    It is a fact. SubStack officially says that at $50/yr, 5% of subscribers pay.

    Where do you see that?

    Here Substack gives 10% as a target.
    https://substack.com/going-paid-guide

    Good discussion here which says 4-5% more likely.
    https://www.robkhenderson.com/p/what-ive-learned-after-two-years

    I would not be at all surprised if Steve did better than average.

    Some more data (anecdote? ; ) points.

    What is your paid/free subscribers ratio?
    byu/Pareto_Investor inSubstack

    Some discussion of paid vs. not.
    https://tompendergast.substack.com/p/why-im-not-going-paid

    • Replies: @Kaganovitch
  307. @Colin Wright

    Born Laurie Tennant, now Laurie Pohutsky. What’s the story there I wonder? Wiki is u/s.

    Maybe there’s a Mr Pohutsky who wants to be a daddy …

  308. Mike Tre says:
    @YetAnotherAnon

    Imagine letting a tranny doctor examine/operate on you. People would allow that rather than raise objections.

    • Replies: @Colin Wright
  309. Mike Tre says:
    @For what it's worth

    If Steve’s still alive when the lights go out he’ll be begging to have guys like me around. Believe that.

  310. J.Ross says:

    OT — More NAFO nonsense.

    The Romanian gendarmerie detained seven people for attacking with batons a peaceful demonstration in support of Calin Georgescu (whose election victory was annulled by a court).

    Among those detained – a Ukrainian and a Ukrainian with a Polish passport (referred to in the media as a Pole).

    Anon said:

    Reminder that Calin Georgescu is a presidential candidate with the biggest support enabling him to win next elections in [the] first round. He wants to reduce cooperation of Romania with NATO, he was saying that NATO bases on territory of Romania (such as US-American Aegis Ashore base) are going to be used in war against Russia, and it is not interest of Romania to get destroyed in this war. He wants to get Romania out of US-American power games against Russia and make it more similar to Hungary and Slovakia by changing politics to more pro-Russian. Lately he said that Ukraine is a fake country, it lost the war, hence now it is an opportunity for Romania to make partitions of Ukraine in cooperation with Russia and other countries in the region such as Hungary.

    Ukraine is becoming a retarded version of Israel, one that can’t win, making trouble everywhere, feeling entitled to our money, and always eager to restart the cycle of violent stupidity.

  311. J.Ross says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Heimat is the German word for homeland. In Das Boot at the Christmas dinner scene the big ashore admiral describes the Christmas cake as “a piece of homeland.” Homeland is the geographical point of racial origin, not the city you’re based out of, so the German homeland is actually the Baltic coast, and the American Department of Homeland Security is downright incoherent.

  312. @Dmon

    I have never seen a female removing a drawer from an equipment rack.

    You know what’s really heavy on the equipment rack? The UPS for the IT servers; holy shit, all those lead acid batteries weight an f-ing ton.

    I recall an article on German 88mm AAA shells: why 88mm? It turns out they weight about 36lbs and that is about what the kraut soldiers could handle in that job assigment continuously.

    And that leads us to something I’ve noticed on the Russkie-Ukraine battlefield; the artillery people are ALL men. Must have something to do with a typical M175 155mm round weighing 103lbs!!!

  313. @res

    would not be at all surprised if Steve did better than average.

    As a data point, let’s not forget that Steve’s $500 dollar a copy special edition of “Noticing” sold out.

    • Agree: res
  314. @Reg Cæsar

    Did you know that the actors who played Alex’s parents were born on the same day? Or that the mom’s real-life mom is who Whitney Houston was named for?

    Sorry, Reg – I couldn’t get the real guy… copyright infringement or something…

  315. vinteuil says:
    @Reg Cæsar

    Was he on USAID?

    You are The Wag.

  316. Ralph L says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    You’d never heard of Robert Bartley? Other than immigration, his control of the WSJ editorial pages was of immense positive influence for years, before right wing media existed. No other conservative journalist had daily input to the powerful.
    How old are you?

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  317. Art Deco says:
    @YetAnotherAnon

    Revanchism did not have much purchase with the German electorate prior to 1930. It took several adverse incidents to discredit the German establishment with a critical mass of the German public. Also, see William L. Shirer’s observations on the atmosphere in Germany in 1939 as he experienced it. Not much enthusiasm he could see.

  318. Art Deco says:
    @Mr. Anon

    There was a Roman province called ‘Syria Palestina’. It disappeared in Late Antiquity and no territorial unit which resembled it or the British mandate was to be found for about 1,300 years.

    • Agree: Jim Don Bob
    • Replies: @Mr. Anon
  319. Mike Tre says:
    @Dmon

    Great comment thanks.

    • Agree: Achmed E. Newman
  320. anonymous[910] • Disclaimer says:

    Meanwhile, Dems have employed an old-timey negro to go on a Ebonics-ridden rhetoric bender, to try to rally democrats. Didn’t they learn ANYTHING from the Kamala Harris tragicomedy?

    The saucy, extension-abusing, faux-sanctimonious ol’ ho’ below hasn’t internalized the fact that “negro exhaustion” is a real thing.

    People are tired of negroes being tired, and loud, and male blacks across the board are instinctively repulsed by any “thing” that reminds them of their malicious ex-wife demanding increased alimony and/ or child support. They’ll switch channels on their TV as quickly as they hang up their phone to stop the horrible screeching.

    The manner of this woman, complete with gutter expletives, and her socially primitive Ebonics style, indicates a significant number of democrats have learned NOTHING. Speaking like an angry black woman who just stepped off the cotton fields is NOT cute, and it’s no longer even slightly persuasive, even to idiots.

    Democrats, you need to ruthlessly restrain your old-timey negroes from engaging in public discourse. They’re toxic to common deliberation and debate. They’re making your case worse.

    • Thanks: Mark G.
    • Replies: @YetAnotherAnon
  321. @Corpse Tooth

    The asteroid is timed to the reappearance of the Primordial Mothers.

    I, for one, welcome our Gynocratic Primordial Mother Overlords. It can’t be any worse than what we have now, what, with a misogynistic President who not only has purposely grabbed a woman by the snatch, but has also brutally beaten 2 women …

    [MORE]

    … once in ’16 and once in ’24.

  322. @Bumpkin

    I don’t exclude myself, as I once supported Bush II’s Iraq war and ignored the anti-vaxxers.

    It’s highly likely that you supported Bush II’s Iraq war because your tribe of ruraloid no-college whites supported it. And you ignored the anti-vaxxers because they were initially middle-class, left-leaning dog moms before Alex Jones and other fat nationalists embraced it. You’ve never held an opinion counter to the ruraloid no-college whites in your life and you never will because you’re just a tribalist. Really no different than the guy who believes everything he hears in the MSM, only your guiding light is Catturd.

    • Replies: @Bumpkin
  323. J.Ross says:

    OT — but pretty iStevey — There’s people who abide by the rules, screwups who break the rules once but straighten out, morons too stupid to live right, and then there’s a fourth group of reliable troublemakers, usually intelligent enough to do more damage than a moron, and capable of scam after scam.
    Is this Robert Schumake caught on camera running away from an investogative journalist

    https://www.fox2detroit.com/news/judge-calls-businessman-robert-shumake-a-criminal

    the same Robert Schumake as this guy selling magic mushrooms for ostensibly religious purposes?

    https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/crime/head-of-magic-mushroom-church-arrested-in-alleged-multimillion-dollar-pump-and-dump-scheme-minerco-shaman-shu-robert-shumake-julius-jenge/65-2a6f005f-fdec-4bcc-a0bd-85febe7e3174

    There’s a paywalled piece in today’s Detroit News where the city just tells him, “No, you are not a church. Go away.”

  324. @Nicholas Stix

    Please tell us why you and Brimelow fell out.

    • Replies: @Nicholas Stix
  325. @J.Ross

    Former federal prosecutor William Shipley quoted today at https://thedailyscroll.substack.com/.
    They have an excellent free daily email.

    The story today about the $59 million from FEMA to NYC hotels is EXACTLY what the New York lawsuit is intending to keep covered up for some time.

    Like most federal government payments to third parties, these are payments built into the Treasury’s payment processing system every month. They are automatic until canceled.

    The Treasury handles millions(?) of payments like this every month and there is no possible way for every one of them to be processed by a human before payment goes out. So they are programmed to happen automatically. If the Roosevelt Hotel wants $8 million, they make a payment request through an electronic invoice that has already been preapproved.

    So much of what the government spends—if mistaken—is only captured by audits, meaning the discovery is incidental, not because anyone went looking for it. I saw this a few times—and had it explained to me in detail—with fraudulent Medicare and Medicaid billing. Those bills from doctors are paid automatically every month. Overbilling or upcoding is only caught by audit.

    • Thanks: J.Ross
  326. @Mike Tre

    Imagine letting a tranny doctor examine/operate on you. People would allow that rather than raise objections.

    Examine yes, operate no. At least not without assurances that being a weirdo didn’t get he/she/it some kind of pass along the way.

  327. @Mactoul

    Your error lies in ignoring the fact the borders between the peoples are not given by God for all times but are negotiated through war. So each nation living peacefully in its own land is a pipe dream, a mirage.

    Oh, you again. Now your standard limp minoritarian, anti-nationalist word salad … with extra pomposity dressing!

    Your right! Holy cow, I never considered borders being set by warfare … with a comment about improved alignment of peoples and borders after the War.

    Yep, nations living peacefully within their borders, is an absolute pipe dream … well except for the example I just gave about how we finally got that in Europe after the War when borders and peoples were better squared away. Or the US and Canada. Or the US and Mexico. Or actually a majority of places on earth in the nation state era.

    Plus the fact that some people don’t recognize some other people as a a separate people. Spanish don’t regard Basque as a separate people that need their own land and neither do the Chinese regard Tibetans.

    Which means nationalism is wrong, just how? Uh … um … uh …

    Yeah, some people–even nominal “nationalists”–do not respect other people’s nationalism. There is an appropriate word for those people–“imperialists”. There is a tendency toward this problem with certain “big man” personality types. But a responsible and mature nationalist should give due respect to other people’s nationalism. You properly want people in your nation, who also thinks it is their nation. You do not want to dragoon other peoples who don’t want to be with you, into being part of it.

    And it is actually quite straightforward for nation states to peacefully handle that. There are “scale” and convenience reasons why people who are kinda-sorta part of your nation to stick with it. Quebec, Scotland, Wales all examples for sticking with it–so far. But free to go it alone if they so choose. Conversely the Czechs and Slovaks had a perfectly reasonable divorce. It is properly up to a people to decide that for themselves. If a nation’s people feel that they are happy sharing a state with another–usually a kin nation–and some sort of federalism or autonomy works just fine, then they can do that. But if it really matters to a people to be separate–worth the costs–then they can separate. None of this is a problem to handle peacefully.

    So, the nationalist prescription doesn’t work either. If anything, the imperial prescription is better for peace, harmony and prosperity.

    LOL. Even among iSteve commenters you come across these assertions that are so blitheringly stupid, you are left with that age old question “is the brain really just to cool the blood?”

    From you comment you do seem at least vaguely aware that there was this Great War? 1914 and all that? Geez how did that start and blow up into such a debacle?

    Off the top of my head–without even looking anything up I could give you at least 20 wars the British Empire fought to try and expand or maintain itself. The actual number is probably over a 100. Whole libraries could be filled with volumes devoted to the topic. For one Empire. Other empires are the same. The Russians. The French. Dutch. Americans. The Ottomans went on campaign every year as a matter of course. Romans. Chinese. Germans. Japanese. …

    Imperialism means war. There simply is no natural boundary to imperialism. So there is always more conquering to do for the great glory of the king/emperor (and, of course, more tax base).

    In contrast, I–a nationalist–do not want to conquer Mexico … I want to build a wall. Unlike the imperialist, the nationalist knows where the end of his nation is. It’s where the foreigners live.

    Imperialists start wars. Nationalists build walls.

    ~~

    Look, I’m pretty “to each his own”. If you and Jack D and all the other minoritarian loons pinning for your bygone Austrian Empire of minorities and rainbows and happy trees can find a patch to have your little minoritarian imperial utopia … great.

    But I sure as hell wish you clowns would stop trying to f-up the world for the 99% of normal people in it, who just want to live their lives in with their own nation, with their own people and culture, governing themselves according to their own norms and values. You guys are a curse upon thought, a cancer upon humanity.

  328. Corvinus says:
    @Greta Handel

    YOU of all people are part of this dissident right. So is Derbs a race traitor in your eyes?

  329. Corvinus says:
    @Mactoul

    “A statement about his personal preference only. Nobody’s honor is impunged.”

    JFC, just stop. The message was clear—the Musk sycophant took a direct shot at Vance and family formation and he cucked in response.

    Again, John Derbyshire, champion of whites who pens on this fine opinion webzine, is married to a Chinese woman. Is he a traitor to his ethnicity and race? Why?

    Please answer.

  330. HA says:
    @Hail

    “The man is a performer. The deportations are staged as made-for-TV (or social-media) events.”

    He’s just taking a page from his good buddy in Moscow, who also likes to theatrically pretend to be tough against Central Asion (Muslim) illegals and stage regular PR rousts to please his gullible followers.

    (That is to say, when he’s not kissing a Quran and floating rumors that it was his Tatar mistress that converted him to Islam instead of the other way around, he or his trolls are generating viral memes about some it-never-happened public speech that received a 5-minute standing ovation in which he allegedly demanded that local Muslims need to start speaking Russian).

    Meanwhile, the number of Central Asians, legal or otherwise, continues to rise in Russia, and will likely continue doing so given, um, certain recent manpower shortages.

  331. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “he seems to be able to shut up Congress and get his team of deconstructionists into Cabinet.”

    Who are generally unqualified sycophants. Do better, please.

    “That plus Musk’s aggressiveness towards dismantling is sounding hopeful.”

    That’s what 250 million of his money gets him. But to what end? Why should a billionaire and his Incel Clown Posse be even near in charge of making such austere moves. We had this before during the Robber Baron Age to strip government oversight.

    “If he can take on the Military-Industrial complex and shut them down that will be the proof of his talent.”

    They would murder him first.

    “He seems to be our version of Gorbachev doing the unpleasant job of Perestroika.”

    He’s not Gorby. Not even close. Remember, every move for Trump and his billionaire pals are transactional. It’s all about the grift. Again, do better, please.

    Meanwhile…

    https://www.barrons.com/articles/trump-pause-enforcement-bribery-law-2586594f

  332. Mactoul says:
    @AnotherDad

    For the sake of your pure nations millions were evicted from their homes in Europe alone, never mind the rest of the world. And for what?
    Europeans didn’t want the pure nations. They preferred freedom to move.

    This nationalism, this very modern
    hankering for purity, is a great blight and great
    mischief. You yourself are a prime example, hankering after the glorious population transfers.. Let’s hope you never get notice to move within two hours.

  333. Mactoul says:
    @AnotherDad

    As an American, you yourself are a beneficiary of one of the greatest imperial expansion of history. Your ancestors weren’t content to live in their own villages minding their own business within the walls, but were driven to conquer other peoples. You are fine one to lecture others on evils of imperialism.

    All great people are driven to expand. It is only tired, exhausted people that hanker for walls to cower behind.

    • Replies: @AnotherDad
  334. President Donald Trump has major power to reform the positions of the DOJ in ongoing litigation.

    William Kirk discusses IL HB 2587, a piece of legislation that would exempt CCL holders from the state’s 72 hour waiting period.

    • Replies: @Reg Cæsar
  335. @Achmed E. Newman

    wokeness is the legitimate grandchild of the so-called civil rights movement, which was the most successful commie front ever. Michael King Jr. supported the “right” of blacks to break the law (“the abomination of police brutality” simply referred to White cops arresting black criminals) and a regime of racial spoils (radically unqualified and unfit blacks getting hired based solely on their race). That crap about “color-blind equality” was no more than a pull quote that his communist/black supremacist ghostwriter (Vincent Harding, Stanley Levitas, or Clarence Jones) wrote for King’s press allies in the audience to quote, as boob-bait for the Bubbas.

    feminazism then ripped off the so-called crm. The homosexuals came next, and eventually came the sexual psychopaths.

    • Agree: Achmed E. Newman
  336. Very interesting YT program on law enforcement bugging devices from several decades back: did you know that Bell & Howell was a big maker of surveillance equipment?

  337. @Corvinus

    Corvinus, you’ve long been an advocate of democracy, yet ironically you’ve been grumbling nonstop since the election. We are living in wondrous times, as the people’s choice for President does his thing. From the current NYT front page:

    Trump’s Actions Have Created a Constitutional Crisis, Scholars Say

    Law professors have long debated what the term means. But now many have concluded that the nation faces a reckoning as President Trump tests the boundaries of executive power.

    Fiery Directives Under Trump’s Justice Dept. Signal a Significant Shift

    The new tone of the department, current and former officials say, appears to promise a campaign of intimidation against career employees viewed as insufficiently loyal.

    Five Former Treasury Secretaries: It Is Time to Sound the Alarm

    By Robert E. Rubin, Lawrence H. Summers, Timothy F. Geithner, Jacob J. Lew and Janet L. Yellen

    Trump Muses About a Third Term, Over and Over Again

    The president’s suggestion that he would seek to stay in office beyond the constitutional limit comes as he has pushed to expand executive authority.

    Why Musk and Vance Went to Bat for a Self-Described Racist

    Trump Is On the Move

  338. @Ralph L

    No, it’s not that I never heard of Robert Bartley, but I couldn’t remember that name when I wrote, and I wouldn’t have remembered who exactly was that “There shall be open borders” guy.

    “Other than immigration…” Well, yippee on all the rest, but screw him. (I would retract that if I knew he’d come around or something.)

    I wrote a quick post on this, Ralph, but I went on a bender for a couple of years with the WSJ about 25 years ago. I’d pick it up every day at the newsstand. My goal was to learn more about business. I left the editorial page (best) for last, due to my liking it very much (as you wrote, it was actually Conservative, except …*), as I read though the other 3 sections first.

    I made myself get through most of the Markets section even, but I never really cared what stock was going up, what this sector was doing, etc. What I did learn is that no matter what great explanation the WSJ had the next morning for why this stock went up and this other went down, they somehow didn’t see fit to tell anyone that BEFORE the changes! In other words, it’s mostly guesswork and a load of crap.

    .

    * Except 2 things. The other was, as I just reminded myself with that old post, the writer named Al Hunt. He really sucked.

    • Replies: @Ralph L
    , @mel belli
  339. Mactoul says:

    Ah for the summer of 1945 when Red Army corrected the European hodgepodge to create shiny pure nations. The anti-minoritarians should really constitute an annual thanksgiving holiday for Uncle Joe.

    Nationalism in like pride. A proud man hates pride in another man. And a nationalist is no friend to nationalism in other countries. See Hitler, the greatest nationalist ever, crushing nationalism I Poland, Czechoslovakia etc etc.

    If imperialism could be held responsible for the first world war so nationalism be held for the second.

    A subspecies of nationalism the little nationalism, who is content to sit behind walls, merely signifies a decaying people, ripe for takeover.

    • Replies: @YetAnotherAnon
  340. @AnotherDad

    Achmed E. Newman LIKED:

    … you are left with that age old question “is the brain really just to cool the blood?”

  341. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    The means may not be Kosher, but if he can delete $2 Trillion (per year) from budget by methods fair or foul (as long as it survives courts), that would be a miracle. This was never going to be a pleasant surgery using scalpel. What is needed is some holy cows being slaughtered. So far, I am impressed from the trivial (deleting penny) to the big one (scrubbing the DEI rocket to moon).

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  342. @Mactoul

    Europeans didn’t want the pure nations. They preferred freedom to move.

    I’m naziing how “pure nations” and “freedom to move” are automatically mutually exclusive…

    All great people are driven to expand. It is only tired, exhausted people that hanker for walls to cower behind.

    Heil Mactoul!

    • Thanks: Renard
    • LOL: kaganovitch
  343. Mark G. says:
    @Mactoul

    “The Europeans didn’t want the pure nations. They preferred the freedom to move.”

    Increasing numbers of them, though, do not want Muslims or Africans to have the freedom to move to Europe.

    The United States passed the 1924 Immigration Act ending large scale immigration. Even before then, restrictions had been placed on non-White groups like the Chinese from moving here in large numbers.

    The president who signed the 1924 Immigration Act, Coolidge, largely believed in a noninterventionist foreign policy. There was a common view in that period that World War I was a mistake and the traditional American policy going back to Washington of staying out of European wars was better.

    What Steve Sailer has called “invade the world, invite the world” is relatively recent in American history and coincides with America’s decline.

  344. Ralph L says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    They also regularly published columns by even further lefties Alexander Cockburn and Anthony Lewis to keep their readers informed about the idiots.
    In the 70s, my dad enjoyed getting angry at the editorials in the WaPoo and the Alexandria Gazette.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  345. @Mark G.

    What Steve Sailer has called “invade the world, invite the world” is relatively recent in American history and coincides with America’s decline.

    Speaking of which, didn’t he pretty much drop “invade the world, invite the world” years ago to pick up pom poms for Uncle Sam in Ukraine, play dumb on the destruction of the Nordstream pipeline, and not Notice the obliteration of Gaza? (Even upon arrival here at TUR, the phrase seemed to be more often used by followers in reference to his earlier work.)

    People sometimes change. That may be harder to realize or admit if you’ve subscribed to their brand.

  346. Mactoul says:
    @Mark G.

    I fully agree. It is mistake for Europe to take in millions of Africans and Moslems. But this doesn’t mean that European nations should be monoethnic and pure.

    • Replies: @Mike Tre
  347. @Mactoul

    “Ah for the summer of 1945 when Red Army corrected the European hodgepodge to create shiny pure nations.”

    Be fair, I think the Allies had a hand, too. Certainly after 1945 Poland had a much higher proportion of Poles in it, even in those parts which used to be German, like Pomerania. The Sudetenland, too, was historically German, but they were all sent to Germany.

    At the moment the Baltics are trying to create shiny pure nations, by making life hard for ethnic Russians with NATO encouragement.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  348. Corvinus says:
    @Greta Handel

    Listen, you have constantly soiled this fine opinion webzine with your constant nagging of having your comment chimed. Look in the mirror.

    • Replies: @Mr. Anon
  349. Corvinus says:
    @Mr. Anon

    The glue factory can’t come soon enough for you!

    • Replies: @Mr. Anon
  350. The Hate That Dare Not Speak Its Name
    Here’s my “Chronicles” article from a year ago about the mainstream respectability of racist anti-white hate. What’s changed since and what hasn’t?

    (Per your column:) Yes, the ctrl-left may have been surprised that all their pet fringers did not come through with the votes expected. That’s not the answer to your question.

    The answer is what Donald Trump has been doing for the last 3 weeks. I didn’t expect it out of him either, but President Trump has been kicking ass and taking names. President Trump has been responsible for the big counterattack on the anti-White wokeness. If he were acting like Trump-45 right now, no matter whose votes he’d gotten, the anti-White attacks would still be unrelenting.

    Give the guy some damn credit, will you? I know, he’s not high brow, but he’s been doing a hell of a job with this!

    Can you even write “Thank you, President Trump!”? (I knew you couldn’t …)

    Thank you, President Trump!

  351. Hail says: • Website
    @Jenner Ickham Errican

    Thanks, but —

    “FORT BRAGG” and the Ratchet Effect:

    Hegseth [ordered] the renaming of the North Carolina base to Fort Roland L. Bragg, not the Confederate general that was the previous namesake.

    The new name pays tribute to Pfc. Roland L. Bragg, a World War II hero who earned the Silver Star and Purple Heart for his exceptional courage during the Battle of the Bulge.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/hegseth-says-fort-bragg-coming-back-twist

    And here is a good casa of the Ratchet Effect at work at Fox News:

    The base was originally named in 1918 [thru June 2023, ordered changed by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin] for Gen. Braxton Bragg, a Confederate general from Warrenton, North Carolina, who was known for owning slaves and losing key Civil War battles that contributed to the Confederacy’s downfall.

    Which bozo wrote that line?

    “Known for” owning slaves and losing battles! (Byline is a Louis Casiano).

    Scene, USA, 1875: “Greetings, gentlemen. My name is Braxton Bragg. You may remember me from such things as owning slaves, losing battles, and contributing to the Confederacy’s downfall. It’s a pleasure to be in your company.”

    • LOL: Adam Smith
    • Replies: @Hail
  352. Hail says: • Website
    @Hail

    a good casa of the Ratchet Effect

    I meant to write “case.”

    I decided to keep as is; the “casa” version works to honor the bylined Louis Casiano: a Puerto Rican(?) and expert on what Confederate general Braxton Bragg was “known for.”

    • Replies: @Hail
  353. @Achmed E. Newman

    I should add that there’ve been plenty of other people fighting the anti-White evil, as pundits, at their workplaces, in the courtrooms, etc. Have we made dents? Maybe a bit, but this is evil not stupidity – unrelenting evil that must be terminated with extreme prejudice or it will keep coming at us.

    However, we can’t issue Executive Orders, unfortunately. We have Kings now in America, who can. If that’s gonna be the case, it’s great we’ve got OUR King in there.

    • Replies: @Reg Cæsar
  354. Would love to be in a position to be a paid subscriber, but alas, business being what it has been for me for the past few years, I have to be extremely frugal and aggressively prevent any “subscription creep.”

    God willing, one day soon my fortunes will change and I can get past your damn paywall over there.

    • Replies: @Steve Sailer
  355. @Jenner Ickham Errican

    You called it, Mr. American. Let me put a better link in: Mt. McKinley v Denali.

    Our newest post up is an anecdotal polemic about the REAL China, not the one seen in youtube videos made by pretty young Western ladies. Sometimes we have pictures of pretty ladies though.

    Then, we’ll get on that post about the evils of inflation v the good of deflation, finally to that argument against the innumerate Climate Calamity™ fools with the important numbers, then various and sundry items of stupidity, with humor blended in almost everywhere.

    Come due to your wayward internet search. Stay for Peak Stupidity!

  356. Hail says: • Website
    @Hail

    From Peak Stupidity:

    [The renaming of Fort Bragg in honor of some solider named Bragg from the 1941-45 war] is like that deal with not actually renaming King County in Washington State (Seattle being in it) but just saying that it now stands for Martin Rev. Luther, M.D.-Proctology King. That was about 15 years ago, best I can recall.

    The people of the ctrl-left are very tricky […]

    Here’s what’s got to happen — some high-up officers in the base must have a modicum of courage (do they have ANY of it anymore?) and put up pictures of the actual Confederate General Bragg, etc., etc. around the bases.

    • Replies: @Colin Wright
  357. Brutusale says:
    @Mark G.

    “Increasing numbers of them, though, do not want Muslims or Africans to have the freedom to move to Europe.”

    Not this guy! He welcomes a nation of mulattoes.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/french-far-left-leader-melenchon-openly-calls-great-replacement-shock-speech

  358. Mr. Anon says:
    @Art Deco

    There was a Roman province called ‘Syria Palestina’. It disappeared in Late Antiquity and no territorial unit which resembled it or the British mandate was to be found for about 1,300 years.

    There is no governmental administrative unit called “Iberia”. And yet there is such a place as Iberia. Over the last 2,000 years people have used the term “Palestine” to refer to a rough region in the Near East. You can find evidence of it in essays and letters in the 19th Century.

    • Replies: @Mike Tre
  359. Mr. Anon says:
    @Corvinus

    An unimaginative reply from you – as expected. Can’t you come up with any new material, you Nancy-boy?

    You really are a dullard.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  360. @epebble

    Lol, Captain Ackshually! No intelligent person worries about a fictional disease or a fictional asteroid impact. The fraud Pfi$er $teve feigned the former and mocks the latter. Man, the boomers round here are DENSE.

  361. @Mactoul

    Europeans have got themselves jumbled up again. Again you have a lot of Poles living in Germany and a lot of Ukrainians in Poland to mention wholesale movement of others. There are English living in Spain and France.
    Basically the entire continent is on move.
    So the simple picture you like isn’t reality anymore. It was artificial in 1945 and more artificial now.

    LOL. You think it is ten million Europeans living–often temporarily–in other European countries is what has disturbed the “artificial” reality of European nation states?

    Have you even given any thought to why the EU could have something like Schengen? It is precisely because of the settled solidity of European borders post 1945. Can’t you grasp that? It’s like how you can invite guests to your home because you know the law will assert that it is yours. That no one can just squat and take it from you.

    It is the that the Spainish know that Spain is theirs, acknowledged by all and the British won’t try and steal it, that they can allow a bunch of British pensioners to retire there. Likewise the Germans can tolerate some Poles because the border was settled. Otherwise, they’d up and pitch their Polish asses back across the Oder. And maybe even keep going to recover their lost territories. It is precisely that the borders were settled into coherent nation states that allows a little bit of this free movement without creating big political worries. And even then all these cases of even other European peoples plopped down still create frictions.

    Basically the entire continent is on move.

    No it’s not. Kids may study in another country. Or work somewhere else as young adults to “see the world”. Your German banker may do a stint in the City of London. You British retiree might seek some sunshine in Spain. When it comes to actually living their lives–raising their families–95%+ of Europeans are in their own nation, where the language, culture, customs, holidays are their own.

    Europeans are not “on the move”. Africans are on the move.

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman
    • Replies: @J.Ross
  362. @Corvinus

    Plus, Corvinus hates it. Must be the right move.

  363. @Hail

    ‘…pictures of the actual Confederate General Bragg, etc., etc. around the bases.’

    As someone said, defense is just a form of protracted suicide.

    Counterattack: Fort Nathan Bedford Forrest.

    Then put up his picture.

  364. J.Ross says:

    OT — Very good Simplicius — in a word, winning — read the comments too, read all the quotes from Orban and Wilders and Rubio, which it won’t let me copy — a long quote below more tag.
    https://archive.is/3fcoo

    [MORE]

    Commentator cheetosspring:

    cheetosSpring
    cheetosSpring
    15h

    For M. Gessen when the L.A. Times & the WaPo refused to endorse KH for president and then Zuck went on Rogan to talk about the *cultural tipping point* and then DJT filed lawsuits against ABC News and CBS for their roles in pre-election manipulations in favor of KH, “my world suddenly felt like a chessboard from which an invisible hand was picking off pieces faster than I had thought was possible.”

    Gessen, writing an op-ed in the nytimes, describes a dislocation many of us understand down to the beds of our toenails, having been exactly where she is now 4 years ago, as Collective Biden filled Joe’s unelected government w/ Antony B and Jake “the slim reaper” Sullivan and Mrs. Nuland and Amos Hochstein and Penny Pritzger and Ron Klein and Jeff Zeints and Lloyd the 3rd and Anita Dunn. It was like being swept up in a shale-slide down the rock side of a mountain, unable to hang on or scrabble for purchase.

    We ended up at the bottom, but like a friend once observed: the foot of the mountain is where all the fertile soil is.

    Gessen wants very badly to see post-Stalin totalitarianism in DJT’s historic rise to a passingly rare non-contiguous 2nd term as the U.S. president—but she cherry-picks her examples to make obvious that totalitarianism is really only something Dems or progressives can diagnose. And when they diagnose it, it’s always against DJT and the voters who sent DJT back to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

    Gessen doesn’t intend ever to notice that those of us who voted for DJT in 2020 and saw our speech curtailed, our media suppressed, our ability to defend our rights publicly trampled suffered then exactly the same type of totalitarianism that she now hyperventilates over after 3 weeks of DJT redux.

    Comparing MAGA enthusiasts to Nazis who sang “Tomorrow Belongs to Me” in the Liza Minelli musical ‘Cabaret,” Gessen pretends not to have seen the Dems dance the “Macarena,” like mindless automatons—on cue & choreographed—at the 1996 convention, a stark display of untreated addiction to a political ideology.

  365. J.Ross says:
    @AnotherDad

    Poles outside of Poland are often a problem. Poland has had the best economy in Europe for a while now, so these are often people who couldn’t find work in the best economy. Before it was middle-eastern Muslims causing all the trouble in Sweden, it was Poles and Bosniaks.

    • Agree: Mike Tre
  366. @Ralph L

    Thanks for that info., Ralph. Unlike with your Dad, anything that makes me mad is something that I’m not going to keep paying for, if I have a choice in the matter. That’s why, per my old post on the WSJ, when it went up by a measly quarter (not measly in relative terms, either a 50% or 33% hike), I said “that’s it” and quit cold turkey.

    I’d forgotten to answer you from way up top. Mr. Unz is independently wealthy from his higher-math work in the trading business, I think in NYC. I am so glad for the complete lack of ads – if this looked like The Gateway Pundit, there’d be no way I could keep going to the site.

    Thanks, Mr. Unz! … and also, thanks again, President Trump-47!

    • Agree: Jim Don Bob
    • Replies: @Hail
  367. Mike Tre says:
    @Mactoul

    “But this doesn’t mean that European nations should be monoethnic and pure. ”

    Ok Babs.

  368. @Mactoul

    For the sake of your pure nations millions were evicted from their homes in Europe alone, never mind the rest of the world. And for what?

    They had to move because:

    a) Stalin wanted to grab up some territory as spoils of war–a war he helped start. And to do that meant pushing Poland west. Which meant pushing Germans west.

    b) The Germans had started and lost the War. They had made themselves unwelcome in other nations.

    c) These “out of state” Germans–in the Sudetenland, the Pomeranian Corridor, Danzig–had been a part of the generator/justification for Hitler making war. The allies–not being blithering “diversity!” idiots–figured resolving it, however painful was a positive step toward “let’s not do that shit again”.

    And yeah, it was briefly painful and a bunch of uprooted people died. But most of them–say my friend’s Sudeten German parents–were a heck of a lot better off than the millions who died in the War. (They had to make a life in post-War Germany living amongst their fellow Germans. One of the more prosperous and pleasant and functional places in human history. Oh the horror!)

    And it … worked! The post-War Europe of people more or less in their correct nations has been remarkably peaceful. The conflict has come from (your beloved) imperialism–the Russians beating the Hungarians and Czechs back into line–and from the places–Northern Ireland, the Balkans–where the populations were still (your beloved) mixed populations.

    This whole history simply rebuts your nonsense.
    — mixed populations generated conflict and war
    — imperialism generated conflict and war
    — the relatively non-diverse one-peopleish post-War nation states ushered in a remarkable peaceful period in European history

    • Replies: @Mactoul
  369. Hail says: • Website
    @Achmed E. Newman

    I am so glad for the complete lack of ads

    The legal wording means he may accept and run advertising, so long as it’s “unpaid”:

    CONTACT US

    — Email Us (Ron at Unz dot com)

    IMPORTANT NOTE: We do NOT accept paid advertising, and any solicitations on that topic will be reported as SPAM.

    ————————–

    — Mailing Address:

    The Unz Review
    555 Bryant St. #371
    Palo Alto, CA 94301

    One thing Steve Sailer has never done even once, to my knowledge, is to hawk water-filters, nutrition tablets, t-shirts, gold-bar management services, or any other service or product. Not in his entire 25-year blogging career.

    I know there are Sailernalia-knowers who may be reading this whose knowledge exceeds my own (MEH 0910, and mamy others) , but I feel confident in what I say: Sailer either never hawked products or, if he did briefly, he skillfully buried the evidence.

  370. @Mactoul

    Europeans didn’t want the pure nations. They preferred freedom to move.

    LOL. You don’t stop. Geez, just say “Jews”.

    Most normal people down throughout human history have lived their lives amongst their own people, usually within a stones throw–or at least a reasonable day or twos hike–of where they were born. People used to have not just what we think of as national identities but very specific regional and local identities. I’m a this. My people live here.

    Since the abolition of serfdom Europeans have been free to move. But people generally do not move unless their people are able conquer/push-out another people to get some better land, or they are pushed out by other people, or times are tough (overpopulation, famine) so they have no choice but move. Moving is not something done lightly. Pulling up stakes traditionally meant you risk starvation, disease, death. (There isn’t some NGO funding you and serving dinner.) It’s risky.

    What you are talking about is not the “freedom to move”, but the demand “other people must accept me”. This idea that Jews–uniquely among all people on the earth–have some sort of God given right to plop themselves down amongst some other people to start middle-manning where the middle-manning is good–and that the host population must accept us— is a Jewish ideology.

    No one else believed in this “freedom”. Natural rights by definition are limited to your own freedom, they can not depend on coercing your desired behavior from other people. “Your right to swing your fist ends at my nose.”

    I don’t think I have some sort of “right to move” to say China. Or if the Chinese were dumb enough to let my white ass in, that they have some sort of obligation to tolerate me, employ me, golf with me or treat me as a regular Chinses. Heck, I don’t even think I have a right to move to Canada–people who–well the old Canadians anyway–are a pretty close ethnic kin and speak–sort of–the same language. No Europeans did not think there was some sort of right for foreigners to plop themselves down in their neighborhoods and nations. That’s nonsense.

    • Thanks: Moshe Def
  371. @Joe Stalin

    Federal Judge Keeps Hawaii’s Under-21 Gun Ban in Place

    At statehood in 1959, Hawaii was one of only four states which allowed 20-year-olds to vote. The others were Georgia, Kentucky (both 18) and Alaska (19). According to Ballotpedia, in the years following, Hawaiians twice voted down a voting age of 18, by narrow margins.

    Don’t know if it was connected with the voting age, but TIL YIL that Hawaii’s age of majority at the time was also 20. How many other states (before 1971) had set that somewhere below 21?

  372. J.Ross says:

    OT — Wait a minute, what?!

  373. Hail says: • Website
    @Hypnotoad666

    Steve should have been an intellectual hero and leader in the whole “Vibeshift” heralded by Trump’s win

    The way things are going with Blompf-II (“record-low deportations!”), it may be better if Steve Sailer becomes a harsh and open detractor. Use his old skills at satire and wit to mock Trump’s missteps (when they happen), and demand he do better.

    There is little use, NOW, in being a cheerleader for this man; or even a silent onlooker. It would only reinforce the man’s embarrassing do-nothing-and-claim-victory tendencies.

  374. @Achmed E. Newman

    I should add that there’ve been plenty of other people fighting the anti-White evil,

    The “anti-white evil” is just another, backhanded form of white supremacism– one would actually have to be superior, in several ways, to be guilty of many of the things charged– run mostly by (some) whites for the benefit of (those) whites. Much like the African immigration of the 18th century, deleterious to most whites but beneficial for a corrupt few.

    But not their descendants!

    Tangentially related, this fellow writing for Medium discovered some real bias in pay at his company, which he thinks is probably the rule in the white-collar world, and it’s based neither on one’s demographic nor on one’s performance, but on another factor:

    The Truth About the Wage Gap from Someone Who Saw Everyone’s Salary
    There are only two things that determine salary — and…

    His guess at the highest-paid on staff was off, but he wasn’t surprised at the true answer. What was shocking was who was the lowest.

  375. @Hail

    DOGE’s benefit isn’t so much saving money– more than ¾ of spending is either military or untouchable “entitlements”… or paying off creditors. As the case of USAID showed, DOGE is defunding the Deep State’s culture warfare here and abroad.

    Ending the subsidies for “gender” issues in Gaza, Yemen, Iran, etc, would appear to work against the Israelis. Indeed, if anything was a Mossad operation, it was USAID itself!

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
    , @J.Ross
  376. @Hail

    OTOH, Mr. Sailer doesn’t care about water filters, tablets, T-shirts (ever seen one in his closet during interviews?), or gold bars. I doubt he’d be touting Ivermectin or HCQ either. MLB MVP’s signed baseballs or original sketches of golf courses? That might be different.

    …if he did briefly, he skillfully buried the evidence.

    Yeah, well you can’t be too careful with your gold bars.

    I kid, as I think Mr Sailer has a lot of integrity when it comes to this sort of thing – I wish he’d tout the value of REAL money if anything, but Buzz Mo. and I took care of that the other day.

    BTW, you and I sure have divergent opinions on the efforts by President Blompf lately. On THE most important issue, though the outflow is as through a piece of 1/4″ ID Tygon tubing, darkly, he at least has closed one of main valves and capped the big gashes in the inflow pipes made on purpose by his evil predecessor. Homan and Miller are serious, and I think they are learning.

    The latest thing is prosecuting those who leak info. on raids etc. Then again, I know, just sweep the Home Depots and, yeah, those road blockages in LA, Atlanta, and elsewhere. This must accelerate in numbers, keep getting visibility, and become more consistent and random at the same time (the latter meaning you, being deported, could be anybody, anywhere), and self-deportation might start in earnest.

    I’ll say that Homan and company are not only great in ignoring the sob stories but in taking advantage of the opportunities they provide.

    • Replies: @Buzz Mohawk
  377. @Reg Cæsar

    DOGE’s benefit isn’t so much saving money– more than ¾ of spending is either military or untouchable “entitlements”… or paying off creditors.

    I absolutely agree and have already written a post on that point.

    You could pay these people money to go shoot pool (dating myself here) all day long, and we’d still come out way ahead. Wipe out the people and agencies that impede America.

    However, this latest USAID story is beyond even what I thought goes on – the tears of the ctrl-left are almost too much for me. My Doc says to keep an eye on that sodium! I’m eating a banana as I type to counterbalance it. I’ve become a Banana Republican lately.

  378. @Greta Handel

    Is that “higher brow” a natural trait or nurtured?

    LOL!

    Whichever the trait is, however, natural or nurtured, your comment has helped me to understand what the HB in HBD really stands for.

  379. OT, but I just took a quick look at iSteve from March 2022, hoping to find evidence of over-optimistic Russians and their supporters looking for a three-day SMO. But it seems to have been US officials rather than commenters or Russian spokesmen expecting a walkover:

    AP:

    Not long before Putin kicked off his war, some U.S. military officials believed that he could capture Kyiv in short order — perhaps just a few days — and that he might break the Ukrainian military within a couple of weeks. Putin, too, might have expected a quick victory, given that he did not throw the bulk of his pre-staged forces into the fight in the opening days. Nor did his air force assert itself. He has made only limited use of electronic warfare and cyberattacks…

    My understanding is that US diplomats prepared to evacuate the Kiev embassy.

    Philip Breedlove, a retired Air Force general who served as the top NATO commander in Europe from 2013 to 2016 and is now a Europe specialist with the Middle East Institute, said Ukraine may not win the war outright, but the outcome will be determined by what Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is willing to accept in a negotiated settlement.

    Well, that’s debatable.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  380. @Jim Don Bob

    ‘Then women come in and complain about this tough guy attitude that is the workplace calling it “toxic masculinity” (wtf that is), run to HR the first time some guy looks at them sideways, and then get out of the fire house into “management” as fast as they can. That’s how LA ended up with three lesbians in the top FD jobs.’

    That workplace culture also guides us firmly towards doing whatever it is that we’re expected to do. Orwell wrote about this (in a negative sense) in ‘Shooting an Elephant.’ If we’re given a clear role to play, we play it — and often with surprising effectiveness.

    It’s a good thing, and a necessary thing. If you’re to run into a burning building — or confront someone armed, or go over the top, or even just pick up a dresser, you’re a lot more likely to do well if it’s what you’ve come to expect of yourself. That’s a function of culture.

    • Agree: Jim Don Bob
  381. @Hail

    There is little use, NOW, in being a cheerleader for this man; or even a silent onlooker.

    He’s been in office 21 days and he’s already already gutted a huge chunk of the Deep State/DEI industrial complex and exposed the fact that Wokeness was basically a government sponsored psy-op. That alone was worth the price of admission as far as I’m concerned. But if anyone wants to call Trump silly names and criticize him for not being right-wing enough, I’ve got no problem with that.

    But Steve can’t really say anything because that would require him to have a definite position or opinion, which he pretty much refuses to do. For example, after all the discourse over the years on here about the weird national takeover by the Woke cult, you’d think Steve would be interested in the fact that the MSM, the Universities, and corporations were being secretly funded with billions of tax dollars to promote the mind virus and censor . But nah, he finds that too boring to comment on. Like 99% of everything important, he’s a “silent onlooker.” So, whatever.

    I hope he eventually makes lots of money from movie reviews, baseball trivia, and ambiguous snark. (And maybe some supplemental deep state checks to stay silent about everything). But it’s a strange way to run a railroad when you’re in the pundit business.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
    , @res
  382. @Achmed E. Newman

    However, this latest USAID story is beyond even what I thought goes on

    The conspiracy theorists vindicated yet again! At this point, the only people who won’t admit there is a Deep State are the people who are in the Deep State. Now let’s see what’s in those JFK docs . . . .

    • Agree: vinteuil
  383. vinteuil says:

    btw, OT –

    Is Trump’s suggestion that the people of Gaza be dispersed to the four winds, leaving a lovely beachfront property, with great weather, ripe for development – any worse than the available alternatives?

    Wouldn’t that be kind of like what happened with the Greeks & the Turks in 1923?

  384. @Achmed E. Newman

    Yeah, well you can’t be too careful with your gold bars.

    I kid, as I think Mr Sailer has a lot of integrity when it comes to this sort of thing – I wish he’d tout the value of REAL money if anything, but Buzz Mo. and I took care of that the other day.

    Thank you, Alfred. I am very embarrassed about many of my recent comments, but I am proud of the ones about physical gold, and I am happy about your responses to them.

    I do some things right, and I screw up others.

    I type this as my many ounces of pure gold are now trading at and around $2,900 — while Clown World continues to act as crazy as ever and my dollars buy fewer groceries.

    Yes! Me worry!

  385. @vinteuil

    “Is Trump’s suggestion that the people of Gaza be dispersed to the four winds, …”

    His actual suggestion was they go to Egypt and Jordan which is crazy. They would still be in a position to make trouble. Egypt and Jordan are well aware of this and don’t want them at all. Some place like Indonesia would make a lot more sense.

  386. Mactoul says:
    @AnotherDad

    These “out of state” Germans–in the Sudetenland, the Pomeranian Corridor, Danzig–

    There was nothing “out of state” about these Germans. Not a whit more than you could say about Bavarians or Rhinelanders. These were all solidly German majority lands.

    There is nothing Jewy about freedom to move. Europeans prefer to buy property in other countries and even settle there. Like Poles in Germany, English in France and Spain and so on.

  387. President Trump’s Department of Justice files motion requesting a pause in a major US court of Appeals case.

    President Trump’s DOJ is submitting new court filings based on his 2A Executive Order is great news for 2A rights.

    William Kirk discusses the matter of Illinois v. Brown, a case out of the Circuit Court in White County, which has found that as it relates to possessing firearms in the home, the FOID Act lacks historical support and is therefore unconstitutional.

  388. @vinteuil

    Wouldn’t that be kind of like what happened with the Greeks & the Turks in 1923?

    Which Jews were you proposing to expel, and from where?

    • Replies: @Wielgus
  389. epebble says:
    @epebble

    Not sure if this is to show ‘they are caring’, but NASA is steering the Webb telescope to take a picture on an ’emergency’ decision.

    https://www.livescience.com/space/asteroids/in-emergency-decision-james-webb-telescope-will-study-city-killer-asteroid-2024-yr4-before-its-close-approach-to-earth

    • Replies: @Brutusale
  390. @Hail

    There is one product that you apparently didn’t notice. Not noticing that product seems hard to do, but noticing is in the eye of the beholder, so to speak. I myself noticed the product being pushed on many occassions, and I think there were many noticers noticing it on this website because we were put on notice that it had sold out at one point. If you notice anything odd about this post, then you may be noticing a clue too!

    • Thanks: Hail
  391. @Achmed E. Newman

    If you’re having BP issues, you should go on a ketogenic diet, do some exercise, and stop drinking anything except water. Eating a banana for potassium is like taking a potassium supplement with a spoonful of sugar. Also, the research behind the sodium-BP connection is weak. My sense of the situation is that it is like protein-kidney disease. If you are already sick, protein is bad for kidneys, but protein does not cause kidney disease. Likewise, salt is problematic only when your BP/fluid balance systems are already broken. You should aim at the root causes.

  392. Mactoul says:

    Europeans have many faults but not even their enemies accuse them of nationalism. Post-war peace is more likely due to quenching of the nationalist fervor that has tormented the continent for a century. Since 1848 to be precise.
    Even the first war had plenty of nationalism behind it. Britain, France, Germany, Italy were all monoethnic nations.
    Alsace was a nationalist cause. The millions of men were fighting for their nations not for empires in far-off places.

  393. J.Ross says:

    OT — DOGE exact legal ominous dominus — is this true? Anon said,
    >be me
    >lawyer, actually reads Trump’s DOGE Executive Order
    >expecting some illegal power grab, but it’s airtight
    >turns out Trump & Musk didn’t create shit, Obama did
    >Obama created United States Digital Service (USDS) in 2014
    >was meant to fix Big Mike’s tranny BFF’s website after it launched as a flaming pile of DEI shit
    >bureaucratic patch job to fix the Obamacare website meltdown
    >fast forward to 2025, Trump rebrands it DOGE (United States DOGE Service)
    >keeps the acronym, keeps the funding, but gives it a whole new mission: Find the Receipts
    >legally untouchable because it was already fully funded and operational
    >Trump invokes 5 USC 3161, which allows him to create temporary hiring authorities
    >DOGE teams get embedded inside every single federal agency
    >each team consists of a lawyer, HR rep,zoomer nerd , and an investigator
    >they report to DOGE, not the agency they’re embedded in
    >but wait, there’s more
    >Trump invokes 44 USC Chapter 35 which governs federal IT and cybersecurity oversight
    >since USDS was originally an IT oversight body, DOGE now has full access to all federal data systems
    >yes, all of them
    >executive order is written to block legal challenges
    >includes language that overrides conflicting executive orders
    >orders every agency to comply, refusing means they violate presidential authority
    >Congress can’t defund it because it’s not a new program, just a repurposed one
    >DOJ can’t sue for overreach because Trump used existing laws exactly aswritten
    >Dems trying to file legal challenges, but they run into standing issues because DOGE operates within existing frameworks
    >Obama literally built the perfect Deep State IT backdoor
    >Trump&Musk just hacked the system and took the admin controls
    >Musk now has legal oversight of every major agency’s internal systems
    the Deep State can’t stop it without rewriting multiple federal laws
    >MFW they legally outplayed the system and there’s nothing anyone can do about it
    >MFWObama created DOGE

    • Replies: @MEH 0910
    , @res
  394. J.Ross says:
    @Hypnotoad666

    The shill talking point of the day appears to be attacking Elon Musk’s ~8yo son for daring to attend a presidential order signing, because, as opposed to being adorable, apparently it’s some sort of — I don’t even know what they’re trying for here.

    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
  395. anonymous[474] • Disclaimer says:

    How many Covid shots did Steve get?

    Note to Steve: You should get a full body MRI every two years from now on. I declined getting vaxxed over my suspicion of this potential issue. Since you’ve had cancer, it’s a bigger deal for you…

    https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/fda-lab-uncovers-excess-dna-contamination-covid-19-vaccines

    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
  396. anonymous[323] • Disclaimer says:
    @vinteuil

    Is Trump’s suggestion that the people of Gaza be dispersed to the four winds, leaving a lovely beachfront property, with great weather, ripe for development – any worse than the available alternatives?

    Wouldn’t that be kind of like what happened with the Greeks & the Turks in 1923?

    Why do Palestinians have the blues?
    That’s nobody’s business but the Jews!

  397. MEH 0910 says:

    Steve has been dialed back to displaying just two of his posts on The Unz Review main page.

    https://www.unz.com/runz/confucious-deepseek-and-why-china-would-win-a-war-with-the-united-states/#comment-6985897

    Corvinus says:
    February 8, 2025 at 6:48 pm GMT

    @Ron Unz

    Sir, any confirmation on your part that Mr. Sailer is leaving your fine opinion webzine? Is he truly not going to post here anymore?

    • Replies: @Ron Unz

    https://www.unz.com/runz/confucious-deepseek-and-why-china-would-win-a-war-with-the-united-states/#comment-6991236

    Ron Unz says:
    February 12, 2025 at 2:08 am GMT

    @Corvinus

    Sir, any confirmation on your part that Mr. Sailer is leaving your fine opinion webzine? Is he truly not going to post here anymore?

    Sorry for not getting back to you sooner, but I’d been under the gun getting out a very long article of my own:

    https://www.unz.com/runz/american-pravda-charles-a-lindbergh-and-the-america-first-movement/

    I think Steve began very actively posting on his Substack about six months ago, and since then his posting on his website has dropped by about 80%. So although he hasn’t officially said anything, it’s very possible he’s pretty much moved all his activity over there.

    One thing I really should do as a consequence is move Andrew Anglin’s work over to that column since he’s really an extremely prolific blogger rather than a columnist, and the very large number of his posts take up so much space above all the other columnists.

    • Thanks: Achmed E. Newman, res
    • Replies: @Hail
  398. MEH 0910 says:
    @J.Ross

    Is this the last Steve post on Unz?

    Steve has a new post up on Unz:

    https://www.unz.com/isteve/the-rights-weird-new-age/

    The Right’s Weird New Age
    Steve Sailer • February 12, 2025

    • Replies: @Hail
  399. Hail says: • Website
    @MEH 0910

    While technically that counts as a “post on Unz,” it’s really an excerpt from his Take-Mag column about New-Age movements and the Trump coalition.

  400. @Mactoul

    LOL. You are amazing. A few days ago you’re lecturing us

    So, the nationalist prescription doesn’t work either. If anything, the imperial prescription is better for peace, harmony and prosperity.

    how imperialism is better for peace and prosperity.

    Now you’re telling us

    All great people are driven to expand. It is only tired, exhausted people that hanker for walls to cower behind.

    how we nationalists are a bunch of peaceful low-T whimps if we won’t venture out of our pathetic little nations for some good old fashioned imperial rape and pillage.

    You can’t even keep your line of toxic minoritarian bullshit consistent over three days?

    • Replies: @Mactoul
  401. @Achmed E. Newman

    However, this latest USAID story is beyond even what I thought goes on

    Achmed, can you bring me up to speed–maybe just a link–on the story you are referring to. The latest outrage. (A lot of these stories just leave my blood boiling.)

    I clicked back through a few comment links and then top searched on USAID, but it wasn’t clear to me what this “latest USAID story” refers to.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  402. Mike Tre says:
    @Mr. Anon

    “There is no governmental administrative unit called “Iberia”. And yet there is such a place as Iberia. ”

    Heck there’s no governmental administrative unit called “America,” but people refer to it all the time and know exactly what it means.

    Americans would be people of America, but oh wait, there is no country called America, so those people must not exist either.

    • Agree: Liza
    • Thanks: Dnought
  403. Mike Tre says:
    @Chrisnonymous

    “. Also, the research behind the sodium-BP connection is weak.”

    The issue is a longstanding imbalance between the intake of sodium and potassium. If people consumed an equal amount of both then BP issues would correct themselves.

    • Agree: res
  404. Mr. Anon says:
    @Corvinus

    @Greta Handel

    Listen, you have constantly soiled this fine opinion webzine with your constant nagging of having your comment chimed.

    The only one soiling this place is you, you odious piece of filth.

  405. res says:
    @Hypnotoad666

    For example, after all the discourse over the years on here about the weird national takeover by the Woke cult, you’d think Steve would be interested in the fact that the MSM, the Universities, and corporations were being secretly funded with billions of tax dollars to promote the mind virus and censor . But nah, he finds that too boring to comment on. Like 99% of everything important, he’s a “silent onlooker.” So, whatever.

    It does seem a lot has come out which is well worth noticing.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  406. @Chrisnonymous

    Chris, I’m not having any issues per se. I’m just sitting here eating my banana.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  407. @J.Ross

    The shill talking point of the day appears to be attacking Elon Musk’s ~8yo son for daring to attend a presidential order signing…

    That, and “It’s a constitutional crisis!”

    Turns out the American Bar Association has received $100+ million from USAID over the years. Elon should make a list of who is NOT getting USAID money. It probably wouldn’t require more than one sheet of paper.

    But my fave is the Rocky Mountain Institute which trumpeted that bogus study saying gas stoves cause asthma. They too have gotten 10s of millions of dollars from the Feds. Blogger Robert Bryce looked at their 990, and found they have 12 directors all making $400,000+ a year.

    The breadth and depth of this corruption is mind boggling. I’d like to see people go to jail but I will settle for cutting off their livelihood.

    • Agree: kaganovitch
    • Replies: @J.Ross
  408. @AnotherDad

    Sorry, A/D, I should have stuck in one more comma (tween latest and USAID – getting as lazy as say Alden about it.) I refer to the story of USAID in general here, as it is the latest exposure of out and outrageous stuff! I mean, yes, NGO’s are all really GS-NGOs (Government Supported, oxymoronity alert already texted out). I knew that.

    However, the manner in which this much-more-than-I’d-thought money is being spread out and where and who it’s being spread out to is beyond what I’d have imagined. It’s more evil than plain old stupid Gov’t wastage and corruption.

  409. @anonymous

    Agree.

    Alex Berenson yesteday on his Substack said that Japan had 2% more cancer deaths in 2022 and 2023 than expected. Most Japanese got the shot.

    The vaccines were the greatest human trial of all time.

  410. Hail says: • Website
    @MEH 0910

    I tried to access:

    https://unz.substack.com

    And was given this:

    NOT FOUND

    The page you are attempting to access is not found.

    If you want to claim this URL you can start a Substack today

    [Start a Substack]

    Or, Search Substack for “unz”

  411. Corvinus says:
    @Colin Wright

    “but they all seem intelligent, reasonable, and grounded in fact.”

    JFC, no.

    “Call it caste identity if you will, but I am in fact a white American and not just a “Catholic”, followed by “I hate Mexicans”, are the antithesis of Christian teachings and are rooted in irrational beliefs. Them again, you as a southron find such thoughts comforting, but that is an entirely different story.

    “Now, instead of just vilifying me as well…”

    You do that wonderfully well all on your own.

    • Replies: @res
    , @kaganovitch
  412. res says:
    @Corvinus

    “Now, instead of just vilifying me as well…”

    You do that wonderfully well all on your own.

    Isn’t psychological projection fun?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  413. @Chrisnonymous

    It’s not that I don’t appreciate the health and nutrition advice though, Chris, so thanks.

  414. J.Ross says:
    @res

    Alden’s not lazy, it’s meant to be read as an unstoppable unbroken monotone monorhythm rant, one word after another flowing along a stream of uncoolable anger, like ’60s Richard Burton would do when he wanted to show controlled rage.

  415. J.Ross says:
    @YetAnotherAnon

    We’ve traded places with the Soviet Union. A lot of US verbiage about Russia is just easily refuted simple lying. Worse, the DC green zone inmates appear to believe their own lies. There was one Russian commentator who said it would be over quickly, but he’s nobody, he’s not government, he’s the Russian Bill O’Reilly. One of the baseless idees fixees is that everyone in Russia is in the government. Dugin for example was never anybody, he was certainly never “Putin’s brain” as the neocons confidently insist.

  416. J.Ross says:

    Say what you want but at least Chinese people haven’t done anything inhumanly evil since —
    [Chinese evil buzzer goes off]
    Chinese Gangsters enslave women in the Republic of Georgia to steal their ovaries.
    https://www.newsweek.com/chinese-gangsters-enslaved-women-georgia-egg-harvesting-2029334
    Unfortunate title wording: I foresee shills lamenting that, under Biden, the price of eggs wasn’t driving people to enslavement …

    • LOL: kaganovitch
    • Replies: @kaganovitch
  417. Mark G. says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    “I’m just sitting here eating my banana.”

    I’m just sitting here eating German potato salad, German rye bread and lebkuchen I got at a German cafe, the Heidelberg Cafe, on the way home from work.

    This German cafe is here because a German immigrant decided to make his way here to Indianapolis sixty years ago to open it and his children have kept it going. Not all immigration is bad. I have always considered it unfortunate that European immigration to this country has pretty much dried up.

    Every year it seems like there are fewer ethnic restaurants here serving European cuisines like German, French, Italian or Greek since not every family is like the one that keeps my German cafe going. The children go off and do something else.

  418. Corvinus says:
    @res

    It’s just easier for you to make these baseless assertions rather than carefully look at the actual merits of what I have to say.

    • LOL: res
  419. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “The means may not be Kosher,”

    You mean may not be legal or moral.

    “but if he can delete $2 Trillion (per year) from budget by methods fair or foul (as long as it survives courts), that would be a miracle.”

    Assuming that Musk is benevolent, that he has no ulterior motives. But you know better. Musk is a billionaire technocrat. He’s not looking out for your interests. It’s about him and his Incel Clown Posse gaining leverage over the system to exploit it.

    Again, you know better.

    • Replies: @epebble
  420. @Mark G.

    I’m not a Foodie, per se, Mark, but I’d take that great original German food, or Italian or Greek, over any of wildly-foreign crap out of India or worse-yet Africa. I’m told that Ethiopian food is pretty good, but the services is slow – you’ve got to wait around for about 3 weeks for some guys in blue helmets to show up with burlap sacks…

    Anyway, I’d rather take our own country back WITHOUT ANY “ethnic” restaurants. All the recipes are on the internet anyway!

    I know there’s a lot of German history in the Cincinnati area too.

  421. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    If he (Musk) does something really big and nasty, it will get noticed. But some of the changes not involving Musk are interesting too. Just today, there has been an initiative to end the Ukraine war. The terms sound as though they were made by Kissinger/Nixon team (Realpolitik than ideological). Biden and his team would have been stuck forever in the ‘Ukraine Sovereignty and Integrity’ deadlock allowing more warfare. The new guys have the spirit of break a few eggs to make an omelet.

    • Agree: Mark G.
    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @Corvinus
  422. Mactoul says:
    @AnotherDad

    Empire is not just pillage. Empires create large zones of peace. That’s how English, in particular, established the longest era of peace in Indian subcontinent and in Africa.
    The nationalist cates for nothing outside his walls, not even that his nation was created by long-forgotten imperial wars.

    And it is ridiculous about “correct European borders”. Do you mean that East Prussia and Konigsberg were incorrectly German for centuries and how great of Uncle Joe to correct this error?

  423. Bumpkin says:
    @Alexander Turok

    It’s highly likely that you supported Bush II’s Iraq war because your tribe of ruraloid no-college whites supported it.

    Nope, was arguing about it with my engineer buddies instead, pretty much all of whom went to grad school.

    And you ignored the anti-vaxxers because they were initially middle-class, left-leaning dog moms before Alex Jones and other fat nationalists embraced it.

    That may have played a part in why I avoided it, but the big revelation recently was how the Covid “vaccines” were shoved down our throats, despite no evidence to push them and plenty of reports of problems. Once the medicos vastly overplayed their hand on that, it opened the door for people like me to see how far back this scam goes and Ron and others have shown it goes back many decades, back to the childhood vaccines.

    You’ve never held an opinion counter to the ruraloid no-college whites in your life and you never will because you’re just a tribalist.

    I’m sorry to say I don’t think I’ve spent an hour with a “ruraloid no-college white” in my life, as I went to high school in a college town in the midwest, spent several years after that in engineering undergrad and a top grad school, and have spent most of the years since dealing with engineers for whom an undergrad tech college degree is generally considered the bare minimum credential.

    My entire highly college-educated family is filled with contrarian non-conformists on both parents’ sides, ie the exact opposite of tribalist. 😀 That would help explain why I took the contrarian position on the ’03 Iraq war to my nominal “groups” at the time, while anti-vaxxing was such a fringe position which was really only relevant to new parents that most have had no real opinion on it.

    Really no different than the guy who believes everything he hears in the MSM, only your guiding light is Catturd.

    I’ve always read very widely, starting off with a bunch of MSM and alternative rags in my youth, to the last decade of eschewing the MSM altogether in favor of random blogs and websites. If you look at my comment and link history here, you’ll see I’m one of the few linking to guys like avowed socialist Freddie deBoer in addition to the more popular Greenwald or Tucker Carlson. I’ve only ever seen a few Catturd tweets because I’ve avoided Twitter since it first took off among the technorati two decades ago: I didn’t really see the point of micro-blogging and that site is the shithole it is today- predating Elon, who couldn’t fix its long broken culture as he doesn’t even know how- because most people never have found a point to it either.

    Let me now turn my own magnifying glass on you and your avowed college-educated class. What has struck me throughout my life is how simple such people are also, how alike they are to the “ruraloid no-college whites” they sneer at. They are certainly better paid in this current market and do better at some kinds of tests, but whereas the working class may fall for a 100 different scams- I remember distinctly trying to convince a Mormon single mom more than a decade ago that some scheme she got into was actually a pyramid scheme, didn’t work- your college class simply falls for 70-80, just different, more complicated ones, ie Sam Bankman-Fried steals from the masses while Madoff steals from the rich (I wonder what else these two have in common? 😉 ).

    The big problem is that almost no human has the capacity for reason, ie really grasping a mechanism in the real world to understand how it works. A few who do, like the Wright brothers or Boltzmann, figure some such mechanism out and then decades later, they’re simply slavishly copied by all of us monkeys who saw them do something impressive with that. Most humans are simple pattern-matchers instead, as you’ve so ably demonstrated by trying to apply your patterns to me. That makes sense for most people much of the time, but it is why we lived in abject poverty for millenia, as it takes actual reason to step up to our current relative affluence.

    Will our civilization of poverty-minded pattern-matchers simply aping the few who could reason for the last century last for much longer? Nuclear bombs and Ukrainian biolabs suggest not.

  424. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “If he (Musk) does something really big and nasty, it will get noticed.”

    Yes, but you’re conveniently ignoring the point I made—Musk is in it for himself. He and his billionaire buddies want to rig the system in their favor under the guise of “fiscal responsibility”. Don’t be fooled.

    “Just today, there has been an initiative to end the Ukraine war”

    About that…

    —Speaking to reporters ahead of the defence meeting in Brussels on Thursday, Hegseth said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was a “factory reset” for Nato which signalled the alliance needed to be “robust”, “strong” and “real“.

    Hegseth said the US had made an “incredible commitment” to Nato and reiterated calls for fellow members to increase defense spending

    “He added that no country had shown a larger commitment to Ukraine than the US.”—

    “Biden and his team would have been stuck forever in the ‘Ukraine Sovereignty and Integrity’ deadlock allowing more warfare”

    So, on other words, U.S. and Russia sell out Ukraine.

    —Kyiv’s omission from negotiations would represent a striking break from years of U.S. and allied policy, which under former President Joe Biden was guided by the “nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine” principle, with the former president also refusing to speak directly with Putin while the war continued.—

  425. Corvinus says:
    @YetAnotherAnon

    “At the moment the Baltics are trying to create shiny pure nations, by making life hard for ethnic Russians with NATO encouragement.”

    Well within their purview as sovereign peoples. The ethnic Russians who do not prefer it can stay and deal with it, or leave for greener pastures. Freedom of association, as you say.

  426. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “If he (Musk) does something really big and nasty, it will get noticed”

    You mean like this? If he is truly dedicated to reducing the bloat in gummint, then he would say “no thanks” to this deal, right?

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/12/us/politics/trump-tesla-musk-cybertruck.html

    But you know deep down it’s a grift.

    • Replies: @epebble
  427. Corvinus says:
    @Mr. Anon

    “An unimaginative reply from you – as expected. Can’t you come up with any new material, you Nancy-boy?”

    So says the broken record. Man, the glue factory can’t come soon enough.

    • Replies: @Mr. Anon
  428. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    It looks bad, but what if it is a good product they really need? It is supposed to have a strong stainless-steel body that can take some abuse. Anyway, “To the winner goes the spoils” has been an old American tradition. Trump exploited it to the hilt by always using his properties for government work. But, while some grumbled, no one made a big fuss. Ethics and integrity were not the platform he ran on and won. People are getting what they knowingly voted.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  429. J.Ross says:
    @Jim Don Bob

    The Pritzker family — all born to wealth scum with a huge family trust — have sixty-four (64) QUANGOes they’re stealing money from. Sixty-four! And they were all born billionaires!

  430. @Corvinus

    Them again, you as a southron find such thoughts comforting, but that is an entirely different story.

    Citation needed.

  431. @J.Ross

    Unfortunate title wording: I foresee shills lamenting that, under Biden, the price of eggs wasn’t driving people to enslavement …

    If you actually read the article, it is apparent that the ‘enslavement’ took place during the Bidenregnum. It is only the liberation that took place under Trump. Speaking of which, I think it’s high time the Gateway Arch in St. L. was renamed the “Arc De Trump.”

  432. @Mark G.

    Every year it seems like there are fewer ethnic restaurants here serving European cuisines like German, French, Italian or Greek since not every family is like the one that keeps my German cafe going. The children go off and do something else.

    German food is excellent, but I don’t think I have ever seen a German restaurant in the US, and very few French restaurants even in major cities. But in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland you will eat well.

    On the other hand Italian restaurants are quite common and even exist in chains.

    There are also a few Greek restaurants in the US, but not usually very good, in my opinion due to not having access to the right ingredients. (Also very few British restaurants, and when you do find a UK themed pub, the food is usually terrible.)

    When I was in Greece last year I ate many times at an excellent family restaurant, one of the best restaurants I have ever dined at, but the family told me they had a restaurant in Sanford, near Orlando, Florida, but that it was really hard to make a living. However in Crete in the summer season, they were serving about 200 people per night at about $25 per person or more and doing great business. Probably the fact that several members of the family spoke English helped.

    I suspect that the predominance of Italian cooking in the US has a lot to do with the fact that the ingredients for many Italian dishes are mostly cheap, pasta is quick to prepare, and a catering size can of peeled tomatoes goes a long way.

    Once you get past the European, in the USA there are probably just as many restaurants that are Mexican, Brazilian, or Cuban, or at least influenced by those cuisines.

    And then there are the oriental cuisines, Thai, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Indian, all of which seem to be fairly popular as the rice ensures that you get a filling meal for a moderate price.

    None of this would matter much, except that American cuisine is almost non-existent, although there are some items like Philadelphia cheesesteak sandwiches and the ubiquitous hamburger. I have tried soul food, but never found a decent restaurant*, although the concept has potential. Seafood restaurants are also pretty lousy, but maybe there are some good ones in coastal areas that I don’t know about.

    Many years ago I said that if you wanted to thin out the illegal immigrants in the US, the first place to go would be the kitchens of Chinese restaurants.

    * My definition of a decent restaurant is one where the food is better than what I can cook myself, but sometimes when you are away from home, for example in an airport, you just have to eat something no matter how lousy it is.

    • Thanks: Mark G.
    • Replies: @epebble
    , @Reg Cæsar
  433. epebble says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    American cuisine is almost non-existent,

    Like “nobody has seen the sun”? McDonald’s Big Mac is used by economists as the yardstick of ‘good life’. It is considered more accurate than official exchange rate of a nation’s currency.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Mac_Index

  434. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “My suggestion to Democrats is to keep their mouth shut for two years. A magic will happen”

    Wow, what awful advice. You’re usually more astute but this is a clear case of mailing it in.

    Meanwhile, the GOO is weaponizing the Justice Department which I thought was a big no no for them.

    —Since Trump began his second term in the White House on January 20, the new administration fired more than a dozen prosecutors who pursued criminal charges against Trump in two cases brought in 2023, and terminated some FBI officials and prosecutors who pursued cases against Trump supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021 to try to block Congress from certifying his election loss.—

    “Untrammeled (by Congress) DOGE will bite someone on the butt. Really hard.”

    Except a bit earlier you endorsed DOGE to fund 2 trillion in cuts, and implied it can be “under the table” methods of need be. So there is an inconsistency on your part.

    • Replies: @epebble
  435. J.Ross says:

    Steve, are you serious? Are you serious? Are you serious? If I could, I would revoke you letter of recommendation.

  436. @Mr. Anon

    “Pohutsky, who has promoted herself as the first openly bisexual member of the Michigan House, on Thursday took to X to claim that ‘many men’ are not happy with her decision.”

    I don’t believe her. I think she’s just trying to present herself as being somehow courageous–“fighting the patriarchy.” It’s like the way that pop figures (Madonna Ciccone, Cher Bono, et al.) fantasize that they somehow scandalize Christians, when the latter completely ignore them.

  437. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    Multiple things can be true. For example, see:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/steve-bannon-issues-medicaid-warning-to-elon-musk/ar-AA1z3sUn

    Bannon is warning that if and when Musk wields his axe on Medicaid, lot of MAGA will be hurt. This was bound to happen. Sooner or later, when a favored group’s ox is gored, there will be infighting.

  438. mel belli says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Re WSJ, I read it every day religiously from about 1986-2006 (the year they stopped free distribution at every fraternity, sorority, and apartment building in the area of the Berkeley campus). What I treasured was the middle column of the front page, always devoted to some humorous human interest story. One involved a guy in Chicago named Sol who was considered to be a wise man of the markets. He said, “nobody knows anything.” Another on was about a golf nut who got kicked out of the Montevideo Country Club. His buddies asked him how he made his money, and the explanation was that he had bought all of ATT’s pay phones in California, which they didn’t to service anymore, and jacked up the price of a call to a dollar. Then they asked him, “yeah, but where did you get the capital to buy all those phones?” and he couldn’t answer. After some investigation, turned out he’d been a big-tine marijuana smuggler in the ‘70s.

  439. mel belli says:
    @mel belli

    Sorry, Montecito Country Club.

  440. OT: Preliminary NTSB report on the DC crash: https://redstate.com/terichristoph/2025/02/14/ntsb-preliminary-findings-n2185599

    The helo crew were wearing NVGs.

    • Thanks: MEH 0910
    • Replies: @epebble
  441. @Chrisnonymous

    Eating a banana for potassium is like taking a potassium supplement with a spoonful of sugar.

    David Reuben wrote about this in one of his nutrition books– much better than his sex books, and more useful, too– almost 50 years ago. He pointed out that potassium was present in almost every natural food, and there was no need for supplements for it, or, really, supplements for anything else. Get everything from your diet, not pills.

    He also dared to take on the fluoride cult, which was daring in those days. Most health scares were left-wing, but this one was right-wing, at least in America. Europeans, particularly the Germans*, didn’t doctor their water supply.

    Reuben is still alive today, so he must know something!

    *Differences between Europeans are often greater than those between Europeans and Americans. A Danish-born professor living in a Plains state said her relatives back home couldn’t imagine how she could feel safe living near a nuclear power plant. But their Swedish neighbors across the Kattegat were the biggest champions of nuclear power in the world. A Dane in Denmark told me their term for Sweden was “Nordens Amerika”. Big cars, and all. It wasn’t meant as a friendly term.

  442. @Jonathan Mason

    German food is excellent, but I don’t think I have ever seen a German restaurant in the US

    They exist, but you have to seek them out. Just in metro Minnesota, I’ve eaten at the Black Forest Inn (Hasenpfeffer, no less!), Bavarian Gasthaus Hunter, the sadly now-closed Winzer Stube across the river in Hudson, and some Bavarian/Austrian place just north of Minneapolis which also appears to have closed. At the last, a guy in lederhosen would walk around with an accordion, playing folk tunes. (And, by constant request, “Edelweiss”, which is Broadway, but still a decent copy of the style.) More have sprung up in the years since I left, so there is no shortage.

    I doubt there were many in your northern Florida, though. Try St Louis, Milwaukee, Chicago, Cincinnati, and most of Pennsylvania. Lots of Krauts in all those places. Manhattan also seems to have at least one example of everything on earth, as I bet Steve’s L.A. does as well. (Though it was St Paul which pioneered Afghan and Kurdish cuisine in this country.)

    By the way, the re-creation of the City Tavern in Philadelphia, where the huge parties celebrating the completion of the Constitution were held, was run by a German chef, Walter Staib. He wrote a book on the Black Forest style, but also has become an expert on colonial American cuisine since coming here. Sometimes an outsider’s eye can be helpful.

    Sad to say, City Tavern was a victim of Covid.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
    , @Alden
  443. epebble says:
    @Jim Don Bob

    Interesting that a 6-million-dollar Black Hawk does not have omnidirectional collision avoidance capability that a $1,000 China made drone has.

  444. MEH 0910 says:
    @J.Ross

    Trump OUTPLAYED The Deep State By Turning An Obama Program Into DOGE!

    Feb 14, 2025

    President Trump signed an executive order Tuesday requiring federal agencies to work with the Elon Musk-led DOGE to make “large-scale” workforce reductions. The order, titled “Implementing The President’s ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ Workforce Optimization Initiative,” gives DOGE even more powers, just as the Trump administration faces several lawsuits accusing it of violating privacy laws.

    The order requires a “DOGE Team Lead” to be stationed at every government agency, who will oversee hiring decisions.

    Jimmy and Americans’ Comedian Kurt Metzger discuss how Trump managed to skirt possible obstruction by the courts and Democrats by repurposing an earlier Obama initiative as DOGE.

  445. @mel belli

    Good morning, Mr. Belli. I am really glad you mentioned that Human Interest column (or IIRC, just a series of articles) in the WSJ. I thought for sure I had mentioned that in my Peak Stupidity post linked to above, but no.

    Yes, I enjoyed that stuff the most. Though most of the newspaper was about Big Business*, these stories were both human interest and small business stories. Yours was great – no way I’d remember it now even if I had read it.

    The one and only, unfortunately, story that I remember was one about an entrepreneur of hot sauces. He knew everything about it, and the article writer gave a bunch of info on the Scofield scale and lots more. Well, said small hot sauce businessman was pulled over by a cop for something one day and started chatting about his business. The cop was kind of macho and said he had no problem with the hottest of the hot, so “bring it”. The guy had him sample something, not even the “good stuff”, and the cop was hurting, jumping up and down around the cop car, etc….

    It brings to mind a funner, long-lost country. I wish I remembered more of the stories, but maybe you know where I could find them. Were they be by different authors or the same guy?

    .

    * I made a mistake before. It was the Money & Investing section of the 4 sections of that newspaper that bored me and made me realize mostly what a bunch of BS the ‘technical’ (anything but!) trading and after-the-fact explaining stuff was. I liked the Markets section OK.

  446. @epebble

    Yes, it was bound to happen, but it won’t just be MAGA people hurt. (You’re probably right that it’s more of them proportionately, but think of welfare-Mama and working-class blacks too.) Look, as a Libertarian, I was against all of the Socialist healthcare stupidity long before, say Bush-era Medicare D. However, the biggest bug, errr, feature, I suppose, of Socialism is that it’s very hard to reverse.

    The biggest benefit of DOGE has not been the money savings. The biggest has been their shining the light on not just normal government corruption but the use of government $$ for evil by the ctrl-left beyond what even I woul have imagined. DOGE is taking away funding, hence, power, from the left in this way.

    However, no, they cannot save America’s financial state. A big majority of the national budget is the military, SS, Medicare/aid, and interest in large proportions of each. Yes, you can cut waste and fraud within each of the first 3 and make serious cuts in the military. The SS and healthcare obligations are baked in. SS was called the “3rd rail” (reference to subway track-level power conductor) of politics WAY BACK – probably the mid-1990s or earlier.

    “Can’t touch that stuff!’ – some stupid song before (c)Rap “music”

    • Replies: @epebble
  447. Mark G. says:
    @Reg Cæsar

    “Lots of Krauts in all those places.”

    German Americans are the largest ethnic group here in Indiana. I am about twenty percent German. I regularly stop at the German American Heidelberg Cafe on the way home from work. I will either get a meal or a cup of coffee and a pastry. Their coffee and pastries compare favorably with Starbucks. I especially like the Sachertorte, something I first had fifty years ago in Vienna.

    In downtown Indianapolis, you also have the German Rathskellar restaurant, which has been there a hundred years. It looks like the kind of place my favorite German American writer, H.L. Mencken, would have enjoyed eating at. North of where I live, the town of Carmel has a yearly German Christmas market.

  448. Mr. Anon says:
    @Corvinus

    Broken record? More projection. You have never said anything here that is novel or correct.

    One could listen to NPR for five minutes and hear everything you are ever going to say.

    You are a stupid fool and………………a vile piece of garbage.

    • Agree: Alden
    • Replies: @Corvinus
  449. epebble says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Medicare and Social Security are not on DOGE chopping box not only for political reasons but also because they have a separate bookkeeping via trust fund which are expected to be liquid till 2036 and 2033. When they are depleted, the programs may have to make do with spending that matches taxes coming in. In that sense, they are on self-control. The biggest axe DOGE can wield next seems to be DoD, and the respective people are making appropriate noises, and the message seems to be going. Both Hegseth and JD Vance have been fairly direct in admonishing NATO that free ride is over.

    https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/europe-must-prepare-to-defend-itself-in-an-increasingly-multipolar-world/

    https://www.wdsu.com/article/ukraine-zelenskyy-creation-armed-forces-europe-germany/63804716

    • Agree: Mark G.
    • Replies: @Mark G.
  450. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “It looks bad, but what if it is a good product they really need?”

    No, it IS bad. You continue to downplay the role of Musk, a role he shouldn’t be in at all. Cite are one thing. Gutting anything and everything is not what the GOP had in mind. Again, you know better.

    —Republican Sen. Katie Britt has been working to make sure the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency doesn’t hit what she called “life-saving, groundbreaking research at high-achieving institutions,” including her state’s beloved University of Alabama.

    Kansas GOP Sen. Jerry Moran is worried that food from heartland farmers would spoil rather than be sent around the world as the U.S. Agency for International Development shutters.

    And Idaho GOP Rep. Mike Simpson warns national parks could be impaired by cutbacks at the start of summer hiring in preparation for the onslaught of visitors.—

    “Trump exploited it to the hilt by always using his properties for government work.”

    Right, it’s a grift on his part.

    “Ethics and integrity were not the platform he ran on and won.”

    But that’s the GOP platform across the board.

    “People are getting what they knowingly voted.”

    They didn’t expect Musk the billionaire elitist to be front and center.

  451. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “Multiple things can be true”

    Right, the GOP is weaponizing the Justice Department, which I thought was a big no no for them, and Musk”s end goal is to ensure billionaires aren’t held in check by the government.

    “Bannon is warning that if and when Musk wields his axe on Medicaid, lot of MAGA will be hurt.”

    He’s useless. He’s on the outside looking in. Where is the vaunted Stephen Miller trying to rein in Musk?

  452. Corvinus says:
    @Hail

    “Use his old skills at satire and wit to mock Trump’s missteps (when they happen), and demand he do better.”

    He’s NOT going to do better. But you voted for him and by extension support Jews and Israel. You’re a sucker.

    • Replies: @Hail
  453. Mark G. says:
    @epebble

    “The biggest axe DOGE can wield next seems to be DoD”

    The standard Republican line in the past when it comes to defense spending is to “eliminate waste, fraud and abuse” while at the same time talking about how there are serious foreign threats we need to deal with. Decade after decade military spending goes up to deal with these supposed threats.

    There is plenty of waste, fraud and abuse in the DoD that can be eliminated. At the same time, though, all government bureaucracies by their very nature are inefficient. When it is possible, it is better to turn government functions over to private enterprise. You can’t really do this with military spending.

    We will only have serious reductions in military spending when we reject the idea that America is threatened by a potential invasion or needs to invade other countries to eliminate a potential threat. Providing an umbrella against a nuclear attack can be done for a couple hundred billion dollars a year. Most other military spending can be reduced, maybe by half. Anyone just talking about reducing waste, fraud and abuse in the military while not acknowledging this country faces no major threats of being invaded is not really serious about cutting military spending.

    • Agree: epebble
    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @epebble
  454. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “Decade after decade military spending goes up to deal with these supposed threats.”

    Then it goes without saying that Musk should not have his s—-ty truck be bought by the Dept of Defense.

    So, when are you are going to take your buyout as ordered by Trump and do your part to cut spending?

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  455. Corvinus says:
    @Steve Sailer

    You say you’re a rule of law type of guy. What’s your reaction?

    He who saves his Country does not violate any Law—Donald Trump

  456. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “So when are you going to take your buyout as ordered by Trump and do your part to cut spending?”

    I am 68 years old. If you subtract the pension I am not collecting from my salary, I make about six dollars an hour. That is one fifth of what my coworkers make. If the DoD wants to save money, I am about the last person they would want to cut. They would save more money terminating my coworkers while keeping me as one of the remaining employees.

    I think a number of commenters here find flame wars involving two people engaged in personal attacks on each other rather than discussing issues to be tedious. Because of that, I have been making more effort to avoid getting involved in lengthy flame wars.

    While the Republican party is certainly an imperfect vehicle for those who want to cut government spending, most believers in small government consider the Democrats to be even worse. Because of the way our political system is designed, third parties never do very well. Of course, just staying home on election day or voting third party just as a protest vote is always an option. Another option is to vote with your feet. In a number of states under Democrat control, Republicans are just moving to red states.

  457. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “I wam 68 years old. If you subtract the pension I am not collecting from my salary, I make about six dollars an hour.”

    I take this is hyperbole.

    “They would save more money terminating my coworkers while keeping me as one of the remaining employees.”

    Of course you’re going to say that. I’m sure your co workers are saying to get rid of people like yourself.

    “While the Republican party is certainly an imperfect vehicle for those who want to cut government spending, most believers in small government consider the Democrats to be even worse.”

    You’re missing the overall point. It’s not cutting for the sake of cutting. It is about billionaires trying to game the system under the guise of spending freezes and personnel rollbacks.

    My vague impression is that Mr. Sailer knows this, but since he is making money off of Substack, he cannot afford to alienate his base with such NOTICINGS.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  458. Anonymous[763] • Disclaimer says:
    @Mark G.

    You must be a GS-8 or 9. You are smarter than I am, but I retired from the IRS as a GS-13, step 10. You must lack ambition. That is why you continue working because you’re having fun. There was nothing fun about my former job as a revenue agent, which is why I retired the day I was eligible.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  459. Corvinus says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Well, I suppose in the end Trump will continue to support Jews, and you can meekly object.

    —Calling Trump’s plan for Gaza’s future “bold,” Rubio added: “It may have shocked and surprised many, but what cannot continue is the same cycle where we repeat over and over again and end up in the exact same place.”

    Trump has called on Egypt and Jordan to take in Palestinian refugees while the enclave is rebuilt, which could take more than a decade. The proposal was welcomed by Israeli officials but swiftly rejected by Arab and many Western governments, who worry that the mass displacement of Palestinians could result in their permanent exile.—

  460. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “I take this is hyperbole”

    No. If I retired, I would still get 80% of what I make now. By continuing to work, I only get 20% more. I only make one fifth of what my coworkers make after you subtract my pension I am not collecting from my paycheck. Simple math, here.

    In most cases, people who engage in personal attacks on me here are the same people who I do not agree with on political issues. If I started to agree with them all the time, these personal attacks would in most cases subside. I do not care about their opinion of me, though, so why do that?

    “It is about billionaires trying to game the system”

    Rich people are not just on the right. In the last election it was Kamala Harris who received the majority of votes of those who make over a hundred thousand dollars year. It is becoming increasingly the case that the way to wealth is having the right government connections. Free market capitalism has been replaced by a corrupt form of crony capitalism. Saying it is rich Republicans screwing over poor Democrats is an overly simplistic distortion of what is actually happening. There are more rich Democrats who want to maintain the corrupt status quo.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  461. epebble says:
    @Mark G.

    If J.D., Hegseth and Trump, with all their imperfections, can reframe the mission of DoD as protecting U.S. border from invasion, the budget can easily be cut in half. Of course, there will be serious resistance from the traditionalists and the defense production industry. But if DOGE can wield its Thor’s hammer and retire a few ageing carrier groups and submarines, the beast may be subdued.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  462. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “WNo. If I retired, I would still get 80% of what I make now. By continuing to work, I only get 20% more.”

    Which is more than your six dollars an hour figure. As I said, hyperbole.

    “Rich people are not just on the right.”

    Never said otherwise.

    “Free market capitalism has been replaced by a corrupt form of crony capitalism.”

    Absolutely. So why do you think Musk and Trump give two s—- about you as crony capitalists? They are making cuts as a bread and circus. Then they reduce regulations to enrich themselves and further empower themselves. They are running a grift. Why are you foolishly supporting them?

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  463. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “Which is more than your six dollars an hour figure.”

    Huh? They make thirty dollars an hour. If you subtract my pension I am not collecting from my paycheck, I make one fifth of what they do. One fifth of thirty dollars an hour is six dollars an hour. This is the third time in a row you are engaging in a personal attack on me here. I may not continue this if you keep doing that.

    “Why are you foolishly supporting them?”

    The Military-Industrial Complex loves our proxy war in the Ukraine because they make more profits from weapons sales that way. Why do so many Democrats support the MIC?

    I am not a big Trump fan. I voted for Pat Buchanan and Ron Paul when they ran in the primaries but they did not win. I think Trump will be less interventionist on foreign policy than Harris would have been. Both the Republicans and Democrats have largely supported Israel and ignored its ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. I do not support that, the Ukraine intervention or a war with China. I am a consistent non-interventionist on foreign policy so we can spend less money on the military.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  464. Mark G. says:
    @Anonymous

    “That is why you continue working because you’re having fun.”

    I am just a nerdy type of guy who likes to work with a computerized accounting system. The higher level jobs where I work are mostly management type jobs which I would not enjoy. I have never been materialistic. My parents became wealthy when I was a teenager so I already lived that upper middle class lifestyle. Been there, done that. I am happy with a quiet room, a comfortable chair, and my books to read. I imagine as a former GS-13 you must be pretty smart.

    While I do not like our interventionist foreign policy, I am not an anarchist and think we need a small military just for defensive purposes. I took an oath 44 years ago when I went to work for the military to defend the Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic. In addition to liking computers, I like the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights.

  465. @Mark G.

    “I am 68 years old. If you subtract the pension I am not collecting from my salary, I make about six dollars an hour. That is one fifth of what my coworkers make. If the DoD wants to save money, I am about the last person they would want to cut. They would save more money terminating my coworkers while keeping me as one of the remaining employees.”

    Were you offered the buyout?

    Also depending on how the accounting works the government may not realize you are only costing them 6 dollars an hour. Probably more anyway taking overhead into account.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  466. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “Huh? They make thirty dollars an hour. If you subtract my pension I am not collecting from my paycheck, I make one fifth of what they make”

    You’re not making or living on six dollars an hour in your federal job.

    With your pension that you somehow are choosing not to take as of yet, you’re making a nice income.

    If you want to help reduce our budget deficit, retire.

    “This is the third time in a row you are engaging in a personal attack on me her”

    Because I merely said you are using hyperbole?

    “The Military-Industrial Complex loves our proxy war in the Ukraine because they make more profits from weapons sales that way”

    Indeed. But Trump and especially Musk aren’t going to strip our military to the bone, nor whittle away significantly defense contracts. Heil, Musk is in line for a nice payout with his line of sh—ty tricks being bought by our military.

  467. Corvinus says:
    @Mr. Anon

    Keep it up, yeller at clouds and broken record man.

  468. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    You’re wishing upon a star.

    —Speaking to reporters ahead of the defence meeting in Brussels on Thursday, Hegseth said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was a “factory reset” for Nato which signalled the alliance needed to be “robust”, “strong” and “real“.

    Hegseth said the US had made an “incredible commitment” to Nato and reiterated calls for fellow members to increase defense spending.

    “He added that no country had shown a larger commitment to Ukraine than the US.”—

    “But if DOGE can wield its Thor’s hammer”

    Not until Musk gets his fill.

    —On Thursday, Trump floated cutting the defense budget in half – after things “settle down” with Russia and China. It was a sharp turn from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s comments earlier the same day that “nobody can or should test the extent of America’s willingness to invest in national security.”

    Musk, a defense contractor, has already faced questions of whether his wide-reaching business interests disqualify him as a government watchdog. The State Department quietly removed the name of Tesla, which is owned by Musk, from a $400 million contract for armored vehicles on its website this week after multiple outlets reported on it.

    His entrance to the Pentagon, where his companies hold billions of dollars in contracts, raises the question of whether he could tip the scales in his financial favor.—

    Wake up! It’s a grift.

    • Replies: @epebble
  469. Mark G. says:

    “You’re not making or living on six dollars an hour”

    I could retire, live on my pension, and not work at all. Instead, I go in and work forty hours a week for an additional six dollars an hour. My coworkers get five times as much. Six dollars an hour is below minimum wage here in Indiana. I could do better retiring, collecting my pension and getting any other job. I could just retire and live off my pension and savings and relax all day. That is what most federal workers my age do.

    Many people are bored by flame wars and reading personal attacks so I am trying to avoid saying anything negative about you. However, you are really floundering around here. I pointed out to you that most people who engage in personal attacks on me are motivated by the fact that I disagree with them on the issues. You did not respond on that because you know that is true. You are doing it right now, personally attacking me because I dare to disagree with you.

    Defense stocks dropped last week after Trump suggested America, Russia and China get together and each cut military spending by half. Biden never did that.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/02/13/defense-stocks-drop-after-trump-says-defense-spending-could-be-halved.html

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  470. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    The ‘Dealmaker’ may be playing 4-D chess!

    Former US National Security Advisor John Bolton told Tom Swarbrick on LBC that it is “highly probable that Trump will try and withdraw the United States from NATO”.

    Speaking on Thursday, 13 February 2025, Bolton suggested that Trump is setting preconditions—such as demanding NATO allies increase defence spending from 2% to 5% of GDP—that could ultimately justify a US withdrawal.

    Bolton explained, “First he said back in his initial term, well, all these Europeans are not spending 2% of GDP on defence… Now he’s saying you need to spend 5% of GDP on defence. I personally think that’s what the US should spend. I think in a challenging world, we’re not spending enough, and we’re at about three now. But I suspect there’s almost no country in Europe, maybe the Baltics and Poland and a few others that will go to 5%. So in a year when it doesn’t happen, Trump will be able to say, NATO is just as worthless as I always said it was. I’m getting out.”

    https://ukdefencejournal.org.uk/trump-may-withdraw-us-from-nato-bolton-warns/

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  471. Alden says:
    @SF

    Most blacks in the military are clerks warehouse workers wash vehicles because they’re too stupid to learn mechanics work in support jobs suitable for 80 to 100 IQ people.

  472. Alden says:
    @Reg Cæsar

    I used to watch Walter Staib’s cooking show. Interesting recipes

  473. Hail says: • Website
    @Corvinus

    [Steve Sailer should] demand he do better

    [Blompf]’s NOT going to do better

    But Steve Sailer (p.b.u.h.) CAN do better.

    Dust off the old Sailer Catapult.

    Locate the fattened-up wise-guys in the Blumpf camp. Launch some rhetorical strikes.

    That is, if the Blempf people are flittering away their time and “political capital” while sending the half-trillion dollars ($500,000,000,000) in extra Israel-spending they propose to give for the mega-project of terraforming Gaza (into a global-elite resort with special privileges for US-Israel dual-citizens and a complete ban on Palestinians).

    The “Trump Resort–Gaza” plan may have been inspired by the Saudi megaproject announced a few years ago known as “Neom.” The estimated cost of that mega-city is $1,500,000,000,000.

    Trump’s narcissistic tendencies mean he cannot resist such an idea as Neom or a potentially ethnically-cleansed Gaza (and he has little talking-heads on his shoulder telling him Gaza people deserve to be crushed because they are Not God’s Chosen People). Blompf has proposed similar ideas for a new Trump Megacity in the USA somewhere. But the appeal of stealing Gaza is too appealing to him to give it up. Unless Steve Sailer strikes him down (rhetorically) and prevents it!

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  474. @Jim Don Bob

    “Please tell us why you and Brimelow fell out.”

    We never fell out. He and Jared Taylor—they’re joined at the hip—apparently decided, for some reason, that I was becoming too prominent, and had to be stopped. And so, beginning many years ago, they subjected me to the death of 1,000 cuts, before cheating me out of a few thousand dollars and numerous commissioned publications.

    • Thanks: Jim Don Bob
    • LOL: Moshe Def
    • Replies: @Greta Handel
  475. @Nicholas Stix

    So this was a little “too prominent” for the Diffident Right?

    I can’t respond to all your charges against the Irgun, but if they drove the Arabs (the term “Palestinians” had yet to be invented) out of Israel, I say, more power to them!

    Nicholas Stix (December 18, 2014)

    • Replies: @Nicholas Stix
  476. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    I see you are doing your best to imitate the caginess of Mr. Sailer—when good points are made to counter his narrative, the”oh, look, a squirrel” strategy is then put into place. Great work.

    • Replies: @epebble
  477. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    I am not ‘cagey’ at all. I will openly admit that Trump administration may end disastrously. Just this week they got rid of nuclear inspectors who supervise nuclear weapons and now they are getting rid of FAA staff. However, the federal government was becoming unaffordable and somebody had to shrink it. A surgeon would have been preferable, but we ended up with a bloodletter with leeches. Even if it ends terribly, a greatly shrunken federal government is better than bankruptcy (as in Greece, Portugal, Spain etc., recently).

    Murray: Trump layoffs leave Hanford nuclear site with ‘skeleton crew’
    Layoffs at the Hanford site included safety engineers and scientists, Sen. Patty Murray said. Hundreds of other federal workers in the state lost their jobs too.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/murray-trump-layoffs-leave-hanford-nuclear-site-with-skeleton-crew/

    Trump begins firing FAA air traffic control staff just weeks after fatal DC plane crash
    The Trump administration has begun firing several hundred Federal Aviation Administration employees, upending staff on a busy air travel weekend and just weeks after a fatal mid-air collision in Washington.

    https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/nation/trump-begins-firings-of-faa-air-traffic-control-staff-just-weeks-after-fatal-dc-plane-crash/

    • Replies: @Jim Don Bob
    , @Corvinus
  478. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “Instead, I go in and work forty hours a week for an additional six dollars an hour”

    Right. Not just six a dollars an hour as you indicated. So you’re doing OK financially. But, again, you could do your part and retire and have the government save money. That’s what Trump wants you to do. Why aren’t you heeding to his demand?

    “Many people are bored by flame wars and reading personal attacks”

    Again, because I merely said you are using hyperbole?

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  479. Corvinus says:
    @Hail

    “But Steve Sailer (p.b.u.h.) CAN do better.”

    Certainly.

    “Locate the fattened-up wise-guys in the Blumpf camp. Launch some rhetorical strikes.”

    You still support Trump. You’re a sucker.

    “That is, if the Blempf people are flittering away their time and “political capital” while sending the half-trillion dollars ($500,000,000,000) in extra Israel-spending”

    It was always his plan. You knew that going in.

    “Unless Steve Sailer strikes him down (rhetorically) and prevents it!”

    No, that’s YOUR task. But you’re too smitten with Trump and his gummint cuts. Feel free to soothe yourself by calling out Trump and his love for Jews, but in the end, he is your albatross.

    • Replies: @Hail
  480. Hail says: • Website
    @Corvinus

    You’re a sucker.

    Who do you support, Mr. Corv?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @Mark G.
  481. Corvinus says:
    @Hail

    “Who do you support, Mr. Corv?”

    I don’t support—Harris, Schumer, Pelosi, McConnell, Trump, and Musk.

    • Replies: @deep anonymous
  482. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “have the government save money”

    The government would save more money letting someone go who they would not have to start sending a pension check to, like me. The government would save more money if they let go someone with poor performance ratings rather than someone with exceptional performance ratings year after year, like me. The government would save more money letting go someone with little experience rather than someone with 44 years experience who all the newer employees go to when they have a question, like me.

    You were so eager to personally attack me because I disagree with you on political issues, that you started spouting off about someone you know nothing about. You do not work with me and have no way of knowing. I am willing to bet after any force reductions I will still be here.

  483. Mark G. says:
    @Hail

    “Who do you support, Mr. Corv?”

    He told me before the election he was voting for the Libertarian presidential candidate.

    Angela McArdle, chair of the Libertarian party, said their hidden goal was to help Trump by running a liberal leaning candidate that would draw votes away from Harris. It did not swing the election but was a minor factor in helping Trump to win. By not voting Harris, Mr. Corv did his bit to help Trump get in.

  484. Steve posts old review of Judith Rich Harris’s The Nurture Assumption.
    https://www.stevesailer.net/p/the-nurture-assumption-by-judith

    I’m shocked how weak that one is though. Harris’ thesis is very narrowly trained on parenting’s contribution to personality (as defined in psych literature) development, not global outcomes including things like choice of career, which makes many of. Steve’s comments (like citing Sowell) red herrings.

    Also, it overlooks the interesting question about peer group generational interactions. For example, it’s possible that fathering has a far different impact in a community in which 95% of children are raised in intact homes vs one in which 5% of children are. Perhaps 95% intact leads to a situation in which the remaining 5% are “fathered” indirectly via their peer group.

  485. Mark G. says:
    @James B. Shearer

    “Were you offered the buyout?”

    I think everyone in the DoD was offered the buyout. A lot of us accounting people did not take it. It is the government employees connected with promoting DEI or various other leftist schemes that are worrying the most about losing their jobs. The Trump administration, like previous Republican administrations, is pro-military.

    Hegseth has talked about ending affirmative action in the military so a lot of affirmative action hires may go to the top of the list to be let go. As a White male, I have little to worry about there. The woke military of recent years has harmed recruiting and retention of Whites. They may not realize I am past retirement age and giving up my pension to continue to work for them for peanuts but they know my performance ratings, my lengthy work experience and my educational background in accounting.

  486. @epebble

    You will pardon me if I take with more than a grain of salt anything said by Patty Murray or the Seattle Times.

  487. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “I am not ‘cagey’ at all. I will openly admit that Trump administration may end disastrously.”

    And at what price to our system of government?

    “Just this week they got rid of nuclear inspectors who supervise nuclear weapons and now they are getting rid of FAA staff.”

    Right. Those in the Incel Clown Posse are not particularly bright on the inner workings of our government.

    “However, the federal government was becoming unaffordable and somebody had to shrink it.”

    But not by a Musk type, a billionaire who is gaming the system. How it is done matters. You know better.

    I want the trains to run. Mussolini wants the trains to run. But by what means majestic all the difference in the world.

    “A surgeon would have been preferable, but we ended up with a bloodletter with leeches.”

    But we don’t have to. Both parties are paralyzed to do what it takes to get Musk out. But we have the Mitch McConnell’s of the world who now focus on ceremonially challenging Trump rather than taking him on head on. And where is Bannon and Miller in all of this hullabaloo?

    “Even if it ends terribly”

    This is just honkers on your part.

    “ a greatly shrunken federal government is better than bankruptcy (as in Greece, Portugal, Spain etc., recently).”

    Assuming that the cuts are indeed beneficial for Americans rather than for billionaire technocrats and their toadies.

    Assuming that is the path we are on of Musk wasn’t in charge. But that’s what 250 million in donations gets you.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
    , @epebble
  488. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “But not by a Musk type, a billionaire who is gaming the system”

    Harris received the majority of votes of those earning over a hundred thousand dollars a year and Democrats control seventy percent of wealth in this country so if rich people are gaming the system, it is more likely to be rich Democrats like Bill Gates or Warren Buffett.

    Elon Musk and his DOGE team may have just uncovered the biggest case of fraud in history. Musk just provided data that 20.7 million Americans over the age of 100 are collecting Social Security benefits. Some benefits are being paid to people over 140. Musk remarked “maybe Twilight is true and a lot of vampires are collecting Social Security”.

    The data also shows 394 million names in the database while the total U.S. population is 334 million. If the numbers produced by DOGE are correct, one third of all Social Security payments may be fraudulent, with illegal immigrants let in by Biden possibly collecting a large chunk of them.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/might-be-biggest-fraud-history

  489. @Corvinus

    But you supported the corpse of Joe Biden, so STFU and get out of here.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  490. res says:
    @Mark G.

    Thanks for that link. Big news if it holds up. One caveat, in the comments there someone linked to the SSA website with very different numbers.
    https://www.ssa.gov/oact/progdata/byage.html?type=sf

  491. epebble says:
    @Mark G.

    All that data is being misreported. Mere presence of a record doesn’t mean checks are going out. There is a lag in removing records for people who have died. The amount of fraudulent payment is less than 1%.

    An audit produced by the Social Security Administration’s inspector general last year found that from 2015 to 2022, the agency paid almost $8.6 trillion in benefits and made approximately $71.8 billion, or less than 1 percent, in improper payments that usually involved recipients getting too much money.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/17/us/politics/social-security-musk-team-access.html

  492. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    where is Bannon and Miller

    I have not heard about them. Deportations are being managed by ‘Border Czar’ Tom Homan. More interestingly, it appears the cabinet may be sidelined by Musk and Co.

    https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2025/02/17/marco-rubio-state-department-toosi-00204407

    New foreign policy has distinctly Trump’s fingerprints; This can’t be from Rubio or even Hegseth/JD:

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/02/17/revealed-trump-confidential-plan-ukraine-stranglehold/

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  493. Wielgus says:
    @Colin Wright

    Yeah. A Zionist “population exchange” in which only the goyim are in any way inconvenienced…

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  494. ‘Yeah. A Zionist “population exchange” in which only the goyim are in any way inconvenienced…’

    So what else is new? I’ve made the point before, but up until Israel, Jews have been able to pretend to a kind of moral superiority over the rest of us. Nathan the Wise, Jewish support for the Civil Rights movement, vague flannel about the ‘Jewish moral tradition’…even if you didn’t buy it, the argument was there. We’re just better — God requires it of us.

    Now, with Israel…

    Here we have the only fully independent Jewish state that has ever existed outside of religious fantasy. It includes a third of the world’s Jews and is supported by an overwhelming majority of the remaining two-thirds — and what do we have?

    The most evil modern state since Nazi Germany…and even the Germans can say, ‘well, that was just a low point — usually we’ve been as good as anyone.’

    But the Jews? Don’t ever try to tell us how wonderful you are again. Had your chance — muffed it.

    • Agree: JMcG
  495. J.Ross says:
    @Wielgus

    In the movie Voyage of the Damned, a Nazi asks why they’re bothering to let a cruise ship -ful of Jews try to legally emigrate (these are 70s movie Nazis, so their explicit goal is murder), and his fellow Nazi (these are 70s movie Nazis, so they’re also lovers) explains that this way, the whole world will be forced to realize that nobody wants them. It’s not just the Nazis who have a problem with them. Cf the British contemporaneous experience in the Palestinian Mandate. One clear effect of the immivasion is that, overnight, people in the most pro-Palestine leftist strongholds in Europe intuitively understand the Israeli perspective.

    • Replies: @Colin Wright
  496. Corvinus says:
    @deep anonymous

    “But you supported the corpse of Joe Biden, so STFU and get out of here.”

    Begrudgingly, yes. Way better than Trump. Remember, Trump can only beat women in national elections, not men. But at least I’m not supporting billionaire technocrats like Musk, Theil (Jew), and Zuckerberg (Jew) like Trunp is, and apparently yourself as well.

  497. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “I have not heard about them”.

    Right, so they are cucks. No backbone or spine.

    “Deportations are being managed by ‘Border Czar’ Tom Homan. More interestingly, it appears the cabinet may be sidelined by Musk and Co.”

    Yes, Rubio is also cucking. Such brave leadership in the face of a billionaire technocrat who is driven by HIS interests, in case you have not NOTICED.

    “New foreign policy has distinctly Trump’s fingerprints; This can’t be from Rubio or even Hegseth/JD:”

    Right, it’s a grift on Trump’s part.

  498. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    Wow, there is tremendous disinformation on your part.

    “Democrats control seventy percent of wealth in this country so if rich people are gaming the system”

    You mean Biden-voting counties equal 70% of America’s economy. Context is required here.

    https://www.brookings.edu/articles/biden-voting-counties-equal-70-of-americas-economy-what-does-this-mean-for-the-nations-political-economic-divide/

    –In short, 2020’s map continues to reflect a striking split between the large, dense, metropolitan counties that voted Democratic and the mostly exurban, small-town, or rural counties that voted Republican. Blue and red America reflect two very different economies: one oriented to diverse, often college-educated workers in professional and digital services occupations, and the other whiter, less-educated, and more dependent on “traditional” industries.–

    “if rich people are gaming the system, it is more likely to be rich Democrats like Bill Gates or Warren Buffett.”

    No, it is Musk, Theil, and Zuckerberg. Remember, Musk stands to make hundreds of millions of dollars with his impending sale of his s—-ty trucks to the Pentagon. How is this a cost cutting measure on his part?

    “Elon Musk and his DOGE team may have just uncovered the biggest case of fraud in history”

    Clearly that is Fake News.

    https://www.poynter.org/fact-checking/2025/social-security-fraud-discovered-doge/

    https://www.wired.com/story/elon-musk-doge-social-security-150-year-old-benefits/

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  499. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    You just think Elon’s trucks are s***ty because he disagrees with you on politics. Back when he was a Democrat, all the liberals loved him and were running out to buy his Teslas. The same thing is true of RFK Jr. When he was a Democrat, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren were his pals. Almost my entire life, liberals opposed the influence of big corporations until Big Pharma came along and started handing Democrats big donations.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/which-senators-are-owned-big-pharma-rfk-jrs-confirmation-hearings-are-showing-us

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  500. @anon

    Wonderfully stated.

    The most important feature of “free speech” has always been ensuring that dissenters can actually dissent and critique power. It’s not about enabling Howard Stern to monetize perversion – though that is what “free speech” has effectively transformed into – the wanton profusion of lewd puerile trash, and the silencing of critics of (((power))). (i.e., anarcho-tyranny for speech)

    Yes. Free speech properly concerns dialectic only, with allowance for style. Moderation, even heavy moderation, is not necessarily an infringement of speech. In fact, it’s required to maintain efficient dialectic, so long as it is in fact used for that end. Facilitating rank perversion, profanity or fallacy is therefore often the diametric opposite of facilitating free speech because it makes true free speech more difficult.

    It’s of course no surprise that the concept of free speech itself has been perverted in aid of further perversion.

  501. @Greta Handel

    I had my first article published in 1980, and have never hid the fact that I’m not a nazi.

    • Replies: @Greta Handel
  502. @Corvinus

    “Remember, Trump can only beat women in national elections, not men.”

    Trump beat a man in 2020.

  503. @Corvinus

    “Begrudgingly, yes. Way better than Trump. Remember, Trump can only beat women in national elections, not men. …”

    In what way was 2024 Biden preferable to Harris? 2024 Biden would probably have gotten wiped out against Trump losing by 10 points or more.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  504. @Nicholas Stix

    “Trump beat a man in 2020.”

    And the South won the Civil War?

  505. Wielgus says:
    @YetAnotherAnon

    According to T.E. Lawrence, he was detained in Der’a by Ottoman soldiers while operating in disguise, and then beaten and sexually assaulted – the local Ottoman commander, Hajim Bey, told him: “You must understand that I know, and it will be better if you do as I ask.” Lawrence claimed to be a Circassian and that they were exempt from military service (they weren’t). Afterwards, he was able to escape – from his account he was not guarded.
    I am not convinced Lawrence told the entire truth though I suspect something did happen to him – he suggests Hajim Bey knew who he was but I don’t see Lawrence being able to escape so easily if that was the case. Terence Rattigan in his play Ross has the “Turkish General” allowing him to escape after assault because he thinks the assault will psychologically destroy Lawrence. I am sceptical – killing Lawrence if indeed he was recognised would have been a far more likely solution to the problem he posed to Ottoman rule.

    • Replies: @Colin Wright
  506. @Mark G.

    Musk just provided data that 20.7 million Americans over the age of 100 are collecting Social Security benefits. Some benefits are being paid to people over 140.

    I doubt if this is true. Remember the data about the condoms for Gaza!

    Obviously there are quite a few Americans over the age of 100 collecting Social Security, but not 20 million.

    Social security has various ways of checking up that people are still alive. For example death certificate. People who receive social security overseas are required to submit a form every two years to say that they are alive.

    Social Security gets reports from undertakers and from State bureaus of vital statistics. Many of the very old people with active Social Security numbers probably died before electronic reporting, and the fact that they have active Social Security numbers does not mean that they are receiving Social Security checks, unless they actually applied for Social Security and submitted the required documentation.

    You would think that banks and thrifts would also be required to verify that customers are still alive in some way.

    Of course if there are people receiving Social Security on behalf of long-dead relatives, they should be prosecuted and made to repay.

    I would think that you as an accountant chappie would know this kind of things.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  507. Mark G. says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    One of the reasons I saw for incorrect Social Security data was that their system was running on COBOL. We used to have systems running on COBOL but that was long ago. What they are using is very outdated.

    You really do need accurate data to look at. Maybe there is fraud there and maybe there isn’t but it is hard to tell. Musk looked at it and saw something was wrong. You should not be having an outsider noticing it for you. Someone there should have before this. They passed audits but that is no guarantee of anything. Enron was passing audits with massive fraud going on at the same time.

    Here at the DoD we regularly fail audits. Billions of dollars just disappeared in Iraq. I imagine the same thing is happening with the money we are sending to the Ukraine. The Ukrainian American Congresswoman just north of me, Victoria Spartz, supports assistance to her country of origin but has said there needs to be better accounting controls in place. Her background is in auditing. Zelensky recently said we sent them 175 billion dollars but his government only got 75 billion of it.

  508. JMcG says:
    @Mark G.

    Apple TV did a series a few years ago called The Big Conn. It told the story of a lawyer who bribed a judge and got thousands of his clients Social Security Disability. The government estimated that, had this not been brought to light and prosecuted, the cost to the taxpayers would have been 550,000,000.00.
    In a neat trick, if the SSA denies your disability claim, the government will pay a lawyer to appeal that decision.
    A relation works for SSA and told me that the sole reason the government opened an investigation was that they got a tip that the Wall Street Journal was about to publish a front page story on the case. They wanted to be able to say that the matter was already under investigation when asked.
    The SSA decided that anyone who had been put on disability by the corrupt judge would be dropped from the rolls and have to reapply. They immediately got a call from the senior senator from Kentucky ( a Republican). And told in no uncertain terms that no one was to be dropped from the program.
    That’s our government in action.

    • Thanks: Mark G.
  509. @Mark G.

    One of the reasons I saw for incorrect Social Security data was that their system was running on COBOL. We used to have systems running on COBOL but that was long ago.

    Systems running on COBOL have nothing to do with incorrect Social Security data. Every database gets incorrect data over time no matter what the programming language is. A well run IT shop would regularly make an effort to clean up the database.

    SS has millions of people in their database over 120 years old with the DEAD_FLAG set to false because they didn’t do this cleanup because they just don’t give a s**t, in the same way that Treasury writes $100 billion of checks every year to people and orgs without SSNs or EINs because they too don’t give a s**t.

    Trump and Elon are playing up what whiz kids their boys like Big Balls are. But finding this junk is no more complicated than running something like this pseudo code on your database:

    SELECT * FROM SS_TABLE WHERE DEAD_FLAG = FALSE AND (CURRENT_DATE – BIRTH_DATE > 100).

    And yet they never even bothered. Lazy assholes. Fire them all.

    Note that no one is saying that all these people are getting paid, but this crap should be regularly found and corrected or deleted. Then you can look at the programming to see where incorrect data is getting entered.

    What they are using is very outdated.

    Many legacy systems still run on COBOL, especially mainframes. There is nothing wrong with it. You can make a good living as a COBOL programmer.

    I’m gonna go lie down now.

  510. Corvinus says:
    @Nicholas Stix

    “Trump beat a man in 2020”

    No, Trump lost. We’ve been over this, f—- Tired of your antics.

  511. @Mark G.

    Maybe there is fraud there and maybe there isn’t but it is hard to tell. Musk looked at it and saw something was wrong.

    Musk looked at the condoms for Hamas in Gaza thing and thought something was wrong. Considering that Musk is considered to be a genius and that he spoke publicly about the condoms thing, he must have considered it to be the very best example of misuse of funds that his team had found, and he must have done all he could to confirm it before going public, knowing that the claim would be closely examined by many experts.

    And yet he admitted he was completely and utterly wrong about it, even though we might agree that $50 million or $100 million does seem excessive–although perhaps, being for Mozambique, they were all Extra-Strength Magnums.

    Therefore I would not trust the information coming from Musk’s team any more than I would trust a middle school science project using Wikipedia, YouTube, and Only Fans as data sources.

    Perhaps Musk would like to publish the names and addresses of the 20 million people receiving Social Security who are over 100? Thought not.

    Postscript: I acknowledge that the United States is full of criminals and fraudsters, not all imported, and it would not surprise me at all if there are people receiving Social Security checks who should not be, but the 20 million people over the age of 100 is an absurd figure. 5.86% of the entire population of the US are receiving checks from Social Security while over the age of 100? Ridiculous. Surely you as an accountant can see how improbable this is and that Musk cannot possibly provide evidence for this. DOGE is clearly a complete charade.

    Of course anyone can make a mistake, but the fact that these two instances are regarded by Musk and his team as the two most egregious anomalies they have found says it all.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
    , @Jim Don Bob
  512. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “You just think Elon’s trucks are s***ty because he disagrees with you on politics.”

    No, his trucks are simply s—. Now, you just said you agree we could cut military spending by half and save 500 billion dollars a year. So why you do seemingly support Musk getting a government contract from the DoD?

    “Back when he was a Democrat, all the liberals loved him and were running out to buy his Teslas.”

    Teslas are fine. It’s his trucks. And he is isn’t a Democrat or Republican, he’s an opportunist.

    “The same thing is true of RFK Jr. When he was a Democrat, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren were his pals.”

    On some policies.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  513. Mark G. says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    When it comes to governmental fraud, I’ll give you an example from my own experience. I used to work on a voluntary separation incentive program where they would pay military guys to leave early. It is a bit like the buyout program that us civilians just got offered, the goal being to have a force reduction.

    I would get multiple phone calls every week from people saying they were not getting enough money, which I then had to work on fixing. Over a two year period, I do not remember anyone calling saying we gave them too much money.

    Now it is possible when they did the computations and an error was made, it always involved not giving someone enough money but never involved giving someone too much money. The odds of that actually happening, though, is something I would consider unlikely. There must have been people given too much money, knew it, and stayed silent about it. It was our job to find that out, not their job to volunteer the information. There are more dishonest people in the world than you might think.

    • Replies: @Jonathan Mason
  514. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “No, his trucks are simply s___.”

    And how do you know a President Harris wouldn’t have bought even lower quality trucks? You don’t know that. You can’t know that.

    All government decisions are political decisions. Special interests donate money to politicians and then the politicians appoint the bureaucrats who pass out the money to the special interests who gave the politicians donations. It does not matter whether it is truck contracts, government health research grants, or anything else.

    The best solution here is to cut government spending. If Elon is selling the military low quality trucks and you cut the military by half, then it may only need to buy half as many of those trucks. You want to have a situation as much as possible where individuals spend their own money instead of giving it to the government. Big government benefits corrupt politicians, corrupt special interests and corrupt bureaucrats. It harms honest people.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  515. @J.Ross

    ‘…One clear effect of the immivasion is that, overnight, people in the most pro-Palestine leftist strongholds in Europe intuitively understand the Israeli perspective.’

    I’m sorry. I had the impression the Jews immigrated into Palestine, not the other way around.

    You mean the Jews were already there but the Palestinians descended on them?

    Maybe the Europeans will come to understand the Palestinian perspective rather than the Jewish perspective. One hopes not, but…

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  516. @Wielgus

    It does seem wildly improbable that the Turkish commander recognized who Lawrence was.

    Surely he would have envisaged the fallout if he let Lawrence get away and he was subsequently recaptured. Why not have his way with him and tie him up and throw on the next train to Istanbul?

    • Replies: @Wielgus
  517. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “And how do you know a President Harris wouldn’t have bought even lower quality trucks?”

    Strawman. Never said that.

    “If Elon is selling the military low quality trucks and you cut the military by half, then it may only need to buy half as many of those trucks”

    No. You don’t buy ANY of his s—- trucks. Period. You say you want to cut federal defense spending. You say you want to stop this corruption. Yet, you seemingly have no problem with Musk getting a big fat government payout…as an apparent thank you for his cash donation to Trump, who just happened to put him in charge of newly created federal “watchdog” group.

    You’re taking a hypocritical position here.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  518. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “ANY”

    You are getting upset that I am making you look bad and engaging in the internet equivalent of yelling at me by typing in ALL CAPS. And yes, you do not know whether a President Harris would have made a better deal on buying trucks. The Democrats are not a bunch of altruistic angels who think only of the common good.

    You are the person who thought I was the overpaid employee in my organization without knowing my performance ratings, my amount of work experience or the fact that I am not collecting my fat government pension and working for an additional six bucks an hour at the age of 68. You spout off about something you know nothing about because you are a silly pompous ass.

    The driver of high defense spending is not 68 year old DoD employees working for six dollars an hour. It is our interventionism and attempt to be policeman for the world. We do this because the forever wars means bigger profits for the weapons manufacturers. We need to stop the Vietnam wars, the Iraq wars, the proxy wars against Russia in the Ukraine. You support that last war, not me.

    • Agree: JMcG
    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @Jonathan Mason
  519. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “You are getting upset that I am making you look bad “

    You are now projecting.

    “and engaging in the internet equivalent of yelling at me by typing in ALL CAPS.”

    You are being way too sensitive here.

    “And yes, you do not know whether a President Harris would have made a better deal on buying trucks.”

    Again, I never made that argument.

    “You are the person who thought I was the overpaid employee in my organization”

    No, that’s Trump and Musk. They want you to retire. Why don’t you heed their advice? It will save the government money in the long run.

    “without knowing my performance ratings, my amount of work experience”

    I never asked for it.

    “or the fact that I am not collecting my fat government pension and working for an additional six bucks an hour at the age of 68. “

    But you are drawing a healthy salary from the taxpayers.

    You are upset by the fact that someone exposed you as a hypocrite.

    “The driver of high defense spending is not 68 year old DoD employees working for six dollars an hour.”

    First, you are making six dollars an hour more on top of your salary. Be honest. Second, according to DOGE, federal workers like yourself regardless of their experience and performance ratings ARE a driver of our national deficit. Time to retire.

    “We do this because the forever wars means bigger profits for the weapons manufacturers.”

    Right, like Musk’s company, whom you have no apparent problem with him increasing our country’s debt. Again, you are being hypocritical.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  520. @Mark G.

    the fact that I am not collecting my fat government pension and working for an additional six bucks an hour at the age of 68.

    Even assuming that your pension is maxed out and that you cannot increase it by working any more years, surely by working up to the age of 70 you will be substantially increasing your Social Security monthly payments.

    Six bucks an hour is not a lot of money, but it does add up to 1,000 a month, so not negligible. Equivalent to a round trip ticket to Europe every month.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  521. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “First, you are making making six dollars more on the top of your salary.”

    No, I am getting six dollars more an hour than what I would make if I just retired. If I retire, they save six dollars an hour. That is the cost of me working to the federal government. You really are stupid or deceitful by labeling my pension as my salary and then saying I am making six dollars an hour on top of my salary. I am getting six dollars on top of my pension, which I would get anyway, not six dollars on top of my salary.

    You are being evasive here. The Republicans are not the ones promoting pouring more money down the Ukrainian rathole. Neither am I. You are, though. Trump just said Zelensky better make a peace deal with Russia or he won’t have a country left. Once we stop sending money to the corrupt Zelensky regime, they won’t last long.

    You and the other promoters of that war have been evasive from the start that the Ukrainians can’t win a war against an opponent with three times its population. This is not Afghanistan and the Russians are not going home. This war is of existential importance to them. You and your fellow liberals feeble arguments for us being involved there have failed.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  522. J.Ross says:
    @Colin Wright

    I meant that they resent general Muslim crime and the odd terrorist act.

  523. Mark G. says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    “surely by working up to the age of 70 you will be substantially increasing your Social Security monthly payments”

    With the pension system I am on, you can get both a government pension and Social Security but your pension is reduced by the amount of Social Security you receive. There is little benefit to working past 65. Because of that, most people on my pension system retire at 65.

    Yes, I make a thousand a month more by working than retiring. That is not going to be relevant, though, if the government engages in force reductions. Other employees are paid more than me who do less work than me or who have less experience than me. Because of affirmative action, we have a lot of low value minority hires. They should be let go first if we want to save the taxpayers money.

    • Replies: @Jonathan Mason
  524. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “No, I am getting six dollars more an hour than what I would make if I just retired.”

    Right, that’s what I have been saying.

    “If I retire, they save six dollars an hour”.

    Which is what Trump and Musk want you to do.

    “You are being evasive here.”

    Stay on point here, rather than deflect to Ukraine.

    You favor Musk, a “government” official, and his company getting a huge DoD contract, even through you demand that the federal defense budget to be significantly cut.

    That is hypocritical on your part. No way around it.

    “You and the other promoters of that war have been evasive from the start that the Ukrainians can’t win a war against an opponent with three times its population.”

    This is what Great Britain said to the American colonists. Again, Ukrainians will decide what is in their best interest, not Trump or Putin. If they choose to fight, they will do so. If they decide on peace, they will do so.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  525. @Mark G.

    I suppose so, but most people are not really capable of calculating the exact amount they are supposed to be getting., but if they think they are getting less than other people then they will query it.

    There is an equation that you can apply to determine exactly how much Social Security you should be receiving.

    To do the calculation you need to know the exact amounts you contributed for each year you worked in the US, and perform calculations related to inflation, the age at which you started withdrawals, and some other stuff (you can program it into a spreadsheet). I actually did my own calculation and found out that I was getting the correct amount, but I doubt if even 1% of Social Security recipients would do this calculation independently by hand.

    I do agree with you that there are more dishonest people than you would think, but there are also more innumerate people than you would think.

    I don’t know if it applies with the army, but with Social Security, if you are overpaid, you are liable to pay back the money, but the repayments are interest free, so there is little incentive to query apparent overpayments. The recipient could, for example, use the overpayment to pay off expensive credit card debt.

  526. @Jonathan Mason

    I acknowledge that the United States is full of criminals and fraudsters, not all imported, and it would not surprise me at all if there are people receiving Social Security checks who should not be, but the 20 million people over the age of 100 is an absurd figure. 5.86% of the entire population of the US are receiving checks from Social Security while over the age of 100? Ridiculous. Surely you as an accountant can see how improbable this is and that Musk cannot possibly provide evidence for this. DOGE is clearly a complete charade.

    Musk did NOT say these people over 100 years old are getting checks. He said that they are marked as still alive in the SS database.

  527. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “Which is what Trump and Musk want you to do.”

    No they don’t. I am still here. The buyout was largely taken by people who were already planning to retire or who thought they were about to get fired. I am not in either category.

    Future staffing reductions will involve letting go less productive employees before letting go more productive employees. I have 44 years of experience and get exceptional performance ratings every year. I am at the bottom of the list of people to let go. It is a good thing you do not work in management here. You can’t do even the most basic business analysis.

    Bringing up the Ukraine is not deflecting. The government will save more money ending assistance to the Ukraine than it will by canceling a truck contract. Anyone of even minimal intelligence can see that. What is wrong with you?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @Colin Wright
  528. Wielgus says:
    @Colin Wright

    Lawrence did not look like a typical inhabitant of the region and operating undercover strikes me as an example of hubris. His claim to be Circassian (Cherkess) was apparently a cover story – they tend to be fair-skinned, but I have met some and they do not look like T.E. Lawrence.

    Something traumatic probably happened to him but I have significant doubts about some of the details he gives – one possibility is that he was actually assaulted by some Bedouin, not by the Ottomans – the Bedouin were irregular soldiers and some were no doubt more bandits than anything else. But we will never know.

    • Replies: @Manfred Arcane
  529. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “No they don’t. I am still here.”

    Yes, they do want you out. You cost too much.

    “Future staffing reductions will involve letting go less productive employees before letting go more productive employees.”

    No, it’s about getting rid of workers to trim payroll, especially with experience.

    You favor Musk, a “government” official, and his company getting a huge DoD contract, even through you demand that the federal defense budget to be significantly cut.

    That is hypocritical on your part. No way around it.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  530. Corvinus says:
    @James B. Shearer

    “In what way was 2024 Biden preferable to Harris? 2024 Biden would probably have gotten wiped out against Trump losing by 10 points or more.”

    He is a white man. Aren’t they more preferable these days? That’s what I’ve been told.

    He was forced not to run essentially by Pelosi, a bitchy white woman. How is that justice?

    Trump barely won against a black woman. He can only beat women (in more ways than one).

    • Troll: Mark G.
  531. @Mark G.

    ‘…What is wrong with you?’

    Lol. We could have a thread about that. What is wrong with Corvinus?

    My explanation is that, like a crow, he has just snapped up whatever liberal platitudes have floated into his consciousness over the years. Then, in what passes for argument with him, he just regurgitates whatever ones seem somehow appropriate to him when he encounters a perception he doesn’t like.

    He could be a computer program. It’s a possibility. Should ask Ron or somebody. Would it be feasible to write a Corvinus? Did someone in fact do this? Is this what we are seeing? The output of the program?

    • Thanks: Mark G.
  532. @Corvinus

    ‘Trump barely won against a black woman. He can only beat women (in more ways than one).’

    When was that? I’m familiar with the time he won against a half-Indian, three-eighths white octoroon who was raised by Asians in Berkeley and Montreal — but what are you referring to? Hillary Clinton was black? Seems improbable…

  533. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “It’s about getting rid of workers to trim payroll, especially with experience.”

    That is one of the most moronic things I have ever heard. You keep your most experienced workers, especially if they are giving up their pension and working for very little additional money like I am. You could never get a management job here. However, we do hire mentally handicapped people here to work as janitors. That would be a good job for you.

    I did not say I favor Musk getting a contract. I said we would save more money ending military assistance to the Ukraine than canceling a contract, something you can’t deny so you are being evasive. Musk said a week ago on X he had not heard of such a contract and a state department official said there is no such contract.

    If there were plans to buy trucks, they were suspended. This was not a Trump program. It was initiated by Biden. You do not know if a President Harris would have given a truck contract to one of her supporters. You do not know anything about the quality of Tesla trucks versus the alternatives. You are spouting off about something you know nothing about because you are a pompous bloviating nitwit.

    I have a question for you. Are you the stupidest person on the planet or just a loathsome troll?

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  534. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “That is one of the most moronic things I have ever heard. You keep your most experienced workers”

    That’s not what DOGE wants.

    https://apnews.com/article/nuclear-doge-firings-trump-federal-916e6819104f04f44c345b7dde4904d5

    —One of the hardest hit offices was the Pantex Plant near Amarillo, Texas, which saw about 30% of the cuts. Those employees work on reassembling warheads, one of the most sensitive jobs across the nuclear weapons enterprise, with the highest levels of clearance

    https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/miami/news/doge-job-cuts-elon-musk-federal-government-employees-trump-administration/

    —Veterans Affairs cut 1,000 staff, including specialists in cancer and mental health, while the Forest Service lost 3,400 employees critical to wildfire management.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  535. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    You are being dishonest. You gave a partial quote of what I said, leaving out “especially if they are giving up their pension and working for very little additional money like I am”. Selectively quoting like that is a sign of dishonesty. Any objective analysis of my value as an employee versus the value of someone else as an employee would lead to me being kept. If I am not kept, it is their loss and not mine. A competent person can always find work elsewhere. All these people squawking about losing their government jobs are just upset the gravy train is over.

    Yes, there will be people terminated that should not have been and also people they keep they should let go. No one is perfect. The same is true of Democrats. We have a lot of low IQ incompetent affirmative action hires the Biden administration hired and then kept when they shouldn’t have. The fact that you ignore Democrat misjudgements while focusing only on Republicans further demonstrates your dishonesty.

    You being evasive about the fact that we would save more money by ending Ukraine assistance than by canceling a truck contract also demonstrates your dishonesty. You are just a dishonest person of low moral character. You also are not doing very well here and are making a fool of yourself. It is funny you are totally oblivious of that.

    • Agree: JMcG
    • Replies: @epebble
    , @Corvinus
  536. @Corvinus

    “He is a white man. Aren’t they more preferable these days? That’s what I’ve been told.”

    Why did you think he was preferable to Harris?

    “He was forced not to run essentially by Pelosi, a bitchy white woman. How is that justice?”

    If in fact he let Pelosi bully him then that in itself shows he was unfit for the office.

    “Trump barely won against a black woman. He can only beat women (in more ways than one).”

    Harris was a much stronger candidate than Biden. Which is why the Democrats did the last minute switch.

    • Agree: Mark G.
    • Replies: @Corvinus
    , @Colin Wright
  537. @Colin Wright

    I think it was everybody’s favorite Charlie Chaplin look-a-like who pointed out that giving the Jews their own state would “simply make it possible for them to continue on with their despicable bloodthirsty international crime syndicate, only now under the cover of national sovereignty.” Boy, did burning women and children alive in Dresden ever prove *that* cat wrong.

    • LOL: J.Ross
  538. I’ll add my congratulations to Steve for the paying gig on Substack.

    … and some kvetching:

    I like the Unz web site. I like free information. I like the commenting system. Substack feels like a proprietary silo. Like the New York Times! I wouldn’t mind paying for the free information, if that makes any sense. It’s just that paywalls, they’re just sad.

    I don’t like subscriptions to anything. The implicit eternal commitment… Why not regularly ask me to confirm that I still want to pay?

    Substack arrives in my email. Which is already filled with distractions. I can’t keep up!

    … end of kvetching.

    Anyway I still love reading Steve and I paid for the Substack and even ordered his book (a bit expensive, even the paperback edition, especially to ship to France…)

    I was delighted to get it in my mailbox and it’s a lovely book and I even started reading it!

    I also look forward to the audio book, read by Steve!

    What luxury, we live in lucky times.

    • Thanks: Hail
    • Replies: @Greta Handel
    , @Mark G.
  539. epebble says:
    @Mark G.

    It is not just “low IQ incompetent affirmative action hires” that need to be weeded out. It is a restructuring of Federal government so that we can live within our means without blowing up deficits and burden the next generation with impossible debts. Many functions of the government that started in the salad days 1950’s and 60’s may not have a reason to exist today but keep continuing by inertia. Though inelegant, DOGE’s plan of basically firing everybody and then may be rehiring those whose work will be missed, may be the only feasible quick method in the absence of a willingness by Congress to do its job. Somewhat analogous to Zero based budgeting. Musk (and Trump, even if unwittingly) may be America’s Gorbachev doing long overdue Perestroika.

    • Disagree: Corvinus
    • Thanks: Mark G.
    • Replies: @Corvinus
  540. Corvinus says:
    @Mark G.

    “You are being dishonest. You gave a partial quote of what I said, leaving out “especially if they are giving up their pension and working for very little additional money like I am”.”

    But you’re not. You are making a tidy sum. You have a pension to boot.

    “Any objective analysis of my value as an employee versus the value of someone else as an employee would lead to me being kept.”

    You’re working way too hard here to justify being kept.

    “You being evasive about the fact that we would save more money by ending Ukraine assistance”

    Yet another strawman. Never said differently. But the fact remains that you have no trouble if Musk received his DoD government contract despite your insistence that federal defense spending ought to be cut.

    “You are just a dishonest person of low moral character. You also are not doing very well here and are making a fool of yourself. It is funny you are totally oblivious of that.”

    If you have to repeatedly resort to ad hominem, you’re losing the argument. Have the last word if you may. We have said what needs to be said about this topic.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  541. Mark G. says:
    @Corvinus

    “You are making a tidy sum”

    Liar. I am making six dollars more an hour than what I would make if I retired. A minimum wage job would pay more. No one is doing me a favor letting me work here. You are still being evasive and dishonest about the fact that I would be down at the bottom of the list of people to be let go because of that and my high performance ratings. You have no problem with the government hiring unqualified affirmative action hires. I brought it up and you did not respond. Once again, evasiveness on your part.

    “you have no trouble if Musk received his DoD contract”

    There is no contract. I already told you that. Are you senile? It was a program set up by Biden. If Harris had won and given the contract to one of her supporters, there would not have been a peep out of you. I already told you all government decisions are political decisions designed to benefit the supporters of those in powet and the only thing you can do is shrink government and privatize government functions when possible. You don’t remember that? Once again, are you senile?

    “resort to ad hominem”

    You are dishonest and I pointed out examples of your dishonesty. You can’t show where I was wrong. You are continuing your evasiveness again which just further displays your dishonesty. Your overwhelmingly one sided attacks on Republicans is just the sign of a political hack. If you don’t know what that is, here I’ll help you out:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_hack

  542. @Mark G.

    With the pension system I am on, you can get both a government pension and Social Security but your pension is reduced by the amount of Social Security you receive.

    It seems to me that this was eliminated in the dying days of the Biden administration.

    https://www.ssa.gov/benefits/retirement/social-security-fairness-act.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com&tl=0

  543. Corvinus says:
    @James B. Shearer

    “Why did you think he was preferable to Harris?”

    He’s a white man and black women have baggage, right?

    “If in fact he let Pelosi bully him then that in itself shows he was unfit for the office.”

    It’s called taking one for the team. That’s what Rubio and McConnell have done for Trump. Or cocking as some would say.

    “Harris was a much stronger candidate than Biden. Which is why the Democrats did the last minute switch.”

    B—-, please. She was a train wreck. And Trump barely won against her.

    • Replies: @James B. Shearer
  544. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “Musk (and Trump, even if unwittingly) may be America’s Gorbachev doing long overdue Perestroika.”

    Hell no. Again, you’re better than this.

    https://newrepublic.com/article/191667/trump-musk-numbers-statistics-debunked-real-agenda

    • Agree: Jonathan Mason
    • Replies: @epebble
    , @Jonathan Mason
  545. @James B. Shearer

    Harris was a much stronger candidate than Biden. Which is why the Democrats did the last minute switch.

    The one potential candidate that seriously worried me was Michelle Obama. I mean, with enough
    cheating and media partisanship, anyone could have won, but straight up?

    Michelle worried me. Not that I admire her — but she would have been the closest thing to a viable candidate the Democrats could have picked. My suspicion is that she didn’t want the job.

    • Replies: @Jonathan Mason
  546. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    Even a blind squirrel can find a nut once in a while. While Trump may be reckless in many of his actions, it may end up having positive results. Ignore all the random firing of federal workers for a moment. Look at international politics. Forcing Ukraine to surrender to Russia, while it is very sad and tragic for Ukraine, has a certain “you have to kill the chicken to scare the monkey” consequence. The Europeans now know that U.S. won’t come to their support if they have any friction with Russia and hence have to quickly grow up and learn to defend themselves. This will eventually make them self-sufficient and let us shrink our presence in Europe. Sooner or later, our Asian allies will also get the hint and figure out their own defense and new architecture to co-exist with China. Thus, by sacrificing Ukraine, we may see a halving of our defense budget within a decade. This would not have happened without the seriously out-of-the-box thinking by Trump.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  547. @Corvinus

    “He’s a white man and black women have baggage, right?”

    Is that why you were for Biden?

    “It’s called taking one for the team. …”

    So Biden gave way for Harris because that was what was best for the Democrats?

    “… She was a train wreck. …”

    Do you think Biden would have done better?

  548. @European-American

    Substack feels like a proprietary silo.

    That’s how this blog struck me here at TUR. But apparently Whimming (mine always eventually come through) is no longer a high enough paywall to suit Mr. Sailer.

    • Troll: Corvinus
  549. @Corvinus

    Agreed. As I have said before it is not the fact that these claims are wrong, but they have been chosen as the very best examples of what is wrong.

    For example the $50 million worth of condoms sent to Hamas in Gaza turn out to have been sent to Gaza province in Mozambique–so how did Hamas take delivery?

    Anyway the federal government pays about 5 cents per condom wholesale, which means that if the allegation is true, they must have donated a billion condoms, or about 70,000 condoms per person, which seems absurd on the face it and not a very effective way of preventing the spread of AIDS.

    The article you linked to above also suggests that the main cause of fraud in government spending is ID theft.

    This seems plausible.

    I think I’ve said before in these columns somewhere that when I first started to live in Ecuador I was surprised that people were quite willing to share their national ID number for all kinds of purposes, for example money transfers.

    The reason that this was surprising is that in the United States you are told to keep your Social Security number close to your chest and never tell anybody.

    I did a bit of inquiry about this and I found the reason was that if you have somebody’s Social Security number and address, in the United States you can easily start a credit card account online.

    (In the United States your Medicare number used to be the same as your Social Security number, but they changed it to a different number to avoid fraud.)

    Apparently you can’t do this in Ecuador because you need a face-to-face interview to start a credit card account.

    I can use my ID card in Ecuador to get VAT refunds on purchases, senior discounts for transportation or movies, duty free imports, as a voter ID card, to register leaving and entering the country, to deposit money into my own ATM account, to send money to other people’s bank accounts, and for other purposes, and there doesn’t seem to be a significant issue with stolen IDs or illegal voting.

    If Trump and Musk really had their druthers, they would put together a task force that would look at how the top 20 other countries prevent identity fraud, and then put together a plan for an even better system that would make life more convenient for citizens and prevent government fraud.

    It would probably also make it much easier to identify illegal aliens or for people to prove that they are not illegal aliens. At the present time you can buy a credit card sized copy of your US passport that can be carried in a wallet, but it is not much use for travel as it can only be used to go to Mexico or Canada (and that could change any day.)

    If such a document could be combined with an encrypted social security number and a fingerprint, it might go a long way towards preventing Identity Theft in the USA.

  550. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “While Trump may be reckless in many of his actions”

    No, he IS reckless. Use the proper word here

    “it may end up having positive results.”

    On a wing and a prayer, huh. No, we the American people deserve more assurances than that.

    Besides, the elephant in the room that you seem not to address is that Musk is a technocrat billionaire who IS gaming the system for HIS benefit. And the Democrat leadership is feckless in response.

    “Ignore all the random firing of federal workers for a moment.”

    NOT realty, my friend.

    “Look at international politics. Forcing Ukraine to surrender to Russia”

    Wait, I thought America using undue influence in foreign affairs is frowned upon. Besides, it’s NOT our call to make to demand that Ukraine surrender. If it chooses to do so on its own accord, so be it.

    “The Europeans now know that U.S. won’t come to their support if they have any friction with Russia and hence have to quickly grow up and learn to defend themselves.”

    They know Trump will. And why is he doing so? It’s a grift.

    “Thus, by sacrificing Ukraine, we may see a halving of our defense budget within a decade.”

    Right, that MAY happen. Most likely not. Second, has Trump sought to cut defense spending by cancelling new orders and renegotiating current deals?

    https://www.npr.org/2025/02/20/nx-s1-5303947/hegseth-trump-defense-spending-cuts

    Buried in the lede is this. So what Trump cronies benefit?

    —Dov Zakheim, who served as Pentagon controller under former President George W. Bush, said a $50 billion cut in the Pentagon budget “is a huge target.” He said “the big bill payers” would likely include civilian government workers in the defense agencies. And since the priorities are focused on the Air Force and Navy, he says the budget cuts could lead to a smaller Army. Moreover, he says, some proposals could mean “potentially huge costs.” The estimated price tag for an American Iron Dome? Zakheim estimates it’s up to $100 billion each year“. —

    • Replies: @epebble
  551. @Colin Wright

    Michelle worried me. Not that I admire her — but she would have been the closest thing to a viable candidate the Democrats could have picked. My suspicion is that she didn’t want the job.

    Buttigieg seemed like the best candidate, and he might even run next time, but there is one rather obvious factor that goes against him. Swing voters in marginal states are unlikely to switch sides for a gay man.

    • Replies: @Colin Wright
    , @Mark G.
  552. @Jonathan Mason

    ‘Swing voters in marginal states are unlikely to switch sides for a gay man.’

    Hispanics definitely wouldn’t — and blacks are notoriously homophobic. When they had the Gay Marriage referendum in California, 70% of Blacks voted against allowing Gay marriage.

    This really is the Democratic problem. All the chiefs have gone on explore bright, sunlit uplands — but none of the tribesmen have followed them.

    Union members, blacks, ethnics: the Democrats have aced themselves out of any constituency at all.

  553. Mark G. says:
    @European-American

    “I also look forward to the audio book, read by Steve!”

    Will his dog Lambo be on it? Would those two sound like Soupy Sales and White Fang together? I’d buy that.

    Half the reason I came here was to read the comments but the other half was to read Steve. If his blog posts dry up, that eliminates half the reason for coming here. Eventually the comments may dwindle down to nothing on his previous posts. That is pretty much what happened when Audacious Epigone stopped blogging here

    • Replies: @Hail
  554. Hail says: • Website
    @Mark G.

    Half the reason I came here was to read the comments

    Are you reading the comments at Steve Sailer Dot Net?

    The jury’s still out on how the commenter-dynamics there compare with the Sailer-on-Unz “commentariat” (the latter being by far the best commentariat on Unz Dot Com);

    or how it compares with the old days of iSteve Blogspot;

    or with thankfully-put-to-rest Taki-Mag comment-section;

    or with the strange awfulness of Twitter comments. (Almost as a rule, Twitter-comment(er)s are incoherent and of quite low value, or “value-added”; most people on Twitter, and most other social media as we now know them, are definitely playing a kind of quasi-reality-based video game, pure self-entertainment in a low sense.)

    There is always Peak Stupidity, to which I give my endorsement. PS is one of the refuges of some of the good people from this comment-section, and maybe some not-good people but I haven’t noticed any, at least not at a rate above the 1-2% range.

    • Thanks: Mark G.
    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  555. Mark G. says:
    @Jonathan Mason

    “Buttigieg seemed like the best candidate”

    Buttigieg was a mayor here in Indiana of the town of South Bend but he had no reputation here in this state of being an exceptional mayor before he ran for president. I do not think he could have won a statewide race here for senator or governor.

    The county South Bend is located in is one of the three or four most Democrat counties in the state so a gay leftist could win there. The Democrats need to look for a Bill Clinton type moderate to run as their candidate next time. Biden largely was seen as such in 2020, which is why he won, but governed too far to the left once in office.

    • Replies: @Jonathan Mason
  556. @Mark G.

    Buttigieg may not have been a very good mayor, but he is telegenic and able to discuss national and international policy very well, which is the kind of thing that presidents do, regardless of whether they are competent at getting trash picked up and closing down local crack houses.

    Before becoming a mayor, he was in the Navy and was a business consultant for McKinsey, so I imagine he must have some kind of knowledge of budgeting.

    Unfortunately, as said before, being gay makes him unlikely to attract swing voters.

    Difficult to find someone similar to Clinton, but Andy Beshear might be the closest. He won the governorship of Kentucky by 5 points in a state that Trump won by 30 points. I have no idea what his credentials are as far as international diplomacy.

    • Agree: Mark G.
  557. @Wielgus

    The Ottomans were notorious for raping male prisoners of war; Cervantes, who experienced Turkish captivity first-hand, tells about a handsome young male captive who actually had to be disguised as a woman to protect him from the Turks; French POWs during Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign suffered Turkish rape, and so did British POWs other than Lawrence during WW1. I think Lawrence’s story was probably all too true.

    • Replies: @Wielgus
  558. epebble says:
    @Corvinus

    Exactly as planned.

    Merz warns Europe should seek ‘independence’ from US after conservatives win German election – and far-right support surges
    https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/23/europe/german-election-results-cdu-afd-intl/index.html

    If this can be affected in East Asia, that will be major achievement.

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  559. @Jonathan Mason

    “Before becoming a mayor, he was in the Navy and was a business consultant for McKinsey, so I imagine he must have some kind of knowledge of budgeting.”

    Be that as it may… it simply doesn’t matter if you’re just another Bolshevik who has “some kind of knowledge of budgeting,” ….because all you’re really going to do with that “knowledge” is find a way to budget my arse into the Gulag!

    Also, I seem to recall a time in recent living memory when a chick named Sarah Palin’s “experience” as just a small-time mayor and then a f#cking State Governor was dismissed by the same self-anointed Geniuses as nothing compared to the resume of a crooked diversity-hire state senator.

    • Agree: Jim Don Bob
  560. Twinkie says:
    @SFG

    Twinkie and AnotherDad, wish your family all the best.

    Thank you and same to you.

    Although I looked at the entire site – more or less – from time to time, I only commented actively over the years on the blogs of Audacious Epigone, Razib Khan, Anatoly Karlin, and Steve Sailer. This does not mean I agreed with these authors all or even most of the time, but I appreciated the fact that these four authors – whatever their own views or hobby horses – relied on an evidence-based, data-centric approach in general instead of resorting to slogans or ad hominem (to the extent that there was philosophical affinity, Audacious Epigone evinced views that were the closest to my own).

    Moreover, the commenting community that arose in these four blogs were made outstanding by numerous contributors who provided intelligent and insightful commentary and discourse and, frequently, good humor (sometimes unintentional).

    Alas, one by one, the authors have left Unz Review and with them, so have many of the excellent commenters who added such great value to the blogs. I don’t know what happened to Audacious Epigone, Khan has his own Substack, Karlin left and seemingly has turned 180 degrees from his previous incarnation, and now Sailer seems to be departing or, at least greatly reducing his presence here.

    I don’t begrudge these authors, including Steve Sailer, from making a better living on Substack if they can, and indeed I wish them great success, but I just haven’t taken to the platform, especially its commenting system, as I have to the commenting architecture here on Unz Review, so I likely will not migrate to it.

    I will also likely stop commenting on Unz Review, because I have zero interest in the likes of Andrew Anglin or the commenters on such blogs, many of who seem to lack the evidence-based approach espoused by the aforementioned bloggers and their commenters. In my view, juvenile emoting and slogan-shouting (and frequently name-calling) are worse than useless – they are counterproductive and bring disrepute to the whole endeavor.

    So please take this as an adieu of sorts. My sincere thanks to the bloggers and the commenters who made this such an interesting and intellectually stimulating site.

  561. Wielgus says:
    @Manfred Arcane

    I don’t disbelieve those accounts. A released French soldier in Egypt is reported to have told Napoleon that he had been sodomised in captivity and Napoleon just laughed at him. British POWs captured at Kut, especially non-officers, were frequently subjected to rape. Midnight Express invented some of the horrors Billy Hayes personally experienced but in Turkey policemen or guards sexually assaulting detainees is far from unknown.
    My problem is that Lawrence implies he was recognised, but after beating and assault he was left unguarded and able to escape. I find it unlikely, and he scarcely looked like an inhabitant of the region, even in Arab dress. He had blue eyes for one thing, if portraits painted of him are accurate. There was also a large reward out for his head.

  562. res says:
    @Twinkie

    Sorry to hear you are departing. Thanks for all your comments over the years. Even where I find other writers on The Unz Review interesting, the SNR in the comments section tends to be poor. It is tempting to try to regroup somewhere (Steve’s Substack or Peak Stupidity seem the most obvious possibilities), but I have been reluctant to enlarge my internet footprint across different comment systems.

    Wishing you the best.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  563. @res

    Thanks very much for the plug, Res. I’ll have to admit that the Peak Stupidity commenting system is poor to non-existent (as a system). We’ve got a few great regulars though.

    Buy Twinkies errr, Bye, Twinkie. See Ron Unz’s and my suggestion though.

    • Replies: @Mark G.
  564. Corvinus says:
    @epebble

    “Exactly as planned”.

    Not quite.

    There was another surprise: the unexpectedly good showing of the leftist Die Linke party. Weeks prior to the election, there were signs the party would fall short of the five percent cutoff for earning seats in the Bundestag; well, Die Linke won 9 percent of the vote.

    Of course, the German Far Right got a big push from Elon Musk He held an hour-long chat with their co-leader, Alice Weidel, and gave them a lot of visibility on his own platform.

    Imagine that…a billionaire technocrat who is seeking to game the system for his and his friends benefit, cozying up to autocrats in Russia and in China. Again, you’re better than this.

    But, the AfD s considered way too far right by the other democratic parties and the conservatives. There appears to be a “firewall” here. Of course, the AfD will work toward making the German government unstable under Merz in the next couple of years, with their eyes on the prize in 2029, in hopes that their positions will become so normalized they gain muscle and power in the government.

  565. Mark G. says:
    @Achmed E. Newman

    Achmed, you and me and res and Twinkie along with some others migrated over here to Steve’s comment section when the Audacious Epigone blog closed down. A number of commenters on the AE blog, though, disappeared, never to be seen again.

    I think that is likely to happen here too. If I remember correctly, an open comment thread was left on AE’s blog limited to regular commenters to continue to comment on but the number of comments dwindled over time and that comment thread is now closed. I do not know why the Russian Reaction community was able to continue but not the Audacious Epigone community. We will see what Ron Unz does with Steve’s blog. It does seem puzzling he and Steve do not appear to be in regular communication with each other.

    I may look in on Steve’s Substack but it will not be the same. George Harrison once sang “All Things Must Pass”. I have always realized nothing lasts forever. When one thing ends, it just gives me an opportunity to try something new.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
  566. @Mark G.

    Hello, Mark. I wrote comments under A.E.’s blog, but I was writing under iSteve’s here before Mr. Unz put A.E.’s column on his site. Yes, it was a good crowd there too. Mr. Epigone wrote a lot of posts about poll data that led to some interesting speculation by commenters on the underlying reasons. To me, after being polled 4 1/2 years ago, I learned how potentially completely useless poll data can be.

    However, I liked A.E.’s posts on financial matters the most. He didn’t write too many of those, unfortunately. I sure hope he’s doing well.

    Back to the subject, Mr. Unz has only that one last goodbye post and the thread underneath. The deal here would be like the Russian guy Karlin’s, with a new thread at least weekly. It’d be a lot better if Mr. Sailer would agree to get each one started, along some subject line ( people wouldn’t have to stay on it) – that wouldn’t take him more than 10 minutes per week.

    Yes, though, all things must pass. I was just reading a book about John Lennon, and it mentioned George Harrison and that song.

  567. @Hail

    … or with thankfully-put-to-rest Taki-Mag comment-section;

    Agreed! I would try to read those. There were some good, smart people on there, but they’d get in these arguments about minute details, and I gave up before Taki took them away.

    … and maybe some not-good people but I haven’t noticed any,

    Believe it or not, the only comments I’ve ever deleted on purpose were unintelligible viagra (I think!) ads that poured in – looked like they were written by drunken Russians. Yes, it’s always the Russians!

  568. nebulafox says:
    @Twinkie

    Thank you. For everything.

  569. Among the many reasons for Unz Review’s existence proffered by commenters is that it is controlled opposition, or even flypaper to snare the unwary. (For the record, I take no position.)

    Perhaps Steve is slowly disengaging from UR for motives similar to these:

  570. Ron Unz says:
    @Twinkie

    I’d been hoping you’d show up on this website again so I could see whether you’d reevaluated some of your analysis regarding the major consequences of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which we’d sometimes hotly disputed over the last couple of years.

    As you know, I’d emphasized that I didn’t have any military expertise and therefore was paying little attention to the ongoing tactical or operational events on the battlefield although I was quite skeptical that the Russian losses were anything like as heavy as you claimed, or the Ukrainian losses as light.

    However, I did feel that I had a great deal of geopolitical expertise, so I entirely focused on those matters.

    Among other things, I repeatedly predicted that as a result of the conflict (and e.g. the destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines), we would probably see the collapse of NATO within “a few years.”

    As I recall, you very forcefully took the other side, emphasizing that NATO had expanded to include Sweden and Finland, and arguing that the NATO alliance had never been stronger or had a brighter future.

    Only a year or two has now gone by, but I’m sure you’ve followed recent political developments and the public statements of President Trump and Vice President Vance at meeting with our various European allies. Based upon these, I wonder if you’re still sticking to your previous predictions or may have instead “reassessed” them.

    • Thanks: Hail, Mark G.
  571. @Ron Unz

    In fairness to Twinkie, NOBODY could have seen coming what Trump has been up to for the last 5 weeks! Re: NATO, sending Vance over to Europe to embarrass the heads of State there and cause a fracture in NATO that will hopefully break it has been a welcome development. NATO should have been disbanded in 1990. Trump said himself it something like this way back, but Trump-45 was not the same man as Trump-47. (He didn’t follow through on many promises last term.)

    Mr. Sailer predicted the end of Woke and D.I.E. , but, IMO, it was not some fad, and it would not be DIEing had it not been for Trump & Co.’s great efforts.

    Can I ask you, Mr. Unz, to join me and thank President Trump for any one single thing, please? No, he’s not the 2nd Coming, but I truly did not expect this much #Winning on a whole lot of the social and political issues. Mr. Sailer doesn’t seem to want to budge on this and say anything too nice about the Pres.

    How about it, at least on this one issue? (It’s one I agree with you on – also not a follower of the battles and the hardware – I just know America has NO BUSINESS being involved.)

  572. @Ron Unz

    Have you “reassessed” any of your clearly misinformed early views of the Puti campaign to destroy an independent Ukraine and its culture? It may be a silly question to someone who expresses a mind boggling 99% certainty in his past judgments but some of your readers surely learn new and important facts or reasons for firming up previous beliefs. As you know my Ukrainian speaking former professor turned investment banker turned Consultant has a son who was doing business in Kyiv for 10 years and has now made it possible for me to call the highly educated sophisticated Ukrainian ambassadorot Australia Vasyl Miroshnychenko a friend who dropped by my house in the way from watching Ukrainians at the nearby tennis centre where the Australian Open was being played. He is the son of two distinguished medical specialists and g
    just the sort of person to have responded to the summons to gather for the Maidan protest in late 2013 against the Russian bribed President’s abandoning a EU connection. That summons was, as you must surely know and admit by now, issued as a message from a former Afghan refugee in Ukkraine. After the unarmed young protestors were shot that brought out masses of the older generation.(Victoria Nuland was an irrelevance, as you must surely know). My friend, born in Australia in 1951 to Ukrainian refugee parents not only speaks Ukrainian and understands Russian so was able in 1990 tolecture in the only MBA course ever given in the Soviet Union and I cannot think you can rationally maintain your initial prejudices about the Russian war on Ukraine that you started with based on skimming the views and assertions of people you didn’t know on a subject where you started from scratch when I can report the views of an impeccably honest person with the strongest claims to knowing about Ukraine.

  573. Ron Unz says:

    Have you “reassessed” any of your clearly misinformed early views of the Puti campaign to destroy an independent Ukraine and its culture?

    LOL. Since you’ve now returned to this website, I had been thinking of asking you exactly the same question, namely whether you’d repented of your erroneous Ukraine beliefs.

    As you might know, now that the Ukraine war is likely winding down with a near-complete Russian victory, Prof. Jeffrey Sachs was just invited to speak before the European Parliament on the war and its history. His entire presentation is around 1.5 hours long and I haven’t watched it, but here’s a shorter clip of some of his most important points:

    Video Link

    Given Sachs’ exceptionally strong academic credentials and his personal high-level involvement in the region for more than thirty years, I’ve been pleased that my views have been identical to his.

  574. Antiwar7 says:
    @Ron Unz

    I already posted this in the News links…

  575. @Ron Unz

    On ZeroHedge today: Ukraine Can Forget About NATO, Says Trump: ‘That’s Probably The Reason Why The War Started’

    This also marks the most directly Trump has ever said NATO expansion is a key reason for the tragic war, which has taken hundreds of thousands of lives, having started in the first place.

    Mainstream media fact-checkers have been out in force, decrying this perspective as ‘Russian propaganda’. But is this really the case?

    The head of NATO itself in the recent past said the quiet part out loud and fully admitted that constant NATO expansion to Russia’s doorstep was a central driving factor:

    From the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we’ve been told that the issue of NATO expansion is irrelevant to the war, and that anyone bringing it up is, at best, unwittingly parroting Kremlin propaganda, at worst, apologizing for or justifying the war.

    So it was curious to see NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg earlier this month say explicitly that Russian president Vladimir Putin launched his criminal war as a reaction to the possibility of NATO expanding into Ukraine, and the alliance’s refusal to swear it off — not once or twice, but three separate times.

    “President Putin declared in the autumn of 2021, and actually sent a draft treaty that they wanted NATO to sign, to promise no more NATO enlargement,” Stoltenberg told a joint committee meeting of the European Parliament on September 7. “That was what he sent us. And [that] was a pre-condition for not invade [sic] Ukraine. Of course we didn’t sign that.”

    “He went to war to prevent NATO, more NATO, close to his borders. He has got the exact opposite,” Stoltenberg reiterated, referring to the accession of Sweden and Finland into the alliance in response to Putin’s invasion. Their entry, he later insisted, “demonstrates that when President Putin invaded a European country to prevent more NATO, he’s getting the exact opposite.”

    How much clearer could the then NATO Secretary-General have said it (in the Sept. 2023 comments)?

    Even back in the mid-1990s, I thought about how stupid it was, and what a lost opportunity for a peaceful alliance it was, to keep on pushing NATO up toward Russia. The Cold War was over. Not to make anything in particular out of the Russian “Bear” theme, but you don’t box ANY animal into a corner, even a squirrel, without asking for trouble.

    Now, maybe Trump just got wise to the whole thing just this week, upon hearing the truth from some underling, or maybe he has long understood this, but went ahead and spoke it in plain English.

    Either way, Mr. Unz, it’s just 4 words you could write. “Thank you, President Trump.” I can assure you, this type of thing would not have happened with the drunken Kameltoe (officially) in charge.

    • Agree: Mark G.
  576. J.Ross says:

    OT –They really should relax.

    • Replies: @William Badwhite
  577. Corvinus says:
    @Ron Unz

    “As you might know, now that the Ukraine war is likely winding down with a near-complete Russian victory,”

    Given this recent development, you’re going have to reevaluate. It looks like the U.S. is finding a way to support Ukraine’s sovereignty after all, and posing offf Russia in the process.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn527pz54neo.amp

    —Trump said on Tuesday that Ukraine would get “the right to fight on” in return for access to its minerals and suggested the US would continue to supply equipment and ammunition “until we have a deal with Russia”.

    The US president has also said Russia is open to accepting European peacekeepers in Ukraine, but Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the Kremlin would not consider this as an option.—

    Regarding Sachs’s position (from 2023, but relevant).

    https://voxukraine.org/en/open-letter-to-jeffrey-sachs

    An excerpt.

    —While your suggestion is perfectly aligned with that of Russian propagandists, it leaves unanswered the key question from the Ukrainian perspective: Based on what evidence do you trust a serial warmonger, [in addition to catering to oligarchs while curbing dissent of journalists and dissidents], who has stated on multiple occasions that Ukraine does not exist, to be satisfied with Crimea and Donbas and not try to occupy the entire country? Until you find a convincing answer to this question, we would kindly ask you to refer to the 10-point peace plan proposed by President Zelensky and fully backed up by the Ukrainian people. Regurgitating Kremlin’s “peace plans” would only prolong the suffering of Ukrainian people.—

    • Replies: @Corvinus
  578. Corvinus says:
    @Corvinus

    “posing offf“

    pissing off

  579. @Ron Unz

    Hmm. Is your failure to make your reply to me recognised by your own webzine as a a Reply a symptom you should worry about?

    Without finding through one finger taps the post/comment you are replying to I can say that I am undoubtedly much better informed on almost everything relating to zputin’s war than you are and only wish you had ever shown signs of being willing to put your money where your mouth is in taking a reasonable sized bet on a relevant outcome – say $25,000. I won’t waste more time now but just point out that Putin is going to lose big time because Germany’s splendid new commitment is feeding a simple Trump mental process and Trump will now provide arms to make sure Putin loses. Trump will have reasoned that the Germans(his ancestral people) won’t lose and so he must get on the winning side without delay.

  580. @Ron Unz

    Hmm. Is your failure to make your reply to me recognised by your own webzine as a a Reply a symptom you should worry about?

    Without finding through one finger taps the post/comment you are replying to I can say that I am undoubtedly much better informed on almost everything relating to zputin’s war than you are and only wish you had ever shown signs of being willing to put your money where your mouth is in taking a reasonable sized bet on a relevant outcome – say $25,000. I won’t waste more time now but just point out that Putin is going to lose big time because Germany’s splendid new commitment is feeding a simple Trump mental process and Trump will now provide arms to make sure Putin loses. Trump will have reasoned that the Germans(his ancestral people) won’t lose and so he must get on the winning side without delay.

    *** ***

    I have now found my way back to my post/Comment that you are replying to. I don’t need to add anything. I merely note that what you write about Russia/Ukraine is all of a piece with that mind boggling claim you make of 99% certainty your past expressions of opinion are correct. i leave others to interpolate my unstated comment on that.

    • Replies: @res
  581. @J.Ross

    OT –They really should relax.

    Jonathan Leibowitz’s red-faced shouting routine…it baffles me that anyone watches that. “Oh look some smug Jew is shouting again, lets listen”.

    Replies: JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD, JackD

    • Replies: @J.Ross
  582. res says:
    @Wizard of Oz

    Hmm. Is your failure to make your reply to me recognised by your own webzine as a a Reply a symptom you should worry about?

    … 36 minutes later

    I have now found my way back to my post/Comment that you are replying to.

    I would be more worried about your failure to recognize more quickly that he was responding to your immediately preceding comment.

    It is pretty common for someone to miss the “reply” button for the most recent comment. The edit box is right there in the correct place, waiting.

    • Replies: @J.Ross
    , @Wizard of Oz
  583. J.Ross says:
    @William Badwhite

    The basis of his credibility was being the only voice in the mockingbird media wilderness to point out the obvious during the Dumbya regime; he then promptly dropped all his credibility to worship Obama in the Whole Society Initiative.

  584. J.Ross says:
    @res

    Had he not been introduced to me as a sorcerer, I would begin to suspect that the Wizard of Oz was not all he was claiming to be …

  585. @res

    I appreciate that you are a would-be clear thinker but you are mistaken in your inference that I did not recognise what Ron was replying to. You could not have known that I did not come across Ron’s curious comment in the thread where it was indeed an immediate reply but, instead, in the course of reading what I happened to bring up by clicking on Ron’s name to show me what he had recently been posting.

    Now please apply your mind to the curious puzzle of how Ron seems completely deluded on some subjects and unable to apply a fine critical mind.

  586. @Twinkie

  587. @Ron Unz

    Since I wrote my rather summary reply expressing confidence that Trump would in effect follow the German lead and decide that backing Ukraine would put him on the winning side the infamous attack on Zelensky at the White House by Trump and and his V-P has taken place. I certainly did not anticipate that but, in the end, I don’t expect it to affect the outcome of the war.

  588. @Twinkie

    As far as I know South Korea is the only country where the first Christians were converted prior to the arrival of missionaries. A South Korean went to Beijing and brought back Chinese translations of the Jesuit Matteo Ricci’s writings, and it resonated so much with the Koreans they became Catholic.

    For the life of me I can’t remember the name of the Korean who bought back the translations.

    • Replies: @nebulafox
  589. @Ron Unz

    Why would you join a thread serving as Mr. Sailer’s billboard at an exit ramp for readers off TUR?

    Can you appreciate that some of us who’ve been here for years also struggle to reconcile

    • the fair, open mindedness exemplified in your current article on the French Revolution

    • the “very light moderation” and lynching of honest commenters like Realist and, most recently, Wild Man for his disagreement with your views on COVID

    and

    • the indulgence of others like the prevaricating, proven sock puppeteer Wizard of Oz?

    Please reflect on the principles, recent history, and future of the website.

  590. nebulafox says:
    @Torna atrás

    Well… back in ye old Nestorian days:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingjiao_Documents

    (The antiquity of Chinese civilization never ceases to impress me. There could not be a bigger mistake in our relations with China than to assume the Century of Humiliation is the norm: it’s a stage in the cycle. Right now, high dynasty, and China is inevitably a global power as a result.)

    Within that specific time period, Christianity did gain a toehold in Kyushu and was at least tolerated by Nobunaga before Ieyasu’s conservative neo-Confucian revolution crushed it. I don’t know enough about pre-modern Korean history beyond a basic level pertaining to its neighbors-Imjin War, Manchu invasion, etc-to say much, but given how conservative the Joseon dynasty was, I’d assume the ideological motives were similar. This is further confirmed by what happened in Vietnam, where contrary to common assumption, Catholicism was not a novel French colonial import. There was no unitary state until the 1800s. Much like sengoku Japan, missionaries and what they brought were too in demand for anybody to be tempted to make them into an enemy. So by the time the Nguyen tried the same thing, Catholicism was too deeply entrenched to eradicate, as the Le Van Khoi rebellion showed.

    As far as China goes: my gut hunch after learning about guys like Ignatius Sun is that if you want Catholicism to gain a firmer toe-hold with the Chinese aristocracy, you are going to have to keep the Ming or some other native dynasty in power, and preferably Christian converts are associated with military victory for legitimacy purposes. The Qing themselves had too many legitimacy problems with their native Han subjects to have the degree of theological flexibility required (their negative relations with their Muslim subjects-Islam was too entrenched to just get rid of-is a hint here), especially given their own Tibetan religious commitments exacerbating the problem. Of course, it is a two-way road. It didn’t help that this was the era of the Counter-Reformation and the Thirty Year’s War. The Church was probably more concerned with survival in Europe than having the qualities needed to interchange with foreign civilizations that were not completely wrecked like in the Americas, let alone one as resilient and absorbative as China.

    (Note what I said: degree. Too much, and you get the Taiping conflating God with the pre-Confucian shangdi. But too little, and nobody’s going to even understand what you are talking about, best case scenario. The Constantinian model with the Roman Empire shows the way-the church and the res publica mutually shape each other, with give and take. It’s a nice middle ground between Islam superseding cultural identities and Mahayana Buddhism becoming a tool of the state in East Asia.)

    I’ve always found it funny how each culture portrays Jesus as looking like them: African, Germanic, Chinese, whatever. Even the Latin Romans did that: the Jesus portrayed in military barracks and catacombs is clean shaven, when virtually any adult Palestinian Jewish man in the 1st Century wouldn’t have been. But then again, Jesus intended to be all things, for all people, and wasn’t above a Euripides dig on the road to Damascus. So, no offense taken. I hope.

    • Replies: @nebulafox
  591. nebulafox says:
    @nebulafox

    Of course… I’m not much one for historical inevitability, least of all in today’s age. God alone knows what is coming, and He never, ever shows his hand. And people who insist they have some kind of unique insight into the future have a strong tendency to get what they wish for, during or after their lives, but not in the way they expect. The most successful people understand this and go with what is offered in the present. I see that now. I wish I did earlier.

    (Twinkie, if you ever see this: I get it now. What you said about what love really is.)

    My main point is regardless of whether that is true or not, the result is the same. America did not succeed in the Cold War because of our military interventions or our silly State Department’s bilge. We succeeded because we kicked ass at home and people wanted nothing more than to be like us back then, to varying extents over the decades and with all the caveats involved. Our model just outstripped the competition. It’s a mistake to assume that it is impossible that it cannot be outstripped by another model, however flawed that alternative is, if we are dysfunctional enough. This requires a willingness to think beyond immediate survival in a way that isn’t normative in our culture anymore. Even DOGE shows this in their choices of who to fire. Only immediate results are allowed. DeepSeek and its labor allocation policies, cultivating local, homegrown talent without endless credentials or experience, shows the folly of 30 years of American corporate logic.

    It’s ironic that I feel called to do this, because everything “logical” tells me to focus only on immediate salvaging. But you can do so much worse than “learn from others who are doing things better, batten down the hatches, and build. Plant trees your grandchildren-which you will have, no matter how hard society makes it-will play in, even if you are dead”, not just as a general plan, but as motivation in the present to transcend current problems.

    Welp, so long.

    • Thanks: Torna atrás, res

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