Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Political history repeats itself too

What an irony.
The last post on this blog was the last piece I wrote on the Adrian Dix election loss debacle in the 2013 B.C. election and now I'm working on an analysis of the Tom Mulcair election loss debacle in the 2015 Canadian election which ironically was because of much the same mistakes that the Dix team made, and which I warned about in mid-campaign in several Tweets posted several weeks ago.
History repeats again.

Musings on reviving this blog

So ho ho ho looks like I've found a place to post the election analysis piece I'm working on; it'll probably be something neither the mainstream media nor progressive online will dare to touch because it will attack all sorts of shibboleths and false alarms and politically-correct but wrong assumptions.

Isn't it funny how so many vested interests from all corners of the political spectrum are so reluctant to entertain alternate realities; it seems to be the human condition. It's true in religions too, and probably sports and arts and culture, and certainly business and economics.

But truth has an amazing ability to not only survive but win in the end, though sadly a lot of people die taking unsolved grievances to their graves; perhaps the winning end will come for them soon.

Uhoh, gasp: is he going to get into religion again??

Oh no can't do that, it's not politically correct, and it is so rife with misconceptions that it's best left alone and untouched.

Don't even go there, as the libel lawyers always advise their newspaper-editor clients.

Okay.

Maybe later, eh.

J


Trying to look at someone's facebook page led me to re-finding my own page and giving it a new password and then trying to use it and then thereby finding my old blog last updated in 2013!
We'll soon see whether my computer remembers a password I've longsince forgotten though of course it IS written down somewhere in my folder of passwords.
There's gotta be a better way but those password aggregator sites could be vulnerable to hacking; I've heard stories of hundreds of thousands of people having their privacy broken.
Brave New World, eh.