Friday links! Will of the people edition

Problem solved.

Problem solved!

As Winston Churchill once remarked, democracy is the second-worst system of government, after security-state corporatocracy. The problem with the will of the people is that people are dumb. They’re especially dumb compared to your average NSA cryptographer, Fortune 500 CEO, US senator or anyone else who might reach a position to decide whether the governed should govern much themselves. But democracy never had a chance like this before. For the first time in human history, we can know the opinions of ordinary people from all over the world almost instantaneously. Today is Friday, and the will of the people is better known to us than ever. Won’t you marvel at its inanity with me?

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Times observes that some Syrian rebels are bad

Bashar al-Assad, barely winning the race to be the biggest dick in Syria

Bashar al-Assad, barely winning the race to be the biggest dick in Syria

With the US at the top of its game and no other foreign entanglements to distract us, I can’t think of any reason not to bomb Syria. Assad used chemical weapons. That makes him an even worse bad guy, and the only thing that stops a bad guy with sarin is a good guy with laser-guided bombs. Unlike poison gas, bombs only destroy buildings and weapons. Bombs are pretty much the opposite of weapons, if you think about it long enough. Don’t think about it too long, though, because then you might ask a terrifying question: whom are we bombing for?

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On the tea box copy problem

TAZ-20065-2

Editor’s note: The internet still doesn’t work. I am posting this from the coffee shop.

“Through the screened front door,” says my box of Tazo Zen Green Tea, “zingy lemongrass and spritely spearmint coax contemplative pan-fired green teas to come play. Calmly, lemon verbena opens the door and invites them all to a cup of tea.” Hungover, I fly into a rage and invite the tea box to have sex with itself. It does not respond.

I woke with a compromised limbic system, because Titus Andronicus played the Missoula VFW last night. I though they were more popular than that—at least Palace-level popular, if not Wilma. But they played the bingo room at the VFW on their relatively new stage, where they were graciously enthusiastic. “I think we’re about ready to get started,” Patrick Stickles said after sound check. “Or maybe I have to poop.”

We all have to poop now. I am on the comfy chair in my new house, watching the internet man frown at his internet box. Ideally, my Tazo Zen Green Tea would ground me, or possibly center me, in my sunny and briefly analog living room, but I cannot stop reading the box.

What aspect of the experience of being pan-fired would make green teas contemplative? Lemongrass and spearmint invite them to come play through the oddly particular screened front door, but they are not allowed. Wouldn’t it be more fun to drink tea inside? Lemon verbena suggests it calmly, as if she had learned to master her emotions long ago. This is life now, since the pan fire.

Presumably, Tazo chose this vignette carefully. Probably, the thing they agreed to print on all their tea boxes is not a first draft. The germ of this story about tea ingredients coming over to play and drinking tea instead was once written on a whiteboard somewhere, and it grew from their according to professional teasellers’ understanding of the marketplace. This story sells tea.

Why, then, does it throw me into a rage? Again, it’s because I poisoned myself with alcohol. But also maybe there is something different about me, whereby a haiku about anthropomorphized tea ingredients that makes other people feel pleasant and safe makes me feel snarky and alienated.

Or maybe everyone feels like that. Maybe the box copy guys at Tazo thought lemongrass and spearmint coming over to play was somnolent bullshit too, but no one said it because that’s how these things are done. They go home and listen to loud music about how everything is fake. Perhaps the yoga moms feel a pang of cynical resentment when they read about lemon verbena in the tea aisle. Maybe we are all displeased with our own society, and we want only to come together and admit it.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qim8DYhosUw

Nelson, GA will not enforce mandatory gun ownership law

 

Brennan Moss of Moss Firearms in nearby Jasper, GA

Brennan Moss of Moss Firearms in nearby Jasper, GA

Back in May, the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence filed a lawsuit against the town of Nelson, Georgia, which passed a city ordinance requiring all heads of households to own at least one gun. In a settlement last week, the city council declared that the law “cannot and will not be enforced,” according to NBC News. According to the Nelson police chief, that was the idea all along. Councilman Duane Cronic agrees, likening the law to the security-company signs on certain suburban homes. “Some people have security systems, some people don’t, but they put those signs up,” Cronic said in April. “I really felt like this ordinance was a security sign for our city.” Consideration of how a law should differ from a deceptive yard sign after the jump.

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Friday links! Passionate intensity edition

Action Bronson, best and worst, unconvicted and full of passionate intensity

Action Bronson, best and worst, unconvicted and full of passionate intensity

The best lack all conviction, William Butler Yeats wrote in “The Second Coming,” while the worst are full of passionate intensity. He was talking about postwar Europe, but he might as well have described the world we would inherit a century later. Probably, Yeats’s claim is always true. You don’t get to be the worst without great confidence in what you’re doing, and the same qualities that makes the best better encourage them to doubt themselves. Today is Friday, and jerks continue to operate without a moment’s doubt. Won’t you waver along with me?

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