All posts by lefalcon
Posted by lefalcon on March 1, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/03/01/2472/

Posted by lefalcon on March 1, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/03/01/2466/
Gord’s “Gold”

Lately I’ve been thinking about “Wreck of the Edmond Fitzgerald,” but I have no idea what reminded me of it, in the first place. In any case, it is much deserving of its fame. Only an amazingly talented individual such as “Gord” could transpose a current event into modern folk legend.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzRLZaHgv_4
I was noticing that, in the lyrics as posted here:
http://home.pacbell.net/chabpyne/lyrics.html
they accidently typed “words” when they meant “waves”: “Does anyone know where the love of God goes / When the waves turn the minutes to hours?” Surely one of the best lines in a beautifully-expressed song.
Posted by lefalcon on February 28, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/28/gords-gold/
It’s official!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/02/27/gop.poll/ The 2012 presidential campaign is under-way. I, for one, just don’t want to hear about it. I’d much rather hear about Ayn Rand’s Objectivism, and that’s saying a lot.
Posted by lefalcon on February 28, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/28/its-official/
The Fairness Doctrine
Moron.
Loser.
There’s been some talk going around about re-instituting the Fairness Doctrine (whatever that is!). The phrase “the Fairness Doctrine” has, I guess, been floating around for years, but I’ve never known exactly what it was. I proceeded to “conduct Internet research,” i.e. look it up on Wikipedia. Noble Wikipedia describes it thusly:
“The Fairness Doctrine was a policy of the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that required the holders of broadcast licenses both to present controversial issues of public importance and to do so in a manner that was (in the Commission’s view) honest, equitable and balanced.”
Ha ha ha. Do they mean like “fair and balanced”?
The Wikipedia article includes this quote, which provides a more specific description of the doctrine:
“The Fairness Doctrine had two basic elements: It required broadcasters to devote some of their airtime to discussing controversial matters of public interest, and to air contrasting views regarding those matters. Stations were given wide latitude as to how to provide contrasting views: It could be done through news segments, public affairs shows, or editorials. The doctrine did not require equal time for opposing views but required that contrasting viewpoints be presented.”
FAUX News and other outlets would, naturally, claim that they’re already doing this. But perhaps worth pondering is: HOW are they doing it?
The format of brief, rapid, superficial debates among panelists claiming to represent the different sides of an issue, seems to have become furiously prevalent on the TV news channels. But I’ve seen countless of those little debates where one or more important perspectives on the issue simply weren’t articulated by anyone on the panel. It gives the illusion of a nice, pluralistic discussion; but in actuality, the range of possible opinions that are allowed to be expressed is severely constrained. (And the public cannot get up in arms about not being exposed to certain areas of opinion which are being kept so tightly hidden from them, they are, by consequence, not really aware those opinions even exist. Stated differently: How can you agitate for airtime for suppressed views you’re not even cognizant of?)
Alternatively, a channel like FAUX will often present the controversial or non-doctrinal viewpoint … but not in a persuasive or serious way. Rather, the guest with that viewpoint is made to look like an idiot or a nut; and essentially functions as a foil or punching-bag to which the more “level-headed” guests can construct their arguments in counter-point.
And all of this, naturally, begs the question of: Is it really even possible for a government bureau to monitor the level of “fairness” contained in media outlets’ presentations? In some absolute way: NO.
But on the other hand, if we imagine that there is something like collective, communal consensus in our society … and that this consensus reflects a conglomeration and mushing together of everyone’s attitudes, beliefs, shared concepts, values, etc. … and that this big body of mush can be reduced down into some approximate, comprehensible “average,” i.e. a rough consensus that’s more-or-less apparent to us as inhabitants of / participants in society … is it TRULY unreasonable to ask that broadcasting outlets – reaching millions upon millions of listeners / readers / viewers – take some responsibility for remaining (kinda .. sorta .. to some extent) plausibly inside the *gravitational field* of that shared consensus .. as opposed to consistently and intentionally violated it and going against its grain, in order to candycoat and propagate an agenda coinciding only with the interests of the socio-economic ultra-elite (by cloaking it in a fallacious veil of trite buzzphrases about populism)?
My local AM station’s current weekday schedule includes:
Rush Limbaugh: noon-3:00pm
Dennis Miller: 3:00-4:00pm
Sean Hannity: 7:00-10:00pm
Dennis Miller (again!): 10:00pm-1:00am
That’s TEN HOURS of ultra-rightwing commentary in every 24-hour period … on the only station receivable during daytime on the AM band, in arguably most liberal/progressive community in the state.
The situation is obviously at crisis-level in a society that claims to possess some kind of “democratic” system. The problem is that the Fairness Doctrine, while a superb idea in abstract, winds up being just too sketchy on how it could be effectively implemented … to result in a more pluralistic, representative discourse … instead of just transferring tyrannical thought-control over from corporate entities into government hands. Government and the media outlets are already in such deep collusion, state control of the media would hardly constitute a different situation from what we’re already living under. It might even be a productive step, in that it would make the control more obvious, more overt; and help to dispel the ridiculous but widely-held apprehension that media discourse is by-and-large “free.”
Posted by lefalcon on February 21, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/21/the-fairness-doctrine/
Astounding Evidence (??)

I have no particular agenda here other than to offer this link for your consideration. Judge the evidence upon its merits: http://www.islam-guide.com/frm-ch1-1-a.htm
Posted by lefalcon on February 17, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/17/astounding-evidence/
Camus’s The Stranger

I just read _The Stranger_. It’s a pretty engaging book. But I keep wondering: what the heck was Camus thinking when he wrote this thing? I cannot understand what the main character’s problem is. Camus himself claimed the novel’s protagonist, Meursault, “refused to play the game.” I take this to mean that Meursault did not accept some of his society’s basic values, such as belief in God and Christianity. At the same time, he is also apparently incapable of familial or romantic love, or of experiencing any emotional reaction to having killed someone. These “shortcomings” are not the product of some ideological stance against societal indoctrination; they are indications of a severely stunted human personality. He does boil potatoes. I suppose I will continue to wonder about this book for some time.
Posted by lefalcon on February 17, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/17/camuss-the-stranger/
as per request
I had a dream that I was attending a special advance-preview screening of a new version (or “special edition”) of
_Sophie’s Choice_. Richard Dreyfuss was on hand to introduce the film and make a few comments, which was
wholly appropriate, given that he had written, directed, produced, and starred in it. It was freakishly long, like five or six hours,
and seemed to focus almost exclusively on Dreyfuss himself, with hardly any spoken dialogue or scenes in which he
was not the direct focal point. It was only after the closing credits began to roll that I noticed that nothing from the
original – characters, plotline, even basic premise – were in any way represented or even intimated in Dreyfuss’s version.
In short, Dreyfuss’s “version,” if it could even be called that, had essentially no commonality or point of contact with
the 1982 effort or Styron’s novel. It was a completely freestanding work that shared nothing with the earlier movie and book
except the title. What is more, it was the most blatant vanity project imaginable: Dreyfuss had simply paid someone to take
footage with a handheld camera, as he sat in his living room and rambled endlessly about mundane topics from his personal life
in which nobody but Dreyfuss himself could possibly have been interested. Yet the work was being treated as high art,
as a watershed moment in the history of cinematic form.
Posted by lefalcon on February 4, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/02/04/as-per-request/
As requested

“When a trout rising to a fly gets hooked on a line
and finds himself unable to swim about freely,
he begins with a fight which results in struggles and splashes and sometimes an escape.
Often, of course, the situation is too tough for him.
In the same way the human being struggles with his environment
and with the hooks that catch him.
Sometimes he masters his difficulties;
sometimes they are too much for him.
His struggles are all that the world sees
and it naturally misunderstands them.
It is hard for a free fish to understand what is happening to a hooked one.”
-Karl A. Menninger
Posted by lefalcon on December 8, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/08/as-requested/
A Vision of Hell
Posted by lefalcon on November 23, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/11/23/a-vision-of-hell/

