Neocon Flu

Jan. 30th, 2025 08:53 pm
theradicalchild: (Pro-AI Art)
tempImageRuobtI

Today's war criminal Dick Cheney's birthday so I did this. Regardless of how you feel about him and his bitch goddess daughter Liz, he looks pretty cool in anime form.

It pisses me off how the same libtards who bitched about him and Bush pissing away money on war would ultimately proceed to do the same fucking thing, especially with Ukraine, and I hope like hell Trump can get some of our money back from that greedy Jew crook in charge of that corrupt country.

I know the media suddenly sucked his dick and gave head to him and Kamala when he endorsed her and she treated it like the greatest thing since sliced bread, but sorry, I wouldn't want to be endorsed by someone like him.

When David Duke endorsed Jill Stein (what the fuck), this happened:

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Weird as fuck how antiwar Democrats are virtually extinct (and I consider myself an "antiwar liberal" in that I oppose war given both my grandfathers' deaths due to unnecessary wars, Vietnam and the Cold War, and that I'm truly open-minded to sensible ideas).

Whatever. Good night, everyone.
theradicalchild: (White Rabbit in the Air)
From [community profile] thefridayfive:

These questions were originally suggested by [livejournal.com profile] sooguy.

1. Ten years ago, what did you think you would be doing now?
I didn't really have fucking thoughts about the future then, I dunno, maybe continuing to suffer from Stockholm Syndrome and live under their thumb.

2. Where do you think you will be five years from now?
Hopefully not suffering under the narcissistic tyranny of my asshole abusive parents.

3. Do you live life one day at a time or look to the future?
I try desperately to live in the present but all the PTSD my asshole parents and fucktards online inflicted upon me prevent me from doing so.

4. Do you wish you could go back in time and undo something in your life?
Yes, taking my parents' terrible (as always) advice and going into psychiatry, which ended up fucking me up worse mentally, giving me epilepsy, and frying my brains.

5. If you could send a message back in time and give a younger version of yourself some advice, what would it be?
Get the fuck out of your parents' home as soon as you're financially able.
theradicalchild: (Nurse Redheart)


First of all, that's how I voted, and I'm happy with the end results. I would just really fucking love to be able to work (preferably freelance or part-time) without the federal government bitching and moaning at me for doing so and demanding I pay back my money.



Second, I had my follow-up with my podiatrist about my right toenails, and it's not fungus, and things should be okay so long as I take good care of them.

Third, I'm also in the process of changing dentists due to my massive dental bill from my avaricious now-former dentistry and visited the clinic where I had my appointment, only for them to say they didn't get any of my information despite me remembering I had submitted it, so I had to fill it out again, and I have my first appointment in six months.

Remy signing out.
theradicalchild: (Dragon Park Ranger at Computer)
From [community profile] thefridayfive:

1) Who are you appreciating in your life right now?
My downstairs neighbor helping me assemble my electric trike.

2) What's something you've done this year that other people appreciated?
Furry gift art.

3) What's a good way to show gratitude?
Not being a total dick and actually listening.

4) Do you write thank you notes?
I do say "thank you" to people who do good things for me, but to me, if they're only doing said things to get their asses kissed, I don't see the need to write formal notes to them.

5) What can you use help with these days?
Definitely being more productive and accumulating money in quicker time.
theradicalchild: (Dragon Hobo)
Poverty, by AmericaPoverty, by America by Matthew Desmond
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

After I graduated college, I constantly found myself stuck between a financial rock and a hard place. While I had numerous certifications and degrees and would receive more of the former in the future, working unleashed complications with my Social Security benefits to the point where I didn't work for several years. After reentering the workforce for a few more years, I ultimately got the shock that the government was terminating my disability benefits on account of me no longer being "disabled" despite autism being a lifelong condition that never fades, along with other disabilities like arthritis, epilepsy, mental illness, and possible neuropathy that impede my ability to work traditional part-time or full-time jobs.

I'm not normally a fan of nonfiction, especially the political hagiographies and hatchet jobs (with many in the genre often being hybrids of both), but I've been trying to broaden my literary and mental horizons lately and discovered this book through pure coincidence. Given its apolitical description, I gave it a purchase and read, and while it's not 100% perfect, I was definitely not disappointed. The prologue notes that even though America is the richest country in the world, it also has among the most problems of the wealthiest nations, among them being the titular issue of poverty.

The first chapter touches upon the problem of rising rent rates, noting that official poverty rates exclude the incarcerated, and introducing me to the Marxist term lumpenproletariat, referring to unorganized and unpolitical lower orders of society uninterested in revolutionary advancement, which fascinated me given my open-mindedness to socialist ideology. The second indicates that while money earmarked for the poor has actually increased between the Reagan and Trump Administrations, little of it actually reaches them, given waste at the state level, which is very much an issue as it is at the federal level.

The third chapter notes that America has the lowest wages of the industrialized world, irrelevant in spite of education, with wage negotiation between employees and companies being taboo, and corporate greed rampant. The next touches upon how landlords are more prosperous in low-income neighborhoods because expenses are lower, and how poverty isn't simply the condition of not having enough money but rather not having enough choice and being used as a result. Afterward, Desmond indicates that despite usual rightist fears of welfare leeches, those receiving government assistance actually use more of said money on necessities rather than wants. He concludes the respective chapter by saying that Americans who least need it receive the most federal aid.

The author primarily faults President Reagan's tax cuts for the modern American lopsidedness of wealth and lower investment in public programs but seemed to blame them solely for the budget deficits of the 1980s, when in reality there were other factors like a great increase in military spending, alongside the president's genuine concern in balancing the federal budget through the oft-rejected Balanced Budget Amendment to the US Constitution. However, he does rightfully mention the segregation of housing types (whereas in other nations like Germany, they coexist) and continued political polarization of races in the United States.

Desmond indicates that the government could easily end poverty without increasing the federal deficit by tracking down tax cheaters, which the Internal Revenue Service allegedly cannot do because of understaffing. However, he doesn't mention that the IRS, since its establishment, has been weaponized by all presidential administrations against constructive critics of whoever was president at the time. Furthermore, while he does reasonably suggest that companies should pay employees living wages, he is morally oblivious on the issue of reproduction, which is somewhat sensitive to me as a member of a eugenically "inferior" population.

The final chapter suggests that moving poor families to high-opportunity neighborhoods could easily improve their lives. He then states that President Nixon's Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, George Romney (father of Utah Senator Mitt), wanted the government to stop subsidizing segregation, which irked Nixon given its opposition from white suburbanites. The chapter ends with mention of a poll saying that while a record-high number of Americans are satisfied with their financial situations, a record low are "very happy." The epilogue's main message is that poverty in America will only end when a mass movement demands it.

Overall, Desmond's book is definitely a must-read by any American with a passing interest in politics (and given the very critical political climate of America today, they should have at least some), since it makes incredibly enlightening revelations regarding the inconsistency of wealth in the United States and equally implicates politicians of both sides. However, he does neglect to mention the country's neverending hemorrhage of taxpayer money on the military and overseas conflicts that don't even involve America that could more easily go to use at home. In the end, Americans definitely need to overcome the Stockholm syndrome they have with their elected officials and very vocally demand genuine change and progress, so that their country doesn't fall into the ashcan of history.

View all my reviews
theradicalchild: (Lion Burning American Flag)
Sorry I haven't been posting a lot, since I've been way too distracted from the PTSD I received from living with toxic immediate family for forty years, and while moving into my new apartment has been an improvement, I'm still too distracted mentally to have been able to do some actual organization (for instance, my computer desk is still a really hot mess).

Anyway, here's a lot of the stuff I had made for British Imperial Civil War Day a few days ago, more commonly referred to as US Independence Day.

First of all...

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I designed this as an alternate American flag to me symbolizes imperialism (i.e. the whole "the more states it gets, the more stars it gets" thing, and I think most American "values" like hypocrisy, wastefulness, playing Judas Iscariot to its allies, and so forth, are very perverted. I call it "Die Englischweiz" since I combined elements from the English and Swiss flags. The upper-left part symbolizes the states and the others the three branches of the US government, with all keeping one another in check.

I had mentioned before on DeviantArt in a user's Deviation about my suggestion that "America the Beautiful" be the national anthem instead of "The Star-Spangled Banner" since the latter to me is a bit idolatrous, given the whole flag-worship thing, and Francis Scott Key was a slave-owner what wrote it in a slave state, and the lyrics are actually really dumb (and without the music, it sounds like a stupid conversation).

A guy responded that God shouldn't be mentioned in the national anthem, but I disagreed, as countries that are less religious like Canada mention God and theirs, and The Netherlands has a majority irreligious population, yet this is their national anthem:



I think it's pretty fucking awesome, the lyrics are really beautiful, and it semi sounds like the story of my life.

I had also written and read this sonnet and read it at my town's Creative Space a few days ago:

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It was partially inspired by this editorial. Given the author and site's ideology, that really says a ton.

On that note, I did this as well:

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It sickens me that the Woke and BLM crowds don't bitch about this or things like the Indian Removal Act and Trail of Tears and focus exclusively on the War for Southern Independence when focusing on historical racism in the United States. I actually believe Karl Marx was a way better philosopher and think "To each according to his own ability, to each according to his own needs" is my ideal economy, and I think it can coexist with capitalism (and it does semi do in the form of social market economy).

I know people say that American is a Christian nation with Christian values, but I disagree, since most of the Founders were actually deists, which is very far from the same thing as "Christian," so I did these as well since I think American and Christian values are very incompatible:

temp-Image-A2-SHqltemp-Image-Dq-Jap-Z

I think in the second image the last two are cases of taking God's name in vain, but at least Ashcroft wasn't a dick about it, and I definitely respect that.

Finally, this:

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I think it would have been for the far better since I honestly think the world is a way worse place because of us, given our constant treachery like laying waste to the Confederacy and other nations like North Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq, backstabbing the Soviets after the Second World War, and that Britain abolished slavery well before America, among other things.

I'm not anti-American, as I do believe the American people and its issues should come first before we even fucking begin to think of getting involved in the affairs of the rest of the world, I'm just very anti-Jeffersonian as I believe his philosophy is pure bullshit.

I think that America, or at least the United States of America, needs to fucking die and be replaced by a far less sucky form of government. I think a combination of things from other nations like a Federal Council instead of a single President (like Switzerland), a parliamentary system like Germany (and things like Gerrymandering, to the rest of the world redrawing legislative distracts to favor certain parties and candidates, are uniquely American), fucking term limits for everyone (like Mexico used to have, one term, no reelection) would work wonders. And a campaign finance "Prime Directive" so that people can't influence the elections of candidates they can't even fucking vote for all across the country.

I can't say "God bless America" since I don't think He would want to remotely consider doing so for a failed democracy like we have been and still are and instead want to inflict divine judgement on us.

That's my view, folks, love or hate it. Have a good Sunday if you can.

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The Radical Child

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