Not a lot


going on today. Everyone is getting ready for the long weekend which will herald in America’s 250th birthday. Even that is somewhat subdued now that the country is even more divided largely in part to Barack Obama’s “fundamentally transforming” America, and the 2020 stolen election. Joe Biden legitimately won, you’re an “election denier” if you think otherwise.

All Obama did was, as the National Catholic Register says (create a) “culture of fear and intimidation by the forces of “diversity” and “tolerance” who viciously seek to denounce, dehumanize, demonize and destroy anyone who disagrees with their brazen newfound conceptions of marriage and family.”

America didn’t need to be fundamentally transformed. It was perfectly fine as it was.


Then there is the problem of race relations. Obama’s legacy isn’t a positive one in that regard, but as far as I’m concerned the worst aspect of Barry’s reign of terror was Obamacare. The moment they started talking about this monstrosity supermarket prices went up immediately. I remember it well. Let’s not talk about the Obamacare website which crashed spectacularly at its open launch.* Now it costs $500 dollars for a doctor’s checkup. The cost of health care in this country is obscene. But we have gay marriage now so everything is wonderful isn’t it?



I don’t wanna talk about Obama at all, but I have to write something, and as we approach 250 years of the USA it’s worth mentioning some of the unpleasantness that I had to endure for 8 of the first 25 years I’ve been here. When I would go back to Australia and tell people that Obama was awful they didn’t want to know. I was a racist and Obama was cool. I was the problem, not him. I would have been totally on board if Obama was cool, but he never was and never will be. A lot of people stopped talking to me after that, but I only live here what would I know about anything? I get the same ignorant shit from them about Trump now but again…. I just live here.



Today is going to be another hot one. I saw on the news today that Spain has attributed over 1,000 excess death to the recent heatwave. Excuse me, but I thought Spain was a warm to temperate country to begin with. Asking AI in this case is useless because these monsters have been injected with progressive “facts”, try it out yourself if you don’t believe me. In any case how did Christopher Columbus sail around the globe and go for the first time that any European had, to hot places like the Caribbean and Central and South America?

A 16th-century likely fake news illustration by Flemish Protestant Theodor de Bry. He wouldn’t be anti-Catholic would he?


In 1492 Columbus left the Port of Palos in Portugal with three ships and two month later had made landfall on an island in the Bahamas ending the period of human habitation in the Americas now referred to as the pre-Columbian era. Columbus went back to the Americas three more times, visiting hot places like Trinidad and the norther coast of South America and the eastern coast of Central America.

Columbus has been maligned in recent years by various accusations of genocide by association by the Spanish during their colonization of the Caribbean during the 16th century. Columbus lived in the 15th century and the early part of the 16th century but because he discovered all these places, he’s a bad guy forever. Columbus may or may not have done some of these things, but we’ll never know the truth. History is being constantly rewritten. We’re in an ongoing war of information and misinformation, that’s about the only thing you can rely on to be true anymore.

We’ll just ignore the cannibalism, tribal warfare and child abuse


What can we learn from this? The world would have been a much better place if Columbus and all those European explorers had not existed. It would have been a paradise clearly. Ask the Australian Aborigines. In fact, why not read AI’s description of what life was like back then. Whatever you say Chief.

Good Day


*The HealthCare.gov launch on October 1, 2013, was a catastrophic failure where the site could not consistently handle even 500 concurrent users during testing, yet faced 250,000 visitors immediately upon going live. 
 Internal emails revealed that project managers at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) warned of defective code and capacity issues days before the deadline, but the Obama administration proceeded with the launch to avoid political delays.