Can he win? I hope so, but history hasn’t been good to third parties.
Except, Neil Howe talks in the fourth turning that there’s often a political realignment and the parties reshuffle.
Could this be the time?
These people are insane and dangerous. https://video.nostr.build/8a8bd78985d678d25d4feddec8b6242ce5a0cd790a0cb04b742d1f1a3477238e.mov
Bald head should be a warning sign but somehow people’s danger receptors are broken.
The New Yorker is a credible source?
I’m guessing he uses Wise, or something like it.
I believe he holds dollars, but I could be wrong.
Thanks for sharing! I can relate to a lot of this.
I was born in 81, which was the last year of Gen Xers according to Strauss-Howe. I feel like I had a blending of both Gen X and millennial upbringings.
I still had a lot of freedom to ride my bike around town with my friends and do basically whatever I wanted. I also have a strong sense of optimism and look back on the 90s with incredible nostalgia.
I was raised to think about individuals, and like you that individuals should be free to do what they want.
I’m white, but have a mixed race sister. I remember clearly that my dad hated the attention she got because she look different, growing up in a mostly white area. When asked “what is she” he would get annoyed and say “she’s my daughter.”
Like you, I thought being friends with everyone and not getting hung up on race things was the path forward. Learning about cultures was cool, and made life interesting, but grouping people together wasn’t the goal. In fact, it was what we fought against.
Now, I have a mixed race family of my own, and it seems the world is going backwards. Although that’s mostly what I read about online. Real life has been great socially for us.
On the economic front, I graduated college in 2005, with a 6-year architecture degree. Starting my career was easy as the economy was booming.
Those who graduated just 2 years after me had a different experience. I was hanging on to my career, avoiding layoffs. But they didn’t even have a chance. Many never worked in architecture at all, after a very expensive degree.
I’ve always felt bad for them.
Awful having to depend on that currency. I know a graphic designer in Cairo who finds clients in the US, and gets paid in USD. And I think he pays his staff in USD.
If anyone has a skill that can be used online, I think that’s the way to go.
Peter, how did you take a team and get them to win so much? And now the ladies are winning too? What is this magic?
She’s taught them well. She’s in a private Christian school, so there may be a difference with public schools.
Yes, OK Computer is near my top as well.
Some big media account on Twitter asked people what they think the best music album ever was, front to back.
While some albums are more iconic than others, the fascinating thing about the question is how it tends to be a sign of what era someone came of age in (i.e. which decade they grew up as a teenager), and what cultural part of that era they were more in line with. Sure, some people go back and find older iconic music and appreciate it the most, the absolute greats of the past, but the more typical outcome is that someone finds music from their coming-of-age years to be what somehow sticks out.
For me it was rock in the 2000s, and my mental answer to the question of "best album?" was Meteora by Linkin Park.
While it was a very popular album and also well-remembered, it doesn't generally go down on the ageless list of greats. In other words, it's always kind of a top two or three genre item. I could argue why other more iconic albums are better, and why they "should" be my answer. For example I could go a little bit before my time, but still close enough, and say Nirvana's Nevermind was better. That would poll better.
But basically, as a product of my time, Meteora is just the one that struck the right chords at the right time when I was a teenager. It's the one that spoke to me. I would listen to it casually, and then also listen to certain songs in it before martial arts tournaments to get myself in the combat zone. Even as my musical tastes changed over time, that's the album I listened to the most of all time, and so when I hear it in the present day, I still appreciate it a ton.
The fact that they crossed genres appealed to me a lot. Their main vocalist, Bennington, struck their melodic and emotional aspect. The other vocalist, Shinoda, was their hip-hop guy, with a rougher or more practical aspect. Mr. Hahn brought an electronic aspect, and Delson brought the rock guitar aspect. Some of their stylization was anime-aligned, and I was into anime at the time. Basically whatever vibes I might be feeling as a teenager at the time, there was something in Linkin Park that spoke to it, with Meteora being among their best and which came out at the right time when I was 15. It's like Bennington would speak to my emo aspect and help me acknowledge it, while Shinoda and the others would pump me back up, and tell me to not fuck around and get back out there, and boost my confidence. Yin and Yang.
Another reason I thought of this is that here in 2023, Linkin Park released a 20th anniversary edition of Meteora, which included a couple songs like "Lost" that didn't make it into the original. It all hits a bit harder for us fans based on the fact that the lead singer, Chester Bennington, is no longer with us. RIP.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NK_JOkuSVY&ab_channel=LinkinPark
Anyway, I’m doing a series of “real thoughts” uniquely on Nostr, and this is the second one.
Conclusion: Sometimes what hits harder subjectively is worth appreciating, rather than just whatever can be argued to be the best objective answer. Somewhere on that border between "objectively good" and "came out at the right time and hit the spot for you and imprinted itself" is your answer that is worth exploring and sharing.
What's your answer?
My favorite album is Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On.
Long before my time (I’m a 90s kid), I only discovered it in my 30s. I was always into grunge/alt/indie rock.
Never listened to R&B, but man, that album makes me cry. I’ve never heard anything so beautiful, feels so inspired, connects so deeply.
Agree with no one coming to save you. But RFK is inspiring to me.
For those who subscribe to the fourth turning theory, we’ll have a “gray champion” to lead us out of this mess.
Could RFK be that guy? I’m somewhat hopeful.
NYT ran a story about The Fourth Turning.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/08/style/fourth-turning-pop-culture.html
Basically, the book came along in the 1990s and said there would be a big crisis in the late 2000s, and then the 2010s-2020s would have a lot of similarities to the 1930s and 1940s for various qualitative/generational/cyclical reasons.

Normally I'm not really into that sort of qualitative/cyclical analysis, but when I'm sitting around making all sorts of quantitative charts that turn out like this:

Then I'm like:

Can’t wait for the new book! It’s Just over a week away!
Reading this in bed after waking up.
(Not my usual routine)







