22 February 2026

Video of the day -- Brokeback of the Dead


The love that dare not speak its name.

21 February 2026

Link round-up for 21 February 2026

Various interesting stuff I ran across on the net over the last week.

o o o o o

Oh no, the giraffe has escaped!

Apparently Batman is an idiot.

Delivery robots are on the job.

Pay attention to the warning signs.

These guys attached a skateboard to a wire and left it out to tempt thieves.

Whatever your name is, it probably means something in some other language somewhere.

Anton LaVey was wrong -- sometimes stupidity is painful.

The patient is prepped for the exam..... oops.

He really wants to beat up this guy.

The gym can be a dangerous place.

They decided to try a new local restaurant.

Huge collection of colorful marbles here.

See the subtle hues of clouds (click pictures to enlarge).

What is the sound of hot water hitting ice?

Eighty minus eighty equals zero.

This is Adrastea, one of Jupiter's smallest moons.

Cognitive brain training can help stave off the risk of dementia for as much as two decades.

How did ancient peoples build such amazing things?  Lots of ways, none of them involving aliens.

Rising young US scientists are going to work in Europe or other areas overseas, driven out of US institutes by Trump's constant disruptions and funding cuts.  And fewer foreign scientists are coming here to study and work.  Trump is literally blowing the country's brains out.

Get more exercise and you won't be so prone to freaking out over the news.

There's nothing there.

Are you familiar with the sidewalk rule?

The government is stepping up spying on travel by Social Security recipients.  I wasn't aware that benefits can be cut off if you leave the country for a long enough time.  Congress needs to fix that.

Beware of quacks.  They can really hurt you.

"AI"-generated passwords are far less random, and far easier to crack, than they appear.

TikTok has a new feature which reveals your location to others and apparently cannot be turned off.

Learn what "AI;DR" means -- you're going to be seeing it a lot.

Do not allow any "smart" anything in your home.

How much is your car spying on you?  Check this out.

Even the best machine translation gets these kinds of details wrong.

Semantic ablation is why using "AI" to edit your writing makes it bland and boring.

"Smart" glasses are empowering perverts to harass women.

Remember NFTs?  They're still around and still junk.

Anything that "AI" can do, probably doesn't need doing at all.

Here's some advice from Carl Sagan about distinguishing reality from nonsense.

If you're dating somebody who uses a chatbot, get out now.  No matter how normal the person seems now, he or she is at risk of becoming dangerously deranged.  Using a chatbot should be seen as equivalent to using meth or crack.

The Ring "dog finder" ad was the worst backfire in Super Bowl history.

I wonder how much this kind of mask costs.  They'd certainly be effective at defeating facial recognition systems.

Take a dive into the stygian depths of self-indulgent, delusional narcissism.

This meeting has something missing.

"Not even the glass shattered" -- but the driver did.

For a long time, the US remained more religious than most other developed countries -- but since 2015 religion has been declining faster here than almost anywhere else.

Yet another supposedly impressive "AI" demonstration turns out to have been faked.

The Epstein files are the tip of a vast iceberg of evil at the core of our political and financial "elite".

Microslop is pushing a massive new further shittyization of our whole relationship with computers -- we will rent everything instead of owning it, and keep programs and files on "the cloud" (which just means computers owned and controlled by some mega-corporation, not by us) rather than on our own devices.  As the article says, Linux is your best option now.

Detailed surveys show how US voters are turning against trans ideology over time.  It's not hurting Democrats much right now because voters are so turned off of the Republicans due to other issues, but it's going to be a negative for the left so long as the left insists on supporting it.

Interesting discussion here of the "friend-enemy" trap which underlies much of the political polarization in the US (found via SilverAppleQueen).  Some of it's a bit gobbledygooky, but there's some valuable material here, especially in parts 2 and 8 with examples of rhetoric to watch out for, and part 6 on the damage polarization does.

Everybody claims to believe the "AI" hype, but nobody is actually behaving the way they would if they believed it.

Never forget or forgive the people who cheered for lies.

Measured by crashes per miles driven, Tesla robotaxis crash four times as often as human drivers.  Waymos crash more than twice as often as human drivers.

Americans' trust in clergy has plummeted over the last quarter-century and is now at an all-time low.

Two Democratic senators are leading a push to ban surveillance pricing -- the practice of adjusting prices in grocery stores based on information gained from spying on customers.  This practice has provoked a serious backlash every time a company has been caught doing it.

Americans in general don't attach as much importance to race as political rhetoric would suggest.

Companies that have adopted "AI" are starting to demand actual results.

Delivery robots are making the streets dangerous for wheelchair users.

Here's one fundamental difference between gay rights and "trans rights".

Top-level people are leaving xAI because working for Elon Musk is a pain in the ass.

No big surprise:  Epstein believed in "overpopulation" and hoped that global warming would kill off some of the people he viewed as surplus.  Steven Pinker, who has a good track record of seeing through bullshit, wasn't fooled by Epstein.

The US public's supportive response to the Minneapolis resistance contrasts dramatically with the response to the anti-Vietnam-war protests, which met with little sympathy from most Americans at the time.  Modern communications technology accounts for much of the difference.

Must-read of the weekWhat is an MAP?  Unfortunately you need to know.  Read the entire thing, and don't miss Arisu3x3's charming "flag" observation.  Learn the full nature of what's festering in the fetid depths of society.

Apple is the one tech company that hasn't been caught up in the "AI" hype, and investors are starting to notice.

"When the government controls women's bodies, it's not "values" -- it's big government overreach."

The resistance to data centers is almost entirely a grassroots movement; local officials and politicians are mostly bought off by the billionaire-owned giant corporations that build the centers.  One 86-year-old farmer in Pennsylvania has become a local hero by refusing to sell his land to be used for a data center.

The Secular Coalition for America is fighting to uphold church-state separation.

There will be an investigation of Epstein's New Mexico ranch -- and it's being run by the state, not Trump's corrupted feds, so we can hope it will be a real investigation and not another cover-up.

American values still have much to offer the world -- and never forget that those values are solidly British in origin.

Hey Trump supporters, eventually ICE will come after you, too.  It was never really about going after illegals.

Finally doing something good -- the US government is planning to build a system to help Europeans circumvent censorship imposed by their governments.

In many foreign countries (unlike here), the powerful are being held accountable for their crimes.  Here's a detailed discussion of how Brazil stopped Bolsonaro's authoritarian ambitions.  I would observe that, although Brazil's American-style separate branches of government actually did their checks-and-balances job better than the US versions have, the level of mass popular resistance in the US has been far greater.

The UN claims it's about to collapse.  Good riddance.

An underfunded health system is bad enough, but actual laws against providing medical treatment?

Freedom of expression in the UK is increasingly under threat.

British police told defamatory lies about Jews to create a pretext for banning Jewish fans from a soccer game in Birmingham.

Jihadists in Manchester UK have been convicted of plotting what would have been one of the worst terrorist attacks in history.

This Australian author will likely go to prison, not for committing a crime, not even for imagining someone else committing a crime, but for imagining someone else imagining a crime.

The European Union parliament is disabling the "AI" features on all its devices because it can't control the way those features share data.

A child rapist in Norway is scheming to go to a women's prison, and he may get away with it.

Poland's president is now openly calling for the country to have its own nuclear arsenal.  Europe in general is considering a range of options for enhancing its nuclear deterrence, while France continues to guard its independence.

Europe and east Asia, two of the world's big three economic regions (North America being the other), are pursuing closer economic ties, cutting out Trump's unpredictable and tariff-addled US.

Zelensky has awarded a medal to Olympic racer Vladyslav Heraskevych, who was disqualified by the IOC for wearing a helmet honoring athletes killed by Russia.

Ten Ukrainian drone operators out-performed sixteen thousand NATO troops in a simulated battle.  Ukraine's experience in drone warfare is making it a formidable power, one the West should learn from.

Ukraine has destroyed half of Russia's vital Pantsir air-defense systems.  Here is video of some of the hits (fullscreen it to hide the irritating gif some idiot posted at the bottom of the screen).

Oops.

More links at Comedy Plus.

My own posts this week:  some truths and inspirations, a bluntly honest video on Islam, and some guidelines I've found useful for dealing with a stressful world.

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Time has a way of sifting out what is important and what is not.  Most people today who have any education know of Galileo and Newton and have at least some idea of their achievements.  No one except specialist historians remembers the name of the pope who persecuted Galileo, or of the king of England in Newton's time.  Five hundred years from now, it's people like Stephen Hawking and Richard Dawkins who will be remembered from our time.  Trump and Putin and Xi will be forgotten.

o o o o o


This is what happens when shit-for-brains politicians and ideologists are given authority over science.

o o o o o

18 February 2026

Some guidelines I've found useful

A few things I've found useful for staying sane (well, saner than I otherwise would be) in today's world.  I can't say I've adhered to these perfectly, but when I've deviated from them, I've usually regretted it.  From the more specific to the more general:

1. Following the news will be far less stressful if you read only solution-focused items, not problem-focused ones.  If the gist of a post or article is "moan, groan, look how bad and terrible and awful this is, we're doomed", then don't bother reading it.  Read only items which focus on what is being done to solve problems, to resist and mitigate evils.  You will still be reasonably well-informed, but without wallowing in negativity.

2. You are not obligated to provide entertainment for trolls.  If somebody insists on trying to pick fights with you, delete or block or ignore him (whatever is appropriate for the type of forum or situation you're in) and go on with what you were doing.  I have dealt with several determined harassers, both on the internet and in pre-internet times.  Arguing with them doesn't make them go away.  Reasoning with them doesn't make them go away.  Publicly calling them out doesn't make them go away.  Completely ignoring them is the only thing that consistently works -- eventually.

3. On any platform that has an algorithm recommending content for you to view, be aware that it is probably suggesting things that will make you feel angry or agitated (I have particularly noticed YouTube doing this), and be prepared to actively avoid all such content, even if it looks interesting at first.  The sole purpose of the algorithm is to keep you engaged so the platform can show you more ads.  It does not care about your mental health.

4. You cannot claim to be well-informed if you read only sources of information which align with your own beliefs.  Pretty much every source has some kind of bias, and the commonest way that bias manifests itself is not distortion of the news but omission -- that is, simply not mentioning events or data which conflict with the preferred narrative.  People who read only sources that match their own belief system will often end up completely unaware of important information, and thus risk sounding like idiots when discussing what is happening.

5. Never hide your interests or feel shame about them.  Some of them may get you denounced as a snob, while others may cause you to be mocked for liking something "lowbrow", but it doesn't matter.  It's the people who share your interests that matter, and how can they find you if you don't show them?

6. Fully and guiltlessly accept whatever good fortune comes your way, no matter how unearned you may feel it to be.  You've surely had episodes of undeserved bad luck in your life too.  Think of it as balancing out.

7. Show appreciation for the positive things people contribute.  And if you haven't been doing that, then hold your tongue when they do something you don't like.

8. You learn more from listening than from talking.  People who constantly chatter about themselves end up knowing little about others, while others know everything about them.  Who has the advantage there?

9. If you live your life the way somebody else thinks you should want to live it, you won't get another life to live the way you actually did want to live it.

10. It's not true that everyone is alike deep down.  Some people really are very different from you and have completely different needs and drives.

11. Common sense and concrete results are more important than philosophical or ideological consistency.

12. One genuinely new and interesting idea is worth more than a hundred affirmations of what you already know or believe.

13. Always fact-check, verify sources, test claims and hypotheses against hard evidence.  No matter how much you want something to be true, what matters is whether it actually is true.

14. As much as possible, avoid worrying about things you can't do anything about.

15. You exist for your own sake, not to serve some abstraction like "society".

16. People can change.  But they usually don't.

17 February 2026

Video of the day -- Islam


I have watched several of this man's videos.  He is a Nigerian, currently living in London.  Most of his videos deal with the problems of black Africa, but this one takes on a subject of global import -- Islam (from other videos I gather he rejects both Islam and Christianity as alien interlopers in black Africa).  Be warned that no punches are pulled here.  This man is not at all concerned about offending or shocking people.  He just says what needs to be said, about an issue that affects us all to varying degrees.

16 February 2026

Truths and inspirations for 16 February 2026

If something's hard to see or read, click for full size.

[For the link round-up, click here.]











Never, ever let them tell you that not enough is being done about global warming.  A huge amount is being done -- it's just that it's being done by countries other than the US.






Don't look to holy books for morality.












































For Americans who don't recognize the purple-haired woman, she's Amelia.  The man in the picture is British prime minister Keir Starmer.