• Re: Pearls Before Swine: TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome)

    From Mark Jackson@21:1/5 to Lynn McGuire on Mon Jul 7 21:11:22 2025
    XPost: rec.arts.comics.strips

    On 7/7/2025 8:48 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    Pearls Before Swine: TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome) https://www.gocomics.com/pearlsbeforeswine/2025/07/06

    It's likely the guy with no knowledge of history is ranting about Biden,
    not Trump.

    --
    Mark Jackson - https://mark-jackson.online/
    It’s a good thing I had no direction.
    I might have given up. - Jules Feiffer

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to Paul S Person on Wed Jul 9 15:16:18 2025
    On 7/9/25 09:36, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Tue, 8 Jul 2025 14:11:03 -0700, Bobbie Sellers <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo: Texas floods>

    I think it was 1987 when another flash flood rose higher. Trump on site
    dismissed this as a 100 year flood but it is much more frequent than that. >> Due to climate changes which he believes to be a Chinese invention.

    See, that's what I mean by left wing-nuttery: it is sufficient to talk
    about State and local governmental unpreparedness /without/ riling
    people up by mentioning climate change. Do we want to /solve the
    problem/ or just /tweak "their" noses/?

    I /know/ the climate is changing: my maple tree starts budding earlier
    in the Spring and leaves stay on longer in the Fall, leaving about a
    couple weeks less time for raking -- a period during which the weather
    is still nice enough /to/ rake, as opposed to later on.

    But riling people up when there is clearly no need to do so is not a productive thing to do.

    The two parties are confused on this issue. Democrats like NOAA and
    argue that it is valuable, but in this case they want to claim that it
    malfunctioned due to cuts. Republicans dislike NOAA and would like to
    abolish it as valueless, but in this case they need to say that it
    performed well so as not to take blame for the deaths.

    Both are foolish as the real need was for funding for a local
    warning system which the local government dismissed as an un-needed
    expense.

    As I understand it, the /local/ government -- that is, the County --
    wanted to upgrade the system but the /State/ government refused
    /twice/ to allocate the /Federal/ funds they had been given for such
    projects to that county. Or has that changed since yesterday?

    Yes I have read that it was a state denial that prevented it.

    It appears that the people living in the county expressed a strong
    resistance to a warning siren or whistle. I have no idea why.

    A previously idyllic country-side interrupted by loud noises might be behind that folly but perhaps they will consider the loud noise to be more positive after this. We can hope for the sakes of all the lives put at risk
    in the last flash flood and many lost who had no idea what was in store.

    bliss

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  • From Paul S Person@21:1/5 to bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com on Thu Jul 10 08:32:59 2025
    On Wed, 9 Jul 2025 15:16:18 -0700, Bobbie Sellers <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:



    On 7/9/25 09:36, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Tue, 8 Jul 2025 14:11:03 -0700, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo: Texas floods>

    I think it was 1987 when another flash flood rose higher. Trump on site
    dismissed this as a 100 year flood but it is much more frequent than that. >>> Due to climate changes which he believes to be a Chinese invention.

    See, that's what I mean by left wing-nuttery: it is sufficient to talk
    about State and local governmental unpreparedness /without/ riling
    people up by mentioning climate change. Do we want to /solve the
    problem/ or just /tweak "their" noses/?

    I /know/ the climate is changing: my maple tree starts budding earlier
    in the Spring and leaves stay on longer in the Fall, leaving about a
    couple weeks less time for raking -- a period during which the weather
    is still nice enough /to/ rake, as opposed to later on.

    But riling people up when there is clearly no need to do so is not a
    productive thing to do.

    The two parties are confused on this issue. Democrats like NOAA and
    argue that it is valuable, but in this case they want to claim that it >>>> malfunctioned due to cuts. Republicans dislike NOAA and would like to
    abolish it as valueless, but in this case they need to say that it
    performed well so as not to take blame for the deaths.

    Both are foolish as the real need was for funding for a local
    warning system which the local government dismissed as an un-needed
    expense.

    As I understand it, the /local/ government -- that is, the County --
    wanted to upgrade the system but the /State/ government refused
    /twice/ to allocate the /Federal/ funds they had been given for such
    projects to that county. Or has that changed since yesterday?

    Yes I have read that it was a state denial that prevented it.

    It appears that the people living in the county expressed a strong
    resistance to a warning siren or whistle. I have no idea why.

    A previously idyllic country-side interrupted by loud noises might be
    behind that folly but perhaps they will consider the loud noise to be more >positive after this. We can hope for the sakes of all the lives put at risk >in the last flash flood and many lost who had no idea what was in store.

    Others have reported a certain amount of blase disregard due to
    frequent warnings that are never followed by the predicted disaster.
    So some of this may circle back to the Feds to see if the criteria for
    when to issue a warning can be tightened a bit.

    The problem, of course, is that, as Yoda put it, "always in motion is
    the future". And he should know. This makes the ideal (timely warnings
    that /always/ are followed by the predicted disaster) hard to reach.

    Part of the improvements denied apparently involved upgraded sensors
    and staffing to more closely monitor the situation.

    I should note that one story was about a man who, deciding to take
    things seriously, drove into the projected flood zone and evacuated
    his trailer park before the flood hit. So some people did the right
    thing.

    Also, the problem with whistles/sirens is that, while they are loud,
    obnoxious, and hard to ignore, if the residents don't know what it
    means when they go off (that is, what action they are supposed to
    take), they aren't going to work very well.

    And then there's the problem that, as shown in the film /Hair/,
    firepower can silence annoying loudspeakers (and so sirens/whistles as
    well) quite effectively. So the warning devices' survival can not be guaranteed.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"

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