Friday, 5 December 2025

Everything you're saying is a lie: political science, how not why.

"I'm making a statement about a type of danger that doesn't arise from false facts. It doesn't arise from factually incorrect information. It's a more profound problem in our attitude." A fifty minute lecture on how to think about politics, in ways both shallow and profound. And, yes, it just happens to include a critique of Colleen Patrick-Goudreau.

"The problem is not that you believe the wrong things, but that you blame the wrong things: this is an error in the precedence of your reasoning."

LINKhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/3dYtFlbp5j9ZG9yKrr7fF4

14:37 "What these people didn't suspect, during those years, when money, fame, power, respect and sex seemed to be so easily gotten (by becoming a mouthpiece, by becoming a leader for the vegan movement)… what they did not suspect was that when the freak show stopped there would be no show at all."

Thursday, 4 December 2025

In a culture of cocaine addicts, for example, the one man who refuses to use cocaine is insane.

[A question from a member of the audience:]

Did you wish death upon Anna Scanlon, saying you hope her lupus will kill her? 

[More than one person has this name: the particular Anna Scanlon being alluded to was interviewed by the mainstream press in 2018 because of a court case with an internet personality then called the Vegan Cheetah.  Hopefully this doesn't cast a shadow over the lives of several unrelated people with the same name who, I notice, now pop up in response to the same google searches.  If you wanted to know more, you could take a glance at my old video, Where are they now? Vegan Cheetah (Charles Marlowe) —a video that has over ten thousand views, reflecting the scale of his former fame, although he is now forgotten.]

——— 

On the contrary,

I told her, "Hell is real, Anna: there are neither gods nor souls, and yet here I am, trying to lead an army, to break down the gates of hell."

["People like you are trying to pray your way out of hell, while I'm trying to kick down the gates and fight my way in."]

Quite a poetic statement, under the circumstances:

https://a-bas-le-ciel.blogspot.com/2023/08/anna-scanlon-is-scumbag-and-hypocrite.html

By all means, feel free to send me a link to some of your writing, Brandy.

I'm easily impressed.

———

Speaking of that, I just read through it and at the end, you mentioned her condition but it didn't look like you wished death upon her, if that's the email she was talking about, unless there is something I haven't seen. I don't quite understand what she did to you that was so bad though.

———

Anna Scanlon is (1) dishonest, (2) insane and (3) motivated by malice.

You will find I am the opposite of these three things.

My honesty may offend you. But I'm honest. I do not even claim it's a virtue rather than a vice, this kind of honesty. But I'm honest.

My sanity, also, is obnoxious to everyone, because I live in a cultural context that requires me to be insane. In a culture of cocaine addicts, for example, the one man who refuses to use cocaine is insane.

And, finally, you will figure out —sooner or later— that I am not motivated by malice, despite the rather salacious titles that often adorn my articles and youtube videos.

I repeat my request for an example of your own writing, Brandy: I am not interested in talking to you if you're an anonymous person with no ambition to accomplish anything —and you would first need to be ambitious as a writer to accomplish anything at all.

Repercussions: will there be consequences for a century of indigenous identity fraud? Other voices on the pretendian problem.

This one is only five minutes long, but includes an interesting hypothesis about spiritual bankruptcy, emphasizing the extent to which fraud of this kind is motivated by intangible factors, not merely career opportunities:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ozv5bd7gC0

This video, above, was supposed to deal with the fate of Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, and the participants apparently cannot deal with that question directly, but instead veer off into declarations about abstractions and the narration of generalities.

Here's a longer discussion, without a focus on any one case study (although Turpel comes up as an example).

Note the use of the word "tentacles" within the first few minutes of this one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6LyHSXxt8Q

Nobody is dealing with the unholy pentacle of (1) money, (2) fame, (3) power, (4) respect and (5) sex. I've said many times that merely identifying as a medical student changes the experience of your university years: just telling people that you will be a medical doctor in future changes the way you're perceived, even if you're penniless and powerless while you're still in school. The effects of pretendianism are much more profound.

To what extent people like Turpel-Lafond should be analyzed as cold blooded manipulators and to what extent they were hot blooded but genuinely insane remains unasked and unanswered.


Addendum ❦

I would just note: she has not stopped lying.  After paying a $10,000 fine and admitting to "a series of false public claims about her accomplishments and history" Turpel-Lafond has proceed to tell new lies that are impossible to reconcile with already-public evidence.  Not all of the lies are… genetic in character: "For example, she claimed to have authored a book that was never published, claimed to have received an honorary degree that she never received and claimed to have a degree that she hadn't earned."  The source here only dealt with lies she's told "since 2018" —which is really too little too late.  https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/experts-question-meaning-turpel-lafond-reported-dna-analysis-1.7276028

It is interesting that nobody asks what her husband has ever had to say about this matter: one way or another, he knew.


Tuesday, 2 December 2025

Prolegomena to a Massacre: revolution and the reform of education.

In the plainest language possible, let me ask: if "the establishment" isn't good enough, why not just improve it?  Whether we're talking about the justice system, the health care system, or the education system, there will usually be some number of intransigent people within the institution who will make it impossible to improve if we do not destroy it first --or, temptingly, if we do not destroy them first.

This is a temptation most revolutionaries indulge in, sooner or later, as you may have noticed: a massacre is more easily carried out than systematic reform. And the results may seem more immediately gratifying to the supporters of the revolution even if (in the long term) the violence accomplishes nothing positive at all.

The promise of revolution is reciprocal with the reality of institutional intransigence: in our ignorance, we choose to believe in one as a desperate attempt to deal with the other. If you complain that the system of divorce courts (or tax paperwork, or parking tickets, etc.) is needlessly complex (needlessly costly, corrupt, unfair, etc.) every expert in the field will tell you that a revolution would be required to compel anything (or anyone) to change. And they say this knowing that they represent one and the same intransigent establishment that the revolution would massacre. I wonder if I have ever met a single university professor who did not --in this way-- advocate for their own extinction. They are dinosaurs demanding asteroids do the hard work for them: it would be so much easier to disappear than adapt and evolve. Institutions cannot change because the people within them do not want to change: the intransigence of individuals creates the need for a revolution where nothing revolutionary is necessary at all. These same dinosaurs demanded that we defund the police, not evolve with them, entailing two extinctions --a disappearance with a difference.

And institutional resistance to change can come "from below" just as much as "from above": in some cases, wealthy bureaucrats may support fundamental reform while lower echelons of the staff resist it, whereas, in other cases, the elite controlling an institution refuse to change while all the other employees demand it.

If you were to answer the question of why a particular prison can't be improved, your research is unlikely to reveal a cabal of millionaires who have been benefitting from its mismanagement, intentionally sabotaging every attempt at improvement --although, I admit, such a thing would not be entirely unprecedented, if that turned out to be the case for the particular prison you were investigating. When I was in Cambodia, I knew a few researchers who insisted, dogmatically, that they'd seen instances of corruption in medical programs that really were at this level of cartoonish supervillainy.

If you were to interview the teachers at a school that's commonly admitted to be the worst in the city of New Orleans, each one may offer several different explanations for what exactly has gone wrong with the institution, or they may stand mute, dumbfounded, and offer no explanation at all.  Some of the teachers may be activists demanding change, some may fight against efforts to improve the school (as contrary to their own interests) but --generally-- they will never suspect that they themselves are the problem that must be fixed. Their analysis will always indicate that the source of the problem is upward, outward, elsewhere, beyond. Some will feel that the students cannot be blamed, others will feel that blaming the students is essential to their dignity as educational professionals.

The teachers themselves, the policemen themselves, the judges themselves… it is certainly very easy to blame particular people without any understanding of what's wrong with the institution, without any detailed diagram of how it should be improved. Perhaps we do not even have metrics to measure improvement. Perhaps we can neither quantify the incompetence of the people we're firing, nor the competence of whoever we're hiring as their replacements.

It couldn't possibly be that we're unsystematically hiring people who agree with our own political biases, just like that other regime did before. It couldn't possibly be that our notion of "reform" is nothing more than one generation of nepotists replacing another. In this way, when revolutionaries use themselves as the standards of excellence, their revolutions fizzle out after merely eliminating particular people who fail to live up to that endlessly flexible, utterly subjective standard, without any substantive innovation ensuing to create better institutions with better measurable outcomes. The only outcome they care about is replacing one elite with another that (in some sense) resembles themselves.

Understanding education and credentialization as the engine of social inequality, both creating our elites and creating our consent to be ruled by them, the challenge of appointing better-qualified people who will be responsible for the creation of the next generation of better-qualified people seems incredibly daunting to aspiring revolutionaries and reformers alike. The problem cannot be reduced to a schematic assessment of what any given institution "is".

Our residential school system in Canada (that is only now being denounced as genocidal in the popular press, after several generations of noncommittal eyebrow-raising) would seem eminently respectable if examined only as a blueprint --as a mere schematic.  The quality of education provided to our indigenous people (be it "residential" or not) was deplorable if measured by its outcomes; but who indeed was measuring the outcomes? To whom was it obvious that the blueprint was misleading? The schematic view of a social system tells you only what it "is", not how it works: a blueprint of some oceanside hotel-and-casino might look like paradise --or, if detailed enough, could be an anthropological study of the perfect society. Paradise for some. Genocide for others.

What exactly is right with the best school in Japan and what is wrong with the worst school in Louisiana is difficult to depict in a flowchart (and may be completely concealed when looking at a primary source document in detail: comparing the actual textbooks used, comparing the actual exams written, for example).

What is wrong with Communist education, Christian education, etc., may not be visible in a flowchart at all. And, despite my cautioning against the tendency as too often entailing massacres, the thorough analysis of any given institution may conclude by thoroughly blaming the particular people who happen to be teachers after all.

The incompetence (or evil) of particular authority figures may be a more meaningful target of critique than anything that we can truly say "is" the institution, existing as something separable from those all-too-human forces. In politics, we often say reform when we mean replace: if the Communists replace all the Christian teachers, have they reformed the system of education?

The most inefficient way to improve a prison, a school system, etc., is to demolish it first, planning a new one with nothing but a blank sheet of paper soon thereafter. If you don't have a definite idea of what went wrong with the system you've just demolished, it's entirely possible you'll make all the same mistakes over again, or create an institution that's even worse for unrelated reasons. The aesthetics of an emergency can serve as a substitute for a plan, or even a new idea; and in the absence of an actual revolution, these demolitions can create a convenient emergency. Inefficient and inevitable, in equal measure.

The French demolished the Bastille without any plan for a better prison system: we may demolish innumerable institutions to overcome the intransigence that has made them immutable without any expectation that we can do better than our ancestors did before. And the French still celebrate the anniversary of that demolition, in 1789, without celebrating any supposed improvement in prison conditions thereafter. The revolution liberated political prisoners, yes, but then made new prisoners out of new political enemies: the Marquis de Condorcet died in a prison cell (and a prison system) no less medieval than the one that existed before 1789. The darkness of the dark ages does not end with demolition, but only with light: the darkness that defined the Bastille was not yet destroyed --not yet made obsolete by any better idea. The new regime was not ashamed of the barbarism of the old prison conditions, they merely replaced the people in the prisons: we had not yet started to regard ourselves as barbarians, burning down one Bastille to build another.

The intransigence of our elites, the intransigence of our bureaucrats, the intransigence of employees at even the humblest level, can make it so difficult to bring about improvements (or even to experiment with new solutions for longstanding problems) that some kind of demolition starts to seem necessary from the very first phase --in the absence of any understanding of what exactly the institution's problems might be. Whether we're talking about decentralizing schools or collectivizing agriculutre, this revolutionary inefficiency is always (always!) justified with promises of future efficiency --short-term brutality justified with promises of future liberty.

When you increase the scale of the problem and speak of many different institutions being demolished all at once, you find yourself talking about a revolution, even if you have no idealized notion of what "better thing" should be built upon the rubble after the demolition is done.

The particular kind of revolution I'm discussing is the destruction of the system of education that entitles the rulers to rule, while training others to resign themselves to be ruled.  It is the unquestioned "ordering" of society (putting some people in the position of making decisions and others in the position of following commands) that is challenged, questioned and then redefined in a revolution, as I'm using the word. I would emphasize that word "unquestioned" before "ordering": almost nobody researches the education that creates police officers. It is incredibly rare for students to read the PhD theses of their professors, questioning how they became qualified. And politicians research neither one.

Disassembling the gears of a working clock is quite an easy, relaxing activity, if you undertake the task with the assumption that you'll never need to reassemble it again. It is much more stressful for someone who is aware that each element they remove will need to be replaced with another part that works equally well, if not better. To repair clockwork, if purely destructive, is child's play --not unlike political reform.

If we now demolish all of the fossil-fuel-burning power plants, we might optimistically imagine that they'd be replaced with something better, but optimism isn't nearly so powerful as obsolescence. When we have something new that really is better, the significance of abandoning and demolishing the obsolete model does not resemble this "revolutionary inefficiency" I've been warning you about: if decentralized education or collectivized agriculture actually had been more productive (while also being less oppressive, or liberating in some sense of the term) there would have been nothing revolutionary about either one. Improvements to efficiency can be integrated into every level of society as innocuously as the invention and improvement of the wristwatch. Instead, like Galileo's theory of the tides, it was their inefficiency that made them revolutionary: these ideas were a challenge to the elite (as Galileo challenged the Vatican) on the basis of a theory that didn't work --or didn't even exist.

The Maoists persecuted innumerable teachers without ever coming up with a better idea of what exactly a teacher ought to be; they found it easy to condemn the Confucian tradition, but never came up with a new idea as to how they should organize the system of education. They ended up imitating the Americans. Look, now, at the revolution in Vietnam, that was even more expressly anti-European and anti-American while wrestling with a similar mix of Confucian and Buddhist traditions: did they, with their one hundred million minds, produce a new model for education, while the Chinese, with their one billion, have failed to? As shallow and insincere as the excuses for students interrogating and killing their teachers may have been, nevertheless, in studying even the most laughable failures in the history of revolution, we're left with the profound question of what makes a teacher a teacher, what makes a judge a judge, and so on.

Merely assigning new commanders to an army could never be revolutionary, not even if the old commanders are put on trial for crimes against humanity --not even if an insurrection in the barracks massacres a generation of generals. If, instead, you change the system of military education while redefining the criteria for advancement (i.e., how leaders are selected, how enlisted men can earn their promotions, etc.) then you may be looking at a real revolution, even if nobody fires a shot.  Revolutions (big and small) question the credentials that define the elite to then create new systems and standards --rather than merely replacing particular people.

At the risk of repeating myself, I say again: in a revolution, as I'm using the term, the unquestioned order of society becomes questioned, and some attempt is made to redefine how people are prepared for their positions of power, even if it is the power of a schoolteacher, a policeman, a prison guard, or a judge.  There may indeed be a meaningful question to be asked of what makes a good soldier, who is deserving of promotion, and of how this might now, in the 21st century, differ from any prior century, entailing sweeping institutional reform.  Would we be willing to ask the same question of teachers, professors, doctors, police officers, prison guards or any other positions of authority, in our times?  And would we be willing to deal with the intransigence of those who'd be opposed to anyone even daring to ask that question?

In the creation of Afghan democracy, if the American army had torn down the government of the Taliban in the capital and chased out their soldiers from the larger towns into the countryside while allowing the whole population to continue to be educated (only) in Taliban schools (madrasas, etc.), how much cultural and political change could have possibly ensued?  How much or how little democracy could have been created, at the cost of so many billions of dollars, if the Taliban had just retained control of the schools? It is easy enough for Americans to say, "the future of democracy in Afghanistan relies on education", implicitly meaning that it relies on worldly, scientific, atheistic education intended to undermine the legitimacy of the Taliban, and yet it remains very difficult for Americans to say the same thing about themselves: to admit that the future of their own democracy relies on education --and on a type of education that would disrupt the cultural assumptions and religious traditions of their own great-grandparents. We cannot yet see our own barbarity: that the American people could conquer and civilize themselves remains unthinkable.

This kind of disruption cannot happen just once: if it does, democracy disappears within a generation, as it did in France after Napoleon.  The intransigence and immutability of educational institutions (and of the people in power within them) is a recurring obstacle to democracy, even if we are just considering the task of sustaining an already-existing "paper democracy" without any great ambitions for it to be more profoundly democratic.

Neither in Afghanistan nor in Canada will you find schoolteachers with the iconoclastic spirit necessary to challenge the next generation to do what the last one could not do for them. Instead, you'll find only dull-eyed conformists who are, within their own cultural milieu, equivalent to the Taliban.

If we're holding an academic debate about the possible future of some "exotic" country, every expert standing at the podium will readily admit the absurdity of creating "formal democracy" in the absence of "necessary" cultural and educational changes for the masses, but we're reluctant to question the extent to which we're living in a merely formal democracy ourselves, with the specific nature of that formality hinting at "necessary" changes that have yet to unfold.

Throughout the decadent west, the praxis of democracy relies on new phases of "disruptive" education withinin each generation, just as much as it does in poverty-stricken countries trying to make their first transition from dictatorship to "paper democracy".  In our private lives, also, taking responsibility for our actions is not a lesson we learn just once; in our public lives, what it means to take responsibility (for the fate of the republic, shall we say, to be a bit outré) is something we must learn again and again, within each generation, and in the transition between generations even more.  We are too close to the problem to see it clearly when situated comfortably within our own culture, in the same way that parents refuse to see the problem with putting their own children into football and ice hockey leagues, no matter how many life-altering injuries ensue: familiar evils ensconced in tradition are asserted as morally good, and are demanded of the school system (how could they possibly neglect the teaching of these sports, that meant so much to our parents and grandparents!) while absolutely nobody is concerned with how education might be failing to prepare their children to present a complaint at city hall --or even to deal with a routine police interrogation.  It is much more comforting to preach the virtues of democracy to Myanmar than to preach it to ourselves.  It certainly gives Americans a sense of pride to reproach the Russians and the Iranians for the tenuousness of their claim to being a democracy (merely because they have elections, "on paper") and it might be humiliating, instead, to reflect on what we have in common with our enemies.

The shallowness of democracy in Afghanistan indicates the depth of educational and cultural change that would be "necessary" for democracy to function there. The shallowness of our own democracy has similar implications for our own immediate future --implications that are neither discussed nor dreamed of.

We would rather not think through the cultural and educational requirements that would make our own claims to democracy more than mere fiction; we are reluctant to recognize that we might lack the very accoutrements that separate the civilized world from savagery --by which I mean the self-serving justifications that grant us our unflappable sense of moral superiority when we compare ourselves to the Chinese, for example.  When our thoughts turn to the hypothetical future of Myanmar or Afghanistan, no civilized person would propose that they merely change the procedures and processes within government (in "the civil service", etc.) while ignoring the procedures and processes of education and cultural change outside the government's walls. The ways in which we ourselves must still change if we are even to have democracy at the local level remain unthinkable to us.

If the police murder a man in cold blood, the ensuing debate never touches on direct democracy; generally, it never touches on what "we" must do, in governing our own deme, but only on what "they" must do on our behalf (i.e., the nameless, well-paid professionals of our unelected and unaccountable bureaucracy).  We are fascinated by the nebulous abstractions of international politics and "human rights" because we presume we've accomplished something great just in choosing between two candidates for Prime Minister, leaving the whole praxis of democracy aside for the bureaucrats to carry out on our behalf thereafter. Unlike the Chinese or the Saudi Arabians, we imagine, we are not ruled over by mere men (not by aristocrats, not by apparatchiks) but instead by such fine abstractions as "human rights" --by the ideology of our unelected bureaucracy.  Any research into how direct democracy operates at the local scale of the nearest 100,000 people (i.e., a population greater than all of Periclean Athens and the Piraeus combined) will reveal the extent to which our democracy is a kind of fiction --and the fault in authoring this fiction, nightmarish in its implications, is not "theirs" but "ours", here and now. And it takes nothing less than the police committing and covering up a murder to force us to even notice the unreality of this democracy: we pretend to be amazed at former generations who thought so little about the suffering of household slaves, dismissing them as nothing more than "talking tools" (instumenta vocalia) and yet we are so comfortable with being "silent tools" ourselves (instumenta muta).

All relationships outside of the family are learned through education, all responsibilities, all roles, and, with the passage of just a few decades, formal education transforms family relationships, religious relationships, etc., just as palpably as it transforms the economy, public health, and so on.  "Teacher" and "student" are roles created by the government, along with "doctor" and "patient", just as deliberately as every military rank and honor: what it is "to be a good soldier" is ultimately the effect of government policy --and what it is "to be a good man", "to be a good father", etc., emerges in much the same way, although it is worrying for us to admit this to ourselves.  Inevitably, a revolution changes all of these things in the same way that revolutions change the notion of what is "a good policeman", "a good judge", or "a good jailer", even if there is not a single word iterating what the new standard ought to be in any constitution or manifesto.

If the education system does not change, there is no revolution to speak of: Afghanistan remains Taliban so long as the schools are Taliban, even if "a paper democracy" is created "on top", and China remains Communist so long as the schools are Communist, even if the whole country were to adopt the kind of "paper democracy" that Hong Kong now has "on top".  If we change our notion of "what it means to be a man", we must also adjust our preconception of "what it means to be a policeman" --with implications for what it means to be a good teacher in the training (and credentialing) of policemen and innumerable other authority figures.

Saturday, 29 November 2025

Pretendian Politics: Thomas King v Jesse Wente.

With supporting roles for Michelle Latimer, Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond and Buffy Sainte-Marie.

LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQ1gF8sLIyU

This is one hour long so, naturally, it will be shared both on youtube and also as a podcast.

Friday, 28 November 2025

The Politics of Pretendian-ism Continue in Canada: Thomas King.

The last time I mentioned this (on Patreon) feels like a very, very long time ago.

"From 1997 to 2000, King wrote and acted in a CBC radio show, The Dead Dog Café Comedy Hour…" —it is really impossible for any of you to imagine how influential this was (1) for the Cree people and (2) for the tiny minority of white people who cared about the fate of the Cree people and their language at that time.

Radio itself, as a medium, doesn't matter in the same way anymore, but in 1997 it hadn't yet been devoured by the internet. And, of course, the very nature of that medium entailed that I knew Thomas King by his voice, only, and I never saw his face.

That show explicitly addressed the extent to which King was an outsider who struggled to find a foothold in Cree culture, in contrast to Jasper Friendly Bear and Gracie Heavy Hand, who were insouciant in their self-confidence —and who spoke English with the indescribable Cree accent that many pretendians (including Buffy Sainte-Marie) have tried (and failed) to imitate. He was presented as an indigenous person who had the advantages and disadvantages of an urban education, having assimilated into English-speaking culture and lost touch with what had presumably been —at some earlier stage— his own culture. I do not recall hearing an episode in which he discussed being (ostensibly) Cherokee rather than Cree, but I did not hear every episode, and my recollection may be imperfect.

The show was both implicitly and explicitly politically provocative, while being genuinely comedic —and, above all, warm. It was a rare example of warm, well-intentioned comedy, in an era of mean-spirited (and largely self-indulgent) satire.

The recordings of that radio show are a huge percentage of "the literature" worth talking about: it was certainly more politically significant than Wapos Bay.

Here's APTN covering the news in 5 minutes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BynoyTD6u6w

And APTN discussing it in a roundtable format for 14 minutes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NPiX6SJvD4



———Appendix A———

Michelle Latimer —also a proven pretendian— worked with Thomas King on the following film and —I observe— the two have offered closely parallel excuses for their pretendianism (claiming —implausibly— that they didn't lie themselves but were merely misled by lies told to them by their own parents).  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inconvenient_Indian

…aaaaaand you can see Michelle Latimer weeping on stage while dramatically making false claims about her own culture, politics and ancestry starting nine minutes and thirty seconds into THIS video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHEl-A8_2Gk

Wednesday, 26 November 2025

[Other voices:] Little do they realize, when the freak show is over, there will be no show at all.

The wording, in the book, is, in fact:

The younger generation celebrates the mainstreaming of the movement, failing to realize: when veganism ceases to be a freak show, it ceases to be a show at all.

I have also described this as a kind of "game show", luring in contestants just to humiliate them on camera.

There has been less and less interest in veganism for many years now, with this genre being "the sole surviving genre" of (formerly diverse, fractious and fragmentary) vegan edutainment. I cannot say that this sort of thing is popular, but there's a lot of it.

Here is "The Militant Vegan", trying to succeed playing the same game by the same rules:

https://www.youtube.com/@themilitantvegan/videos

Both of these examples happen to be women making money out of their physical appearance via internet pornography. This is a recurrent pattern (as I've observed and discussed many times) with important political implications.

Guillotines, like blue jeans, never entirely go out of fashion.

"Under the Paris Agreement [signed in 2016], Canada committed to reduce GHG emissions by 40% to 45% below 2005 levels by 2030…"

And, now, behold the chart:

https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/environmental-indicators/greenhouse-gas-emissions.html

The measurement of megatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent decreased from 747 to 682 during the Coronavirus lockdown period, approximately, and then rebounded only part of the way to the 694-to-700 range. It is impossible to say that any ecological improvement was achieved from 2005 to 2019.

Now, I ask you: is it credible to imagine that these numbers will drastically change from 2026 to 2030?

759 x 0.6 = 455 megatonnes carbon dioxide equivalent, scil. a decrease of 40% since 2005.

Of course, even if this were suddenly achieved during calendar year 2029, the total amount of carbon in the atmosphere produced during all the years leading up to 2029 would remain a problem: we're not talking about diet and weight loss here, the pollution is cumulative.

The outcomes of COP30: have you ever heard anyone even bother to criticize them?

https://www.canada.ca/en/services/environment/weather/climatechange/canada-international-action/un-climate-change-conference/cop30-summit/summary-outcomes.html

Not a single one of my viewers or listeners has asked me to comment on (or critique) the outcomes of this conference. Understandably: nobody cares.

Carbon credits are a profoundly flawed paradigm that was already tried and already failed: they were obviously flawed from the first stage of design, and only became more flawed in the process of execution, as even an imbecile like George Monbiot could figure out.

Here we are in the last few days of 2025, reading that our eminently qualified government experts still believe in "high-integrity carbon credits and increas[ing] private investment in greenhouse gas mitigation".

Monday, 24 November 2025

I will walk again… BUT IN THE MEANTIME…

The few of you who know me personally have heard me saying, again and again, "Okay, I'm leaving the first gym and I'm walking to the other gym now…" —because I was going to the gym twice a day, and I felt I'd benefit from walking in-between the two gyms. I had a period of intense exercise both before and after the surgery.

Alas, I've now had a period of time of barely being able to walk to the grocery store, and a few days (here and there) of not being able to walk at all.

Anyway, yeah, I am making the completion of the second edition of No More Manifestos my top priority… but you can also see the depth of depravity I've sunken into with both book collecting and retro video games, on my other channel…

Behold the semi-satirical masterpiece, entitled, I've got $250 to burn AND I'M ALL OUT OF MATCHES.

LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65icWhac2Co

Thursday, 20 November 2025

Tuesday, 18 November 2025

Katie Johnson Lost Her Virginity with Donald Trump.

This is a remix and re-upload with a significantly new introduction added on in the first two minutes: this one was uploaded on Nov. 15th, 2025, that one on Nov. 4th, 2020.  Five years later, and still it's news.

LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyCcD41fpKI

The sequel to this video, recorded and uploaded Nov. 17th, 2025, follows "below" on this blog (i.e., these two have not been posted in the order you might reasonably expect, under the circumstances).

Thursday, 13 November 2025

Who is a Jacobin and who is an Aristocrat? And which one is Napoleon supposed to be?

I am still struggling with my health, and can barely walk. NEVERTHELESS…

Here are a few new pages from the second edition: a reasonably profound critique of Christianity, en passant.

I would remind you: this is what à-bas-le-ciel (as a creative project) was originally devised for, but I never had a single colleague or contemporary from the atheist movement to work with (nor to work against, I might add).

——————————

"If you've accepted the authority of a pagan witch-doctor, learning to believe that certain gestures of his hands and certain words chanted in an incomprehensible language will have a magical effect, you can easily transfer this reverence to a Christian priest: he simply uses different words and gestures, appealing to the same basic superstition.  Transference of faith is far more simple than the transference of skepticism, as the transference of desire is easier than the transference of detachment."

"In the last few centuries, Christians of every sect wanted to imagine that their followers could instead arrive at this point of submission to the power of their rituals through reason alone, refusing to see that this use of reason undermined the faith it was meant to serve.  People who are not afraid of ten thousand tiny demons are not afraid of one god, either, because they do not need His protection against Them: the church without ghosts soon enough becomes a church without believers, as one kind of haunting relies upon the other, reciprocally.  Over a period of 500 years, the modernization of Christianity eradicated the belief in 'rival' (smaller, lower) superstitions, inadvertently destroying the basis for belief in any superstition whatsoever."

"Christianity made itself half-rational and entirely lost its magic as a result.  In training children to believe in the supposedly-rational world of Pascal and Descartes, with the monotheistic god and the Christian church as its logically-deduced leader, the modernizers of theology destroyed the basis for the whole structure of personal subjugation (to the greater whole) that they were trying to defend."

"The exceptions prove the rule: the Quakers embraced the total insanity of the crassest superstition (with every man being 'seized' by the holy spirit and becoming a prophet by virtue of having 'a seizure', speaking in tongues, etc.) and led a sincere revival that lasted a hundred years, while the rest of the Christian faith withered away.  As soon as the Quakers felt embarrassment and tried to rationalize their religion, they caught up with the decline that every other form of the half-rational religion had experienced in the same millennium."

"To be rational and reasonable seemed at first to be an ornament to the faith, but, after a few generations, the faith itself had become nothing more than an ornament of only so many sequins, worn by rational and reasonable people on only so many special occasions.  And it would be delightful to imagine that this is what destroyed the civilization of Easter Island or laid waste to the work of a dozen dynasties in Egypt, but there has never been any example of a civilization destroyed by its self-awareness other than our own.  It is a holotype: neither the decline of Confucianism nor the fall of Communism followed the same pattern.  Never once in the history of India or Arabia will you find such irony."

"It was in Europe, uniquely, for a transitional period of a few centuries, that we saw aristocrats accepting god's existence only as a theorem, 'proven' like Pascal's pontifications, explained in axioms like the philosophy of Descartes, and so on.  Whereas in Ancient Rome we could all accept the divinity of Julius Caesar after his death, and his religious status as pontifex maximus had been the least controversial thing about him while he was still alive, crucially, in our 'early modernity', our ostentatiously rational ruling class could never accept that the political power of particular human beings was 'proven' by words and gestures performed like a magician's trick on a stage.  The god of their abstract reasoning seemed to discredit his own worldly authority: their faith, arrived at rationally, discredited blind obedience to mere rituals.  The real threat to the church was not atheism but deism."

"With or without irony, aristocrats of this kind often said (or wrote) that they envied 'the pure faith' of the peasants, but even if they secretly despised it, they were alienated from it just the same.  They could speak for hours about the abstract relationship between divine creation and worldly hierarchy, but they could not sincerely say they accepted that one man would rule (rather than another) because he was rubbed with a magic ointment in a public ceremony presided over by the Pope --a ritual that continued down to the coronation of Napoleon, even though the 'Sacred Ampoule' containing the magic oil for this ceremony had been (quite intentionally) destroyed by revolutionaries just a few years before.  Both in France and England, the peasants, in their purity, believed that a king could magically cure scrofula (an infection that horribly distorts the shape of the neck, most often caused by tuberculosis) with a mere touch, even after civil wars (or, more rarely, the outright abolition and restoration of the monarchy) had demonstrated to them how new kings could be contrived --sometimes repeatedly, within living memory.  What exactly was there to be envied, for the Aristocrats who had been corrupted by a passing acquaintance with Greco-Latin literature?  If the right to rule had been revealed to be a mere ritual, the only question that remained was whether this ritual, like the king's cure for scrofula, should be regarded as real or unreal."

"If a man is genuinely terrified to eat without first getting some blessing put upon his food (warding off demons, etc.) there can be no question of axioms and proofs to substantiate the authority of the person providing the ritual; but the Christian who has accepted the supremacy of god only through Neoplatonic reasoning cannot be convinced that it would be dangerous for him to eat without getting the magic sacrament first, and in the absence of this fear (this reliance, this dependency) he will regard the authority of the ritualist as something no different from (and no more difficult to question than) the qualifications needed by an actor to perform a particular part in the theater.  Believing in reasoning leads to believing in nothing, even if the people who preach Reason themselves are the most pious victims of blind faith, like Descartes (d. 1650) and Hobbes (d. 1679) and Newton (d. 1727) and Kant (d. 1804).  All of these men believed in the same god as the Neoplatonists, but they were as modern as Machiavelli (d. 1527) in this one respect: they could not believe in the magical difference between a crown and a peasant's cap."

"If you obey only those rules you can understand, you'll be in a constant state of rebellion: every society relies upon obedience to an incomprehensible and mysterious set of rules as fragile as the Sacred Ampoules.  Rational defiance of them would be anarchy.  The ostentatiously rational aristocrats of the last few centuries were anarchists in constant rebellion against the mystique of the dark ages, although they considered themselves to be the most devout conformists within the same system of church and monarchy that they would destroy."

Wednesday, 12 November 2025

Political Power Doesn't Begin or End with a Ballot Box.

Talking to conservatives about climate change: these are the ostensibly respectable people you meet in the comment section below the glowing image of Jacob Rees-Mogg.
I think this is a slightly important notion: that people, for political reasons, make excuses without even understanding what it is they're making excuses for, "from a position of blithe ignorance, not knowing what evils they're making excuses for." 

And yes, I do realize I've eschewed the opportunity to say, "Political Power NEITHER Begins NOR Ends with a Ballot Box". ;-) I use that pattern of neither/nor entirely too often in the book, you know.

Tuesday, 11 November 2025

Being Left Wing: How Not Why.

Created in response to a question from the audience:

[J. Falcon:] I'm tired of the garden of eden, the ego trips over ineffective activism, disconnection from practical political change, economic and historical realities of the left wing I find myself stuck in... but I absolutely have no interest in joining the all meat diet, scientific racists, and shoulder pad faux-sophisticates of the right. Perhaps, if you're willing, this calls for a "Being Left Wing: How Not Why."

LINK: https://youtube.com/shorts/mjaF4NPdmRo

Ecology and Ego: Veganism and False Humility.

 

LINK: https://youtu.be/zjq2Mgyxd2Q

Monday, 10 November 2025

Ecology is the opposite of freedom: that's why it's worth fighting for.

Two new "shorts" on the crisis of ecology: the longest six minutes of your whole entire life.

1 of 2.
I don't know but I do care: the hardest thing to admit in politics.
LINK: https://youtube.com/shorts/78MetqgPdzo

2 of 2.
Ecology is the opposite of freedom: that's why it's worth fighting for.
LINK: https://youtube.com/shorts/ZDhf8NWFb0g

Saturday, 8 November 2025

[Meanwhile:] Commodore 64 is Still Doomed.

I do try to keep the C64 news to an absolute minimum around here, dear reader… but…

I must mention, briefly, that attempts to revive the C64 computer brand have ended up in a court battle to determine who owns the so-called "intellectual property" in this century:

https://www.timeextension.com/news/2025/11/commodore-industries-is-trying-to-prevent-the-revived-commodore-international-from-using-the-iconic-name

Now you may complain that this is the first time I've mentioned the C64, but this is not so: just a few short years ago, à-bas-le-ciel was home to an epoch-marking video titled, The C64: Are You Wasting Your Life… YET? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Bxhhoq1SN4

The moral to the story, for me, is something quite tangential to the interest of "Time Extension" here: there are weekly C64 news shows. MANY OF THEM. On youtube, as podcasts… you name it. The C64, the ZX Spectrum, and even the Atari desktop computers all have regular news programs, 97% preoccupied with video games.

There is no weekly vegan news show. There is no monthly vegan news show.

There is no vegan news anymore.

Of course, my own interest would be in profoundly political news about veganism as a movement, but even at the shallow end of the swimming pool, we should take a moment to notice that we have neither swimmers nor sunbathers nor even water anymore.

Far be it from me to ask my audience if anyone wants to co-host such a show. Far be it from me to ask if anyone else would want to collaborate or contribute in any way. #talentisscarce

[Meanwhile:] The Utter Insanity of Right Wing Responses to Ecology.

I hesitate to use "right wing" in the title here, as Jacob Rees-Mogg has not yet "left the left" —if you're willing to categorize the nominally Conservative Boris Johnson as "left" (AND INDEED HE IS)… but, nevertheless… his taste in wallpaper and bookshelves is right wing, so that's the category I'm going to work with here…

The political position of Nigel Lawson alluded to here is that, quote, "carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that warms the atmosphere —but… the UK would be 'crazy' to do anything about it". The single sentence summary I have just quoted is from 2016, and still, it's news: https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/global-warming-climate-change-sceptic-nigel-lawson-real-humans-causing-a7307456.html

The similarity to what Charlie Kirk has so recently said (about carbon and climate change) should be self-evident, although it appears here in a different accent and cadence, presented to an audience that is neither more nor less insane: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fafp3NEZg1g

On the very definition of vegan: now more than ever…

"For me, the difference between 'vegan' and 'plant based' is not the difference between 'ethical veganism' and 'health based veganism'. Veganism proper: it's never going to be satisfied with a merely personal decision to be vegan."

Fifteen minutes from season one.

LINK: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0EwpOopH8jPRIp2Zk6Qx2X

^ I'm never going to explain anything that clearly ever again… so don't even ask. ;-)

Friday, 7 November 2025

[Meanwhile:] A myth within a myth, a cage within a cage: "high tech solutions" to climate change.

The problem is adumbrated somewhere in the middle of my (relatively) recent podcast, Youtube is dead: the lost avant garde of intellectual dissent on the internet: although right-wing propaganda on carbon relies on flagrant falsehoods, the left and center are playing an even more dangerous game —in part because their lies seem more plausible —in part because a whole generation of gormless idiots (globally) has been groomed to believe in them. Neither the electric engine nor the electric airplane can drastically reduce carbon levels, reversing climate change: veganism can.

Ironically, if you want to put a pro-China spin on this tragic tale, it would be that China (with several centuries of Buddhist, Daoist and Confucian cultural tradition behind it) could now lead the world in creating a new cultural tradition of eating drastically less meat and dairy —or none at all.

Link to the aforementioned podcast, "Youtube is dead, etc.": https://open.spotify.com/episode/6wFSB1chYtTpJmWwVuWYxr

Monday, 3 November 2025

Deprive a workman of his tools and he discovers he still has claws.

[This is, in fact, the page immediately prior to the excerpt shared on October 4th. Yes, as may be implicitly obvious, today I've gone back to the beginning of chapter 4, to make minor revisions throughout 4 and 5, again.]

Torn from the pages of the second edition.

The cardinal, of course, is willing to go much further, but having never eaten human flesh, his reasoning has more of an abstract air than the raven's speech before: "Modern humans are the masters of many tools, and yet your tools become terrible things once you've come to see yourselves as serving a role defined by these instruments.  The law creates the lawyer, and then he lives his whole life in service to the law.  'What a terrible tool!', you think, as if you could liberate the lawyer by tearing up the law.  How little you can imagine what dangerous people these same lawyers will become once you've deprived them of their law: a workman without his tools soon discovers that he still has claws."

The blue jay, hopping on his perch, now warns: "Destroy the bureaucracy, and you still have a society ruled by bureaucrats.  Destroy the belief and the believers remain."

The raven presses his old argument even further: "Even if your civilization provides nothing but a veneer painted over barbarism, you need to learn to appreciate the veneer!  You see little difference between bureaucrats and barbarian kings, but as soon as the bureaucrats return to barbarism, you'll appreciate the progress of a thousand years that dragged them down from their thrones, deprived them of their dueling swords, and taught them to care for the technicalities of the law, romanticizing the arbitrary procedures of limited government."

"Only a fool blames the highway for the brutality of the highwaymen: demolish the road beneath them, like pulling the carpets out of an abattoir, and what have you got? A gang of killers, all the same."

Sunday, 26 October 2025

Richard (Vegan Gains) judging me by the standards of his own morality, in three minutes or less.

 My own comment posted below the video reads as follows:

The irony is that these people complain that I'm lying, and then proceed to criticize and complain about my content with the assumption that I'm telling the truth: indeed, it's my honesty that they're offended by —while condemning me for supposedly being dishonest and manipulative. And the reality is that all of those videos are really honest, and that's exactly why shallow and simple-minded people (Richard included) can't cope with them.

Without being needlessly profound in response to such a shallow and mean-spirited video: Richard does not hesitate to condemn honesty as dishonesty and, in close parallel, he condemns humility as narcissism. Weeping on camera, for example, he interprets as a clear sign of deceptive, narcissistic behavior; concealing heartbreak and regret from the public would be the very opposite of deception and narcissism, I suppose? What if I were laughing, with cruelty, in the same video, instead of weeping: would that be a symptom of narcissism? Simply not weeping on camera, simply pretending not to be upset at all —would that be deceptive? Would that be narcissism?

Admitting your unhappiness is interpreted as grandiosity rather than sorrow, admitting your failure is interpreted as boasting rather than humility —without the slightest hesitation to reflect on the paradox, or what the implications of such fallacious reasoning might be if the same principles were applied to other examples, equally. Melissa admits that she lied and reflects on the harm caused by the lies she told, but Richard is willing to immediately overturn all this evidence and claim that I am the one lying: I have somehow fabricated the whole situation, and shifted the blame onto her, no other explanation is possible. He has become accustomed to this way of thinking. As soon as people have learned this habit of blaming someone for being a narcissist, the most surreal inversions of reality seem possible, in order to buttress the theory: from their perspective, there is no longer any difference between the truth and a lie —nor even a difference between weeping and laughing.

I assume this commentary from Richard was recorded prior to his own divorce —but it could not have been very long before his divorce, foreseen or unforeseen at the time.

I don't think anyone could interpret what he has to say about sexual function and dysfunction as anything other than jealousy; if he were less shallow, he'd be jealous of the book review videos instead. Yes, he really should be jealous that Melissa and I read Thucydides and Aristotle together. He can't be. And he can't be happy for us, either.

Saturday, 11 October 2025

Youtube is dead: the lost avant garde of intellectual dissent on the internet


LINK
:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/6wFSB1chYtTpJmWwVuWYxr

Implicitly, this is a significant contrast to my old "manifesto" titled On Community, although it does not address the thesis of that video, directly, in any way: if you regard this as a manifesto, it is addressed to the youtuber (or podcaster) as a solitary intellectual dissident, cultural critic, commentator and comedian --not as the center of an incipient community, pulling together like-minded people (as per "the spirit season one") with an ambition to accomplish something more than they could ever attempt alone.

Friday, 10 October 2025

Black Hammer's Long Shadow, or: Growing Old Gracefully with Commander Gazi.

It was, perhaps, a sign of incipient insanity when Augustus Romain decided that he preferred the stage name Commander Gazi: his parents really had given him a name worthy of Plutarch's Lives to begin with. I could find just one source reporting that a long list of criminal charges against him had been dropped…

[Source 1 of 3:] https://www.tampabay.com/news/crime/2025/01/29/augustus-romain-uhuru-st-petersburg-black-hammer-party-gazi-kodzo/

…while a separate court proceeding accused him of knowingly working as a Russian agent, with one possible interpretation being that his whole political movement was little more than an attempt to disrupt "politics as usual" in America as a service to their Russian paymasters.

According to prosecutors, the four carried out a number of actions in the US between 2015 and 2022 on behalf of the Russian government and received money and support from Aleksandr Ionov, the president of the Moscow-based group Anti-Globalization Movement of Russia.

Mr Ionov used the APSP, Uhuru Movement and Black Hammer to promote Russian views on politics, the Ukraine war and other issues, they said.

[Source 2 of 3:] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c624ppg14jpo

The BBC might mislead you into assuming that he was sentenced to five years in prison, but no: merely five years' probation is reported by MSNBC.

The Justice Department said that in addition to protesting Meta on Russia’s dime [i.e., objecting to Facebook censorship policies on what could be said about the War in Ukraine], Romain posted Russian propaganda to social media at Ionov’s direction and sought Ionov’s input on a news release from their organization that condemned President Joe Biden’s support for Ukraine. […] This case is a prime example of why voters must be wary of ostensibly radical activists whose rhetoric closely mirrors Russian far-right rhetoric.

[Source 3 of 3:] https://www.msnbc.com/the-reidout/reidout-blog/russia-propaganda-black-americans-augustus-romain-jr-rcna183843

On the contrary, this is a prime example of how utterly meaningless "far right" and "far left" have now become, in the careless parlance of our times. If Commander Gazi can be described as "far right" instead of "far left"… ?

I do not know if there is a single injured party uploading anywhere on the internet to reflect on the long list of crimes that Gazi will (apparently) never be punished for, as most of the charges against him were inexplicably dropped. These were not victimless crimes —and, of course, in a more abstract sense, I would assume that many of the people who donated money to support him now feel that they were victims of a kind of hoax, in retrospect.

In terms of what youtube does best, here's a purely personal set of reflections from a woman who knew him before he was corrupted by money, fame, power, respect and sex: https://youtu.be/TMMDqlsIWKs?si=DluJ99-hyFK80YTQ

The barbarity of political discourse in our century. It's enough to make a man learn Ancient Latin, quite honestly.

Thursday, 9 October 2025

And I will leave no ghost when I am gone: torn from the comments section.

Like "the younger man," I also started watching EM as a teenager. I always knew he was abnormal, and I guess I should have "put the pieces together" more after hearing him talk so much about the world of folly and ignorance, but it still disappointed and surprised me how much more drab and thoughtless and passionless the world seemed to be once I started to grow up. I expected more people (at university, for example) to be more like Eisel, so much more brave, passionate, creative, silly, vulnerable, brilliant. It's weird for me to watch EM now, after not having been here in a few months. It's like he's living on another planet from everyone else I know, and that world is equal parts brighter and darker, it is so much bigger and it is so much more vividly realized, and it is so much more youthful but it is also so much more mature. EM is a man who was alive when most of us were already ghosts, and he is a man who will leave no ghost when he is gone.

Tuesday, 7 October 2025

Censorship and the strange fate of à-bas-le-ciel… with or without Youtube.

 

[Note that the numbers shown for the "watch hours", in the image above, concern a period of 365 days in which my channel was banned (and thus inaccessible to any audience) for the vast majority of the time. So those are just the "watch hours" for a few months prior to the banning, and short period time after the ban was lifted. The discussion that ensues, below, is —of course— concerning whether or not my channel will now be banned again.]

9:48:49 PM  https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ZMBWEewOamE

9:49:06 PM  ^ This is an example of a video that was deleted as "hate speech".

9:49:13 PM Charles: Okay.

9:49:23 PM  ^ When I challenged the decision, I was told that the video (specifically) encouraged violence.

9:49:25 PM  This is a lie.

9:49:36 PM  ^ That "short" (video) in just a few seconds proves that this is a lie.

9:49:41 PM  Specific employees within youtube are corrupt:

9:49:58 PM  there are specific youtube employees who are not following youtube's rules and guidelines.

9:50:06 PM  This is a real problem: I have real evidence.

9:50:29 PM  Yes, in theory, the community guidelines should be enforced against me: instead, I am looking at totally fictional charges of "hate speech".

9:50:38 PM  ^ That one example (shown in just a few seconds) really does prove my point.

9:51:05 PM Charles: I am sorry if you feel that way but you were given the option to appeal if you think we made a mistake.

9:51:10 PM  In that video, I am discussing quantitative evidence that veganism has become less popular. (I am a vegan: for me, this is sad news, by the way.)

9:51:27 PM  So the video is (at that time stamp) discussing these numbers on a chart.

9:51:40 PM  This was categorized as "hate speech", and on appeal I was told that it is promoting violence.

9:51:48 PM  Right now, Charles, I am appealing: this is my appeal.

9:52:02 PM  What are you going to do with this information?

9:52:13 PM  I cannot fill out a form, so I am explaining the situation to you.

9:52:34 PM Charles: Aright, I will forward the information to our internal team.

9:52:41 PM Charles: I will convert this chat to email.

9:52:48 PM  (1) Dishonest and corrupt people within youtube have (repeatedly) categorized my videos as hate speech. (2) I can present evidence that the videos do not contain hate speech, in general, and they do not promote violence, in specific.

9:52:52 PM Charles: Is this the best email to reach you at [EMAIL ADDRESS]?

[…]

9:53:11 PM  Here is the evidence, in two links:

9:53:18 PM Charles: Sure, go on.

9:53:21 PM  (1) https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ZMBWEewOamE

9:53:45 PM  (2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcgy9PNWAEA

9:53:56 PM  ^ Those two videos present very real evidence of youtube employees lying.

9:54:23 PM  My channel has been a victim of these lies: my experience with youtube show [sic] evidence of misconduct by youtube employees.

9:54:52 PM  Okay, Charles, when do we deal with the other aspects of the appeal "form"?

9:55:29 PM  [Quoting the webpage:]

—————

• A form will load on this page. Use this to write your appeal.

• Tell us about your channel and how it doesn’t violate the feedback above.

• Add links of your videos (particularly the most viewed).

—————

9:55:55 PM  ^ Am I allowed to provide some other kind of positive statement about my youtube channel?

9:56:07 PM  ^ Should I provide links (as suggested) to my most popular videos?

9:56:27 PM Charles: You can share details to your appeal here.

9:56:48 PM Charles: Just so you know that each appeal is carefully reviewed by our experts.

9:57:14 PM  Right: and experts are human beings. They can lie, too. They can be guilty of misconduct. They can be biased.

9:57:15 PM Charles: As for the option to appeal, I am requesting you to share a screen recording for this to be checked.

9:58:20 PM  "You can share details to your appeal here."

^ This is the instruction you've provided for me to follow.

9:59:33 PM Charles: As a Manager, I have thoroughly reviewed your concern and this final.

10:01:45 PM Charles: Are you still there?

10:02:05 PM  Yes, I am writing my appeal.

10:02:22 PM Charles: I thought the appeal that you have shared started a while ago?

[This is not a masterpiece, but you can see precisely how many (or how few) minutes went into the composition (with the time-stamps indicating the California time zone).]

10:06:41 PM  My channel has a ten year history of dealing with some of the most important political, religious and ecological controversies of our time: sometimes seriously and sometimes satirically. My most recent videos (uploaded to youtube) show this same mix of the serious and the satirical. Today, I uploaded a short parody song…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z28bs-184Ss

…whereas three days ago I uploaded a serious discussion of contemporary politics (lasting about sixteen minutes)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jp32EaA8jDA

The video immediately prior to that is over an hour long, and is comedic, but the comedy deals with a tremendous variety of serious political issues (including climate change, repeatedly).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBVGeH2B0hQ

I think that this mixture of the serious and the satirical has made my channel difficult for youtube employees to evaluate and, frankly, "difficult to censor":

obviously, the serious videos and the satirical videos can't be held to the same standard.

I have also, repeatedly, encountered the problem of youtube employees attributing opinions to me that I criticize (or satirize) in others. To use a real example, I have quoted racist statements from Kanye West, but I was excoriating Kanye West: my own video was anti-racist, but did quote and deal with racism.

I understand that many of the political issues I deal with are shocking and disturbing, from the critique of the vegan movement to the critique of modern religion, BUT THIS IS YOUTUBE: this website, Youtube, really was created to give people like me a voice.

This is a place for dissident intellectuals to challenge the presuppositions of members of the audience. Youtube should not silence someone like myself, who criticizes Jordan Peterson, while giving Jordan Peterson the right to speak unopposed. Thank you.

[…]

10:08:55 PM Eisel Mazard: I infer that you will now re-format this information, so that it can be transmitted to someone as an appeal?

10:09:23 PM Charles: Thanks for confirming.

10:09:44 PM Charles: No, I will forward your exact words.

10:10:02 PM Charles: Please expect an email within 24 hours.

No More PhD: Mike Israetel and Me.



Posted, in parallel, to my comedy channel, under the significantly different tile, "Academic credentials are a joke: bro science is serious business." And here's the link to that version of the video if you want it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBCDUo1zSBc

Saturday, 4 October 2025

Jordan Peterson is still a Nazi: Lindsay Shepherd is still a Nazi.

 

If you're watching this anywhere other than Canada, you probably can't imagine the extent to which these people have redefined political discourse (left and right) in this country: I realize J.P. is merely one voice among many in London or Los Angeles, but he's both Julius Caesar and Joe Rogan in Canada.  Meanwhile, Lindsay Shepherd uploaded one video two days ago, and two videos two years ago: this video is, in part, a response to all three. Link to her videos: https://www.youtube.com/@lindsayshepherdess

And the link to my own: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jp32EaA8jDA

Saturday, 27 September 2025

Youtube censorship: the impossibility of proving your innocence (even against allegations so specific as "promoting violence" and "hate speech").

[Yes, that's a long title, above, but it draws attention to the incongruous contrast between the current phase of negotiations and the one immediately prior: youtube employees have completely ceased to suggest that I am guilty of "promoting or glorifying" violence. That claim narrowed down the dangerously vague allegation of "hate speech" into something that I should be able to defend myself against —and so, just as suddenly as the allegation was introduced, it has now disappeared from discussions.]

Hi there, [Sept. 27th, 2025, circa 6:00 PM]

I hope all is well. 

Thanks for reaching back.

I truly understand how deeply you must be feeling right now, and I want to acknowledge the immense importance of understanding the precise reasons behind the decision. It's not just a matter of curiosity; it's a fundamental human needs to understand why something significant has happened, especially when it impacts your creative work and livelihood. It's completely natural to seek closure, to want to piece together the events and gain a sense of resolution. Believe me, I genuinely wish I could provide you with that sense of closure.

Unfortunately, I find myself in a position where our established policies restrict me from divulging the detailed information you're seeking. This isn't a decision made lightly, but rather a necessary measure to uphold the security and fairness of our review processes. We've implemented these policies to protect the integrity of our systems and ensure that all creators are treated equitably. I realize that this explanation might sound impersonal, but it's crucial to understand the broader context.

Still, kindly know that you are still more than welcome to check out our Community Guidelines resources.

If you have any additional concerns, please feel free to reach out. 

Best,
Ark
 

—————

Hi Eisel, [Sept. 27th, 2025, 7:49 PM]

Thanks for reaching out.

This is Jon, a manager from the YouTube support experience team.

I understand you are facing a series of "Hate Speech" violations which you are convinced are being applied in bad faith, not as a genuine enforcement of policy.

I recognize that your core issue is with the integrity of the review process itself. You are citing the lack of specific evidence from YouTube and the near-instantaneous rejection of your appeals as proof of a systemic problem, which you believe constitutes employee misconduct. Let me assist you here.

To avoid confusion with the resolution and duplication of work for this video, please refer to this case: [4-4615000039678] YouTube Support for resolution.

To ensure fairness and consistency, our review process is thorough, therefore, submitting additional appeals or contacting us repeatedly will not change the outcome of the decision we have reached.

While I recognize this isn't the outcome you wanted, I want to assure you that my support team has dedicated significant effort to investigating your situation, utilizing all available resources and reviewing every detail. Regrettably, even after this thorough process, we are unable to provide a different resolution or share any further information beyond what has already been communicated.

I hope this clears things out. Your understanding and cooperation will be highly appreciated!

Regards,

Jon

—————

So if I upload the same video again ("I am too ugly to lead the vegan movement") what would I need to delete from it, to avoid having the video censored (again) as hate speech?

There must be a specific moment in that video (and in each of the videos) justifying your claim that they promote (or glorify) violence: it must be possible for me to remove the portion of the video you've identified as hate speech, to then upload it again.

I would also point out, not hypothetically, exactly the same videos have been uploaded again (already) without anyone at YouTube perceiving the same statements as hate speech (or as promoting and glorifying violence, in particular).

Either you are telling the truth, or you are lying: either it is true that each of these videos actually contain hate speech (e.g., the parody song "Monk Mode", e.g. the video about the declining popularity of the vegan movement aforementioned) or else they do not.

This is a very simple, binary question.

You know you are lying: you know you are part of the world's most laughable "cover up" in claiming these videos promote and glorify violence (against a racial minority that is never specified, but always remains vague, I note) when the videos contain nothing of the kind —very clearly nothing of the kind at the time stamp provided (e.g. a chart showing declining interest in veganism, being discussed from a pro-vegan perspective, I might add).

I will repeat here, for your convenience, the list of videos that have been deleted under false pretenses: not a single one of these videos contains hate speech: the decision to delete these videos should be overturned.

HOWEVER, if these videos WILL NOT be reinstated ("unbanned") then please provide me with guidance as to what should be censored out when I reupload them (as I already have done, in many cases, without being censored again).

Sept. 25th, 2025
https://youtu.be/ZlHEEbYyzaQ
MONK MODE! @Hamza97

Sept 24th, 2025
https://youtu.be/xdEhTXBU_KI
I'm still too ugly to lead the vegan movement.

Sept 24th, 2025
https://youtube.com/live/82zFz7lx7Oo
Stop saying, "dating is a numbers game". #blackpill #incels

Sept 24th, 2025
https://youtu.be/oDmp7KyD71I
Blackpilled Incels: Refugees from the Toxic Optimism of Christianity

Oct 1st, 2024
https://youtu.be/6g8Yn0wnsKE
Genetically inferior, morally inferior, intellectually inferior.

September 30th, 2024
https://youtu.be/YEp8rbvbzpg
The Last PUA in Japan: Tkyosam's Deleted Videos.

September 27th, 2024
https://youtu.be/F0pac_Y9ItE
She is not an Anastasia: Hamza Ahmed's new girlfriend is a Jessica.

E.M.