That’s beautiful, Neo! And dare I say it, better than the original by The Bee Gees? That’s probably Neo-heresy, but there it is.
Speaking of the President’s speech last night (if we weren’t, we soon shall be, I’m sure), it was mercifully short. And I worry quite a bit about stopping oil tankers leaving Venezuela, even if they are unflagged. I’d honestly prefer he just announce we would enforce the international embargo on the open seas, and not just offshore from Venezuela. The result should be the same without appearing to be an attack on that country.
At Fox News, Providence police say they have live rounds, that is, ones which were not fired, with DNA and fingerprints of the shooter. This gives me hope they will find him.
Might one wonder if the university’s leadership is “merely” ramping up COMPLICITY with the Destroyers to the next level…and then—AGAIN—attempting to cover up their subversive agenda by declaring themselves DEFENDERS of human rights.
Yes, the old tried and true…
File under: Underground Railroad for the 21st century?
Kate:
If Chief Inspector Cleusou can’t help Providence there are other resources:
Looks superb. (Wonder if the major booksellers will carry it….)
I know I knew it… But when I read it again today I was almost mute with rage… Jewish preschools in Sydney have armed guards at the gates. Jewish school children often take their kippahs off for the journey to/from so as not to be obviously Jewish… and yes walk past armed guards every day.
If the Australian Jewish community reenacted Esther this Purim, who’d blame them?
as ive mentioned before, an essay that norman podhoretz, wrote nearly 40 years,
‘lamentations’ proved powerfully prophetic, this was before the intifada that led to the oslo delusion, then 9-11 which touched off more than 20 years of war, which was handled poorly by the west, of the leading nations of the anglosphere, the US, UK Australia and Canada, only the first has held together in some way,
in a time, where the unofficial capital of the United States, the Big Apple, is seized by the worst filled with passionate intensity, as yeats put it, in the form of Zohran Mamdani, when London is similarly ruled by another sort in Sadik Khan, lets not speak of Mark Carney’s behavior, but Albanese, is of a piece, the lesson that Enoch Powell, the polyglot former intel officer, and Parliament member had in 1967, was not merely for the Angel Iste, ‘the Bell tolls for all of us,’ there seems to be a little consideration about who the akrams are,
but they are one pair of footsoldiers, the al hijra newcomers like the trio of ex afghan fighters that has bedeviled us,
he wrote of a time, when Israel would be under siege all over the world, and this would lead to it’s downfall, and the world would take little note, and more than a degree of approbation,
I can’t help to thinka a sense of heartache and that terror of having proven a proghet,
haunted his last days specially after october 7th, and the aftermath,
Re: Brown security cameras
Geez. Brown has public maps of campus including the locations of its security cameras.
A commenter mentions that in the security biz that’s a cardinal sin. Yeah, it doesn’t sound like a good idea.
Elsewhere I’ve read that it’s possible Brown intentionally disabled its CCTV cameras in deference to hardline leftist grups:
________________________
The Brown University President and school officials have been giving ridiculous answers to questions about the 800 cameras on the campus and the fact that no current footage exists of the shooter walking around inside the campus or inside the buildings therein.
The question is really a simple one. Did Brown University follow the requests of the hardline leftist groups who asked the school to disable the functioning of their surveillance network in order to protect the identity of the students on campus?
Obviously, this potential explanation would answer a lot of seemingly irreconcilable questions about the lack of surveillance footage available to local law enforcement, state police and FBI investigators. The only current footage of the shooter is from privately owned doorbell cameras and CCTV systems from businesses near the campus. No footage of the shooter on campus has been identified.
The situation in Australia is indeed sickening, John Guilfoyle. Whom would they obliterate if they re-enacted Purim? People who cannot or will not see the threat of violence inherent in Islamism (and Islam) are committing slow societal suicide.
All around the world, countries which are not yet majority Muslim need to be doing surveillance on mosques, Islamic schools, and Islamic internet sites to crack down hard on the radicals.
Here’s a bit of sleuthing I did today starting from X/Twitter:
__________________________
Mustapha Kharbouch reflects on how the Brown encampment made him feel a strong connection to his Palestinian ancestry and envision a different, possible, world. “what would my ancestors think of this?” he writes. https://palestine-studies.org/en/node/1655973
Not surprisingly, that link to the IPS now yields “Access Denied”. However, I found this article, again from CedarNews:
__________________________
Online investigators claim to have recovered a now-deleted document described as a “manifesto” allegedly linked to Mustapha Kharbouch, the Brown University student identified by authorities as a suspect in the campus shooting in Providence, Rhode Island.
According to screenshots and archived material circulating on social media, the document was previously published on a platform associated with the Institute for Palestine Studies, a U.S.-based academic organization focused on Middle Eastern research. The material has since been removed, and its authenticity and authorship have not been independently verified.
I downloaded the text images, ran them through OCR, then had Chat clean the text up, which I will paste into the next comment (because I like to keep my comments to a screenful).
The result sure sounds like it could be the Kharbouch article IPS has scrubbed.
Article possibly by Mustapha Kharbouch about his experience at a pro-Palestine encampment at Brown in 2024:
______________________________
“I Hear the Voice of My Ancestors Calling”:
From the Camps to the Campus
“I hear the voice of my calling,
the voice of my call,
singing: wake up, child,
wake up, wake up.
Singing: wake up, child,
wake up, wake up.
Listen, listen.”
Note: The lyrics above are from a song sung by hunger strikers at Brown University. Versions vary.
In the cold, early days of February 2024 in Providence, Rhode Island, I sat on the ground nestled among hundreds of my peers in a university campus center. Leaning on each other, we filled the small space between us with our bodies and hands, rocking back and forth in unison, striking ourselves to create loud percussion that accompanied our chants. Those standing tapped the ground. The whole room vibrated with music, emotion, and tactility.
We had just announced the end of an eight-day hunger strike by fellow brave student comrades, but there was something more in the air. As the genocide in Gaza continued to unfold, we held our grief in collective solidarity and yelled out—from the deepest parts of ourselves—for a glimmer of hope. From Turtle Island to Palestine, we called upon the strength of ancestral spirits to fuel the sumud (Arabic for steadfastness) of our resilient kin in Gaza.
With the bittersweet end of the hunger strike—as the third major action after two student sit-ins were met with arrest by the university—we left the campus center carrying the painful knowledge of our Palestinian kin’s inability to escape the forced Israeli blockade. This realization, though sobering, fueled our belief that this movement has only witnessed its beginning. We affirmed our commitment to continue on, unyielding, until Palestine attains its freedom.
As the tune of the ancestors’ song grew louder every time another person joined the crowd, an uneasy feeling fluttered in my chest: Is this hope?
In the weeks that followed, I struggled with what to feel and think about the idea of hope. I mulled over its applicability in a context of genocide, questioned its possibility, and wondered whether it holds any real power in animating transformation—on both an individual and collective level, for the movement and beyond. I talked with my parents, friends, and fellow organizers about it. I discussed it with peers in class and read works by scholars across geographies and time periods.
Being born and raised as a third-generation stateless Palestinian refugee in Lebanon, I came to realize early in life what hope—or the lack thereof—means for many of us. My existence, like that of many others, constitutes a loophole in the nation-state project and therefore threatens its sustainability and the regulated exclusions on which it is founded. Growing up like an ivy plant between the cracks of the systems that govern our world pushed me to see hope in any endeavor as a feeble excuse for accepting powerlessness.
Looking at my exhausted and overworked parents has always reminded me that hope has never been part of our familial lexicon. As one scholar eloquently puts it:
“Rather than enduring existential crises, Palestinians learn to deal with existence as a crisis.”
Despite this vexed relationship with hope, as the student movement grew on campus I felt forced to reckon with a new orientation toward it—and with the guilt it sometimes produced. How dare I feel hope sparked by a hunger strike on a safe U.S. campus while my people continue to be forcefully starved and slaughtered in the thousands?
My parents’ and grandparents’ consistent experiences of betrayal by their leaders and by a settler-colonial regime taught them better than to allow frivolous hope to take center stage. I believe the intergenerational cynicism I inherited taught me to reject hope to preserve my sanity and avoid disappointment while navigating survival when denied existence.
So how do I grapple with this intergenerational, existential hopelessness—passed on like a wretched inheritance—while tens of students from all walks of life, some of whom I had never met, put their academic lives, careers, and bodies at risk?
How do I reject hope when my student comrades—many of whom are not Palestinian—give their time, effort, and resources so generously to this collective cause?
How dare I not feel hope when they scream by the hundreds, demanding that the university divest its endowment from companies complicit in settler-colonial violence; when they dare to imagine a better, more caring, more just, and more equitable world that safeguards Palestinian life?
How do I reject hope when my peers practice sustainable world-building from within a campus movement whose implications stretch from the local to the global?
These thoughts, among others, continued to linger within me. The encampment, which began at the end of 2024, represents a formative moment in this trajectory of feeling and thinking about hope in a time of genocide. There, the theories we encountered in our Palestine and Comparative Ethnic Studies classroom converged with the material actions of over a hundred comrades who committed to and helped organize the movement.
After the accumulation of dispersed actions for Palestine on Brown’s campus this year—building on decades of student activism—the Brown student encampment became one site in a historic, national student rebellion.
______________________________
Note the mention of Turtle Island, supposedly a Native American term for North America, which is also the namesake for the Turtle Island Liberation Front, the group which has been busted for planning coordinated bombings on New Year’s Eve across Southern California, including in Los Angeles and Orange County.
It’s all coming together!
Kate
I don’t know any Australian Jews…As far as I know there are none observant in our regional rural community. But the Sydney folks shrieking into the TV cameras yesterday know exactly who their enemies are. They know who has defaced & burned down synagogues. They know who celebrated the October 7th massacre. They know who shot up Bondi Beach. They also know the Albanese government is not on their side…or at least by now they should. He was told pretty clearly to stay the hell out of the funerals.
I’m PM…I’ve got every Imam in Sydney in a big ballroom explaining that from now on “globalise the intifada & from the river etc…” are ground zero for visa revocation & expulsion proceedings. I’m pointing at them & saying in the next sitting term of Parliament I’ll reverse my call for a Pally state until I hear some contrition from among the Muslim community.
The current government is on thin ice…and Albo’s platitudes and wishy-washy “new” “tough” legislation is not being received with applause. A better Coalition leader than Susan Ley & he’d be in real strife. The guy to watch is no longer in government, but Josh Freydenburg is on fire!
I hope Australians with common sense catch fire along with the opposition. Australia’s soul is at stake.
Re: Brown shootings, MIT murder
________________________________
Sources: Active manhunt underway for person of interest in Brown, MIT professor shootings
Fingers crossed, huxley. Internet rumors suggest the suspect has committed suicide, but it’s best to wait and see.
Someone here may have been familiar with Tom van Dyke, the polymath from Los Angeles who was once an affiliate at League of Ordinary Gentlemen (the residue of which is Ordinary Times. New Reform Club, and American Creation. His co-bloggers have announced that he died last month at age 69. Cannot find a proper obituary.
That video was great! Wonderful! Thanks for sharing, neo!
Ruth @11:19am, it seems like they stuck close to the original tempo. I think you’re safe using this version.
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That’s beautiful, Neo! And dare I say it, better than the original by The Bee Gees? That’s probably Neo-heresy, but there it is.
Speaking of the President’s speech last night (if we weren’t, we soon shall be, I’m sure), it was mercifully short. And I worry quite a bit about stopping oil tankers leaving Venezuela, even if they are unflagged. I’d honestly prefer he just announce we would enforce the international embargo on the open seas, and not just offshore from Venezuela. The result should be the same without appearing to be an attack on that country.
So cool!
But will it still work for CPR??
The Jewish Chronicle, Mike Doran — “Tucker Carlson claims Israel is a burden on the US. It reveals profound strategic ignorance”
https://www.thejc.com/opinion/tucker-carlson-claims-israel-is-a-burden-on-the-us-it-reveals-profound-strategic-ignorance-xove2ryc
That headline should really read:
“Qatar (and friends) claims Israel is a strategic burden on the US….”
Well, if Qatar says so, then….
…which is what makes this convocation so, um, curious:
“Witkoff to Meet Qatari, Egyptian and Turkish Officials on Gaza in Miami”—
https://www.newsmax.com/politics/witkoff-qatar-egypt/2025/12/18/id/1238831/
Well, good luck with THAT…
At Fox News, Providence police say they have live rounds, that is, ones which were not fired, with DNA and fingerprints of the shooter. This gives me hope they will find him.
See also here:https://legalinsurrection.com/2025/12/authorities-recovered-evidence-dna-at-brown-shooting-scene/
Kate:
I recently read a article regarding a method that allows fingerprints on fired shell casings to be imaged (made visible and “read” ).
Prints and DNA, that would be good news indeed. They seem to need Chief Inspector Cleusou in Providence, to up their game.
As has already been said, RIP Norman Podhoretz.
https://archive.fo/4A6te
Barton Swaim in today’s WSJ
Mike, thanks for the Podhoretz link.
I’ll add another worthy effort that fills in a few of the gaps…though it could use some improved editing in spots…
‘Norman Podhoretz’s intellectual journey and the fate of American Jewry;
‘The “Commentary” editor’s career epitomized both the success of 20th- century Jews and an awakening to the peril posed by the moral collapse of political liberalism.’—
https://www.jns.org/norman-podhoretzs-intellectual-journey-and-the-fate-of-american-jewry/
“…find him.”
Or not.
Might one wonder if the university’s leadership is “merely” ramping up COMPLICITY with the Destroyers to the next level…and then—AGAIN—attempting to cover up their subversive agenda by declaring themselves DEFENDERS of human rights.
Yes, the old tried and true…
File under: Underground Railroad for the 21st century?
Kate:
If Chief Inspector Cleusou can’t help Providence there are other resources:
https://twitter.com/TheBabylonBee?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2001356627543314781%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Finstapundit.com%2F763411%2F
(Chief Wiggum, you have to scroll down)
Nice new profile pix!
And apparently, a “must read”, declared so by none other than Mark Judge.
“The Most Explosive Book of 2026”—
https://instapundit.com/763383/
Opening blurb:
Looks superb. (Wonder if the major booksellers will carry it….)
I know I knew it… But when I read it again today I was almost mute with rage… Jewish preschools in Sydney have armed guards at the gates. Jewish school children often take their kippahs off for the journey to/from so as not to be obviously Jewish… and yes walk past armed guards every day.
If the Australian Jewish community reenacted Esther this Purim, who’d blame them?
as ive mentioned before, an essay that norman podhoretz, wrote nearly 40 years,
‘lamentations’ proved powerfully prophetic, this was before the intifada that led to the oslo delusion, then 9-11 which touched off more than 20 years of war, which was handled poorly by the west, of the leading nations of the anglosphere, the US, UK Australia and Canada, only the first has held together in some way,
in a time, where the unofficial capital of the United States, the Big Apple, is seized by the worst filled with passionate intensity, as yeats put it, in the form of Zohran Mamdani, when London is similarly ruled by another sort in Sadik Khan, lets not speak of Mark Carney’s behavior, but Albanese, is of a piece, the lesson that Enoch Powell, the polyglot former intel officer, and Parliament member had in 1967, was not merely for the Angel Iste, ‘the Bell tolls for all of us,’ there seems to be a little consideration about who the akrams are,
but they are one pair of footsoldiers, the al hijra newcomers like the trio of ex afghan fighters that has bedeviled us,
he wrote of a time, when Israel would be under siege all over the world, and this would lead to it’s downfall, and the world would take little note, and more than a degree of approbation,
I can’t help to thinka a sense of heartache and that terror of having proven a proghet,
haunted his last days specially after october 7th, and the aftermath,
Re: Brown security cameras
Geez. Brown has public maps of campus including the locations of its security cameras.
https://x.com/PhilHollowayEsq/status/2001101794668064865
A commenter mentions that in the security biz that’s a cardinal sin. Yeah, it doesn’t sound like a good idea.
Elsewhere I’ve read that it’s possible Brown intentionally disabled its CCTV cameras in deference to hardline leftist grups:
________________________
The Brown University President and school officials have been giving ridiculous answers to questions about the 800 cameras on the campus and the fact that no current footage exists of the shooter walking around inside the campus or inside the buildings therein.
The question is really a simple one. Did Brown University follow the requests of the hardline leftist groups who asked the school to disable the functioning of their surveillance network in order to protect the identity of the students on campus?
Obviously, this potential explanation would answer a lot of seemingly irreconcilable questions about the lack of surveillance footage available to local law enforcement, state police and FBI investigators. The only current footage of the shooter is from privately owned doorbell cameras and CCTV systems from businesses near the campus. No footage of the shooter on campus has been identified.
https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2025/12/17/brown-university-received-a-letter-from-34-human-rights-groups-in-august-requesting-they-disable-their-cctv-system/
________________________
Something is rotten here.
The situation in Australia is indeed sickening, John Guilfoyle. Whom would they obliterate if they re-enacted Purim? People who cannot or will not see the threat of violence inherent in Islamism (and Islam) are committing slow societal suicide.
All around the world, countries which are not yet majority Muslim need to be doing surveillance on mosques, Islamic schools, and Islamic internet sites to crack down hard on the radicals.
Here’s a bit of sleuthing I did today starting from X/Twitter:
__________________________
Mustapha Kharbouch reflects on how the Brown encampment made him feel a strong connection to his Palestinian ancestry and envision a different, possible, world. “what would my ancestors think of this?” he writes. https://palestine-studies.org/en/node/1655973
–Institute for Palestine Studies (Aug 14, 2024)
https://x.com/PalStudies/status/1823783287737008215
__________________________
Not surprisingly, that link to the IPS now yields “Access Denied”. However, I found this article, again from CedarNews:
__________________________
Online investigators claim to have recovered a now-deleted document described as a “manifesto” allegedly linked to Mustapha Kharbouch, the Brown University student identified by authorities as a suspect in the campus shooting in Providence, Rhode Island.
According to screenshots and archived material circulating on social media, the document was previously published on a platform associated with the Institute for Palestine Studies, a U.S.-based academic organization focused on Middle Eastern research. The material has since been removed, and its authenticity and authorship have not been independently verified.
–“Update: Online Sleuths Circulate Alleged Manifesto Attributed to Mustapha Kharbouch”
https://cedarnews.net/newstasks/sleuths-circulate-alleged-manifesto-attributed-to-mustapha-kharbouch/894995/
__________________________
I downloaded the text images, ran them through OCR, then had Chat clean the text up, which I will paste into the next comment (because I like to keep my comments to a screenful).
The result sure sounds like it could be the Kharbouch article IPS has scrubbed.
Article possibly by Mustapha Kharbouch about his experience at a pro-Palestine encampment at Brown in 2024:
______________________________
“I Hear the Voice of My Ancestors Calling”:
From the Camps to the Campus
“I hear the voice of my calling,
the voice of my call,
singing: wake up, child,
wake up, wake up.
Singing: wake up, child,
wake up, wake up.
Listen, listen.”
Note: The lyrics above are from a song sung by hunger strikers at Brown University. Versions vary.
In the cold, early days of February 2024 in Providence, Rhode Island, I sat on the ground nestled among hundreds of my peers in a university campus center. Leaning on each other, we filled the small space between us with our bodies and hands, rocking back and forth in unison, striking ourselves to create loud percussion that accompanied our chants. Those standing tapped the ground. The whole room vibrated with music, emotion, and tactility.
We had just announced the end of an eight-day hunger strike by fellow brave student comrades, but there was something more in the air. As the genocide in Gaza continued to unfold, we held our grief in collective solidarity and yelled out—from the deepest parts of ourselves—for a glimmer of hope. From Turtle Island to Palestine, we called upon the strength of ancestral spirits to fuel the sumud (Arabic for steadfastness) of our resilient kin in Gaza.
With the bittersweet end of the hunger strike—as the third major action after two student sit-ins were met with arrest by the university—we left the campus center carrying the painful knowledge of our Palestinian kin’s inability to escape the forced Israeli blockade. This realization, though sobering, fueled our belief that this movement has only witnessed its beginning. We affirmed our commitment to continue on, unyielding, until Palestine attains its freedom.
As the tune of the ancestors’ song grew louder every time another person joined the crowd, an uneasy feeling fluttered in my chest: Is this hope?
In the weeks that followed, I struggled with what to feel and think about the idea of hope. I mulled over its applicability in a context of genocide, questioned its possibility, and wondered whether it holds any real power in animating transformation—on both an individual and collective level, for the movement and beyond. I talked with my parents, friends, and fellow organizers about it. I discussed it with peers in class and read works by scholars across geographies and time periods.
Being born and raised as a third-generation stateless Palestinian refugee in Lebanon, I came to realize early in life what hope—or the lack thereof—means for many of us. My existence, like that of many others, constitutes a loophole in the nation-state project and therefore threatens its sustainability and the regulated exclusions on which it is founded. Growing up like an ivy plant between the cracks of the systems that govern our world pushed me to see hope in any endeavor as a feeble excuse for accepting powerlessness.
Looking at my exhausted and overworked parents has always reminded me that hope has never been part of our familial lexicon. As one scholar eloquently puts it:
“Rather than enduring existential crises, Palestinians learn to deal with existence as a crisis.”
Despite this vexed relationship with hope, as the student movement grew on campus I felt forced to reckon with a new orientation toward it—and with the guilt it sometimes produced. How dare I feel hope sparked by a hunger strike on a safe U.S. campus while my people continue to be forcefully starved and slaughtered in the thousands?
My parents’ and grandparents’ consistent experiences of betrayal by their leaders and by a settler-colonial regime taught them better than to allow frivolous hope to take center stage. I believe the intergenerational cynicism I inherited taught me to reject hope to preserve my sanity and avoid disappointment while navigating survival when denied existence.
So how do I grapple with this intergenerational, existential hopelessness—passed on like a wretched inheritance—while tens of students from all walks of life, some of whom I had never met, put their academic lives, careers, and bodies at risk?
How do I reject hope when my student comrades—many of whom are not Palestinian—give their time, effort, and resources so generously to this collective cause?
How dare I not feel hope when they scream by the hundreds, demanding that the university divest its endowment from companies complicit in settler-colonial violence; when they dare to imagine a better, more caring, more just, and more equitable world that safeguards Palestinian life?
How do I reject hope when my peers practice sustainable world-building from within a campus movement whose implications stretch from the local to the global?
These thoughts, among others, continued to linger within me. The encampment, which began at the end of 2024, represents a formative moment in this trajectory of feeling and thinking about hope in a time of genocide. There, the theories we encountered in our Palestine and Comparative Ethnic Studies classroom converged with the material actions of over a hundred comrades who committed to and helped organize the movement.
After the accumulation of dispersed actions for Palestine on Brown’s campus this year—building on decades of student activism—the Brown student encampment became one site in a historic, national student rebellion.
______________________________
Note the mention of Turtle Island, supposedly a Native American term for North America, which is also the namesake for the Turtle Island Liberation Front, the group which has been busted for planning coordinated bombings on New Year’s Eve across Southern California, including in Los Angeles and Orange County.
It’s all coming together!
Kate
I don’t know any Australian Jews…As far as I know there are none observant in our regional rural community. But the Sydney folks shrieking into the TV cameras yesterday know exactly who their enemies are. They know who has defaced & burned down synagogues. They know who celebrated the October 7th massacre. They know who shot up Bondi Beach. They also know the Albanese government is not on their side…or at least by now they should. He was told pretty clearly to stay the hell out of the funerals.
I’m PM…I’ve got every Imam in Sydney in a big ballroom explaining that from now on “globalise the intifada & from the river etc…” are ground zero for visa revocation & expulsion proceedings. I’m pointing at them & saying in the next sitting term of Parliament I’ll reverse my call for a Pally state until I hear some contrition from among the Muslim community.
The current government is on thin ice…and Albo’s platitudes and wishy-washy “new” “tough” legislation is not being received with applause. A better Coalition leader than Susan Ley & he’d be in real strife. The guy to watch is no longer in government, but Josh Freydenburg is on fire!
I hope Australians with common sense catch fire along with the opposition. Australia’s soul is at stake.
Re: Brown shootings, MIT murder
________________________________
Sources: Active manhunt underway for person of interest in Brown, MIT professor shootings
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/sources-active-manhunt-underway-for-person-of-interest-in-brown-mit-professor-shootings/vi-AA1SCs7l
________________________________
Got that? There is one person of interest now connected both to the shootings at Brown and the murder at MIT.
Interesting.
Hmm…the FBI and State Police seem to have the current shooter suspect surrounded in Salem, New Hampshire.
They’ve got a warrant and everything.
–Fox News, “BREAKING: Officers surround building after finding Brown suspect’s abandoned car, report says”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBZWkD85PzI
Knock on wood.
Fingers crossed, huxley. Internet rumors suggest the suspect has committed suicide, but it’s best to wait and see.
Someone here may have been familiar with Tom van Dyke, the polymath from Los Angeles who was once an affiliate at League of Ordinary Gentlemen (the residue of which is Ordinary Times. New Reform Club, and American Creation. His co-bloggers have announced that he died last month at age 69. Cannot find a proper obituary.
That video was great! Wonderful! Thanks for sharing, neo!
Ruth @11:19am, it seems like they stuck close to the original tempo. I think you’re safe using this version.