Thursday, April 30, 2026

But You Do Believe, I Mean Really Believe

You needn't watch the embedded videos if you don't want. They're here to provide color and background, but the gist of these ravings will be just as irrational without them as with them.

The King of England came and gave a speech to Congress. Gavin Ashenden had thoughts. Gavin rightly pointed out that the King essentially said all faiths are the same. I argue that it was more than that, it's that the King thinks they're all also little more than personal taste preferences.

The speech, Gavin's typically excellent analysis and other recent events from across the pond makes me think of this scene from Live and Let Die. This scene is the source of the title of this post.

I discussed the matter with AI and we came to this summary.

Based on his own words, Charles III treats religion not as a set of binding, objective truth claims about reality, but as a collection of interchangeable, culturally interesting belief systems—something closer to personal or societal preferences than ultimate truth. By speaking as though “all faiths and none” can be equally affirmed and that dialogue can reconcile fundamentally incompatible worldviews, he effectively flattens serious theological differences into matters of taste, suggesting that faith lacks the same gravity, urgency, and truth-status as issues he speaks about more forcefully, like public policy or institutions.

Basil Weighs In

I then asked it to generate a scene where Basil, an orthodox Anglican determined to defend the faith even if he's the last one doing it, holds forth. I rather liked the results. Enjoy.

The night had settled over the river like a soft, humid cloak, thick with the scent of water and pine and something faintly sweet that drifted in from the marsh. The porch boards held the day’s heat, giving it back slowly, as though reluctant to surrender the sun entirely. Fireflies stitched erratic constellations over the dark water, blinking in and out like faulty lanterns in the hands of invisible ferrymen.

At the far end of the porch, Basset Hound General Beauregard lay on his side, snoring with the deep, rhythmic authority of a man who had fought a war, won it, and now felt no further obligation to remain conscious. Every so often one long ear twitched, as though even in sleep he were issuing minor corrections to the universe.

Closer to the railing, Cat sat upright, tail wrapped neatly around his paws, eyes fixed on the fireflies. He was not watching them for their beauty. He was watching them because things that moved like that—irregular, flickering, unpredictable—often distracted the smaller, dumber creatures of the night. And distracted creatures made mistakes. Cat believed deeply in mistakes.

Behind him, in the pool of lamplight, Bobby Lee Bond leaned back in his chair, boots crossed, one hand resting loosely on his stomach, the other holding a glass of amber liquid that caught the light just enough to glow. The drink—his “Cat Behaves”—smelled faintly of citrus and something sharper beneath it. A Perdomo Lot 23 smoldered between his fingers, sending up a slow, contemplative ribbon of smoke.

Across from him, Basil had achieved a posture that suggested both leisure and imminent attack. One leg crossed elegantly over the other, pipe angled just so, gin and tonic resting untouched at his elbow—he looked, at first glance, like a man content with the world.

He was not.

“—I say, Bobby,” Basil began, with the particular clipped intensity that meant a speech was not merely forthcoming but inevitable, “the difficulty is not that the fellow is insincere. Oh no. That would be almost a relief. One could deal with insincerity. One could call it out, expose it, have done with it. No, no—the trouble is that he appears to believe what he’s saying, and that is infinitely more alarming.”

Bobby took a slow draw from his cigar, eyes half-lidded, letting Basil gather steam. He had learned, over the years, that Basil required a certain runway.

Cat flicked an ear back, listening. This would be interesting. Basil in full cry was one of the more reliable entertainments of the civilized world.

“You see,” Basil continued, tapping the bowl of his pipe lightly against the armrest for emphasis, “a man in his position—Defender of the Faith, no less—cannot, simply cannot, speak of faith as though it were a matter of seasonal preference. ‘This year, we are terribly keen on mutual understanding, old boy. Next year, perhaps a dash of transcendence, if it’s not too frightfully inconvenient.’”

He took a sharp breath, then pressed on.

“I mean to say, one imagines what my great-great-grandfather Fitzallen would have made of it. The man was shot through the lung at Inkerman and still managed, while bleeding rather alarmingly into his tunic, to inform a rather startled Russian officer that Anglican doctrine was not, in fact, a matter for polite negotiation.”

Bobby smiled faintly.

“I’m sure that clarified things for the Russian,” he said.

“It clarified everything,” Basil snapped. “That is precisely the point. Clarity! The man knew what he believed, knew it to be true, and behaved accordingly. None of this—this—this ghastly business of suggesting that all roads lead to the same destination so long as we hold hands and speak in soothing tones.”

Cat’s tail gave a small, approving twitch. He did not much care for roads, destinations, or hand-holding, but he approved of clarity. Clarity meant fewer surprises. Fewer surprises meant fewer interruptions to his plans.

Basil leaned forward now, warming to his theme.

“And then there was Fitzallen the Elder—1789, Paris, most unfortunate business—who was asked, quite directly, whether he thought the Church might accommodate itself to the new spirit of the age. Do you know what he said?”

“I suspect you’re about to tell me,” Bobby murmured.

“He said, ‘Sir, the Church accommodates itself to nothing. It is the world that must accommodate itself to the Church, or perish attempting the alternative.’ And then, I might add, he had the good sense to leave the country before anyone could object too strenuously.”

Bobby took another sip of his drink, letting the citrus bite settle.

“You’re describing a world,” he said quietly, “where there was less… room.”

“Room?” Basil repeated, as though the word itself were faintly obscene. “My dear fellow, we are not discussing upholstery. We are discussing truth. Truth does not require room. It requires recognition.”

He gestured broadly with his pipe, nearly losing a small shower of ash onto the porch.

“When a man stands before a nation—before your nation, I might add—and speaks as though the profound differences between belief systems can be resolved by ‘dialogue,’ he is not merely being polite. He is suggesting that the differences themselves are somehow secondary. That they are, what—misunderstandings? Linguistic accidents? Slight variations in taste?”

Cat turned his head slightly, eyes narrowing. Basil was circling something now, something sharper.

“And they are not,” Basil pressed on. “They are claims about the nature of reality itself. About God. About man. About sin and redemption and the entire blasted structure of existence. These are not trifles to be sorted out over tea.”

Beauregard snorted loudly in his sleep, then settled again, as though registering a mild objection from the depths of unconsciousness.

Bobby let the silence stretch for a moment.

“Let me ask you something, Basil,” he said finally. “Do you think he believes any of it?”

Basil paused. Just for a moment.

“That,” he said more slowly, “is the most unsettling possibility of all. That he believes in something—but not in the way that requires him to risk anything for it.”

Cat’s ears tilted forward. Now that was interesting.

Basil leaned back again, but the intensity did not leave him.

“You see, Bobby, a man who truly believes—truly believes that he has grasped something about the ultimate structure of reality—cannot treat it as one option among many. He may be courteous, he may be restrained, he may even choose his words carefully—but he cannot, in the end, pretend that contradictions are merely… decorative.”

Bobby nodded slightly, the glow of his cigar lighting his face for a moment.

“That’s about right,” he said.

They sat in silence for a while after that.

The river moved, slow and dark. The fireflies continued their erratic dance. Somewhere in the brush, something small made a mistake.

Cat’s eyes sharpened.

Basil, having exhausted his immediate supply of Fitzallens, took up his gin and tonic at last and drank deeply, as though fortifying himself for the next round.

Bobby leaned back, smoke drifting upward, and said nothing.

On the far end of the porch, Beauregard snored on, entirely untroubled by questions of truth, monarchy, or the fate of Western civilization.

Cat rose silently, slipped into the darkness, and went to see about the mistake.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Targeting Trump And Making Money

Last night, at the White House Correspondents Dinner, another lefty tried to assassinate Trump. Here's a good summary of the threat.

Everyone is overlooking the most chilling detail regarding last night’s third assassination attempt on POTUS.

The shooter at the DC correspondents diner was identified as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, from California. part-time teacher/tutor. Teacher of the Month in December 2024 at C2 Education. BS Mechanical Engineer, Master in Computer Science, video game developer. Donated to Kamala in 2024.

This dude has a background (so far) as normal as it gets...

He was just some ordinary schlub who traveled across the country to attack POTUS. No surveillance system in the world, with the possible exception of the KGB under Stalin, could have detected and prevented the attack.

When it was recently revealed that the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) had been funding hate groups like the KKK and Nazis, the SPLC came up with the cockamamie excuse that they were funding "informants" within these organizations to detect possible threats against their employees. That was obvious nonsense.

With a pool of possible assailants of 360,000,000 or so people, there is no surveillance scheme in the world, save again for Stalin's, that could protect you from every possible threat. That's why wealthy and vulnerable people hire bodyguards and pay for protection systems. Keeping yourself safe is a solvable problem because you always know where you are and where you are going. Trying to detect every possible random attack vector before they strike is idiotic.

There isn't anywhere near enough white supremacy in America to justify the rivers of cash pouring into the SPLC so the SPLC went out and funded the hate it was trying to fight, generating incidents it could then use in its marketing campaigns.

Even with all the security afforded a president, this guy broke through. If it were you trying to keep him safe, what would you do, review the security policies surrounding Trump or focus on nationwide surveillance campaigns sufficient to stop any threat?

Monday, April 20, 2026

The MGB Is Gone, But Not Forgotten

In our yard, we have low voltage lighting. Three of the lights don't work any more after only 2-3 years. I dug up the first one and found that it was tied in to the main power line with a cheap dagger connector. It's the kind that clamps on to the power cable and puts a narrow, conductive dagger through the insulation to make the connection. Water, such as it is here in the SoCal desert of San Diego, had rusted that conductive dagger to the point of dissolving.

Enter my experience rewiring the MGB. I pulled out my crimp connectors and heat-shrink tubing and voila! or should I say, "there you go!*" and the lights were working again.

My heat shrink tubing was too narrow for the multi-wire end of the connectors so in one place it required some electrical tape, but at the point, I was over the whole affair and unwilling to clip, strip and rewire everything.

Suffice it to say, my MGB wiring version will outlive all of those wretched, CCP dagger connector pieces of junk.

Bloody commies.

* - This is the British version of voila!

Sunday, April 19, 2026

They're Just Looting The State

Two more data points describing the looting of California.



Eventually, California's bill will come due, probably sooner rather than later. That Alabama property is looking better and better all the time.



Saturday, April 18, 2026

Buying Real Estate With AI

We're going to put an offer in on an excellent Alabama river house in the next day or two. It's way cool. I posted the view from the dock a while back. Here's a view of the excellent kitchen, complete with a gas stove. Yay!

The house is lovely, but overpriced. Our realtor, at the request of my real estate expert wife, sent us the comps for the area. The average time on market is about 70 days. This one has been on the market for over 200 days. Clearly, the market is signaling the price is wrong.

Yesterday, we had a phone conversation with our Alabama realtor about what and how we wanted to offer for the property. I've bought and sold houses as well as built and remodeled houses, but I know when I'm totally outclassed. I didn't intend on doing much more than listening to the two experts discuss the place. Still, I wanted some amount of analysis prior to the conversation.

I handed the comps PDF document to AI* and asked it to analyze the situation. It did a reasonably thorough job and pointed out some things I'd missed. At the conclusion of our phone call with the realtor, the girls decided on a price to offer for the house. It was within a percent or two of AI's recommendation and for the exact same reasons AI had given me.

Not bad.

* - For AI, read ChatGPT.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

If The Purpose Of A System Is What It Does

 ... then the contrapositive must be true as well:

"The purpose of a system cannot be what it doesn't do."

Roads

Keeping with the recent theme of what San Diego systems in particular and California systems in general are designed to do, let's look at a few more examples. Below is a map of an area I have traveled hundreds of times.

The Friars Road / Sea World Drive intersection has been closed for about 6 years. There has been some kind of construction allegedly taking place on the section of Friars underneath the I-5 freeway.

6 years.

San Diego is wealthy. California is wealthy. The weather here is utterly perfect for construction projects.

6 years.

It would be hard to make the case that the primary purpose of the City of San Diego is to maintain its roads. That cannot be true because the roads are not promptly and properly maintained despite mountains of money being spent. 

Similarly, there is "road construction" going on in many places in San Diego where I drive. The orange cones are up, lanes are blocked, cement barricades are in place, but there is no work being done. No workers, no vehicles, no staging of materials, nothing. If any is present, it is minimal.

Education

California spends about $25,000 per student, an amount that is 30% higher than it was in 2020. We place near the top in terms of spending. Only 29% of our 4th graders are proficient at reading. We place near the bottom in that category.

Whatever its purpose might be, educating our children is not the primary purpose of the California Department of Education.

Looting

One could make a reasonable argument that the purpose of the state and city governments in California is to loot the citizens.

This is no longer surprising to me:

Monday, April 13, 2026

Why Do You Rob States?

When asked why he robbed banks, Willie Sutton replied, “Because that's where the money is.”

States have a lot more money than banks.

This is a partial reply to Tim's comment on a recent post where he pointed out that even 200,000 Chinese anchor babies becoming eligible to vote wouldn't be that big of a deal. I might have thought that as little as 3 months ago. Something completely changed my mind. The California High Speed Choo Choo, as Deano calls it, flipped me.

Authorized in 2008, it was supposed to connect Los Angeles and San Francisco. Anyone familiar with California permitting and zoning red tape knew instantly that it was going to be insanely expensive and take forever. AI says that as of April 2026, the estimated cost for the full Phase 1 California High-Speed Rail project (San Francisco to Los Angeles/Anaheim) has reached approximately $126 billion to $135 billion and I have no reason to doubt it. 

Not a single mile of track has been laid so far.

This sad, little bridge in Central California is just about the only solid evidence the high speed choo choo project even exists.

Someone on X made a snarky comment that completely changed my thinking about not just the high speed choo choo, but the graft and corruption uncovered in Minneapolis, California and elsewhere as well as the voter fraud. In short, the post asserted that there was never any intention of building the railroad at all. It was all graft from the start.

It immediately rang true. When it was announced in 2008, I thought there was no way it was ever going to happen. I'd gone through the permitting processes on relatively straightforward remodels and construction and they were beyond onerous. This one, cutting across any number of habitats of strange and unusual creatures, seemed doomed from the start.

It was Willie Sutton on an utterly cosmic scale. The entire project was intentional theft. Everyone involved in it, save for the Global Warming Climate Change fanatics, knew it would never be built.

New hypothesis: The Democratic Party is mostly AWFLs with a pack of ruthless and intelligent parasites riding on top, directing it. 

The AWFLs thought they were stopping the death of polar bears while the parasites were sticking needles into the biggest financial veins they could think to find.

Michael Schellenberger, ex-progressive, wrote the staggering San Fransicko: Why Progressives Ruin Cities. It detailed the results of his inside-the-system research into how SanFran managed to spend stunning amounts on the homeless without having any effect other than increasing the size and severity of the problem. What he discovered was a huge industry that made money off of suffering.

Some of the NGOs he detailed would get money from the government at the beginning of the year and then do nothing but lobby and budget for next year's money. That was it. That was all they did. Get money and then get next year's money.

Our youngest son and I went to a Padres game recently. The stadium is near one of our zombieland areas. We had to drive through it to get to the game. Every zombie we saw had a price tag of about $80,000 per year. The money wasn't going to the zombies, it was going to government agencies and NGOs that would kick some of that money back to Democrat campaigns.

Dig this.

The Somali fraud schemes in Minneapolis were of a piece. Dittos for the Los Angeles hospice scam recently uncovered by people doing the most basic of due diligence.

In answer to Tim's comment, I'll just stop with this:

Why was the border wide open for 4 years? Why don't we have national voter ID? Why are we all alone in the world in having birthright citizenship?

Add it all up. It's Willie Sutton at as large a scale as can be managed. It's not that 200K Chinese will change a national election, although if they are properly placed, they certainly could. It's that birthright citizenship is just one more tool in the graft toolbox.