Professor of Wellbeing Economics Paul Frijters and journalist Matthew Ehret join host Ross Ashcroft to discuss America's need for a new enemy and Cold War 2.0.
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[Ehret's interview begins at 13:30]
"The agency that oversees Texas' electric grid declared an 'energy emergency alert three' early Monday after the grid experienced a systemwide failure," the Weather Channel reported.
The alert turned into rotating outages that are likely to continue through Tuesday morning, according to grid managers.
About 2.5 million people were without power as of 9:00 a.m., the outlet tweeted:
Comment: RT follows up:
"Extreme weather conditions caused many generating units - across fuel types - to trip offline and become unavailable," the company said in a statement, urging energy conservation as the power grid has become more and more strained. Energy use has been at record levels in the state as they, as well as the central US, are facing unusually cold weather.
These rolling blackouts reportedly last anywhere from 10 minutes to an hour.
More than two million homes were reported to be without power in the state on Monday morning, according to poweroutage.us.
The last time rolling outages were implemented in Texas was during a massive storm in February 2011.
Video out of Texas has shown the state blanketed with snow and some roadways dangerously covered in ice. For the first time ever, every county in the state was under a winter storm warning going into Sunday evening.
Road conditions have left many roads impassable and led to numerous crashes, especially on highways. Unlike states that are used to colder weather and heavy snowfall, Texas is facing an unusual emergency as much of the state does not have the resources to handle extreme winter conditions, leaving roads slick and icy, and many homes not insulated enough.
Footage of multiple highway crashes have hit social media with interstate roads either covered in snow or ice. Residents are being urged by local officials to stay home and not travel.
More than 140 million Americans in 26 states were under some sort of winter advisory heading into Monday as a major winter storm swept through the southern Plains.
The storm, which has already caused power outages and a number of pileups on icy roads, was expected to travel up the Northeast through Tuesday, bringing heavy snow, ice and freezing temperatures, the National Weather Service said. Six inches to a foot of snow was forecast to stretch from the mid-Mississippi to Ohio Valleys, across the lower Great Lakes and into northern New England, according to the service.
It also warned about more power outages and significant travel disruptions across much of the southern Plains, as well as "bitterly cold air" that can result in "dangerous or life-threatening wind chills."

A person takes part in a demonstration against the so-called Global Security Bill, in Paris, France.
"The Russian liberal is a thoughtless fly buzzing in the ray of the sun; that sun is the sun of the West." So said the nineteenth century Russian philosopher Pyotr Chaadayev. If the basic position of the Russian conservative is that Russia is different from the West and should follow its own distinct path of development, that of the Russian liberal is that the same rules of historical development apply to all nations, and that more backward countries, such as Russia, in their view, are therefore bound to follow the same path as more advanced ones - i.e. the West.
Comment: Somebody should inform Facebook, which is actively banning anyone who doubts it didn't come from bats...
All hypotheses are still open in the World Health Organisation's search for the origins of COVID-19, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has told a briefing.
A WHO-led mission in China said this week that it was not looking further into the question of whether the virus escaped from a lab, which it considered highly unlikely.
The United States government has said it will review the mission's findings.
Comment: The WHO is probably unwilling to completely discard the 'lab-escape' hypothesis as it allows them to exert pressure on certain actors as a threat against possible 'findings' in the future. But they're still unlikely to actually take the possibility seriously.
See also:
- WHO inspector reveals on camera coronavirus was being manipulated in lab before outbreak and that vaccines will not work
- Man-made: COVID-19 virus has properties that have never been found in nature before
- Research paper finds HIV like insertions in 2019-nCoV not found in any other coronavirus, "unlikely to be fortuitous in nature"
- Lab-made coronavirus triggers debate
- Multiple scientists: Coronavirus was altered in a lab to better attach to humans
- Norwegian scientist claims coronavirus was lab-made and 'not natural in origin'
Donald Trump gives two thumbs up to the crowd during a campaign rally in Cleveland, Ohio, November 5, 2018.
All Democrats and 7 Republicans voted guilty on Saturday, including Richard Burr of North Carolina, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Ben Sasse of Nebraska, and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.
House managers and Trump's defense team had agreed Saturday to move to closing arguments for up to 4 hours in the Senate impeachment trial of the former president.
Comment: Surprisingly, McConnell said ahead of time he'd vote to acquit. From The Hill:
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Saturday that he will vote to acquit former President Trump, ending weeks of speculation about what he would do.And Lindsey Graham says he'll meet with Trump to discuss the future of the GOP. Also from The Hill:
McConnell's decision, confirmed to The Hill by a GOP senator, comes hours before the Senate is expected to take a final vote on whether to convict Trump of "high crimes and misdemeanors" over an article accusing him of inciting insurrection during the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
McConnell has criticized Trump's role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, including saying the former president "provoked" the mob. He disclosed to reporters last month that he hadn't spoken to Trump, with whom he aligned himself closely for years, since Dec. 15.
But he also kept his caucus guessing on how he would ultimately vote, saying that he wanted to listen to the arguments from both House impeachment managers and Trump's legal team.
"Based on his comments over the past two months, I really had no idea what he was going to do," said Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), a member of GOP leadership.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said on Friday that he'll meet with former President Donald Trump to talk about the future of the Republican party and his role in it.Meanwhile the New York Times runs its own mock impeachment trial and finds Trump guilty (shocking!). From RT:
"I'm going to try and convince him that we can't get there without you, but you can't keep the Trump movement going without the GOP united," Graham said, according to Politico.
"If we come back in 2022, then, it's an affirmation of your policies. But if we lose again in 2022, the narrative is going to continue that not only you lost the White House, but the Republican Party is in a bad spot."
Although the Republicans lost the Senate and White House during the 2020 elections, they gained seats in the House. Trump also received the second most votes in a presidential election in U.S. history, even while he trailed Biden significantly in the popular vote and the Electoral College.
Since then, however, Trump's actions contesting the election, culminating in the ugly and deadly mob attack on the Capitol that led to his second impeachment, has raised new questions in GOP circles about moving on from the former president.
At the same time, Trump retains a high level of support in the GOP grassroots.
RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel has talked before about Trump's future in the party saying that the party will keep a neutral stance on the former president as he has caused strife in the party.
"Trump's got to work with everybody," Graham said. "You got to put your best team on the field. If it's about revenge and going after people you don't like, we're going to have a problem. If this is about putting your best team on the field, we've got a decent chance at coming back."
In a decision that will shock few and surprise fewer, the New York Times editorial board has declared Donald Trump guilty. No matter the charges or evidence, the Times has been making this case for four years.Trump's attorney Michael Van der Veen has since been 'interviewed' by MSM, at which point he tore them a new one:
"If you fail to hold him accountable, it can happen again," the Times' editorial board wrote on Friday, in a plea to Republican senators to convict the former president.
"To excuse Mr. Trump's attack on American democracy would invite more such attempts, by him and by other aspiring autocrats," they declared. "The stakes could not be higher. A vote for impunity is an act of complicity."
That the New York Times would call for Trump's conviction is unsurprising. This is the same editorial board that described Trump's re-election campaign as "the greatest threat to American democracy since World War II," demanded lawmakers impeach the president back in 2019, then "Impeach Trump Again" after his supporters rioted at the US Capitol last month, and called for the overhaul of the entire political system to prevent someone like Trump ever coming to power again. In fact, the only decision of Trump's the board praised was his use of missile strikes against Syria in 2018, which it called "reassuring."

Governor Andrew Cuomo dismissed the matter of where nursing home fatalities actually took place.
The stunning admission of a cover-up was made by Secretary to the Governor Melissa DeRosa during a video conference call with state Democratic leaders in which she said the Cuomo administration had rebuffed a legislative request for the tally in August because "right around the same time, [then-President Donald Trump] turns this into a giant political football," according to an audio recording of the two-hour-plus meeting.
"He starts tweeting that we killed everyone in nursing homes," DeRosa said. "He starts going after [New Jersey Gov. Phil] Murphy, starts going after [California Gov. Gavin] Newsom, starts going after [Michigan Gov.] Gretchen Whitmer."
Comment: Maybe because that would've been the right thing to do. The cover-up tends to support that notion.
In addition to attacking Cuomo's fellow Democratic governors, DeRosa said, Trump "directs the Department of Justice to do an investigation into us."
"And basically, we froze," she told the lawmakers on the call.
"Because then we were in a position where we weren't sure if what we were going to give to the Department of Justice, or what we give to you guys, what we start saying, was going to be used against us while we weren't sure if there was going to be an investigation."
DeRosa added: "That played a very large role into this."
Comment: The tweets are vicious, and deservedly so.
It's funny how change happens. You thought the big change came on Election Day, when the incumbent president lost, but that turned out to be nothing compared to the change that came two months later.
On Jan. 6, supporters of Donald Trump swarmed the Capitol building. Some forced their way inside, and Washington has never been the same. It may never be the same. As a result of what happened on Jan. 6, your descendants will live in a very different country. Some in Congress have compared that day to 9/11. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has likened it to Pearl Harbor, which spurred America's entry into the Second World War.
Every day we hear new and more florid comparisons from Democratic partisans. But Tuesay night, CNN outdid all of them by comparing what happened Jan. 6 to the Rwandan genocide.
Comment: We have been watching a deceptive narrative and massive political power grab unfold in real time. And though harrowing to witness for all of its implications pointing to how pathological interests operate, it is nonetheless a fascinating chapter in US history - and even world history - that may be noted for its significance concerning the destruction of a whole nation of people.
See also:
- Acting D.C. Chief blows cover off Congress' blaming capitol police in brutal letter
- Growing evidence Capitol attack was pre-planned undercuts Trump impeachment premise
- Man charged in US Capitol riot worked for FBI, has held top-secret security clearance since 1979: lawyer
- Capitol Police chief forced to resign drops damning letter to Pelosi revealing what really happened ahead of Capitol riots
- Investigators struggle to build murder case in death of US Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick
- Capitol Police report warned Congress could be targeted three days before riot
- Giuliani Presents Evidence - From Their Own Words - That Antifa & BLM Rioters Were at 'Insurrection' on Capitol Hill
- Murder on Capitol Hill: Analysis of Ashli Babbit Shooting Video Disturbingly Suggests Coordinated Action
- Outgoing Capitol Police chief: House, Senate security officials hamstrung efforts to call in National Guard
- "Incitement" timeline debunked as ex-Capitol police Chief says Pelosi & McConnell's Sergeants-at-Arms refused security measures
Everyone needs to stay safe from these invisible but murderously mighty microbes by shunning contact with the unwashed, unmasked and unvaccinated. But is that drastic approach — which is accompanied by severe curtailment of civil liberties and constitutional rights — warranted?
It turns out that the case for the variants' contagiousness and dangerousness centres largely on the theoretical effects of just one change said to stem from a mutation in the virus's genes. And, as I'll show in this article, that case is very shaky. I also have an accompanying nine-minute 'explainer' video.
That one change is known as N501Y — scientific shorthand for the substitution of one protein building block (amino acid) for another at position 501 in the part of the virus called the spike protein. Specifically, position 501 lies in the portion of the spike protein that's responsible for the intimate coupling between the virus and cells that lets the virus slip inside and multiply.
[Note that any such amino-acid switcheroo is correctly called a change, not a mutation. Mutations occur only in genes. For some reason many scientists and scribes who ought to know better are mistakenly calling N501Y and other amino-acid changes 'mutations.' ]
Comment: By firing her, they have of course just proved her point, on every level: they hate her for her political views, are persecuting her accordingly, are today's fascists, and their behavior will likely worsen on a similar trajectory to the Nazis'.
A statement by Lucasfilm was obtained by io9, reading: "Gina Carano is not currently employed by Lucasfilm and there are no plans for her to be in the future. Nevertheless, her social media posts denigrating people based on their cultural and religious identities are abhorrent and unacceptable."
Comment: That's utter BS, as we'll see from her actual post below.
Carano's post about Nazi Germany caused the hashtag #FireGinaCarano to trend widely on Twitter. She later deleted the post, but screenshots of it continued to be shared online. The actress' controversies go back months, however, to before the premiere of The Mandalorian's second season, in which she featured prominently.
Comment: If Carano had suggested that anyone pro-Trump, pro-freedom of speech and anti-lockdown was behaving like Nazis, she'd have been promoted. Instead, the media is flat-out lying to everyone's face, telling them her post was anti-Semitic!!!
Here is the 'offending' post:
As you can see, a correct reading of her brief comment - which is only the first two lines - is that, far from "denigrating," Carano was in fact underscoring the extent to which Jews were abused under the Nazi regime, and hinting at how it happened. She then quoted something which fleshed out her point.
The Woke Left apparently found this offensive because they inferred from her comment that she was placing them in the role of the Nazis today. Carano herself never actually made this comparison, but the Woke Left is highly sensitive to the truth being exposed: the racialist and genocidal motives they project onto others... actually emanate from them.
They are so exquisitely tuned to 'detecting and deleting WrongThink' that the reason Carano first came on their radar back in the summer of 2020 was because - like sentinels for The Borg - they had noticed that the actress had not been actively voicing support for the BLM
Carano's response to all this?
Priceless:
And this from the day before she was fired for WrongThink:












Comment: See also: MindMatters: Picking Matthew Ehret's Brain: How Darwinism Took Over the World, and Why Ertugrul Is Awesome