blue mob vs facts

Matt Taibbi points out that the Assange arrest has nothing to do with the discredited Russians-hacked-the-US-election theories:

Not only [does the US's unsealed indictment of Assange] have nothing to do with Russiagate, but in one of the odder unreported details of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, he never interviewed or attempted to interview Assange. In fact, it appears none of the 2800 subpoenas, 500 witness interviews, and 500 search warrants in the Mueller probe targeted Assange or WikiLeaks.

According to WikiLeaks, no one from Mueller’s office ever attempted to get a statement from Assange, any WikiLeaks employee, or any of Assange’s lawyers (the Office of Special Counsel declined comment for this story). A Senate committee did [contact] Assange last year about the possibility of testifying, but never followed up.

But don't let reality interfere with the opinions of disappointed Clinton voters. As James Howard Kunstler puts it:

It was interesting to scan the Comments section of The Times’s stories about the Assange arrest: Times readers uniformly presented themselves as a lynch mob out for Mr. Assange’s blood. So much for the spirit of liberalism and The Old Gray Lady who had published The Pentagon Papers purloined by Daniel Ellsberg lo so many years ago. Reading between the lines in that once-venerable newspaper — by which I mean gleaning their slant on the news — one surmises that The Times has actually come out against freedom of the press, a curious attitude, but consistent with the neo-Jacobin zeitgeist in “blue” America these days.

Orch Gathering (video)

Vimeo, 1 min 16 sec

Screenshot:

orch_gathering

So far these little non-videos have been extremely unpopular, so I know I'm onto something.
The Eurorack array seen in earlier non-videos (top) has been pared down to modules actually in use (except for a Doepfer FX module, which just sits there).

And in case you missed them:

Rhythm Study No. 5
Rhythm Study No. 7
Rhythm Study No. 2
Rhythm Study No. 12
Paint Trail
New New Wilderness

far center (revised diagram)

Benjamin Studebaker has a post on "media bias charts" that cling to conventional notions of left/right and rate journalists according to that outdated scale. Studebaker proposes lumping everything that is considered acceptable left and right by these pundits into a single box -- liberal, meaning essentially establishment liberal (pro war, pro "markets") -- while creating new boxes for the anti-establishment left and right:

media-triad

In the process of coming up with the chart above, he formulated and discarded the chart below (minus the red ink):

media-triangle

This is actually a more helpful chart because it allows for a far center, which has been added in red.
The far center is who got it right on Russiagate (including voices from the right and left). New Right is used instead of Alt-Right because the latter is a Clinton term. Mostly the far center agrees that (i) the military/contractor sector is sucking the life out of the US and (ii) bank bailouts are a mistake. Where they disagree is on (A) government intervention in markets and infrastructure (left says we need more of it; right says less); (B) race/identity (the far center is more likely to be skeptical of shaming and language policing than the bulk of the anti-establishment left while at the same time scoffing at claims of white superiority); and (C) fiscal/monetary issues (e.g., whether printing money is OK to address social problems or whether it always, necessarily "leads to inflation").