Friday, 24 April 2026

 


Austin Russell: China’s Newest Useful Idiot? The Billionaire Who Bought Forbes with Foreign Pocket Change

So, Austin Russell, the self-proclaimed wunderkind behind Luminar Technologies, a company that makes lasers for cars that don’t drive themselves properly, just became the proud owner of Forbes. Yes, Forbes — the magazine most famous for putting every attention-seeking billionaire on a “rich list” like it’s an achievement, not a global indictment.

The Setup: Nothing to See Here, Just Foreign Money

Let’s be clear — Austin didn’t buy Forbes out of his own piggy bank alone. No, the $800 million deal came laced with foreign funding.

  • His partners? The Sun Group (India-based) — whose Vice Chairman had former ties to Russian government advisory roles, which in spy-speak is code for “drinks vodka with spies.”
  • Also onboard: GSV Ventures, a Silicon Valley fund — because no shady deal is complete without the blessing of people who invest in ed-tech scams.
  • The previous owner? Integrated Whale Media, a Hong Kong-based group with long-standing Chinese links, who held the keys to Forbes for nearly a decade.

So, we’ve gone from Beijing to Bangalore to Austin, who swears he’s just passionate about “media integrity.” Yes, because nothing says journalistic integrity like needing foreign money to buy the most American business magazine in history.

The CFIUS Problem

The deal is now under scrutiny from CFIUS — the U.S. government’s official “Are-you-sure-this-isn’t-a-hostile-takeover?” committee. Their main concern? That foreign governments could influence U.S. media narratives — you know, like when Forbes mysteriously got much softer on China while under Integrated Whale’s ownership. What a coincidence.


Russell claims this is all just “entrepreneurial ambition”, but you have to wonder:

  • Is it ambition, or is it being the world’s richest useful idiot?
  • Or worse, is it just business as usual in a country where billionaires can buy institutions like they’re picking up groceries?

Austin’s Defense

Russell insists he’s running the show solo.

  • $10 million came from his own pocket.
  • The other $790 million? Ah yes, foreign consortiums. Because every red-blooded American billionaire looks for investment from companies with Russian political ties when buying a U.S. media outlet.

Let’s Not Forget

Russell is a 29-year-old lidar nerd, not exactly the guy you expect to understand geopolitical power plays. But that’s what makes it so believable — because the best agents aren’t moustache-twirling villains. They’re young, well-meaning Silicon Valley types who accidentally give China and Russia soft influence because, hey, the terms sheet looked good.

And the Content?

Under Chinese-linked ownership, Forbes had already started softening on China. Articles critical of Chinese business practices became rare. Could this new ownership simply continue the trend?

After all, if you can’t beat America militarily, you may as well make sure their business press sounds like the “Visit Beijing” tourism board.

The Punchline

Is Austin Russell a Chinese agent? Probably not — but he’s ticking every box for the audition.

  • Young? ✔
  • Naïve? ✔
  • Willing to take money from anyone offering it? ✔
  • About to control an influential media platform with foreign-funded backing? ✔✔✔

As they say, if it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and buys Forbes with foreign money — maybe it’s time to check if the duck speaks Mandarin

  FOX NEWS NEW PANIC What Kind of Husband Goes Grocery Shopping with his Wife?



It has lately been brought to my attention, through the ever-vigilant sages of Fox News, that a most alarming degeneracy has taken root in our civilization: the modern man, once a titan of industry and remote controls, has begun… accompanying his wife to the supermarket.

I shall not soften the horror.

There he stands, in the produce aisle—examining avocados, comparing prices, even (God preserve us) holding the basket. What was once a fortress of masculine detachment has become a marketplace of shared decision-making. One trembles to imagine what comes next: recipe discussions? Coupon awareness? Eye contact over pasta sauce brands?

The commentators, in their wisdom, have hinted at two equally dreadful possibilities. Either the man has become a tyrant, hovering over his wife’s sacred domain of grocery selection, micromanaging the ripeness of bananas with despotic zeal—or worse, far worse, he has surrendered entirely, reduced to a docile cart-pusher under the gentle but firm dominion of a list.

In either case, civilization totters.

Therefore, I humbly propose a solution equal in proportion to the crisis. Let us establish designated Masculinity Preservation Zones—areas within supermarkets where men may stand idle, staring into the middle distance, occasionally grunting, while their wives shop in peace. Alternatively, for those already too far gone, we might introduce rehabilitation programs: brief seminars reminding them that knowing the price of milk is the first step toward societal collapse.

For if this trend continues—if men persist in participating in the mundane logistics of their own households—we risk a total breakdown of the delicate fiction that adulthood requires rigid theatrical roles rather than simple cooperation.

And once that illusion is gone, who can say what horrors await? Shared responsibilities? Functional partnerships? Mutual respect?

One shudders.


 

 

 

 

re
2026,Social Media, Satire

 

https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/04/fox-news-new-panic-what-kind-of-husband.html

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

  ​FIFA BLOWS TORONTO FOR CHEAP TRICKS

by Doc Scholx


There is something almost theatrical in its contradiction about the way the 2026 FIFA World Cup is being prepared for Toronto.

On paper, it is simple enough: the world’s biggest football tournament arrives in Canada, shared across three nations, promising accessibility, global unity, and civic pride. In practice, it increasingly resembles something rather different — a carefully tiered system of access in which the experience of “being there” depends less on passion for the game than on one’s willingness to absorb what can only be described as escalating financial astonishment.

Let us begin with the official structure, because it is here that the story starts to fracture.

When FIFA first opened ticket sales, it introduced a tiered pricing system that already placed the event far outside the reach of the casual supporter. Category 4 tickets — the supposed entry point — were priced at roughly $1,300 CAD. Category 3, 2, and 1 climbed steadily from there, with most mid-tier seats falling somewhere between $1,500 and $2,500 CAD, while premium Category 1 seats reached approximately $3,000 CAD.

Even at this stage, the language of “global accessibility” began to feel slightly strained.

But the structure did not stop there.

FIFA later introduced a new classification — almost as an afterthought, though with rather significant consequences — called “Front Category 1.” These were positioned as the best seats in the stadium: front-row, prime sightlines, the kind of vantage point one would assume had already been included in the highest tier. They were not. Instead, they were priced at at least double Category 1, meaning $6,000 CAD and upward for a single match.

At this point, one begins to suspect that “category” is no longer a description of seating, but of social permission.

Then comes the matter of allocation. Fans were not always buying specific seats, but rather zones within stadiums — broad regions in which their eventual position would be determined later. In theory, this is efficient. In practice, it produces a peculiar kind of post-purchase anxiety: paying premium prices only to discover that one’s “Category 1” experience might involve corners, obstructions, or placements far removed from the imagined prestige of the purchase.

And then, almost inevitably, came revision.

After initial sales, FIFA began releasing additional “last-minute” ticket batches across all 104 matches, including fixtures that had previously been described as nearing capacity. This included high-profile games and so-called “flagship” matches, undermining the earlier sense that availability was genuinely scarce.

This is where the language becomes interesting. “Last-minute release” sounds like responsiveness. “Additional inventory” sounds like logistics. But to many fans, it felt like something closer to retroactive supply adjustment — an attempt to reconcile pricing ambition with actual demand.

The reaction, predictably, was not enthusiasm.

Supporters who had already purchased tickets in earlier rounds expressed frustration at what they saw as shifting rules. Some had paid top-tier prices under the assumption of scarcity, only to see new waves of tickets appear later. Others pointed out that if seats were still being released at scale, earlier pricing may have been calibrated more toward projection than reality.

The criticism was sharpened further by FIFA’s adoption of dynamic pricing, a system in which costs fluctuate based on demand. In principle, this mirrors airlines or concerts. In practice, it introduces volatility into what many still consider a civic or cultural event. Prices rise, shift, and segment in ways that make the final cost of attendance less predictable than ever.

The resale market completes the picture.

Tickets that originally cost $1,300 CAD in Category 4 have appeared on secondary platforms for significantly more. Mid-tier tickets in the $1,600–$2,000 CAD range have become common starting points for resale listings. Category 1 seats, originally around $3,000 CAD, have reportedly been listed for as much as $62,000 CAD in extreme cases.

At this point, we are no longer discussing pricing. We are discussing altitude.

All of this sits beneath the administrative umbrella of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, who has overseen an expanded tournament structure featuring 48 teams and three host nations. The intention, at least rhetorically, is inclusion: more nations, more matches, more access. Yet the lived experience of ticket acquisition suggests a different reality — one in which expansion has been accompanied not by democratization, but by segmentation.

And so we return to Toronto.

What does it mean to host a “global game” in a city where ordinary fans increasingly find themselves priced out at the point of entry? What does it mean to speak of civic pride when attendance is stratified into financial tiers that escalate from the expensive to the prohibitive?

There is, of course, a technical defense available. Markets respond to demand. Premium experiences cost premium money. Not every seat can be cheap. All of this is true in a narrow sense, and irrelevant in a larger one.

Because the underlying question is not whether tickets cost money. It is whether the structure of pricing still bears any meaningful relationship to the idea of a shared public event.

If football is becoming a hierarchy of access codes, dynamic pricing curves, and post hoc ticket releases, then what is being staged is no longer simply a tournament. It is a filtering mechanism. A system that determines not just who watches, but who is meant to.

And Toronto, for all its openness and self-image as a welcoming global city, becomes in this arrangement not a home for the world game, but a showroom for its segmentation.

One is left, finally, with a rather uncomfortable thought: that the most universal sport in the world is being reorganized into something rather less universal in practice — an experience still spoken of in the language of the public, but increasingly delivered in the logic of exclusivity.

Or, to put it less gently, the game remains global.

It is just no longer clear that the seats are.





2026,Economic,fame,FIFA,Propaganda,unpublished,USA,watchlist,ZENO,
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
23y April TOD
"Politeness costs nothing and benefits everyone – let's make it the
norm in Toronto."
- Edmund Scholz
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

RED MOON MUSIC


 Red Moon Collective April 2026

As an artist in Toronto in 2010, I joined the Red Moon Collective, which was a get-together. They had parties, one another, mostly musically based. I was a photographer and poet, so it wasn’t the main focus of the group, but I still hung out with them. People sang, collaborated, built friendships out of repetition and proximity and late nights that didn’t really end so much as dissolve into the next day. Fast forward fifteen or sixteen years and something has changed shape. I’ve been around artists in Toronto recently and they seem more isolated, more self-contained, like they are orbiting their own work rather than each other. The instinct to build things together is still there in theory, but in practice it feels thinner, harder to activate. Apps like Vampr show up as the new meeting point, like Tinder did for people, but something about that kind of matching system doesn’t seem to produce a shared world. It produces contact without continuity. And contact without continuity doesn’t become culture.

What I’m really noticing is not just a loss of collaboration, but a loss of how collaboration actually works when it works at all. There used to be an unspoken literacy inside scenes like the Red Moon Collective. Nobody sat you down and explained it. You learned it by being there. You learned how to drift into a room and stay in it long enough for something accidental to turn into something intentional. You learned how to return to people without needing a formal reason. You learned how to let ideas stay unfinished without abandoning them. It was not organized, but it was coherent. It had rhythm. It had memory.

Now I meet younger artists and collaboration often seems to arrive as a kind of abstraction. It is either a planned transaction or a vague aspiration. When it comes up, there is a kind of hesitation, like they are trying to figure out what box it belongs in. It feels like one-task thinking: one collaboration, one output, one moment, cleanly defined. Not because people don’t want more, but because the environment they’ve grown inside doesn’t give them repeated examples of how anything else actually holds together. The culture of how to do it has thinned out.

There are reasons for this that sit underneath everything. The city itself has tightened. Time has fragmented. People are pulled across jobs, gigs, obligations, survival logistics that make shared unstructured time harder to sustain. You don’t just “hang out until something happens” the way you used to, because there are fewer spaces where that kind of time is economically or socially stable. Even when people meet, the conditions for staying in the same orbit are weaker. So collaboration gets pushed into scheduling, and scheduling is where spontaneity goes to die.

Then there is the platform layer, which accelerates contact but flattens duration. You can find anyone now. That part is easy. But what used to matter was not finding people, it was remaining near them long enough for trust and rhythm to build. When discovery is instant, repetition becomes optional, and without repetition, scenes don’t fully form. They flicker.

Over all of this sits a shift in how artists are taught to think about themselves. The individual unit has become the default. The personal brand, the solo output, the constant stream of discrete work. Even collaboration gets filtered through that lens, like it has to justify itself inside an individual trajectory. That changes behaviour in subtle ways. It narrows what people assume collaboration even is.

And underneath even that, there is a quieter break in transmission. The old scene knowledge—the informal craft of how to actually be in collective process—doesn’t pass through as reliably anymore. It used to be absorbed by being around it long enough. By watching it fail and work and restart. By repetition without instruction. That kind of learning doesn’t survive easily in fragmented environments. So what disappears is not just the scene, but the shared instinct for how scenes operate.

I still feel like I can push through that gap. I can still head toward collaboration and make it happen even when the conditions are not helping it. But I notice that for a lot of younger artists, there is a kind of uncertainty at the starting point. Not resistance, exactly. More like not knowing what the process is supposed to feel like once it leaves the level of a single interaction.

So what looks like isolation is not only personal choice or temperament. It is a shift in cultural memory. A loss of shared operating knowledge. And once that goes, collaboration stops being a default condition of being an artist in a city and becomes something you have to consciously reconstruct every time from scratch.

My name is Ed Scholz, and what I remember is not just a collective I joined. It is a way of being around other people’s work that assumed continuity, assumed return, assumed that things didn’t have to be completed to matter. That assumption used to be everywhere. Now it has to be rebuilt, one encounter at a time.

RED MOON The Good Old Days ofArists

 As an artist in Toronto in 2010, I joined the Red Moon Collective, which was a get-together. They had parties, one another, mostly musically based. I was a photographer and poet, so it wasn’t the main focus of the group, but I still hung out with them. People sang, collaborated, and built friendships through shared work and repetition. Fast forward fifteen or sixteen years, and I’ve noticed something different. I’ve hung out with artists in Toronto recently, and they all seem more isolated. There doesn’t seem to be the same drive to work together in any sustained way. It feels like meeting people has become easier, but actually building something together has become harder. Apps and platforms like Vampr seem to be where people meet now, but like Tinder, they can also create a kind of isolation. The collective will to make music together, or to build something lasting in a shared scene, feels weaker.

What has changed is not desire. Most artists still want to collaborate. What’s changed is the structure around that desire, the environment it has to move through.

Toronto in 2010 still had pockets where scenes behaved like living things. Not organized, not formal, but continuous. You showed up to the same rooms enough times and something started to form between people. It wasn’t efficient. It wasn’t optimized. But it had persistence. You could walk into a space and feel like you were stepping into an ongoing conversation that had already started before you arrived and would keep going after you left.

That kind of continuity has thinned out.

Part of it is money. Not in an abstract way, but in a daily way. Rent rises. Work fragments. Time gets split into smaller pieces that don’t line up easily with other people’s schedules. The old rhythm of just being around—long evenings, shared studios, repeated encounters—starts to break apart. Collaboration stops being something that happens by default and becomes something that has to be arranged, coordinated, negotiated. And anything that requires coordination across exhausted schedules becomes fragile.

At the same time, the way people find each other has changed. Discovery is now instant. You don’t have to wait to run into someone. You don’t have to be in the same room three or four times before a connection forms. You can match, message, connect, and move on. Platforms like Vampr make that frictionless. But what they remove is not just friction—it’s repetition. And repetition is where a lot of real collaboration used to quietly take root.

Without repetition, relationships stay light. Not shallow in a judgmental sense, just unanchored. You meet more people, but you spend less time becoming anything with them.

Then there’s the shift in how artists are positioned in the world. Increasingly, you are encouraged to see yourself as a solo unit of output. Even when collaboration happens, it often sits inside that frame. Whose project is this? Whose audience is it for? How does it circulate? These questions aren’t always spoken, but they shape behaviour. Over time, they make collaboration feel less like a shared unfolding and more like an arrangement between separate careers.

And underneath all of that sits a quieter disruption that never fully resolved itself. The COVID years didn’t just pause scenes; they interrupted the habit of gathering. The informal infrastructure of art life—venues, studios, parties, residencies, the in-between spaces—lost continuity. When that continuity breaks, people don’t automatically return to the same patterns. They adapt. They work alone more. They build new habits that don’t require proximity. And even when proximity becomes possible again, the old momentum doesn’t fully reassemble.

So what you end up with isn’t a lack of artists, and it isn’t a lack of interest in collaboration. It’s a thinning of the conditions that used to make collaboration feel natural, almost inevitable. The density is gone. The repetition is weaker. The shared time is harder to hold together.

And in that gap, isolation can look like a personal choice, but it’s often just structure expressing itself through people.

The difference between then and now isn’t that artists stopped working together. It’s that working together stopped being the easiest thing the environment produces.





Monday, 20 April 2026

 

Photo by #江戸門戸

Swipe Culture and the Small Lives of Vampr

by  江戸門戸 and Doc Scholz

There is a certain kind of music story that never makes it into documentaries because nothing explodes. Nobody gets discovered in a clean line from obscurity to fame. Instead, what you find are fragments of careers that shift slightly off course because someone, somewhere, swiped right.

In Toronto, a producer who had been making loops alone in a bedroom for years opened Vampr more out of boredom than intent. He matched with a vocalist in London who had a similar habit of starting songs and abandoning them halfway through. They did not introduce themselves like people in an industry story would expect. There was no “let’s build a project,” no talk of strategy. It started with a file. A rough beat. A voice over it. Then another version. Then a week of back and forth that stretched into something resembling discipline.

They never met. The song never charted. It did not even get released in any meaningful sense. But for about three months, there was a working relationship that did not exist before the app.

That is the pattern underneath almost everything Vampr produces.

In Los Angeles, Saltwives—already an established UK production duo with credits across major pop records—use the app in a very different way. For them, it is not a place of discovery but a kind of casting directory. They look for writers and topliners the way a film set looks for background talent, not because they are unknown, but because their workflow demands more voices than their immediate circle can supply. They describe it in practical terms rather than romantic ones. The app becomes another layer of infrastructure in an already functioning career.

There is no mythology in it. Just throughput.

And then there are the quieter cases, the ones that exist only in aggregate memory. A drummer in one city finding a bassist in another and forming a band that rehearses entirely over video calls. A singer who starts getting feedback from producers she would never have had access to through local scenes. A session guitarist who picks up remote work one track at a time, never fully stepping into a “breakthrough,” but gradually stitching together a livable income from scattered collaborations.

None of these stories look like arrival. They look like continuation.

The founders of Vampr have often pointed to these outcomes as evidence that the system works. Millions of connections, they say, across more than a hundred countries, and in that network are songs that would not have existed otherwise. They are technically correct, but the language flattens what is actually happening. A connection is not a collaboration. A collaboration is not a career. And a career, in music especially, is not a thing that can be cleanly traced back to one tool.

What Vampr actually does—what it consistently appears to do—is remove distance without removing uncertainty. It makes everyone reachable and almost no one accountable. You can match with someone who feels like the exact missing piece of your work, and still never hear from them again after the first exchange. Or you can build something that lasts months without ever deciding it is real enough to name.

This creates a strange economy inside the app. Attention is abundant. Intent is not. Musicians scroll through one another like open invitations that may or may not be real. For some users, especially those early in their careers, it feels like opportunity multiplied. For others, especially those with experience, it feels like signal buried under volume.

The most consistent success stories are not stories of discovery but of adjustment. People who learn how to filter faster. People who learn how to move a conversation from the app into actual work before it dissolves. People who accept that most matches are not beginnings of songs, but brief acknowledgments that two people exist in the same industry momentarily.

The platform does not resolve the central problem of music collaboration, which has never really been access. It is alignment. Timing. Commitment. Taste. Those things do not scale well through interfaces.

So what remains are these small, uneven outcomes. A track completed across continents. A band formed and later dissolved without notice. A handful of working relationships that outlast the app sessions that created them. And beneath all of it, the larger truth that Vampr did not invent: most music careers are not made of breakthroughs but of accumulations that only look meaningful in hindsight.

Nothing in that system guarantees success. But it does guarantee contact. And in the modern music economy, contact is often mistaken for momentum.

That confusion is where the app lives.

Networking For Toronto Music Newbies

 

Vampr vs SoundBetter: The Two-Stage Music Industry Filter Nobody Talks About


Music by Peter Randel, Ember Swift and Doc Scholz

Photos by #江戸門戸



Vampr vs SoundBetter: The Two-Stage Music Industry Filter Nobody Talks About

The modern music industry doesn’t reject most people at the “talent” stage.

It rejects them at the access stage.

That’s what platforms like Vampr and SoundBetter really reveal—not opportunity, but the two-tier system underneath music today:

  1. A chaotic social feed of aspiring musicians

  2. A gated marketplace of professionals who already survived the chaos

And most people never move from one to the other.


Vampr — “It’s networking, but without the power structure”

Vampr sells itself as empowerment: meet musicians, collaborate, build your career.

In reality, it’s closer to a collapsed industry mixer with no gatekeepers and no standards.

One user puts it bluntly:

“It helps me connect with people… but it’s still difficult to actually turn that into real work.”

That’s the real pattern. Vampr creates contact, not consequence.

What it actually is

  • A swipe-based talent pool

  • Mostly early-stage or hobby-level musicians

  • Endless “maybe we should collab” conversations

  • Very little follow-through

It mimics networking without replicating what made networking powerful in the first place: scarcity, reputation, and accountability.


The uncomfortable truth

Vampr is not a career tool. It’s a hope simulator.

You feel productive because:

  • you matched with someone

  • you exchanged messages

  • you shared a demo

But nothing is enforced:

  • no deadlines

  • no contracts

  • no real stakes

So most collaborations die in the same place:

“yo this is sick we should do something”

And then nothing happens.

Pros

  • Easy entry point

  • Low friction discovery

  • Useful for experimentation

  • Good for isolating creative energy

Cons

  • Almost no accountability

  • Extremely uneven quality

  • Conversation-heavy, output-light

  • Rewards attention, not completion


SoundBetter — “Where the industry charges you for skipping the struggle”

SoundBetter is the opposite world: polished, structured, and monetized.

It’s where musicians go when they’ve realized something uncomfortable:

talent doesn’t matter if your mix sounds like a phone recording

One user describes it like this:

“I had no access to professionals until I found SoundBetter.”

That’s the real pitch: access to people who already made it through the system.

But here’s the part nobody says out loud:

SoundBetter is not collaboration. It’s outsourcing.


What it actually is

  • A freelance marketplace for audio labor

  • Mixing, mastering, production, session work

  • Tiered pricing based on perceived credibility

  • Reputation-based hiring system

In other words:

the music industry, but with the gate removed and replaced with a price tag


The uncomfortable truth

SoundBetter doesn’t fix inequality in music.

It prices it.

If you have money:

  • you get professional sound

  • you bypass years of trial and error

  • you skip technical development

If you don’t:

  • you stay in Vampr-land

  • or YouTube tutorial purgatory

  • or endless self-mixing cycles

So the “democratization” story is only half true.

What actually happened is:

the gate didn’t disappear—it became a checkout page


Pros

  • High-quality professionals

  • Clear deliverables

  • Real industry experience available on demand

  • Reliable workflow and structure

Cons

  • Expensive for emerging artists

  • Creative decisions shift to hired experts

  • Reduces learning-by-doing

  • Turns music into service procurement


The real system nobody admits

These platforms are not competitors.

They are filters in sequence:

Stage 1: Vampr (noise phase)

Everyone is:

  • networking

  • experimenting

  • “working on something”

  • not finishing anything

Stage 2: SoundBetter (compression phase)

Only a few remain:

  • people with budget

  • people with clarity

  • people with finished material worth fixing

Everything else gets stuck in between.


What this actually means for musicians

The industry didn’t become more open.

It became more segmented:

  • Vampr = infinite possibility with no structure

  • SoundBetter = structure with a paywall

And the brutal reality is this:

Most musicians don’t fail because they lack talent.
They fail because they never leave the networking layer.

They stay in:

  • conversations

  • demos

  • “we should collab”

  • unfinished projects

While a smaller group moves into:

  • paid production

  • finished releases

  • professional output

  • distribution-ready work


Final verdict

Vampr is where music starts when nobody is watching.

SoundBetter is where music goes when it starts costing money to keep going.

And the gap between them is where most careers quietly disappear.



As always comment directly at my Substack Instagram etc. for insights from an outsider. 



https://scholz01.blogspot.com/2026/04/vampr-vs-soundbetter-two-stage-music.htm



https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/04/networking-for-toronto-music-newbies.html

MasterPiece by江戸門戸<

 CITIZEN CANADA SHOW RED LIGHT 🔴 “BUY. BELIEVE. OBEY.”





🗞️ You no read magazine. Magazine read you. #ttumplego #trumpapology Winter drag long. Eyes heavy. Mind itch. Content scream louder. Metrics push. Habits lock. Feed never sleep.
Think choice? Or habit choose for you? Cold make humans pliable. Algorithms notice. Repeat behavior. Loop tighter. Comfort sold like firewood. Belief sold like blanket. Obedience sold like food. INSIDE THIS PAGE: 🧠 “Isolation Training.” — Alone room, alone mind. Patterns show. Attention valuable. Choice possible but hidden. 📺 “Emotion Engineered.” — Screen push, heart pull. Fear, joy, anger measured, replayed, optimized. 🛒 “Winter Commerce.” — Buy warmth. Buy distraction. Buy ritual. Obey for small comfort. Repeat. 🕹️ “Observe or Obey.” — Quiet show control. Recognize loop. Then maybe step out. 🚀 “Subtle Captivity.” — Cold, dark, routine, media. Habit stronger than desire. Mind tethered, invisible chains. 📸 Thoughts captured by
#GreatguyTV scholxpage3 CitizenCanada #江戸門戸 / by江戸門戸

CITIZEN CANADA SHOW RED LIGHT 🔴 “BUY. BELIEVE. OBEY.”

     CITIZEN CANADA SHOW RED LIGHT 🔴 “BUY. BELIEVE. OBEY.”

🗞️ You no read magazine. Magazine read you.
#ttumplego #trumpapology
Winter drag long. Eyes heavy. Mind itch. Content scream louder. Metrics push. Habits lock. Feed never sleep.

Think choice? Or habit choose for you?
Cold make humans pliable. Algorithms notice. Repeat behavior. Loop tighter. Comfort sold like firewood. Belief sold like blanket. Obedience sold like food.

INSIDE THIS PAGE:

🧠 “Isolation Training.” — Alone room, alone mind. Patterns show. Attention valuable. Choice possible but hidden.
📺 “Emotion Engineered.” — Screen push, heart pull. Fear, joy, anger measured, replayed, optimized.
🛒 “Winter Commerce.” — Buy warmth. Buy distraction. Buy ritual. Obey for small comfort. Repeat.
🕹️ “Observe or Obey.” — Quiet show control. Recognize loop. Then maybe step out.
🚀 “Subtle Captivity.” — Cold, dark, routine, media. Habit stronger than desire. Mind tethered, invisible chains.

📸 Thoughts captured by #GreatguyTV

#scholxpage3 CitizenCanada 江戸門戸 / by江戸門戸

                 https://www.instagram.com/reel/DXV7hfhDScq/?igsh=MTJ0MnpvbWl5MGMybg==

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

THE MEME THAT WASN’T SUPPOSED TO EXIST (2007–2012): A CULTURAL AND LEGAL AUTOPSY — PART II




There is a strange thing that happens when a culture passes through its own shock threshold. It stops remembering events as events and starts remembering them as atmospheres. The internet of the late 2000s was already doing this instinctively, long before anyone had language for it. It was learning, in real time, that certain artifacts do not persist because they are preserved, but because they are repeatedly re-invented in the act of describing them.

By 2007–2008, what had begun as a fragmented and unstable piece of Brazilian fetish film circulation had already ceased to be about the original clip at all. The object itself—compressed, reuploaded, stripped of context—was less important than the reaction it produced, and even less important than the reaction to the reaction. This recursive structure is what gave the meme its historical weight. It was not a video. It was a feedback loop.

And feedback loops, unlike media artifacts, do not require stability to persist.

The earliest traceable phase of this loop was simple: individuals recording themselves watching the clip and uploading their responses to early YouTube. These were not polished productions. They were not commentary in the modern sense. They were closer to involuntary theater. People sitting in bedrooms, in offices, in dorm rooms, confronting something they had been told not to see, and discovering that the only socially legible way to process it was to immediately perform that processing for others.

The reaction video became its own genre almost instantly, but more importantly, it became a distribution method that no longer required the original source. The clip itself could disappear entirely and still propagate culturally, because what was being transmitted was no longer the content—it was the idea of having encountered it.

This is where the meme crosses a threshold that earlier media systems could not easily conceptualize. In broadcast logic, content is primary and commentary is secondary. In this new logic, commentary becomes self-sustaining. The reaction no longer depends on the object. It begins to generate its own necessity.

By 2008, this structure had already begun to leak into mainstream entertainment, not as imitation but as absorption. Late-night television, still operating within broadcast constraints, began to import internet behavior as material. Comedy writers, sensing that audiences were already aware of viral shock culture, began to construct jokes not around the content itself but around the shared fact that something unwatchable existed and had been seen by “people online.”

The shift is subtle but irreversible. Humor stops describing things and starts indexing awareness of things. The audience is no longer being told a joke about a video. They are being reminded that they belong to a cultural moment in which that video could exist.

Around this same period, stand-up comedy begins to mutate under the pressure of the internet. Comedians operating in the late 2000s club circuit—performing in rooms where audiences were increasingly shaped by early YouTube exposure—begin to rely less on narrative setup and more on shared cultural shorthand. Names like Sarah Silverman and Daniel Tosh circulate within this ecosystem not as direct archivists of specific meme references, but as participants in a broader shift where shock, taboo, and internet literacy collapse into a single comedic language.

But what is notable in retrospect is not what was explicitly said. It is what no longer needed to be said. The existence of the meme becomes sufficient context. The joke is not in the description, but in the acknowledgment that description is unnecessary.

Meanwhile, outside comedy, mainstream news media begins to engage with the phenomenon from a different angle entirely. Networks such as CNN and Fox News frame the rise of “disturbing online videos” as a social concern, particularly focused on youth exposure and the breakdown of content boundaries. But these discussions are structurally constrained: the material itself cannot be shown, only described, and even description is often softened into euphemism.

This creates a strange asymmetry in public discourse. The meme is simultaneously everywhere and nowhere—present in conversation, absent in representation, fully known without being fully visible. It becomes one of the first truly modern examples of what might be called “distributed cultural knowledge,” where shared awareness replaces shared experience.

And yet, as with many internet-origin phenomena of this era, the legal system becomes a site where memory attempts to anchor itself incorrectly.

There is a persistent belief that the meme “went to court,” or that some judicial body ruled on its status as art or obscenity. This belief is not entirely irrational—it emerges from proximity. Around the same period, obscenity prosecutions involving extreme adult material were indeed occurring, most notably under frameworks such as Miller v. California (1973) in the United States and R v Butler (1992) in Canada. These legal standards governed what could be classified as obscene material, and they were actively being applied in cases involving distributors of extreme pornography in the late 2000s.

Among these cases, figures such as Ira Isaacs became symbolic in public discourse, not because they were connected to the meme itself, but because they embodied the kind of legal struggle that the internet imagination mistakenly retrofitted onto it. In Isaacs’ case, repeated prosecutions and a final conviction in 2012 became part of a broader cultural narrative about whether extreme sexual content could be defended as art, intent, or expression.

But none of these cases involved the meme. None adjudicated it. None stabilized it.

What happened instead was a collapse of distinction. Multiple unrelated legal processes, similar in subject matter but distinct in object, began to merge in public memory into a single imagined legal event. The internet, which had already blurred the boundaries between original and copy, now blurred the boundaries between case and narrative.

This is how the myth of the “court ruling on the video” emerges—not from legal fact, but from narrative compression under conditions of cultural overload.

By 2009, the reaction video economy had matured into infrastructure. YouTube, still in its pre-algorithmic but rapidly scaling phase, had become the primary environment for this behavior. The platform itself was engaged in a contradictory process: attempting to remove the underlying material while simultaneously hosting and amplifying its derivatives. Reaction videos remained accessible, commentary proliferated, and the original clip existed only in intermittent, unstable fragments.

Virality, in this sense, was no longer a matter of persistence. It was a matter of oscillation. Content survived through cycles of appearance and removal, each disappearance generating renewed curiosity, each reappearance triggering renewed reaction. The meme was no longer a single artifact but a system of recurrence.

And by the early 2010s, that system had already begun to fade—not because it was resolved, but because it had been absorbed. The internet had moved on to faster cycles, shorter attention spans, and more structurally integrated forms of recommendation and amplification. What remained of the meme was not its content, nor even its reaction videos, but its afterimage in cultural memory.

It survived as a reference to a time when the internet still produced shocks that felt unstructured, unmoderated, and unrepeatable. A time when seeing something once meant carrying the knowledge of it indefinitely, because there was no guarantee you would ever be able to locate it again.

And in that sense, the meme did not disappear.

It simply became the first recognizable form of something the internet would eventually perfect:

a culture built entirely from what it has already seen, even when it can no longer remember how it saw it.






Model A vs Model B: Why Traditional Macroeconomics No Longer Matches the Structure of the Global Economy

Modern economic thinking is built on a conceptual division between microeconomics and macroeconomics. Microeconomics focuses on individual agents—households, firms, and localized decision-making—while macroeconomics aggregates these behaviors into national or regional indicators such as GDP, inflation, unemployment, and interest rates. For much of the last century, this division provided a functional and productive framework for understanding economic behavior. It allowed economists to move from local behavior to national outcomes using simplifying assumptions about aggregation, equilibrium, and linear propagation of shocks.

However, the structure of the global economy has evolved in a way that increasingly breaks the assumptions underlying this framework. To understand this shift, it is useful to distinguish between two interpretive models of the economy: Model A and Model B.

Model A corresponds broadly to classical and neoclassical macroeconomic thinking. It assumes that the economy can be decomposed into relatively independent units whose interactions are structured, measurable, and largely linear. Model B, by contrast, describes an economy that is fully networked, multi-layered, and non-linear in its behavior, where macroeconomic outcomes emerge from dense interdependencies rather than aggregated bilateral relationships.

The central argument is that we are no longer operating in a world that Model A can accurately describe. Instead, we are operating in what can be called a macro-super economic system: a global, multidimensional network in which macroeconomic outcomes emerge from complex interactions across finance, trade, energy, information systems, and political structures simultaneously.


Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, and the Original Model A Framework

Traditional economics is built on a clear separation between microeconomic behavior and macroeconomic outcomes. Microeconomics assumes that individuals and firms make decisions based on constraints such as prices, preferences, and information. These decisions are assumed to be rational or at least systematically structured. Macroeconomics then aggregates these behaviors to produce system-level outcomes.

In this framework, macroeconomics functions as a form of controlled reduction. Millions or billions of micro-level decisions are compressed into a smaller set of variables: GDP growth, inflation rates, unemployment levels, trade balances, and monetary aggregates. These variables are then modeled using equations that assume relatively stable relationships over time.

Critically, this structure assumes a form of binary or low-dimensional interaction. Countries trade with other countries. Sectors interact with other sectors. Financial markets respond to policy changes in measurable ways. Even when complexity is acknowledged, it is typically reduced into manageable segments: “real economy vs financial economy,” “domestic vs international,” or “supply vs demand shocks.”

This worked reasonably well for much of the 20th century, particularly in a world where:

  • capital flows were slower

  • supply chains were regional

  • financial systems were less deeply integrated

  • and information transmission was delayed

In such a world, macroeconomics could reasonably treat the system as a set of interacting but separable components. Shocks were often localized, and their effects could be traced through relatively clear transmission channels.

This is the world in which Model A was not only useful, but effective.


The Collapse of Dimensional Simplicity

The modern global economy no longer conforms to this structure.

What has changed is not simply the scale of economic activity, but its topology. The system is no longer best described as a set of bilateral relationships. It is better understood as a dense, evolving network in which virtually every major economic node is indirectly connected to every other through multiple overlapping channels.

These channels include:

  • global financial derivatives markets

  • integrated supply chains

  • energy pricing systems

  • currency and capital flows

  • algorithmic trading networks

  • geopolitical risk transmission

In this environment, macroeconomic outcomes are no longer the result of simple aggregations of microeconomic behavior. Instead, they emerge from multi-layered interactions across the entire system simultaneously.

This is where Model A begins to fail.


Model B: The Networked Macro-Super Economic System

Model B describes the economy not as a set of separable parts, but as a high-dimensional network system. In this system, macroeconomic outcomes are not simply the sum of microeconomic behaviors. They are emergent properties of interaction structures.

This shift can be described as a transition from classical macroeconomics to what can be called macro-super economics.

In macro-super economics:

  • causality is distributed rather than linear

  • shocks propagate through multiple overlapping pathways

  • feedback loops dominate outcomes

  • second- and third-order effects are often larger than first-order effects

  • local events can generate global responses without passing through traditional channels

In such a system, the traditional binary distinctions of macroeconomics begin to break down. The separation between domestic and international economics becomes artificial. Financial markets are not distinct from the real economy; they are tightly coupled. Energy markets are not external inputs; they are structural constraints embedded in the system itself.

The result is that macroeconomic behavior becomes fundamentally multidimensional. It cannot be accurately represented in low-dimensional models without losing essential structure.


Why Model A Still Dominates

Despite this transformation, most economic thinking and policy frameworks still operate primarily within Model A assumptions.

There are several reasons for this persistence:

First, Model A is computationally and institutionally convenient. It allows governments, central banks, and international organizations to simplify complex systems into manageable indicators. Policy can then be designed around observable variables such as inflation or unemployment.

Second, Model A is historically successful. For decades, it produced sufficiently accurate predictions in a world that was less interconnected. This historical success creates institutional inertia, reinforcing its continued use even as conditions change.

Third, Model A aligns with how human cognition naturally works. Humans tend to think in linear, causal chains and prefer decomposable systems over networked ones. This makes Model A intuitively appealing even when it is structurally incomplete.

However, none of these reasons change the underlying reality: the system itself has evolved beyond the assumptions that made Model A effective.


The Consequences of Model Mismatch

The most important implication of this mismatch is not simply forecasting error, but systematic misinterpretation of risk.

Under Model A assumptions:

  • risk is assumed to be localized

  • financial instruments are assumed to distribute risk

  • shocks are assumed to decay over distance or time

  • policy interventions are assumed to act in isolation

Under Model B conditions, each of these assumptions fails.

For example, the 2008 financial crisis demonstrated that instruments designed under Model A logic—such as derivatives and structured credit products—did not disperse risk but instead created hidden correlations across the system. When stress emerged in one part of the financial network, it propagated globally through tightly coupled exposures. What appeared to be diversification was in fact synchronization.

Similarly, geopolitical and institutional shifts—such as changes in Hong Kong’s financial role within the global system—do not remain regionally contained. They reconfigure global capital pathways. Likewise, energy chokepoints such as the Strait of Hormuz do not function as local disruptions; they act as systemic constraints that immediately affect global pricing, inflation expectations, and industrial activity.

In each case, Model A interprets the event as localized and sequential. Model B reveals it as network-wide and simultaneous.


Why Prediction Fails Under Model A

The failure of prediction under Model A is not primarily due to lack of data. It is due to structural misrepresentation of the system itself.

If the system is treated as low-dimensional and loosely connected, then:

  • correlations appear weak

  • shocks appear isolated

  • and future outcomes appear fundamentally uncertain

However, if the system is understood as high-dimensional and tightly coupled, then:

  • correlations become latent but powerful

  • shocks become systemic triggers

  • and outcomes become constrained within probability structures

In other words, Model A makes the future appear more random than it actually is, because it fails to account for the underlying structure that constrains outcomes.


Macro-Super Economics: A Multidimensional Shift

The transition from Model A to Model B is therefore not simply a refinement of macroeconomics. It is a transformation of its dimensional structure.

Traditional macroeconomics is effectively low-dimensional: it compresses the world into a manageable set of aggregate variables and assumes relatively stable relationships between them.

Macro-super economics, by contrast, is high-dimensional and network-based. It treats macroeconomic outcomes as emergent properties of:

  • financial networks

  • trade networks

  • energy systems

  • political feedback loops

  • informational and behavioral dynamics

These systems interact continuously, producing outcomes that cannot be reduced to any single dimension without losing predictive structure.


Conclusion: The Cost of Outdated Models

The persistence of Model A is not merely an academic issue. It has real consequences for prediction, policy, and risk management.

As long as the global economy is interpreted through a low-dimensional, binary framework, systemic risks will continue to be underestimated. Crises will appear sudden, even when they are structurally embedded. Policy responses will be reactive rather than anticipatory. And the system will continue to behave in ways that appear surprising only because its structure is being misread.

The central insight of Model B is not that the world is unknowable. It is that the world is knowable only if it is modeled at the correct dimensional scale.

In a fully connected global economy, macroeconomics can no longer remain a matter of aggregation over independent units. It must become a theory of networks, feedback loops, and emergent structure.

Until that shift is fully recognized, the gap between the structure of the world and the structure of its models will continue to define the limits of prediction itself.

Thursday, 9 April 2026




A good doctor does not fall in love with a single tool. Sometimes the patient needs a knife. Sometimes a bandage. Sometimes a pill. The skill is not in owning the tools—it is in knowing when to use each one, and just as importantly, when not to. In modern culture, we’ve made the mistake of turning tools into doctrines. Diversity, equity, and inclusion were, at their best, instruments—useful in specific conditions, at specific times, to correct specific imbalances. But when a tool becomes universal, it stops being medicine. A scalpel used everywhere becomes butchery. A bandage applied to every wound traps infection. A pill taken without diagnosis poisons more than it heals.

The real problem is not the tool, but the loss of judgment. When one side applies the same remedy to every problem, it creates harm. When the other side responds by burning down the entire medical kit, it creates a different kind of harm—and in doing so, often restores faith in the very tool it sought to destroy. This is how overcorrection breeds revival. What is missing is not a better ideology, but a return to humanism—the quiet, disciplined practice of asking what the patient in front of you actually needs. The original Star Trek understood this. Its diversity was not a prescription forced onto every situation, but a natural outcome of a broader commitment to human dignity. The lesson is simple, and difficult: tools are not truths. Use them well, or they will use you.

@citizencanada scholx


https://joe-average123.blogspot.com/2026/04/debunking-buzzfeeds-people-try-to-live.html


Wednesday, 8 April 2026

 

Day 1 Networking as a Background Actor (Music Placement Edition)

Step 1: Show Up and Observe

  • Arrive early, be on time.

  • Watch carefully: notice who does what. Directors, ADs, camera crew, sound crew.


Step 2: Be Friendly (Not Pushy)

  • Smile, say hi to the people around you.

  • Introduce yourself politely: “Hi, I’m Ed, I’m in background today.”

  • Don’t mention music yet—just be memorable in a good way.


Step 3: Learn the Environment

  • Look for where music might go: background songs, emotional moments, scene transitions.

  • Take mental notes—you can’t take your phone out on set.


Step 4: Identify Tiny Opportunities

  • Ask simple questions if someone seems friendly:

    • “Who’s handling the music for this scene?”

    • “Will there be any songs in this short?”

  • Write down names.


Step 5: Connect Casually

  • During breaks, chat naturally with other crew or actors.

  • Listen more than you talk. If music comes up, you can say casually:

    • “I make music too—always curious how filmmakers pick tracks.”


Step 6: Make Yourself Remembered

  • Be professional: know your marks, don’t slow anyone down.

  • Smile, be polite, help if asked. Crew notice reliability—this is your first credibility point.


Step 7: Exit with Purpose

  • When day ends, thank people who helped you.

  • Collect a business card or contact if offered (even just for cast/crew).

  • Make a note: who might be open to hearing music later.


Step 8: Prepare Your Music Mini-Pitch

  • Don’t send anything today. Just plan your tracks and prepare to show them later.

  • 1–2 short songs, clear mood, link you can email.


Key Rule for Day 1: Your goal is visibility and friendly credibility, not selling music yet.