Big surprise: J6 pipe bomb suspect is allegedly Capitol police officer

Through the use of a software algorithm that analyzes the gait of an individual’s walk, the computer program identified the J6 bomber as then-Capitol cop Shauni Kerkhoff, with 94-98% accuracy. Kerkhoff now works for the CIA.

Of course, we knew how this would turn out. It was just a matter of when. The question now is what else did the Capitol cops do that day? Remember the J6 gallows? Was this one more among many undercover ops that day?

Idiots are guarding Western civilization

An unremarked phenomenon has been brewing for the past 10 years: a total lack of seriousness among modern adults. There’s a foolish, scatterbrained, overly casual nonchalance directed at every endeavor, task, or moment, that deserves serious consideration and attention. We’ve all witnessed it. The middle and upper classes are not serious people. Hedonistic distraction, along with a cultural disparagement of serious attitudes, elevated emotions or senses of duty, have created a situation where an alarming number of adults exist in a state of arrested development. And these are the exact people employed in positions that require a capacity for professionalism and a sense of responsibility and honor.

You can envision the person who created the Louvre’s surveillance password. You can mentally map out their entire life. Instead of a job at Taco Bell, they somehow weaseled their way into a security position guarding priceless cultural heirlooms. Do they feel even one iota of shame, or dishonor, for what they did?

The lie of modernity

What have we really gained from the blitzkrieg advance of technology of the past three decades? Are we more enlightened, or less? Are we more or less hopeful of the future? More prosperous? More humane? Or are we collectively moving backward, and the platitudes preached in favor of technological advancement begin to ring increasingly hollow? What actual culture can we say exists now because of our hyperconnected world? Our paychecks buy less and less, and the world around us offers no real reprieve. Real culture of the past is being replaced with a cheap cut-out faux culture. Our architecture is a good weathervane for where we are, and it is pitiful. New buildings are boxes, no character, no soul. Intentionally ugly, it seems. Cars, clothes, music, all so hideous that it can’t be accidental. Everyone zombie-walking while staring at the plastic rectangle in their hands, ready to get home to the larger wall rectangles, the things that are increasingly becoming their entire world. We’re all distracted, and meant to be. Heroin-pure distraction is the new designer drug, further refined and distilled in Silicon Valley labs. An opium den that you carry with you, and never emerge from. We pay for it with our humanity, with our past, and with our future.

Jesse Butler arrest bodycam

Here is footage of Jesse Butler crying like spoiled brat as he’s arrested, probably the first time in his life he’s faced consequences for his actions. He violently raped two girls, almost killing one, but a bleeding heart judge gave him zero jail time. He was convicted of his crimes as a 17 year old, which all men know is old enough to understand right from wrong. Butler should be removed from society. He’s a danger to women, and always will be. A forever home in a permanent penal colony is the only justice possible here.

Something is changing

An almost imperceptible, but elemental, cultural shift is taking place in America. Like an undercurrent slowly changing direction, a seed on the verge of germination, the blue hour just before dawn. Something new is coming, catalyzing events have inverted every impotent zeitgeist clung to by the troglodytic masses, culminating in an unplanned socio-political pregnancy, and with it, a transformational birth. The old order is withering, being shed.

Oklahoma teen, Jesse Butler, gets no prison time after conviction for brutal rape of two 16-year old girls

Judicial leniency is creating a state of almost anarchy among violent offenders and their victims. Butler was 17 at the time of the rapes, but both rapes exhibited the same characteristics: strangulation, beatings, violent depraved sexual acts, leaving both girls permanently scarred both mentally and physically. Butler was initially sentenced to an appropriate 80 years in prison, but judge Susan Worthington reduced his sentence to just one year probation and community service. Imagine the horror of the victims and their families, knowing that no justice is possible now. In a just world, Butler would never see the light of day again. 17 is old enough to know right from wrong, and many juveniles are tried and sentenced as adults when the crime is heinous enough. Justice here would mean removing Butler permanently from society. Perhaps dropping him into a permanent penal colony, encircled by machine-gun equipped Boston Dynamics robot dogs. Anything less creates a spiritual imbalance among the innocent.