My Ex-GF Christine Palma Died Suddenly Of A Brain Aneurysm. She was 47.

We met at the LA Press Club in May of 2007 (she was a volunteer there, coming out of years of depression and not working, basically homeless, sleeping in the LAPC office, and feuding with other members of the LAPC). We were together for a year, and then remained distant friends. She was going to convert to Orthodox Judaism but could never get it together. For most of her adult life, she could never get it together in most things, but she was cute and cuddly and good with my tech support. Our first few months together were fun, but she was so chronically late and irresponsible and prone to falling out with people that she felt like a millstone around my neck. “You love me because I’m pathetic,” she’d often say and I’d deny it. In retrospect, initially, it was a turn-on to provide for someone even more broken than myself.

She’d had several relationships that lasted about three years. She’d never earned $40,000 in a year.

I would have broken up with her by the end of 2007, but then we took up chess and that kept us together for another six months. Christine was loving and faithful and easygoing. She was a good cook. She built my website Alexander90210.com and when I updated its WordPress last Friday, my site disappeared and so I emailed and texted her for help and for the first time she never got back to me. So I just Googled her on a premonition and found out she had died in late February of 2019.

I wasn’t shocked. Her life had long seemed to me like a downward spiral.

She was cute when we were together but afterward she packed on weight when she was went on various anti-depressant medications. I gave her the nickname “Fats” which she usually found endearing. I tried to encourage her to lose a few pounds but then she periodically got angry and started throwing food at me. I got into a bad cycle of yelling at her (that never happened in any other relationship). I was impatient and she got rattled. I increasingly didn’t like who I became when I was around her and I finally cut things off after we took a 9-day road trip to San Francisco, Coos Bay, Pacific Union College, and Yosemite. The trip was fine but I was done with this woman who wouldn’t grow up.

She was my second asian girlfriend (the first one was at UCLA in 1989). I made Christine laugh but she never got sarcasm. She created chaos wherever she went. She was wired in a way that kept her feuding with people. I tried to keep her at arm’s length and not get lost in her problems. I think she’s the only girl I’ve dated who was worse than me at reading social cues. I used to sing to her a few verses from the Mike and the Mechanics song “The Living Years” to encourage her to reconcile with… She thought that was ridiculous. She had good reason to hate.

When I left her in May of 2008, she sent me about 60 emails in 48 hours and threatened to trash me to members of my religious community. I said I’d just show them her emails to let them know what I was dealing with. She backed off.

She particularly upset because she viewed me as her last chance to have children.

We stayed in touch on occasion. When she’d read on my blog that I was going through a difficult time, she’d buy me groceries and drop them off on my doorstep.

In the summer of 2008, I bought her an Alexander Technique lesson but she missed her appointment. That was typical of her.

I sometimes encouraged her to give up her volunteer radio position and get a real job but she said her KXLU position gave her self-worth.

I told her about the benefits I got from going to 12-step programs but she showed no interest in doing something like that for herself.

In her 20s, she was gorgeous and smart and had the world at her feet. By age 47, she was dead and her life seems so sad in retrospect.

From the Los Angeles Loyolan:

Christine Palma, public affairs director for KXLU, host of KXLU’s public affairs program “Echo in the Sense” and an LMU alumna, passed away on Feb. 25 after a short illness. She was 47.

“She was a person of very generous heart and spirit, radiated love and light, exceedingly kind and caring and a peaceful and gentle presence one could always count on,” said Lydia Ammossow, KXLU advisor, in an email to the KXLU community. “Christine cared deeply for the station and for her work on her program. It will be impossible to imagine our Sunday evenings without her.”

Palma graduated from LMU in 1994 with a degree in creative writing and literature and had been with KXLU for over 24 years. Her show, which took place on Sundays, explored current events, feature pieces and long-form interviews, according to her website. She began as a student DJ before beginning her public affairs show after she graduated.

“I’ve known Christine 13 or 14 years,” said Peter Ludwig, also known as Mystic Pete, another KXLU host. “Her program was unique … I was often struck by how compelling they were because I listen to a lot of radio and its not often that I’m hearing things that are new, but almost every show she did was an important show. You don’t meet people like that very often who are just good natured and friendly and always helpful.”

Palma’s shows were mostly about progressive politics, the arts, new thought or visionary ideas and were always greatly researched and compelling, according to Ludwig, which was a sentiment echoed by Chris Johnson, another host who worked the show before Palma’s.

“Public affairs programming, mandated by the federal government, is often buried or viewed as an inconvenience by broadcasters. This was not the case with Christine and her show,” said Johnson. “Christine conscientiously researched and played lectures and discussions on the deeper and more important matters to our society and culture … Beyond that socially progressive stance, from which she never wavered, Christine was a good and true friend. Her impulse was always to help. She was a giver more than she was a taker. With her public devotion to art a vehicle for social betterment, KXLU has lost a champion. With her inclination to engage and help, I have lost a friend.”

“She was very kind hearted person and she embodied the real spirit of KXLU of that we’re all family and support each other and our shows, but she was even more so than that,” Pat Murphy, host of KXLU’s “Alien Air Music” and a longtime friend of Palma’s, said. “We can honor her memory by emulating her positive support, her patience and her dedication to our programs, as well as the other shows on KXLU.”

Posted in Personal | Comments Off on My Ex-GF Christine Palma Died Suddenly Of A Brain Aneurysm. She was 47.

The Kyle Position

Kyle Rowland writes: I have been pointing out fatal problems with core alt-right positions for a while now. I openly invite anyone who wants to come on to defend their movement. So far nobody has managed to put up any substantial defense.

I have also laid out my own political position, which is worth restating:

Human biodiversity says that you will have a differences in relevant traits within and between populations. Most saliently, there are differences in intelligence.

Wherever there are large differences in intelligence, you have conflict. In specific, you have attempts by low IQ groups to murder and steal the wealth produced by high IQ groups.

It appears that the difference in intelligence is what is driving this murderous and destructive behavior, not differences in race or ethnicity. Differences in race and ethnicity do seem to create these destructive dynamics, but through the differences in traits, most saliently differences in intelligence that drive wealth gaps.

In the French and Russian revolutions you can see the worst humanity has to offer as packs of thieving morons murder their most educated, intelligent, and productive countrymen, alongside their wives and children.

In the genocides, expulsions and discrimination suffered by – among others:

Armenians in the Ottoman Empire

Jews in Old Europe

Tutsi in Rwanda and African Great Lakes region

The Chinese in Malaysia.

The Igbo in Nigeria.

The Whites in Zimbabwe and South Africa.

The Indians of Uganda

Are all characterized by precisely the avarice and lies that characterized the French revolutionaries. The ethnic differences catalyze the violence through differences in productivity, that lead to differences in wealth, that lead to jealousy and rage.

Property is a social construct. It is not sustained through government action, but through individual enforcement. There’s no government database saying that my wallet is mine, that my laptop is mine, that my telescope is mine, that my keys are mine. They are mine because I claim them and defend my claim through the implicit threat that I will physically and socially attack anyone who tries to grab or claim my property.

This threat is what underlies property, and is what would form the basis of my ownership even if there WAS a government database that stated that these specific possessions are mine.

I am critical of revolutionaries who seize the property of their productive countrymen, and often murder them for good measure. But much of the blame, in all the real-world cases, lies with those most productive countrymen. They fail, and fail catastrophically and unforgivably, in their duty to maintain credible deterrence. They fail to draw the social and physical boundaries they must draw.

When someone claims that my laptop is theirs, my response must be immediate physical or verbal attacks on this person until those claims are withdrawn. If, in the presence or absence of witnesses, someone claims that my laptop is theirs, and I fail to gainsay this with an effective physical or verbal assault, the reality of my claim to my laptop wavers. It is not clear that my laptop is mine if somebody else can say it is theirs without me gainsaying them. Ownership is a social construct based on claims. Claims must be defended to be valid.

The French aristocracy and petit bourgeois failed to effectively defend their claims to property and rights that they formally had. People were able to gainsay their claimed rights and property, without being beaten down with physical or social assaults. Given this, it is not actually clear that when the revolutionaries stormed their houses, stole their possessions, raped their wives, and murdered their children, that those revolutionaries were violating their rights. A whole lot of talking preceded that violent action, and the nature of that conversation made it unclear whether the contested properties belonged to their former owners, or to the usurpers who seized them.

Say I leave my laptop where it stands and sit a few tables away. Then someone comes along and says – is this anyone’s laptop? Hello? Is this anyone’s laptop? Then they pick up the laptop. Then I run up to them and wrestle them for control of the laptop, and we both sustain injuries in the struggle and end up in some form of arbitration.

It is not totally clear who is in the wrong.

Similarly, when french revolutionaries talk about how the king’s power is illegitimate, and the king demurs, when the french revolutionaries talk about how market elites are illegitimate, and the market elites demur, it is not totally clear who is the thief and who is the usurper when things come to violence.

To allow this ambiguity to permeate the social system of property and power is to invite ultraviolence. To be sure, there is a good case to be made that the french revolutionaries were vile thieves and murderers, especially given what they did to each other after taking power. But there is also a case to be made that the royals and petit bourgeois were unforgivably negligent in their response to the challenges that preceded the violence.

To bring this back to present day, our modern elites fail to respond adequately to claims that they are illegitimate, and their property is stolen. They should respond with withering social assaults — identify those who make those claims with Nazi concentration camp administrators, and with Hutu machete-wielders who seize babes from their mothers’ arms and hack them apart on the spot. Point out that precisely the same logic is being deployed in the prelude to those murderous atrocities, towards them.

It is clear that the safest, and most moral course of action when faced with people who attempt to blur the lines of what belongs to who, is to crack the whip. To fail to do so is to accept the blurring of the lines, and thus invite thieves into your home to kill you, murder your children, rape your wife, and burn it down.

To make our elites realize the shape of this moral landscape is to stabilize this country, and pave the way to radical improvements.

Posted in Alt Right | Comments Off on The Kyle Position

I Just Got Back From My First Voice Lesson

It turns out I have pressed phonation. It’s worse than cancer. My voice is strangled in the back of my throat. So I’m learning to lift my voice to the top of my palate. That takes (and produces) more energy from my body but it places less strain on my throat.

Posted in Speech | Comments Off on I Just Got Back From My First Voice Lesson

It’s Never Too Late To Have A Good Relationship With Your Dad

Even after he’s gone, you can choose which memories you focus on and how you understand them. You can put some effort in to sense what it was like to walk in his shoes. You can widen and deepen your empathy. You can learn about him. You can reread his biography. You can reread his emails to you. You can watch some of his videos. You can talk about him.

When I choose one angle on my dad, he’s a hero. He is courage personified. He’s a man who never strayed from his pursuit of the truth.

With a little effort, even though I’ve lived my life differently than what my dad wanted (I saw his life as a warning to me and I didn’t want to end up like him), I can think of ways the two of us were terrifically alike. In developing empathy for my father, I develop empathy for myself. Given who we were at various stages of our lives, we could not have acted differently. Our capacity for free will may not be as large as we imagined. To understand all is to forgive all.

Posted in Articles | Comments Off on It’s Never Too Late To Have A Good Relationship With Your Dad

#228 5-1-19 Who Guards The Guardians? Barr vs The FBI

00:00 Eric Striker doxxed
10:00 Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg answers questions
13:00 Colin Liddell joins
20:00 Venezuelan turmoil
24:00 KMG joins: Eric Striker, Alt Right, Germany’s WWI, WWII, Angela Merkel
28:00 Richard Spencer
40:00 Morgenthau Plan – was it genocidal?
1:18:00 KMG on AG Barr’s testimony today to Senate
1:25:00 Youtube 13yo girl sensation Soph
1:32:00 New Zealand news media dies in darkness
1:46:00 Activists Are Trying To Force Mastercard To Cut Off Payments To The Far Right
1:58:00 Tucker Carlson: Why Is America In Venezuela?
2:00:00 Julian Assange: Wikileaks co-founder jailed over bail breach
2:03:00 Characteristics of white supremacy
2:07:00 Trump Fires Off 60 Mostly Anti-Biden Retweets in an Hour
2:11:00 Mark Zuckerberg jokes about privacy
2:14:00 ‘Armageddon’ rioting breaks out in Paris as extremist demonstrators hijack May Day protests
2:24:00 Semenya loses landmark legal case against IAAF over testosterone levels
2:30:00 Barriers Against Barbarism
2:33:00 German Intelligence Issues Taboo-Breaking Report on Muslim Antisemitism
2:50:00 If Politicians Can’t Face Climate Change, Extinction Rebellion Will

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/william-barr-walks-back-claim-fbi-didnt-brief-trump-campaign-on-russia-threat

https://affirmativeright.blogspot.com/2018/04/hitler-as-expression-of-german-bad-form.html

https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2019/05/striker-outed-by-splc-as-smoll-hispanic.html

https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2019/05/01/prolific-alt-right-propagandists-identity-confirmed

CNN sees ratings swoon in April

Barriers Against Barbarism

https://besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/german-intelligence-muslim-antisemitism/

http://www.desertsun.co.uk/blog/9536/

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2019/may/01/caster-semenya-loses-landmark-legal-case-iaaf-athletics

Canadian soldiers carry guns in ‘full fighting order’ at Toronto’s Khalsa Day — the Forces called it ‘misguided’

Tucker Carlson Condemns GOP Calls for Venezuela Intervention: Seem to Care More About Venezuela Than the US

Assange jailed: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-48118908

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-01/trump-fires-off-60-mostly-anti-biden-retweets-in-an-hour

https://mashable.com/article/mark-zuckerberg-privacy-joke-facebook-f8-2019/

https://www.cnsnews.com/blog/terence-p-jeffrey/1485-vs-352-abortions-or-after-21-weeks-gestational-age-outnumbered-homicides

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/01/christchurch-trial-new-zealand-media-agree-to-curb-white-supremacy-coverage

https://www.buzzfeed.com/markdistefano/mastercard-activists-cut-off-donations-far-right

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6980499/Armageddon-rioting-breaks-Paris-extremist-demonstrators-hijack-Day-protests.html

Posted in America | Comments Off on #228 5-1-19 Who Guards The Guardians? Barr vs The FBI