Showing posts with label Illinois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illinois. Show all posts

Sunday, August 3, 2025

The heat is on

 


"Red Heat" is a somewhat strange film released in 1988, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Belushi and Lawrence Fishburne. I recently watched it on a Swedish TV channel, where it was marketed as a "comedy". Ahem, I beg you pardon? More like an extravaganza in Murder One (and some mayhem) if you ask me! But sure, Arnie and Belushi do try to add some comic relief here and there. Arnold usually by not smiling at all. He´s supposed to be a hard boiled Communist police officer from the old Soviet Union! 

The film was made during Gorbachev´s perestroika/glasnost, which may explain why the Russians are the "good guys" in this production. The "Soviet" segments were actually taped in Hungary, at the time the most "liberal" Eastern bloc nation. Curiously, "Red Heat" is so Russophile that it even assimilated Russian racism against non-Russian ethnic groups in the old Soviet Union. The villain is a Georgian (from Georgia south of Russia) and another bad guy is described as a "Mongolian hippie"...

On the American end, the bad guys are African-Americans and led by a certain Abdul Elijah, who turns out to be a Black supremacist, Marxist and drug kingpin. He is clearly intended as a hybrid between Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X (or perhaps the Black Panthers). Abdul hates all White people with equal gusto, including...Russians. OK, so there is little Wokeness in this film, if you get the drift.

And yes, I noticed that the bus at the end was marked "American Liberty Lines". Perhaps interesting as cultural studies in 2025?

  

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Shakedown

 


So a Swedish TV network just showed "Pulp Fiction". I asked the AI a funny question about it... 

In Pulp Fiction, a milkshake costs five dollars and is considered too expensive. What is the current price of a milkshake in the United States?

As of 2025, milkshake prices in the United States vary depending on the establishment and the type of milkshake:

  • Fast-Food Chains: At McDonald's, a small milkshake is priced at $3.99, with medium and large sizes at $4.69 and $4.89, respectively. Chick-fil-A offers milkshakes ranging from $4.85 to $5.25, depending on the flavor. Hack The Menuhttps://chick-fil-a-menus.com/

  • Specialty or Gourmet Milkshakes: At venues like baseball stadiums, prices can be higher. For instance, the Chicago White Sox's "Campfire Milkshake" is priced at $15. Eater Chicago

Reflecting on the $5 milkshake in Pulp Fiction (1994), which was considered expensive at the time, it's interesting to note that today, such a price is standard at many fast-food establishments. This change underscores how inflation and evolving consumer expectations have influenced pricing over the past three decades. 

Friday, May 9, 2025

Allegations

 


This article contains allegations that Prevost, the future Pope Leo XIV, mishandled sexual abuse cases in both Chicago and Peru. However, there is also an interview with a Mexican author who believes that Prevost *did* try to investigate the abuse allegations in Peru, indeed, that he was one of the few local bishops who tried to do so.

Not sure if that´s more re-assuring, tbh.

Otherwise, I´m intrigued by Prevost´s strong connection to Peru. He seems to have been a cleric in that particular South American nation for decades. Not sure if I find *that* very re-assuring either, but that´s me... 

Victims´ groups alleges Prevost mishandled sexual abuse cases 

Leo Africanus?

 


From X. Original unkown. Not sure if true or just another rumor...

We have a pope...or something

 

Credit: INFOWeather1

Pro-Trump/pro-Vance Breitbart News tries to cope with the new Woke Pope in the State of Vatican City. See links below! Whatever. 

Personally, I would like to know why Prevost took the papal name Leo XIV. Leo XIII (the Pope most people-in-the-know think about when they hear the name "Leo") is still seen as one of the greatest popes in modern Catholic history (reigned 1878-1903). So choosing *that* name strikes me as...daring. 

Also, what does it tell us about Prevost´s political orientation? Leo XIII could be seen as a cautious reformer. But he could also be seen as radical, since his predecessors on the papal throne were arch-conservative. Leo XIII, by contrast, is associated with "Rerum novarum", the first social encyclical. It inspired the Catholic trade union movement. I read "Rerum novarum" years ago and didn´t find it particularly radical, but in its 1891 Catholic context, maybe it was. So perhaps the name signals that Prevost wants to be explicitly political and even somewhat "radical"?

I suppose we´re about to find out, aren´t we?   

Newly elected Pope opposed gender theory

Cubs or White Sox?

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Jah Rastafari

 


Almost by accident, I found an English translation of some of the Ethiopian Bible books not considered canonical by other Churches in a used book store.

Or did I?

It turned out that my prize volume, "Books of the Ethiopian Bible: Missing from the Protestant Canon. Ethiopian Church", was even stranger than I expected.

I almost immidiately noticed that the name of God was rendered "Jah". Then, I noticed that at least one of the texts seem to be translated into some kind of Pidgin English. Oookay. So I checked the publisher, Lushena Books in Illinois, United States. Yepp, it´s an Afro-centrist outlet of some kind. 

In other words: the book isn´t published by supporters of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, but by Rastafarians!

Not that I mind. The work was pretty cheap and I looked into Rastafarianism before. As opposed to, say, Pastafarianism. So I might consider taking a second look at it, Jah willing.    

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Revolution´s tired

 


When I was much younger than today, some anarchist somewhere expressed concern that maybe capitalism would co-opt things such as gay rights, anti-racism or feminism. Few people believed him. I mean, capitalism is homophobic, racist, sexist and deeply oppressive, right? Surely movements fighting these things are inherently revolutionary!

Flash forward about 40 years...

A mafioso-looking billionaire governor of Illinois, part of the imperialist United States, promises to double down on "sex changes" during Transgender Awareness Week.

Revolution´s tired.   

Illinois governor doubles down on "sex changes" 

Friday, August 16, 2024

We are the Revcoms

The Great Chicago Fire


HA HA HA. I´m old enough to remember when these shysters *actually endorsed Kamala Harris*. That is, they endorsed Joe Biden in the 2020 POTUS elections. Which means they endorsed Harris, too. But listen to their whining now...

If a vote for Biden (and "Cold-blooded Kamala") was right in 2020 to stop "the fascist Trump-Pence regime" (no less), why is it wrong in 2024, to stop the "fascists" from, you know, coming back? Exactly.

However, (psycho)analyzing Bob Avakian might be completely pointless, and these days the Revolutionary Communist Party´s personality cult of their Chairman is so hilariously bizarre, that the entire "party" comes across as a one-man operation. It looks as if Avakian is effectively worshipping himself.

But who knows, maybe the RCP can move the needle with say ten votes in Illinois.    

The Democratic National Convention: Putting the joy in genocide, the optimism in oppression and the feel-good in fascist denial

Supporting a mass murderer and mass incarcerator running for President?! Who could be so desperate and deluded?!

Bob Avakian is the most important political thinker and leader in the world today

On the campaign trail

 

Me, trying to sit out the POTUS elections

The election campaign in the US is heating up. Links below are to the pro-Trump Breitbart News site. Some cynical comments...

Even if the allegations against Walz about Chinese ties are true, I´m pretty sure most American politicians did pretty much the same thing until, say, 10 years ago. So the only difference would be that Walz was stupid enough to continue in the same vein throughout the Trump years. 

As for pro-Palestinian activists not voting for Kamala Harris...LOL. What are the chances? So probably a nothingburger. But sure, the slogan "Kamala, you can´t hide, we won´t vote for genocide" is almost bizarrely brilliant. I mean, who´s behind it? The Revolutionary Communist Party? The Revolutionary Workers League? Dude!

The polling results from Pennsylvania (an important swing state) are strange. Note that voters under 40 prefer Trump with a 18-point margin! Less surprising, perhaps, is that atheists overwhelmingly (84%) support Harris. If Robert F Kennedy Jr is included in the polls, Trump and Harris are tied at 47% each of the total Pennsylvanian vote. So perhaps RFK Jr can still play a role in the November elections? Or at least create havoc!

And it´s only August. Still awaiting the October surprise with much fear and trembling...  

House Oversight Committee to launch investigation into Tim Walz´s Chinese connections

Pro-Palestinian protesters set to crash Harris-Walz coronation

Trump leads Kamala in Pennsylvania

Friday, March 1, 2024

When Aslan met Bagheera

 




From the X account Legendary Cryptids: "One of the only known cases of multiple cryptids being friends are the reports of black panthers and maned lions in America traveling together. A pair were spotted near the Illinois Indiana border in 1948 and in Arkansas in 1977."

They say Aslan and Bagheera are on the move...

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

The dancing orms of Turkana

 

Credit: Ghedoghedo

An entertaining blog post about the very real "state fossil of Illinois", the Tully Monster, and how it inspired both weird speculations about the Loch Ness monster and two cryptozoological hoaxes about dancing worms in Kenya! I admit I had no idea. 

Shuker is very critical of Ted Holiday, but I actually found his last book "The Goblin Universe" interesting. But then, that´s not a cryptozoological study sensu stricto. And perhaps not even sensu latto! 

The Tully Monster in cryptozoology

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

It´s the intention that counts

 


A Palestinian woman (somewhat strangely referred to as "pro"-Palestinian here - I assume she is, of course, but she seems to be *ethnically* Palestinian, as well) has been arrested in the US state of Indiana for crashing her car into a school she believed was Jewish/Israeli. 

Plot twist: it´s actually the school of a bizarre Black supremacist and anti-Semitic sect! However, they claim to be "Hebrews" and therefore use the Star of David as their symbol. 

Something a simpleton like our pro-Palestinian woman obviously cannot comprehend. Welcome to the US of A, the land of religious freedom (and really quirky cults). 

Or maybe she was on to something, after all? In Chicago, Black Hebrew Israelites and pro-Hamas protesters have actually clashed, for reasons not explained in the second link...   

Palestinian woman crashes car into "Black Israelite" school

Pro-Palestine groups clash with "Black Israelites"

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Still out there

 


It seems people are still encountering insectoid or mantis-like aliens or cryptids. A YouTube channel called "Phantoms and Monsters Radio" has collected four such stories in this relatively short clip. 

They do have an "authentic feel", ironically because they *don´t* conform to the usual pop culture stereotypes of how alien entities "should" act. With one exception: the missing time. 

One story is about insectoid angels who turn out to be the good guys (!). Another is about a mantis-like cryptid which can somehow cloak itself, rather than a paranormal entity or UFO occupant. I think this may be the same encounter mentioned in an old episode of "Monsters and Mysteries in America", but I´m not entirely sure. 

Of course, hoaxes or hallucinations cannot be ruled out in these cases, since some of the witnesses were clearly in an alternate state of consciousness at the time of their encounters. Unless, of course, the ultraterrestrials can alter our consciousness so we can see them...

Make of this material what ye wish! 

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Karmic culmination


Many of the reactions to the Rittenhouse acquittal have a very disturbing quality about them. I mean, how could a person like *this* ever become a staffer of a main line political party? Don´t they understand that they could be setting the stage for a quite literal civil war? The Dems had to drop this character from their payroll, but unfortunately I don´t think this is an isolated example... 

Chicago Democratic staffer resigns after bizarre tweets

Saturday, November 20, 2021

The only sane Democrat?

 


The only sane Democrat left? 

Tulsi Gabbard on Kyle Rittenhouse

"The jury got it right—finding Rittenhouse not guilty on all charges. The fact that charges were brought before any serious investigation is evidence that the government was motivated by politics, which itself should be considered criminal."

Friday, January 25, 2019

Prophets always double down




”When Prophecy Fails” by Leon Festinger, Henry Riecken and Stanley Schachter is a classical study of an apocalyptic sect and the supporters´ reactions to the failure of its prophecies. The book was first published in 1958. On the basis of historical material, the authors suspected that apocalyptic movements often became *more active* after their prophecies about impending doom had been disconfirmed. However, there was no way of actually proving the theory – until the researchers discovered the Seekers, a small UFO sect based in a suburb of Chicago, which predicted that the world as we know it would end on December 21, 1954. Festinger & Co directed some of their students to join the sect (i.e. to infiltrate it) in order to discover how the leaders and members would react when the apocalypse failed to materialize. Today, this kind of research method would probably be considered unethical. In the book, most personal and geographical information have been garbled to protect the identities of the sect members, but they were well known at the time, due to media interest in their prophecies. The leader and main ”channel” of the group, Dorothy Martin, is called Marian Keech in the narrative. Her chief sidekick, Charles Laughead, is called Dr Armstrong. A competing medium who played a certain role in the events, Rose Phillips, is referred to as Ella Lowell. ”Lake City” is obviously Chicago, ”Collegeville” is East Lansing (where Armstrong had a position at the university) and ”Steel City” is presumably Detroit.

The book is easy to read and the events described border the absurd and tragicomic. Already before the predicted apocalypse (a great flood which would destroy Chicago together with the central parts of North America), the Seekers had experienced their first ”great disappointment”. On December 18, an obvious prankster called the Martin residence and informed her that a UFO would land in her own backyard later the same day, presumably to pick up all the sect supporters. The hoaxer called himself Captain Video, the name of a character from a popular science fiction TV show! Yet, Martin´s supporters gathered outside her house, sincerely hoping to be rescued by the space ship. When the UFO failed to materialize, the sect members watched ”Captain Video” on TV, trying to find coded messages in the show about what to do next… After a supposed psychic message from the aliens, the group gathered outside the Martin residence again throughout the night, once again expecting a space ship to pick them up. Nothing happened this time either.

Festinger´s undercover observers weren´t disappointed by the reactions of Martin, Laughead and the Seekers after December 21 came and went without any floods or aliens. Instead of losing faith, they simply reinterpreted the aborted prophecy (the aliens had called off the whole thing due to the ”light” spread by the Seekers) and, just as predicted by Festinger, became *more* active in trying to convert people to their little UFO religion. They even invited people to gather outside Martin´s house on Christmas Eve (200 interested outsiders showed up), promising that this time, there would be a UFO landing for sure. Before the failed apocalypse, the Seekers had been a semi-secret group which rarely talked to the press and seldom tried to win new converts. After the failure, by contrast, they were more than eager to talk to reporters, including hostile ones, and never turned down anyone who asked for information – most peoples showing interest in the UFO group were teenagers, many of whom were ”interested” only ironically. (The pranksters constantly plaguing the group were also teens or college students.) Many of the sect members had quit their jobs, got rid of money and other possessions, and experienced conflicts with their families as a result of their belief in the imminent end of the world. Armstrong had been fired from the University of Michigan, and the local police and PTA in the Chicago suburb where Martin was living had made systematic attempts to stop her from proselytizing. Add to this the ridicule in the media. Armstrong explicitly told one of the undercover researchers that he *had* to believe in the message since he lost so much and no turning back was possible. The will to believe was strong, and this explains the bizarre fact that the Seekers went on the offensive after their predictions had been disconfirmed – one way to deal with the cognitive dissonance is to convert the rest of the world to your perspective (including your reinterpretations of the failed prophecies). The Armstrong family, now under Rose Phillips´ influence, awaited another UFO landing about five months later – again, nothing happened. As for Martin, she eventually moved to Peru, then to California, and until the end of her days continued to issue channeled messages from the space brothers, often with apocalyptic overtones.

What struck me most when reading ”When Prophecy Fails” was that the Seekers wasn´t an outright cult. Rather, we are dealing with a somewhat looser structure of extremely gullible honest-to-God people. Martin clearly believed in her ability to receive messages from the aliens through automatic writing, while Armstrong had been drawn into the flying saucer milieu after a long meeting with George Adamski, whose tall tales he swallowed hook, line and sinker. Both leaders were so desperate for ”orders” from higher intelligences that they often assumed that high schoolers or college kids who came to visit the Martin residence were in fact ”space men”. They also mistook one of Festinger´s undercover research assistants for an alien! Authority within the group wasn´t entirely clear. While Martin was the main channel, she was temporarily challenged by an ordinary rank and file member who suddenly began to channel ”the Creator”, who was said to be higher than ”Sananda” (Martin´s alien spirit-guide). Armstrong and some other supporters of the sect also accepted the revelations coming through Rose Phillips, who wasn´t even a member and seemed mildly skeptical of the doomsday prophecies. Two or three members of the group were probably skeptical to all or most of the happenings, yet were never purged. Note also how easy it was for the researchers to gain access to the group. There is clearly much more to unpack here…

Of course, what makes ”When Prophecy Fails” really disturbing is that it may shed some light on other religions the holy scriptures of which contain failed prophecies. Guess which ones? ”When Prophecy Fails” also raises questions about political movements, or indeed entire civilizations, which see *their* expectations disconfirmed. However, since Marxism, open border globalism or the Western Idea of Progress usually don´t have an absolute cut off date for when the Messiah will arrive, it takes longer for the cognitive dissonance to work itself out. Still, it´s interesting to reflect on the similarities between us ”rational people” and Dorothy Martin´s  little UFO sect in Lake City 70 years ago…

Thursday, September 20, 2018

The Phantom Menace




This book by paranormal investigator Lon Strickler contains the original witness reports concerning “Mothman in Chicago”. During 2017, there was a veritable paranormal flap in Windy City, with about 50 observations of a bizarre creature often compared to the famous Mothman of Point Pleasant, WV. Strickler has also included some earlier reports about flying humanoids and other weird creatures from the Midwest.

The first thing that struck me when reading the recent reports is that “Mothman” is something of a misnomer. The only similarity seems to be the creature's glowing red eyes. Otherwise, it's described as a black creature with huge bat-like wings and (sometimes) a pterodactylid head. Several witnesses compare it to a gargoyle. It's also extremely large. The creature has not been associated with UFOs and other paranormal activity, unlike Mothman who was part of a more general “flap” in West Virginia. The author has chosen to call the it the Chicago Phantom, but it seems the Mothman moniker is here to stay, since all winged humanoids are immediately associated with the Point Pleasant inhumanoid (also popularized by a film featuring Richard Gere).

It was interesting to read the comments of the investigators from Strickler's Task Force at the end of the book. One of them is willing to concede that many of the sightings might be misidentifications of cranes. A similar explanation has also been proposed for Mothman. However, everyone on the team agrees that at least some of the encounters must be genuine. But what is it? A flesh-and-blood cryptid? Or a being from another dimension of reality, which is Strickler's favored explanation?

The Chicago Mothman (or Batman!) flap has created conflicts between different factions within the community of paranormal researchers. Strickler's group are frustrated with MUFON, which claims that we're dealing with misidentifications of herons or kites. On the web, I found an article at Mysterious Universe titled “Mothman Problems” which promotes Allison Jorlin, who believes that most of the purported observations are hoaxes. Apparently, Jorlin was expelled from the Task Force by Strickler, who also had a fall out with Loren Coleman (Coleman has written his own book on Mothman, which I haven't read yet). Much frustration has been caused by Strickler's refusal to give other investigators access to the witnesses, but surely this doesn't in and of itself prove a hoax?

My guess is that the Chicago Phantom problematique will be discussed back and forth for years on various anomalist websites. The last word has not yet been said about this episode…

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Feed the fat guy to the sharks




Once in a while, "MonsterQuest" apparently have to come up with a real monster, or else...

In this episode, "Jaws in Illinois", the search party goes after sharks with the chutzpah to show up in fresh or brackish water, something the aquatic ape known as Homo sapiens finds deeply questionable. Sharks, after all, are supposed to lurk at sea, or gild our shark-fin soup.

Bull sharks in Louisiana, Greenland Sharks in the St. Lawrence River and (perhaps) Great White Sharks in New Jersey are featured. However, only a couple of minutes are devoted to the mysterious shark captured in Illinois (sic) during the Great Depression or thereabouts.

The whole show looks promising, but gets progressively more boring as it drags on. Gee, why didn't they just use the fat guy as bait? There's enough meat on him to feed an entire sea-serpent!

Three stars, if you are a shark aficionado.

Monday, September 10, 2018

Some say it thundered






On 25 July, 1977 in Lawndale, Logan County, Illinois, 10-year old Marlon Lowe was attacked by a gigantic raptor with a 3-meter wing span that lifted him 60 cm off the ground and carried him for 12 meters. The boy was eventually saved by his mother. Indeed, his experience has become the classical Thunderbird encounter. It was a close one!

There is only one problem: according to modern science, Thunderbirds aren't supposed to exist. The creature is considered to be purely mythological.

Mark A. Hall is a cryptozoologist who believes that Thunderbirds are real, flesh-and-blood creatures. His book contain a lot of reports, both old and new, about birds carrying off people or livestock. Several modern reports come from Alaska, where birds with the even more dramatic wingspan of 4 meters have been reported.

The problem is that Thunderbirds are a world-wide phenomenon. The author mentions legends from Siberia, Russia proper, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, New Zealand, Fiji... More recently, Thunderbirds have been sighted in Iran, southern and eastern Africa, England and even Norway. If these outsized raptors are so universally well-known and have an almost global range, how come we don't see them more often? Why haven't any bird-watcher spotted them? What do they eat? Why don't they swoop down on carrion on a regular basis, scaring away all the vultures and crows in the process?

As usual in cases like this, there are only two possible answers. One is that they don't exist. They really are mythological creatures. The other is that we are dealing with some kind of paranormal phenomenon. We have a bunch of Unidentified Flapping Objects on our hands! The least likely possibility is that we are dealing with an exceedingly rare, flesh-and-blood bird who just happens to be substantially larger than a condor or sea eagle... (And who has survived all over the world, despite being rare.)

Hall also promotes the idea that an unknown, monstrous owl lives in the forests of eastern United States. He calls it Bighoot and believes that it may be responsible for the Mothman observations. Apparently, Bighoot is a master of disguises, and resembles a very large tree trunk when it sits on the ground!

OK, I suppose anything is possible in the state of West Virginia, but there are obvious pitfalls in explaining one unknown with another! Bighoot?

I decided to award Hall's book three stars, since this seems to be one of the few books available on the subject of Thunderbirds. However, "Thunderbirds" is so badly edited, that two stars would have been a more logical option. It may not be a book for the birds, but perhaps another writer should try his hand on this subject?

So what happened in Lawndale that summer day back in 1977? The truth is that we don't know, and probably never will, unless a Thunderbird is sighted by a group of respected ornithologists. Perhaps we don't *want* to know? We do know that Marlon Lowe still stands by his story. He is interviewed on the episode "Birdzilla" of the TV series "MonsterQuest". With that, we must unfortunately close the case for now and await further developments...