memfree

joined 1 year ago
[–] memfree 2 points 1 month ago

fair enough :-)

[–] memfree 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Since you aren't vegetarian, may I recommend trying a 'Reuben' pizza (or stromboli)?

Instead of pizza sauce, use Russian dressing. Top with sauerkraut and chopped up corned beef and finish with shredded swiss cheese (use a good swiss and shred yourself for best results). You might optionally add onion before baking or dill pickles afterwards.

[–] memfree 3 points 1 month ago

hmmm.... my dough is still rising, but it has a bread-flour base that might make for tough rolls.... though perhaps I can amend the dough to be fluffier before the final rise.

[–] memfree 3 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Yes! I LOVE veggie crumbles. I use them in spaghetti sauce, chili, tacos, enchiladas, and most everything else that calls for ground hamburger -- especially when in a sauce.

My bigger issue is how to construct a 'thing' that works with dough. Maybe something like a 'cheese steak' stromboli would work.

 

I am craving something bready and sloppy for dinner, but I can't think of anything that fits the bill. I could make a giant vegetable pot pie (I've done that before and they are tasty), but for whatever reason, I'm wanting bread dough instead of pie dough and I don't think that would work as well. Focaccia by itself would be too much bread without enough 'stuff'. My better half is vegetarian, so I'd like to keep it meatless (cheese is fine). We have too much tofu right now, so I'm slightly tempted to make an S&B curry stew and then baking it inside bread dough, but would that work? It'd certainly have the sort of savory I desire, but it might be too gloppy. Really, I'm looking for something more like stromboli but I can't think of anyone but Italians that bake lots of filling inside a bread wrap.

Any ideas?

[–] memfree 3 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Well, don't leave us hanging! Which bags lasted 10 years? Where do we get them? I'm having a hard time because the only really good bags I have require a minimum purchase of 50 (these: https://enviro-tote.com/product/medium-grocery-tote-bag/).

 
  • 6:09PM 200 missiles launched at Israel

Nearly 200 missiles have been launched at Israel from Iran, Israel’s army radio announced.

  • 6:06PM IRGC vows ‘crushing attacks’ if Israel responds

The Iranian Revolutionary Guards have threatened “crushing attacks” for Israel if it responds to the missile barrage launched on Tuesday evening.

  • 6:04PM Iran says Tel Aviv is target of attack

Iran has launched a missile attack on Israel’s commercial hub Tel Aviv, state media reported, citing officials.

The official IRNA news agency said Iran had launched “a missile attack on Tel Aviv”, without elaborating after staying quiet during the start of the barrage.

  • 6:03PM Explosions in Jerusalem

Explosions sounded in Jerusalem on Tuesday evening as air raid sirens rang out, AFP journalists reported, with what appeared to be air defence interceptors echoing over the city.

The explosions came shortly after the military said that Iran had launched a missile attack targeting Israel.


See also BBC and AP coverage:

[–] memfree 29 points 1 month ago

It sounds like the donor had requirements. From The Tribune:

The University of Chicago has received a $100 million gift from an anonymous donor to support free expression, marking what may be the largest-ever single donation to support such values in higher education, the university announced Thursday.

And:

Discussions surrounding the donation have been ongoing for over a year, according to a university spokesperson.

From https://chicago.suntimes.com/education/2024/09/26/university-chicago-donation-free-speech-expression-forum :

The gift was ridiculed by advocates involved in the encampment that highlighted abuses against Palestinians in the Israel-Hamas War and torn down by the university in the spring.

“It’s truly a slap in the face,” said Yousseff Hasweh, a U of C grad who’s diploma was withheld by the university for two months, allegedly for his involvement in the protest.

[–] memfree 4 points 2 months ago

Facts?! That just makes them devolve to No true Scotsman rhetoric. ;-)

[–] memfree 13 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Vance and the rest -- including Trump himself -- are suggesting that the attacks are because Democrats are demonizing Trump and Democrats need to tone down the vitriol, ignoring that Trump has said Democrats are destroying America and that we won't have a country left if they get in office and all the rest. At least Vance is -- after saying on TV with Dana Bash that they have confirmed reports from Springfield (in an interview about the pet eating thing) -- that he, too, ought to tone down his rhetoric, but let's see if he can stick with that for more than a day.

Here's a story from July about the left/right spread in toxic language: https://theconversation.com/trump-shooting-is-a-warning-about-how-toxic-language-leads-to-violence-234637

Note the disparity on their graphic:

[–] memfree 3 points 2 months ago

That is so pretty!

[–] memfree 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Ehn. The latest guy called Putin a terrorist on camera, which is something a Trumper would never say.

 

Donald Trump's running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH), on Monday said there's a "big difference" between Republicans and Democrats: "No one has tried to kill Kamala Harris."

Note that earlier in the day, Elon Musk wrote and deleted a similar post. From NY Times:

In response to a user who asked, “Why they want to kill Donald Trump?” Mr. Musk, who has endorsed the former president and comments frequently on the U.S. presidential campaign, wrote: “And no one is even trying to assassinate Biden/Kamala.” His post, which was captured by X users, included a thinking-face emoji.

Mr. Musk took down the post after it immediately drew outrage.


For Vance comments, see also NY Times, Vance says the left is to blame for the attempts on Trump’s life., and/or CNN, Vance blames liberal rhetoric for apparent assassination attempt against Trump :

“I know it’s popular on a lot of corners of the left to say that we have a both sides problem. And I’m not going to say we’re always perfect. I’m not going to say that conservatives always get things exactly right. But you know, the big difference between conservatives and liberals is that we have — no one has tried to kill Kamala Harris in the last couple of months, and two people now have tried to kill Donald Trump in the last couple of months,” the Republican vice presidential candidate said at the Georgia Faith & Freedom Coalition dinner in Atlanta.

“I’d say that’s pretty strong evidence that the left needs to tone down the rhetoric, and needs to cut this crap out,” he continued.

Vance vowed to “do my part” to tone down the rhetoric and said he was speaking particularly to those who say that Trump needs to be “eliminated.”

“Somebody’s gonna get hurt by it, and it’s gonna destroy this country. Somebody is gonna get hurt. And you think about what an incredible wound it would open up in the United States of America, all of us, and I promise I will do my part to tone down the rhetoric,” Vance said. “But in particular, the people telling you that Donald Trump needs to be eliminated. You guys need to cut it out, or you’re gonna get somebody hurt.”


Thankfully, both Democrats and Republicans came together to disavow the New Hampshire Libertarian Party for this from Deadline:

Republican and Democratic Party leaders have condemned New Hampshire’s Libertarian Party for sharing a post saying that anyone who assassinated Vice President Kamala Harris would be “an American hero.”

The party later deleted the post on X, formerly known as Twitter, but appeared unrepentant about the message, saying it was removed because of the platform’s rules and complaining about restrictions on free speech.

[–] memfree 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

@aihorde@lemmy.dbzer0.com draw for me misprogrammed bots making surrealistic space for violence in America -- now with kitties!

[–] memfree 1 points 2 months ago

Be impressed that the bot put an actual sentence on the image!

 

cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/16039719

This series started last week, but it continues tonight Friday the 13th through November 1st.

The films are drawn from a list compiled by The New Republic last year of the 100 most impactful political movies.

The films encompass both documentaries and dramatized works; most are American, while a few are from other countries. Their release dates range from 1915 (The Birth of a Nation) to 2016 (I Am Not Your Negro). Many will have celebrity presenters introducing them, along with TCM host Ben Mankiewicz.

From Hollywood Reporter:

The series runs Sept. 6 to Nov. 1 — four days before America votes for its next president — and features TCM host Ben Mankiewicz in conversation with the likes of Steven Spielberg, Spike Lee, Lee Grant, Sally Field, Andy Garcia, Melissa Etheridge, John Turturro, Bill Maher, Alexander Payne, Diane Lane, Josh Mankiewicz, Barry Levinson, Maureen Dowd, Stacey Abrams and former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

More from the Advocate:

LGBTQ+ issues won’t be neglected. I Am Not Your Negro, for instance, is a documentary based onan unfinished manuscript by Black gay writer and civil rights activist James Baldwin, reflecting on the lives of Medgar Evers, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Baldwin himself. The Times of Harvey Milk(1984) will be featured, presented by Sally Field, the proud mother of a gay son. Also scheduled are 1964’s The Best Man, scripted by gay writer Gore Vidal, in which a same-sex liaison threatens to derail a politician’s career, and Born in Flames, director Lizzie Borden’s 1983 vision of a dystopian future in which women, LGBTQ+ people, and people of color are oppressed.

Borden will be among the celebrity presenters, introducing Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles, Chantal Akerman’s 1975 feminist feature about a widow engaged in sex work. Melissa Etheridge will be a presenter as well, discussing the 1928 silent classic The Passion of Joan of Arc.

Times listed are for Eastern Time. I've skipped last week and bolded titles ranked in the top 20.

Friday, September 13 - Night Two

  • 8:00 PM Reds (1981) (Bill Maher - #41)
  • 11:30 PM The Parallax View (1974) (Kyle Smith - #47)
  • 1:30 AM Germany, Year Zero (1948) (Alexander Payne - #97)
  • 3:00 AM Gabriel Over the White House (1933) (#30)
  • 4:30 AM The Battleship Potemkin (1925) (#7)
  • 6:00 AM The Fog of War (2003) (#56)

Friday, September 20 - Night Three

  • 8:00 PM Dr. Strangelove (1964) (Spike Lee - #3)
  • 9:45 PM Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) (Stacey Abrams - #11)
  • 12:15 AM Hearts and Minds (1974) (Phil Mattingly - #39)
  • 2:15 AM The Lives of Others (2006) (#19)
  • 4:45 AM Born in Flames (1983) (#43)
  • 6:15 AM Bicycle Thieves (1948) (#52)

Friday, September 27 - Night Four

  • 8:00 PM Three Days of the Condor (1975) (Maureen Dowd - #72)
  • 10:15 PM I Am Not Your Negro (2016) (Sara Sidner - #58)
  • 12:00 AM The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) (Melissa Etheridge - #88)
  • 1:30 AM The Last Hurrah (1958) (#57)
  • 3:45 AM Night of the Living Dead (1968) (#35)
  • 5:15 AM The Tin Drum (1979) (#92)

Friday, October 4 - Night Five

  • 8:00 PM The Times of Harvey Milk (1984) (Sally Field - #81)
  • 10:00 PM The Best Man (1964) (Josh Mankiewicz - #69)
  • 12:00 AM I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932) (Sec. Lonnie Bunch III - #95)
  • 1:45 AM City Hall (1996) (#80)
  • 3:45 AM Strike (1924) (#25)
  • 5:15 AM High and Low (1963) (#84)

Friday, October 11 - Night Six

  • 8:00 PM A Face in the Crowd (1957) (Barry Levinson - #10)
  • 10:15 PM Wag the Dog (1997) (Diane Lane - #54)
  • 12:00 AM The Murder of Fred Hampton (1971) (Abby Phillip - #37)
  • 1:45 AM JFK (1991) (#34)
  • 5:00 AM Z (1969) (#15)
  • 7:15 AM Night and Fog (1956) (#21)

Friday, October 18 - Night Seven

  • 8:00 PM The Birth of a Nation (1915) (Jamelle Bouie - #5)
  • 11:30 PM Lincoln (2012) (Hon. Robert M. Gates - #24)
  • 2:15 AM Malcolm X (1992) (#22)
  • 6:00 AM Primary (1960) (#38)

Friday, October 25 - Night Eight

  • 8:00 PM All the President’s Men (1976) (Steven Spielberg - #4)
  • 10:30 PM Citizen Kane (1941) (Frank Luntz - #33)
  • 12:45 AM Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975) (Lizzie Borden - #36)
  • 4:15 AM Olympia Part One: Festival of Nations (1938) (#86)
  • 6:15 AM Olympia Part Two: Beauty of the Festival (1938) (#86)

Friday, November 1 - Night Nine

  • 8:00 PM Being There (1979) (Andy Garcia - #71)
  • 10:30 PM The Candidate (1972) (Kaitlan Collins - #20)
  • 12:30 AM Harlan County USA (1976) (Lee Grant - #12)
  • 2:15 AM The Manchurian Candidate (1962) (#2)
  • 4:00 AM Weekend (1967) (#94)
9
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by memfree to c/entertainment
 

This series started last week, but it continues tonight Friday the 13th through November 1st.

The films are drawn from a list compiled by The New Republic last year of the 100 most impactful political movies.

The films encompass both documentaries and dramatized works; most are American, while a few are from other countries. Their release dates range from 1915 (The Birth of a Nation) to 2016 (I Am Not Your Negro). Many will have celebrity presenters introducing them, along with TCM host Ben Mankiewicz.

From Hollywood Reporter:

The series runs Sept. 6 to Nov. 1 — four days before America votes for its next president — and features TCM host Ben Mankiewicz in conversation with the likes of Steven Spielberg, Spike Lee, Lee Grant, Sally Field, Andy Garcia, Melissa Etheridge, John Turturro, Bill Maher, Alexander Payne, Diane Lane, Josh Mankiewicz, Barry Levinson, Maureen Dowd, Stacey Abrams and former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.

More from the Advocate:

LGBTQ+ issues won’t be neglected. I Am Not Your Negro, for instance, is a documentary based onan unfinished manuscript by Black gay writer and civil rights activist James Baldwin, reflecting on the lives of Medgar Evers, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Baldwin himself. The Times of Harvey Milk(1984) will be featured, presented by Sally Field, the proud mother of a gay son. Also scheduled are 1964’s The Best Man, scripted by gay writer Gore Vidal, in which a same-sex liaison threatens to derail a politician’s career, and Born in Flames, director Lizzie Borden’s 1983 vision of a dystopian future in which women, LGBTQ+ people, and people of color are oppressed.

Borden will be among the celebrity presenters, introducing Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles, Chantal Akerman’s 1975 feminist feature about a widow engaged in sex work. Melissa Etheridge will be a presenter as well, discussing the 1928 silent classic The Passion of Joan of Arc.

Times listed are for Eastern Time. I've skipped last week and bolded titles ranked in the top 20.

Friday, September 13 - Night Two

  • 8:00 PM Reds (1981) (Bill Maher - #41)
  • 11:30 PM The Parallax View (1974) (Kyle Smith - #47)
  • 1:30 AM Germany, Year Zero (1948) (Alexander Payne - #97)
  • 3:00 AM Gabriel Over the White House (1933) (#30)
  • 4:30 AM The Battleship Potemkin (1925) (#7)
  • 6:00 AM The Fog of War (2003) (#56)

Friday, September 20 - Night Three

  • 8:00 PM Dr. Strangelove (1964) (Spike Lee - #3)
  • 9:45 PM Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) (Stacey Abrams - #11)
  • 12:15 AM Hearts and Minds (1974) (Phil Mattingly - #39)
  • 2:15 AM The Lives of Others (2006) (#19)
  • 4:45 AM Born in Flames (1983) (#43)
  • 6:15 AM Bicycle Thieves (1948) (#52)

Friday, September 27 - Night Four

  • 8:00 PM Three Days of the Condor (1975) (Maureen Dowd - #72)
  • 10:15 PM I Am Not Your Negro (2016) (Sara Sidner - #58)
  • 12:00 AM The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) (Melissa Etheridge - #88)
  • 1:30 AM The Last Hurrah (1958) (#57)
  • 3:45 AM Night of the Living Dead (1968) (#35)
  • 5:15 AM The Tin Drum (1979) (#92)

Friday, October 4 - Night Five

  • 8:00 PM The Times of Harvey Milk (1984) (Sally Field - #81)
  • 10:00 PM The Best Man (1964) (Josh Mankiewicz - #69)
  • 12:00 AM I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932) (Sec. Lonnie Bunch III - #95)
  • 1:45 AM City Hall (1996) (#80)
  • 3:45 AM Strike (1924) (#25)
  • 5:15 AM High and Low (1963) (#84)

Friday, October 11 - Night Six

  • 8:00 PM A Face in the Crowd (1957) (Barry Levinson - #10)
  • 10:15 PM Wag the Dog (1997) (Diane Lane - #54)
  • 12:00 AM The Murder of Fred Hampton (1971) (Abby Phillip - #37)
  • 1:45 AM JFK (1991) (#34)
  • 5:00 AM Z (1969) (#15)
  • 7:15 AM Night and Fog (1956) (#21)

Friday, October 18 - Night Seven

  • 8:00 PM The Birth of a Nation (1915) (Jamelle Bouie - #5)
  • 11:30 PM Lincoln (2012) (Hon. Robert M. Gates - #24)
  • 2:15 AM Malcolm X (1992) (#22)
  • 6:00 AM Primary (1960) (#38)

Friday, October 25 - Night Eight

  • 8:00 PM All the President’s Men (1976) (Steven Spielberg - #4)
  • 10:30 PM Citizen Kane (1941) (Frank Luntz - #33)
  • 12:45 AM Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975) (Lizzie Borden - #36)
  • 4:15 AM Olympia Part One: Festival of Nations (1938) (#86)
  • 6:15 AM Olympia Part Two: Beauty of the Festival (1938) (#86)

Friday, November 1 - Night Nine

  • 8:00 PM Being There (1979) (Andy Garcia - #71)
  • 10:30 PM The Candidate (1972) (Kaitlan Collins - #20)
  • 12:30 AM Harlan County USA (1976) (Lee Grant - #12)
  • 2:15 AM The Manchurian Candidate (1962) (#2)
  • 4:00 AM Weekend (1967) (#94)
 

"In the end, we all knew what we knew before, that ABC's goal tonight was to help Kamala Harris, and ABC did help Kamala Harris," Laura Ingraham said on Fox News. That's one way of putting it. Van Jones on CNN found another.

"She whupped him," Jone said. "She just whupped him. ... Kamala Harris did something great for every parent in America. She put the bully in his place."

A certain super gigantic galactic pop star seemed to agree. Moments after the debate, Taylor Swift endorsed Harris, signing her Instagram post "Childless Cat Lady," a reference to a comment made by Trump's running mate, JD Vance.

For more details on the 4chan nature, head over to the Daily Beast for pieces like these:

Debate Transcript: https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/harris-trump-presidential-debate-transcript/story?id=113560542

PBS (no longer live) updates: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/live-updates-trump-and-harris-debate-in-philadelphia

 

The incident occurred approximately one block from the stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla., as traffic started to build ahead of a 1 p.m. start to the game.

"How things escalated into the situation that they were in handcuffs and being held on the ground with police is mind boggling to me," Rosenhaus told ESPN.

See also:

 

“Dick Cheney will be voting for Kamala Harris,” she said of her father, who served as vice president under President George W. Bush from 2001 to 2009. “If you think about the moment we’re in, and you think about how serious this moment is, my dad believes — and he said publicly — there has never been an individual in our country who is as grave a threat to our democracy as Donald Trump is.”


“One of the most important things we need to do as a country as we begin to rebuild our politics is we need to elect serious people,” Liz Cheney said. “Here in Texas, you guys do have a tremendous, serious candidate running for U.S. Senate.”

The audience erupted in applause cutting Liz Cheney off.

“It’s not Ted Cruz," she said.

She blamed Cruz for leading the effort in the Senate for trying to overturn the election.

"That is not somebody to put in a position to be able to do that again," Cheney said.

 

TL;DR: Democrats are united against Trump and will continue to be that way, but if Trump loses so overwhelmingly that he stops running, then a Harris administration will be stuck with a largely Republican government that will keep it from getting much done, thus making it easier for a new brand of Republicans to emerge in two years for for the mid-terms and beyond.

Harris is effectively an emergency nominee, has few policy proposals, scant governing history in Washington and a history of churning through staff. Oh, and she would be the first Democrat to enter the presidency since 1884 without majorities in both chambers, should Republicans flip the Senate.

That adds up to a recipe for gridlock — and perhaps some deal-making to fund the government and avoid across-the-board tax hikes — but not a Scandinavian social welfare state.


The day after Trump leaves the scene, Democrats will lose their best force for unity, fundraising and enthusiasm. But they’ll have the same challenges they do today with the Electoral College, the Senate and the House and the distribution of voters therein.

 

The shooter who opened fire inside Apalachee High school is believed to be a 14-year-old boy, a law enforcement source tells CNN.

The source said it is not yet known whether the teen attended that school.

We cannot continue to accept this as normal,” the president said in a statement.

At least four people are believed to have been killed and approximately 30 more were injured in the shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder, Georgia, although it’s unclear how many of the injuries are from gunshot wounds, according to law enforcement sources.

Apalachee High School is located in the city of Winder, Georgia, which is a community about an hour outside of Atlanta.

 

Banksy’s hope, it is understood, is that the uplifting works cheer ­people with a moment of unexpected ­amusement, as well as to ­gently underline the human capacity for ­creative play, rather than for destruction and negativity.

Some recent theorising about the deeper significance of each new image has been way too involved, Banksy’s support organisation, Pest Control Office, has indicated.


A contractor, who only wanted to give his name as Marc, told PA they were planning to pull the billboard down on Monday and had removed it early in case someone “rips it down and leaves it unsafe”.

He said: “We’ll store that bit [the artwork] in our yard to see if anyone collects it but if not it’ll go in a skip. I’ve been told to keep it careful in case he wants it.”

See source article for more details and great pics of the current art campaign.

 

The acknowledgment came after POLITICO began receiving emails from an anonymous account with documents from inside Trump’s operation.


On July 22, POLITICO began receiving emails from an anonymous account. Over the course of the past few weeks, the person — who used an AOL email account and identified themselves only as “Robert” — relayed what appeared to be internal communications from a senior Trump campaign official.


The person said they had a “variety of documents from [Trump’s] legal and court documents to internal campaign discussions.”

Asked how they obtained the documents, the person responded: “I suggest you don’t be curious about where I got them from. Any answer to this question, will compromise me and also legally restricts you from publishing them.”

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