Wednesday, 4/16/25: Friday morning my wife and I will head out of Los Angeles on Highway 15 for a 4 hour drive northeast through the Mojave Desert (forecast: calm and mild) en route to Las Vegas.
When we arrive we will walk around the streets and through casinos to watch people gamble, some casting their hopes towards a mystical power, praying that it sends them money, refusing to accept that all power is in the house, and the mysticism is math.
We'll see a show at the Sphere on Saturday.
These things will be interesting until they appear empty through commercial promotion without perceptual depth. The Sphere will bring an hour of distraction, but what will it be other than glorified flashing lights? Will it change our immediate lives? Will gambling bring anything beyond clanging bells and empty pockets?
The "news" too, which may distract us on the desert trek, tends to lose its power through mindless media treatment. News cycles usually feature at least one striking event, striking in the sense that they impact large numbers of people, like the replacing of a world order with uncertainty, or a president switching sides in the middle of a war, but even impactful stories outlive their shelf life if the reporting is repetitive and shallow. For instance the story of Trump's tariffs, impactful as the tariffs are, becomes boring as presented by media, because Trump's terms are the basis of the reporting, with endless discussion of economic theories the tariffs are allegedly based on, while in fact economic theory is not the compelling motivation behind the tariffs. The motivation is to sow chaos and war as cover for establishment of new monopolies in coming AI/bio-engineered societies. Such superficial reporting gives stories an abbreviated shelf life no matter how impactful they are (unless you're part of the story and it becomes real beyond the media, as happened to us when the Palisades fire burned down our daughter's house). Ukraine vs Russia? What's the shelf life of this story if we hear only grand terms like "freedom" and "democracy" to describe its motivations, avoiding the actual motivational question: Who gets the mineral rights in Ukraine? This is treated as a side issue, when it is actually the only issue, at least for America's evolving corporatocracy. I find myself pondering my grandfather, who fled Ukraine at the age of 10 after his father was killed in a pogrom. Should that be somewhere in the story to freshen it up?
Anyway, Vegas here we come!
Note: The next post on this trip, and in fact all of my future posts, will appear on my alter-ego's site, Harry the Human at http://harrythehuman.harrythehumanpoliticalthoughtsfrombeyondthepale.com/.
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