The WMD Delusion: “And Now, Even Now . . . The Cat . . . TOTALLY Out of the Bag!”

On the following imagery alone:

Which one looks like he’s abiding by the above?  Sowell’s fanatical followers are so bothered by how much I have to say: That nowhere in their minds does it dawn on them to wonder why he said so little.

As a distinguished scholar once said: “The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.”

— Thomas Sowell

The man’s a magician:

As I’m practically spit on by people promoting principles I followed to find he didn’t. Simply by virtue of writing those words, he couldn’t possibly do the same in service of his own ideals? And lo and behold — sleight of hand is how they pulled it off.

When you have absolutely no idea what’s going on here, on what basis are you so doubt-free?

Never mind this . . .

But who cares about that:

When you’ve got this . . .

“Watch again”

How fitting for the world you wallow in:

And I can’t click Play for you either!

On the biggest and most costly lie in modern history (which shaped everything you see today): Half the country took the word of professional know-it-alls over nuclear scientists. And when your camp came up empty on WMD:

You just bought more bullshit from the same people who sold you the first batch:

Shrewd!

Preach Responsibility and Take None!

At every turn . . .

The faithful tap dance around reality — oily evading anything that requires them to hold Sowell to his own standards.

Hard to Imagine:

That I have to explain that quote to people who seemingly live to flood the internet with his words.

He and his flock incessantly complain about the media — and they don’t make policy. But the second I scrutinize Sowell — suddenly you have new standards.

180 — how fitting!

As I said in my doc:

The question comes down to whether or not you’re basing your belief on something in the realm of reason — not some fail-safe fantasy that allows you to believe whatever you want.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act III

In response to all that:

This is the best ya got? . . .

What happened to all this jazz?

In what parallel universe does this even remotely reflect anything like that:

A couple of 2-minute reads that never even mention the tubes that took us to war (or anything else of substance on this endless saga of absurdity). Touting technicalities as “facts” doesn’t get it done: Especially when you make a living selling slogans and catchy quotes about careful consideration. If you only apply the principles you preach when it serves your interests — they’re just empty claims on a cup and a meaningless mantra touted on a T-shirt.

8. Old information at the beginning of the sentence, new information at the end.

— Steven Pinker

How do you feel about no new information — anywhere? 

On Sowells’s quote above I couldn’t agree more:

But there’s another reason why so many people misunderstand so many issues. Professional know-it-alls like you pull stunts like this while peddling lines like that as cover . . .

To whitewash your record of patently obvious hypocrisy and lies. What would you call someone who shoots their mouth off without addressing the evidence — but banks on their fabricated reputation to create the impression that they did? It’s painfully obvious what this guy’s up to: He’s engineering an illusion — and you bought it.

You buy — a lot! Which is why “now, even now” — I have to explain the self-evident to you.

And still — you don’t get it!

But Anything Goes:

In this shithole you call home . . .

If that weren’t true . . .

We’d simply be discussing the facts instead of me having to show the spectacularly stupid & childish shit I’ve almost invariably faced in telling this story on Thomas Sowell for 3-1/2 years.

Not to mention your kin who came before you:

It is as though with some people — those who most avidly embrace the “we are right” view — have minds that are closed from the very get-go, and they are entirely incapable of opening them, even just a crack.

There is no curiosity in them. There are no questions in their minds. There are no “what ifs?” or “maybes.”

— Laura Knight-Jadczyk

One Tweet is all it should take: Thomas Sowell flagrantly failed to follow the facts on Iraq WMD — opting to peddle partisan hackery that poisons political discourse & butchers debate to this day. Here’s my 7-part documentary that exhaustively details the WMD Delusion (taking on both parties to boot — on that issue and then some).

In your fantasyland of circular certitude (where Sowell’s fancy quotes amount to fortune cookies for the committed): “There’s no ‘there’ there” and you don’t have to go there.

Your pursuit of truth and accountability seems awfully one-sided, Mr. Sowell. And that’s a fact: “truth verifiable from experience or observation.” Just as my lifelong record of unwavering commitment to the truth and objective scrutiny to find it.

As I said in my doc:

You can’t seem to comprehend that I don’t care what damage the truth inflicts upon politicians of any brand. I have this crazy idea that across-the-board accountability is always in the best interests of the nation.

As for my frustration — I have this thing about people who regurgitate nonsense in the face of overwhelming evidence that counters their baseless beliefs.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

“To learn to ask: ‘Is that true?’” . . .

Maybe there’s something to what she just said. Let me think about it. That’s interesting. Maybe I should change my mind.’” . . . When is the last time you can honestly remember a public dialogue — or even a private conversation — that followed that useful course?

Every once in a blue moon — someone has the guts the reconsider. Not long before this Tweet — this Sowell supporter was condemning my efforts like all the rest that day (and every day).

And then he opened the doc . . .

He’s the exception — this is the rule:

You introduce statements and arguments of people who aren’t Thomas Sowell

As this story is also . . .

About the behavior of the echo chamber around Sowell — it’s kinda necessary to include other people to properly illustrate the problem. And I wouldn’t mind explaining everything — if you thought about anything.

If I did cartwheels on TikTok to tell this story — you’d take issue with my form. We’ve created a culture that gripes over “flashy graphics” while worshipping liars in the images. Constant complaining has become a virtue — where everything of value is gain you get in the moment:

And easy is all the rage!

Stockton Rush’s name will never be forgotten for his folly that took 5 lives in a contraption doomed to fail. That same wishful thinking in totally unsuitable material — was held by a CIA/WINPAC analyst named Joe Turner: Who provided a path to war that cost countless lives, unspeakable destruction, trillions of dollars & counting, and poisons political discourse to this day and probably generations to come.  

Never heard of him!” — I’m not surprised (in a country that can’t even get the self-evident straight) . . .

Even 20 years later!

By Design

America Remains Mired in the Murky

What does it say to you: That on evidence claimed as components to build a nuclear bomb — the “debate” was hijacked by 10-second sound bites? Shouldn’t any debate establish what the debate is actually about? What does it say about a country that can’t even establish that much on a matter of this magnitude?

As I said in my doc:

All the sarin gas shells in the world would have no bearing on the aluminum tubes and other intel, but loyalists to logical fallacies are not burdened by the inconvenience of FACT.

They will nitpick over pebbles while refusing to even glance at the mountain of evidence that crushes their “convictions.”

— Richard W. Memmer: Act V

For the sake of argument: Let’s say Saddam had full-blown active WMD programs on chemical & biological weapons. The tubes would still be a lie — whether the war would have been justified in that scenario or not. I’ll go one further: Let’s say he had a uranium enrichment program in operation as well, but that the rotors were carbon fiber — not aluminum.

Once again, the tubes would still be a lie.

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.


The road to reality is blocked by detours designed to keep you going in circles. Purveyors of poppycock reroute you with narratives that avoid detail like Black Death. The way out is to start with an inconsistency or two that’s narrow in scope:

And take the trail where it leads . . .

To ascertain the truth on any topic:

If you’ve got something concrete to go on — that’s your point of entry. By all means, keep the door open in every direction. But by nailing down the definitive first, it paves a clearer path to all the rest. This country does the exact opposite on everything:

Lumping it all together and never even approaching where you should have started in the first place:

But why bother putting your critical thinking skills to the test on that:

When you can congratulate yourselves on this . . .

I’m a retired engineer, electrical not mechanical. You are absolutely correct about technical limits on materials such as this sub design. It’s insane this guy took the sub to its breaking point.  It’s sad but a good lesson to future explorers. Don’t push the physical limitations of the materials and design.

— YouTube user

Never mind applying the exact same principles to this: “This chart is misleading in several respects . . . Beams centrifuge never actually worked . . . We can infer.” Sounds pretty sloppy to me. Perhaps we should have a conversation to clear up what all this means on matters that have eroded reason beyond recognition?

For over two decades:

America has made it impossible to have this conversation: Painfully obvious deception that shaped everything you see today.

But we’ve got all the time in the world to talk about Titan. You’re all in tune on materials when you find the topic entertaining, but try to discuss the manipulation of materials that started a war that poisoned everything in its math — and right on cue . . .

Out comes the “critical thinkers” of our time:


You’ve probably heard of yellowcake: How about uranium hexafluoride?

Does calling someone a “Bush hater” strike you as a valid counter to that question? Never mind this story goes straight to the top with who’s in the White House right now — on very specific culpability to boot. How so?

How I’d love to live in a world where you’d ask not out of party-line pursuits — but because it’s on the trail to the truth.

If that title doesn’t tell you something about my commitment to objective scrutiny, what would?

The rotor speed required to separate uranium isotopes doesn’t care who’s president, and when it comes to ascertaining the truth, neither do I. In order to maintain such speeds, the material properties of centrifuges are as critical as it gets. You don’t need to interview a world-renowned nuclear scientist to figure that out — but I like to be thorough. To claim that Iraq WMD wasn’t a lie should be like saying we didn’t land on the moon.

As I wrote and produced the most exhaustive documentary ever done on WMD, I would know.

In addition to interviewing world-renowned nuclear scientist, Dr. Houston Wood, I also corresponded with David Albright (the physicist above who wrote extensively on the tubes) — as well as Colin Powell’s chief of intelligence at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research.

Greg Thielmann said the following in 2013:

It will be up to Iraqis to debate whether their country now has a brighter future than it otherwise would have had without foreign invasion and occupation in the first decade of the new century. But it is uniquely incumbent on Americans to understand who and what were responsible for an enterprise that proved so costly in terms of U.S. lives lost, money spent, international reputation tarnished, and a campaign against al Qaeda diverted.

America just casually moved on . . .

I didn’t — as I knew then what few know now:

The immeasurable value in the willingness to be wrong, understanding why, and looking to learn from it. And that not doing so — increasingly compounds the consequences of no accountability.

Look around!


If only you’d laid it all out exactly as I like it — then I’d abide by the principles I preach

Is that how it works?

That’s about the size of it. I guess I figured that if you didn’t understand something — you’d try this on for size, but I’m old-fashioned that way:

Einstein borrowed from the one below:

The worth of man lies not in the truth which he possesses, or believes that he possesses, but in the honest endeavor which he puts forth to secure that truth; for not by the possession of, but by the search after, truth, are his powers enlarged, wherein, alone, consists his ever-increasing perfection. 

Possession fosters content, indolence, and pride.

— Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

And now, even now . . .

The cat . . . TOTALLY out of the BAG! You’re still standing here . . . “debating”

What follows epitomizes possesion — as this guy proudly proceeds to make it all the more murky in this conversation I came across:

Incredibly, we’ve created a world in which I have to point out the premise of your own point to make mine. The first two words of “False pretense?” foretell the fallacies to come. Let’s make this explicitly clear in no uncertain terms: You’re saying the war was not a lie because of what you found, correct?

Colin Powell didn’t go to the UN on chemical weapons alone.

So there’s more to the story — any anyone with an atom of objectivity would consider that information in ascertaining the truth. But why keep your word when you keep the faith?

“Remember what the Dormouse said”:

Who’s the Dormouse and what did he say? What does Never Mind mean in an image that is crystal clear on what you continue to make cloudy? Do I have to explain why the artist is crossing out the letters? And if you don’t get what’s going on in Easy as 123:

Perhaps you should inquire before you blur out #1 and flagrantly ignore #2 and #3.

Unfortunately, I feel the need to point out that NDIA is for illustration purposes only (as it spells out the acronym and captures some key aspects I assume are similar across all such organizations).

Note the “Nuclear” in the name:

And this name . . .

It seems that someone qualified in that field of defense would consider the nuclear component of the equation — as opposed to the wishful thinking that started a war and weaponized systematic self-delusion for decades. And there’s no end in sight as countless millions still cling to this crap after 20 years.

Perfecting the shamelessness it takes to never STFU long enough to consider anything that flies in the face of calcified convictions that cannot survive scrutiny.

Right on cue | Never fails

Lemme get this straight:

On an issue involving the separation of uranium isotopes (an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter): I remind you of the “nuclear” in your name — and you brazenly ignore the evidence on that front (along with a scenario that clearly explains why the premise of your original post could not be more wrong).

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.

Instead of considering anything in the “whole cloth” case — you steer the “conversation” right back your way to get your way (never learning anything as you gleefully wallow in willful ignorance). And incredibly — you wanna tell me about your job rather than do your job (as in demonstrating that you have the capacity & integrity to objectively consider information being presented to you.


Below is my reply to that “False pretense?” poppycock he’s peddling. He may very well be an expert in his field, but he didn’t know jack about what matters most. And what’s worse — he doesn’t want to: As he “insist upon ‘affirmation independent of all findings’” (borrowing from Peck who borrowed from Buber).

A TON of that goin’ around!


My surgical specificity in that clip puts this lie in its place in 5 minutes alone. To take a story this complex and convoluted and boil its essence down to a few minutes was no small feat.

Imagine what I did with 160:

“There is no skimming over the surface of a subject with [Hamilton]. He must sink to the bottom to see what foundation it rests on.”

— Major William Pierce (Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton)

Wouldn’t it be absurd to share that quote if my clip contained nothing but trite talking points? Some circles are not burdened by squaring their walk with their talk. They seem to think that advertising virtue equates to embodying it.

Case in Point:

By Definition:

  • A delusion is a mistaken belief that is held with strong conviction even when presented with superior evidence to the contrary
  • Characterized by or holding idiosyncratic beliefs or impressions that are contradicted by reality or rational argument
  • Something a person believes and wants to be true, when it is actually not true

A lot of that goin’ around!


That anyone would blow right by all that and go straight into this utterly ridiculous exchange that follows: Is central to the story of a nation that’s gone out of its mind. From erosion of reason that took decades of denying the undeniable in the Gutter Games of Government — this country craves the familiar (and anything that doesn’t instantly compute is seen as complex as quantum physics).

What part of “Mired in the Murky” do you not understand? Try some of this for a change and you’ll be amazed by the clarity that comes with it.

As I said in my doc:

DOE’s standard is to spin a tube at 20% above 90,000 RPM before failure — so 48,000 short is a pretty loose definition of “rough indication.” . . . Out of 31 tubes in subsequent testing, only one was successfully spun to 90,000 RPM for 65 minutes — which the CIA seized on as evidence in their favor.

One DOE analyst offered a superb analogy of that contorted conclusion:  “Running your car up to 6,500 RPM briefly does not prove that you can run your car at 6,500 RPM cross country. It just doesn’t. Your car’s not going to make it.”

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

As in — not this . . .

By the way: Do you really need a proverb to know how undestanding has worked since the dawn of time? But now that you’ve been remindered of what you already know, how you will you handle what you don’t?

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

“Who are these guys?” seems like a pretty good place to start. Or not:

What’s wrong with that picture?

And this one:

Not to mention — this one . . .

Associated Press, October 3rd, 2004: Rice said she learned of objections by the Energy Department only after making her 2002 comments.

Richard W. Memmer: Are we to believe that the National Security Advisor of the United States was unaware of an intelligence dispute of this magnitude that had been going on for well over a year?

One Congressional investigator went so far as to call it a holy war. And doesn’t it strike you as suspicious that she didn’t bother consulting the DOE before serving up images of a nuclear detonation?

— Act II

Holy War

Something’s not right!

Start with those 3 little words of wonder and you’ll be amazed at the clarity that comes with it. But whatever you do: Spare me your nitpicking over pebbles. At least attempt to address something from the bullets below, all of the above, and the mountain of evidence I put on a silver platter for you.

That you swat away like your kin who came before you:

It is as though with some people — those who most avidly embrace the “we are right” view — have minds that are closed from the very get-go, and they are entirely incapable of opening them, even just a crack.

There is no curiosity in them. There are no questions in their minds. There are no “what ifs?” or “maybes.”

— Laura Knight-Jadczyk

What is Truth

A young man sittin’ on the witness stand
The man with the book says “Raise your hand”
“Repeat after me, I solemnly swear”
The man looked down at his long hair
And although the young man solemnly swore
Nobody seemed to hear anymore

And it didn’t really matter if the truth was there
It was the cut of his clothes and the length of his hair

— Johnny Cash


  1. Are you disputing that sarin gas shells have nothing to do with enriching highly enriched uranium?
  2. What’s a Zippe/Beams Hybrid Centrifuge? Who’s Zippe? Who’s Beams?
  3. Why am I pointing to the cell stating 2.8mm?
  4. Why am I notating the image with numbers corresponding with the cup?
  5. What’s Thomas Sowell’s role in the story and what are his half-truths I’m referring to?
  6. What is going on in this image I included in the banner image above and the ones below?

  • What’s an Italian Medusa vs. a Nasser-81mm rocket and why does it matter?
  • Who’s saying, “Because we say so!” — and on what basis are they “disputing” the tolerances”?
  • If you’re claiming that Iraq was going to shave the walls — why does that negate the assertion on tolerances?
  • “The rotor wall thickness for the Beams centrifuge has always been specified as 6.35mm”: Why does that matter and why am I pointing to “Beams centrifuge never actually worked”?

Anyone wanting to know the truth would not behave in ways that make damn sure you never will. And anyone entering this discussion with sincerity — would come away realizing that there is no debate, and there never was.

They just made it up:


To think that congratulating yourselves for ordering a book & broadcasting it for Likes is in the interest of problem solving is pure fantasy. Same goes for recycling the same story without moving the needle and never examining the efficacy of your efforts.

A lot of that goin’ around too!

V for Victory & Venom for Values

In this fantasyland where wishful thinking rules: You can win an argument without even knowing what the issue is about. What you do in denying the undeniable daily would be unthinkable for me to do ever.

Islands of Idolatry

People talking without speaking
People hearing without listening

Lara walked along the tracks following a path worn by pilgrims and then turned into the fields. Here she stopped and, closing her eyes, took a deep breath of the flower-scented air of the broad expanse around her. It was dearer to her than her kin, better than a lover, wiser than a book. For a moment she rediscovered the purpose of her life.

She was here on earth to grasp the meaning of its wild enchantment and to call each thing by its right name, or, if this were not within her power, to give birth out of love for life to successors who would do it in her place.

― Doctor Zhivago (referenced in Into the Wild)

In the spirit of discovery that clarity, curiosity, and courage can inspire:

And on that note:

OR . . .

We can keep doing it your way:

I wonder . . .

How many remember what it was like to be uplifted by the genuine spirit of America? Maybe it wasn’t as real as I imagined it to be, but that authenticity is worlds away from where we are now.

Your move . . .

Thank you for reading!

When you open your eyes to what’s underneath — it intrinsically trains your mind to see with increasing clarity.

The WMD Delusion: “And Now, Even Now . . . The Cat . . . TOTALLY Out of the Bag!”

On the following imagery alone:

Which one looks like he’s abiding by the above?  Sowell’s fanatical followers are so bothered by how much I have to say: That nowhere in their minds does it dawn on them to wonder why he said so little.

As a distinguished scholar once said: “The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.”

— Thomas Sowell

The man’s a magician:

As I’m practically spit on by people promoting principles I followed to find he didn’t. Simply by virtue of writing those words, he couldn’t possibly do the same in service of his own ideals? And lo and behold — sleight of hand is how they pulled it off.

When you have absolutely no idea what’s going on here, on what basis are you so doubt-free?

Never mind this . . .

But who cares about that:

When you’ve got this . . .

“Watch again”

How fitting for the world you wallow in:

And I can’t click Play for you either!

On the biggest and most costly lie in modern history (which shaped everything you see today): Half the country took the word of professional know-it-alls over nuclear scientists. And when your camp came up empty on WMD:

You just bought more bullshit from the same people who sold you the first batch:

Shrewd!

Preach Responsibility and Take None!

At every turn . . .

The faithful tap dance around reality — oily evading anything that requires them to hold Sowell to his own standards.

Hard to Imagine:

That I have to explain that quote to people who seemingly live to flood the internet with his words.

He and his flock incessantly complain about the media — and they don’t make policy. But the second I scrutinize Sowell — suddenly you have new standards.

180 — how fitting!

As I said in my doc:

The question comes down to whether or not you’re basing your belief on something in the realm of reason — not some fail-safe fantasy that allows you to believe whatever you want.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act III

In response to all that:

This is the best ya got? . . .

What happened to all this jazz?

In what parallel universe does this even remotely reflect anything like that:

A couple of 2-minute reads that never even mention the tubes that took us to war (or anything else of substance on this endless saga of absurdity). Touting technicalities as “facts” doesn’t get it done: Especially when you make a living selling slogans and catchy quotes about careful consideration. If you only apply the principles you preach when it serves your interests — they’re just empty claims on a cup and a meaningless mantra touted on a T-shirt.

8. Old information at the beginning of the sentence, new information at the end.

— Steven Pinker

How do you feel about no new information — anywhere? 

On Sowells’s quote above I couldn’t agree more:

But there’s another reason why so many people misunderstand so many issues. Professional know-it-alls like you pull stunts like this while peddling lines like that as cover . . .

To whitewash your record of patently obvious hypocrisy and lies. What would you call someone who shoots their mouth off without addressing the evidence — but banks on their fabricated reputation to create the impression that they did? It’s painfully obvious what this guy’s up to: He’s engineering an illusion — and you bought it.

You buy — a lot! Which is why “now, even now” — I have to explain the self-evident to you.

And still — you don’t get it!

But Anything Goes:

In this shithole you call home . . .

If that weren’t true . . .

We’d simply be discussing the facts instead of me having to show the spectacularly stupid & childish shit I’ve almost invariably faced in telling this story on Thomas Sowell for 3-1/2 years.

Not to mention your kin who came before you:

It is as though with some people — those who most avidly embrace the “we are right” view — have minds that are closed from the very get-go, and they are entirely incapable of opening them, even just a crack.

There is no curiosity in them. There are no questions in their minds. There are no “what ifs?” or “maybes.”

— Laura Knight-Jadczyk

One Tweet is all it should take: Thomas Sowell flagrantly failed to follow the facts on Iraq WMD — opting to peddle partisan hackery that poisons political discourse & butchers debate to this day. Here’s my 7-part documentary that exhaustively details the WMD Delusion (taking on both parties to boot — on that issue and then some).

In your fantasyland of circular certitude (where Sowell’s fancy quotes amount to fortune cookies for the committed): “There’s no ‘there’ there” and you don’t have to go there.

Your pursuit of truth and accountability seems awfully one-sided, Mr. Sowell. And that’s a fact: “truth verifiable from experience or observation.” Just as my lifelong record of unwavering commitment to the truth and objective scrutiny to find it.

As I said in my doc:

You can’t seem to comprehend that I don’t care what damage the truth inflicts upon politicians of any brand. I have this crazy idea that across-the-board accountability is always in the best interests of the nation.

As for my frustration — I have this thing about people who regurgitate nonsense in the face of overwhelming evidence that counters their baseless beliefs.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

“To learn to ask: ‘Is that true?’” . . .

Maybe there’s something to what she just said. Let me think about it. That’s interesting. Maybe I should change my mind.’” . . . When is the last time you can honestly remember a public dialogue — or even a private conversation — that followed that useful course?

Every once in a blue moon — someone has the guts the reconsider. Not long before this Tweet — this Sowell supporter was condemning my efforts like all the rest that day (and every day).

And then he opened the doc . . .

He’s the exception — this is the rule:

You introduce statements and arguments of people who aren’t Thomas Sowell

As this story is also . . .

About the behavior of the echo chamber around Sowell — it’s kinda necessary to include other people to properly illustrate the problem. And I wouldn’t mind explaining everything — if you thought about anything.

If I did cartwheels on TikTok to tell this story — you’d take issue with my form. We’ve created a culture that gripes over “flashy graphics” while worshipping liars in the images. Constant complaining has become a virtue — where everything of value is gain you get in the moment:

And easy is all the rage!

Stockton Rush’s name will never be forgotten for his folly that took 5 lives in a contraption doomed to fail. That same wishful thinking in totally unsuitable material — was held by a CIA/WINPAC analyst named Joe Turner: Who provided a path to war that cost countless lives, unspeakable destruction, trillions of dollars & counting, and poisons political discourse to this day and probably generations to come.  

Never heard of him!” — I’m not surprised (in a country that can’t even get the self-evident straight) . . .

Even 20 years later!

By Design

America Remains Mired in the Murky

What does it say to you: That on evidence claimed as components to build a nuclear bomb — the “debate” was hijacked by 10-second sound bites? Shouldn’t any debate establish what the debate is actually about? What does it say about a country that can’t even establish that much on a matter of this magnitude?

As I said in my doc:

All the sarin gas shells in the world would have no bearing on the aluminum tubes and other intel, but loyalists to logical fallacies are not burdened by the inconvenience of FACT.

They will nitpick over pebbles while refusing to even glance at the mountain of evidence that crushes their “convictions.”

— Richard W. Memmer: Act V

For the sake of argument: Let’s say Saddam had full-blown active WMD programs on chemical & biological weapons. The tubes would still be a lie — whether the war would have been justified in that scenario or not. I’ll go one further: Let’s say he had a uranium enrichment program in operation as well, but that the rotors were carbon fiber — not aluminum.

Once again, the tubes would still be a lie.

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.


The road to reality is blocked by detours designed to keep you going in circles. Purveyors of poppycock reroute you with narratives that avoid detail like Black Death. The way out is to start with an inconsistency or two that’s narrow in scope:

And take the trail where it leads . . .

To ascertain the truth on any topic:

If you’ve got something concrete to go on — that’s your point of entry. By all means, keep the door open in every direction. But by nailing down the definitive first, it paves a clearer path to all the rest. This country does the exact opposite on everything:

Lumping it all together and never even approaching where you should have started in the first place:

But why bother putting your critical thinking skills to the test on that:

When you can congratulate yourselves on this . . .

I’m a retired engineer, electrical not mechanical. You are absolutely correct about technical limits on materials such as this sub design. It’s insane this guy took the sub to its breaking point.  It’s sad but a good lesson to future explorers. Don’t push the physical limitations of the materials and design.

— YouTube user

Never mind applying the exact same principles to this: “This chart is misleading in several respects . . . Beams centrifuge never actually worked . . . We can infer.” Sounds pretty sloppy to me. Perhaps we should have a conversation to clear up what all this means on matters that have eroded reason beyond recognition?

For over two decades:

America has made it impossible to have this conversation: Painfully obvious deception that shaped everything you see today.

But we’ve got all the time in the world to talk about Titan. You’re all in tune on materials when you find the topic entertaining, but try to discuss the manipulation of materials that started a war that poisoned everything in its math — and right on cue . . .

Out comes the “critical thinkers” of our time:


You’ve probably heard of yellowcake: How about uranium hexafluoride?

Does calling someone a “Bush hater” strike you as a valid counter to that question? Never mind this story goes straight to the top with who’s in the White House right now — on very specific culpability to boot. How so?

How I’d love to live in a world where you’d ask not out of party-line pursuits — but because it’s on the trail to the truth.

If that title doesn’t tell you something about my commitment to objective scrutiny, what would?

The rotor speed required to separate uranium isotopes doesn’t care who’s president, and when it comes to ascertaining the truth, neither do I. In order to maintain such speeds, the material properties of centrifuges are as critical as it gets. You don’t need to interview a world-renowned nuclear scientist to figure that out — but I like to be thorough. To claim that Iraq WMD wasn’t a lie should be like saying we didn’t land on the moon.

As I wrote and produced the most exhaustive documentary ever done on WMD, I would know.

In addition to interviewing world-renowned nuclear scientist, Dr. Houston Wood, I also corresponded with David Albright (the physicist above who wrote extensively on the tubes) — as well as Colin Powell’s chief of intelligence at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research.

Greg Thielmann said the following in 2013:

It will be up to Iraqis to debate whether their country now has a brighter future than it otherwise would have had without foreign invasion and occupation in the first decade of the new century. But it is uniquely incumbent on Americans to understand who and what were responsible for an enterprise that proved so costly in terms of U.S. lives lost, money spent, international reputation tarnished, and a campaign against al Qaeda diverted.

America just casually moved on . . .

I didn’t — as I knew then what few know now:

The immeasurable value in the willingness to be wrong, understanding why, and looking to learn from it. And that not doing so — increasingly compounds the consequences of no accountability.

Look around!


If only you’d laid it all out exactly as I like it — then I’d abide by the principles I preach

Is that how it works?

That’s about the size of it. I guess I figured that if you didn’t understand something — you’d try this on for size, but I’m old-fashioned that way:

Einstein borrowed from the one below:

The worth of man lies not in the truth which he possesses, or believes that he possesses, but in the honest endeavor which he puts forth to secure that truth; for not by the possession of, but by the search after, truth, are his powers enlarged, wherein, alone, consists his ever-increasing perfection. 

Possession fosters content, indolence, and pride.

— Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

And now, even now . . .

The cat . . . TOTALLY out of the BAG! You’re still standing here . . . “debating”

What follows epitomizes possesion — as this guy proudly proceeds to make it all the more murky in this conversation I came across:

Incredibly, we’ve created a world in which I have to point out the premise of your own point to make mine. The first two words of “False pretense?” foretell the fallacies to come. Let’s make this explicitly clear in no uncertain terms: You’re saying the war was not a lie because of what you found, correct?

Colin Powell didn’t go to the UN on chemical weapons alone.

So there’s more to the story — any anyone with an atom of objectivity would consider that information in ascertaining the truth. But why keep your word when you keep the faith?

“Remember what the Dormouse said”:

Who’s the Dormouse and what did he say? What does Never Mind mean in an image that is crystal clear on what you continue to make cloudy? Do I have to explain why the artist is crossing out the letters? And if you don’t get what’s going on in Easy as 123:

Perhaps you should inquire before you blur out #1 and flagrantly ignore #2 and #3.

Unfortunately, I feel the need to point out that NDIA is for illustration purposes only (as it spells out the acronym and captures some key aspects I assume are similar across all such organizations).

Note the “Nuclear” in the name:

And this name . . .

It seems that someone qualified in that field of defense would consider the nuclear component of the equation — as opposed to the wishful thinking that started a war and weaponized systematic self-delusion for decades. And there’s no end in sight as countless millions still cling to this crap after 20 years.

Perfecting the shamelessness it takes to never STFU long enough to consider anything that flies in the face of calcified convictions that cannot survive scrutiny.

Right on cue | Never fails

Lemme get this straight:

On an issue involving the separation of uranium isotopes (an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter): I remind you of the “nuclear” in your name — and you brazenly ignore the evidence on that front (along with a scenario that clearly explains why the premise of your original post could not be more wrong).

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.

Instead of considering anything in the “whole cloth” case — you steer the “conversation” right back your way to get your way (never learning anything as you gleefully wallow in willful ignorance). And incredibly — you wanna tell me about your job rather than do your job (as in demonstrating that you have the capacity & integrity to objectively consider information being presented to you.


Below is my reply to that “False pretense?” poppycock he’s peddling. He may very well be an expert in his field, but he didn’t know jack about what matters most. And what’s worse — he doesn’t want to: As he “insist upon ‘affirmation independent of all findings’” (borrowing from Peck who borrowed from Buber).

A TON of that goin’ around!


My surgical specificity in that clip puts this lie in its place in 5 minutes alone. To take a story this complex and convoluted and boil its essence down to a few minutes was no small feat.

Imagine what I did with 160:

“There is no skimming over the surface of a subject with [Hamilton]. He must sink to the bottom to see what foundation it rests on.”

— Major William Pierce (Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton)

Wouldn’t it be absurd to share that quote if my clip contained nothing but trite talking points? Some circles are not burdened by squaring their walk with their talk. They seem to think that advertising virtue equates to embodying it.

Case in Point:

By Definition:

  • A delusion is a mistaken belief that is held with strong conviction even when presented with superior evidence to the contrary
  • Characterized by or holding idiosyncratic beliefs or impressions that are contradicted by reality or rational argument
  • Something a person believes and wants to be true, when it is actually not true

A lot of that goin’ around!


That anyone would blow right by all that and go straight into this utterly ridiculous exchange that follows: Is central to the story of a nation that’s gone out of its mind. From erosion of reason that took decades of denying the undeniable in the Gutter Games of Government — this country craves the familiar (and anything that doesn’t instantly compute is seen as complex as quantum physics).

What part of “Mired in the Murky” do you not understand? Try some of this for a change and you’ll be amazed by the clarity that comes with it.

As I said in my doc:

DOE’s standard is to spin a tube at 20% above 90,000 RPM before failure — so 48,000 short is a pretty loose definition of “rough indication.” . . . Out of 31 tubes in subsequent testing, only one was successfully spun to 90,000 RPM for 65 minutes — which the CIA seized on as evidence in their favor.

One DOE analyst offered a superb analogy of that contorted conclusion:  “Running your car up to 6,500 RPM briefly does not prove that you can run your car at 6,500 RPM cross country. It just doesn’t. Your car’s not going to make it.”

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

As in — not this . . .

By the way: Do you really need a proverb to know how undestanding has worked since the dawn of time? But now that you’ve been remindered of what you already know, how you will you handle what you don’t?

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

“Who are these guys?” seems like a pretty good place to start. Or not:

What’s wrong with that picture?

And this one:

Not to mention — this one . . .

Associated Press, October 3rd, 2004: Rice said she learned of objections by the Energy Department only after making her 2002 comments.

Richard W. Memmer: Are we to believe that the National Security Advisor of the United States was unaware of an intelligence dispute of this magnitude that had been going on for well over a year?

One Congressional investigator went so far as to call it a holy war. And doesn’t it strike you as suspicious that she didn’t bother consulting the DOE before serving up images of a nuclear detonation?

— Act II

Holy War

Something’s not right!

Start with those 3 little words of wonder and you’ll be amazed at the clarity that comes with it. But whatever you do: Spare me your nitpicking over pebbles. At least attempt to address something from the bullets below, all of the above, and the mountain of evidence I put on a silver platter for you.

That you swat away like your kin who came before you:

It is as though with some people — those who most avidly embrace the “we are right” view — have minds that are closed from the very get-go, and they are entirely incapable of opening them, even just a crack.

There is no curiosity in them. There are no questions in their minds. There are no “what ifs?” or “maybes.”

— Laura Knight-Jadczyk

What is Truth

A young man sittin’ on the witness stand
The man with the book says “Raise your hand”
“Repeat after me, I solemnly swear”
The man looked down at his long hair
And although the young man solemnly swore
Nobody seemed to hear anymore

And it didn’t really matter if the truth was there
It was the cut of his clothes and the length of his hair

— Johnny Cash


  1. Are you disputing that sarin gas shells have nothing to do with enriching highly enriched uranium?
  2. What’s a Zippe/Beams Hybrid Centrifuge? Who’s Zippe? Who’s Beams?
  3. Why am I pointing to the cell stating 2.8mm?
  4. Why am I notating the image with numbers corresponding with the cup?
  5. What’s Thomas Sowell’s role in the story and what are his half-truths I’m referring to?
  6. What is going on in this image I included in the banner image above and the ones below?

  • What’s an Italian Medusa vs. a Nasser-81mm rocket and why does it matter?
  • Who’s saying, “Because we say so!” — and on what basis are they “disputing” the tolerances”?
  • If you’re claiming that Iraq was going to shave the walls — why does that negate the assertion on tolerances?
  • “The rotor wall thickness for the Beams centrifuge has always been specified as 6.35mm”: Why does that matter and why am I pointing to “Beams centrifuge never actually worked”?

Anyone wanting to know the truth would not behave in ways that make damn sure you never will. And anyone entering this discussion with sincerity — would come away realizing that there is no debate, and there never was.

They just made it up:


To think that congratulating yourselves for ordering a book & broadcasting it for Likes is in the interest of problem solving is pure fantasy. Same goes for recycling the same story without moving the needle and never examining the efficacy of your efforts.

A lot of that goin’ around too!

V for Victory & Venom for Values

In this fantasyland where wishful thinking rules: You can win an argument without even knowing what the issue is about. What you do in denying the undeniable daily would be unthinkable for me to do ever.

Islands of Idolatry

People talking without speaking
People hearing without listening

Lara walked along the tracks following a path worn by pilgrims and then turned into the fields. Here she stopped and, closing her eyes, took a deep breath of the flower-scented air of the broad expanse around her. It was dearer to her than her kin, better than a lover, wiser than a book. For a moment she rediscovered the purpose of her life.

She was here on earth to grasp the meaning of its wild enchantment and to call each thing by its right name, or, if this were not within her power, to give birth out of love for life to successors who would do it in her place.

― Doctor Zhivago (referenced in Into the Wild)

In the spirit of discovery that clarity, curiosity, and courage can inspire:

And on that note:

OR . . .

We can keep doing it your way:

I wonder . . .

How many remember what it was like to be uplifted by the genuine spirit of America? Maybe it wasn’t as real as I imagined it to be, but that authenticity is worlds away from where we are now.

Your move . . .

Thank you for reading!

When you open your eyes to what’s underneath — it intrinsically trains your mind to see with increasing clarity.

The WMD Delusion: “And Now, Even Now . . . The Cat . . . TOTALLY Out of the Bag!”

On the following imagery alone:

Which one looks like he’s abiding by the above?  Sowell’s fanatical followers are so bothered by how much I have to say: That nowhere in their minds does it dawn on them to wonder why he said so little.

As a distinguished scholar once said: “The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.”

— Thomas Sowell

The man’s a magician:

As I’m practically spit on by people promoting principles I followed to find he didn’t. Simply by virtue of writing those words, he couldn’t possibly do the same in service of his own ideals? And lo and behold — sleight of hand is how they pulled it off.

When you have absolutely no idea what’s going on here, on what basis are you so doubt-free?

Never mind this . . .

But who cares about that:

When you’ve got this . . .

“Watch again”

How fitting for the world you wallow in:

And I can’t click Play for you either!

On the biggest and most costly lie in modern history (which shaped everything you see today): Half the country took the word of professional know-it-alls over nuclear scientists. And when your camp came up empty on WMD:

You just bought more bullshit from the same people who sold you the first batch:

Shrewd!

Preach Responsibility and Take None!

At every turn . . .

The faithful tap dance around reality — oily evading anything that requires them to hold Sowell to his own standards.

Hard to Imagine:

That I have to explain that quote to people who seemingly live to flood the internet with his words.

He and his flock incessantly complain about the media — and they don’t make policy. But the second I scrutinize Sowell — suddenly you have new standards.

180 — how fitting!

As I said in my doc:

The question comes down to whether or not you’re basing your belief on something in the realm of reason — not some fail-safe fantasy that allows you to believe whatever you want.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act III

In response to all that:

This is the best ya got? . . .

What happened to all this jazz?

In what parallel universe does this even remotely reflect anything like that:

A couple of 2-minute reads that never even mention the tubes that took us to war (or anything else of substance on this endless saga of absurdity). Touting technicalities as “facts” doesn’t get it done: Especially when you make a living selling slogans and catchy quotes about careful consideration. If you only apply the principles you preach when it serves your interests — they’re just empty claims on a cup and a meaningless mantra touted on a T-shirt.

8. Old information at the beginning of the sentence, new information at the end.

— Steven Pinker

How do you feel about no new information — anywhere? 

On Sowells’s quote above I couldn’t agree more:

But there’s another reason why so many people misunderstand so many issues. Professional know-it-alls like you pull stunts like this while peddling lines like that as cover . . .

To whitewash your record of patently obvious hypocrisy and lies. What would you call someone who shoots their mouth off without addressing the evidence — but banks on their fabricated reputation to create the impression that they did? It’s painfully obvious what this guy’s up to: He’s engineering an illusion — and you bought it.

You buy — a lot! Which is why “now, even now” — I have to explain the self-evident to you.

And still — you don’t get it!

But Anything Goes:

In this shithole you call home . . .

If that weren’t true . . .

We’d simply be discussing the facts instead of me having to show the spectacularly stupid & childish shit I’ve almost invariably faced in telling this story on Thomas Sowell for 3-1/2 years.

Not to mention your kin who came before you:

It is as though with some people — those who most avidly embrace the “we are right” view — have minds that are closed from the very get-go, and they are entirely incapable of opening them, even just a crack.

There is no curiosity in them. There are no questions in their minds. There are no “what ifs?” or “maybes.”

— Laura Knight-Jadczyk

One Tweet is all it should take: Thomas Sowell flagrantly failed to follow the facts on Iraq WMD — opting to peddle partisan hackery that poisons political discourse & butchers debate to this day. Here’s my 7-part documentary that exhaustively details the WMD Delusion (taking on both parties to boot — on that issue and then some).

In your fantasyland of circular certitude (where Sowell’s fancy quotes amount to fortune cookies for the committed): “There’s no ‘there’ there” and you don’t have to go there.

Your pursuit of truth and accountability seems awfully one-sided, Mr. Sowell. And that’s a fact: “truth verifiable from experience or observation.” Just as my lifelong record of unwavering commitment to the truth and objective scrutiny to find it.

As I said in my doc:

You can’t seem to comprehend that I don’t care what damage the truth inflicts upon politicians of any brand. I have this crazy idea that across-the-board accountability is always in the best interests of the nation.

As for my frustration — I have this thing about people who regurgitate nonsense in the face of overwhelming evidence that counters their baseless beliefs.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

“To learn to ask: ‘Is that true?’” . . .

Maybe there’s something to what she just said. Let me think about it. That’s interesting. Maybe I should change my mind.’” . . . When is the last time you can honestly remember a public dialogue — or even a private conversation — that followed that useful course?

Every once in a blue moon — someone has the guts the reconsider. Not long before this Tweet — this Sowell supporter was condemning my efforts like all the rest that day (and every day).

And then he opened the doc . . .

He’s the exception — this is the rule:

You introduce statements and arguments of people who aren’t Thomas Sowell

As this story is also . . .

About the behavior of the echo chamber around Sowell — it’s kinda necessary to include other people to properly illustrate the problem. And I wouldn’t mind explaining everything — if you thought about anything.

If I did cartwheels on TikTok to tell this story — you’d take issue with my form. We’ve created a culture that gripes over “flashy graphics” while worshipping liars in the images. Constant complaining has become a virtue — where everything of value is gain you get in the moment:

And easy is all the rage!

Stockton Rush’s name will never be forgotten for his folly that took 5 lives in a contraption doomed to fail. That same wishful thinking in totally unsuitable material — was held by a CIA/WINPAC analyst named Joe Turner: Who provided a path to war that cost countless lives, unspeakable destruction, trillions of dollars & counting, and poisons political discourse to this day and probably generations to come.  

Never heard of him!” — I’m not surprised (in a country that can’t even get the self-evident straight) . . .

Even 20 years later!

By Design

America Remains Mired in the Murky

What does it say to you: That on evidence claimed as components to build a nuclear bomb — the “debate” was hijacked by 10-second sound bites? Shouldn’t any debate establish what the debate is actually about? What does it say about a country that can’t even establish that much on a matter of this magnitude?

As I said in my doc:

All the sarin gas shells in the world would have no bearing on the aluminum tubes and other intel, but loyalists to logical fallacies are not burdened by the inconvenience of FACT.

They will nitpick over pebbles while refusing to even glance at the mountain of evidence that crushes their “convictions.”

— Richard W. Memmer: Act V

For the sake of argument: Let’s say Saddam had full-blown active WMD programs on chemical & biological weapons. The tubes would still be a lie — whether the war would have been justified in that scenario or not. I’ll go one further: Let’s say he had a uranium enrichment program in operation as well, but that the rotors were carbon fiber — not aluminum.

Once again, the tubes would still be a lie.

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.


The road to reality is blocked by detours designed to keep you going in circles. Purveyors of poppycock reroute you with narratives that avoid detail like Black Death. The way out is to start with an inconsistency or two that’s narrow in scope:

And take the trail where it leads . . .

To ascertain the truth on any topic:

If you’ve got something concrete to go on — that’s your point of entry. By all means, keep the door open in every direction. But by nailing down the definitive first, it paves a clearer path to all the rest. This country does the exact opposite on everything:

Lumping it all together and never even approaching where you should have started in the first place:

But why bother putting your critical thinking skills to the test on that:

When you can congratulate yourselves on this . . .

I’m a retired engineer, electrical not mechanical. You are absolutely correct about technical limits on materials such as this sub design. It’s insane this guy took the sub to its breaking point.  It’s sad but a good lesson to future explorers. Don’t push the physical limitations of the materials and design.

— YouTube user

Never mind applying the exact same principles to this: “This chart is misleading in several respects . . . Beams centrifuge never actually worked . . . We can infer.” Sounds pretty sloppy to me. Perhaps we should have a conversation to clear up what all this means on matters that have eroded reason beyond recognition?

For over two decades:

America has made it impossible to have this conversation: Painfully obvious deception that shaped everything you see today.

But we’ve got all the time in the world to talk about Titan. You’re all in tune on materials when you find the topic entertaining, but try to discuss the manipulation of materials that started a war that poisoned everything in its math — and right on cue . . .

Out comes the “critical thinkers” of our time:


You’ve probably heard of yellowcake: How about uranium hexafluoride?

Does calling someone a “Bush hater” strike you as a valid counter to that question? Never mind this story goes straight to the top with who’s in the White House right now — on very specific culpability to boot. How so?

How I’d love to live in a world where you’d ask not out of party-line pursuits — but because it’s on the trail to the truth.

If that title doesn’t tell you something about my commitment to objective scrutiny, what would?

The rotor speed required to separate uranium isotopes doesn’t care who’s president, and when it comes to ascertaining the truth, neither do I. In order to maintain such speeds, the material properties of centrifuges are as critical as it gets. You don’t need to interview a world-renowned nuclear scientist to figure that out — but I like to be thorough. To claim that Iraq WMD wasn’t a lie should be like saying we didn’t land on the moon.

As I wrote and produced the most exhaustive documentary ever done on WMD, I would know.

In addition to interviewing world-renowned nuclear scientist, Dr. Houston Wood, I also corresponded with David Albright (the physicist above who wrote extensively on the tubes) — as well as Colin Powell’s chief of intelligence at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research.

Greg Thielmann said the following in 2013:

It will be up to Iraqis to debate whether their country now has a brighter future than it otherwise would have had without foreign invasion and occupation in the first decade of the new century. But it is uniquely incumbent on Americans to understand who and what were responsible for an enterprise that proved so costly in terms of U.S. lives lost, money spent, international reputation tarnished, and a campaign against al Qaeda diverted.

America just casually moved on . . .

I didn’t — as I knew then what few know now:

The immeasurable value in the willingness to be wrong, understanding why, and looking to learn from it. And that not doing so — increasingly compounds the consequences of no accountability.

Look around!


If only you’d laid it all out exactly as I like it — then I’d abide by the principles I preach

Is that how it works?

That’s about the size of it. I guess I figured that if you didn’t understand something — you’d try this on for size, but I’m old-fashioned that way:

Einstein borrowed from the one below:

The worth of man lies not in the truth which he possesses, or believes that he possesses, but in the honest endeavor which he puts forth to secure that truth; for not by the possession of, but by the search after, truth, are his powers enlarged, wherein, alone, consists his ever-increasing perfection. 

Possession fosters content, indolence, and pride.

— Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

And now, even now . . .

The cat . . . TOTALLY out of the BAG! You’re still standing here . . . “debating”

What follows epitomizes possesion — as this guy proudly proceeds to make it all the more murky in this conversation I came across:

Incredibly, we’ve created a world in which I have to point out the premise of your own point to make mine. The first two words of “False pretense?” foretell the fallacies to come. Let’s make this explicitly clear in no uncertain terms: You’re saying the war was not a lie because of what you found, correct?

Colin Powell didn’t go to the UN on chemical weapons alone.

So there’s more to the story — any anyone with an atom of objectivity would consider that information in ascertaining the truth. But why keep your word when you keep the faith?

“Remember what the Dormouse said”:

Who’s the Dormouse and what did he say? What does Never Mind mean in an image that is crystal clear on what you continue to make cloudy? Do I have to explain why the artist is crossing out the letters? And if you don’t get what’s going on in Easy as 123:

Perhaps you should inquire before you blur out #1 and flagrantly ignore #2 and #3.

Unfortunately, I feel the need to point out that NDIA is for illustration purposes only (as it spells out the acronym and captures some key aspects I assume are similar across all such organizations).

Note the “Nuclear” in the name:

And this name . . .

It seems that someone qualified in that field of defense would consider the nuclear component of the equation — as opposed to the wishful thinking that started a war and weaponized systematic self-delusion for decades. And there’s no end in sight as countless millions still cling to this crap after 20 years.

Perfecting the shamelessness it takes to never STFU long enough to consider anything that flies in the face of calcified convictions that cannot survive scrutiny.

Right on cue | Never fails

Lemme get this straight:

On an issue involving the separation of uranium isotopes (an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter): I remind you of the “nuclear” in your name — and you brazenly ignore the evidence on that front (along with a scenario that clearly explains why the premise of your original post could not be more wrong).

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.

Instead of considering anything in the “whole cloth” case — you steer the “conversation” right back your way to get your way (never learning anything as you gleefully wallow in willful ignorance). And incredibly — you wanna tell me about your job rather than do your job (as in demonstrating that you have the capacity & integrity to objectively consider information being presented to you.


Below is my reply to that “False pretense?” poppycock he’s peddling. He may very well be an expert in his field, but he didn’t know jack about what matters most. And what’s worse — he doesn’t want to: As he “insist upon ‘affirmation independent of all findings’” (borrowing from Peck who borrowed from Buber).

A TON of that goin’ around!


My surgical specificity in that clip puts this lie in its place in 5 minutes alone. To take a story this complex and convoluted and boil its essence down to a few minutes was no small feat.

Imagine what I did with 160:

“There is no skimming over the surface of a subject with [Hamilton]. He must sink to the bottom to see what foundation it rests on.”

— Major William Pierce (Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton)

Wouldn’t it be absurd to share that quote if my clip contained nothing but trite talking points? Some circles are not burdened by squaring their walk with their talk. They seem to think that advertising virtue equates to embodying it.

Case in Point:

By Definition:

  • A delusion is a mistaken belief that is held with strong conviction even when presented with superior evidence to the contrary
  • Characterized by or holding idiosyncratic beliefs or impressions that are contradicted by reality or rational argument
  • Something a person believes and wants to be true, when it is actually not true

A lot of that goin’ around!


That anyone would blow right by all that and go straight into this utterly ridiculous exchange that follows: Is central to the story of a nation that’s gone out of its mind. From erosion of reason that took decades of denying the undeniable in the Gutter Games of Government — this country craves the familiar (and anything that doesn’t instantly compute is seen as complex as quantum physics).

What part of “Mired in the Murky” do you not understand? Try some of this for a change and you’ll be amazed by the clarity that comes with it.

As I said in my doc:

DOE’s standard is to spin a tube at 20% above 90,000 RPM before failure — so 48,000 short is a pretty loose definition of “rough indication.” . . . Out of 31 tubes in subsequent testing, only one was successfully spun to 90,000 RPM for 65 minutes — which the CIA seized on as evidence in their favor.

One DOE analyst offered a superb analogy of that contorted conclusion:  “Running your car up to 6,500 RPM briefly does not prove that you can run your car at 6,500 RPM cross country. It just doesn’t. Your car’s not going to make it.”

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

As in — not this . . .

By the way: Do you really need a proverb to know how undestanding has worked since the dawn of time? But now that you’ve been remindered of what you already know, how you will you handle what you don’t?

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

“Who are these guys?” seems like a pretty good place to start. Or not:

What’s wrong with that picture?

And this one:

Not to mention — this one . . .

Associated Press, October 3rd, 2004: Rice said she learned of objections by the Energy Department only after making her 2002 comments.

Richard W. Memmer: Are we to believe that the National Security Advisor of the United States was unaware of an intelligence dispute of this magnitude that had been going on for well over a year?

One Congressional investigator went so far as to call it a holy war. And doesn’t it strike you as suspicious that she didn’t bother consulting the DOE before serving up images of a nuclear detonation?

— Act II

Holy War

Something’s not right!

Start with those 3 little words of wonder and you’ll be amazed at the clarity that comes with it. But whatever you do: Spare me your nitpicking over pebbles. At least attempt to address something from the bullets below, all of the above, and the mountain of evidence I put on a silver platter for you.

That you swat away like your kin who came before you:

It is as though with some people — those who most avidly embrace the “we are right” view — have minds that are closed from the very get-go, and they are entirely incapable of opening them, even just a crack.

There is no curiosity in them. There are no questions in their minds. There are no “what ifs?” or “maybes.”

— Laura Knight-Jadczyk

What is Truth

A young man sittin’ on the witness stand
The man with the book says “Raise your hand”
“Repeat after me, I solemnly swear”
The man looked down at his long hair
And although the young man solemnly swore
Nobody seemed to hear anymore

And it didn’t really matter if the truth was there
It was the cut of his clothes and the length of his hair

— Johnny Cash


  1. Are you disputing that sarin gas shells have nothing to do with enriching highly enriched uranium?
  2. What’s a Zippe/Beams Hybrid Centrifuge? Who’s Zippe? Who’s Beams?
  3. Why am I pointing to the cell stating 2.8mm?
  4. Why am I notating the image with numbers corresponding with the cup?
  5. What’s Thomas Sowell’s role in the story and what are his half-truths I’m referring to?
  6. What is going on in this image I included in the banner image above and the ones below?

  • What’s an Italian Medusa vs. a Nasser-81mm rocket and why does it matter?
  • Who’s saying, “Because we say so!” — and on what basis are they “disputing” the tolerances”?
  • If you’re claiming that Iraq was going to shave the walls — why does that negate the assertion on tolerances?
  • “The rotor wall thickness for the Beams centrifuge has always been specified as 6.35mm”: Why does that matter and why am I pointing to “Beams centrifuge never actually worked”?

Anyone wanting to know the truth would not behave in ways that make damn sure you never will. And anyone entering this discussion with sincerity — would come away realizing that there is no debate, and there never was.

They just made it up:


To think that congratulating yourselves for ordering a book & broadcasting it for Likes is in the interest of problem solving is pure fantasy. Same goes for recycling the same story without moving the needle and never examining the efficacy of your efforts.

A lot of that goin’ around too!

V for Victory & Venom for Values

In this fantasyland where wishful thinking rules: You can win an argument without even knowing what the issue is about. What you do in denying the undeniable daily would be unthinkable for me to do ever.

Islands of Idolatry

People talking without speaking
People hearing without listening

Lara walked along the tracks following a path worn by pilgrims and then turned into the fields. Here she stopped and, closing her eyes, took a deep breath of the flower-scented air of the broad expanse around her. It was dearer to her than her kin, better than a lover, wiser than a book. For a moment she rediscovered the purpose of her life.

She was here on earth to grasp the meaning of its wild enchantment and to call each thing by its right name, or, if this were not within her power, to give birth out of love for life to successors who would do it in her place.

― Doctor Zhivago (referenced in Into the Wild)

In the spirit of discovery that clarity, curiosity, and courage can inspire:

And on that note:

OR . . .

We can keep doing it your way:

I wonder . . .

How many remember what it was like to be uplifted by the genuine spirit of America? Maybe it wasn’t as real as I imagined it to be, but that authenticity is worlds away from where we are now.

Your move . . .

Thank you for reading!

When you open your eyes to what’s underneath — it intrinsically trains your mind to see with increasing clarity.

I Put It All on a Silver Platter for You 10 Years Ago: When I Saw the Writing on the Wall

America lost its way long ago (and you’re right about how some of that happened). But all that pales in comparison to the aftermath of 9/11. Every major problem in America was exponentially exacerbated because of that fiasco for the ages — which Sowell helped sell and got off scot-free.

They all did — as they always do (Democrats & Republicans alike):

America’s in perennial pursuit of ideologies: Warfare waged with galactic levels of baggage & bullshit bolstered by “opinions lightly adopted but firmly held . . . forged from a combination of ignorance, dishonesty, and fashion.”

Borrowing from Theodore Dalrymple’s Life at the Bottom. And how fitting for a country that can’t even get the self-evident straight . . .

Even 20 years later:

You’ve probably heard of yellowcake: How about uranium hexafluoride?

Does calling someone a “Bush hater” strike you as a valid counter to that question? Never mind this story goes straight to the top with who’s in the White House right now — on very specific culpability to boot. How so?

How I’d love to live in a world where you’d ask not out of party-line pursuits — but because it’s on the trail to the truth.

By Design

America Remains Mired in the Murky

What does it say to you: That on evidence claimed as components to build a nuclear bomb — the “debate” was hijacked by 10-second sound bites? Shouldn’t any debate establish what the debate is actually about? What does it say about a country that can’t even establish that much on a matter of this magnitude?

As I said in my doc:

All the sarin gas shells in the world would have no bearing on the aluminum tubes and other intel, but loyalists to logical fallacies are not burdened by the inconvenience of FACT.

They will nitpick over pebbles while refusing to even glance at the mountain of evidence that crushes their “convictions.”

— Richard W. Memmer: Act V

For the sake of argument: Let’s say Saddam had full-blown active WMD programs on chemical & biological weapons. The tubes would still be a lie — whether the war would have been justified in that scenario or not. I’ll go one further: Let’s say he had a uranium enrichment program in operation as well, but that the rotors were carbon fiber — not aluminum.

Once again, the tubes would still be a lie.

Getting lucky in finding something you didn’t know about — does not absolve you from a case that was woven out of whole cloth.


Never mind this . . .

But who cares about that:

When you’ve got this . . .

“Watch again”

How fitting for the world you wallow in:

And now, even now . . .

The cat . . . TOTALLY out of the BAG!

And now, even now . . .

Never mind all that and this . . .

Not to mention this . . .

A young man sittin’ on the witness stand
The man with the book says “Raise your hand”
“Repeat after me, I solemnly swear”
The man looked down at his long hair
And although the young man solemnly swore
Nobody seemed to hear anymore

And it didn’t really matter if the truth was there
It was the cut of his clothes and the length of his hair

— Johnny Cash

What is Truth


Note the “Nuclear” in the name:

False pretense? I’m, as a GWOT veteran myself, and a CBRN assigned to 3rd IDrd Marine Division, we did find WMD in Iraq, but in 2010.

It seems that someone qualified in that field of defense would consider the nuclear component of the equation — as opposed to the wishful thinking that started a war and weaponized systematic self-delusion for decades. And there’s no end in sight, because countless millions still cling to this crap after 20 years.

As now, even now — they “insist upon ‘affirmation independent of all findings’” (borrowing from Peck who borrowed from Buber).

Something’s not right!

Start with those 3 little words of wonder and you’ll be amazed at the clarity that comes with it. Anyone entering this discussion with sincerity — would come away realizing that there is no debate, and there never was.

They just made it up:

The road to reality is blocked by detours designed to keep you going in circles.

Purveyors of poppycock reroute you with narratives that avoid detail like Black Death. The way out is to start with an inconsistency or two that’s narrow in scope and take the trail where it leads. To ascertain the truth on any topic: If you’ve got something concrete to go on — that’s your point of entry. By all means, keep the door open in every direction. But by nailing down the definitive first, it paves a clearer path to all the rest. This country does the exact opposite on everything:

Lumping it all together and never even approaching where you should have started in the first place:


Half the country took the word of professional know-it-alls over nuclear scientists. And when your camp came up empty on WMD — you just bought more bullshit from the same people who sold you the first batch:

Shrewd!

Preach Responsibility and Take None!

You can’t seem to comprehend that I don’t care what damage the truth inflicts upon politicians of any brand. I have this crazy idea that across-the-board accountability is always in the best interests of the nation.

As for my frustration — I have this thing about people who regurgitate nonsense in the face of overwhelming evidence that counters their baseless beliefs.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II


There’s no willingness to say, “I’m wrong.” I mean, you have to take a 2×4 to these people, basically — to get ’em to, sorta, knock ’em down and admit they were wrong.

— David Albright

That physicist said about the people pushing the aluminum tubes fantasy that took us to war.

And I’m talkin’ about you! . . .

The story I’m out to tell takes both parties to task on the biggest & most costly lie in modern history — along with some other issues at the core of America’s decline. Sowell is simply a conduit through which to tell that story. And how his role within it could be harnessed for good.

Compelling him to admit where he’s wrong will work wonders for where he’s right.

Wouldn’t it be something if an idea that threw you for a loop — piqued your curiosity to probe for more? But You make it impossible to have this conversation within a single frame — let alone the bigger picture!

After all — you’re busy!

You’re always busy . . .

Indeed, nowadays, we tend to take in and repeat whatever the values and beliefs of those around us have rather than forming our own independent thought and stopping to organize and evaluate the information we are receiving.

— Ann Baker, Critical Thinking: A fading skill in the age of information overload

Perfectly put — except for the “fading” part. In our Age of Unenlightenment — “fading” is an understatement for the ages. What does it say to you that across communities where claims of critical thinking are everywhere — I haven’t found it anywhere? It’s become a pastime for people to take endless delight in advertising their immaculate critical thinking skills. But the second they’re challenged on anything that is even perceived as threatening their interests:

Don’t do any of this . . .

What I do takes work — time & effort to think it through. If you’re unwilling to work in the interest of truth, understanding, and problem solving — we have nothing to talk about and I wish you well. You may take pride in not blocking anyone, but I’m asking you to make an exception (so I’ll never bother you again). Is that really too much of a courtesy to ask?

Thank you!


My surgical specificity in this clip puts this lie in its place in 5 minutes alone. I’m not out to “DESTROY” Sowell (quite the contrary). Stick around — you’ll see. But in the meantime, lemme put it in terms you’ll understand: If he stepped into a debate with me on this matter, the beating he’d take would be biblical. If you think you can challenge me on that, I invite you to try. I’ve been inviting you for a really long time.

Trillion Dollar Tube 

To take a story this complex and convoluted and boil its essence down to a few minutes was no small feat:

Imagine what I did with 160:

“There is no skimming over the surface of a subject with [Hamilton]. He must sink to the bottom to see what foundation it rests on.”

— Major William Pierce (Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton)

Wouldn’t it be absurd to share that quote if my clip contained nothing but trite talking points? Some circles are not burdened by squaring their walk with their talk. They seem to think that advertising virtue equates to embodying it.

Case in Point:

Following Facts Where They Lead

“Said so and so”? . . . that’s one helluva trip you took there, Mr. Sowell.

Stirring Defense!

Your pursuit of truth and accountability seems awfully one-sided, Mr. Sowell. And that’s a fact: “truth verifiable from experience or observation.” Just as my lifelong record of unwavering commitment to the truth and objective scrutiny to find it. Sowell’s disciples have no such notion, as defending the faith is all matters in following in his footsteps.

And at every turn, the faithful tap dance around reality — oily evading anything that requires them to hold Sowell to his own standards.

Hard to Imagine:

That I have to explain that quote to people who seemingly live to flood the internet with his words.

He and his flock incessantly complain about the media — and they don’t make policy. But the second I scrutinize Sowell — suddenly you have new standards.

180 — how fitting!

“Remember what the Dormouse said”:

If I came into this cold, I’d know that’s important — just as I’d know that blurring out #1 and crossing out 2 & 3 is key to the story. I’d recognize that the imagery is about correlating events. And if I didn’t understand all that — I’d damn sure want to.

Just as I’d be intrigued by someone clearly out to tell a larger story about the decline of America and how we can right this ship.

It’s pure fantasy to think that you can ignore key dimensions of a problem and magically solve it. The problems that plague America are interrelated, and anything short of addressing that is going nowhere. But everyone’s wrapped up in their wheelhouse — operating under umbrellas of interests that don’t account for complexities outside of them.

Just picking the “root cause” that works for you doesn’t cut it. You’ve gotta look at interconnected causes across-the-board.

I’ve got an idea — and it’s got teeth. It’s as outside-the-box as it gets (but rooted in timeless truths America made outdated). There’s a way we can harness folly from the past for the benefit of the future.

A.K.A. Learning!

All ya gotta do — is do what you say you do . . .

And my idea is a framework for debate that boxes you in to do exactly that. You won’t like it — but here’s the deal: Your opposition won’t either. And who knows, you might learn to love embracing challenge, changing your mind, and the fruits from demanding across-the-board accountability.

This — is not that . . .

This is Broadcasting Beliefs About That

To the uneducated, abstract ideas are unfamiliar; so is the detachment that is necessary to discover a truth out of one’s own knowledge and mental effort. The uneducated person views life in an intensely personal way — he knows only what he sees, hears or touches and what he is told by friends.

As the unknown sage puts it, “Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people.”

But more than ever, even the most educated minds act in an uneducated manner in service of their interests — and do catastrophic damage by doing so. Even the best of the bunch are part of the problem they’re trying to solve.


I didn’t get the memo:

When did acquiring knowledge become: “I don’t understand everything — so I can act like an imbecile who can’t understand anything“? Would you browse a textbook then blame the teacher for your failure to understand the material? If you’re gonna blow right by illustrations and clips at the crux of the story:

Don’t complain that you can’t understand what you didn’t stop to consider.

Are you telling me . . .

That I can grasp this — but you can’t grasp that?

JavaScript programmers would get the joke but I wonder if they’d get the point (and what they’d do if they didn’t). Allow me to share my process when learning from people who’d run circles around me in writing code. One picture is worth a thousand words:

Which image below would you choose if you wanted to understand a fairly complex coding construct?

For me, it’s whatever it takes to get me where I wanna go. I wish I were smart enough to read the language spec and pick it up all on my own. Then again, I love the demands of difficulty and overcoming obstacles.

But I can’t do it alone . . .

I need the help of amazing minds from my multitude of sources that increasingly grows the more I learn and advance my skills. When I returned to this topic awhile back, I almost got it in the first video. In the face of such phenomenal work (or any sincere effort, for that matter): It would be unthinkable for me to blame the source because I gotta work a little harder.

I was equally impressed by the 2nd video. He furthered my grasp on my question — and enhanced my overall understanding to boot. And the icing on the cake: He taught with this magical tool I’d never seen before.

This — is pure gold . . .

3rd and 4th tries:

Found that amazing graphic and a guy who ranks with the best I’ve ever seen in any discipline. My gap paved the way to pay dirt — but only because I kept digging. Now I’m tapped into the internals, and I’ve got new tools to advance my knowledge on that front and many more.

The answer was there all along — I just needed to train my mind to see it.

Works the same way here . . .

Einstein borrowed from the one below:

The worth of man lies not in the truth which he possesses, or believes that he possesses, but in the honest endeavor which he puts forth to secure that truth; for not by the possession of, but by the search after, truth, are his powers enlarged, wherein, alone, consists his ever-increasing perfection.

Possession fosters content, indolence, and pride.

— Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

The caption bubbles below are especially fitting for times: In a bubble of binary beliefs — possession of principles equates to embodying them. Never mind that their calcified convictions cannot survive scrutiny. But when you can deny the undeniable among the Like-minded:

Anything Goes . . .

You introduce statements and arguments of people who aren’t Thomas Sowell

As this story is also . . .

About the behavior of the echo chamber around Sowell — it’s kinda necessary to include other people to properly illustrate the problem. And I wouldn’t mind explaining everything — if you thought about anything.

If I did cartwheels on TikTok to tell this story — you’d take issue with my form. We’ve created a culture that gripes over “flashy graphics” while worshipping liars in the images. Constant complaining has become a virtue — where everything of value is gain you get in the moment:

And easy is all the rage!

If I came across someone so clearly in command of this material — I wouldn’t give a f#@k about format. They could write it down on napkins and I’d roll with it. I don’t need somebody to babysit me with just the right formula for me to carefully consider something.

I’m happy to put some time and effort into working it out on my own (and asking questions on anything unclear).


Anyone wanting to know the truth would not behave in ways that make damn sure you never will. Defenders of the indefensible make it impossible to discuss even a single image — and yet have the temerity to bitch about my website. Anything Goes for apologists trying to preserve what they perceive.

I know their Rolodex of Ridicule rabbit-hole routine — all too well:

And Now for the Weather . . 

Not the tiniest trace of reasoning can be found in anything I’ve come across in decades of dealing with the doubt-free on WMD. And of all those I’ve challenged — their knowledge combined could fit into a thimble with space to spare.

Funny how there’s always an excuse:

Back in the day — there was no website with an array of illustrations to gripe about. I was just sharing Trillion Dollar Tube to all these fine folks flaunting their badge of beliefs so F.A.I.R. In that clip, there’s no correlating of multiple contexts to tell a larger story. No long story to take up your time. Just 5 minutes of your life to look at argument that obliterates the bullshit that took us to war. But without watching one second of my work:

I’d suggest heading on back to that backwater school, Purdue, for a little more indoctrination, er, I mean education.

BACKWATER SCHOOL

To call the Cradle of Astronauts “backwater” is award-worthy for asinine statements.

The “arguments” of “Expert” By Association — taking cue from his kin on Rolodex of Ridicule:

  • “You use words like honor, courage and commitment as punch lines at liberal cocktail parties” — ripping off A Few Good Men and thinking I wouldn’t notice
  • The “Get help!” routine
  • “Academia”
  • “I’ve stood on the wall — have you?” — Jesus, why not toss in “You weep for Santiago” while you’re at it?

What does any of THAT have to do with the price of tea in China — or THIS?

About those NAVY Core Values

That “Expert” By Association holds so dear:

Or Not . . .

Snowflake, Libtard, Libturd, Cupcake, Bush hater, Bush basher, Bush Derangement Syndrome, TDS, Demon-crat, Democrat Party

Stirring Defense!

But who cares in your echo chambers of choice — where you can act like a child and be applauded for it. In a world where you’re constantly reinforced by a fellowship of fury — you can promote principles in one breath and abandon them the next. And get away with it with ease — because you’ve got friends:

The individual believer must have social support. It is unlikely that one isolated believer could withstand the kind of disconfirming evidence we have specified. If, however, the believer is a member of a group of convinced persons who can support one another, we would expect the belief to be maintained and the believers to attempt to proselyte or to persuade nonmembers that the belief is correct.

These five conditions specify the circumstances under which increased proselyting would be expected to follow disconfirmation.

— When Prophecy Fails

Or as I coined it . . .

None of these boxes of beliefs are entirely wrong, but bonding within them makes you think you’re entirely right (on everything). The mirror image reflects how you see yourselves — and the behavior below embodies your reaction to anyone who dares to burst your bubble.

As disgusted as I am by it all, I feel sorry for the lives of hermetically sealed minds. You’ll never know how much more the world had to offer you:

And how much more you had to offer it!

I don’t understand. I don’t understand. It’s all so incoherent and confusing with all these things I have to stop and think about.

That’s because you wallow in a world of paint by numbers — where people telling you what you wanna hear every single day: Package it all neatly into nursery-rhyme narratives (turning your mind into mush). “Text, graphics, graphics, text, short paragraphs” . . .

Well you tell me . . .

And yet somehow . . .

This Sowell supporter below had no trouble understanding my site (and even politely replied with the makings of what real conversation looks like). To be sure, he could have investigated it further and asked some questions on that front, but to get the ball rolling — this will do:

And is worlds away from what I’m used to.

  1. He acknowledges the marque evidence driving the story
  2. While he already knew the truth on the tubes — he’s keeping the door open on Sowell (as to whether he “fell for it or lied about it”)
  3. It’s the most clear-cut case of lying by omission imaginable, but right now — all that matters is that he’s allowing the conversation to breathe (which means we can build on it)
  4. Genuine conversation is a journey — and along the way in this pursuit of truth & understanding, are glorious discoveries in the willingness to be wrong
  5. By acknowledging that you’re wrong (in part or in whole) — just might create a hairline crack in the convictions of your interlocutor (enough to shed some light on the truth you have to tell)
  6. And through that exchange — perhaps they’ll come around to realizing they’re wrong (in part or in whole)

And all that sounds a lot like this:

In over 3 years of telling this story on Thomas Sowell, that’s the first time I’ve seen a supporter express any disappointment at all. 

Are you telling me . . .

That the Sowell supporter above and a handful of others — just happened to have a Rosetta Stone to reason through what you can’t? Would a reasonable person blow right by critical evidence at the beginning — so you can cite website style as your reason to outright reject it by the end?

I’m not a fan of comic books — but because I’m not keen on that kind of layout, is that a valid excuse to say I can’t comprehend it? I’ve written this story a hundred different ways when one Tweet is all it should take: Thomas Sowell flagrantly failed to follow the facts on Iraq WMD — opting to peddle partisan hackery that poisons political discourse & butchers debate to this day. Here’s my 7-part documentary that exhaustively details the WMD Delusion (taking on both parties to boot — on that issue and then some).


If you don’t like my illustrations, go read the bone-dry reports for yourselves: And I’ve got plenty more material to add to your reading list. But that takes work — and why bother when you can just ridicule those who did it for you.

One picture is worth a thousand words:

When you don’t want the pictures and you don’t want the words — what would you have me do?

And once I did it:

We both know your next move . . .

Sowell had his own moves in mind. Funny how none of ’em went anywhere near the evidence. Hmm . . .

As a distinguished scholar once said: “The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.”

— Thomas Sowell

The man’s a magician:

As I’m practically spit on by people promoting principles I followed to find he didn’t. Simply by virtue of writing those words, he couldn’t possibly do the same in service of his own ideals? And lo and behold — sleight of hand is how they pulled it off.

When you have absolutely no idea what’s going on here, on what basis are you so doubt-free?

And what happened to all this jazz?

In what parallel universe does this even remotely reflect anything like that:

A couple of 2-minute reads that never even mention the tubes that took us to war (or anything else of substance on this endless saga of absurdity). Touting technicalities as “facts” doesn’t get it done: Especially when you make a living selling slogans and catchy quotes about careful consideration. If you only apply the principles you preach when it serves your interests — they’re just empty claims on a cup and a meaningless mantra touted on a T-shirt.

8. Old information at the beginning of the sentence, new information at the end.

— Steven Pinker

How do you feel about no new information — anywhere? 

You walked into the party
Like you were walking onto a yacht
Your hat strategically dipped below one eye
Your scarf it was apricot
You had one eye in the mirror

“As you watched yourself gavotte”

A Conflict of Visions . . .

And then some!

You had me several years ago
When I was still quite naive
Well you said that we made such a pretty pair
And that you would never leave


But you gave away the things you loved
And one of them was me . . .

Well I hear you went up to Saratoga
And your horse naturally won
Then you flew your Lear jet up to Nova Scotia
To see the total eclipse of the sun

“Well you’re where you should be all the time”

And all the girls dreamed that they’d be your partner
They’d be your partner and . . .

And these are on the mild end of the savagery I’ve seen:

You couldn’t carry Sowell’s jockstrap!

Seriously? Get a life. It doesn’t matter what you say, he’s better than you basically in everything.

You deserved to be treated that way! You’re a moron and pathetic character assassin

Holy shit…. a video of a circle jerks with a nut in the center talking about RPMS. Yet somehow Thomas Sowell is a liar.

I couldn’t agree more . . .

But there’s another reason why so many people misunderstand so many issues. Professional know-it-alls like you pull stunts like this while peddling lines like that as cover . . .

To whitewash your record of patently obvious hypocrisy and lies. What would you call someone who shoots their mouth off without addressing the evidence — but banks on their fabricated reputation to create the impression that they did?

“And the sign said”

“The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls”

Part II

Sowell: A Solo Play in a Silo of Sycophants

The one constant on display through all these topics is an irrepressible mind digging through the data in order to understand the complex reality underneath. His intellectual process, plus his ability to write quickly, have resulted in dozens of books and hundreds upon hundreds of newspaper columns that have helped many of us learn. 

Dr. Henderson likes to learn . . .

So shedding light on Sowell with new information should be welcomed by someone touting “the role of knowledge and information in decisions.” His findings for 44 years shaped his solidified perception of Sowell — but what if he only went looking for what he wanted to find?

A lot of that goin’ around!

As in — not this:

I tend to believe Thomas Sowell. He is brilliant and has worked at a think tank for about 40 years. Sources matter! Yours is from a concerned citizen.

Does that strike you as a valid counterargument in response to an issue involving artillery rockets and material properties of centrifuge rotors (an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, no less)? Never mind that comeback doesn’t qualify as argument at all. A lot of that goin’ around too!

“Compared to What?”

That — looks an awful lot like this, doesn’t it?

But this — doesn’t look anything like that:

Sowell’s 2-minute reads that never even mention the tubes that took us to war (or anything else of substance on this endless saga of absurdity). Touting technicalities as “facts” doesn’t get it done: Especially when you make a living selling slogans and catchy quotes about careful consideration.

8. Old information at the beginning of the sentence, new information at the end.

— Steven Pinker

How do you feel about no new information — anywhere? If you only apply the principles you preach when it serves your interests — they’re just empty claims on a cup and a meaningless mantra touted on a T-shirt.

As I spotted Sowell’s patterns of hypocrisy in a matter of minutes, I have to wonder what Clifton Duncan was doing during “3 months of deep immersion into the life and ideas of Dr. Sowell.” What he missed then is one thing — what he’s willing to miss now is something else entirely. It would never occur to this actor that he’d have a play for the ages by acting on the very principles upon which he puts Sowell on a pedestal.

Imagine coming across undeniable evidence that knocks him off his high horse. But instead of avoiding reality like Black Death — Duncan embraced the discovery to take his story to new heights. An in so doing, the ultimate irony is that he would “Become [the spirit of] Thomas Sowell” for real, as the image he believes in is an illusion.

“The one constant” . . .

Does not strike me as a claim that comes with caveats. Does this book cover imply he’s a Maverick only on the pages within? Of course not, it’s suggesting a way of life — and no rational person would argue otherwise.

Just as no rational person would contort the definition of “constant” by restricting it to the domain that isolates Sowell’s history to what serves you:

I focused on the issues where he really did dig through the data.

By that standard, I can isolate O.J. Simpson’s character to the football field and ignore that little matter of murder. So, we’ve gone from “irrepressible mind digging through the data” to “I just meant where he really did.”

 a.k.a. Changing the Rules:

Right on cue | Never fails

Sowell had his own moves in mind . . .

Funny how none of ’em went anywhere near the evidence on WMD or anything else on that fiasco for the ages.

Two themes emerge from [Professor Henderson’s] writing: (1) that the unintended consequences of government regulation and spending are usually worse than the problems they are supposed to solve.

— Hoover Institution

But spending and unintended consequences didn’t cross your mind on this multi-trillion-dollar fiasco for the ages? And with all the wisdom in Sowell’s fancy quotes to float:

This “intellectual giant” couldn’t see that coming either?

Just how much of an “Intellectual Giant” could you be and blow it on something this big and glaringly obvious? This isn’t about intelligence, it’s about ulterior motives. But wouldn’t an intellectual giant have the foresight to see the inherent holes in his motives? That however well-intentioned they might be, catastrophic consequences tend to come with endless lying and ineptitude.

Not to mention the poison of partisanship to absolve it all — running the nation into the ground while you’re at it.

At what point does it dawn on you and your beloved Sowell — that blind loyalty to that cause would predictably damage your others? Ya know, like creating the conditions for Obama to come along and take race relations & woke totally off the rails.

Some genius!

Sowell’s hailed as a folk hero for calling out problems he helped create (and takes no responsibility for any of it). A lot of that goin’ around too! Given the world-altering consequences of manufacturing a lie to invade a Middle Eastern country in the aftermath of 9/11: The chances of Sowell being a repeat offender on lying and/or manipulating matters in a manner outside the parameters of a Maverick:

But no need to fuss over predictions:

As I’ve already got the goods to prove his hypocrisy doesn’t end on WMD. Sowell’s disciples say he does one thing and I’m showing you that sometimes he does another (which brings his credibility into question on everything else). Does that mean he’s wrong on everything else? Did I say that? I’m not even implying it.

I’m simply saying his credibility is in question (and no rational person would argue otherwise).

Moreover: Anyone with a history wildly out of sync with their sanctimonious claims — should not be put on a pedestal as a bastion of virtue. But that story about blind belief — is a conduit for telling a larger story about blind belief. And I don’t care whether it’s about this guy or that guy:

I take the trail to the truth and I don’t give a damn who gets in the way.


Not only did Sowell flagrantly fail to follow the facts on all-things Iraq — he brazenly ignored the debauchery in his own party to politely pounce on the other. And yet somehow his patently obvious history of hypocrisy has gone unnoticed for decades by people heaping praise upon him.

In the film, Larry Elder describes Sowell as the “greatest contemporary living philosopher and notes that he causes people to “rethink their assumptions.” Rethinking and questioning our assumptions has long been en vogue in the academy, and if you really listen to what he has to say, few scholars will make you rethink your assumptions like Sowell will. If you’re looking for a one-hour introduction to one of the great minds of the last century, Common Sense in a Senseless World is exactly that.

— Art Carden

Next to zero . . .

Number of Sowell’s followers willing to “rethink their assumptions” — about the “greatest contemporary living philosopher” who “causes people to ‘rethink their assumptions.’” But all I need is one — the right one:

Following Facts Where They Lead

“Said so and so”? . . . that’s one helluva trip you took there, Mr. Sowell.

Stirring Defense!

Are you telling me . . .

That I can grasp this — but you can’t grasp that?

Your pursuit of truth and accountability seems awfully one-sided, Mr. Sowell. And that’s a fact: “truth verifiable from experience or observation.” Just as my lifelong record of unwavering commitment to the truth and objective scrutiny to find it.

As I said in my doc:

You can’t seem to comprehend that I don’t care what damage the truth inflicts upon politicians of any brand. I have this crazy idea that across-the-board accountability is always in the best interests of the nation.

As for my frustration — I have this thing about people who regurgitate nonsense in the face of overwhelming evidence that counters their baseless beliefs.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

About that concerned citizen:

As part of my exhaustively detailed research covering angle that matters most: I interviewed a world-renowned nuclear scientist, corresponded with the key physicist who wrote extensively on the tubes, along with correspondence with Colin Powell’s chief of intelligence at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR):

Powell’s very own intelligence agency that he conveniently ignored.

INR stuck to its old-fashioned ways by agreeing with DOE:

Ya know, the actual experts!

As I said in my doc:

The question comes down to whether or not you’re basing your belief on something in the realm of reason — not some fail-safe fantasy that allows you to believe whatever you want.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act III

As a distinguished scholar once said: “The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.”

— Thomas Sowell

The man’s a magician:

As I’m practically spit on by people promoting principles I followed to find he didn’t. Simply by virtue of writing those words, he couldn’t possibly do the same in service of his own ideals? And lo and behold — sleight of hand is how they pulled it off.

When you have absolutely no idea what’s going on here, on what basis are you so doubt-free?

“Garbage website. Next.” . . .

And yet somehow . . .

This Sowell supporter below had no trouble understanding my site (and even politely replied with the makings of what real conversation looks like). To be sure, he could have investigated it further and asked some questions on that front, but to get the ball rolling — this will do:

And is worlds away from what I’m used to.

  1. He acknowledges the marque evidence driving the story
  2. While he already knew the truth on the tubes — he’s keeping the door open on Sowell (as to whether he “fell for it or lied about it”)
  3. It’s the most clear-cut case of lying by omission imaginable, but right now — all that matters is that he’s allowing the conversation to breathe (which means we can build on it)
  4. Genuine conversation is a journey — and along the way in this pursuit of truth & understanding, are glorious discoveries in the willingness to be wrong
  5. By acknowledging that you’re wrong (in part or in whole) — you just might create a hairline crack in the convictions of your interlocutor (enough to shed some light on the truth you have to tell)
  6. And through that exchange — perhaps they’ll come around to realizing they’re wrong (in part or in whole)

And all that sounds a lot like this:

In over 3 years of telling this story on Thomas Sowell, that’s the first time I’ve seen a supporter express any disappointment at all. 

Are you telling me . . .

That the Sowell supporter above and a handful of others — just happened to have a Rosetta Stone to reason through what you can’t? Would a reasonable person blow right by critical evidence at the beginning — so you can cite website style as your reason to outright reject it by the end?

I hate comic books — but because I’m not keen on that kind of layout, is that a valid excuse to say I can’t comprehend it? I’ve written this story a hundred different ways when one Tweet is all it should take: Thomas Sowell flagrantly failed to follow the facts on Iraq WMD — opting to peddle partisan hackery that poisons political discourse & butchers debate to this day. Here’s my 7-part documentary that exhaustively details the WMD Delusion (taking on both parties to boot — on that issue and then some).


If you don’t like my illustrations, go read the bone-dry reports for yourselves: And I’ve got plenty more material to add to your reading list. But that takes work — and why bother when you can just ridicule those who did it for you.

One picture is worth a thousand words:

When you don’t want the pictures and you don’t want the words — what would you have me do?

And once I did it:

We both know your next move . . .


About those think tanks . . .

What’s Wrong With This Picture?

And this one . . .

Associated Press, October 3rd, 2004: Rice said she learned of objections by the Energy Department only after making her 2002 comments.

Richard W. Memmer: Are we to believe that the National Security Advisor of the United States was unaware of an intelligence dispute of this magnitude that had been going on for well over a year?

One Congressional investigator went so far as to call it a holy war. And doesn’t it strike you as suspicious that she didn’t bother consulting the DOE before serving up images of a nuclear detonation?

— Act II

Holy War

Sowell is possibly the most fascinating and productive scholar in the world. I say that not as a junior colleague of Sowell (I am a mere 69), but as someone who has studied his work for 44 years.

His scholarship covers a wide range of issues: income inequality, ethnic differences in economic performance, economic geography, poverty and economic growth, the destructive effects of the welfare state, the effects of affirmative action, the role of knowledge and information in decisions, incentives within the political system and within academia, and, more recently, the performance of charter schools.

What can we establish on the bit above?

First off, he’s heavily invested in seeing Sowell in the light that those 44 years have shown him. Secondly, “the role of knowledge and information in decisions” is on the table. Seems like evidence claimed as components for building a nuclear bomb (to manufacture a war in the Middle East in the aftermath of 9/11) — qualifies for consideration, don’t ya think?

On a matter of such magnitude, the stakes don’t get much higher. For a Maverick who’s worshipped for following the facts — wouldn’t he take the trail to where they matter most?

As in the marquee evidence used to manufacture this fraud?

I did — Sowell didn’t!

If that title doesn’t tell you something about my commitment to objective scrutiny, what would?

The rotor speed required to separate uranium isotopes doesn’t care who’s president, and when it comes to ascertaining the truth, neither do I. In order to maintain such speeds, the material properties of centrifuges are as critical as it gets. You don’t need to interview a world-renowned nuclear scientist to figure that out — but I like to be thorough. To claim that Iraq WMD wasn’t a lie should be like saying we didn’t land on the moon.

As I wrote and produced the most exhaustive documentary ever done on WMD, I would know.

The one constant on display through all these topics is an irrepressible mind digging through the data in order to understand the complex reality underneath.

“When the Machine Has Taken the Soul from the Man”: Part I

You cannot be, I know, nor do I wish to see you an inactive Spectator . . . If we expect to inherit the blessings of our Fathers, we should return a little more to their primitive Simplicity of Manners, and not sink into inglorious ease.

We have too many high sounding words, and too few actions that correspond with them.

— Abigail Adams, 16 October 1774


Note: As you’ll find in the image of the letter to executives below.

I contacted HR to raise a code-of-conduct complaint against one of Ecolab’s best, and I was mysteriously fired a month later. I hold no ill-will against my managers — especially since they didn’t support my ouster. Who pulled the plug and why is unclear to me. I sure didn’t see this coming from what I witnessed in week one.

When I started as a contractor in [March] 2023, 3 days into the job I was asked if there was any way we could meet their deadline, to which I replied:

Let me talk to the BA and we’ll see

She had never done a digital whiteboard before, but she accommodated my request and I had everything I needed in no time. Rather than wait until Monday to tell management the good news about what could be done, I just went and did it. But my role in that success is secondary to the person who provided the information in a manner outside their comfort zone.

That I never saw such openness in her again is one thing. That she became increasingly hostile toward me (and that this behavior was tolerated by leadership for months) — is something else entirely. Things started to fall apart after an email I sent to management two days before Christmas, in which I wrote:

Proper allocation of resources is in everybody’s best interest

Had that happened early on or somewhere along the way — it would have changed the course of all that followed. I am not without blame, as the link below will explain. But no one else would have gone so far to rectify the situation: Driving improvements in our processes by implementing an issue-tracking system, retooling our design and development, and putting automation in place on multiple fronts (much of which was on my own time).

On a project of this magnitude, fluid communication between key resources is imperative (all the more so when we’re an ocean away). The overlap in time zones should be capitalized to the fullest so that we maintain some sense of rhythm. As it was, what could be cleared up in 5 minutes on the phone could take 5 days in emails. In some cases, I never got the answers I needed — but I kept moving with what I had. Despite having to decipher her 28-page document with no help, I automated 4 hours of work to as many minutes. And still, she complained.

Two weeks later, not a word from HR (with things worsening by the day). She refused to touch even the tiniest of tasks if not formatted to her liking. At the very least, take a look tonight and we’ll talk about it tomorrow — so we can keep moving.

I would have made her better. Ecolab made her worse.


Though the bridge between the band would become the culprit in question, she was exceptional within her wheelhouse. How she behaved outside of it is how this saga all started (which was avoidable with better decisions by all parties involved). Despite how it went off the rails — you’ve got some dedicated people who deserved a helluva lot better than the fiasco that follows.

However it ended up, this image is in memory of all the good they give (including her).

All that aside . . .

I wouldn’t give you two cents for all your fancy rules if, behind them, they didn’t have a little bit of plain, ordinary, everyday kindness and a — a little lookin’ out for the other fella, too . . .

— Mr. Smith Goes to Washington

On the image above, ECOLAB looks like a lovely place to work. On a lot of levels, it is. I spent many a morning marveling at how this team of subject matter experts could be so on the ball at 6:00 AM. My job was a cake walk compared to theirs. But since all their efforts flowed through mine — it seems a bit more importance should have been placed on our processes.

It was the easiest thing to get right — and we got it wrong right out of the gate.

Why would a company hire expertise and then hamstring his abilities by catering to a colleague with limited skills in that area? To get this project off the ground in a rush, it was the right call for the BA to crank out code in ways I couldn’t. But to meet the urgency of the moment, we built bad practices into our database design, and what’s worse — we kept doing it.

A younger version of me would have been appalled by the piecemeal approach in which we slapped this stuff together (so I share some blame in how this happened). But by the end of the year, I’d had enough — it was time to right this ship (and make amends for my part in its listing). As I wrote in the opening line of my email Some End-of-Year Thoughts:

Regardless of what I have to share, every mistake I made this year was avoidable and my responsibility. . . . I cannot overstress that ECOLAB’s mistakes do not absolve me of mine, but going forward we need to take a hard look at how we’re doing things on this end.

Much to my delight, Manager2 was quite welcoming of what I had to say in my Christmas gift. This guy’s as good as it gets in setting the mood in seconds. He called me shortly after that email and immediately put me at ease.

That — is class!

Note: Manager1 hired me and Manager2 is in charge of the project.

The main point to me is that [the players] have to be coordinated, and the 10 people have to support what that 11th guy is doing, and vice versa. . . .

The only way that can happen is for there to be discipline, for everyone to be disciplined enough to do their job, knowing the guy beside him is doing his, too, so that you can count on him and he can count on you, and go right down the line.

— Bill Belichick

Coaching a subordinate would be a walk in the park for my managers, but she doesn’t work for them — and therein lies the rub. Even without authority over her, if you’re in a managerial capacity and you see an increasingly problematic issue in your purview, you’ve gotta find a way.

But what was in their way is what interests me most.

I’m not excusing their failure to resolve the situation, but it’s only fair to understand all sides of the story. What they did right vastly outweighs where they went wrong — so it’s grossly unfair for this to taint their fine work (under a degree of pressure & responsibility I couldn’t handle and wouldn’t want to).

And let’s face it — they never should have had to deal with this drama in the first place. They had bigger and better things to do, and so did we. Wherever they dropped the ball on a bit of planning in our processes, she and I should have picked it up. Eventually, I’d be moving on — but she’d remain (with a record of impressing the hell out of everyone had she followed my lead). I would have trained her right out of my own job if I could — so how much she wanted to grow was entirely up to her.

I will be happy to teach her everything I can, but she’s not had time to advance her SQL skills much (so she’s mainly relied on her experience from Access). As my career revolved around Access in the early years, I completely understand that (and I still respect that tool). But part of the purpose of going to another platform like SQL Server is to harness the advantages that come with it — and we haven’t come anywhere close to doing that.

Some End-of-Year Thoughts

But she was having none of it . . .

All the while participating only to the extent of her limited SQL skills (which were capable of much more than her hermetically sealed M.O.). She’d blow her whole morning before she’d add a column to keep moving. My mindset doesn’t compute the Charmin-soft standards of today — as this is more my sentiment:

Step up your game or get out of the way!

Even if she didn’t want to participate outside the confines of her cage: The far-bigger problem is her complete lack of effort in taking an active interest in the needs on my end. That initiative alone would have fostered communication and a better understanding of what I’m trying to do:

And how we can help each other & ECOLAB at large.

To be sure, I should have done some things better from the beginning (just as we all should have). But that’s the past — it’s time to get busy on the present and how we pave the way for the future. But she was having none of it. No matter how many times I went out of my way for her — she never responded in kind.

How I would love to work for people who think like this leader below (though in no way am I implying that the BA falls into the second sentence — and I know she works hard).

If you come here, you are going to need to want to be pushed, to be challenged, to work. If you are here to collect a paycheck, or to show up, don’t come.

— Ric Elias, CEO of Red Ventures

Despite constant resistance and barely any help from management in handling her intransigence — we still were making major strides (and well on our way to a well-oiled machine even without fixing the engine under the hood). I offered ideas for short and long-term solutions to fix those problems:

But it seems the more I had to say, the more of a burden I became.

Predictably — not a peep!

By the way, that manager and I are friends to this day. He didn’t dismiss my concerns — he respected my challenge and openly said so to the team. We had a free-flowing dialogue then got right back to work. See how easy that is? When it comes to my experience at ECOLAB and the aftermath of reporting my concerns: You wildly overcomplicated even the most fundamental of matters.

As explained in We’ve never developed four deployments in parallel — but we just did:


Yet the expectation was as if we were doing one.

Please hear me out as I show you how that expectation could be a reasonable one (and solve all kinds of problems to boot). I’m in a great mood and after I send this, I’m gonna go right back to doing what I’m asked to do. But it’s in ECOLAB’s best interest to adopt at least the bare-minimum option below (which is simple and could be turned around in a few days):

On the surface, some minor structural changes and a few new files seems straightforward (and it should be). But we didn’t design for scalability—we designed to meet [her] skillset (which was fine to get things off the ground, but all development after APW2 should have been in my hands). With a more sophisticated approach, we would have created simplicity: So accommodating the needs of each deployment would have been a breeze.

But we designed to meet [her] needs (thereby creating complexity through overlap and duplication).

Please hear me out . . .

That I felt the compelled to say, “please” to promote ideas should speak volumes (not to mention that my mood should have nothing to do with it). By the way, I finished that email before I was fired and sent it anyway (offering my assistance with grace):

As for HR . . .

Two weeks later and you’re still working out what to do?

I’m not sure how much more I could have done to impress upon you the urgency of the situation. Why not handle it in stages? Even without reading all the emails, you could pick up the gist pretty quickly then meet with her manager to get her update to speed. Now, this person has authority — so why not exercise it? By all means, set up another meeting with all immediate parties involved — but until then, try this on for size:

We’ve been informed of a complaint about your ongoing behavior. We’re investigating it further and will contact you for discussion at the appropriate time. For now: Knock it off, get on the phone with this guy, and get to work

ECOLAB had other ideas . . .

Incredibly, you needed another 2 weeks — for what seems like a summit meeting for something that should have been tightly contained.

I made it clear that I didn’t want to harm her career. So I’m not just bothered by word getting out because of what happened to me. I don’t like the additional weight of negative impact on her and my managers as well. Jesus, she just needed a good kick in in the ass — and you people blew this whole thing out of proportion.

So what you deem as careful consideration — was sloppily handled in my eyes.


I’m keenly aware that I have no protections as a contractor.

But when I contacted HR for help — I was under the impression that their efforts would reflect something in the realm of What Real Leadership Looks Like:

When you said you’d have an update for me, booting me out the door is not what I had in mind. But it’s all par for the course — including the asinine decision to pull the plug before you even bothered to protect your investment:

Stopping deployments dead in their tracks.

You’ve got a Java programmer who picked up my kind of work pretty well in just a short time of training her months ago. Granted, it was pretty simple stuff as an introduction — but she’d had already built on what I showed her (and pretty impressively, I would add). With just 2-3 days of guiding her along — you’d be in good hands to keep the lights on until you got another developer in my domain:

But you might not even need one — as she’s pretty sharp.

Moreover, she could have contacted me anytime — and I’d do what I could to help her out. So just by thinking it through and knowing the integrity of the person you’re dealing with — you’d make the smart move and reap the rewards:

Keeping the lights on, eliminating the burden, elevating her skills, and in so doing — possibly save a bunch of money to boot.

Once again . . .

Even with all the obstacles in the way and atmosphere of apathy on my input: It was demonstrably clear that things were greatly improving from one deployment to the next. I just needed a little more time to tie up loose ends — and a modicum of courtesy and understanding would have been appreciated

By the way, this notion of “self-validation” had gotten totally out of hand.

Naturally, she didn’t have time to assist on that or anything else I asked her to do (and management catered to her complaints, as always). I’ve never seen anyone spend so much time complaining while citing concerns about efficiency. I know a little somethin’ about efficiency — and that ain’t it! I once turned around a project in 3 days that took someone else 3 months. I relay that story in The Cut of Your Jib — where I showed that guy some grace despite getting none.

It’s under the Listening, Learning & Empathizing menu for a reason.


Lara walked along the tracks following a path worn by pilgrims and then turned into the fields. Here she stopped and, closing her eyes, took a deep breath of the flower-scented air of the broad expanse around her. It was dearer to her than her kin, better than a lover, wiser than a book. For a moment she rediscovered the purpose of her life.

She was here on earth to grasp the meaning of its wild enchantment and to call each thing by its right name, or, if this were not within her power, to give birth out of love for life to successors who would do it in her place.

― Doctor Zhivago (referenced in Into the Wild)

In the spirit of discovery that clarity, curiosity, and courage can inspire:

Part II

A Professional Know-It-All Worshipped as All-Knowing: Part 1

People who talk glibly about “intelligence failure” act as if intelligence agencies that are doing their job right would know everything.

— Thomas Sowell

D.O.E’s standard is to spin a tube at 20% above 90,000 RPM before failure — so 48,000 short is a pretty loose definition of “rough indication.” . . . Out of 31 tubes in subsequent testing, only one was successfully spun to 90,000 RPM for 65 minutes — which the C.I.A. seized on as evidence in their favor.

One D.O.E. analyst offered a superb analogy of that contorted conclusion:  “Running your car up to 6,500 RPM briefly does not prove that you can run your car at 6,500 RPM cross country. It just doesn’t. Your car’s not going to make it.”

In an industry where fractions of a millimeter matter, these guys were playing horseshoes with centrifuge physics . . .

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

Between Sowell’s words and mine — which ones strike you as glib?

My words and illustrations seem awfully specific for someone simply “attacking” Sowell, don’t ya think?

My surgical specificity in this clip puts this lie in its place in 5 minutes alone. I’m not out to “DESTROY” Sowell, but lemme put it in terms you’ll understand: If he stepped into a debate with me on this matter, the beating he’d take would be biblical.

If you think you can challenge me on that, I invite you to try. I’ve been inviting you for a really long time.

Trillion Dollar Tube 

To take a story this complex and convoluted and boil its essence down to a few minutes was no small feat:

Imagine what I did with 160

“There is no skimming over the surface of a subject with [Hamilton]. He must sink to the bottom to see what foundation it rests on.”

— Major William Pierce (Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton)

Wouldn’t it be absurd to share that quote if my clip contained nothing but trite talking points? Some circles are not burdened by squaring their walk with their talk. They seem to think that advertising virtue equates to embodying it.

I tend to believe Thomas Sowell. He is brilliant and has worked at a think tank for about 40 years. Sources matter! Yours is from a concerned citizen.

This concerned citizen interviewed a world-renowned nuclear scientist, corresponded with the key physicist who wrote extensively on the tubes, along with correspondence with Colin Powell’s chief of intelligence at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR):

Powell’s very own intelligence agency that he conveniently ignored. INR stuck to its old-fashioned ways by agreeing with DOE (ya know, the actual experts).

What did you do?

Besides gleefully get in the way by derailing the debate every step of the way? But more importantly, what will you do now?

Greg Thielmann said the following in 2013:

It will be up to Iraqis to debate whether their country now has a brighter future than it otherwise would have had without foreign invasion and occupation in the first decade of the new century. But it is uniquely incumbent on Americans to understand who and what were responsible for an enterprise that proved so costly in terms of U.S. lives lost, money spent, international reputation tarnished, and a campaign against al Qaeda diverted.

Note:

I modified the Intelligence Community image above by overlaying CIA on top of Director of National Intelligence — to show how the IC effectively operated pre-9/11 and before DCI took center stage.

America just casually moved on.

I didn’t — as I knew then what few know now:

The immeasurable value in the willingness to be wrong, understanding why, and looking to learn from it. And that not doing so — increasingly compounds the consequences of no accountability.

Look around!

Taking on the entire country by myself is worlds away from what everyone else is doing. In reference to its opening image on Without Passion or Prejudice, I wrote: “Half the country is with me on this — and I just lost the other half. Had I started with the image below — it would be the opposite half.” America lost its way long ago (and you’re right about how some of that happened).

But all that pales in comparison to the aftermath of 9/11. Every major problem in America was exponentially exacerbated because of that fiasco for the ages — which Sowell helped sell and got off scot-free.

They all did — as they always do (Democrats & Republicans alike):

The story I’m out to tell takes both parties to task on the biggest & most costly lie in modern history — along with some other issues at the core of America’s decline. Sowell is simply a conduit through which to tell that story (and how his role within it could be harnessed for good).

Compelling him to admit where he’s wrong will work wonders for where he’s right.

What I do takes work — time & effort to think it through. If you’re unwilling to work in the interest of truth, understanding, and problem solving — we have nothing to talk about and I wish you well. You may take pride in not blocking anyone, but I’m asking you to make an exception (so I’ll never bother you again). Is that really too much of a courtesy to ask?

Thank you!


When you make up your mind on lickety-split perception alone: In what parallel universe does that qualify as critical thinking? Ann Baker’s article beautifully captures what critical thinking is and is not:

Indeed, nowadays, we tend to take in and repeat whatever the values and beliefs of those around us have rather than forming our own independent thought and stopping to organize and evaluate the information we are receiving.

What does it say to you that across communities where claims of critical thinking are everywhere — I haven’t found it anywhere? These people taking endless delight in flooding the internet with ceaseless claims about their immaculate critical thinking skills.

But the second they’re challenged on anything that is even perceived as threatening their interests:

Don’t do any of this . . .

As I have an idea that could turn the tide (which would serve your interests whether I agree with them or not): All conversations on the country fit under the umbrella of mine. If you’re not interested in such discovery, let’s not waste each other’s time. Thx 🙏

I’ve got an idea — and it’s got teeth. There’s a way we can harness folly from the past for the benefit of the future.

A.K.A. Learning!

All ya gotta do — is do what you say you do. And my idea is a framework for debate that boxes you in to do exactly that. You won’t like it — but here’s the deal: Your opposition won’t either. And who knows, you might learn to love embracing challenge, changing your mind, and the fruits from demanding across-the-board accountability.

This — is not that . . .

This is Broadcasting Beliefs About That


My idea is simple:

Cutting through our Crap is King culture to you to see it — is not.

Where infantile insults are celebrated:

The doubt-free who don’t do their homework are the experts.

Those who belittle and outright reject correction — are the righteous and wise. The ones with courage to admit when they’re wrong — are the weak. Tireless dedication is mercilessly mocked — while intellectual laziness is esteemed. Original thinking and uniqueness are bashed — while conforming to the trite is trumpeted. Depth is discarded with disdain — while shallowness is embraced with love.

The honest & sincere are shunned — while manipulators & liars are welcomed with open arms.

This is my story — and if you read it in full, you’ll find it’s part of your story too. You’ve all dealt with the same behavior I have — the difference is that I get it from every direction.

Conventional means have repeatedly failed and won’t put a pinprick in the atmosphere of absurdity suffocating the country. It’s high time to take another approach. If we don’t take a long, hard look at what America has become and how we got here — we will not see a return to some semblance of recognizing reality in our lifetime. As my videographer perfectly put it

We finally figured out what we were doing by the end

If we don’t change course as a country — we won’t!


I’ve written this story a hundred different ways when one Tweet is all it should take:

Thomas Sowell flagrantly failed to follow the facts on Iraq WMD — opting to peddle partisan hackery that poisons political discourse & butchers debate to this day. Here’s my 7-part documentary that exhaustively details the WMD Delusion (taking on both parties to task — on that issue and then some).

Einstein borrowed from the one below:

The worth of man lies not in the truth which he possesses, or believes that he possesses, but in the honest endeavor which he puts forth to secure that truth; for not by the possession of, but by the search after, truth, are his powers enlarged, wherein, alone, consists his ever-increasing perfection. Possession fosters content, indolence, and pride.

— Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

Are you telling me . . .

That I can grasp this — but you can’t grasp that?

Your pursuit of truth and accountability seems awfully one-sided, Mr. Sowell. And that’s a fact: “truth verifiable from experience or observation.” Just as my lifelong record of unwavering commitment to the truth and objective scrutiny to find it.

As I said in my doc:

You can’t seem to comprehend that I don’t care what damage the truth inflicts upon politicians of any brand. I have this crazy idea that across-the-board accountability is always in the best interests of the nation.

As for my frustration — I have this thing about people who regurgitate nonsense in the face of overwhelming evidence that counters their baseless beliefs.

— Richard W. Memmer: Act II

Anyone wanting to know the truth would not behave in ways that make damn sure you never will. Defenders of the indefensible make it impossible to discuss even a single screenshot — and yet have the temerity to bitch about my website. You blow right by illustrations and clips at the crux of the story — then complain how you can’t understand what you didn’t stop to consider.

Anything Goes for apologists trying to preserve what they perceive. I know their Rolodex of Ridicule rabbit-hole routine — all too well:

And Now for the Weather . . .

But every once in a blue moon, someone has the guts the reconsider. Not long before this Tweet — this Sowell supporter was condemning my efforts like all the rest that day (and every day).

And then he opened the doc . . .

“To learn to ask: ‘Is that true?’” . . .

Maybe there’s something to what she just said. Let me think about it. That’s interesting. Maybe I should change my mind.’” . . . When is the last time you can honestly remember a public dialogue — or even a private conversation — that followed that useful course?


“Compared to What?”

That — looks an awful lot like this, doesn’t it?

But this — doesn’t look anything like that:

A couple of 2-minute reads that never even mention the tubes that took us to war (or anything else of substance on this endless saga of absurdity). Touting technicalities as “facts” doesn’t get it done: Especially when you make a living selling slogans and catchy quotes about careful consideration.

8. Old information at the beginning of the sentence, new information at the end.

— Steven Pinker

How do you feel about no new information — anywhere? 

If you only apply the principles you preach when it serves your interests: They’re just empty claims on a cup and a meaningless mantra touted on a T-shirt.

As a distinguished scholar once said: “The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.”

— Thomas Sowell

The man’s a magician:

As I’m practically spit on by people promoting principles I followed to find he didn’t. Simply by virtue of writing those words, he couldn’t possibly do the same in service of his own ideals? And lo and behold — sleight of hand is how they pulled it off.

When you have absolutely no idea what’s going on here — on what basis are you so doubt-free?

I started this site to tell a story about a colleague who was coddled by a company that enabled her increasingly hostile behavior. After all other attempts failed over a 6-month period: I went to HR to raise a code of conduct complaint. A month later I was fired. Who pulled the plug and why is unclear to me.

As told in “When the Machine Has Taken the Soul from the Man” — there were mysterious forces in play with this person (i.e., politics, plain as day). Within her wheelhouse, she was exceptional (even winning an award for excellence). But how she performed outside her area of expertise is what’s in question. Would you judge the quality of her work strictly on how she is seen by those who celebrate her:

Or would you look at the totality of the story for the whole truth?

I don’t know anyone who would argue for the former. And yet, this goes on every single day — blindly defending people on beliefs that cannot survive scrutiny. Invariably, there are ulterior motives involved: Just like ECOLAB looking away from behavior by someone who deserved a good kick in the ass a long time ago.

Tough love used to be timeless — and look what happened when it became outdated. They’d be doing her a favor by being hard on her, but they tap danced around it — squandering a golden opportunity to elevate all those involved by embracing the challenge.

A lot of that goin’ around!

Sowell’s acolytes instantly assume I’m out to discredit all his work — which is in breach of Sowell’s own standards:

And these are on the mild end of the savagery I’ve seen:

You couldn’t carry Sowell’s jockstrap!

Seriously? Get a life. It doesn’t matter what you say, he’s better than you basically in everything.

You deserved to be treated that way! You’re a moron and pathetic character assassin

Holy shit…. a video of a circle jerks with a nut in the center talking about RPMS. Yet somehow Thomas Sowell is a liar.

How do you reconcile that with this?

Politicians and pundits are not gods. When you treat them as such — you do a cosmic disservice to them, yourselves, the country, and the world as well. Look around! If they were the genuine article — they’d be pushing you to make a habit of welcoming challenge:

Not just endlessly pointing out the opposition’s flaws while unconscionably ignoring your own.

A lot of that goin’ around!


I’ve got an idea — and it’s got teeth!

My idea is simple: Cutting through our Crap is King culture to get you to see it — is not. Conventional means have repeatedly failed and won’t put a pinprick in the atmosphere of absurdity suffocating the country. It’s high time to take another approach. If we don’t take a long, hard look at what America has become and how we got here — we will not see a return to some semblance of recognizing reality in our lifetime. As my videographer perfectly put it

We finally figured out what we were doing by the end

If we don’t change course as a country — we won’t!

I love you so much that I can’t leave you
Even though my mind tells me I should
But then you make me think that you still love me
And all my thoughts of leaving do no good . . .

You’ve got me heart over mind worried all the time
Knowing you will always be the same
You’ll keep hurting me I know but I still can’t let you go
Cause my heart won’t let my love for you change

Part II