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Monday Night At The Movies: "A History Of Violence" (2005)

Join Gagglers for "A History Of Violence"!
The screening starts at 3 p.m. ET sharp.
Share all of your thoughts, comments and criticisms on the Live Chat.

01:35:43
The Gaggle Music Club: Mussorgsky's "Night on Bald Mountain"

This week's selection for The Gaggle Music Club is "Night on Bald Mountain" by Modest Mussorgsky.

Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky (1839–1881), one of the most distinctive voices in 19th-century Russian music, was a member of the “Mighty Handful” that also included Mily Balakirev, César Cui, Alexander Borodin and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. The Five’s mission was to break from Western European models and forge an authentically Russian style, drawing on folk melody, native idioms and Orthodox liturgy. Mussorgsky was perhaps the least conventional of the group, and the one whose music most strongly resisted later academic tidying up. His rejection of Western compositional norms, favoring speech-like vocal lines, abrupt modulations and stark orchestral colors, made him seem unrefined to contemporaries, but visionary to later composers.

The piece that is now called "Night on Bald Mountain" was not a single, straightforward composition. The piece audiences are most familiar with is Rimsky-Korsakov’s 1886 orchestration ...

00:13:36
TG 1941: NATO Worthies Set Out To Sabotage Alaska Summit

George Szamuely discusses the enormous energy NATO leaders are expending to ensure that the upcoming summit between presidents Trump and Putin ends in failure or, better still, doesn't take place at all.

01:28:41

‼️🚨🇦🇿 Over the past three months, Azerbaijan’s President, Ilham Aliyev, has:

• Hosted the World Freemasonic Congress in Baku (July 2025); 👁️
• Hosted the World Talmudic Rabbinic Congress in Baku (August 2025); 🇮🇱
• Announced that Azerbaijan will join the Abraham Accords; 🇸🇦🇮🇱
• Met with HTS terrorist Al-Julani in Baku; 🇸🇾
• Begun exporting gas and artillery shells to Ukraine; 🇺🇦
• Declared support for Israel’s operations against Hamas 🇮🇱

11 hours ago
22 hours ago

NEW - Johns Hopkins University is enhancing two AI-driven tools, GenWar and SAGE using classified details from Pentagon that will help reveal enemy weakness to support D.O.D programs.

Read more: https://www.disclose.tv/id/uaxwwtpbto/

@disclosetv

January 21, 2023
More Leftie Than Thou
"Jacobin" Magazine Celebrates A Strike Against Ol' Blue Eyes

Here at "The Gaggle" we have very little time for the "more Leftie than thou" school of thought--that's the approach to life according to which the only thing that matters is whether you take the right position on every issue under the sun from Abortion to Zelensky. No one in the world meets the exacting standards of this school of thought; any Leftie leader anywhere is always selling out to the bankers and the capitalists. The perfect exemplar of this is the unreadable Jacobin magazine. 

The other day I came across this article from 2021. It's a celebration of trade union power. And not simply trade union power, but the use of trade union power to secure political goals. Of course (and this is always the case with the "more Leftie than thou" crowd), this glorious, never-to-be-forgotten moment on the history of organized labor took place many years ago--in the summer of 1974 to be exact. Yes, almost half a century has gone by since that thrilling moment when the working-class movement of Australia mobilized and prepared to seize the means of production, distribution and exchange. 

Well, not quite. Organized labor went into action against...Ol' Blue Eyes, the Chairman of the Board, the Voice; yes, Frank Sinatra. Why? What had Sinatra done? Sinatra was certainly very rich, and he owned a variety of properties and businesses. But if the Australian trade union movement were, understandably, searching for the bright, incandescent spark that would finally awaken the working class from its slumber there were surely richer, greedier, more dishonest, more decadent, above all more Australian individuals it could have discovered. Australia was never short of them. Rupert Murdoch immediately springs to mind. Why Sinatra?

 

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