Discussion:
Genocide Joe is beginning to stink like Lyndon B. Johnson
(too old to reply)
NefeshBarYochai
2024-05-08 00:48:40 UTC
Permalink
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.

After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.

Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.

Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.

President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.

So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.” Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.

It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.

He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.

As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.

Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.

https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
Sharx335
2024-05-08 01:05:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.” Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over. If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Idlehands
2024-05-08 01:46:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.”  Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over.  If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Poor Sharx, accuses people who are using their rights to question and
challenge the status quo as being Nazis or Nazis sympathizer.

His solution, go full facist and deport and starve them out.

What a great puppet he is for the Israeli regime, swallowing their
propaganda whole and spewing it onto others sho actually think for
themselves.

Hamas have agreed to a ceasefire but the invasion of Rafah continues,

--
Facisim: The first step is to fascinate fools and muzzle the intelligent

Bertrand Russell
NefeshBarYochai
2024-05-08 19:46:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.” Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over. If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Study your Israeli history and you'll find who the terrorists are
.
%
2024-05-08 21:08:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.” Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over. If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Study your Israeli history and you'll find who the terrorists are
.
its the people who gab about it all
Sharx335
2024-05-08 22:29:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.” Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over. If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Study your Israeli history and you'll find who the terrorists are
.
I have and it is YOU and YOUR ilk.
bitrex
2024-05-09 04:27:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.”  Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over.  If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Don't know about elsewhere but the number of Americans who are ignorant
on the basics of World War II history is large, probably no more than
10% could even confidently answer questions about the most basic facts
of the conflict like who declared war on whom and in what sequence.
John Larkin
2024-05-09 14:14:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.”  Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into and
stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of history
that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and a
majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over and
over.  If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them would
EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Don't know about elsewhere but the number of Americans who are ignorant
on the basics of World War II history is large, probably no more than
10% could even confidently answer questions about the most basic facts
of the conflict like who declared war on whom and in what sequence.
All my history classes started with the Roman Empire and worked up
chronologically. I was always disappointed that they never made it to
the 20th century. They should go in reverse order.

I do know some people who are interested in WWII. I must have 60
books, including Morison's 15-volume official history of US naval
operations in WWII.

My dad was in the Navy in the Pacific in the war. He was on an LST. He
typed.
Sharx335
2024-05-09 18:06:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.”  Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-
like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground, ostrich
like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to get into
and stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so ignorant of
history that they are condemned to forever repeat the mistakes of the
past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas and
a majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism over
and over.  If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support them
would EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens would be
deported from whatever country you are currently soiling with your
stupid naivete.
Don't know about elsewhere but the number of Americans who are ignorant
on the basics of World War II history is large, probably no more than
10% could even confidently answer questions about the most basic facts
of the conflict like who declared war on whom and in what sequence.
Much could be said about the callous indifference shown by so many
isolationists and not just in the U.S., but also in Canada, the U.K.
etc. The attitude was that it was just an European conflict and to more
or less appease Hitler. Well, that did NOT work and NEITHER will any
kind of ceasefire solve anything in the Middle East, EXCEPT to allow
Hamas to regroup, rearm and to continue their dedicated attempts to kill
all Jews.
bitrex
2024-05-09 20:19:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sharx335
Post by bitrex
Post by Sharx335
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.”  Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-
like-lyndon-b-johnson/
People like you who bury any commonsense deep into the ground,
ostrich like, are very similar to the Germans who allowed Hitler to
get into and stay in power. They are so stupid, so shallow, so
ignorant of history that they are condemned to forever repeat the
mistakes of the past.
War is war and it can end the moment one side SURRENDERS and Hamas
and a majority of Palestinians have proven their evil barbarianism
over and over.  If it were in my power, NONE of you fools who support
them would EVER get employment in the West ever again. Noncitizens
would be deported from whatever country you are currently soiling
with your stupid naivete.
Don't know about elsewhere but the number of Americans who are
ignorant on the basics of World War II history is large, probably no
more than 10% could even confidently answer questions about the most
basic facts of the conflict like who declared war on whom and in what
sequence.
Much could be said about the callous indifference shown by so many
isolationists and not just in the U.S., but also in Canada, the U.K.
etc. The attitude was that it was just an European conflict and to more
or less appease Hitler. Well, that did NOT work and NEITHER will any
kind of ceasefire solve anything in the Middle East, EXCEPT to allow
Hamas to regroup, rearm and to continue their dedicated attempts to kill
all Jews.
There was no point in being a Europe-war isolationist after early-mid
1942, Nazi Germany declared war on the US soon after and began
prosecuting that war with as much vigor as they could despite the
intervening distance.

My late father (I'm the youngest of four) spent the summer of 1942
watching ships burn off Cape Cod, maybe there were some isolationists
left in like, Iowa, but certainly very few in New England.
But the US has hardly been "isolationist" since, it throws itself in to
conflicts all the time, loses almost all of them and spends a huge
amount of money and lives on the process of accomplishing fuck all but
making defense contractors wealthy.

Conservatives - never saw a pubic television station they didn't think
was an "immoral" use of taxpayer dollars, but never saw a war they
didn't want a piece of, or a dead brown-skinned kid they weren't happy
about. As if wars are cheap..
Bill Sloman
2024-05-08 05:18:59 UTC
Permalink
On 8/05/2024 10:48 am, NefeshBarYochai wrote:

<snipped the usual toxic nonsense>

Why does this right-wing idiot continue to cross-post his nonsense here?
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
boB
2024-05-12 00:32:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bill Sloman
<snipped the usual toxic nonsense>
Why does this right-wing idiot continue to cross-post his nonsense here?
We use 60 and 30 milliOhm Rohm SiC FETs

Although the ones we have the most inventory of are the older ones
with +22V/-4V gate to source requirements.

boB

John Larkin
2024-05-08 14:28:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by NefeshBarYochai
President Biden has the stench of LBJ about him. For those of us old
enough to remember, that stink is recalled with sadness and
foreboding.
After President Kennedy was assassinated, President Johnson proved
himself adept at passing civil rights and other Great Society domestic
legislation that JFK couldn’t. It would have been enough to make him
one of our great presidents. But he had a fatal flaw when it came to
Vietnam.
Johnson saw that war in geopolitical and personal terms. A struggle by
Vietnamese nationalists against French and then American oppressors
and their South Vietnamese puppets was, to Johnson, an American fight
against Communism, the Soviet Union, and China. Once he made that
fight his own, he couldn’t “back down” despite the war’s course and
the press and TV coverage which, over time, revealed to the American
people his mistaken framing and the horrific punishment he, and they,
were inflicting on their Vietnamese victims, who declined to submit
despite millions dead, more millions maimed, and much of the country
destroyed by bombs and napalm.
Personal defeat was anathema to LBJ, so he persevered in a war that
much of the country came to believe was immoral and wrong as the
anti-war movement, led by students and faculty on campus, rapidly
expanded and tore apart the country, creating divisions that remain
today. When the movement took its protest to the Chicago streets
outside the Democratic convention, the police ran amok in full view of
the TV cameras, which played a role in Richard Nixon’s narrow defeat
of Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 watershed election, which started the
country down the more Republican, more conservative path that has
largely characterized our politics to this day.
President Biden suffers the same flaws. He has been fine all his
political life with the Israeli oppression of Palestinians. Israel was
running an apartheid state all that time, but there was never so much
as a peep of criticism of it from him. AIPAC’s money was political
mother’s milk for him. He has been the USA’s foremost Christian
Zionist for a long time. As President, he preferred the Palestinians
docile and quiescent, so that his geopolitical vision of an
Israeli-Saudi Arabian pact, leading a Western-dominated Middle East
against Iran, could be born. When Hamas struck on October 7, Biden
couldn’t see it as part of a resistance struggle against 75 years of
oppression. He saw it as a challenge to him and his hopes for
stabilizing the region to permit him to focus on his hot war against
Russia and his cold war against China. Palestinians be damned.
So he unleashed Israel, knowing it was going to lay waste to Gaza to
“restore deterrence.” Despite his issues with Benjamin Netanyahu, he
gave him his full support, never expecting that there might be an
uproar in America over an Israeli genocide of Palestinians. His
recent, tone-deaf visit to Michael Douglas and Katherine Zeta Jones to
raise a few million from well-heeled Democratic contributors
exemplifies the bubble in which Biden lives. He continues to support
the genocide with tens of billions because he does not really believe
that he can lose the country over it, and because he has no empathy
for the Palestinian victims of Zionism.
It is redolent of the same stench of arrogance that brought down LBJ.
Today’s suppression of the rapidly expanding anti-genocide movement on
campuses mirrors what we endured back then, and strongly suggests that
we are looking at a repetition of 1968 at the upcoming Democratic
Convention in Chicago. His prospect of a narrow victory over Trump in
Michigan and the other few critical battleground states is already
endangered, and the anticipated reaction to the violence the
authorities will visit on American young people there will further
alienate more voters from Biden. Yet his support of the genocide
continues.
He’s content to gamble that he will prevail in the end because his
opponent is Trump. The protesters be damned. He may be right. But
Biden is gambling with American democracy, all to permit Israeli Jews,
at least two-thirds of whom support the genocide and oppose letting
any humanitarian aid enter Gaza, to continue to kill Palestinian women
and children by the thousands, and to use their own government’s
failure to anticipate the Hamas attack to ratchet up their ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian people from the land between the River
and the Sea.
As a civil rights lawyer who has investigated and prosecuted cases in
the International Criminal Tribunals, I can well understand the
dilemma faced by those Democratic voters in Michigan, Georgia,
Pennsylvania, and Arizona who hesitate to vote for a genocider, even
one running against an insurrectionist.
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
bitrex
2024-05-08 21:15:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
Why no buy WOLFSPEED:

<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
john larkin
2024-05-08 22:32:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?

I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
bitrex
2024-05-08 23:40:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.

I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
John Larkin
2024-05-09 02:04:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.

SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.

Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.

Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
bitrex
2024-05-09 03:35:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.

<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>

And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
John Larkin
2024-05-09 14:06:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.

The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.

OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.

A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
bitrex
2024-05-09 15:09:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.

The simulation engine is just Spice, WYSIWYG with respect to thresholds,
output timings, temperature, etc. AFAIK. No mysteries. Fewer mysteries
than parts with datasheets, sometimes..
John Larkin
2024-05-09 15:33:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
Post by bitrex
The simulation engine is just Spice, WYSIWYG with respect to thresholds,
output timings, temperature, etc. AFAIK. No mysteries. Fewer mysteries
than parts with datasheets, sometimes..
bitrex
2024-05-09 15:46:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
Actually I probably don't need anything as complicated as an integrated
buck converter controller, anyway. Hard to believe this topology is
patented but I guess so long as I don't use something similar for
"digital audio"??

<https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/95/9c/87/a0741208b77066/US20070210861A1.pdf>
john larkin
2024-05-09 17:24:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
Actually I probably don't need anything as complicated as an integrated
buck converter controller, anyway. Hard to believe this topology is
patented but I guess so long as I don't use something similar for
"digital audio"??
<https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/95/9c/87/a0741208b77066/US20070210861A1.pdf>
That's crazy. It's obvious, trivial, and ancient.

But the US Patent Office is a revenue center now.
bitrex
2024-05-09 17:52:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
Actually I probably don't need anything as complicated as an integrated
buck converter controller, anyway. Hard to believe this topology is
patented but I guess so long as I don't use something similar for
"digital audio"??
<https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/95/9c/87/a0741208b77066/US20070210861A1.pdf>
That's crazy. It's obvious, trivial, and ancient.
But the US Patent Office is a revenue center now.
I noticed that RP2040 doesn't have integrated Flash, which makes it a
bit less desirable for a number of applications.

How low can you CV-modulate that spread-spectrum buck switcher chip you
mentioned, again?
Joe Gwinn
2024-05-09 18:38:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
Actually I probably don't need anything as complicated as an integrated
buck converter controller, anyway. Hard to believe this topology is
patented but I guess so long as I don't use something similar for
"digital audio"??
<https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/95/9c/87/a0741208b77066/US20070210861A1.pdf>
That's crazy. It's obvious, trivial, and ancient.
But the US Patent Office is a revenue center now.
It was patented in 2008 as US 7456,685, which expires in 2026. Maybe
not obvious back in 2006.

Joe Gwinn
bitrex
2024-05-09 16:02:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
80 cents in 500s is definitely nice, certainly gives many 8 bitters a
run for their money
john larkin
2024-05-09 17:29:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by NefeshBarYochai
Jill Biden reportedly told her husband some time ago to “Stop it, Joe,
stop it now.” Good advice that he continues to ignore — at his peril,
and ours.
https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/genocide-joe-is-beginning-to-stink-like-lyndon-b-johnson/
What's your favorite SiC mosfet?
<https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Wolfspeed/C3M0280090D?qs=nxZbHzLpdvfcUe1hs5VeOQ%3D%3D>
What's wrong with that one?
I've used C2M0280120D and it works fine. Gate drive is a nuisance, but
that's true for all pure SiC parts.
Ope, I meant to write "why not buy...", it looked like a nice part. More
standoff voltage than I'm accustomed to requiring for most projects,
though.
I may have a need to roll my own hysteric synchronous buck soon, at an
astounding 12V..
That's not SiC territory. Possibly GaN if you want a tiny MHz
switcher.
SiC has amazingly low capacitances compared to high-voltage silicon.
But the gates have to swing to levels like +15 and -5. Fast.
Why design a switcher, unless it's for fun. You can get a whole 2-amp
buck switcher, great internal reference, current and thermal limited,
spread spectrum, for 19 cents.
Indeed there's lots of stuff off the shelf but for the application I
have in mind the it's is acting more like a low frequency
self-oscillating Class D, tracking a control voltage.
I have two current designs where I muck the feedback node of a
spread-spectrum switcher chip to use it as either a programmable power
supply, or an amplifier.
The simple one powers about 130 12-volt relays. We run them at 12
volts whenever we reprogram them, and after a few milliseconds drop
down to 8 volts to save power.
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Eventually some damned IC jock intgrates our fun circuits.
It's the future now, we can design our own mixed-signal ICs at the local
Starbucks, the IC jocks don't have to have all the fun.
<https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/dst/slg46140-datasheet>
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to AFbeen
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
Inertia? Have to use your brain?
Post by John Larkin
OTP on a leadless package isn't appealing.
A fierce uP with flash memory and some ADC and DAC channels is more
useful.
There aren't a lot of fierce uPs at the price, not ones with
well-documented tookits and APIs in English, anyway.
RP2040.
80 cents in 500s is definitely nice, certainly gives many 8 bitters a
run for their money
The dual 130 MHz ARM cpu's are cool. One can do the slow interface
stuff and one can scream bare-metal. The timers and hardware state
machines are slick too.

I was concerned about the floating-point speed, so we tested one. The
basic operations take average about 600 ns, which is OK for us.

It will make a 7 ns pulse on a port pin, with c raising and dropping
the pin in the most obvious way.
bitrex
2024-05-09 15:29:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
Jeroen Belleman
2024-05-09 17:09:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.

Jeroen Belleman
john larkin
2024-05-09 17:38:53 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.

There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.

People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!

I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.

Loading Image...
bitrex
2024-05-09 17:50:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.
There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.
People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!
I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m8zc7g56jul39d0/NIF_Tour-Highland%20Tech%20group%20photo%20TC.jpg?raw=1
Spice has a useful "metastability detector", the simulation slows to a
crawl and you can hear the PC's fans start howling from the kitchen
John Larkin
2024-05-10 02:18:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by bitrex
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.
There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.
People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!
I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m8zc7g56jul39d0/NIF_Tour-Highland%20Tech%20group%20photo%20TC.jpg?raw=1
Spice has a useful "metastability detector", the simulation slows to a
crawl and you can hear the PC's fans start howling from the kitchen
I've been simulating a power supply that was festooned with "singular
matrix" errors and ran at 50 ns/second. A power supply! I fixed it
somehow without knowing why. Just change things.

It complained about errors on U3 node 2. I have no idea where node 2
is inside U3.
Jeroen Belleman
2024-05-09 20:16:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.
There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.
People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!
I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m8zc7g56jul39d0/NIF_Tour-Highland%20Tech%20group%20photo%20TC.jpg?raw=1
Nice. Which one is you?

Jeroen Belleman
john larkin
2024-05-09 20:35:12 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 9 May 2024 22:16:53 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.
There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.
People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!
I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m8zc7g56jul39d0/NIF_Tour-Highland%20Tech%20group%20photo%20TC.jpg?raw=1
Nice. Which one is you?
Jeroen Belleman
Left rear, blue shirt, behind The Brat.

NIF is great to work with. Friendly, collegial, smart. They are
physicists who appreciate good electronics.

The masks are partly covid, part because it's a rather large clean
room.

One great discovery on that project was the Micrel SY88022 laser
driver. It's good for a lot more than driving lasers.
Jeroen Belleman
2024-05-09 21:19:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 22:16:53 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.
There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.
People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!
I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m8zc7g56jul39d0/NIF_Tour-Highland%20Tech%20group%20photo%20TC.jpg?raw=1
Nice. Which one is you?
Jeroen Belleman
Left rear, blue shirt, behind The Brat.
NIF is great to work with. Friendly, collegial, smart. They are
physicists who appreciate good electronics.
The masks are partly covid, part because it's a rather large clean
room.
One great discovery on that project was the Micrel SY88022 laser
driver. It's good for a lot more than driving lasers.
Interesting chip, indeed. Just the sort of thing to build fast
samplers or TDRs with. Thanks for the tip.

Jeroen Belleman
Gerhard Hoffmann
2024-05-09 23:46:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by john larkin
One great discovery on that project was the Micrel SY88022 laser
driver. It's good for a lot more than driving lasers.
Interesting chip, indeed. Just the sort of thing to build fast
samplers or TDRs with. Thanks for the tip.
I'm not too impressed. We had that kind of performance in our 10G
XFP Infineon fiber optic transceivers, from Gennum and Infineon Semi
20 years ago. The fiber optic division was sold to Finisar then.
I spent nearly a month in San Jose for Tech transfer with 4 other
people. Me, just a lowly freelancer.. But it was interesting. :-)


There seems to be a wall at 25 ps.

Has anybody here played with nonlinear transmission lines?
I tried with Spice, but with discrete devices I did not get
very far. PSPL seems to have been the king of these before
they were eaten by TEK.

Gerhard

(BTW I echoed your Thorium transition post to timenuts.)

What has that to do with uk.comp.sys.mac and pro wrestling ????
bitrex
2024-05-10 00:13:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by Gerhard Hoffmann
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by john larkin
One great discovery on that project was the Micrel SY88022 laser
driver. It's good for a lot more than driving lasers.
Interesting chip, indeed. Just the sort of thing to build fast
samplers or TDRs with. Thanks for the tip.
I'm not too impressed. We had that kind of performance in our 10G
XFP Infineon fiber optic transceivers, from Gennum and Infineon Semi
20 years ago. The fiber optic division was sold to Finisar then.
I spent nearly a month in San Jose for Tech transfer with 4 other
people. Me, just a lowly freelancer.. But it was interesting.  :-)
There seems to be a wall at 25 ps.
Has anybody here played with nonlinear transmission lines?
I tried with Spice, but with discrete devices I did not get
very far. PSPL seems to have been the king of these before
they were eaten by TEK.
Gerhard
(BTW I echoed your Thorium transition post to timenuts.)
What has that to do with uk.comp.sys.mac and pro wrestling ????
Why did the Bushwhackers walk like that?


John Larkin
2024-05-10 02:09:52 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 9 May 2024 23:19:20 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 22:16:53 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by john larkin
On Thu, 9 May 2024 19:09:14 +0200, Jeroen Belleman
Post by Jeroen Belleman
Post by bitrex
Post by John Larkin
Post by bitrex
And I can integrate some other functions, too. Look at all the fun parts
you get for 40 cents in small quantity. These things have been solid
money-makers for me so far
People keep re-inventing the "analog FPGA" but none seem to have been
successful. There must be some deep fundamental reason why.
More briefly, asynchronous mixed-signal design can be annoying as you've
probably experienced. Have to even more carefully consider timings and
race conditions, the lull between clock edges can't save you.
I *like* to use asynchronous state machines in my designs from
time to time. It's not really so different from synchronous
design, and it's a natural solution in many situations. It's
just that setup and hold times apply to more inputs than just
a clock.
Jeroen Belleman
Most of us did async logic when we were kids, before we found out
about proper state machines and metastability and such.
There are occasional fads for async logic (Intel had one) but they
don't seem to stick either.
People manage to screw up synchronous state machines too!
I recently did a box full of GigaComm picosecond logic, async of
course. A laser modulator. It got us a VIP tour of NIF, with free
lunch.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m8zc7g56jul39d0/NIF_Tour-Highland%20Tech%20group%20photo%20TC.jpg?raw=1
Nice. Which one is you?
Jeroen Belleman
Left rear, blue shirt, behind The Brat.
NIF is great to work with. Friendly, collegial, smart. They are
physicists who appreciate good electronics.
The masks are partly covid, part because it's a rather large clean
room.
One great discovery on that project was the Micrel SY88022 laser
driver. It's good for a lot more than driving lasers.
Interesting chip, indeed. Just the sort of thing to build fast
samplers or TDRs with. Thanks for the tip.
Jeroen Belleman
It will accept a small differential input and output a fierce, fast
s.e. or differential out with adjustable amplitide down to zero. Nice
pulse generator.

My chain is

gigacomm logic
SY88 gain and amplitude control
Distributed amplifier
Lithium niobate modulator

Scary expensive stuff.
Loading...