Friday, June 27, 2025

"Weirdos could be here," he thought.

I checked the Duckstack today and read the latest, "Comb Tomb." One bit is about crime:

Most nonviolent crime is a crime of opportunity. Anything happening in the ghetto is just some teenage hooligan jiggling car doors as he passes to see if any are unlocked. Then they ransack the car as fast as they can and leave with anything that looks like it might be sellable on ebay. There’s no thought behind it, they’re impulsive and unscrupulous, that’s all.

After the word hooligan, you can click for a footnote, which reads, "'Teenage Hooligans' could be here, he thought." I immediately understood what that meant -- it's what stick-in-the-muds would call a "racist dog whistle" -- but didn't recognize it as something I'd seen in exactly that form before.

Then I checked /x/, where I found that the latest Roy Jay thread is titled "/royjay/ weirdos could be here he thought edition."

Just as a reminder, although Roy Jay is a very au courant theme on /x/ right now -- the first Roy Jay /x/ post was the past April 5 -- I discovered him not by looking at new threads but by searching the entire archive, going back to 2013, for the string "blue prince" and getting only one result, which was a Roy Jay thread.

Running into the "X could be here, he thought" format twice in quick succession like that, I of course looked it up. Know Your Meme has it as "Dapper Man Pumping Gas While Smoking Cigarette / X Could Be Here, I Hate X," and as expected it originated as a racist copypasta on 4chan. It was prompted by the challenge to write a short story about this image:


It appears that in this image's entire history as a meme, everyone has studiously ignored the fact that this gas station offers E85, regular, and milk. What kind of car runs on milk?

9 comments:

Ra1119bee said...

William,
Because everything is numbers/gematria
, especially in sync events, the numbers 224 and 299
( price for the milk ) got my attention.

Recall my many comments about the
master number 22. In most all movies the number
22 is in there somewhere.
If not visually
then mentioned in the dialogue.

Of course in the number 224, there is also a 4, the doorway.
22 x 4=88

Also in almost every movie is the master
number 11. Of course 11+11=22.
Check out another absolutely intriguing Twilight Zone
episode clip : the Obsolete Man
( one of my absolute favorite Twilight
Zones!! )
The Obsolete Man's plot is about the final destruction
of humanity by eliminating those who think different
and those who read or are the curator of books.
Rod Serling was truly ahead of his time.
Kinda cool that he lived in Yellow Springs Ohio for a short time.
Serling was in the Air Force, based at Wright Patt.

Of course the master number 99 is interesting as well
as the number 9 is about endings AND new beginnings.
Much like the tail of the ouroboros.

Recall that the Beatles song The End is iN the trilogy
of Golden Slumbers/ Carry that Weight/ The End
Of course there is also the creepy Revolution 9 song
on the White Album.

In the photo note that the number 9 appears at the end
of all of the numbers.

Twenty-two ( Twilight Zone )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHpKHzNGUJM


clip from Twenty-two ( Twilight Zone )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uqeF_2qLCw

Mile 22
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLw2sfQrhcQ

Taylor Swift - 22
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgFeZr5ptV8&list=RDAgFeZr5ptV8&start_radio=1

The Obsolete Man ( listen for the mention of number 11 )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3quruHpcuo&t=53s


One After 909 ( Beatles )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t8UeWjynWvE&list=RDt8UeWjynWvE&start_radio=1


William Wright (WW) said...

And skim milk at that. Not even the good stuff.

I looked up Hooligan, and it turns out one hypothesis is that it was named after a man named Patrick (Patrick Hooligan), who stole some stuff.

Since the two "X could be here ...." phrases set Hooligan and Weirdos as equivalent (the X's), I then looked up Weird. The first definition on Etymonline is "the power to control fate", and then we get this:

"Force that sets events in motion or determines their course; what is destined to befall one;" from Old English wyrd "fate, chance, fortune; destiny; the Fates."

It was interesting to see that tie between Weird and Fortune.

This is going to be unfair and heavily biased, since I am already thinking or hypothesizing in these terms (so should be appropriately discounted), but the mention of fate brought Pharazon to mind, and I thought I remembered him saying something about fate in Daymon's book, though I couldn't remember the phrase. I looked it up, and it was actually one I've used in the comments here before:

"...So he named himself, Willful, Chosen, Fated: Three in One, King of Air, Earth, and Wave."

I say unfair because there are plenty of other characters who have either referred to fate or even adopted fate as their name (Turin Turambar, for example), so this more just outlines my thought process within context.

Wm Jas Tychonievich said...

Skim milk calls to mind the old Thomas B. Bucket story.

In my teens I was a diehard fan of the hilariously unfunny old comic strip Happy Hooligan, and my sailboat, the SS Lobster Already, took its name from the strip.

(German characters in HH add “yet” or “already” to the end of every utterance, and there’s a panel where a German punches one of the Hooligan brothers in the face while exclaiming “Lobster already!”)

Another HH character is Woozy Bill, who is always escaping from the insane asylum and trying to catch anarchists.

Ra1119bee said...

William,
I forgot to add that in the first link Twenty-Two ( repost
below) in Rod Serling's
commentary, listen for the word : spooked.
A word in the sync stream as of late.

Also in the Obsolete Man clip ( re-link below )
I thought it interesting that both Mr. Wordsworth
and the Chancellor emphasizes the word
books to booksssss.

The reason why I thought the emphasizes on
bookssss interesting
is because it somewhat supports my perspective
that we gain knowledge and puzzle pieces
for a vast spectrum
of ideologies i.e. many booksssss
( the good, the bad and the ugly )
and not just from one source, teacher or chancellor.

The Obsolete Man
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3quruHpcuo&t=53s

Twenty-two
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHpKHzNGUJM

Ra1119bee said...

William,

I thought of a couple of more things that
have both connections to 22 and Roy Jay's repetition
of the word 'spook' in his performances.

Here's the connection:
In the movie Mile 22 which I just posted ( see repost below)
the plot is about a group of hidden( ghost)
government operatives who carries out a mission on Mile 22.
copy and paste:
"The term "spook" has been used in various contexts.
It is typically used to refer to an**** undercover agent
or a figure of authority.

It can also be used as a compliment to indicate
that someone is worthy of their position.

Historically, it was used as an offensive term
for an ethnically African/black person.
In World War II, it was used to refer to black Army pilots
who trained at the Tuskegee Institute."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

If my perspective is right about Roy Jay playing
not only the trickster archetype
but also the ghosted "spook"
would explain why he wears white gloves
and the white gloves connection to Freemasonry.

As I'm sure you know,
many Secret Societies protects the Sacred
Knowledge from the sheeple whom they
deem unworthy of the knowledge,
because knowledge is power and has
to be earned.

Perhaps that's why Roy Jay speaks' in riddles, like
the riddler in Batman.

Roy Jay's 'slithers' are also movements of a snake,
which that symbolism speaks for itself.
Interestingly if Roy Jay's existence is a made up meme
than it wouldn't be surprising that RJ was created
in the year of the snake, no?
Also vipers hide under the sand.
Copy and paste:
"Vipers, including the Sahara sand viper, hide under the sand.
They use the sand to stay cool, ****ambush prey,
and go unnoticed.***
When threatened, they coil up into a distinctive c-shape."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Who do you think Roy Jay's prey is?
Hint: The sheep maybe?

Also interesting is that the trickster also hides
under a mask or makeup .

Also interestingly is this information below
having connection
to not only the color 'amber/golden but also
to the arrowhead which I've made mention about
the arrowhead regarding Roy Jay's loose pants outfit.

Copy and paste: asterisks mine
"Since the copperhead is a pit viper, you’ll notice
a very distinctive ****triangular-shaped head.
Some people call it an *****“arrowhead-shaped” head.
These wider parts of the head allow for space
to fit the snake’s fangs and venom glands."
~~~~~~~~~~
Everything is connected.

Mile 22
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLw2sfQrhcQ

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riddler

William Wright (WW) said...

This is an interesting one - the phrase "This weirdo could be here" popped up for me last night.

I decided to try a game called "Road 96". I specifically chose it because the title brought to mind the 96 Elves of the 144 and their "road" to Valinor. Seriously.

In the very first scene of the game (called Burnin', by the way), and in the very first dialogue of that scene, a woman named Sonya wants to go into a party. Her companion Adam warns her not to go in, and this is what he says (referring to himself in the 3rd person):

"Look, all Adam's saying is you shouldn't go in. This Weirdo could be here."

Normally wouldn't have caught my attention, but that second sentence is basically the same phrase you came across twice on Friday as well. Further, it is combined with a warning from a man named Adam.

On your other post I had brought up Michael, who is also Adam, in context of my Prince Warner dream from yesterday. I concluded that one meaning of the phrase being Michael as a prince who warns (is a warn-er). And here in one phrase in this game title referring to a Road and 96, I had a man named Adam giving a warning using this phrase.

I guess it is also interesting the phrase was right at the beginning. I stopped playing 5 minutes into it because it wasn't my thing.

Last year, in my mind you were specifically associated with the number 96 (via Patrick).

Wm Jas Tychonievich said...

Weird! Spook!

When you first brought up Warner as a name, the first thing I thought of was a kid I went to church with in Kirtland whose name was Adam Warner.

I connected the name Sonja with Jay way back in 2020.

https://narrowdesert.blogspot.com/2021/10/jonas-jason-sonja.html

Did you play enough to find out anything about the “weirdo” Adam was warning Sonia about?

William Wright (WW) said...

No, but did play far enough to get some details, as well as another weird sync.

Sonya is going into a party, which is where Adam is warning her not to go. Sonya goes in but tells Adam he can't come in because the party is We (as another unnamed character) get to come along with Sonya, though. First thing she does is gamble (getting to the Casino theme, I guess) and at one point she asks us to get her wallet for her. Then she asks us to get her a drink (tying to Jack Nicholson?), and when we come back, she has disappeared.

We do catch a glimpse of the weirdo, but nothing else.

However, after leaving the party, we hitchhike with two guys on a motorcycle: Stan and Mitch. They are related to Sonya and inform us that they believe a Taxi Driver is trying to kill her.

Anyway, Stan and Mitch is a fascinating name combination, because Stan means "Stone" and Mitch is a form of "Michael". It was interesting gIven my association of the Stone with Michael.

After that, I lost interest in the game, and turned it off. So maybe synchronistically that was all I needed to see. Who knows. I mean, it was like a switch went off after that point, and I just didn't want to play it anymore. Lost interest completely.

I will note that Taxi comes from the word which means "Tax, Charge". Driver, from Drive, which can mean "to hunt (Deer), pursue". Thus, a Taxi Driver in a creative or alternative definition would be someone who hunts or pursues a charge or tax.

This made me think directly of Gross Gaur, who was hunting a charge or payment he had made, which led him to your school asking for a receipt.

Stan and Mitch are trying to save/ protect Sonya from the Taxi Driver, which if symbolic of Jay (per your 2021) post, would seem to tie into the story, potentially, that is associated with MIchael and his Stone.

William Wright (WW) said...


Also, I should note that Sonya's attitude reminded me somewhat of yours in my dream with you and me (or people I took for you and me) at the Chinese restaurant. I had been trying to warn you to leave the place, and you wouldn't take any of the warnings seriously.

In the game, once in the party with Sonya, we realize the threat is real because we catch a glimpse of the weirdo. We repeatedly tell her that she should leave the party because someone is after her. She is there to have fun, though, so she keeps blowing us off. That was pretty much dream-you in that restaurant. Here is one of the dialogue excerpts:

Us: Uh . . . about that guy I saw

Sonya: Ah, Jesus - not again.

Us. You're in serious danger!

Sonya: Sweet cakes, I'm unbreakable. Don't worry.

Us: You need to leave here NOW!

Sonya: You're starting to sound like Adam, honey buns.

This is when she then asks us to go get her a drink, and that we need one too, because we we should chill.

I just realized at the beginning of the scene, when Adam is trying to tell Sonya not to go into the party, she tells Adam that she is going in but he can't come, because the party is only for important people.

The guard laughs, and says to Adam. "She really burned you there!"

The dialogue is funny because of previous associations as "Adam" as one who gets burned (as Abinadi) by a King Noah, who in one hypothesis is directly linked with Jay.

The Craft

When poets write constrained by rhyme, They use the language to divine. And when they cheat and bend the rules, They slough the suits and pl...