Saturday, April 11, 2026

CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 124th Edition. On the Road with J. D. Vance. Avignon Papacy in the news. The Slovenian woman speaks. Men behaving badly towards women. Teens not having babies not a good thing? Staying too long.

J. D. Vance's Roadtrip.

This past week we've seen the United States meddle in a foreign election.

Now, this is likely happened before, but not in this fashion.  Chances are the CIA has funded various sides back during the Cold War.  If we could go so far as to topple the Iranian government, which we helped do in the late 40s as it was socialist (the horror!), we could certainly meddle in elections in some fashion.

But that's not what I refer to.

Rather, Vice President J.D. Vance, the highest legitimate figure in the U.S. Government, was in Hungary stumping for Viktor Orbán, the long serving Prime Minister of the country who looks like he's going to go down in defeat tomorrow.

Now, this probably provokes a yawn from a lot of Americans in a day and age in which we have a demented hotelier starting wars and saying stupid stuff non stop.  But it is really extraordinary.  The US has been willing to use economics and clandestine efforts in some circumstances, but outright campaigning?  

Nope.

Oh King Donny got involved in it too, with his limited world view:


In actuality the economy of Hungary under Orbán is in pretty bad shape.

What's going on here?

Frankly, a lot of the news analysis of this hasn't been very good.

Orbán represents something that Trump actually doesn't, although Trump probably doesn't realize that.  Orbán is not only an authoritarian from the far right, and corrupt, he's a illiberal democrat that National Conservatives adore.

Vance probably does get that, as he's a National Conservatives.

Unlike Trump and his Protestant Christian Nationalist, Orbán's party stands for a different sort of quasi authoritarianism.  Once that's still scary, but which is much more intellectual than anything Trump could grasp.  Trump's MAGA is massively crude in comparison.

Fans of Orbán imagine every Western democracy working the way that Hungary does, and its very notable that Hungary's primary opponent in this election is also from the far right.  This election is a contest between two National Conservatives with Péter Magyar, whose very last name means Hungarian basically, likely to come out on top.

Magyar formed a new party to run against Orbán's old party, which he came up in.  Tisza, the new party, has moved back towards Europe, however, and therefore is headed in the direction of being more of a true conservative party.

To put this in context, if this were an American election, it would basically be between Conservative Republicans and the Heritage Foundation, which is downright scary.

And that should tell you J. D. Vance's weltanschauung.

At least, however, that should tell you that if Vance is elected in 2028, which there's little chance he will be, Paula White and Franklin Graham will be sent packing.

Vance is now in Pakistan, having been assigned the task of negotiating the end of the war by King Donny.  Donny, who has no filter, has already noted that with J. D. at the helm, if it doesn't get done, well that's not Trump's fault.

Vance is a curious choice for this.  Either Trump really has faith in him, perhaps because he opposed the war, or he's just tossing him to the wolves.  Trump has no problem at all, as we've seen, axing those who were once his most loyal supporters.  This could really boost Vance in some ways, which may be what he's trying to do, or it could wreck him.

The Pope is Catholic.

In something that's vaguely sort of related to this, the news this week was filled in some quarters with the story that the Catholic Church may, or may not have, been threatened, or not, by the Trump administration.

The story was broken by a blogger that we link into on this site.  Supposedly some Administration officials were upset by some statements of Pope Leo's and told a Vatican official that the Church better get in line with Trump, and then reminded the figure of the Avignon Papacy.

Right away, some conservative Catholic bloggers were dubious about that, in part because we're all surprised that any American knowns anything about the Avignon Papacy.  What was additionally surprising, however, for historically minded American Catholics is to realize how many American Catholics don't realize that the U.S. is a deeply Protestant country with a strong history of rampant anti Catholicism.  Indeed, while Kennedy's betrayal of his faith got us all in the door of the culture, to our detriment, that's never really gone away.  Bishop Barron, when he appears with Trump's faith leaders, may be standing on a floor with members of other denominations, but you can be relatively assured that some of the Protestant clergy appearing with him don't think he, and the Orthodox cleric who appears, are even Christians, in spite of the fact that they represent the actual original Christianity.  

Anyhow, the Administration denied the story and now the Vatican has as well.  The overall lesson however, probably should be that figures like Vance and Marco Rubio aside, the Evangelical arm of MAGA is a lot stronger than the National Conservative end, and they don't really view Catholics favorably in spite of what naive Catholics may think.  Walking arm in arm with the Trump administration, which some have done, is going to come back to haunt American Catholics.

Pope Leo XIV, I'd note, is already getting accused of being a flaming liberal, including by some American Catholic clerics.  What he seems to be is, well, a flaming Catholic.  I.e., really, really, Catholic.  American Catholics who are upset with him ought to reconsider what's upsetting them.

Melania on the tube

Melania  Trump, the forth wife of King Donald, came on the tube to proclaim that she never served Epstein. She rarely speaks in public, and listening to her heavy accent really shows why.

People have said horrible things about her which she doesn't deserve, but it's easy in a way to see why.  Her husband is a horrible person with a horrible history with women and they were friends with Epstein.  This administration has sought to keep Epstein material from the public and to bury the topic, which is a big part of the reason that Pam Bondi was canned.

People have been wondering why Melania is choosing to speak now.  It is an interesting question.  It's also interesting that she demanded what her husband has been opposing, a real Congressional investigation.

I've often noted here that people inevitably revert to their original, and true, personalities.  We might just be seeing that.  She came up as a model and famously appeared in at least one photo that should be regarded as pornography. Modeling paid off as it turned into a career that caused her to be married to a rich man, if we regard being married to Donald Trump as a payoff.  Frankly, it probably isn't.  Maybe now she's returning to being the Slovenian woman that she originally likely was.

Men abusing women

Flag of the Hispanic people.  By Banderas - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=44866151

Fairly distressing news in some quarters.

An investigation by The New York Times found extensive evidence that the United Farm Workers co-founder groomed and sexually abused girls who worked in the movement.

I'll be frank that even though I sympathize with unions in the current age, while conceding that they also had a negative impact on labor in the 70s-90s, and while I sympathize with migrant farm workers, something about Chavez always left me a bit uneasy.  That might simply be because I first heard about him in the 70s, at which time I was a lot more conservative than I am now on a lot of things, as odd as that may seem.

But I don't think so.

Something just made me feel odd about him.

Which is a really easy thing to say retrospectively, isn't it?

Chavez was huge figure in the farm labor movement, which is to say the Hispanic farm labor movement as symbolized by his organization, the United Farm Workers.  The flag used by the UFW is also used by the Hispanic movement, which was strong in the 70s and 80s.


I tend to associate it in my mind with La Raza, which apparently no longer calls itself that.


Well, so what?

So what indeed.  I think in part that I just have a youthful recollection of how radical everything was getting in the 1970s, and associate LaRaza and UFW with that.  Things have certainly moved along since then, and indeed the entire American Hispanic Immigrant situation has.  Indeed, today the Hispanic population of the United States has really come into its own and is its own force in a way that it was not in the 1970s and 80s. And as that, as I long predicted, it's very conservative, but also sui generis.  Not MAGA, although Trump briefly thought it was.

What's that have to do with Chavez, probably not much.

One of the things about the farm labor movement and Hispanic movements in general is that they reflected back on things in Central and South America in away, including the efforts of the Catholic Church, of which of course I'm part, to aid Hispanic people.  Because Chavez was a practicing Catholic, he was lauded in some quarters by the Church, and not without reason.  Now his reputation is ruined, as it should be.

He seems to be one of those guys who just couldn't keep his hands off of girls.

Regarding somebody who couldn't keep his hands of of women, even it it meant drugging them:

Bill Cosby found guilty: What the $59.25M verdict means for sexual assault survivors

The whole Bill Cosby story is just bizarre.  It's hard to know what to make of it, other than it seems to be a massive example of the Jimmy Akin Rule that sin makes you stupid.  It's also, however, an example of accommodation to sin brings on worse sins.  Cosby was in Hugh Hefner's orbit.  In some ways, therefore, it figures.

Hefner was a pioneer in what one Leonid Radvinsky exploited in the electronic age, the prostitution of the image of women. He was a billionaire.

OnlyFans owner Leonid Radvinsky dies of cancer at 43

He's now take the same trip that Hefner took, and in both instances, even knowing that death was approaching, they did not reform.

Americans apparently spent $2.64B on Only Fans last year, which is a lot, but actually in context not as much as it might seem.  The girls whose lives are being wrecked by it didn't get much of that $2.64B from the men whose lives it is also wrecking.

And hence, once again, why the young are returning to real conservatism and the Faith.

I thought a drop in teen pregnancy was a good thing?


While a return to what is real and authentic is to be lauded, just like Paula White's bee dance, the groping for it brings about some really weird results.

The CDC announced last week that teen pregnancies were at an all time low.

When I was a kid and teenager society was hugely concerned about the teen birth rate.  It was actually lower in the 1970s and 80s than it had been in the 50s, but people didn't seem to take that into account and there was a general fear, it seemed, that 100% of teenage girls were going to be pregnant in any give year.

Well that figure is really in the basement now.  Added to that, there's lots of new stories that teenagers and young adults really aren't having much sex, which is also a good thing, assuming they aren't married.

Now, all of a sudden, some quarters of the far right are really freaked out about this.  Consider:

The problem is teens and young adults. From ages 15-19 the fertility rate is down 7% and it's down 70% over the last two decades, meaning we're telling people that are young not to have babies.

Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News.

Problem?  What's going on here?

I'm not sure what they're aiming at, but it's interesting to note that the book "The Third Reich.  A New History" includes a Nazi era German cartoon lamenting the decline in German birth rates down to age 14.  It seems to be a far right populist thing.

Indeed, in some conservative quarters there's a real push to emphasize that young people need to get married, young, and have lots of babies.

I'm not saying that there isn't something to this, but it can really go to far.  This is going too far.

In the category of going too far.

I don't believe in recovered memories.

I do believe that you can basically forget something and then remember it later, usually when somebody or something prompts the memory.  While there are some very rare people with perfect recall, who can remember all the details of their lives with crystal clear accuracy, those people are few.  Most people, however, have piles of information stored in their mental databanks that they have no particular reason to recall, but can if there's a prompt.

Recovered memories of trauma are another thing, however, and in my view, mostly complete bullshit  People don't have some horrific memory of the time they were, fill in blank here, and have it capable of being restored.  People remember when they were exposed to really significant trauma. About hit only "recovered" memory of trauma that's likely real is when somebody didn't regard something as traumatic, but later on somebody convinced them that it was.  They never really forgot it however. They just didn't regard it as significant.

For this reason I'll note that this past week there's been news of a dramatic lawsuit being filed where the supposed victim of a trauma had it recovered after decades passing since it supposedly occurred.

Human memory is really peculiar.  We don't really know how memory works that well, but we do know that some people have highly accurate memories.  I fall into that camp.  I can remember certain things back to age 3 or so, and I remember them.  They don't vary or change, I can see them, in my minds eye, if I choose to, although I frankly will admit that I don't remember as much as I used to, and that concerns me greatly.

Other people have very malleable memories.  The details of what they think they remember change over time.  Some people recall nearly nothing at all and no prompting is going to recall their memories.

All of this is significant as in my view "recovered" memories are basically suggested.  They aren't real.

Having worked in lawsuits involving recovered memories this is pretty clear to me.  People will work with a subject until the subject has a memory.  The memory is completely fictional, but they have it.  

In the most recent instance of this, I happen to know one of the accused, or rather I should say I happened to have known the accused, although not personally and not well.  The accused is deceased.  I don't believe the accusations against him at all.  What I do believe, however, is that the person had a peculiar personality and had, as a sort of cause, a certain then demised demographic.  The demographic has become a cause celebre since then, which has caused the expressed public view to shift on the demographic, Frankly, that has completely suppressed any ability to look into the cause and origin of the condition, and up until a Supreme Court opinion last week, even caused states to basically ban looking into it.  What was once regarded as hopelessly weird and disgusting is to now be celebrated.  The person I knew backed the demographic when it was regarded as weird and disgusting, which is inevitably going to cause members of the general public to suppose that you are part of it, if they have any ability to do so.

Indeed, a lot of people still find the demographic weird and disgusting.  So it still comes up in that fashion in back room discussions.  That keeps some people who fairly reliably are rumored to be members of it to closet themselves.  Truth be known, as the condition is fairly openly accepted now, if the people who have it simply admitted it, probably nobody would care, save for one instance I can think of where a decade long public personality would have been shown to be a lie.

Accusing people of things is really easy.  Accusing the dead of things is easier yet.  American law, based on English common law, holds that the accused are assumed innocent until proven guilty, but that's not how the public acts.  If somebody is accused of certain things, people believe it instantly.  For that reason, those things are libelous per se if untrue, save for lawsuits, which are subject to an accusatory privilege.

Anyhow, I'm really tired of accusations that come decades after a supposed event.  It'll sound harsh, but there really ought to be a put up or shut up policy for adults.  Forty years later?  Too freakin' bad, you are too late.

Rampaging ageism

I posted earlier this week about Chris Christie taking a shot at the Baby Boomers.

Good for him.

I'm noting this as this past week, after that post, brought up too boomer related items.  One is the matter immediately above, brought by a boomer lawyer.  Another is dealing with an upset boomer.

The last instance of this was affirmatively an example of somebody upset because younger people are trying to move on.  I won't detail it, but I got a direct personal comment about it from the upset person.  They've been in a prolonged fight with a Gen Xer, who has gotten over the fight, and the Boomer now fears that people are moving on, and around, the Boomer.  The Boomer is correct.

Work, for most people, isn't a hobby.  For some elderly people it actually is, as pathetic as that is.  It doesn't matter if you have the sort of work that doesn't put you in the way of others, which very few people do.  People who work by themselves, for themselves, basically have that position.  Even then, if they work in an area of public trust, there comes a time when they need to stop.

John Barrasso, age 73.  King Donny, age 79.  Lindsey Graham, age 70.  None of these guys should be doing this job.

Last edition:

CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 123rd Edition, The Holy Thursday Massacre

Thursday, April 11, 1946. Nostra culpa.

Einstein warned "I believe that the abominable deterioration of ethical standards stems primarily from the mechanization and depersonalization of our lives ... Nostra culpa!"

First powered flight of the X-1.

X-1 in flight.

Forced labor in French overseas territories, which had allowed for annual conscription for government projects, was banned.

The final edition of the China Burma Indian soldiers newspaper the Roundup was published.  It was a reprise of the war, and on its last page ran a selection of pinups, a feature of the newspaper with its pinups being a bit racier than Yank's.

In the last issue of this series (1946) we ran a story from the Rocky Mountain News about pregnant German women.  I.e., women who had become pregnant by American troops to whom they were not (and could not be, at that time), married.  The news ran the story in a somewhat lighthearted fashion, but that didn't match the reality.

Such children, of whom there were at least 200,000 by Allied troops, actually faced pretty rough conditions, as discussed here:

Occupation children

Last edition:

Tuesday, April 9, 1946. The Bomb, the accused, and pregnant Fräuleins.

Lex Anteinternet: The 2026 Election, 6th Edition, Campaigning before defeats.

 


March 20, 2026

The Oil City News has put up its updating election tracker, something we've done here as well, although theirs is an article that updates over time whereas we have to update blog entries, which is getting dicey due to some glitch on Blogger.

Anyhow, a good place to check on who is running, without, of course, our brilliant and amusing running commentary.

2026 Election Tracker: Who is running for office in Wyoming?


March 21, 2026

Former Casper Vice Mayor and City Councilor Shawn Johnson announced this wee that he is seeking the Libertarian Party of Wyoming’s nomination for the U.S. House of Representatives.

The House race has been very active, due to one term Representative Harriet Hageman taking aim at the Senate.  The current candidates are:

U.S. House of Representatives

GOP

Jillian Balow

Chuck Gray.  On our don't vote for list.

Reid Rasner. On our don't vote for list.

David Giralt

Bo Biteman   On our don't vote for list.

Kevin Christensen On our don't vote for list.

Independent

Daniel Workman.

Libertarian

Shawn Johnson

As an aside, we heard a public radio discussion of Christensen the other day, which was neutral, but which makes it plain he's sucked on the government tit pretty much his whole life and now comes in as a far right figure.  These sorts of campaigns, of which there seem to be a lot this year, are much like a new high school graduate being an expert on parenting as he's lived at home for 18 years.

We better list the Senate as well.

U.S. Senate

GOP

Harriet Hageman. On our don't vote for list.

Jimmy Skovgard.

Skovgard has so far failed to impress, unfortunately.  For awhile I subscribed to one of his two blogs which I gave up on as it might be kindly described as blather.  Hopefully some other Republican will announce for this position, as I will vote for him in the primary when I'd rather not, as Hageman is a no/go..

Democratic Party

James Byrd

And the Governor's race:

Governor

GOP

Eric Barlow:  At least so far, Barlow seems to be by far the best choice for this office.  I'm seeing some of his signs around.

Brent Bien. On our don't vote for list.

Meggan Degenfelder. On our don't vote for list.  Degenfelder is from the relatively hard right and has been tarred with the brush of a Trump endorsement, which she really doesn't seem fully comfortable with.  She may be aware that it's problematic.

Democratic Party

Gabriel Green:  Green is associated with the DINO movement, so while he's running as a Democrat, it's "in name only". Indeed, he founded the state's DINO movement, and he might be the only person to run under that banner.  He's aggressive in this strategy, and is nearly as hard on the Democrats as he is the Republicans.

Constitution Party

Joseph Kibler.  On our don't vote for list.

Kibler announced as a Republican, switched to being an independent and is now in the Constitution Party..

Kibler is a carpetbagger and has the typical carpetbagger "I just moved here from California for all your freedom and now I'm going to run things". 

Wyoming State Superintendent of Public Eduction

Tom Kelly

Wyoming Secretary of State

GOP

Robert Short

Rachel Williams.  Williams, formerly Rodriguez-Williams, is on the don't vote for list.  She's the chairperson of the Freedom Caucus.

A carpetbagger from California, she always used a hyphenated name up until filing for this office.  The WFC is packed with far right Evangelicals and generally MAGA has a strong New Apostolic Reformation element that is anti-Catholic as well as anti Hispanic.  She is Hispanic and Catholic and in the category of people that is abandoning MAGA like crazy.  She isn't, but she may instead have wanted to camouflage her Hispanic ethnicity a bit.  I don't know that, but it's pretty odd that she suddenly changed her name for the campaign.

As a politician, she's had all the WFC views.

Democratic Party

Bryan McCarty

Wyoming State Auditor

GOP

Kristi Racines

Apparently State Auditor is too boring to bring very many candidates out to run for it.

Some interesting State House races.

House District 37

GOP

Steve Harshaman

Ross Schriftman

Democratic Party

Betsy Erickson

HD 37 is an interesting race as Harshman is one of the best legislators in the House, and yet he's drawing opposition. 

Schriftman, who apparently attended Casper City Council meetings frequently, is running as a "constitutional conservative" which makes him a no/go, as that uniformly means that they don't grasp the constitution whatsoever.

Erickson is a young Democrat whose already adopted the seas of blood stance of the Democratic Party.

House District 57

GOP

Julie Jarvis 

Jeanette Ward  On our don't vote for list.

Jarvis took out Ward in the 2024 race and Ward, who is an extreme Freedom Caucuser, wants the seat back.

House District 58

GOP

Peter Boyer

Bill Allemand.  On our don't vote for list.

Allemand, who is facing legal trouble for drunk driving, is one of the worst members of the legislature in our view and needs to go.  Boyer is the Mayor of Bar Nunn.

March 24, 2026

Reid Rasner Sues A Fifth Person For Defamation

Reading the article, it's easy to see why Rasner is upset, but suing people during a campaign is a questionable tactic, although Rasner may figure he has no other vehicle to clear his name.

March 25, 2026

A special election was held in Florida for the Florida house district in which King Donny claims residency.

A steadfast opponent of voting by mail, Donald voted by mail.

The Democrat took the seat, flipping it from the GOP.

I'm sure MAGA has some explanation why their beloved gets to vote by mail even though he declares it to be hideous, and why the people of his state House District just said no to the GOP.  But it will be delusional.

A good essay on an election closer to home.

The case for deep Wyoming roots

Chad Auer, a senior policy advisor to Governor Mark Gordon, announced his bid for Superintendent of Public Instruction.  Legislator Tom Kelly announced earlier.  Neither candidate has very deep roots in the state, both being recent transplants.

Rasner and Gray's contest, and of course they're only two of the candidates in that race, has turned out to be surprisingly interesting recently as Rasner has been pointing out Gray's hypocrisy on wind projects he claims are "woke", but which he voted for.  Both candidates oppose wind power, because they love oil and global warming is a fib in their minds, but Gray is exposed on this.  Gray's struggling to respond and has resorted to blaming his votes on Governor Gordon.

March 26, 2026

Another carpetbagger, one Frank Chapman, a lawyer from out of state who moved to Moran about a decade agon and is now some sort of rancher and outfitter, has announced for the House race.

Like every other Republican, he's running on the government is mean to me ticket.  He's self declared MAGA.

In other news:

Hageman Endorses Degenfelder For Governor Of Wyoming

That's a pretty good reason not to vote for Degenfelder.

Must Be Campaign Season: Rasner, Gray Blast Each Other

March 27, 2026

An amusing story about the real Wyoming Frank Chapman and the Floridian carpetbagger:

And yet another Republican enters the race, this being former Cheyenne legislator John Romero-Martinez.  He's running as "100% America first", whatever that means.

He's not on our don't vote for yet list, but frankly, he may be headed there.

March 31, 2026

The Tribune has an article on Chuck Gray's offices avoidance of a Wyoming Public Records Act request on Chuck's blatantly illegal turning of Wyoming voting records over to the Trump illegitimate administration.

There's no doubt whatsoever that what Gray did is illegal.  He should be impeached.

Cont:

Trump interferes in the 2026 election. This will be struck down.

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (52 U.S.C. 20901 et seq.), the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (52 U.S.C. 20501 et seq.), and the Federal Government’s constitutional obligation to guarantee a republican form of Government to every State in the Union, U.S. Const. Art. IV, Sec. 4, it is hereby ordered:

Section 1.  Purpose and Policy.  The right to vote in Federal elections is reserved exclusively for citizens of the United States under the Constitution and Federal law.  Federal statutes explicitly prohibit non-citizens from registering to vote or voting in Federal elections and impose criminal penalties for violations.  (18 U.S.C. 241; 18 U.S.C. 611; 18 U.S.C. 1015; and 52 U.S.C. 20511).  The Social Security Administration (SSA) maintains records that, in conjunction with the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program under 42 U.S.C. 1320b-7, can assist in verifying identity and Federal election voter eligibility.  

The Federal Government has an unavoidable duty under Article II of the Constitution of the United States to enforce Federal law, which includes preventing violations of Federal criminal law and maintaining public confidence in election outcomes.  To enhance election integrity via the United States Mail, additional measures are necessary.  Secure ballot envelope identifiers provide a reliable, auditable mechanism to enforce Federal law without unduly burdening or infringing on the rights of eligible voters.  Unique ballot envelope identifiers, such as bar codes, enable confirmation that only citizens receive and cast ballots, reducing the risk of fraud and protecting the integrity of Federal elections.  

Sec. 2.  Establishment and Transmission of State Citizenship Lists and Prioritization of Investigations and Prosecutions Related to Election Fraud.  (a)  To the extent feasible and consistent with applicable law, including but not limited to the Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a), the Secretary of Homeland Security, through the Director of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services and in coordination with the Commissioner of SSA, shall take appropriate action to compile and transmit to the chief election official of each State a list of individuals confirmed to be United States citizens who will be above the age of 18 at the time of an upcoming Federal election and who maintain a residence in the subject State (State Citizenship List).  The State Citizenship List shall be derived from Federal citizenship and naturalization records, SSA records, SAVE data, and other relevant Federal databases.  The State Citizenship List shall be updated and transmitted to State election officials no fewer than 60 days before each regularly scheduled Federal election, or promptly upon request by a State in connection with any special Federal election.  The Secretary of Homeland Security shall establish procedures to (i) allow individuals to access their individual records as well as to update or correct them in advance of elections; and (ii) enable States to routinely supplement and provide suggested modifications or amendments to the State Citizenship List transmitted thereto.  An individual’s identification on the State Citizenship List does not indicate that the individual has been properly registered to vote in the State.  State and Federal laws and State procedures must still be followed for an individual to be registered to vote.  There may be State laws, not reflected in the State Citizenship List, that preclude voter registration, or the individual may choose not to be registered.

(b)  For purposes of this order, an individual is “eligible to vote in a Federal election” if the individual is a citizen of the United States, 18 years of age or older by the date of the upcoming election, and otherwise qualified under the laws of his or her State.  The Attorney General shall prioritize the investigation and, as appropriate, the prosecution of State and local officials or any others involved in the administration of Federal elections who issue Federal ballots to individuals not eligible to vote in a Federal election, including under 18 U.S.C. 2(a), 18 U.S.C. 241, 18 U.S.C. 371, 18 U.S.C. 611(a), 18 U.S.C. 1001, 18 U.S.C. 1015, 52 U.S.C. 10307, and 52 U.S.C. 20511.  Similarly, the Attorney General shall prioritize the investigation and, as appropriate, the prosecution of individuals and public or private entities engaged in, or aiding and abetting, the printing, production, shipment, or distribution of ballots to individuals who are not eligible to vote in a Federal election. 

Sec. 3.  United States Postal Service Rulemaking on Mail-In and Absentee Ballots.  (a)  The unlawful use of the mail in connection with elections is prohibited by various Federal statutes, including 18 U.S.C. 1341, 18 U.S.C. 1708, 52 U.S.C. 10307, and 52 U.S.C. 20511.  

(b)  To ensure the faithful execution of Federal law, protect the integrity of the mail as a medium for transmitting Federal election ballots and establish uniform standards for mail-in or absentee ballot services implemented through the United States Postal Service (USPS), the Postmaster General is hereby directed to initiate a proposed rulemaking pursuant to 39 U.S.C. 401 and other applicable authority within 60 days of the date of this order.  The notice of proposed rulemaking shall include, at minimum, the following:

(i)    Proposed provisions specifying that all outbound ballot mail must be mailed in an envelope that:

(A)  is marked as Official Election Mail, including through designated markings provided by USPS for this purpose, such as the Official Election Mail logo, as necessary and appropriate;

(B)  is automation-compatible and bears a unique Intelligent Mail barcode, or successor USPS technology, that facilitates tracking and is consistent with the other requirements of this section; and

(C)  has undergone a mail envelope design review by the USPS to ensure compliance with USPS mailing standards, including barcode placement.

(ii)   Proposed provisions specifying that, no fewer than 90 days prior to a Federal election, any State may choose to notify the USPS if it intends to allow for mail-in or absentee ballots to be transmitted by the USPS.  As part of that notification, any notifying State should further indicate whether it intends to submit to the USPS, no fewer than 60 days before the election, a list of voters eligible to vote in a Federal election in such State to whom the State intends to provide a mail-in or absentee ballot to be transmitted via the USPS. 

(iii)  Proposed provisions specifying that the USPS shall not transmit mail-in or absentee ballots from any individual unless those individuals have been enrolled on a State-specific list described in subsection (b)(iv) of this section with the USPS pursuant to this subsection.

(iv)   Proposed provisions specifying that the USPS shall provide each State with a list of individuals (Mail-In and Absentee Participation List) who are enrolled with the USPS, pursuant to a process specified in the rulemaking directed by this subsection, for mail-in or absentee ballots provided by such State, along with unique ballot envelope identifiers, such as bar codes, for mail-in or absentee ballots provided to such individuals.  The preparation and transmission of each State-specific Mail-In and Absentee Participation List shall comply with the Privacy Act and all applicable use agreements. 

(v)    Proposed procedures enabling each State to routinely supplement and provide suggested modifications or amendments to the State’s Mail-In and Absentee Participation List in advance of any Federal election, consistent with applicable State law. 

(c)  The USPS shall coordinate with the USPS Office of Inspector General and the Department of Justice for investigation of suspected unlawful use of the mail involving Federal election materials. 

(d)  Any final rule pursuant to this section shall be issued no later than 120 days from the date of this order.

Sec. 4.  Implementation.  (a)  The Secretary of Homeland Security, the Commissioner of SSA, and the Postmaster General shall coordinate with the Secretary of Commerce in effectuating all relevant aspects of the implementation of this order.

(b)  The Attorney General shall enforce compliance with the applicable Federal statutes referenced herein and provide guidance to election officials, including any instrumentalities thereof; contractors; individuals involved in the administration of Federal elections; or public or private entities engaged in the printing, production, shipment, or distribution of ballots.

(c)  The Secretary of Homeland Security shall, within 90 days of the date of this order, establish the infrastructure necessary to compile, maintain, and transmit the State Citizenship List described in section 2(a) of this order, and shall designate a point of contact within DHS to receive and process requests from individuals and State election officials regarding the relevant State Citizenship List.  The Commissioner of SSA shall provide all necessary citizenship and identity data to the Secretary of Homeland Security in support of this requirement, consistent with applicable law, the Privacy Act, and all applicable use agreements.

Sec. 5.  Enforcement.  The Attorney General and the heads of executive departments and agencies (agencies) with relevant authority shall take all lawful steps to deter and address noncompliance with Federal law, including withholding Federal funds from noncompliant States and localities where such withholding is authorized by law.  Evidence of violations of existing Federal laws by State or local election officials; States or localities, including any instrumentalities thereof; contractors; individuals involved in the administration of Federal elections; or public or private entities engaged in the printing, production, shipment, or distribution of ballots may be referred to the Department of Justice for consideration of investigation or charges under 18 U.S.C. 2(a), 18 U.S.C. 241, 18 U.S.C. 371, 18 U.S.C. 611(a), 18 U.S.C. 1001, 18 U.S.C. 1015, 52 U.S.C. 10307, and 52 U.S.C. 20511.  States and localities should preserve, for a 5-year period, all records and materials — excluding ballots cast — evidencing voter participation in any Federal election (e.g., ballot envelopes, regardless of carrier).

Sec. 6.  Severability.  If any provision of this order, or the application of any provision to any agency, person, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, the remainder of this order and the application of its provisions to any other agencies, persons, or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.

Sec. 7.  General Provisions.  (a)  Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(i)  the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or

(ii)  the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

(b)  This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.

(c)  This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

                             DONALD J. TRUMP

THE WHITE HOUSE,

    March 31, 2026.

It's illegal.  He's trying to steal the election and to keep Democrats from voting, although it's GOP geezers like himself who like to vote by mail.

April 3, 2026

As if there weren't enough, another rich carpetbagging cornfederate joined the race for the House on the "I'll kiss Donald Trump's Ass better than anyone" ticket, this being Steve Friess, son of the late Foster Friess.

With so many people running for the House, we better repost the list.

U.S. House of Representatives

GOP

Jillian Balow

Chuck Gray.  On our don't vote for list.

Reid Rasner. On our don't vote for list.

David Giralt

Bo Biteman   On our don't vote for list.

Kevin Christensen On our don't vote for list.

Steve Friess.  On our don't vote for list.

Independent

Daniel Workman.

Libertarian

Shawn Johnson

As an aside, we heard a public radio discussion of Christensen the other day, which was neutral, but which makes it plain he's sucked on the government tit pretty much his whole life and now comes in as a far right figure.  These sorts of campaigns, of which there seem to be a lot this year, are much like a new high school graduate being an expert on parenting as he's lived at home for 18 years.

On the election, the sheer number of far right wing carpetbaggers will inevitably make things tough for the original OG carpetbagger, California Chuck Gray.  Added to that, he's voted for wind projects, which are generally fine with me, in his first real job, Secretary of State, while he's campaigning against "woke wind".  Reid Rasner is harassing him about that but Chuck's record is clear. He's been relatively green while in office. Chuck's a broken record however and is unable to adjust, so he's still doing it, blaming it on the Governor.  Apparently Chuck isn't woke, but he wasn't awake, or something.

Gray and Gordon got into another argument in a public forum yesterday, resulting in Gordon telling him to shut up.  We can only hope.

Anyhow, while Rasner has no chance, Rasner, Friess, Biteman and Christensen will all carve away the cornfederate vote from him and there's a decent chance that most if it will go to Biteman.  All of this benefits Balow considerably.

April 4, 2026

Laramie County substitute teacher Ryan Shollenberger has thrown his cap into the ring for Superintendent of Public Education as a Libertarian.

He'll be running against, so far, Republicans Chad Auer and Tom Kelly.

April 5, 2026

Democrat Lisa Kinney has jointed the House race.

Kinney causes us to add a new category to our "don't vote for" list, that being candidates who are as old as dirt.  The US already suffers massively for being in the clutch of oldsters, the last two Presidents being prime examples.  Enough is enough.

Kinney was first in the legislature in 1984 and was admitted to the bar in 1986.  She's at least in her late 60s, if not 70s.  Too old.  

Indeed, every single occupant of Wyoming's representation in Wyoming is too old to be occupying the jobs they're occupying. 

April 8, 2026

Two cowards:

Wyoming’s Barrasso, Lummis and Hageman silent on Trump’s threat that a ‘whole civilization will die’ if Iran deal isn’t reached

One of these people is running for office, the other is not this cycle.  Both are welded to Trump as they are afraid not to be.

In other election matters, I turned on the tv at noon the yesterday, which I normally don't do, and ads were on for Chuck Gray and Reid Rasner declaring their undying love for Trump.  Chuck looks like such a fish out of water in Wyoming in his ads it isn't funny.  Rasner has apparently super glued his trucker's hat on his head as it never comes off now.

April 10, 2026

Long time state Senator Bill Landen is not running for his seat in District 27.  Casper surgeon Kevin Helling has announced to replace him. 

Landen has been a voice of reason in the legislature.

Sen. Bill Landen announces plan to retire from Wyoming Senate

An interesting possibility in the House Race:

Wyoming’s crowded U.S. House primary race could produce a winner without a majority

Cornfederates are splitting their endorsement over which person will make the most hideously bad Governor.

April 11, 2026

Kibler, after playing musical chairs with his party affiliation, has dropped out of the race for Governor.

House district 58 has a second Republican challenger taking on incumbent Cornfederate Bill Allemand.  One Keenan Morgan has announced for the race, adding to the already running Mayor Peter Boyer.

Last edition:

Lex Anteinternet: The 2026 Election, 5th Edition, part two: The Saddle Up Edition

Friday, April 10, 2026

For those on the Old Calendar. . .

 have a blessed Holy Friday and Easter Weekend.

Ascendant Ignorance in the Age of Donald Trump. Ignoramus Watch Part 3. The Quack Edition.

  


BASH: Is this measles outbreak a consequence of the administration undermining support for vaccines?

DR OZ: I don't believe so. Secretary Kennedy has been advocating for measles vaccines

BASH: Oh, come on

From a CNN Interview of Mehmet Oz, a prime example of the Oprah Effect.1 

In fairness to Dr. Oz, who in fairness should not be a government official, he does want people to get the measles vaccine.

Also in fairness, the dissing of vaccines isn't really a Trump thing in and of itself, but he gave it some boosted unneeded assistance by taking the political step of promising Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. a job as the HHS Secretary if he'd drop out of the last Presidential race.  Kennedy is a quack, and an opponent of vaccines in varying degrees (it seems to change day by day).  The rise of this movement, however, started with people like Jenny McCarthy who sadly has a son with autism.  McCarthy herself was a Playboy model and her only real expertise is in showing her naked visage, something that really doesn't qualify a person for anything serious, and in fact may achieve much the opposite.

Oh, and by the way, Jenny McCarthy appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show multiple times in the 2000s to discuss her erroneous theories on autism and vaccines, and to promote a book she wrote.

Much of this story has to do with the inability to understand the difference between present conditions and past ones.  People tend to assume that negative developments in a population mean a negative present condition. Sometimes they do, but sometimes they also represent a positive one.  I'll give a personal example.

In 1982 I had pneumonia while at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma.  I was extremely ill, literally on death's door.  

Before the advent of antibiotics the fatality rates for bacterial pneumonia were between 60% and 70%.

Not good.

Now, the survivability rate is pretty good.

I've had a colon surgery for a developing condition that would have killed me even thirty years ago.

The point?  Well, if I go on to develop Alzheimer's, which I pray I do not, it'll mostly be because I didn't die at age 19 of pneumonia.

Also, fwiw, Meet The Press this weekend had a physician on who noted that diseases we can now vaccinate for are associated with cancer, which is a developing field of medicine.  I.e., you get some disease that's not big deal when young, and then you get cancer when older.  You don't want cancer.

A fellow I know who suffered a heart attack, and who was otherwise very healthy, may have developed his heart condition this way as well.

Get vaccinated.

March 10, 2026

The worst cabinet in American history

And it's not even close.

March 15, 2026

The Trump Interregnum is threatening to pull broadcasting licenses of those who do not give a happy spin to the war against Iran.

March 21, 2026

Waging a war against American airports must be easier than waging a war against a real country that fights back:

cont:


Absolutely reprehensible.

At this point, support of Trump is indecent.

March 31, 2026
We were horrible in Vietnam until we did Rolling Thunder One and Rolling Thunder Two, and then we won. As soon as we do half-measures, we lose. The faster we get this over the better. If we seize Kharg Island, it's technically boots on the ground. It could be done almost flawlessly. If we have enough firepower, it would be very easy to defend.
Rep. Rich McCormick, whom apparently is unaware that the US lost the Vietnam War.

April 10, 2026

Melania Trump made a rare and awkward televised appearance to deny ties to Jeffrey Epstein.


The appearance was so rare, and the rumors regarding her association with Epstein so long lasting, that there's lots of open speculation as to why, although the release of a book in the UK asserting she was an Epstein bedmate a year prior to her association with Trump may be the reason.  Or it may just be that she's tired of her reputation being dragged through the mud.

Note, I'm not asserting the book is correct.  I don't know, and I'm not going to read it.  She's asserting that at least some of what's being said are lies, and no doubt some of them are lies.  I'll note the repeated claims that she was a prostitute is a lie.  Her claims that Epstein did not introduce the couple are mostly likely correct.

I'm surprised by how surprised people are that she speaks English poorly.  Frankly, it just sounds heavily accented to me.

I'm not a Melania fan, but I don't envy her position.

Marrying Trump made her rich and we don't know why she married him, and her marriage no doubt now looks like a pretty poor choice to people who do not adore Trump.  Maybe she adores Trump.  It's certainly made her a target, and she can hardly defend herself due to her poor speaking abilities.  

The whole event is rather odd.

cont:

Arc de la défaite?

Footnotes:

1. The Oprah Effect is so named here to explain the phenomenon of Oprah Winfrey putting some flaming bogosity on to her popular daytime television show and thereby having millions of people give it credence.  There are a fair number of examples, including the rise of Dr. Oz.

Related Threads

Doug Wilson, the Calvinist preacher who appeared in Pete Hegseth's weekly Pentagon prayer meeting, says that in his preferred Christian nation, anything that Protestants consider to be a "public displays of idolatry" would be banned, including Catholic parades.

Last edition:

Ascendant Ignorance in the Age of Donald Trump. Ignoramus Watch Part 2. The War is a Racket edition.