Monday, February 8, 2021

In case you haven't noticed it, the Republican Party is struggling for its soul.

You are welcome to censure me again.  But let's be clear about why this is happening. It's because I still believe, as you used to, that politics isn't about the weird worship of one dude.

Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse.

And is an open question where it will go, or if it will become two parties.

Or, quite frankly just go right over a cliff and not survive at all, leaving a decade or more for a new conservative party, or parties, to be formed.  There's a pretty decent chance that might occur.

And it is also an open question of what this will all mean for Wyoming.

This is a true disaster in the making.  Make no mistake about it.

This past week Mitch McConnell, the de facto head of the the traditional Republican Party, came out in support of Liz Cheney, also a member of the traditional Republican Party, and against Marjorie Taylor Greene, a radical member of the Populist Trumpite Party that has been so influential in the GOP over the past four years.

Let's stop and consider this for a second.

Liz Cheney was under attack for one reason, and one reason only.  She'd voted to impeach Donald Trump, while he was still in office, as her conscience lead her to that.

Cheney is as conservative as they come.  Her voting record aligns more closely to Trump's positions than those of Florida pretty boy Matt Gaetz, whom normally Wyomingites wouldn't given the time of day.  None the less, Cheney has now been censured by about half of the Wyoming county organizations. and the state official GOP organization.  

That's right, the state's GOP has censured Cheney. There's a state legislator already running against her as a more conservative candidate than she, when it is literally impossible for anyone to be more conservative than she is, by any standard conventional definition of conservatism.

And Ben Sasse, who voted his conscience as well, and who wouldn't go along with the effort to disenfranchise voters that Ted Cruz lead as part of a self serving Ted Cruz effort to bolster his sinking political fortunes is up to be censured in Nebraska, "again".*

Sasse and Cheney continue to have the courage of their confictions. Sasse just gave the Nebraska GOP the middle finger salute, which they deserve, but in an articulate way.  Let's consider what he said once again.

You are welcome to censure me again.  But let's be clear about why this is happening. It's because I still believe, as you used to, that politics isn't about the weird worship of one dude.

Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse.

And you should really listen to his entire speech.

Cheney, for her part, refused to back down and chastised her party for believing in lies.  She even doubled down a bit on the bad acts of the President that resulted in her vote.  She not only has the courage of her convictions, but she's basically laid down the gauntlet to those who are accusing her of disloyalty.

Greene, for her part, is rapidly becoming the symbol of the alt right in some odd way.  Congress has a long history of marginalizing its members who aren't regarded as fit for office, but that's not what happened here.  Elected this past fall from Georgia, Greene has at least recently continued to wear "Stop the Steal" facemasks and is brazenly pro Trump in the conspiratorial sense.  Examination of her public comments shows that she has questioned the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon, and espoused a theory that Jewish space lasers started forest fires in California some years ago.

Let's stop to let that one sink in.

Giant Jewish space lasers.

Gee, with all the things Israel has to worry about it's starting forest fires in California rather than zapping Tehran. . . . 

In other words, Greene is a complete nut.

But that level of nuttery is what the GOP is contending with given the miles wide fissures that have developed in the party over the last few years.

And this also gives the GOP an opportunity, if it will take it.  Right now, it hasn't, and hasn't even come close to doing so.  Indeed, it all but retreated into one of the stupidest arguments that people ever make, that being the "well, I don't agree, but everyone has a right to speak", which is closely followed by "well, I don't agree, but the people of the district voted for her so. . . "

The people of Germany in 1932 voted for Adolph Hitler.  That argument is made for that.  If a person advocated for destroying a building, they'd be arrested.  We really don't have to simply shrug our shoulders, nor does Congress, over the really extreme.

As noted, an opportunity exists here, if it will be taken.  And its an opportunity the party in Wyoming is likely to sit out and end up on the wrong side of.

A vast danger exists here as well.

Whose in the tent?

We've gone over and over how this came about, and we're not going to do that again.  Instead, we're just going to write about where we right now.

The pillars of American conservatism, William F. Buckley and Ronald Reagan.

On one hand, you have the traditional Republican Party.  It's a center right conservative party that looks back to Ronald Reagan as its intellectual standard, and Reagan basically looked to William F. Buckley, the father of modern conservatism.  Buckley was a true intellectual and he defined American conservatism in a way it had never been before, and when it badly needed defining.  It's defined, or at least was, by  the following:

a.  It's politically conservative

b.  It's socially conservative

c.  It's very pro business.

d.  It's "small government" but it believes in the government.

e.  It's pro defense, and tends to be a bit interventionist overseas.

f.  It has a strong adherence to law and order and the rule of law.  It's not revolutionary, and it puts the constitution and the law ahead of its own goals.

Conservatism also, frankly, doesn't mind be a bit eliteist or at least it traditionally didn't.  Buckley and his acolytes hoped to see conservatives in power, but they were used to being out of power, and were accordingly used to the idea that they could serve being voices crying in the wilderness, albeit vocies that would be heard.  One biographer of Buckley noted that he'd grown up partially in England and as a sincere Catholic in England, he was by definition part of a "fighting faith", but a highly intelligent fighting faith.

Ronald Reagan and Newt Gingrich. Gingrich can really be viewed as the founder of what became the Tea Party.  He ran for President as recently as 2012.

Then you have the Trumpite populist wing of the party.

While he'd disavow it, the Trumpite wing of the party has its roots in the politics of Newt Gingrich, who lead an insurgent, take no prisoners, give no quarter, libertarian movement within the GOP during his time in the House from 1979 to 1999.***  He's notably from the same state that Green is from.  Indeed, but for a personal evolution, Gingrich might well have followed the role in a Trump White House that Buckley did in Reagan's, although by 2016 Gingrich had evolved considerably far away from the movement he'd started in the 1990s.

The Trumpite wing, or evolved Gingrich wing if you will, is much more difficult to define in part because its members fit a sliding scale and always have.  There are those who are actually more in the traditional party than the Trumpite wing, but have flown the Trump flag for convenience.  And indeed, there's a lot of cross over.  If we were to define it, however, it is defined by:

a.  It's strongly nationalistic, with its nationalism grounded in the founding demographic of the country.

b.  It's Protestant and "Christian Nationalist"

c.  It's libertarian in terms of economics, but not in anything else.

d.  It values cultural "values" of a conservative sort over the rule of law and adheres to the theory that they should be the law or implicitly are the law.

e.  It's isolationist.

f.  It's basically anti government and a proponent of "state's rights".

These two sets of views are sufficiently divergent that they really can't be housed in one body.  Part of the GOP's problem is that its tried to do so for almost 40s years.****  The traditional Republican Party is more like the Canadian and British Conservative parties.  The Trumpite party is more like a host of 20th Century European conservative parties.  The traditional Republican Party had managed to keep a lid on the populist Gingrich branch for decades, using it when it could, and suppressing it when it needed to.  Now, however, with the Trump presidency having dramatically impacted the GOP at its base roots, its unclear if it can do so, and this too is something that happened before, both inside the US and out of it.

As the past is indeed the prologue to the future, and as this is set to have dramatic impacts on the US without a doubt, we should look at this.

The Trumpite wing of the party

The Trump wing of the party strongly resembles a host of European political parties (and I'm including a Canadian political party in that definition) which valued ideology over democracy and let that define their approach to candidates.  In each instance, that lead to their downfall.

Now, let me note immediately, I'm not writing that those who are diehard Trump supporters are fascists.  I'm also not claiming that everyone who voted for Trump, is in the Trumpite wing of the party.  Indeed, I'm pretty sure that Cheney voted for Trump, even if Sasse didn't (which he has been open about).  This too, I'll note, is part of the history of these parties.  They were sometime successful on their own, but they often existed in environments in which they traveled with other conservative parties.  Indeed, in the U.S. system, which is a two party system, this tends to cause their to be more than one party inside of a party, as republican systems such as ours tend to default to two parties almost always, but that's always the weakness of such parties at the same time. They house multiple parties by default, most of the time.

Anyhow, what I am saying is that all of the aforementioned political parties operated or still operate in democratic environments in which they place certain political values ahead of democratic ones.  As they very strongly identify with their ideals, they essentially hold that in order for a political view to be legitimate, it had to comport to that ideal, and if it doesn't, it's illegitimate and doesn't count.

The country saw some of this in the recent insurrection.  Most of the people who were at the protest were likely simply those who believed that the election had been stolen, and therefore they were were trying to save the election. But running through that were t hose who believed that the election must have been stolen, as Trump didn't win.  Next to that were people who believe that Trump must have won, as votes for Biden were illegitimate by their nature, and don't count. And finally you have those who believe that there's a giant conspiracy afoot controlled by some pedophiles in the Democratic Party.  If you look at that, you essentially have the gamut of the German right wing parties in the 1920s, leading up to 1932, which we will deal with below.  

Al Smith, conservative, who would have recognized what Cheney did as comporting to his principles.

It really becomes apparent when you take this back to Wyoming look at the drama surrounding Liz Cheney's vote to impeach Donald Trump.  Her action is classic traditional Republican.  It put the rule of law above the party, and hence is admirable.  It's much like Al Smith's express rejection of votes that were on religious grounds in the 1930s, or Richard Nixon's concession of the election in 1960.  Cynthia Lummis' action doesn't really fit in here, as hers is pure political self interest, irrespective of her excuse.*****  An anti Trumper in 2016, she was seeing Ted Cruz as the Trump heir apparent in 2024, and was doing anything possible to kiss his ring and secure a position in a future Cruz administration.

Cruz for his part is probably actually really a traditional Republican, but he knows that he's going down in inevitable defeat in 2024 to Beto O'Roarke and he has to clear out while the getting is good. And therefore he's angling to kiss up to the Trump wing of the party as he figures it's strong, and that Trump is a fading figure. He planned on emerging as Trump's heir apparent for a 2024 run, figuring that by that time four years of panic over a future Kamala Harris administration, assuming that we're not already in a Kamala Harris administration by that time, will propel him to victory.  Of course, he pretty much shot his bolt on that and peaked a bit too soon, and in the wrong venue.  Indeed, Lummis nailed the coffin shut on her career as well, although she'll no doubt be able to keep on keeping on as Wyoming's Senator as we haven't booted one since Gale McGee's last run/non run.

Anyhow, looking locally, ten out of 23 counties have censured Cheney and now the state organization has as well.  Why? Well, she didn't vote "right" in their view, and that puts us back on the Trumpite populist scale.  She should have, in their view, voted against impeachment as that would be loyal to Trump, which means being loyal to their values, or more properly Weltanschauung,^ which puts the party's positions, or the Trumpite ones, ahead of democracy. Some of them are flat out okay with that, some haven't though it out, some believe the election was stolen, and some of them simply don' believe that any other action is legitimate for the reasons we set out above.  Their Weltanschauung is all defining in this context, trumps concerns about democracy in some, and defines the legitimacy or illegitimacy of opposing views.  Indeed, the intellectuals in the movement, and there are intellectuals in the movement, are quite open about this.

All of which means that this is a scary position for the country to be in, and a scary place for the GOP to be in, and which means that the GOP and the conservative movement may be headed for a train wreck.

A lesson from history.

We keep hearing that the United States has never been here before.  Actually it has to an extent.  Probably twice.

We didn't mention American political parties of the past in this tread up until now, but we will here at this point.

The first time we were here was from the mid 1830s through the mid 1860s. 

By the mid 1830s it was clear that a growing divide in the country over the issue of slavery was creating a rift that threatened civil war. After the US annexed Texas, that war became nearly inevitable.  Hardcore slavery proponents in the South couldn't reconcile the concept of a nation with slavery being limited.  That's important, it has to be noted, to realize.  It wasn't the threat of slavery being immediately limited that they regarded as irreconcilable with their beliefs, it was the limitation of its expansion.  Of course, everyone was savvy to the reality that limiting the expansion of slavery ultimately would mean its elimination. This came to a head with the election of Lincoln and the South took the country into civil war.

Before we move on from here, we have to first consider the pre Civil War in context.  Now the thought of slavery is so abhorrent that those who admire the Southern cause nearly always separate it from slavery if they can. But at the time, they did not.  The North and the South both had conservatives.  The South did not have what we'd call "liberals" in any numbers, however.  Some Southern conservatives sided with democracy and sided with the Union, if only in individual allegiance.  Some even had arrived at anti slavery positions before the war, which is essentially siding with democracy.  But most of the Southern political class couldn't bring itself to that point and was willing to lead the country into war over something that some deeply believed in. Others simply couldn't see past their own financial interest. Quite a few mixed the two with various degrees of acknowledgement of that.

Father Charles Coughlin in the 1930s.  In Coughlin's views, which were shared by many, we can see some of the same type of thinking we're also seeing today in some quarters, although certainly in a much different context.

It also happened again in the 1920s and 30s, with the rise of political extremism.  Both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party struggled with growing extremisms, much like they are right now.  On the right there were groups like that formed by Fr. Coughlin, on the left there were serious Socialists and Communist parties, and pretty significant heavy left infiltration into the Democratic Party.

Whitaker Chambers, who had been a Soviet spy in the 1930s after becoming a Communist in the 1920s, before having a profound conversion and leaving the Communist Party.

We know what happened in the first instance. The Civil War, followed by Reconstruction, followed by the betrayal of Reconstruction.  We can't say that the hard right, if you will, prevailed in the Democratic Party of the era, but we can say that a disaster truly occurred.  Long term, and it was long, the hard right of the Democratic Party collapsed, featuring two 20th Century attempts at forming a new southern Democratic Party, both of which quickly failed.

The Dixiecrats

Strom Thurmond, who was so opposed to desegregation in the 1940s that he ran for President in a party dedicated. Thurmond, it might be noted, was openly opposed to integration, but not so much that he avoided African Americans altogether.  He fathered a child by a black long term household employee in 1925, who was still working for him in 1948.

Not without being disruptive, however. Strom Thurmond, seeing integration coming on strong, ran as a Dixiecrat (States Right Democratic Party) in the 1948 election, taking the electoral votes of four states.  Truman swept the nation that year, so it didn't matter. So what was the net result?

Well, the Dixiecrats failed to achieve anything and its members ended up rejoining the Democratic Party. They weren't completely done, so to speak, but they were frankly much diminished.  A Democratic candidate had won in 1948 in spite of them and they had proven to not really matter much, at least in 48, to the party.  Integration of the military went ahead in the 1940s and 50s, and it entered civil society in the early 1950s.  The Democratic Party itself, moreover, started to ignore its conservative wing.

Which wasn't enough for it to make one last try.

The American Independent Party

In 1968 George Wallace, running for the far right American Independent Party, took five southern states in an election that otherwise saw Richard Nixon elected to office.  He was basically a Dixiecrat.


Wallace was regarded as an actual potential prospect in 68, but that proved to be very much in error.  He returned to the Democratic Party, survived an assassination attempt, and changed his mind on segregation prior to his death.  For a lot of people today, he's only known as the mysterious reference in Lynard Skynard's Sweet Home Alabama as the Governor who gets the boos.  The party itself ran another hard righter in 1972's Presidential election, but ultimately split into two.  It still exist as a near non entity except oddly in California, for an odd reason.  It pretty much just nominates candidates from other parties now, who are already running, such as its 2016 nomination of Donald Trump.  In 2020 it nominated the gadfly ticket of Rocky De La Fuente and Kanye West.^^

Oh, California?  

Well those who have studied it suspect that those who register as part of it in California actually mean to note that they are Independents, not actual members of the party.

Both Wallace and Thurmond were really Democrats, but conservative Democrats deeply dedicated to segregation. Both got over it towards the end of their careers, but that's not the point. The point is that the Democrats had an extremely strong conservative element from 1865 until 1968, and it really only had a liberal branch starting in 1912.  The liberal branch had a companion center left/right branch, yielding to a center left branch alone in the 2000s.

That hard right fringe, which is what it was, is completely dead in the Democratic Party.  Dead.  And both of these insurgent Democratic bodies are, well, irrelevant now.

The lesson?  Well, in Birmingham they may love the Governor, but choosing positions that weren't viable with the country at large and whose day was done may have won votes temporarily in the South, but in the long run it killed conservatism in the Democratic Party.

The application?  Well, taking hard right positions of the type we're seeing right now which place party above the democratic process may win accolades from inside the party room right now, but outside, it's pretty cold and this may alter the GOP forever without a populist wing.

So let's look at the other movements and see if that's just an American fluke.

The Union Nationale

Long serving, and two time, Premier of Quebec, Maurice Duplessis.

Quebec's government was run by the Union Nationale from the mid 1930s, when it was first formed, until the late 1950s.  

In that time, Quebec was similar in some ways (and very much not in others) to some of the regions where the Trump wing of the GOP is popular today.  It was heavily rural, at least in so far as the French speaking population was concerned, with islands, if you will, of big cities.  And it had a culture that was distinct from the WASPish culture that ran Canada.  It was, in that fashion, sort of like Wyoming, in that it had a rural population that felt oppressed, different and besieged by the national culture, whether it was to the extent it imagined or not.

The party, lead by Maurice Duplessis, was extremely conservative and extremely French nationalistic.  It pursued a form of isolationism within Canada from the rest of Canada itself.  It's economic policy, at the time, might be regarded as agrarian distributism.  Like a lot of the Trumpite wing of the GOP, it was Christian Nationalist, but not in a protestant fashion, but a Catholic one.



The Union isn't a wholly unadmirable party by any means.  It did a good job of guiding Quebec through the Great Depression, which brought it to power.  But it was nearly an anachronism at the time it was formed, something that Trumpites should take counsel from.

The Union was French Quebecois to the core and rightly realized that the Quebecois had preserved their identity due to their religion more than anything else. Following the French defeat in the Seven Years War the Quebecois were allowed to retain their religion, and the church had realized that the only way that the Quebecois were going to survive was through a type of self isolation.  The Quebecois largely eschewed commerce and industry, as well as governance, and kept to themselves as a separate French speaking, Catholic, body in an overwhelmingly English speaking, Protestant, North America.  The Church kept the Quebecois in existence.

But following the Boer War the English Empire was rapidly changing.  The UK itself recognized that the days of old fashioned colonialism were drawing to a close and sought more and more to develop what had been an empire into a family of English speaking sister states, with England as their mother.  In this world, Canada was drawing more and more into being fully and culturally separate from the United Kingdom, although it would take World War One and World War Two to really make that true.

As Canada's politics developed into their own, the Union Nationale stepped into the culture of the province that had defined its path, and with a vengeance.  The party was singularly nationalistic in a Quebecois fashion.  Realizing the history of the Church in preserving the provinces identity, it operated more and more to try to institutionalize that history into a quasi governmental role, much like Fianna Fáil did in Ireland following Irish independence.  As with the Irish example, the party operated to see that education and social services were nearly wholly run by the Church, which at first accepted that role due to it traditionally occupying it.

The party lost power in Quebec during World War Two which in part reflected that it had developed fascist sympathies by the late 1930s.  It returned to power following the war, but by then Canada was rapidly evolving into its modern self.  By the 1950s the Church was begging the Union Nationale to take over the normal social roles that were occupied by the government in other Canadian provinces, but the Union refused to accept the reality that the Church saw coming.  Instead it ran its old policies into the ground and by the late 1950s it was subject to what amounted to a political revolution with a cultural reaction, much as the same started happening in Ireland in the 2010s and which is still occurring.  In both instances, interestingly enough, the institutions that it sought to keep in a traditional role sought to be relieved of it, being more savvy to the the nature of a modern state than the party.

To conclude the party's fate, the party was essentially defined by and lashed to the identity of Duplessis himself. He died in 1959 and his immediate successor, seeing the tidal wave coming, attempted to initiate a "100 days of change", but died before that was over.  His successor called an election, and the liberals won. The Quiet Revolution, and all the ills it brought, and it did bring ills, came about. Reform came, but all at once and in a disastrous way.  

Much of that blame can be laid right at the feet of the Union Nationale.  It should have seen what was coming as early as 1945/46, and it should have listed to one of the organizations it was attempting to boost, the Church.  It didn't.  

The party dissolved in 1989. There are a couple of parties that claim it as their intellectual ancestor, but they amount to nothing.

The lesson here?  The party stood for something, and something real, early in its history, but even then was backwards looking, something it failed to appreciate because of the economic situation Quebec was in.  It was unable to adjust, at all, to the sweeping changes that came into Canada as soon as World War Two ended and went down in defeat, forever, for its failure to adjust to them.  In a lot of ways, if you insert the story of the "Tea Party" or "Alt Right" wing of Wyoming's GOP in here, it reads much the same.  If so, it's probably in the 1955-56 period on the Union Nationale timeline.

The Union Nationale still has parties that assert its heritage.  They have no real role in Quebec politics today.  Looked at that way, the hard Trump wing of the GOP, or at least Wyoming's, should consider where the Union Nationale was in 1950. . . and then in 1960. . .and now.

Let's look at another French example.

The Revolution Nationale


"Work, the Country, Family".  The personal standard of Marshall Petain, but one which was adopted informally for the Vichy regime itself.

The Revolution Nationale was a movement, not a party, but none the less its instructive as Trumpism is a movement, not yet a party.

The Rrevolution Nationale was the movement put together by the defeated French right wing following France's surrender to the Germans in 1940.  Contrary to the way its sometimes imagined, the French government didn't cease to exist in 1940 in any fashion. It's surrender was legally legitimate, and for that reason members of the "Free French" forces were de facto rebels.  The Free French themselves reflected a variety of backgrounds, De Gaulle was a monarchist, but the French left went largly out of office when France surrendered and into opposition, if not into outright exile.

Phillippe Petain in 1941.

Vichy, while remaining a legitimate government, knew its limitations and it accordingly turned in on itself, with Phillippe Petain, the hero of World War One at its head.  Petain was, as is well known, a great hero of World War One.  As a career military man, he could be expected to hold the views of the military class, in regard to politics, but he doesn't actually seem to have.  Somehow, however, he acquired these with the fall of France.

French politics were extremely odd up until recently, and a bit difficult to follow, with factions that arose in the French Revolution continually fighting it out over the decades.  As part of this, at some point the French officer class began to contain a significant number of traditionalist monarchists, something that is foreign to the US, but which is instructive in what we're going through now. Emphasizing French tradition over liberal reform, the French monarchist saw the figure of the monarch as the standard bearer of conservatism.  Its truly odd in that the last really fully legitimate French monarch was on the thrown last arguably in 1792, or maybe in 1848. . . or maybe in 1870, but no monarch had been on the thrown of any kind since 1870, which was a long time before 1940.  None the less, monarchist remained and a lot of them were in the Army.

How the Revolution Nationale conceived of itself in comparison with the pre war regime.

They weren't solely in the Army by any means, and over time a line of hard right monarchist philosophy came about due to such thinkers as Charles Maurras, founder of Action Frances. They identified themselves with all things traditionally French and based in their thinking on the concepts in Integralism.  Integralism held that all things had to be oriented towards the Church, but in their application of this they went far beyond these principals and into a sort of unique French traditional cultural orientation.

Once in power, Petain gravitated towards this view and it became the ethos of the government.  It had, quite frankly, the virtue of standing both for and against something simultaneously.  It remained distinctly French in this fashion until the second half of the German occupation of France during which time the Germans came to more and more dominate Vichy and Vichy slid into collaboration, and hence less French, but its politicians still striving to retain their highly conservative and insular views.  Originally conceiving of it self as a means of protecting the real France against what it regarded as threats to France, including the French left, it ultimately decayed into simply collaborating with the Germans in France as a practical matter.

Poster depicting France as imagined by the Revolution Nationale.

Vichy of course fell with the Allied landings in 1944.  What's significant here, however, in this story is this.  The French right, including the traditionalist right, had been a factor in French politics since the early 1800s.  But with the cooperation with the Germans, the traditionalist right's bolt was shot.  There would be other right wing French politicians, and there still are, but the legacy of Vichy has so tainted the traditionalist right wing that the French right wing has simply had to accommodate itself to the permanent influence of the left, even when its out of power.

Now, this lesion would be easy to dismiss, but the key fact may be this.  Accommodating to the seeming lesson of the immediate age deprived the French traditionalist right of a role in its future.  France that came out of World War Two had no place for it even when those who were really basically sympathetic to it, including Charles DeGaulle, were in power.

Let's turn sought from France for a second and look at a similar example, that of Spain

The Spanish Falangist

Falangist ideology is misunderstood in the US and always has been.  It wasn't represented by one political party, but two.  And it isn't fascism, at least in the abstract.  And, moreover, it never ruled Spain.  Furthermore, in some ways the party was uniquely Spanish

Falangism had its roots in the collapse of the Spanish monarchy, which was a long time in coming.  The movement itself was diverse and included everyone from true fascist to dedicated monarchist.  By and large, if taken in broadly, and if its individual branches aren't examined, what it stood for was syndicalism as an economic theory, something that has never been popular in the United States, monarchism, and traditionalism.  While one branch of the party was decidedly fascist, and therefore anti religion, another part was decidedly Catholic, and as time went on, while the two coexisted, they never completely reconciled. This later feature was emphasized by the forced union of all of the Falangist parties with the Carlist parties under the Franco regime.  Carlist were a distinctly traditionalist and nationalist movement that was dedicated to monarchy.  

Looked at this way, Falangism had some themes that were very similar to the Revolution Nationale, after the forced 1934 merger.  The movement had a dedicated inward looking economic view that was opposed to Communism and Capitalism, it sought to vest great power in the state, it was highly traditional and Christian Nationalist, and it came to be focused on one man, Francisco Franco.

Franco, of course, came to power either rescuing Spain or destroying it, depending upon your view of things. Which every it was, he remained in power until his death in 1975.  Franco was never a member of the Falange, but he did rely on it and it was accordingly heavily associated with him.

Franco, always enigmatic, saw his own end and the end of the state he created coming on with his death.  Before that time came, he restored the Spanish monarch and the current king of Spain actually briefly ruled the country following his death.  But with Franco, the Falange pretty much died as well.  In the 1930s it was the single most significant political movement in Spain.  Now, while Falange parties remain, they're non entities.

The lesson here?  Well, perhaps not much of one because the state of Spanish democracy was such a mess in the 1930s its hard to really see a Spain that didn't collapse into civil war.  But if there is one, it's this. The Falange wasn't a believer in democracy.  When democracy came back to Spain, it died.  Vested ultimately in, as Ben Sasse would say, om the "weird" dedication to "one dude", it didn't survive the dude.

Let's go a bit to the west, Portugal

The National Union

Here's another movement that has a now familiar sounding name and, as will be scene for those not familiar with it, now familiar sounding politics. The Portuguese National Union.

The National Union came to power with António de Oliveira Salazar, the strongman who ruled Portugal for a blistering 36 years..

Portuguese generals following the coup of May 26, 2926.

Salazar was an economist who was brought into the Portuguese government in 1926 when the Portuguese Army, distributed by Portuguese political instability, stage a coup on May 28 of that year.  Most sections of Portuguese society, except for the left, supported the coup.  While the generals felt that they had saved the nation from disorder, they proved unable to run the economy, and brought Salazar in as the finance minister. 

Salazar was successful in addressing the Portuguese deficit and by 1932 he was running the country as its Prime Minister.  His policies were somewhat like those already mentioned for Vichy France, but nowhere near as extreme.  Perhaps for this reason, his rule lasted an incredibly long time.  He was, in essence, a moderate authoritarian.

Which provides, perhaps, the lesson.

Salazar.

Salazar was a conservative, anti democratic, and yet dignified man.  He likely would have found the Trumpite wing of the Republican Party deeply repellant for a variety of reasons, and indeed he was opposed to political parties in general.  He was a deeply religious Catholic himself, but he did not seek to unify Christianity with the nation, regarding politics as separate from faith.  HIs regime studiously observed religious tolerance and he made every effort to separate the government from religion.  He believed that his death would end the National Union, but it didn't immediately.

But it did end, and when it did, it went down in the Carnation Revolution of 1974, a left wing, military coup by young officers in the Portuguese military.

For a time, it was feared that Portugal would become a Communist state.  It did not. Today its current government is a coalition government of Socialist, conservative Christian Democrats, and monarchist, an unlikely coalition if ever there was one.  The country none the less features some significant left wing parties.  They aren't governing, however.

So the lesson here is that Portugal's anti democratic highly conservative movement also, interestingly enough, eschewed extremism.  It remains in power longer than any other autocratic governments, and its figurehead was not charismatic.  When it fell, it fell peacefully, and more or less into moderation.

The German Conservative Right.

The German right wing political pars of the Weimar period give us an other example, although an interesting one in context. They actually were evolving in the opposite direction in some instances, although not enough to save them.

German National Peoples' Party poster from the 1920s.  I think this is supposed to show a Teutonic night, the symbol of Germany, trapped between a Communist and a Pole, but I'm not really sure.  It's creepy, that's for sure.

The big right wing political party in Germany between the wars and before the Nazis was the German National People's Party.  It wasn't the only right wing German party by any means, however.  All  of the far right "conservative" parties were an odd mixture of highly nationalistic, monarchist and militaristic ideologies, including the NDV.  Some of the really nasty ideologies that would fully bloom in Nazism were present in the NDV before the Nazis amounted to much.

The NDV, however, oddly evolved in a different direction.  Never a huge fan of democracy, they became more democratic as time went on. It actually began to fall apart when some of its leadership admitted in 1928 that campaigning to restore the monarchy was pointless as it wasn't going to happen and younger Germans didn't support it.  That set the party up for real problems as German politics became increasingly extreme after October 1929 and radicalized far right Germans gravitated towards the Nazi Party, just as radicalized left wing members of the SDP increasingly joined the German Communist Party.  As right wing radicals struggled to drag the party back to the right, moderates bolted and formed the Conservative People's Party, a center right party.  

Every German political party came basically to an end with the Nazis coming to power in 1932, although not immediately, and the NDV, to its lasting shame, participated in brining the Nazis to power.  Some NDV figures participated in the early Nazi government, and as with all German political parties some simply went over to the Nazis. The Nazi government ultimately suppressed the NDV on the grounds that it had been infiltrated by Communists.  However, some surviving members of the party were part of the July 20, 1944 plot, which makes a great deal of sense as the goals of those plotters were less purely democratic than they were in the nature of conservative anti Nazism.

After the war the NDV never revived. The Christian Democratic Union, untainted by the Nazis and their rise in any fashion, simply supplanted them. The CDU, however, was not really a conservative party but a center right party.  And that's the lesson here.  The NDV's inability early on to place democracy above its own interests made it an inherently anti democratic party whose reform came to late, as it participated in the damage to German society and its democracy that gave rise to the Nazis.  When Germany returned to democracy after the war, the anti democratic role of the NDV was too much of a legacy for the German right to overcome.  It simply disappeared. The fact that the majority of the German populace was no less interested in democracy than the members of the NDV didn't matter.  It's day was done, just as in democratic West Germany, the day of the KDP was done as well.

A British Example

Let's throw in a British example, from something along the lines of the last time this happened in an English speaking country.

Let's look at Oliver Cromwell.

Oliver Cromwell.

Cromwell started off as a parliamentarian, and in that role he was a central figure in the English Civil War.

The English Civil War was, obviously, quite a while back and it figures into the long mess of the English trying to sort out the disaster of the Reformation and the accompanying Elizabethan Religious Settlement, which was no settlement at all, but rather a compromise that allowed Elizabeth to reign without things being decided and, at least by some accounts, without her actual belief in it.^^^ Be that as it may, during the reign of King Charles I, the question of the rights of kings, a long running dispute in English history, arose which pitted the highly Anglican King Charles against he Parliament.

Parliamentary forces fell to the control of Cromwell, who proved to be an able general.  He was also a devout Puritan, which is to say a devoted follower of Calvin, and he believed the Church of England to be tainted, in his view, with Catholicism.

Cromwell's military prowess lead him to victory and on to the position of English dictator as the "Lord Protector". That lead him to be hated.  He was even posthumously executed, with his body desecrated, and his head being kept in a secret location to this day, least the desecration repeat.  His actions lead to the execution of King Charles I, but his reign lead to the restoration of the Crown under King Charles II, who for all his faults converted to the faith Cromwell feared the most, Catholicism, prior to his death.

The lesson? Well Cromwell was a purist fanatic.  His fanaticism lead him to power and it lead many people to their death, including King Charles I.  In effect, Cromwell, in his view, "stopped the steal", but his government then went about telling everyone what to think and what to do, and not to do, in accordance with the leader's beliefs. It lead the English to hate him in his own day, and the Irish to hate him forever.  Puritanism fell from grace and they ended up fleeing to Holland and the English colonies in North America. Not a real record of success.

So what to make of all of this?

What indeed.

Well, perhaps quite a lot.

Right now the Republican Party, a party that did not have its origin in extreme conservatism and which originally sought to overthrow at least one item in the existing social order, and which has both flirted with liberalism and been the standard bearer of conservatism, has seen a large part of its based infused by populism.  Some of those populist were Democratic populist at one time, an element of the Democratic Party that was once strong.  Additionally, in some regions of the country the GOP is the only party, the way that conservative Democrats were once the only party in the South.

A longer strain of history in the party, the traditional Republican Party, has seemed to lose control of the situation and right now there's a civil war in the party about what sort of party it is going to be.  Long history suggest the traditionalist will will out, but right now there's good reason to believe that won't occur.  Maybe the Trump wing will persevere and dominate.  Maybe the party will spit into two.

And here's the concern.  The country needs a conservative party, and as basic conservatives, we'd like to see a real conservative party exist. But the direction the Trump wing of the party is taking it won't succeed long term, and might not succeed short term, even if it contains real elements of conservatism that should be in a conservative party.  The history of all such movements in western society has been disastrous, not only to themselves, but to the movements they espoused, and often to conservatism in the larger sense.

Ben Sasse has warned about the an allegiance to "one dude".  His warning is well placed. Beyond that, an allegiance to the movement over the democratic process has a really bad history.  It tends to lead to the extinguishment of such movements themselves, no matter what the merits of their aims may be.

Put another way, by censuring Sasse and Cheney, real conservatives, they're essentially and ironically censuring themselves in the pages of history, and probably to their ultimate political extinction, and that which they stand for.  They need to step back and consider what they're doing, but in the heat of the moment, that hardly ever occurs.

__________________________________________________________________________________

*People should be making no mistake about Cruz.  Cruz was already going to go down in defeat if he ran again for the Senate in 2024.  He has his eyes on the White House, but he has to.  He has nowhere else to go and is going to be out of a job in 2024.

Cruz was supporting the Trumpites as he hoped they'd draw his wagon into the White House.  Cruz was serving Cruz in recent events, and he likely sank his political career permanently as a result.

**Of note, those in the administration who were openly religious nearly uniformly were protestants, with perhaps the exception of Kelly Anne Conway, who is a Catholic.  Mike Pence was a fallen away Catholic who had become an evangelical Christian, something that's extremely significant in regards to a person's religious views if their serious about it.  Mike Pompeo went overseas to Italy while in office and noted his Italian roots, but he's also a protestant which, in the case of ethnicities such as Irish Americans and Italian Americans frankly disqualifies a person from claiming that status.

***Gingrich has moderated considerably with age and his views on various things have changed.  He's acknowledged a lot of fault in his prior life of all types.

****The Democrats have the same problem, however, in that the moderates in the party and the left wing radicals really can't be housed in the same party either.

*****Lummis, who regarded Trump with distain in 2016, endorsed him heartily in 2020.  While perhaps her conversion was sincere, it has the appearance of somebody calculating their political fortune and making a guess that Wyoming was Trumpite, and Cruz was Trumpite, and Cruz was headed to the White House, therefore she'd have a position in a Cruz White House. That calculation was almost certainly wrong and will likely permanently marginalize her political future.

^Weltanschauung is a German word for "World Outlook", but the term conveys more than that and is difficult to translate into English.

^^Events such as what is going on inside the GOP must be madding to members of parties like the Indepedant Party or the Constitution Party, which have long been hard right.  They must wonder where all those people were all those years.

^^^While it may be apocryphal, by some accounts she refused the attention of priests of the Church of England upon her death, calling them "false priests", and thereby tacitly acknowleding the position of her sister Mary.

How you can tell when your country has way too many lawyers.


A new suit contends King’s Hawaiian is misleading consumers about where its rolls are made.

Oh who cares? They're yummy.

Clearly a place for the application of the doctrine of de minimis non curat lex.


Sunday, February 7, 2021

February 7, 1921. Refugees in Turkey, National Boy Scout Week, Army shrinks, Navy grows.

 Russian refugees on beach at Proti Island near Constantinople

It was the beginning of National Boy Scout Week.  In Sheridan Wyoming the Boy Scouts decorated the downtown windows on this Monday in honor of the week.

An issue of Boys' Life, the Scouting journal, from 1921, depicting a  Boy Scout and a Sea Scout.

Congress, earlier in 1920, had voted to reduce the size of the U.S. Army to 175,000 men.  President Wilson vetoed the measure.  Congress overrode the veto, and it became effective on this day in 1921 so the Army would accordingly shrink.

The Navy, however, gained a new ship, the USS Selfridge, a Clemson class destroyer that would serve a mere nine years.

USS Selfridge.

Hands off, bub.

One additional follow-up to this item: 
Lex Anteinternet: Weld County, Wyoming? No thanks.: The degree to which boosters completely fail to think out the things that they boost is one of the stories that repeats itself continually t...

The Governor of Colorado responded with a hands off. 

As well he should have. This is an absurd idea.

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the East: Catholic Church, Paris France

Churches of the East: Catholic Church, Paris France:

Catholic Church, Paris France


The Best Post for the Week of January 31, 2021

 The best posts for the week of January 31, 2021.

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the East: The ruins of of Saint Albain Nazaire, France.








Saturday, February 6, 2021

February 6, 1941. Previews and Maneuvers. Hitler issues Directive 23 and courts Franco. Italians retreat in, and Germans embark for, Libya. Will Bill visits Jerusalem. Boy Scouts listen to radio.

Wild Bill Donovan, envoy of FDR and future head of the OSS, in Jerusalem on this day in 1941.

A lot of behind the scenes and preview of coming attractions type events were going on, on this day in 1941.  

Wild Bill Donovan, the future head of the OSS, was in British occupied Palestine.  No doubt something sort of behind the scenes was going on if Wild Bill was there.

In North Africa, Operation Compass, the British Commonwealth advance in Italian Libya, continued with the Battle of Beda Fomm commencing.

The British also took Benghazi on this day.

The British had committed some tactical errors in their campaign in North Africa, but the Italians were sucking it up everywhere in Africa. They were going down in defeat in Libya and they were suffering the same fate in Eritrea.  They were in big trouble.

And big trouble not only in North Africa, but also in a war against their near neighbor, Greece.  

No, things were not going well for Mussolini at all. At this rate, he was going to see his new Roman Empire pushed out of Africa in short order and likely have to enter into a negotiated settlement with Greece.

And this is something to really consider.  

We're so used to the concept of England holding on by it knuckles at this point in the war that we fail to appreciate that, just about a year after the UK had been pushed out of France and France itself had surrendered to the Germans, the British were more than holding their own.  They were winning in North Africa and Greece, an ally by default, was winning in its war with Italy.  The Germans were engaged in a full scale air and naval war against the United Kingdom, but that war had shifted to being one on economic targets, in essence.  A fact that was reflected by a new directive issued on this day Hitler, which read:

Directive No. 23 -- Directions For Operations Against The English War Economy

1. The Effect Of Our Operations Against England To Date:

(a) Contrary to our former view, the heaviest effect of our operations against the English war economy has lain in the high losses in merchant shipping inflicted by sea and air warfare. This effect has been increased by the destruction of port installations, the elimination of large quantities of supplies, and by the diminished use of ships when compelled to sail in convoy. 

A further considerable increase is to be expected in the course of this year by the wider employment of submarines, and this can bring about the collapse of English resistance within the foreseeable future.

(b) The effect of direct air attacks against the English armaments industry is difficult to estimate. But the destruction of many factories and the consequent disorganisation of the armaments industry must lead to a considerable fall in production.

(c) The least effect of all (as far as we can see) has been made upon the morale and will to resist of the English people.

2. Consequences For Our Own Future Operations:

In the course of the next few months, the effectiveness of our naval operations against enemy merchant shipping may be expected to increase thanks to the wider use of submarines and surface ships. On the other hand, we are unable to maintain the scope of our air attacks, as the demands of other theatres of war compel us to withdraw increasingly large air forces from operations against the British Isles.

It will therefore be desirable in future to concentrate air attacks more closely and to deliver them chiefly against targets whose destruction supplements our naval war. Only by these means can we expect a decisive end to the war within the foreseeable future.

3. It must therefore be the aim of our further operations against the English homeland to concentrate all weapons of air and sea warfare against enemy imports, as well as to hold down the English aircraft industry and, where possible, to inflict still further damage on it.

For this purpose it will be necessary:

(a) To destroy the most important English harbours for imports, particularly port installations, and ships lying in them or being built.

(b) To attack shipping, especially when homeward bound, by all methods.

(c) Systematically to destroy the key points of the aircraft industry, including factories producing antiaircraft equipment and explosives.

These duties must still be carried out by such forces as remain available for operations against England, even should a large proportion of the Airforce and a smaller proportion of naval forces be withdrawn in the course of the year for employment in other theatres.

4. For the execution of these tasks, it should be noted:

(a) The sinking of merchantmen is more important than attack on enemy warships.

The same is true of the use of aerial torpedoes.

By reducing the available enemy tonnage, not only will the blockade, which is decisive to the war, be intensified, but enemy operations in Europe or Africa will be impeded.

(b) When attacks against ports or aircraft factories have obviously been successful, they will be repeated again and again.

(c) By continuous laying of minefields the enemy's feelings of uncertainty and loses will be increased.

(d) After attacking the large import harbors, efforts will be made, as far as the range of aircraft allows, to prevent the transfer of supplies to smaller ports.

Only when the weather or other conditions prevent attack on the targets designated in paragraph 3 will attacks be made on other armaments plants, towns of particular importance to the war economy, and dumps in the interior of the country, and transport centers.

No decisive success can be expected from terror attacks on residential areas or from attacks on coastal defenses.

5. Until the beginning of the regrouping of forces for Barbarossa, efforts will be made to intensify the effect of air and sea warfare, not only in order to inflict the heaviest possible losses on England, but also in order to give the impression that an attack on the British Isles is planned for this year.

6. Special orders will be issued for cooperation between naval and air forces in reconnaissance over the sea.

7. Directive Number 9 of 26th May, 1940, and Directive Number 17 of 1st August, 1940, are no longer valid.

Hitler's orders basically acknowledged what was already a fact.  The Germans knew at this point in the war that the British were not going to give up and the concept was to stare the island, literally and materially, out of the war.  

That strategy had been tried in 1914-18, of course, and failed.  

And that had also brought the US into the war in 1917.

Also on this day, the Germans commenced Operation Sonnenblume, their relief mission to the Italians in North Africa in the form of troops.  They were now diverting, therefore, men and material that would have soon been pointed east to a region of the globe that they'd shown no interest in since 1918.  Indeed, in 1914-18 Africa had been a men and material drain of no benefit to the Reich as well, and now they were doing it again.  This reflected a sense of desperation regarding the Italian cause.  If Italy lost to the UK and Greece, which it was now warning it might, that would mean that the German concept of having a secure southern flank when it invaded the USSR would have been defeated.  So Hitler was committing Erwin Rommel, and German men and material, to Libya.

On the same day, Hitler wrote Francisco Franco.

Dear Caudillo!

If I write this letter it is done in order to determine once again with extreme clarity the individual phases of the development of a situation which is not only important for Germany and Italy but could have been of decisive importance to Spain.

When we had our meeting, it was my aim to convince you, Caudillo, of the necessity of common action of those states whose interests in the final analysis are certainly tied up indissolubly with each other. For centuries, Spain has been persecuted by the same enemies against whom today Germany and Italy are forced to fight. In addition to the earlier imperial strivings inimical to our three nations there now arose, moreover, antitheses conditioned by world-outlook: The Jewish-international democracy, which reigns in these states, will not excuse any of us for having followed a course which seeks to secure the future of our peoples in accordance with fundamental principles determined by the people and not those imposed by capital. As concerns the German determination to follow this fight through to the final consequence, I need waste no word. The Duce thinks no differently. On the basis of this analysis, the Japanese people as well will not in the long run get by, unless it be by a submission sacrificing the future of the Japanese people. I am now convinced that Spain faces the same fate. Caudillo, if your struggle against the elements of destruction in Spain was successful, it was only because of the democratic opponents forced to be cautious by attitude of Germany and Italy. You will be forgiven, Caudillo, but never for this victory! Just as little does England think of letting you remain for a long period in North Africa opposite Gibraltar-as soon as she is once again in a position of power. The Spanish seizure of the Tangier zone would in such a case-and this is my deepest conviction, Caudillo-only be a passing intermezzo. England, and probably America too, will do everything, to render this entry into the Mediterranean in the future even more secure under their dominion than up to now. It is my most heartfelt conviction that the battle which Germany and Italy are now fighting out is thus determining the future destiny of Spain as well. Only in the case of our victory will the present regime continue to exist. Should Germany and Italy lose this war, however, then any future for a really national and independent Spain would be impossible.

I have thus been striving to convince you, Caudillo, of the necessity in the interests of your own country and the future of the Spanish people, of uniting yourself with those countries who formerly sent soldiers to support you, and who today of necessity, are also battling not only for their own existence, but indirectly for the national future of Spain as well.

Now at our meeting we agreed that Spain declare its readiness to sign the Three-Power Pact and to enter the war. In setting the date, periods in the far future were never considered or even mentioned, but instead the conversation always was concerned with a very short time-limit within which you, Caudillo, still believed that you could carry out various economic measures favorable for your country.

I personally have been skeptical from the beginning about the hope of receiving very soon more real economic benefits for Spain.

1. England indeed has no thought at all of really helping Spain! England is only endeavoring to postpone the Spanish entry into the war, to put it off in order in this way continually to increase her distress and thus to be able finally to overthrow the Spanish Government of that time.

2. But even if England were about to think otherwise, in an impulse toward some kind of sentimentality never present in British history up to now, she could not really help Spain under any conditions. She is absolutely not in the condition even in transportation alone to aid another country in a time in which she herself has already been forced to the most rigorous retrenchments in her standard of living. And the need for transport space will as the months go by not decrease but instead will get more and more serious.

In spite of the fact that I, therefore-as stated-have been thoroughly skeptical about this from the beginning, I nonetheless brought to bear every bit of appreciation for your efforts in at least trying, even before entering the war, to get shipments of foodstuffs into Spain from countries overseas as well.

Germany, however, has for her part, declared herself ready to deliver to Spain, immediately after undertaking entrance into the war, food, that is-grain-to as great an extent as possible! Furthermore, Germany has declared herself prepared to replace the 100,000 tons of grain which was waiting in Portugal destined for Switzerland in order that it might benefit Spain immediately. This of course remains contingent upon the final decision for Spain's entry into the war. For about one thing, Caudillo, there must be clarity: We are fighting a battle of life and death and cannot al this time make any gifts. If it should later be asserted that Spain could not enter the war because she received no supplies, that would not be true! For immediately after settling the entry into the war, a fixed date of which there has as yet been no outward indication at all, Spain would receive the first supplies, that is, 100,000 tons of grain. I doubt whether 100,000 tons of grain could really have reached Spain from abroad within the same period of time, even if such an inclination had existed. Thus, I also doubt that this is going to happen. The assertion, however, that-if our grain had been delivered immediately-the Spanish people could thus by propaganda have been prepared for entry into the war is self-contradictory for another reason.

You, yourself, Caudillo, have indeed personally indicated to me the importance of not yet consummating publicly the entrance into the Three-Power Pact, because you feared that this would have hurt your other efforts, for example in obtaining more grain, indeed would perhaps have wrecked them. How much less possible would it then have been to carry on open propaganda for entering the war? No, I am taking the liberty once more to confirm that:

1. During our conversation, it was never considered that Spain's entry into the war would perchance not take place until autumn or the coming winter, and that-

2. Germany was ready to furnish supplies to the Spanish Government at the moment when the final date for entering the war was determined.

When I had the request made to you, Caudillo, with the impression of urgency to bring relief to the Italian ally and to set this date in the middle or the end of January, that is, to permit the German march against Gibraltar to begin on or after January 10, in order to start attacking at the end of January, then for the first time our negotiators were unequivocally informed that such an early date could absolutely not be considered and this was again motivated by economic factors. However, when I thereupon let it be known again that Germany was indeed ready to begin at once with deliveries of grain, Admiral Canaris received the conclusive information that this delivery of grain would not be decisive at all, for via railway, it certainly could accomplish no practical effect. It was now further declared that since we had already made available batteries for the Canary Islands and moreover intended also to provide dive-bombers for additional security-even that was not decisive, since the Canary Islands from the point of view of food could no longer be held after six months.

That it is absolutely not a matter of economic factors but rather of others is apparent from the last statement in which it is stated that for climatic reasons to march in this season could not succeed, but on the contrary should only be considered at the earliest in the autumn or winter.

Under these conditions, of course, I do not understand why one should first want to declare an event impossible on economic grounds, which is now said to be impossible simply for climatic reasons. Now I do not believe that the German Army would be disturbed during its march in January by a climate which in itself is nothing out of the ordinary for us. In any case, we solved our problems in the Norwegian campaign under varied conditions and with severe climatic hindrances in the form of snow and ice, not to mention the fact that, from the participation of German soldiers and officers in your campaign, Caudillo, the climatic conditions of Spain are nothing unfamiliar to us. I regret most profoundly, Caudillo, this your opinion and your stand since:

1. I feel it my duty to bring relief to my Italian friend and ally and thus be of help to him indeed be of help at the moment when he experienced an unfortunate mishap. The attack on Gibraltar and the closing of the Straits would have changed the Mediterranean situation in one stroke.

2. I am of the conviction that in war, time is one of the most important factors. Months which one lets slip by are often never regained again!

3. Finally however it is clear that, on January 10 if we had been able to cross the Spanish border with the first formations, Gibraltar would today be in our hands. That means: Two months have been lost, which otherwise would have helped to decide world history.

4. I am further of the convictions that Spain's economic condition would have improved and not become worse because of what would in any case have come to Spain through us and that on the other hand the deliveries which since then actually came to Spain from abroad during this time can only amount to a fraction compared to that which would in any case have been delivered at once by us.

But quite aside from this, Caudillo, I should like now to mention the following:

The entrance of Spain into this struggle has certainly not been conceived of as exclusively to the benefit of the interests of Germany and Italy. Spain herself has advanced very great territorial claims for the fulfilment of which the Duce and I had declared ourselves ready in every degree which could at all be reconciled with an acceptable new arrangement of the African colonial possession for Europe and its countries. And I may point out in this regard that in this struggle up to now first Germany and then Italy, have suffered the most prodigious blood sacrifice, and that both, in spite of this, themselves made very modest claims.

In any case, however, the moment of military operations above all can only be proposed by the one who therewith assumes the main burden of the struggle and who must therefore calculate it into the total program of a military analysis which is after all of world-wide extent. That I myself have no other goal in mind than the common success is certainly understandable. Indeed in this case, Caudillo, my urging in and of itself only proves the strength of my consciousness of responsibility toward my ally as well. For wheresoever in the course of this war difficulties should arise, it will be my unbending will to help out with them; and my decision to make good in the final settlement whatever during one or another stage of this war can perhaps at first have miscarried. This affects Spain as well. Spain will never get other friends than those given [her] in the Germany and Italy of today, unless it becomes a different Spain. This different Spain however would only be the Spain of decline and of final collapse. Even for this reason alone, Caudillo, I believe that we three men, the Duce, you, and I, are bound to one another by the most rigorous compulsion of history that is possible, and that thus we in this historical analysis ought to obey as the supreme commandment the realization that in such difficult times, not so much an apparently wise caution as the bold heart, rather, can save nations.

Moreover, Caudillo, this war is decided regardless of what ephemeral successes the British believe they can achieve anywhere on the periphery. For independently thereof, the fact remains that the British power in Europe is broken and that the mightiest military machine in the world stands ready for every additional task which may be put to it to solve. And how good and reliable this instrument is, the future will prove.

Accept my cordial and comradely greetings.

Your ADOLF HITLER

Hitler was renewing his request of Franco to join the war, something Franco had refused to do on the basis that the country had not recovered from its civil war. The German thought was that Spain could seize Gibraltar, which it likely could have, and pinch of the Mediterranean.  It was a simple solution to a problem that, in their view, was now requiring them to commit troops to North Africa.

Franco has always been an enigma.  A strong man, a caudillo as Hitler termed it, he actually wasn't a fascist like Mussolini and Hitler, although he certainly wasn't a democrat.  A conservative monarchist at heart, he was better able to read the winds than his strong man contemporaries and was leery of entering into the war full scale, choosing instead to provide Germany with material support and submarine bases (and air bases early on).  Just enough to be doing something, but not more than that.

Franco's reluctance to join the Germans also can be attributed, in this instance, to what he conceived of Spain's territorial interests.  There was, at this time, a French Morocco and a Spanish Morocco.  Franco had actually crossed from Spanish Morocco into Spain when the Spanish army, or rather most of the Spanish army, went to war with the Spanish reds when the Spanish parliament had collapsed.  French Morocco, had it been offered to him, would likely have proved a sufficient inducement to cause him to throw in with Germany.  But that would have pitted Spanish interest against that of Vichy France, which would likely have attempted to fight Spain over it, and which would have ended the problematic cooperation of Vichy France with Germany.  That was an offer Hitler couldn't make.

All of which should have caused the Germans to pause.  They hadn't beaten the UK and the British Commonwealth forces were now in better shape than they had been some months prior.  Italy was proving to be of no value as an ally, and actually a net deficit, and Spain wasn't up for cooperating.

And yet they went on planning for Operation Barbarossa anyway.

The Germans captured a RAF Wellington on this day:

Wellington bomber captured on Boulogne raid

Convoy SC-20 suffered its third and final loss:

Ships hit from convoy SC-20

Boy Scouts were learning about radio:

Scouts Listening to the Radio, 1941

February 6, 1921. William Jennings Bryan in Florida.



'Neath palms and sunshine; William Jennings Bryan's Presbyterian Tourist Bible Class, Miami, Fla., Feb. 6th, 1921.
 

Not getting a break.

 How to tell when you are the President:

Joe Biden, Watch Geek in Chief

You can't get a break on anything.

So, Biden is probably well to do (but not as well to do as his predecessor, maybe) and has a really good watch. So what?  I see very nice watches on the wrists of lawyers, and others, including some not so wealthy, all the time.

Watches are cool.  Nice watches are very cool, even though a really nice watch isn't what it once was.  Biden has one or more?  So be it.  I'll bet Trump had several.




Oh, and one more thing Governor Gordon. . .

On this topic:  
Lex Anteinternet: Weld County, Wyoming? No thanks.
The degree to which boosters completely fail to think out the things that they boost is one of the stories that repeats itself continually t...

Weld County, Wyoming? No thanks.

The degree to which boosters completely fail to think out the things that they boost is one of the stories that repeats itself continually throughout history.

The law of unintended consequences.

I really want an additional 320,000 people eligible for instate hunting licenses.

I haven't been able to draw an antelope license two years running.  I really, really want to add 320,000 people from Weld County to the rolls.  After all, down there, there aren't any antelope to hunt and then they could travel up to my county and make sure that I never drew a tag as they drew them.

Yeah. . . that's something we want alright.

Thursday, February 4, 2021

February 4, 1941. The United Service Organization founded.

See here:

Today in World War II History—February 4, 1941

The USO was formed on this day in 1941.  It still exists.

The organization came into being  to provide, for a lack of a better way to put it, aid and comfort to American servicemen.  A non profit organization, it's services are highly diverse and difficult to categorize.

We're so used to the thought of their being a USO that its difficult to realize that during World War One, no such organization existed, and the same roles were instead provided by a variety of pre existing organizations such as the Red Cross, the YMCA and the Knights of Columbus.  The evolution away from such organizations to a centralized, larger, one with a singular focus is interesting in terms of what it meant in social development.  In no prior war had the US had an organization dedicated just to the needs of servicemen, broad needs at that.  It has ever since.

On the same day the Canadian SS Empire Engineer, a refrigerated ship, was torpedoed and went down in the Atlantic with all 39 hands.  It was one of ten cargo ships that went down that day, seven of which belonged to Allied nations, two of which belonged to the neutral United States, and one of which was German.

Commonwealth forces continued to advance in Libya, taking Msus.

More on the war on this day:

Day 523 February 4, 1941

The misery of war:

The cold wet misery of the Greek front line

February 4, 2021. Death of Eugene Burnand

 A Swiss painter and illustrator, who painted heavily agrarian scenes.








Op eds. Two to draw from.

The Tribune ran a couple of interesting op eds regarding recent stories involving or surrounding Representative Cheney.

The first was by a former head of the Wyoming Republican Party, Ron Micheli.  Micheli is highly conservative but of the traditional Republican type.  He's on record lamenting the alt right drift of the GOP in Wyoming.

He now writes opinion pieces, and his on recent events can be found here:

Micheli: We have seen gadflies like Gaetz before

Of note, Gaetz in not only portrayed as a gadfly by Micheli, the headline says Gaetz is.  Backing this up, Gaetz stated yesterday he was willing to resign from the House to defend Donald Trump in the upcoming impeachment trial, if Trump were to ask.

Trump's not going to ask.

Trump's legal problems have really created an odd sideshow for politicians who want to try to advance their careers in odd legal ways by associating themselves with him.  Ted Cruz, for example, earlier offered to argue one of Trump's election challenge cases in front of the Supreme Court, as if having Ted Cruz argue that case does anything much more than to advance the career of Ted Cruz.  Really silly.

The other was by Christine Hillegass, a psychologist living in Livingston Montana.

Hillegass: Voting her conscience is a positive

Micheli's opinions can't be discounted, given his relationship to the GOP.  Hillegass' probably can be by some, as she lives in Montana, not Wyoming, but they're interesting nonetheless.