Tuesday, March 8, 2022

2022 Wyoming Legislative Session. Part IV. The sleeping tiger edition.

Khrushchev reminds me of the tiger hunter who has picked a place on the wall to hang the tiger's skin long before he has caught the tiger. This tiger has other ideas.   

John F Kennedy 

We don't usually feature news from other legislatures in this section, but here the timing suggests we should.

Yesterday we ran this item:
Lex Anteinternet: 2022 Wyoming Legislative Session. Part II. Red Mea...: Yesterday we noted, and quoted for the first time in the long-running (seven months) first part of the 2022 series on the legislature, some ...

On the same day, Governor Noem of South Dakota signed into law a bill that achieves the same goals, more or less.

In other news, Wyoming Senator Bo Biteman told a Chamber of Commerce meeting that he is going to introduce legislation calling for a Constitutional Convention.

This is sort of a perennially popular idea with some conservatives who don't seem to realize that once, called, the convention can do anything.  Proof of this is the Constitution itself, as that convention was called merely to fix the Articles of Confederation.

Happy in that belief, conservatives imagine that the convention would gather and pass a balance budget amendment.  Based on the spirit of the times when it gathered, however, it might do damage to democracy, or it might enshrine a right to bodily privacy (abortion) in the text, or wipe out the Second Amendment.

February 8, 2022

A bill has been introduced to reimburse oil and gas and coal producers the increased amounts they have to pay in increased royalties from state proceeds that are drawn from the state's share of those funds.

Once again, a state which is short of money is finding a way to have less of it.  This bill is supposed to send a message to the Federal Government, but the message it may be sending might not be the one Wyomingites really want it to receive.

Another to create a runoff system has been introduced, something that has been kicked around since the 2018 election when populists felt that they were cheated in the Governor's race by losing that election when two populist candidates, the late Foster Freiss and Harriet Hageman took votes from each other.

February 9, 2022

A bill has been introduced to do away with the 2/3s requirement to introduce a bill in the budget session.  It would require an amendment to the state constitution in order to achieve this.

February 11, 2022

An Educational Transparency Bill has been introduced that would require each school district to list its curriculum materials by grade level and subject.

February 11, 2022, cont

A bill calling for a constitutional convention has been introduced.  It will fail.

In terms of education, a bill banning the teaching of "critical race theory" has been introduced.

A bill to rename Wyoming Boulevard, a section of state highway, the Donald J. Trump Highway has been introduced.  It will fail.

This is a budget session, and we're seeing the introduction of bills that would fail in the regular session.  Introducing them in the budget session is a guaranteed failure, which in a way may serve its own purpose.  The House members associated with these bills are all populists.  Some Senators appear, but notably absent is Sen. Bouchard, while notable present is Rep. Gray. The two were fellow travelers up until Gray announced for the House.

February 12, 2022

A bill has been introduced which would make abortions illegal, save for protecting the life of the mother, hinged on the Supreme Court overruling Roe v. Wade.  Whatever a person thinks of the issue, that it would be brought up in this session makes sense.

Another bill has been introduced to create a certificate of biliteracy for graduating high school students who are proficient in more than one language.

A bill has been introduced which would recognize those discharged from the armed forces for refusing to receive COVID 19 vaccines as honorably discharged.

February 13, 2022

Senate File 64 makes an attempt to extend the viability of existing coal-fired power plants through the following amendments to an existing statute.

373117.  Limitation for recovery of costs associated with electric generation built to replace retiring coal-fired generation facility.

 

(a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter:

 

(ii)  In addition to the requirements of paragraph (i) of this subsection, any electric public utility seeking to retire a coalfired electric generation facility shall make a good faith effort to sell the facility to a person who would install and operate carbon capture, utilization and storage technology at the facility;

 

(ii)(iii)  The rates charged by an electric public utility, other than a cooperative electric utility, shall not include any recovery of or earnings on the capital costs associated with new electric generation facilities built, in whole or in part, to replace the electricity generated from one (1) or more coal fired electric generating facilities located in Wyoming and retired on or after January 1, 2022, unless the commission has determined that the public utility that owned the retired coal fired electric generation facility made a good faith effort to sell the facility to another person prior to its retirement in accordance with paragraphs (i) and (ii) of this subsection and that the public utility did not refuse a reasonable offer to purchase the facility or the commission determines that, if a reasonable offer was received, the sale was not completed for a reason beyond the reasonable control of the public utility.

 

3718102.  Energy generation portfolio standards; reporting requirements; rate recovery and limitations.

 

(a)  Consistent with the objective of ensuring Wyoming electric utilities maintain access to reliable and cost effective electric generation resources and subject to subsection (f) of this section, the public service commission shall establish by rule energy portfolio standards that will maximize the use of dispatchable and reliable lowcarbon electricity. In establishing standards, the commission:

 

(f)  Any public utility that elects to install and operate carbon capture, utilization and storage technology at an otherwise retiring coalfired electric generation facility in accordance with W.S. 373119(c)(i) or (ii) shall be deemed to have complied with any standards established under this section.

 

Section 3.  The public service commission shall promulgate all rules necessary to implement this act.

 

Section 4.  This act is effective immediately upon completion of all acts necessary for a bill to become law as provided by Article 4, Section 8 of the Wyoming Constitution.

February 14, 2022

And, this morning the wheels go up and the airship of state takes off, as the legislature convenes.

Okay, bad metaphor, but nonetheless.

February 15, 2022

Governor Gordon's State of the State Address and Justice Fox's the State of the Judiciary:

February 15, 2022, cont.

A bill has been introduced to "decriminalize" possession of marijuana.  It actually doesn't, but makes the penalties minor up to certain amounts.  The bill has a substantial number of sponsors, so it has a chance of actually passing during the budget session.

The bill seeking to incentivize film productions in Wyoming failed.

The House refused to convene a committee to look into Rep. Zwonitzer's residency, deeming his residency to comply with the rules of the legislature.

February 18, 2022

A bill that would freeze party affiliations prior to primaries at three months' prior has secured introduction.

This bill failed in a prior legislature.  It's strongly favored by the populist wing of the party.  It oddly received an endorsement from former President Trump yesterday, which if nothing else either shows how closely his camp is following state legislatures or how closely some in the Wyoming GOP are in contact with it.  The sponsor, however, stated he was unaware of the endorsement.

Candidate Harriet Hageman also endorsed the bill, calling the practice of late party switching "unethical".  Whether its ethical or not, I suspect that if the bill passes it will end up in litigation as to its constitutionality.

The Senate introduced a bill that would ban the teaching of critical race theory in Wyoming's schools, while the House declined to introduce one which was more specific on the topic.

A bill altering the mining bonding requirements to allow putting funds on deposit with the State Treasurer in a dedicated trust account, secured introduction.

A bill that would have required employers to accommodate unvaccinated employees failed to secure introduction.

February 19, 2022

The redistricting bill moved forward.

A bill extending money for the yet unsuccessful effort of sagebrush farming was introduced.  Hopes are that the entity attempting it is close to success.

The bill requiring school age athletes competing in school sports to compete in the category consistent with their genetic gender survived its initial vote.

February 20, 2022

Three bills that address abortion have advanced and therefore will receive committee hearings.

A second critical race theory bill (there were three) has also survived and will receive committee hearings.

February 21, 2022

The bill to rename Wyoming Blvd died.

February 24, 2022

The bill to ban "cross over" voting advanced after being reassigned to the agriculture committee.

A bill banning the teaching of "critical race theory" passed the Senate and has gone on to the House.

Bills restricting abortion have passed committee.

February 26, 2022

Senate File 102 has passed the Senate.  It provides:

SENATE FILE NO. SF0102

 

 

Second Amendment Protection Act.

 

Sponsored by: Senator(s) Hicks, Cooper, Dockstader, Driskill, Kinskey, Kolb, Kost, Nethercott and Steinmetz and Representative(s) Burkhart, Greear, Haroldson, Jennings, Neiman, Olsen, Styvar and Washut

 

 

A BILL

 

for

 

AN ACT relating to the regulation of firearms and the protection of constitutional rights; providing a declaration of authority; prohibiting the enforcement of federal regulation of firearms by state officials; providing penalties; and providing for an effective date.

 

Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wyoming:

 

Section 1.  W.S. 914201 through 914203 are created to read:

 

ARTICLE 2

SECOND AMENDMENT PROTECTION ACT

 

914201.  Short title.

 

This article shall be known and may be cited as the "Second Amendment Protection Act."

 

914202.  Declaration of authority.

 

(a)  The Second Amendment Protection Act is enacted under the authority of the second and tenth amendments to the United States Constitution, article 1, section 24 of the Wyoming Constitution, Wyoming's agreement with the United States that the state adopted when it joined the Union under the United States Constitution's system of dual sovereignty, and Printz v. United States, 521 U.S. 898 (1997).

 

(b)  The legislature further declares that the authority for W.S. 914201 through 914203 is provided by the findings in W.S. 68406.

 

914203.  Prohibiting the enforcement of federal regulation of firearms; penalties; defense of Wyoming citizens.

 

(a)  This state and all political subdivisions of this state are prohibited from using any personnel or funds appropriated by the legislature of the state of Wyoming or any other source of funds that originated within the state of Wyoming to enforce, administer or cooperate with any unconstitutional act, law, treaty, executive order, rule or regulation of the United States government that infringes on or impedes the free exercise of individual rights guaranteed under the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

 

(b)  Nothing in this act shall limit or restrict a public servant, as defined in W.S. 65101(a)(vi), from providing assistance to federal authorities for purposes not specifically identified in subsection (a) of this section. Nothing in this act shall be construed to prohibit Wyoming governmental entities from accepting federal funds for law enforcement purposes.

 

(c)  Any public servant, as defined in W.S. 65101(a)(vi), who knowingly violates subsection (a) of this section shall be subject to the misdemeanor penalties in W.S. 68405(b).  As used in this subsection, the penalties in W.S. 68405(b) shall be applied to public servants.

 

Section 2.  This act is effective July 1, 2022.

 

(END)

 

1

SF0102

 

The bill, as it prohibits poilice officers from enforcing an unconstitional law by definition, literally does nothing whatsoever.  All statutes are presumed constitutional until a court rules otherwise, and no statute ruled unconstitional can be enforced.

March 1, 2022

A Sentate amendment to the budget cut the funding for UW's gender studies program.

March 4, 2022

The Senate amended the redistricting map so that now the House and Senate versions do not match.  The Senate version might, according to some, result in court challenges as well.  If I understand it correctly, which I might not, it reduces some split districts and prevents an expansion in the number of legislators.

March 5, 2022

Funding for the women's and gender studies department was restored in a compromise that requires the department to report on its general requirements to the legislature.

The oil & gas rebate bill died.

Of some potential interest, Utah's legislature passed a bill on transgender atheletes but the Governor indicated that he will veto it. A smiliar bill is pending in the Wyoming legislature and one passed the South Dakota legislature and was signed into law this year.

March 8, 2022

The Governor signed the first bills from the session to reach his desk into law.

Governor Gordon Takes Action on Eight Bills on Monday, March 7

 

CHEYENNE, Wyo. –  Governor Mark Gordon took action on eight bills on Monday, March 7. The Governor signed the following bills into law today:

 

Bill No.

Enrolled Act #

Bill Title

 

SF0023

SEA0001

Nursing home administrators.

SF0031

SEA0002

Absenteeism and truancy.

SF0002

SEA0003

Legislative budget.

SF0029

SEA0004

Liability for governmental healthcare providers-amendment.

SF0024

SEA0005

Pharmacist and pharmacy technician practice.

SF0039

SEA0006

Firemen's pension plan benefits.

HB0009

HEA0001

Economic development programs-tribal inclusion.

HB0046

HEA0005

Partnership challenge loan program-amendments.

 

The full list of bills the Governor has taken action on during the 2022 Legislative Session can be found on the Governor’s website. 

-END-

It's interesting to note that bills that are passed are frequently ones that have received little attention, which makes sense as they aren't the controversial ones.

In controversial ones, the transgender atheltics bill failed due to time constraints on bills.

Karlee Provenza, D-Laramie, confronted Susan Gore after a Minerals hearing about the New York Times report that Gore funded spying on various membes of the legislature, including Provenza.  Gore has denied the allegations.

Gore has been a major influence on Wyoming politics due to her finances. Whe's not from Wyoming but has moved in, and is a major backer of the Wyoming Liberty Group.

The Senate defeated a bill that would have created criminal penalties for pregnant women who used certain illegal drugs.  Surprisingly, Anthong Bouchard, who is highly conservative, spoke against the bill, indicating that it'd compound the tragedy the topic entails and the focus should be on treatment, a quite liberal position.

March 8, cont.

Bill No.

Enrolled Act #

Bill Title

HB0021

HEA0002

Repealing exemption for one-way pagers.

HB0030

HEA0003

School finance-increasing cash reserves.

HB0037

HEA0004

Juvenile justice data reporting.

HB0059

HEA0006

Worker's compensation-COVID-19.

HB0070

HEA0007

Digital identity protection.

HB0086

HEA0008

Genetic data privacy-amendments.

HJ0001

HEJR0001

Supreme court justices and district judges-retirement.

SF0059

SEA0007

Game and fish fund-investments.

SF0058

SEA0008

Wyoming council for women's issues-workforce services.

SF0057

SEA0009

Chancery court vacancy amendments.

SF0046

SEA0010

Solid waste cease and transfer program funding.

SF0045

SEA0011

Military department-annual report.

 

The full list of bills the Governor has taken action on during the 2022 Legislative Session can be found on the Governor’s website. 

-END-

HJ0001 is a proposal to raise the judicial retirement age to 75.  It reads as follows:

ORIGINAL HOUSE 

JOINT RESOLUTIONHJ0001

 

ENROLLED JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 1, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

 

SIXTY-SIXTH LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WYOMING

2022 BUDGET SESSION

 

 

 

 

A JOINT RESOLUTION proposing to amend the Wyoming Constitution by amending the retirement age requirements for Wyoming supreme court justices and district court judges.

 

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WYOMING, two-thirds of all the members of the two houses, voting separately, concurring therein:

 

Section 1.  The following proposal to amend the Wyoming Constitution, Article 5, Section 5 is proposed for submission to the electors of the State of Wyoming at the next general election for approval or rejection to become valid as a part of the Constitution if ratified by a majority of the electors at the election:

 

Article 5, Section 5.  Voluntary retirement and compensation of justices and judges.

 

Subject to the further provisions of this section, the legislature shall provide for the voluntary retirement and compensation of justices and judges of the supreme court and district courts, and may do so for any other courts, on account of length of service, age and disability, and for their reassignment to active duty where and when needed. The office of every such justice and judge shall become vacant when the incumbent reaches the age of seventy (70) seventy-five (75) years, as the legislature may prescribe.; but, in the case of an incumbent whose term of office includes the effective date of this amendment, this provision shall not prevent him from serving the remainder of said term nor be applicable to him before his period or periods of judicial service shall have reached a total of six (6) years. The legislature may also provide for benefits for dependents of justices and judges.

 

Section 2.  That the Secretary of State shall endorse the following statement on the proposed amendment:

 

Currently, the Wyoming Constitution requires Wyoming Supreme Court justices and district court judges to retire upon reaching the age of seventy (70). This amendment increases the mandatory retirement age of Supreme Court justices and district court judges from age seventy (70) to age seventy-five (75).

 

The Constitution also currently provides an exception to the mandatory requirement to retire upon reaching age seventy (70) for justices and judges who had not yet completed six (6) years of judicial service as of December 12, 1972. The proposed amendment would remove the now-obsolete six (6) year service guarantee.

 

(END)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Speaker of the House

 

 

President of the Senate

 

 

 

 

 

Governor

 

 

 

 

 

TIME APPROVED: _________

 

 

 

 

 

DATE APPROVED: _________

 

 

I hereby certify that this act originated in the House.

 

 

 

 

Chief Clerk

I can think of no good reason to do this.  It's yet another aspect of the curious nature of the modern Untied States in which power is seemingly vested endlessly in the elderly, or more specifically, in the Baby Boom Generation.

This is not to suggest that any current judge approaching the current retirement age of 70 is unsuited for the position. We've been lucky, so that's not true. But our luck will run out at some point. Age exacts a toll.

Prior Editions:

2022 Wyoming Legislative Session. Part III. Okay, Boomer.



Monday, March 7, 2022

Subsidiarity Economics. The times more or less locally, Party VIII. Infrastructure Money

 December 23, 2021

Wyoming's Airports to receive $15.1M in Infrastructure Money

The Federal funds can be used for terminals, runways and parking lots and the like.

Of Wyoming airports, Jackson's will get the most, receiving $3.38M.  Natrona County International Airport gets the second-largest amount at $1.34M.  Natrona  County's airport will use the funds for electrical work.

January 4, 2021

More Colorado eateries are closing, with downtown Denver's formerly iconic all night diner Breakfast King closing yesterday.

January 24, 2022

United Airlines has asked for $1,000,000

from the Federal Government in order to keep air travel open on United flights from Cody (Yellowstone Regional Airport) to Denver.

February 3, 2022

A Federal Court has invalidated recent offshore oil and gas leases that came up in a recent sale on the basis that the Government didn't comport with environmental regulations.

It is thought this may spill over to onshore leases as well.

February 4, 2022

An intergovernmental spat has broken out between the USPS and the EPA over USPS replacement vehicles.

The Post Office announced that only 10% of its new vehicle force will be electric, causing the EPA to massively react.  There have been calls for the head of the Post Office to resign.

My prediction is that they'll redo the order, and order electric.

March 3, 2022

In an example of embarrassing bad timing, the nuclear power plant to be constructed in Kemmerer anticipated using Russian sourced nuclear fuel and, at least right now, there's no obvious alternative.

March 7, 2022

Oil topped $130/bbl yesterday briefly due to the Russo Ukrainian War.  It was at $121/bbl at the time this was posted.

Wheat prices are also up for the same reason, with there being little in the way of an American due to the drought that set in last year and which, at least right now, is continuing.

Last Prior Edition:

Subsidiarity Economics. The times more or less locally, Party VII Going Nuclear


Sunday, March 6, 2022

Friday March 6, 1942. Rationing typewriters

From Sarah Sundin's blog 

Today in World War II History—March 6, 1942: US Gen. Joseph Stilwell meets with Chiang Kai-shek for first time in Chungking. Typewriters are rationed in US; sales of new and used typewriters are banned.

Also from her blog is this excellent poster.  Normally I wouldn't repost it, but it's just too good for the topic we're going to expand out a bit on.

 


The massive increase for the need of all sorts of government employees in the war is something that we are, of course, well aware of, but this really emphasizes it. The war created a shortage of "stenographers", i.e., typists, and typewriters.  An interesting article on that in Washington, D.C. can be found here:

DC's World War II Typewriter Shortage


And another one, from a court reporter's firm, appears here:

How Stenographers Became Critical During WW2

We've dealt with the role of machines in relation to the change in women's place in the workplace before, and while our big thread on that dealt with domestic machinery, it also mentioned the typewriter.

Well, in one sense, not much. The concept that World War Two's working women stayed in the workplace is grossly exaggerated.  For the most part, they didn't.  Most in fact left their wartime employment and returned to domestic lives they'd hoped for, or at least expected, prior to the war.  Indeed, a lot of occupations did not open up for women for decades.  Lawyers I know, for example, who went to law school right after World War Two have related to me that it was extremely difficult for a woman to get through the schools as they were harassed, in part, by male professors (and students) who didn't feel they belonged there.  I know one woman who did go through law school in the 1940s, and was a highly respected lawyer, but she's an example of one. For the most part, women's occupations weren't a lot wider in variety after the war than they were before. A big exception was the role of secretary, which had become an exclusively female role by the 1940s, but then it was very much well on the way to that prior to World War Two.  And that role is telling as to the reason.  The reason women replaced men as secretaries (which was controversial at first) was due to a machine. . . the typewriter.

 
Manual typewriters, 1940s.

Of interest there, women actually did not work much as secretaries, as this thread notes, until the typewriter.  Their introduction into that role was actually quite controversial when it first occurred, but as noted above, in the period from 1910 to 1940, women completely took over the role as the prior occupation of scrivener, a nearly all male role consisting of people who transcribed things by pen and ink, died away.

Not that men didn't actually occupy this position in the military.  "Clerk Typist" was an Army occupation, and there were thousands of them in the service, mostly men.  Typing skills in men were still so valued as late as the Vietnam War that a demonstrated ability to type nearly guaranteed that an enlisted man would be assigned to that occupation while in the service.

Monday, March 6, 1922. The dawn of the cartoon magazine.

Maj. Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson, eccentric cavalryman, at that time, and founder of D C Comics was photographed.

Wheeler-Nicholson came from an unusual family, and he was an unusual character.  He achieved success very early as a cavalryman in the U.S. Army, and then went on to command infantry in the US military mission to Siberia during World War One.  He became an author in this time period but he seems to have struck people the wrong way and ended up in disputes inside the Army, one of which lead to his court marshal during this time frame. Adding to his problems, he was shot by an Army sentry shortly after this in an incident in which the sentry through he was trying to enter another officer's home, but which his family maintained was an Army sanctioned assassination attempt (which it surely was not).

In 1923 he'd leave the Army and become a pulp fiction writer.  Ultimately, he founded a franchise which essentially created the modern cartoon magazine.  Nonetheless, he never really profited from his efforts and lived in financial straights the rest of his life.

Saturday, March 5, 2022

The Best Posts of the Week of February 27, 2022

The best posts of the week of February 27, 2022.

Some observations on the war in Ukraine







Wars and Rumors of War, 2022.

 

Ukrainian soldier with AKM.

February 11, 2022

Russia v. Ukraine

Everything has the feel right now of waiting for an inevitable Russian invasion of Ukraine.

But how far will the Russians go, and what does that mean?  We really don't know, assuming of course it happens.

And if Russia takes all of Ukraine, how long will the third guerilla war against the Russians in a century last?

And what will the much threatened sanctions amount to?

The US, we'll note, has told American citizens to leave the country.

February 17, 2022

Russia v. Ukraine

The Russians claimed to have withdrawn some troops from Crimea, the US says this isn't so.

The Russians have claimed to find mass graves of executed ethnic Russians in the Donbass, the Ukrainians say that isn't so.

The Russians also claim that they were shelled by Ukrainian artillery, which the Ukrainians also deny.

Arms of some sort continue to arrive in Ukraine from the west, although what's being shipped isn't clear. The US has been flying USAF drones over the country and not hiding it, which is interesting.

February 18, 2022

Russia v. Ukraine

Artillery exchanges are in fact occurring in the Eastern Ukraine.

February 19, 2022

Russia v. Ukraine

Russian separatist in the Donbass region have ordered a general mobilization of all men capable of bearing arms on the baloney pretext that they fear a Ukranian invasion.

While making guesses in this context is difficult, my guess is that this is the beginning of the false flag operation that's been predicted, and the war will commence shortly.

February 21, 2022

According to the US, the orders to launch an invasion have been given to Russian field commanders.

France has been engaging in telephonic shuttle diplomacy between the US and Russia in hopes of avoiding a war.  It seems like the current status of this is that the US has proposed a summit if Russia doesn't invade.

This raises the question if what is occurring is an intentional variant of the Sudetenland crisis.  Ie., Putin may have sparked this run up to an invasion with the thought that the west would bargain the Donbass, Crimea, and NATO status for Ukraine, away, rather than to risk a war.

February 21, 2022

Putin spoke, blaming the US in part for the situation, and declaring the breakaway provinces of Ukraine occupied by Russian surrogates to be independent states. The Russians are sending troops into them as "peacekeepers".

Effectively, at type of invasion is now occurring.

February 24, 2022

Russia v. Ukraine

Russia has invaded the Ukraine, but the full nature and extent of that action is not yet clear.

Air and missile strikes commenced yesterday in the early morning hours.  Reports from Ukraine are that Russian troops crossed the border in the north and the south.

Several NATO countries have invoked Article 4, requiring a consultation.

Just yesterday, FWIW, former President Donald Trump was praising Putin as a master strategist.  Others are wondering if the now elderly Putin has become mentally unhinged.  This is likely to result not only in a Ukrainian defeat, but the economic destruction of Russia.

Yesterday, Putin, prior to launching the invasion, was threatening to use his nuclear arsenal if western nations interfered with his assault on Ukraine.  In a televised broadcast, he dressed down one of his own intelligence chiefs, who was clearly stunned by the treatment.

There's been a lot of speculation on why Putin would take an action that's guaranteed to be a disaster for the Russian economy, with speculation ranging from he just doesn't get it, to he just doesn't care.  The latter is probably the case.  The Russian economy is in an increasingly distressed state and with a change in the US administration, Putin no longer has some sort of friend in office in the west.  Ukraine has been moving increasingly towards the west in its orientation.  Putin would reassemble all of the old pieces of the Russian Empire into his new one if he could, and this was likely, by his calculation, the last chance he had to do so. What remains unknown at this hour is if he'll grab pieces of Ukraine and push for it to bargain with him, or simply overrun the entire country.

What also isn't known is the degree to which this may prove to be a bloody fight.  The Russian Army is frankly not all that great, but the Ukrainian Army is a former Soviet one as well.  If not a peer to peer fight, which it isn't due to at least Russian air assets, it may be closer to a peer to peer fight than generally suspected.  And the Russians will receive years and years of guerilla warfare within the country, and probably now out into Russia as well, as a result.

February 25, 2022

The Russo Ukrainian War.


Situation as of February 25, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

One complete day of fighting has now occurred.

Ukraine is a large country, and the size of the respective military forces is actually in their balance, except in the air.  Having said that, the Russians have not done as well as expected, and the Ukrainians are putting up a real fight.  They heavily resisted the Russian capture of Chernobyl, albeit unsuccessfully, and wiped out an airborne attack on an airport very near Kyiv.

The reporting on advances themselves, I should note, has been bad.  From most of the television reporting, it's impossible to tell the actual state of the war at any one time.

The Ukrainians have ordered a full mobilization which would, if fully carried out, put an additional 1,000,000 men in uniform.  Yesterday, the Ukrainian government issued 10,000 rifles to civilians in Kiev.  The Ukrainian parliament has passed a right for civilians to keep and bear arms.

Large protests broke out in Russian in over 60 Russian cities yesterday over their own country's actions in commencing an invasion of a neighbor,  Over 1,000 Russians were arrested.

All three of Wyoming's Congressional delegates condemned the attack, which means notably that Senators Barrasso and Lummis have now joined a position regarding Russian behavior that Congressman Cheney held for months.  Having said that, a staffer of one of the Senators seemed headed towards neutrality until his employer came out with condemnation.   The positions were notably much stouter than that taken by Elsie Stefanik, who replaced Cheney in her role in the House.  Setfanik, who also condemned the attacks, stoutly and fairly absurdly blamed them on President Biden.  Her view however is a minority one in the current politics of the time, with this being one thing, so far, both parties seem unified on.

China blamed the US for the Russian invasion, not surprisingly.

Heavy sanctions are rolling onto Russia, which is a petrostate with an otherwise primitive economy.

February 26, 2021

Situation as of February 26, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

The Russians are now in Kyiv

They have not taken it and Ukrainian resistance is reported as fierce.

Without really saying as much, western military analysts expected the Russians to take Kyiv on the first day of the invasion. That Russian troops are in it now is very bad for Ukraine, but also demonstrates that the military advance is much slower than anticipated.  Indeed, Russian forces have been underperforming and Ukrainian ones over performing so far.

Ukraine still faces, of course, long odds.

The Russian Navy took the tiny island of Snake Island which has been Ukranian territory since the Second World War.  It's claimed by Romania as well.  The island was occupied by border guards.  The Russian ship identified itself as that, and demanded the surrender of the border guards occuping it. After a slight delay, they replied "Russian ship, go fuck yourself".  All thirteen border guards were killed in the ensuing bombardment and occupation of the island.

The island is off of Odessa.

More and more it appears that Russia intends to take Ukraine west of the Dneiper.

NATO is deploying troops to its eastern boundaries.

US paratroopers deploying to Latvia.

The Netherlands are sending 200 antiaircraft missiles to Ukraine.

The US Administration is seeking $6.4B in aid to Ukraine, half of which is for military equipment.

Japan is considering joining in on the sanctions.  Australia has.

February 27, 2022

Situation as of February 27, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

Fighting rages on iside of Kyiv.  The Russians have entered Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city.   For those familiar with the old Russian spellings, this is the city of Kharkov.  They have not taken it, but rather are now engaged in fierce street fighting.

As the map shows, they've' also advanced down on Kyiv on both bank of the Dneiper and in the south, they've launched a spearhead across the Dneiper.  While recent US assessments have been that their advance, which as been remarkably slow, was slowing down more, it now appears to be picking up speed and becoming much more coordinated.

In the south, moreover, this would suggest that they in fact intend to take the entire country, not just the territory east of the Dneiper.

Yesterday Russian websites were subject to a cyber attack, with at least one hackers group openly announcing they were targeting the Russian government.

Today Putin has declared western sanctions "illegitimate" and put his nuclear forces on special status, a fairly meaningless species of armed tantrum in context.

February 28, 2022

Situation as of February 28, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

There have been signficant gains by the Russians in he south over the lsat day, an area which is receiving little in the way of reporting.  In an area in the east, a Sovieet advance of yesterday was repulsed and the Ukranians recovered ground.

The southerin advance is, from a military position, extremely worrisome as it appears set to link with Russian forces to the east, and be well positioned to advance up the right bank of the Dneiper and sever the country in two.

Fighting remains fierce in Kharkiv and Kyiv.  Photos from Kharkiv showing civilians dead in the streets with water and groceries they were trying to bring home before Russian artillery killed them have been published.

The US has increased its state of readiness given yesterday's declaration that Russian nuclear forces were going on high alert.

Russian markets are tanking.

The world's largest airplane, the An-225, was destroyed in the fighting at the airport that's been contested outside of Kyiv.

The ruble is an a free fall.

The Russian stock exchange has closed.

The agreed to discussions beteween Ukraine and Russia have commenced.

February 28, cont:


Situation as of February 28, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

Updated map, showing Russian coastal advances, but much less overall territorial control in the south than earlier map.

Switzerland has joined the EU in its sactions.

March 1, 2022


Situation as of March 1, 2022, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

On todays' sitaution map, the Russians regained some ground they'd lost yesterday in the South, but also lost some ground they had taken.  They may be withdrawing in the south from the left bank of the Dneiper.  Their forces that had linked with rebel areas of the Donbas were cut off again.

A massive Russian convoy is reported north of Kyiv.

Putin is reportedly becoming irate with the slow Russian progress accodring to Russian insiders and threatening to launch a more devestating attack.

This would suggest that the offensive used limited, if signficant, resources and that the Russians are underperforming.

Hungary, while a NATO member, announced it will not allow arms to cross its territory to enter Russia.  Hungary's president is a Putin ally.

Slate has an article analysing the Russian offensive and concluding the Russian army is just bad.  You heard it here first.

March 1, cont.

The Russians have not achieved air superiority, their advance has stalled again, some Russian troops have run out of food and feul, and some have even surrendered.

At this point they've committed 80% of their pre invasion mustered force.

March 2, 2022


Situation as of March 2, 2022, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

Todays' situation is much like yesterday's  The Russian reestablished their coastal link up with a breakaway region of the Donbass after having achieved that yesterday and then having lost it.  They continue to struggle to take Kyiv and Kharkiv, but have not.  They've now made an advance to a city northeast of Kyiv.

March 3, 2022

Situation as of March 3, 2022, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

The Russians continue to advance.  The Ukranian Black Sea port city of Kherson in the south has fallen, being the first major Ukranian city to fall.  Still, the amazing thing is that it wasn't occupied by the Russians on the first day of the invasion, being close to occupied Crimea.

The UN has condemned the Russian invasion.

Over 800,000 refugees have fled the country.

Reports exist that the Chinese instructed the Russians not to commence the invasion during the Olympics.

Martch 3, cont.

The massive Russian convoy north of Kyiv that has received so much attention appears to actually be a series of smaller ones that are stalled.

Ukranian sources claim to have attacked it, which the US says it does not doubt, but it also seems that it may be at least partially stalled due to breakdowns and fuel issues.

March 4, 2022

Situation as of March 4, 2022, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

The Russians are expanding their toe hold in the north and beginning to advance more into western Ukraine with a clear, if early, trend in the expansion of that offensive commencing.  The are also clearly now closing their pincer's in the northeast and shall likely hold a greatly expanded area in the north east within a few days.  It's beginning to therefore become plain that their goal is to take the entire country, although the rate at which they are progressing is much slower than would have been anticpated.

Yesterday buildings at the nuclear power plant at Enerhodar caught fire during the seige there.

Russian Gen. Andrei Sukhovetsky, commander of the Russian 7th Airborne Division and a deputy commander of the 41st Combined Arms Army, was killed by a Ukranian sniper.

March 5, 2022


Situation as of March 5, 2022, 2022.  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2022_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine.svg  Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016 based on map provided by BNO News

Russian forces in the south made a rapid advance to the nortwest interior yesterday, although their advance is thin.

Ceasefires were agreed to pertaining to two secondary cities in order that civilians could evacuate.  The cities are Mariupol and Volnovakha.  Mariupol is a port city that has repeatedly been reported as captured, but obviously fighting continues there.

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham stated yesterday that a Russian assasination of Puti would be the only way "that this ends".

Reports have been made that Russia dispatched two seperate mercenary groups in an effort to assasinate President Zelenskyy, who has survived three attempts so far. This would be a clearly illegal action even in the context of war with it being notable that during the Second World War no nation went so low as to attempt the same.

Russia has blocked access to Facebook in its ongoing effort to prevent the news of the war and its attack upon its neighbor from reaching its citizens.  It earlier imposed fifteen year prison sentences as a penalty for reporteres going against the official line of Putin's government concerning the assault upon the neighboring country.

China blocked Premier League soccor coverage based on an expresed intent for teams to stand with Ukraine.

Remington and Federal are each providing 1,000,000 rounds of ammunition to Ukraine, gratus.

Italy has seized some yachts belonging to Russian oligarchs.

Soprano Anna Netrebko has resigned from the Metropolitan Opera after refusing to renounce Putin.  Netrebko is from the Russian city of Krasnodar, just east of Crimea.  Interestingly, the last name would indicate Ukranian heritage.

North Korea

The Stalin theme park of North Korea fired its ninth ballistic missle of the year, the second one since the Russian invasion of Ukraine started.  This isn't surprising, as nobody is paying any attention to the pathetic state during the current crisis.

Related Thread:

Friday, March 4, 2022

Wednesday, March 4, 1942. Counterstrikes

Today in World War II History—March 4, 1942: Two Japanese H8K flying boats bomb Pearl Harbor—no damage. Aircraft from USS Enterprise strike Marcus Island in South Pacific.

From Sarah Sundin's blog.

If you were fighting the war, of course, it was a horrible day. . . if fighting was going on, which it was all over the world. But in terms of huge events, well, it was just another day in the war in some ways.

Operation K, the flying boat raid, had significant aspirations but was a flop.  It didn't do much, other than to remind everyone that Hawaii was still within Japanese air range.

H8K.  This one was in its last moments later in the war, just before the U.S. Navy, which took this photo, shot it down.

The round trip flight engaged in by the two Japanese aircraft from the Marshall Islands was nearly 5,000 miles in extent.

Marcus Island is the easternmost island of the Japanese archipelago and is extremely isolated.   The US bombed it repeatedly during 1942 and 1943, but never occupied it.


The remote island was first discovered by the Portuguese in 1694.  They didn't make a specific recordation of the location of the island, however, and it was not sighted again until British/Australian mariner Bourn Russell spotted it in 1830, noting that it was not on his charts, which of course it was not.  It was next sighted by an American evangelical mission to the Hawaiian islands in 1864. The first effort to occupy it commenced by a private Japanese expedition in 1886.

The United States and Japan both claimed the island early on, and in 1902 the US dispatched a warship to enforce its claims, but withdrew when it found the island occupied by the Japanese and a Japanese warship patrolling nearby.  The Japanese withdrew the civilian population in 1933 and made the island a military installation with a weather station and an airstrip.

The island was transferred to the United States in 1952, but in 1968 the US gave it back but continued to occupy it, having a substantial radio station there, whose antenna can be seen in the photo posted above from 1987.  The Coast Guard occupied the island until 1993, and then it was transferred to the Japanese Self Defense Force.

Saturday March 4, 1922. Work at work.

A rather odd illustration graced the cover of Judge.

On the same day, Dr. Hubert Work was sworn in as Postmaster General, replacing William Hayes who went to work in the motion picture industry as its moral conscience.


Hayes was there for the event.


Work would later serve as Secretary of the Interior.