Sunday, August 7, 2022

Lex Anteinternet: The Candidates and Office Holders, how much are we entitled to know. Eye Planks.

Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.

Matthew 7:3-5

Lex Anteinternet: The Candidates and Office Holders, how much are we...: Earlier this past week, Wyoming's voters learned, if they're paying attention, a little about the personal life of a candidate that ...
We ran this just the other day, and then the WyoFile revealed:

August 7, 2022

WyoFile, the Trib reports, has revealed that a host of Wyoming candidates and political figures took PPP money in spite of their generally anti Federal Government positions. This includes Frank Eathorne, Robin Belinskey, Rex Rammell and Anthong Bouchard or their businesses.  There were more, but these were the ones for statewide offices that were notable due to their positions.

Harriet Hageman was not among them, but the WyoFile went deeper and noted that members of her family had.  A spokesman reacted accusing WyoFile of "journalistic malpractice". 

PPP money was in the form of loans, but generally they were loans that were subject to be forgiven and were more often than not.

Which gets back to our original point.

Indeed, that point was already sort of made in regard to Chuck Gray, who the news earlier revealed somehow exists on next to no reported income.  That does matter as right wing Republicans have a sort of rugged individualist, pull yourself up by your bootstraps, ideology, and if you are getting by without having to pull on those, your authenticity, as well as that of your point, is certainly in question.

And here we have something like that.

A whole host of candidates has been campaigning on the evils of the Federal government and its money.  But then they take it.  Earlier, Wyoming GOP head Frank Eathorne had been shown to take some substantial money from the Federal government in his livestock operation.  He declared that to have been a mistake and that he now eschews it. But it turns out that when PPP loans were there, the bulk of which have been forgiven, he was ready to take it as well.  And Rex Rammell, who is ready to expel Federal employees of some offices by force if he's elected Governor, which he will not be, didn't have to be forced into taking PPP money.

This gets to an interesting phenomenon that's evident in this race on all sorts of level of various candidates loudly proclaiming that the Federal government, and indeed all government, needs to get out of the way, unless they rely on the government somehow themselves, in which case that personal reliance is somehow fine.  Without getting into it too deeply, any candidate who is campaigning on the "hate the government" or "get the government out of the way" is really open to examination on this topic.  If they're backing a pet law, or rely on the government for enforcement of something that aids their personal interest, business, or well-being, well. . . . 

Indeed, there are entire industries in the state and nation which complain about regulation, but basically exist only because the country subsidizes them in one fashion or another. Agriculture gets slammed that way but really basically doesn't fit into this category, or at least not much, but other industries most definitely do.  We've dealt with it before, but we're so used to it, we can't recognize the subsidies but would be in a world of hurt if they were gone. For example, Wyoming couldn't pay for its highways and airports but for Federal funds, and it only just begins there.

And certain industries exist only due to Federal license, with those licenses having become more and more in the nature of private property over the years.  Work, in some fashion, at a family radio station?  Well that radio station exists only because the Federal government lets you treat it like property, rather than regulate it to keep it local, or open it up to bidding every few years.

Indeed, taking just one, radio licenses for commercial stations used to be subject to a set of regulations that, for competition purposes, basically required them to be local.  Not anymore.

Would Chuck Gray be for that?

In reading the article, the one anti-government crusader who didn't show up in the PPP list, as noted, was Harriet Hageman. Frankly, I thought the WyoFile article was a bit of a cheap shot, partially, in that regard, as it mentioned her husband's law firm, but that firm is a firm and the fact it took PPP money doesn't really say anything about him or her.  

Her family's ranching operations, on the other hand, taking PPP money. . . . 

Anyhow, Hageman is a lawyer, and she keeps campaigning on taking on the Federal government.  Mentioned in the list of Federal terribles are such entities as the U.S. Fish & Wildlife.  An article endorsing her by former Congressman Barbara Cubin cites that she's quick to sue.

Frankly, in many of these instances average Wyomingites would probably come down on the other side, if they knew the issues.  Agencies like the U.S. Fish & Wildlife help keep Wyoming what it is.

And Hageman hasn't limited herself to just matters such as that.  She represented Susan Gore in a lawsuit that included a claim against at least one local contractor.  Maybe the suit had merit, but we shouldn't really buy too much into the common lawyer propaganda that they only represent the innocent, just and virtuous.  A lawyer with a practice like that would starve.  Lawyers represent their clients and their interests.

The ultimate point on all of this is this.  At some point, a person has to be honest about these things, and a person can in fact be honest about taking government money while opposing it. That defense is, "well, this is the system and I have to operate within it, but I'll vote to take it down even if it hurts me."

And frankly, with some of these offices, that would mean basically destroying the highway system and wiping out airports.

Indeed, how far along on the "less government" path is anyone really willing to go?  Not all that far, I'd wager.  Wyoming didn't have driver's licenses until the 1950s.  Would we propose returning to a non license state of affairs?  Wyoming's liquor trade was unregulated right up into Prohibition, and the current licensure system only came about after Prohibition's repeal. Would we be willing to return to an unregulated liquor trade?  Wyoming was a pioneer in wildlife and hunting laws, but that means that there are laws. Would we want to go back to unrestricted taking of wildlife?

And on property "rights", they exist solely because the government says they do.  One candidate campaigning against the government is a significant landlord, an occupation that you actually can't have unless the government lets it happen.

Indeed, quite a few of the "anti-government" candidates that have a problem with the Federal government don't otherwise have a problem with the government at all. That shows in how they'd handle the Federal domain, they'd transfer it to Wyoming. Wyoming is a governmental body, rather obviously.

Of course, they feel that Wyoming would regulate things less than the Federal government does, which isn't all that much to start with.  Some of them would just transfer that domain to private landowners, with it often being the case that those in the agricultural sector think it would simply be given to them, rather than being sold to somebody with a rich hair dressing chain in New Jersey.

Which brings us to the point that most of us only feel the government is being too restrictive or intrusive if there's something we personally want to do that it's impinging on somehow.  Otherwise, we're fine with it.

Which also means that a person needs to be pretty careful what they wish for.

Friday, August 7, 1942. The Marines land on Gaudalcanal.

On this date in 1942 U.S. ground forces engaged in offensive actions in World War Two for the first time when U.S. Marines landed on Guadalcanal, Tulagi, and Florida islands in the British Solomon's.  The landing at Guadalcanal was comprised of the 1st Marine Division and numbered 11,000 men in strength.

Marines landing on Guadalcanal on August 7, 1942.

The degree to which this is truly momentous is sometimes lost. This event occurred just nine months after Pearl Harbor and even fewer, obviously, after Midway.  The hard fought campaign would ultimately involve 60,000 U.S. troops, about half that number of Japanese troops, and include both Marine and U.S. Army elements.  The goal was the simple one of retaking lost territory in the South Pacific.


The initial landing force was principally made up of Marines.  The initial landings saw the rapid fall of all of the objectives, save for Guadalcanal, the most substantial one.  The Japanese were on the offensive in New Guinea at the time and had rolled their advances to the doorstep of Australia.

Lt. Gen. Gott.

British Lt. Gen. William "Strafer" Gott was killed when his transport plane was shot down by German fighters.  He had just been appointed to command the British 8th Army.

Churchill had appointed Gott over objections of some of his advisors, who wished to see Bernard Law Montgomery appointed.  Anthony Eden had urged the appointment, as he had served with Gott in the First World War and had a high opinion of him.  According to at least one of Montgomery's advisors, Gott himself was desperately worn down by his prior commands prior to accepting this one.

His death would result in Montgomery's appointment.  Churchill went on to state that the "hand of God" had been involved in removing Gott, and it was, while a terrible tragedy for Gott and those in the airplane with him, a bizarrely fortuitous event for the British in elevating Montgomery.


Blog Mirror: Sergeant Presley: Photographs of Elvis’ Time with the Army

 

Sergeant Presley: Photographs of Elvis’ Time with the Army

Saturday, August 6, 2022

Best Posts of the Week of July 31, 2022

The best posts of July 31, 2022

Monday, July 31, 1922. Laddie Boy and his portrait.


Airborne




(For the item on French wine consumption over the decades).

The Candidates and Office Holders, how much are we entitled to know?



Earlier this past week, Wyoming's voters learned, if they're paying attention, a little about the personal life of a candidate that they otherwise probably know very little about.  More specifically, due to news reporting on former Secretary of State Max Maxfield filing an election claim against Representative Chuck Gray, pertaining to his dropped bid for Cheney's seat, we now know that Gray only reported around $10,000 in income from a recent tax year.  Maxfield's point is that his reported loan to himself makes very little sense for a many who has such a dismal income.

And, truly, that is odd.

What that points to is fairly obvious.  He has family or personal money in a fairly substantial amount.

Does that matter?

Well, maybe, maybe not.

It's worth noting that two of the nation's richest Presidents, Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Roosevelt, were champions of the poor.  Indeed, it's a rich irony of modern political life that the beloved Republican Theodore Roosevelt would have been regarded as a Socialist RINO by lots of today's Republicans.  But their wealth was hardly a secret at any point.

It's also worth noting that Donald Trump, the hero of the Republican far right, is also a very rich man, although we don't really know how rich, for whatever that's worth.

But none of that is the question. The question is do we really have a right to know these things?  I.e., The Roosevelt's wealth was not an accurate predictor of their political inclinations, so does this sort of thing even matter?

Well, it might.

Let's take the current Secretary of State race.  The Secretary of State is in charge of elections, as we know, but on a daily basis he's more involved with the relationship of businesses to the state.  Uniform Commercial Code filings, corporate registrations, etc., are the business of the Secretary of State.  

Indeed, at least two prior Secretaries of State have had huge impacts on corporate registrations in Wyoming, one massively encouraging out-of-state entities to incorporate here and another very much discouraging it.  The Limited Liability Company, now present all over the country, was a Wyoming invention that came out of Kathy Karpen's stint as Secretary of State.

A person with some relationship to business would presumably be the best occupation of that sort of position.  Elections are, quite frankly, nearly a side show with the office.

Gray has a BA/BS from the University of Pennsylvania from 2012.  More specifically, he's a product of the Wharton School of Business, one of the country's best business schools, which is coincidentally also where Donald Trump graduated from.  One of my cousins did as well.  According to a 2016 letter to the editor, at which time he was running for the state House of Representatives, he's single and an only child, and grew up in California.  He's associated with a series of media outlets (at least radio) owned by his father located in Natrona County, and according to the letter he came here to run them.  At one time he had a very right wing radio commentary show on one of the stations, although I've never heard it.  He's a Roman Catholic, which is publicly available information, but I knew it anyhow, as on rare occasion I've seen him at Mass.  I'll note it's rare not because he rarely attends, I don't think that's true at all, but because I don't attend any of the numerous Masses offered every weekend that he does.

Does any of that matter?

Well, it probably does, to some degree.  The Wharton degree is impressive, but it's also the case that he seemingly remains in what we might regard his tender years to some extent, for a position that requires some expertise with business on a practical level, or at least I'd argue that it does.  His primary opponent's qualifications include being a practicing lawyer, and being in the business of law (it is a business) for a decade or so.  She's been in the State Senate for about as long as Gray has been in the House.  She grew up in Riverton (and like all candidates with long roots here notes that she's a "fifth generation" Wyomingite).  She's also married.

It would seem pretty clear that qualification wise, Nethercott has Gray beat hands down.  Gray's only real campaign point is his view that the 2020 election was stolen, to add to it, and he seems to be part of the GOP right wing strategy to seize Secretary of State offices for the far right.  He's been showing 2,000 Mules at his events.1

That actually gets to the religion point.  I don't know Nethercott's religious views, and in a normal year, I wouldn't really care.  I'll be perfectly frank that if a Shiite Muslim ran for the office who had built up a good personal business and held degrees in accounting and law, I'd vote for him or her, and you can substitute the "Shiite Muslim" there for Buddhist, Hindu, Shinto or what have you, for this office.  But I do note that if you have a known religious adherence, and you are seemingly departing from it, that raises questions.

Catholicism takes an extremely dim view of lying, and for a person in a public office if it's a significant lie it can be a mortal sin. All mortal sins can be forgiven, but for a person in that sort of role, doing what you can to rectify the impact of the sin is necessary.  It may be that Gray really believes the fibs he's telling about the election, or at least implying, but that alone would raise real questions about his fitness for office.  If he doesn't believe them or is willfully fooling himself, that's another matter.

What about being single?

I can't see that it matters for this office at all, nor does being married.

I would note that for other offices it sort of might.  I'm not going ot delve into it but on the GOP races family values are frequently cited, and the GOP has made strong points about being pro family and pro traditional definition of family. That's all fine and provides a reason to vote for them.  Social issues matter.2

Yeah, these couples again.  The point is that if you are pro family, but lack one in this sense, it at least raises some questions.

But if you are a strong proponent of family and are lacking some traditional aspects of one, that raises questions.  They are questions that can be answered in ways that satisfy voters or not, I suspect, some of which may be downright painful to provide.  If you frequently mention family, your love of family and children, it's legitimate to ask why you don't have any.  A life that seemingly was principally devoted to work in which children were absent may reflect a personal tragedy of some sort, or an intentional avoidance of children. Answering one way implies something quite a bit different from another.  Yes, it's personal, maybe painful, but it's personal in the same way that advocating for prohibition while being a closet drinker, or advocating for banning abortion and then having one, or advocating for gun control while keeping guns yourself, etc., etc. are.

What about residence claims?

I mentioned that just above, twice really, and this is one topic that candidates bring up constantly themselves.  Candidates whose families have very long histories here always mention it.  When Cheney first ran, those running against her mentioned it, and her defenders, many of whom are now her detractors, had some pretty fanciful answers for why she was in fact a native.3  Many of the same people who now accuse her of being a Virginian were really ready to ignore that up until now, but will cite that her main opponent, Harriet Hageman, has a family that's been in the state for "four generations".4  As noted, Nethercott cites her family beating out Hageman by an entire generation.5 6

Does this matter?

Well, it may and may not, once again, depending on up what that might really mean.

I'll be frank that I’m pretty nativist.  But I certainly don't think you have to have a family going back to the retreat of the Ice Sheet here in order to run.  I'd prefer candidates to be from Wyoming, and indeed that's one of the reasons I wasn't keen on Cheney the first time she ran.  But I don't think this has to go back two, four or more generations, or really even any.  I'd also note that this is the case, only Lynette Gray Bull has any right to be in the race at all.

Indeed, what I think it really boils down to is being "native to this place" in the way that Wendell Berry referred to it, quoting Wes Jackson.  Some people not from here, are, and some from here, aren't.

Indeed, going further, what I think that opens up in the topic of provincialism and carpetbaggerism.

Charges of being a carpetbagger are easier to look at.  A carpetbagger is, of course, somebody who moves into a location just to take advantage of it for personal gain without having any real connection to it.

Cheney was open to that criticism the first time she ran, but while in office she pretty steadfastly represented what most Wyomingites held to be their interests most of the time, and was loved by the GOP.  In being willing to sacrifice her career for the Constitution, which she clearly is, she's immune to any charges of being a carpetbagger at this point.

This is much less clear in the cases of Chuck Gray and Gubernatorial candidate Rex Rammell.  It's easy to wonder about Gray, who is still a political toddler in some ways, as he was only here for two years when he first ran for office in 2014.  And the fact that his work connection with the case is thin has to make a person wonder.  Rammell, for his part, is originally from Idaho, where he also participated in a series of gadfly campaigns.  Normally, quite frankly, a person from the region can't really be accused of being a carpetbagger as they're from the region, which is extremely similar to being from the state.  Rammell is an Idaho native.  He moved in to the state in 2012, just like Gray, citing a veterinarian position he wanted to take as the reason why, but after a string of failed campaigns in Idaho launching off on new ones in Wyoming does make a person wonder.

It doesn't make a person wonder as much, however, as it does when the Idahoan accuses a person actually from Wyoming as being inelgible to run, as he had a Marine Corps career that took him out of the state, and who takes a shot at Governor Gordon as he was born in New York as his mother happened to be there when she went into labor, both of which Rammell has done.7

A person might wonder about Anthony Bouchard, who is from Florida originally, but he seems to have had a public life in the state prior to having a political one, which you really can't say about Gray or Rammell, but he points to something else that is disturbing to natives, which is the influences of migrants into the state.

Migrants into the state have always been a feature of Wyoming's demographics, but it hasn't always worked the exact same way.  Frankly regional migration has always been very common and from this prospective looking at Wyoming as part of an overall region is helpful. Nebraskans, Coloradans, Montanans, Dakotans, etc., come into the state, and we go there, pretty routinely.  This is part of the natural mix of demographics of the state, especially one that has borders that look like a big box.

The state has always taken in migrants from long distances too, but often these same people flowed back out when the economy turned.  But more recently the state began to take in the very wealth from elsewhere who very often have radically different views than natives or regional natives do, and to add to that the state has taken in an influx of people from what, for lack of a better way to put it, had been part of the Confederacy at one time, or part of the Rust belt, or from the Pacific Coast.

Wyoming's politics had traditionally been conservative, but middle of the road as well, if that can make sense.  To a large degree, the central defining feature of much of the Wyoming view traditionally has been "I don't care what you do, as long as you leave me alone."  Wyomingites were pretty laissez-faire on social issues for the most part, and pretty patriotic.  Wyoming of 1982, rather than 2022, would have been shocked and appalled by Donald Trump.  In a state in which up to 50% of the population is from somewhere else, it's folly to believe that the state's current politics isn't a reflection of the politics of elsewhere, right now, to a pretty strong degree.

As a strong recent example of this, the amendment to the state constitution back in the 90s to prevent Obamacare from telling us what to do with medical treatment probably wouldn't have passed in the 70s or 80s.  And efforts to restrict abortion in the legislature, and I do oppose abortion, fell flat in the 70s, 80s, and 90s.  Something culturally changed to bring us where we now are.

As part of that, big money has come in from various sources to fund really extreme right wing politics, which was coincident with a migration in of people who held very strong far right views. One old time Wyoming politician publically stated that this had corrupted the state's politics when he got out.

Probably nothing symbolizes this better than Susan Gore and Foster Freiss.  Gore is an import with Goretex money and has been a major factor in the Wyoming Liberty Group.  The group's views are really imported ones, not ones that rose up here locally.  Freiss, as a politician, was a good example of the same thing. Extremely wealthy and very conservative in a non Wyoming sense.  When he ran, his campaign struck me like something out of Alabama, more than Wyoming.

Of course, that doesn't mean that nativism doesn't have its own problems when taken to excess.  We've really been seeing that recently as well.

Truth be known, Wyoming has a very long and pronounced history of our politicians having moved in. This doesn't mean that every politician has moved in, but more than we might suppose.  Certainly, early in the state's history this was practically the rule for higher office.  Francis E. Warren, for example, didn't grow up here.

Being from here does, or rather might, given you insights you'd otherwise lack if you didn't.  I've thought for some time that if you haven't lived through a couple of petroleum depressions, you really don't know anything about the state.  And if you don't identify with the land itself, you aren't qualified in my view to run.  But the claims about being a "x" generation Wyomingite have a danger in that to a certain degree certain people almost assume that this makes you a type of royalty.  

Indeed, just because your ancestors homesteaded in 1898 doesn't mean that they were benighted souls of Arthurian Legend. It probably means they were dirt poor.  Rich people didn't homestead.  And being part of one of Wyoming's traditional occupations means something, but it doesn't mean everything, particularly if you aren't doing it.  "Grew up on a ranch" tends to mean that you aren't ranching anymore.



Indeed, this gives rise to what we'll coin the John Wayne Effect, which is that I dress like a cowboy and claim a tie to ranching, I must be just like the Ethan character in The Searchers, as that's just like John Wayne was really like, right?

Ummmm. . . . 

This may sound silly, but there's all sorts of people who run around assuming that John Wayne was who he portrayed in the movies.  No, he was an actor.  Yes, he bought a ranch at some point with his movie money, but he wasn't actually a 19th Century cowboy, but a 20th Century actor.  And to make the point all the more, he wasn't a Marine Corps Sergeant in the Second World War, either.  He didn't even see service in the war.

This really shows up this time of year as people will cite they're "from a ranching family" or in some cases appear in campaign photos like gunfighters or cowboys.  Gunfighters, I'll note, is a new one.  Cowboys isn't.  

Now, don't get me wrong, dressing like a rancher is okay if you like to dress that way, but if you appear in campaign ads dressed like a cowboy and with ranching things and stuff, you probably better really be one.  Otherwise, it suggests, or should suggest, that you somehow want to keep your real means of making a living sort of secret or are somehow not too proud of it.  Or, there's some disconnect between your means of making a living and how you imagine your real character, probably identifying with the "rugged individualist".

Well, I've punched cattle. . . and still do, and I love it.  But it's hard work, truly.

So what of all of this?  

I guess these things cut both ways, but what it comes down to in the end is the extent to which you really identify with the state on an existential basis. And by that I mean the whole state.  If you can't walk into the Hines General Store in Ft. Washakie and identify with the occupants there, and their problems, at least a little, you probably aren't qualfied to be there.  And by the same extension, if you can't walk into the Hines General Store without looking like a goofball to those there, you probably ought not to be running.

We'll call that the Hines General Store Test.

Footnotes.

1.  As an aside, all of this makes Gray's early Congressional race ads in which he appeared at oilfield locations wearing a hard hat pretty silly, really.  Gray isn't from here, hasn't been here that long, and has never worked that kind of job in so far as we can tell.   Those were of course supposed to show his support for the oil industry, but he hasn't even been here long enough to experience what its like when we have a real industry collapse.

2.  Or at least they should, as we note later on in this essay, to a large degree in Wyoming's history they really have not.

3.  I was told by one of them, at the time, that hte fact that her mother had gone to grade school in Wyoming made Liz a native even if she wasn't born and raised here.

I'd bet dollars to donuts now that the same persion was her fan all the way into 2020 and then now probably calls her a "RINO".

4. And some of those same people are supporters of Chuck Gray, who is not a native and who hasn't been here all that long.

5.  It may be just me, but I wonder how people tally the count for generations.  My family has been in the region since the 1860s or so, but that's only three generations in reality in terms of families.  I guess that may say something about my family marrying late or something, but four or five generations is a really long time for Wyoming and its a little hard to add up.  In pondering it, however, part of my wife's family which arrived later would make her the fourth generation, and one that arrived in the region earlier would make her something like the sixth or seventh.

I'll note that some people take liberties with this, although I'm not saying any of the current politicians do, in counting a prior ancestor as a generation even if their kids packed up and moved to California, where your parents were born, and then you moved back in.

6.  It's also worth noting that the Democrat Lynette Gray Bull has the best claim to ancient ancestor status in the state and region, as she's a Native American.

7.  Both of Gordon's parents were ranchers in Kaycee Wyoming and he grew up on the ranch.  As an odd fact, Gordon is the grand nephew of Gen. George S. Patton.

Blog Mirror: A SHORT HISTORY OF U.S. FIRE LOOKOUTS

 

A SHORT HISTORY OF U.S. FIRE LOOKOUTS

Thursday, August 6, 1942. Treason.

Detroit restaurant owner Max Stephan was sentenced to death for aiding an escaped German prisoner of war. The sentence, which was commuted to life in prison by President Roosevelt, was the first such example since the Whiskey Rebellion.

German forces took Tikhoretsk and Armavir in their advance in the southern Soviet Union.

The Germans murdered several thousand Jewish residents of the Zdzieciol Ghetto in the Dzyatlava Massacre.  The city was a Polish one, although it is now in Belorussian.

Friday, August 5, 2022

Wednesday, August 5, 1942. Vichy Guilt.

Today in World War II History—August 5, 1942: 80 Years Ago: Churchill appoints Lt. Gen. William Gott to replace Gen. Claude Auchinleck over British Eighth Army in North Africa.
So reports Sarah Sundin.

Churchill visited El Alamein. He'd flown into Cairo the day prior.

More ominously, she also notes:
Antisemitism in France had a long history.  Tragically, during the war, it began to come out in events such as this. Vichy was still an independent state, and it was cooperating accordingly in one of hte most horrific crimes in history.

In France, the Japanese, yes Japanese, submarine I-30 arrived in Lorient with a load of mica and shellac, and blueprints for the highly successful Type 91 aerial torpedo.  The crew was met and greeted by Admirals Raeder and Donitz.  Ultimately, the crew visited Berlin and its commander, Commander Endo, met Hitler.

It would carry radar equipment for Japan on the way back, but it didn't make it, being sunk by a British mine on its return trip.

France, according to Sundin, also began to ration wine at the rate of two liters per person per week.  There are about five glasses of wine in a liter, according to the Internet, so that probably was a pretty significant restriction in a country in which wine still provided a significant number of daily calories.

Beyond that, however, as late as the 1950s French wine consumption was so large that the French government, concerned with the health impacts of excessive drinking, began a campaign to encourage the French to limit their consumption to one liter per day.

Yup, one liter per day.

Wine consumption has dropped way off in France. As late as the 1980s, more than half of all French adults drank at least one glass of wine daily.  That figure is now 17%, and 38% of the French don't drink.  This huge cultural shift is attributed to a wide variety of factors.

Dutch Queen Wihelmina visited the White House and addressed Congress.

Anthony Eden announced that the British would not feel bound by the 1938 Munich Agreement post-war, which seems rather obvious.

Friday, August 5, 1922. Blood and Sand.

 


Blood and Sand released on this day in 1922.  I've never seen it, but it's a well known turgid drama about an aspiring bullfighter.

The Saturday magazines were out.


The Saturday Evening Post went with an Arctic theme, perhaps because it was August and people were hoping for cooler things in those pre air conditioning days.

Judge went to the beach, with an illustration entitled "Dear Tracks".


The Country Gentleman chose a radio listening baby.


The Ladies Home Journal chose an 18th Century theme, "Salt Water Taffey".


Colliers went with an oddly uniformed motorcycle policeman.

Foothill Agrarian: To Know a Place

Foothill Agrarian: To Know a Place:   A conversation with my friend Hailey Wilmer last week started me thinking (again) about what is required to really know a place. Dr. Wilme...

AT-802U: More than light attack.


Those in farm country will recognize this as the Air Tractor, the giant crop duster.  It's also used as a fire bomber.

The US just adopted this for Special Operations Command.

Thursday, August 4, 2022

Footprints dating back 12,000 years have been found in salt flats at Hill Air Force Base in Utah.

More evidence showing that human beings had spread well into the continent much earlier than had only recently been supposed.

The area was, at the time, a wetland. The footprints appear to be those of women and children.

Tuesday, August 4, 1942. Bracero's

In a move with enormous long term consequences, the Bracero Program was initiated on this day in 1942 with the U.S. execution of the Mexican Farm Labor Act.

Bracero's, a term meaning manual laborers.

The act, designed to relieve wartime labor shortages, particularly in the agricultural sector, allowed controlled, and actually relatively small, numbers of Mexican agricultural workers into the country.  It was designed to make up for wartime shortages, and it accordingly exempted the laborers from conscription, which aliens in the U.S. were otherwise subject to.  It also provided for a basic minimum living wage and housing conditions.

Long term, it helped acclimate the American agricultural section to the concept of migrant labor, which was already there to some extent.  Following the war, the numbers of Americans employed in the type of labor that bracero's occupied decreased greatly and even during the war the program was expanded to include railroad workers, something Hispanic Americans were already employed in to a significant degree.  

It would not be true that the correlation of the shift of the American seasonal agricultural sector to Mexican migrant labor was 100% due to the Bracero program by any means, but it was a factor in it.  Other factors included Americans becoming used to higher wages in other types of jobs due to the Second World War and moving for higher wages, something that also had a permanent impact on the agricultural sector.

The German 4th Panzer Army crossed the Aksay River in the drive on Stalingrad.  Soviet general Yermenko flew to the city in a C-47, where he was met by Commissar Nikita Khrushchev.

The British accused Mahatma Gandi and the Indian National Congress Party of working towards appeasement of the Japanese following a raid on the party's headquarters and seizure of papers there.

Sarah Sundin reports:
Today in World War II History—August 4, 1942: First P-38 aerial combat and victory in the Pacific. Movie premiere of musical Holiday Inn[SS1] , starring Bing Crosby & Fred Astaire.
Holiday Inn is a well known film, but I've never seen it.

She also reports that the first trainload of Belgian Jews arrived at Auschwitz as the European tragedy expanded.

Friday, August 4, 1922. Parabellum


An ROTC contingent was in camp, receiving training from the U.S. Army.  The tanks in these photographs were the World War One Renault pattern, one of the better tanks of the First World War.


While I'm not completely certain, I think the instructor depicted above is actually wearing hearing protection while his student shoots a Browning machine gun.  Of interest, in spite of the lessons of the Great War, none of the men in these photographs, and they're all men, are wearing helmets.






On the same day, a photographer took photos of the Coast Guard Cutter Seneca.




In an ongoing war, the Irish Free State landed 1,500 troops at three ports in County Kerry to take the Munster region from the Irish Republican Army.  The IRA was pretty rapidly losing ground in the conventional fight.

At 6:25 p.m. Eastern Time, during the internment of Alexander Graham Bell, all telephone service in the United States was suspended for one minute.

The Aliens Decree was issued by the Bolshevik government of the Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic basically allowing everyone over 14 to become Soviet Citizens, and making anyone below that age Soviet Citizens, save for those who had opposed the Soviets or who failed to apply by the end of the  year.

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Airborne

I flew this week for the first time since COVID hit.

Before that, I used to travel a lot for work.  

I'm not a natural traveler, so it's never been something that I really enjoyed, even though I usually enjoy seeing any place that I go to.  That is, I don't enjoy the process of traveling much, and I don't enjoy thinking about traveling.  My father was the same way, and nearly all of the long distance traveling he'd done had been due to the Air Force.

Occupational traveling, so to speak.

Most of my traveling has been that way as well.

This is 2022, and to be accurate, the last time I flew somewhere was in 2019.  I can't really recall the last time I flew anywhere, or to where, but the mostly likely spot would be Denver, as I used to fly to Denver and back in a day routinely.  COVID ended that as when COVID hit, it dropped air travel down to nothing for obvious reasons, and when it came back, the number of flights in and out of here locally were cut significantly.  The red eye to Denver was a casualty of that. The one to Salt Lake also went away, although I think that was even prior to that.

I used to also fly a lot to Texas for depositions.  I'm not sure of when I last did that, but it was before COVID.   Zoom took over most of that, so it's rarely done now.

One major thing I worked on should have had trips to South Carolina, Arizona and Illinois, but did not.  All of those were done via Zoom.  It worked out okay, I guess, but I can't say that I'm a fan even now.  It's good enough, however, that you acclimate yourself to it and begin to believe that it's good enough

Anyhow, some travel is slowly coming back, and earlier this week I flew to Oklahoma City.

Oklahoma City.

I've been to OKC before, the first time in 1982 when an airliner discharged me there after having taken off from Cheyenne.  Their terminal was much more primitive, by my recollection, at the time, and we did the classic old-fashioned walk down airliner stairs, which is seemingly a rarity now, across the tarmac and into the terminal, and then on to a bus, which went to Ft. Sill.

More recently, and in different circumstances, I've flown to Denver and boarded a large Boeing airliner.  Based upon another one of our blogs, the last time I was there was in 2014.  On that trip I went with two other lawyers, one of whom I knew really well, and it was a fun trip. We flew from OKC to Houston after that, that time on a small commuter jet.  Since that time, he's passed away, having only been retired for a year or so when he became very ill and died.

As noted, we flew from Denver to OKC in a big airliner on that occasion.

Not this time.  

Locally I boarded a Bombardier CRJ200 and then, to my surprise, in Denver boarded a second CRJ200.

Boarding the CRJ200 in Denver.

I'm not a huge fan of the CRJ200, although it's better than boarding a twin-engined turboprop.  Looking it up, I see where production of the CRJ200 ceased in 2006 and that may partially explain it.  I've never been on one that was really new, and they show it.   Back in 06, locally, you probably boarded a turboprop.

On the ground, the stewardess assured us the plane had been thoroughly cleaned, but we were given wipes.  I didn't use mine.  I'm getting pretty fatalistic about COVID 19, although I'm zealous on the vaccines and boosters.  Some folks did use them, and I can't blame them. The plane smelled vaguely antiseptic.

The stewardess in Denver, upon taking off, warned us the flight was going to be turbulent.  The last times I flew, in 2019, they were doing that too, with the same result.  It wasn't at all.  I'm okay with that, but I wonder what brought about the hypersensitivity to warning of turbulence.  

She was also pretty blunt and somewhat familiar in her tone, which is a change from what had been the norm.

It was a smooth ride all the way to OKC.

Getting off the plane was hot.  That was the same as it was in 1982.

So the first change noted.

I never would have expected a flight from Denver to OKC on a CRJ200.  Are they trying to run smaller planes now as fewer people are flying?  I wasn't the only one surprised, the guy sitting next to me remarked, "I thought for Oklahoma City they would have used a bigger plane".

The trip back was more remarkable, but not in good ways.

First of all, I'd moved my flight up by two days, due to a big change in what I was doing there.  I didn't pay that much attention to the closeness of the connection in Denver.  I used to always do that.  It was extremely right.

Concluding my business in OKC I had to rush, by foot, back to the hotel and turned my right ankle something fierce.  As a high school student, I turned it severely, and it's never really been the same, although it rarely causes me problems.  I injured it very severely a second time, probably about fifteen years ago or so.  So it'll turn.

It's still really hurting.

Added to that, some weeks ago, I somehow injured my right elbow.  I haven't gone in for attention to it, but it really hurts.  

I've never flown injured before, but it's miserable.

When I got on the plane in OKC, an elderly woman was seated next to me.  I rarely pay any attention to the passengers seated next to me, but she was hard not to notice right from the onset.  For one thing, she was extremely nervous getting seated.  She even remarked to me, "you'd think I'd never flown before".

Once on the plane, she was absolutely convinced that there was some trouble with the airplane, as the pilots were not in the cabin.  As luck would have it, a pilot from another airline was seated in the set in front of her, and hence nearly me, flying back to his home in Denver.  That meant he was subject to continual questions, including "can you fly the plane if they don't come?"

She wasn't kidding, and actually assumed that he could.

The pilots weren't in the cabin as the airplane, we learned, had been on the ground in Denver all day and the interior was very hot.  They were outside as there's a way that the plants can be hooked up to external air conditioning, and they were working on that project.  The plane never did get cool, but it was tolerable.

The same type of plane on the way down was fine, I thought, but two colleagues who also traveled down, at different times, both indicated that their planes were hot.  One volunteered the opinion that CRJ200s were simply a hot aircraft.  I'm not sure.

At any rate, we got rolling on the tarmac and the stewardess announced we'd lost some time, but would try to make it up, particularly as there were afternoon thundershowers expected in Denver.  As it was, we left twenty minutes late, and then again announced that there were afternoon thundershowers expected, and it might be rough.

The lady next to me was really now worried about her plane being late in Denver.  In spite of the instructions of the crew to turn off cell phones, she didn't, and texted the entire flight and took placed a phone call using the hands-free option, making those of us near her unwilling eavesdroppers.  From time to time, she leaned up to the traveling pilot and asked if we'd make it to Denver on time.  He always assured her that we would.  In the row behind me, in the meantime, there were two gentlemen from a foreign land speaking in their native language so loudly that I'm sure it could have been heard back home, wherever that was.

I don't know if we landed on time or not, but we were delayed on the tarmac as they looked for stairs and then had a hard time hooking them up.  By the time they opened the cabin door, I had 20 minutes to make it to my next flight, on a different concourse.  When they opened up the doors, the stewardess, as they now do, asked if anyone had a "tight" connection, and the lady next to me said she did. The pilot immediately said "two hours, you do not".  

I did, and stated that I did. They let me go.

I sped walked through the terminal, concourse A to B with the train in between, on my injured ankle, making it just as they were boarding my plane.  Amazingly, they were loading my baggage as I got on.

That's pretty impressive, really.

The final plane was a CRJ700.  They made them up until 2020, and they're a little bigger. Better yet, the exit row actually has legroom.


Overall observations?  I don't like the smaller planes for longer trips, but who would?  I guess I can't blame them for switching to them.  I suspect fewer people are traveling for any reason.  

And it's easy to forget the manners and habits of traveling, even after just a short couple of years break.  I mean that for myself as much as anyone else.

Monday, August 3, 1942. Supplying Malta.

Today in World War II History—August 3, 1942: Lt. Cdr. Mildred McAfee is named the first director of the WAVES, becomes the first female officer in the US Naval Reserve.
From Sarah Sundin's blog.

The British launched Operation Pedestal, a naval operation designed to provide supplies to besieged Malta. The degree to which Malta was in desperate straights for much of 1941 and 1942 is often forgotten in the story of the war, as is the fact that the naval contest there was for a long time more evenly matched than we might otherwise remember.



Thursday, August 3, 1922. Things cheesy.

While the LoC information doesn't identify anything more than the title, a K. J. Matheson was an employee of the Department of Agriculture at the time who was an expert on cheese.  He wrote several scholarly treatments on the same. This is likely a device to shave a cheese wheel.  Photograph from this day in 1922.  Note how this would never pass muster in a modern lab or workshop of any kind due to the lack of protective devices.
 

A New York radio station, WGY, introduced a weekly serial series, the first to do so.

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

Blog Mirror: Is Biden too old?

 An interesting essay by 76 year old Robert Reich:

Is Biden too old?

Wednesday, August 2 1922. Work and play.

 



Wednesday, August 2, 1922. Death of Alexander Graham Bell

 On this day in 1922, Alexander Graham Bell died on his estate in Nova Scotia.


Bell was born in Scotland and later immigrated to Canada with his family.  In his early inventive years, he lived in the United States and obtained American citizenship after his marriage.  In his later years, he kept residences in the U.S. and Canada, but tended to favor his home in Nova Scotia, which had originally been a summer home.  He was 75 at the time of his death.  He is, of course, most famously noted for the telephone.

Monday, August 1, 2022

Saturday, August 1, 1942. Unintended Consequences

Today in World War II History—August 1, 1942: The American Federation of Musicians begins a yearlong strike . Permanente Hospital opens in Oakland, CA, for employees of Kaiser Shipyards in Richmond.

So reports Sarah Sundin's blog.

She also reports that the Japanese set up a puppet government in Burma on this day.

I had no idea of the yearlong American Federation of Musicians strike over royalties by recording companies.  Union members were not allowed to record for a commercial recording company, although they could appear on the radio. The strike took several months to have an effect due to a backlog of recordings, but it ultimately did, and the full strike lasted until 1944.

The strike did not affect vocalists, who continued to record.  This resulted in an increase of vocalist's popularity, and it became one of the contributing factors to the decline of the big bands.

Dealt with elsewhere, the Permanente Hospital item reflected a shift in how healthcare was being provided to workers that would accelerate during World War Two, giving rise to the current insurance based American healthcare system.

Sunday, July 31, 2022

Monday, July 31, 1972. Operation Motorman

The British carried out Operation Motorman on this day in 1972, reoccupying those areas of Northern Ireland controlled by residents and/or the Irish Republican Army.

The operation was a success and reduced violence in the north significantly, although it didn't end it. 

Friday, July 31, 1942. More Case Blue confusion. Canada establishes the Wrens. Marines depart to invade Guadalcanal.


From Sarah Sundin's blog

Today in World War II History—July 31, 1942: Germans cross River Don in Ukraine. Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service is established; 7000 will serve in the WRCNS as Wrens.

Canada had been reluctant to bring women into naval service.

FWIW, a relative of mine served in the Wrens during the war, even though it had already taken women into the army and the RCAF. For that reason, the Wrens were actually established slightly after the WAVES.

As a perhaps slightly salacious side note, starting in 1943 the Wrens started publishing their own newspaper, the Tiddly Times.  The name came from a British seams nickname for something extra to decorate uniforms, but that was an odd choice of titles for more than one reason.

As a note, it's interesting the extent to which we're reading of the Germans as aggressors trying to conquer the same lands that the Russians are now attempting to conquer 80 years later.

Regarding Case Blue, Hitler reversed his recent order which had taken the 4th Panzer Army away from the attack on Stalingrad and reassigned it, reversing its direction, and creating additional confusion.

The 1st Marine Divisions embarked on US and Australian ships for the invasion of Guadalcanal.    US aircraft bombed Japanese airfields on the island.

Monday, July 31, 1922. Laddie Boy and his portrait.


 

Lex Anteinternet: And the Trigger Law is Stayed. What Judaism actually holds.

Lex Anteinternet: And the Trigger Law is Stayed.: Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: Lawsuit filed over Wyoming's abo... : Lex Anteinternet: Lawsuit filed over Wyoming's abortion re...

From that article:

Some peculiar arguments were apparently made to the Court, I'd note, but the extent to which they figured in the Court's decision is unclear.  One party argued that the fact a party seeking an abortion might have to travel was apparently argued to raise constitutional issues, but it frankly isn't clear how that would be true.  A Jewish plaintiff argued that the statute infringed on her religious rights as Judaism, she said, permits abortion (I'm not sure if that's actually universally true) and, according to her, in some instances requires it.  On that latter point, I didn't hear it developed as an argument, but at least generally, I highly doubt that's true.

In today's Tribune, an article by a local Rabbi points out in great detail that, in fact, the Jewish religion is pro-life and does not sanction abortion except in limited circumstances to save the life of the mother.

I had doubted the comments made by that plaintiff and based upon the Rabbi's comments, the Wyoming law went further in allowing abortion than Judaism traditionally has.

The Best Posts of the Week of July 24, 2022.

 The best posts of the week of July 24, 2022

Cliffnotes of the Zeitgeist XXXVI. The Lying edition









Saturday, July 30, 2022

Mystery Lake Fish Stocking

Sunday July 30, 1922. Traffic

 

July 30, 1922. From Westchester County Archives and Records Center in Elmsford, New York. - Bronx River Parkway Reservation, The Bronx to Kensico Dam, White Plains, Westchester County, NY.

The Irish Army took Tipperary.

Today In Wyoming's History: July 29, 2020. Pete Williams retires.

Today In Wyoming's History: July 292022  Pete Williams, Casper, Wyoming native, retired from his long time role as the Justice reporter for NBC news.



Williams had a very long career which stretched back to radio in Casper, starting off at KATI.  From there he went to KTWO radio and television.  In 1986, however, his career took a much different turn when he became a press spokesman and legislative assistant to then Congressman Dick Cheney.  He followed Cheney in that role into the Defense Department when he became Secretary of Defense.  He went to work for NBC in 1993.