Thursday, September 21, 2023

Friday, September 21, 1923. Oklahoma standoff, Lee's Ferry, Coolidge Press Conference, Dr. Fidel Pagés.

The Colorado River was photographed at Lee's Ferry.


Things were getting worse in the standoff between the Governor and the Legislature in Oklahoma.


.President Coolidge delivered an address to the Press.

I am reminded that when I came here I did a good deal of wondering whether I would be able to be helpful to the members of the press in these conferences that we have, and especially as to whether I wouldn’t find it more or less of a bore on my part and, perhaps, not particularly pleasant. I haven’t found it that way at all. In fact, I have come to the conclusion that I rather look forward with pleasure to having you come in twice a week, in order that I may talk to you, give you a little of the idea I may have of what the Government is trying to do, and satisfy you, insofar as I can, on the questions that you ask.

I am reminded too that my boys have returned back to school. They are just such boys as some of you have, I have no doubt. I hope that they can remain there at school without much of anything in the way of publicity. When they are here anything that they can do to be helpful, or that we can do, we are glad to do but I sent them up to Mercersburg, which is a very excellent school. They have always been in the public schools at Northampton and would have been there now, had we remained in Massachusetts, but there is no one in Northampton now, but my housekeeper. I wanted them to be under more supervision than that, so I sent them up there in order that they might be out of Washington and have that opinion, which I think boys are entitled to have, of privacy in their school affairs. Dr. Irving has been very helpful to them up there, and I presume that if you make any application to him, or any of your associates, to get any story about the boys up there, he will have to tell you that we very much prefer that they be not subjected to publicity while they are there.

Now I have several inquiries here – more than I do sometimes.

The veteran inquiry about the Governors’ Conference. I have practically determined that I shall adopt the time when the Governors are meeting in their annual conference, which is in the middle of October. I have adopted that as a result of some communications that I have had from Governors, indicating that that would meet their convenience, and that it would be of very much greater assistance to them, than should we call it at any other time.

Q. Where do they meet?

A. They meet in Indianapolis. I think it is the 16th or 15th of Oct.

Q. The meeting will be after that?

A. I am not sure yet whether it will be right after or right before. I am under the impression now that it will be more convenient if we have it immediately following.

Q. Do we understand that they will come here or you go there?

A. Oh, no. I shall not go there. The conference will be here.

I have several inquiries about an extra session of Congress, Nothing new has developed on that. I have already expressed to you quite a good many times that I couldn’t see any reason at the time I was speaking, nor do I now, for calling an extra session. There are many questions to come before Congress but I think, so far as they have been presented to me, they will be able to wait. Now as I said before, I don’t want to foreclose a session, and should it be disclosed to me that on account of some condition Congress might render a great public service by coming into session earlier than about eight weeks from now, I will take that instance up and decide it when it comes. At present, I don’t see any reason for an extra session.

An inquiry about the Oklahoma situation. So far as I know, there have been no representations made to Washington in relation to that situation, and an inquiry as to whether there is any Federal observation being made on it – not any that I know of. It wouldn’t be necessary to do it from Washington, of course, because the Executive is represented there by the Marshal and the United States District Attorney, as he is in every other jurisdiction, and should there be any violation of the laws of the U. S., why, of course, that would be the tribunal before which said violations should be brought.

Regarding the shipping board policy. I have no new policy about that. It really isn’t the business of the executive, as I understand it, under the law to try to formulate a policy for the Shipping Board. I am glad at all times to confer with, different departments, give them the benefit of any judgment that I may have or any information that may come to me, and assist them in every possible way. The Shipping Board has certain directions under the law for carrying on the shipping business of the U. S. to – generally speaking to try and get into private hands as soon as possible and to liquidate it. The plan that they had appealed to me, especially because they represented it to me, and it was my judgment that it was, perhaps, a first step and the best step that we could take towards private ownership and private operation. It has appeared that it isn’t possible to put it int o effect under the present statute. I haven’t conferred with the Board yet. I got that opinion from the Attorney General yesterday, I think – today has been Cabinet day. I am going to confer with Chairman Parley or any other members of the Board very soon, and see if I can help in any way. I don’t know whether they will desire legislation about it. Of course, one of the main elements of their plan was that it could be put int o operation without the mediation of Congressional action, that it could be put into operation immediately. That was the essential of it. Whether they think they want to pursue some other plan, if it is necessary to secure legislation, I do not know. Of course the Board had the plan that was explained in the Shipping Bill last year and which was debated in the Senate, but never came to a final vote. I suppose that represents the idea that the Shipping Board has of the kind of legislation they would like to have, rather than forming another, but whether they think it advisable to do anything about that legislation in the coming session is something I Couldn’t give you any definite opinion about now.

An inquiry also about Mr. Ahister and his conference with me. That leads me to say a general word about matters of this kind. Of course, the people that come here to see the President come because they have something that they want to lay before him. Something they want to tell him. Not because they expect to get information from me. That being so, I give them the opportunity, insofar as I can, to tell me what it is that they have in mind. Very much as you come in and get information from me, not by all talking to me, but by permitting me to talk to you, and it is the reverse of that operation that goes on here when any one comes to see me. When they go out they are, of course, at liberty to make such representations as they want to. They are not supposed to quote the conferences with me, but sometimes they undertake to do that and sometimes they don’t. Now, I shall have to adopt the rule, of course, of not being responsible for what people may say when they go out. They are good about it, I know, and mean to represent everything just exactly as they understood it, but if I should undertake to follow up all those things and correct them all, I don’t suppose I would have an opportunity to do very much else. So I am not going to do that.

This inquiry is in relation to railroad consolidations. I haven’t been into the particulars of that. Senator Cummings has it under consideration. He is a veteran in the study of railroad problems, was one of the authors of the present law, and I should want to confer with him and with others, of course; with the Interstate Commerce Commission, also, before I could have any mature opinion about railroad matters.

There wasn’t anything that came up today at the Cabinet Meeting that is of any particular interest. We discussed a lot of small details as to when we might be able to meet and take up some questions, but there were no decisions made, and while I had expected to take up the agricultural problem especially at this meeting of the Cabinet, I was not able to do so because Secretary Wallace hasn’t completed his survey of the wheat situation.

Another inquiry about the Merchant Marine problem. I have already spoken about that, and I can’t give you any more information as to what the next step will be.

I have already spoken about the Oklahoma situation. As I said, no representation, as far as I know, has been made in Washington at all about that, and it would be very unlikely that any representation would come from anyone except the Governor.

Further inquiry as to what may be done about profiteering in coal. The Federal Trade Commission, as I have already said, has all the facts that were gathered by the Fuel Commission. They are studying those, and undertaking to see if they can make any representations that would be helpful. On the 24th, which is next Monday, the Interstate Commerce Commission meets, I think, at Pittsburgh, in order to consider rates, especially of coal. I think that has firtually covered the things that you had in mind.

I am reminded that the Conference of Governors is at West Baden instead of Indianapolis. I assume that Mr. Welliver is right. He almost always is.

The pressman's strike in New York City ended.

Spanish military physician, Dr. Fidel Pagés, only 37 years of age and the developer of the technique of epidural anesthesia, was killed in a traffic accident in the town of Quintanapalla.  He was returning from a vacation with his family.

The Aerodrome: Challenging airport funding and looking at subsidization of transportation in a different light.

The Aerodrome: Challenging airport funding and looking at subsidi...

Challenging airport funding and looking at subsidization of transportation in a different light.

Should this be the fate of most of Wyoming's airports?

In an interview with Wyoming News Now, Casper Mayor Bruce Knell came out against providing subsidies to Sky West and went on to suggest that Wyoming had more airports than it needs.  He specifically stated, regarding SkyWest

SkyWest is a 1.2-billion-dollar company. They absolutely should not receive any of taxpayers’ money … to help them with their business.

Knell also went on to accuse SkyWest of "feasting" off of the revenues and basically threatening the communities by indicating they may pull out. 

And he went on to challenge the Minimum Revenue Guaranty concept, stating, according to Oil City News:

We need to do away with these MRGs statewide. The state needs to quit funding them. We need to do away with the airport in Gillette, in Rock Springs, in Evanston, in Sheridan, in Cody, in Riverton. They all need to go away. We need to have one international airport in Casper, and one airport in Jackson.

Not too surprisingly, the communities which Knell feels should lose an airport reacted. Officials from Sweetwater County wrote a letter in reply which stated.

The Southwest Wyoming Regional Airport is a critical economic driver for Southwest Wyoming, supporting over $36.9 million in annual economic activity including $25.5 million in annual spending and 324 jobs resulting in $11.4 million in annual payroll,” the letter states. “Much like your local airport, our airport provides critical connectivity to the global economy for dozens of commercial and industrial employers in Southwest Wyoming while also providing residents connectivity to healthcare, friends, family and leisure destinations, improving the overall quality of life for our workforce.

While you may be willing to risk your local economy’s vitality, we are not. Our airport and its air service are foundationally critical assets to our community.

Casper's mayor, it should be noted, serves in a different capacity than those of most cities and towns, and accordingly is not elected as mayor, but appointed to that position by other councilmen.  This is not to say that it's wholly influential, however.

As for doing away with airports, it's hard to imagine any of these airports going away. The real question is whether they shall continue to have commercial air service.  Knell's view seems to be that if they didn't have regional service to Denver and Salt Lake, that would mean that the Casper and Jackson airports would succeed by default, something that's not really clear.

FWIW, at one time or another I've been in planes that landed at every one of these airports, although I've only been on regular commercial flights to Casper.  Having said that, I've known people to take commercial flights into Jackson, Cody, Riverton and Rock Springs, and I've never heard any complaints about those flights.  Being able to fly regionally, and with much greater access than currently exists, is something that outside business entities often ask about.

Knell's overall point is that he feels that the free market should take care of all of this.  The truth of the matter is, however, that only rail transportation isn't subsidized in the U.S.  Highway transportation is heavily subsidized by taxes, which fund the roads, various transportation departments, and specialized police forces.  Air transportation is subsidized by the creation and maintenance of airports, and the maintaining of the TSA and FAA.

Given that, we might really wish to ask the question of what transportation we wish to subsidize and in what amounts, assuming we wish to subsidize any, and of course we do.  Nobody is going to suggest we abolish highway funding, for example. So the real question is what is most efficient, socially productive and serves our long term goals.

The 2024 Election, Part VI. The 14th Amendment Edition.

AMENDMENT XIV

Section 1.

All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

Section 2.

 

Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice-President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the Executive and Judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State.

Section 3.

No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of

 

President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

Section 4.

The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void.

Section 5.

The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.

It is increasingly clear that the 14th Amendment is going to be used as a legal basis to challenge Donald Trump's ability to be a Presidential nominee this election.   

And legal scholars, weighting in, have read this language to bar his ability to do so.  Two non-profit legal groups have made it known that they are going to be filing suits.

I suppose we should list running, at the present time, in this sad show.

President.

Democrats:

Joe Biden; the incumbent.  

While a majority of Democrats and voters in general are disenchanted with the aged President, he will take the nomination absent something unexpected occurring.

Marianne Williamson.

Gadfly. Williamson mostly serves to remind voters that there are some real wackadoodles in the Democratic Party.

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.  

As if Williamson wasn't enough of a wackadoodle. Kennedy is receiving attention, but his candidacy isn't likely to go anywhere.  Known for some unconventional views.

Republicans.

Donald Trump. 

The former President, who is facing multiple felony charges, but who has a large number of fanatic followers in spite of having nearly every deficit as a candidate imaginable.

Nikki Haley

In a normal election cycle, we could expect Haley to do well.

Vivek Ramaswamy.  

Youngest candidate, oddly tacking to the right of Trump on some things, and getting increasingly extreme as the election goes on.

Perry Johnson,

largely unknown businessman.  Age 75.  Because we need more old people to run for this office.

Larry Elder 

Conservative African American radio host.  71 years of age, and first time candidate.

Asa Hutchinson. 

Former Governor of Arkansas and conventional, non MAGA, Republican. Age 72.

Tim Scott.

African American Senator from South Carolina.

Ron DeSantis

Governor of Florida.

Chris Christie

Former Governor of New Jersey. Blunt anti Trump candidate.

Mike Pence.

Boring, if briefly heroic, former Vice President.

Doug Burgum

Governor of North Dakota who can't muster up enough courage to discuss Trump's coup.

Will Hurd 

Congressman from Texas.

Steve Laffey 

A politician you've never heard of but who is apparently on the New Hampshire ballot.

Ryan Binkley 

A Texas businessman and Protestant Pastor.

Green Party

Cornel West.  

West would be familiar to watchers of news shows and PBS from the late 20th Century, but his candidacy here nearly reduces him to gadfly status.

American Solidarity Party

Peter Sonski  

Sonski is a businessman who is the ASP's choice for President this year. The party is a Christian Democratic Party that ought to receive more attention, and would in a fairer system.

Lurking on the outside of all of this is No Labels, which in spite of the existence of third parties, threatens to launch a non-party third party run at the Oval Office.  Joe Manchin is continually mentioned as its potential candidate, although the Democrats desperately hope he'll stay in the Senate.

In terms of more local races:

U.S. Senate

Republicans

John Barrasso, maybe?

The long serving Senator has not announced if he's running or not.  Right now, because it's pretty obvious that Mitch McConnell is headed on to the next realm, he stands to potentially be Senate Majority Leader.

Reid Rasner.

Rasner has announced and is running essentially as a far right populist.  If Barrasso stays in, his campaign will be forgotten within days of the primary election.

September 3, 2023

The Heritage Foundation and others have worked out a Project 2025 as a plan to radically reshape the Federal Government should Trump come to power.

As the Heritage Foundation would have it:

The fourth pillar of Project 2025 is our 180-day Transition Playbook and includes a comprehensive, concrete transition plan for each federal agency.  Only through the implementation of specific action plans at each agency will the next conservative presidential Administration be successful. 

Pillar IV will provides the next President a roadmap for doing just that.  To learn more about Project 2025’s vision for a conservative administration, please read our recently published book, Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise.

September 7, 2023

Six Colorado voters have filed an action seeking to bar Donald Trump from running for election under the 14th Amendment.  The complaint is a phenomenal 115 pages long and is effectively a brief.



The relief sought is as follows:


This is the second such lawsuit that's been filed. The first was dismissed, although I haven't researched why.  Lack of standing would be my guess.

One of these suits is going to hit home and succeed.  Some might note that Trump is not likely to prevail in the general election in Colorado anyhow, but this would mean that Colorado's primary votes would go to another GOP candidate, should it succeed.

As noted, somewhere it will, and depending upon when it happens, this issue will have to go to the Supreme Court rapidly.  While predicting the ultimate outcome is hazardous, my guess is that there's a fair chance that the Supreme Court will ultimately hold that Trump is not qualified to run.

cont:

So on the same day a lawsuit was filed in Colorado, Secretary of State Gray wrote to the SoS of New Hampshire, stating:


How much sway Wyoming has with New Hampshire, or for that matter any state's SoS with another's, is an open question, but the direction of this seems clear.  Some state is going to find Trump can't be on the ballot and this will have to go to the Supreme Court.  That will determine the issue for every state.

Gray touches upon, but doesn't really answer, an important issue here, that being, how is it to be determined that a person was in an insurrection?  Being convicted of having been in one, under a statute that could give rise to that determination, is one thing, and in fact odds are good that Trump will have been by November 2024.  But that clearly isn't, I think, required by the 14th Amendment for the reason that Secretary Gray notes, the Civil War example.  Nobody was tried for the crime of having engaged in a treasonous rebellion against the United States following the Civil War.  Clearly at the time the mere presumption of Confederate service was enough.  As that's the only example, it would seem that presumption would operate here as well such that, if a SoS determines that Trump aided and abetted an insurrection, it would be up to Trump to prove that he did not.

The lawsuits will work differently, of course, as they have that as part of their allegations, and therefore That issue will be for them to prove at trial, or perhaps by motion.

September 11, 2024

Latest polls put Trump ahead of Biden in the General Election.

That presumes, of course, that they both win their nominations.  Democratic spokesmen fielded to the weekend shows are trying to brush it off by noting that the economy is strong, unemployment low, and there are 14 months left to go.  But it's a bad sign for Biden, no matter what.

This would suggest that both Democrats and rank and file (not populist) Republicans need to wake up.  If Trump takes the Oval Office, it will complete the conversion of the GOP into a right wing populist party which will have huge impacts on the country for the foreseen future, and certainly during the next four years.

If Republicans are to take him on, what they really need to do is to meet at this time and determine that those leaning into Trump should get out.  They're not going to do anything.  They need to get their field down as small as possible.

For the Democrats, they need to meet with Joe and propose a moderate substitute.  

September 14, 2023

Legislators have criticized a ballot initiative to limit property tax in Wyoming, noting that it would strip funding for schools.

They're correct.

A lot of the local anger over property taxes is frankly ironic. For decades, Wyoming communities have encouraged relocation into the state, which ipso facto brings in wealth and raises property values overall.  Indeed, many relocatees upgrade their dwellings by doing so.  Meanwhile, local government and infrastructure needs remain, if not in fact grow.

The solution is more distributist, localist and involving subsidiarity and solidarity, which was the case all along.

Vivek Ramaswamy vowed to cut the federal workforce by 75% by the end of his term if elected, which is frankly absurd.\

Mitt Romney has announced that he will not be running for reelection. This brought out the predictable assortment of Trump trolls condemning Romney for not being a Trump troll.  It also brougth the following comment from the former President:


There is something deeply weird about comments like this coming from Trump.  With all the attention to Biden's mental status, there's little with Trump, but something is off with him.

September 19, 2023

President Trump was interviewed by the new host of Meet The Press.

The interview is revealing for the way in which Trump has become so proficient at lying, he sounds credible while doing so, helping to provide some insight to why his followers believe him.  He spouts lies with such routine blandness that they sound like somebody repeating what he believes to be the truth.  If people only listened to Trump, you may well be convinced that the falsehoods reflect reality.

September 21, 2023

The Natrona County GOP invited WyoRino to a meeting they held to debate him/her/they.  Some members of the county's Republican Party have been in the crosshairs of the anonymous blogger.  Predictably, he didn't show up to the event, and so conservative Cowboy State Daily's not so conservative Op Ed columnist Rod Miller had nobody to debate.  From reading about it, some other populists did show up, however.

Now, one of the non Natrona County GOP legislators, Larry Craigo of Johnson County, is the subject of an anonymous mailer.  He's called that person/persons cowardly.

There's something interesting going on here.

Whoever is behind these efforts, and it of course may be a collection of people has spare money to devote to this effort.  I've seen a large vinyl WyoRINO banner locally, and WyoRINO bought a billboard here as well.

Spare cash, far right wing, those are the clues really.

Trump has announced that he's going to Michigan rather than the next debate.  This will likely be pretty scripted, as the UAW isn't exactly pro Trump, even if many of its rust belt employees share many of his non labor views.

Of course, Bernie Sanders has weighed in. . . 

Last Prior Thread:

The 2024 Election, Part V. Wooing the primary voters.


Related Threads:


Why should this even be allowed to occur?

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit on Wednesday suspended Judge Pauline Newman, appointed to the bench in 1984 by Ronald Reagan, from hearing new cases.

The 96, yes 96, year old's behavior has been raising questions about her mental competence.

The bigger question is why we'd have a judicial system in which somebody who should have been forcibly retired 30 years ago is still on the bench.

Dineen on Christian Nationalistm

[A] peaceful but vigorous overthrow of a corrupt and corrupting liberal ruling class and the creation of a postliberal order in which existing political forms can remain in place, as long as a fundamentally different ethos informs those institutions and the personnel who populate key offices and positions. While superficially the same political order, the replacement of rule by a progressive elite by a regime ordered to the common good through a ‘mixed constitution’ will constitute a genuine regime change.

Patrick Dineen.

Hmmmm. . . . how would you actually do that?

That sounds a lot like DeValera's Ireland.  Is that the goal?  Are there any other examples?

Denver sucks.


Best cities to raise a family


Denver ain't one of them, which is no surprise if you've been to Denver.

Indeed, according to this study, it's the worst place to raise a family in the United States.

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Via Reddit's 100 Years Ago Today Sub. September 20th, 1923:The Inquiring Photographer asks, "If you had the means to enjoy life without working would you continue to work?"


 

Thursday, September 20, 1973. The Battle of the Sexes and the Death of Jim Croce.

"The Battle of the Sexes" took place in the Houston Astrodome between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs. King won three straight sets.

King and Riggs prior to the match.

This event was a big deal at the time, and I can recall my parents watching the television coverage of it.  It's always seemed odd to me as Riggs, who had been a tennis great in his youth, was well past his prime, while King was in hers.  Riggs, however, was quite the promoter and much of the attention can be attributed to that.

It was, up until that point, the most watched tennis match of all time.


Jim Croce, age 30, was killed along with five others when a chartered Beechcraft E18S hit a tree during takeoff from the Natchitoches Regional Airport in Louisiana.  

Croce was a well known pop singer at the time.  When in grade school, one year we had to learn his Time In A Bottle song for a performance of some sort.  Perhaps it's for that reason, but I've never liked that song since then, and I didn't like it then.  Or maybe its just the song.  I have always liked his Leroy Brown song.

Monday, September 20, 1943. Sort of airborne at Kaiapit, Holocaust expands into Belgium, Gold moved, Midget submarines deployed against the Tirpitz, Coast stand down, Consript the dads.

The Battle of Kaiapit in the  Markham and Ramu Valley – Finisterre Range Campaign was fought between the Japanese and Australian armies.


The battle saw the Australian 2/6th Independent Company flown into the Markham Valley by the United States Army Air Force, which then attacked the village the prior day.  The village was reinforced by the Japanese, unbeknownst to the Australians, who then held out against strong counter-attacks against a more numerous foe, allowing the Australian 7th Division to be flown into the upper Markham Valley.

The entire Allied strategy in the battles provided an interesting example of the use of air power for transport, making the units types of airborne units, while neither paratroopers nor glider infantry were deployed.  Insertion by C-47 is something that the US Army had experimented with prior to the US entering the war, briefly considering creating units that would fly in, and land, and then go into combat.  This was abandoned before the war, but it's exactly what occured here.

American forces on Sagekarasa in the Solomons discover that the Japanese forces have evacuated the island.  The Japanese were proving adept at withdrawing from locations undetected.

Sarah Sundin notes on her blog that the U.S. 5th Army and the British 8th Army linked in Italy on this day.

General Marshal and Admiral King testify in front of a Senate Committee that failing to conscript fathers of families stood to prolong the war.

Germany began the mass deportation of Belgian Jews to Auschwitz. 

The Germans demanded that Italy's gold reserves be placed in German custody in Milan.

Crew of the midget submarine X-5. All were killed by counter fire from the Tirpitz during the raid when their vessel was hit and sank.

Six Commonwealth midget submarines, of which five were lost, raided the German Kriegsmarine in Norway, damaging the Tirpitz.  The raid, Operation Source, was heroic, but of debatable utility given the heavy loss of life.

The crews were made up of members of the Australian, New Zealand and British navies.

The first flight of the De Havilland Vampire took place.


The fighters were ordered into production in 1944 with the first deliveries coming in April 1945, too late to be used during it.  It would go on to be a successful post-war British fighter, but was already obsolete by the early 1950s.

Sarah Sundin notes that the U.S. stood down its coast observation posts, the threat of invasion having ceased.

 USS Liscome Bay (CVE-56), September 20, 1943.

Thursday, September 20, 1923. Showdown in Oklahoma.


The Governor of Oklahoma and its legislature were in a toe to toe contest over whether the Governor's mobilization of the National Guard over the KKK was warranted.

This is an historical episode of which I was wholly unaware, and quite extraordinary.  While it was late in coming, the Governor was reacting to racial violence in the state by deploying the National Guard under what was essentially an act of declaring martial law. The legislature clearly was upset by the act and intended to convene to address it, and the Governor himself.

A Communist led revolt broke out in Bulgaria.

The Yankees took the American League pennant, beating the St. Louis Browns 4 to 3.

Blog Mirror: How old is too old?

An intersting entry from Robert Reich, with many interesting replies, some of which are my own.

How old is too old?

At one time grocers were local.

 Robert Reich

@RBReich
Why are grocery prices so high? Monopoly power. If Kroger succeeds in merging with Albertsons, it will control: Safeway Ralphs Smith’s Harris Teeter Dillons Fred Meyer Vons Jewel-Osco Shaw’s

Why, oh why, must we have this absurd consolidation?

Cliffnotes of the Zeitgeist. 49th Edition. $33,000,000,000,000.

That's the current national debt.

There's really no excuse for it.  Just as the inflation rate should be darned near 0%, the debt ought to be darned near $0.00.

It's not that the government, like populists believe, simply spends too much.  It probably does, but the real problem is the American government taxes far too little.  It could be done, and should be done, but a fair and equitable, and realistic, tax regime would need to be imposed.

Last prior edition:

Cliffnotes of the Zeitgeist. 48th Edition. Are you not entertained?

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Red meat for the dogs. Hatred.

Animals don't hate, and we're supposed to be better than them.
Elvis Presley


"Bolshevism without a mask" Nazi poster from 1937.

As silly as it may seem to say, something (well, a lot of things) has been really bothering me about the current blather coming out of Republican quarters.

It is not that a conservative party, although it is unclear if that is what the GOP is anymore, would have nothing to say, but it's not saying it. I'm not hearing from any William F. Buckley's or George F. Will's on the merits of conservatism.  George Weigel isn't breaking through to the audience.  Politician wise, I'm not hearing the voice of a Ronald Reagan or Barry Goldwater being taken seriously.  I was hearing a bit from Mitt Romney, but he's stepping away from the podium.  Asa Hutchinson and Chris Christie are still there, but they're not making it above the din.

I am hearing from a lot of candidates, local and national, who speak with short invectives, however.  I won't bother with the Boeberts or Greene's but even locally it's pretty upsetting.

Somebody acting in anonymity (but with enough in the way of time and resources available to purchase signs supporting their blog) is accusing people of being "RINO's", as if they can define half the state's GOP that way based on their own assessment. The head of Wyoming's Freedom Caucus and at least one of its members calls Republicans they disagree with and the Democrats the "Uniparty".  Our congressman purports to have knowledge that there's a "place in Hell for those who pursue policies that are intended to increase the price of food, energy, and housing" as if anyone anywhere has a policy that actually is intended to do any of those things.

And then there's Trump.

Ceterum (autem) censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.

Cato.

Trump rages against his opponents. They're debased, insance, Marxists, fascists, and the like.  It recalls the radical statements of earlier demagogues.

Here he stops at nothing, and in his vileness he becomes so gigantic that no one need be surprised if among our people the personification of the devil as the symbol of all evil assumes the living shape of the Jew.

Rather, it's campaigning on almost one thing, and one thing alone.

Hitler, Mein Kampf.

Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas.

Stalin.

And what is being expressed is hatred.

Hatred.

And that, more than anything else, is what unites the GOP increasingly with the spirit of fascism, and ironically enough, Communism as well.

It's not that conservatives or populists have nothing to say.  Rather, they don't say it much, and only rarely as sort of a battle cry.  Instead, their public image is based on hate.  It's not all of us together, and we must find a way, listen to my ideas, but rather, it's us against them, they're vile, and must be destroyed.

Trump isn't arguing any policy positions.  Instead, he spews hatred.  His opponents, legal and political, are mentally incompetent, deranged, fat, etc. etc.  He doesn't appeal to logic, but emotion, and the emotion he appeals to is hatred.  People need to fear his opponents, as they are Der Untermensch, i.e., subhuman.


Indeed, the entire yapping class appealing to the populist in the GOP, which is now a populist party, appeals to fear and hatred in a radical way.  The scary left wing intelligentsia is going to insert itself into the schools, or vaccines, or whatever, and turn us all into drones, and your sons and daughters into debased freaks.

Authoritarian movements that have little else going for them other than fear have always behaved this way.  If you didn't support the Ku Klux Klan, Catholics are going to take over and give the country to the Pope and black men are going to rape your daughters.  If you don't support the Nazi's, the Communist Slavic Jewish hoards are going to take over and rape your daughters.  If you don't support the Communists, the big monied (probably Jewish, they always get the short end of the stick in this stuff) are going to control everything and starve your daughters.  It's not our ideas against theirs, but rather us against them, and in the end, they must be destroyed.

I imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain.
James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time

Trumpist populations tell us that Democrats are deranged to the extent of being Untermenschen.  They must be destroyed.  It's gotten so bad, that to merely call somebody a "RINO" is the equivalent of calling somebody subhuman. An entire Wyoming website, which moderate Republicans asked to unmask itself, exists only to do that, as if calling somebody a RINO in the context in which the position that seem to determine that would have left you out of the GOP mainstream in the pre Trump era, is preposterous. But it happens now all the time.  No Democratic or moderate Republican position can be considered, as they are the hideous Untermenschen.

Indeed, hate has become such the defining factor, that all of the former standard which conservatives adhered to have gone by the wayside, although frankly they started to as long ago as Ronald Reagan. "Family values" are to be defended, but divorces and personal sexual misconduct mean nothing, because as long as one is a populist, your infidelities are irrelevant.   Biden is corrupt because he's a Democrat. Trump is pure because he's a Republican.  I'm not saying anything about either man, but defining their morality based upon their party is all the more that needs to be done.

I have decided to stick to love...Hate is too great a burden to bear.

Martin Luther King Jr., A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches

Cato urged that Carthage be destroyed as a detraction.  Hatred never serves humanity, but in the end serves one man.

If all a politician or public figure has to offer is invective, they should be disregarded.  Moreover, if that's principally what they have to offer, they should be cast aside.

Hate isn't a policy.  It's a vehicle, more often than not, for the person publically spewing it.

Related threads:

Red Meat for the dogs and cowardice.

Sunday, September 19, 1943. Wars within the war.

The Markham, Ramu and Finisterre campaigns on New Guinea began with an Allied offensive in the Ramu Valley.


The Ramu Valley campaign would continue on through November, with the overall campaign carrying on until April 1944.

The Battle of Turjak Castle in Slovenia ended in a Slovene partisan victory against the Anti Communist Volunteer Militia, formerly allied to the Italian Army.  Part of the wars within the war feature of World War Two.

German forces and Cham Albanians began the Paramythia executions of Greeks in Paramythia.

Lebanese Maronite Christian leader Bechara El Khoury met with Lebanese Sunni Muslim senior politician Riad Al Solh and worked out the National Pact.  Under it, an arrangement was arrived upon in which a free Lebanon would have a Christian President and a Muslim Prime Minister.

The St. Louis Cardinals took the National League pennat with a 2 to 1 victory over the Chicago Cubs.

Monday, September 18, 2023

Red Meat for the dogs and cowardice.

I've met 2/3ds of our people in Congress from this state, and I may have met, but just don't remember doing so, the remaining 1/3d.

I can't say that I know any of them well, but I have spoken to the ones I've met, before they were in office, in a different context.  One in a commerce sort of sense, and the other just as two folks sort of sense.

All of them are very smart people.  

I frankly don't believe that they believe a lot of what they're saying.  When they stand up and talk about "Biden's radical green agenda", I don't believe that they believe what they're saying.  I've strongly suspected that in at least one case the speaker would be speaking for a green agenda if they had remained in their native state.  And when one stated that just recently, it was combined with waiving the banner of a new mask mandate that hasn't happened and isn't going to happen, and the speaker, who is no dummy, knows that.

I think they're throwing red meat to the dogs.

They're pitching to people at the top of the GOP Central Committee here and its supporters. Those people actually do believe what they say, which raises the bigger question of how they believe it.  Some of it may be due to narrowed horizons, both professionally and in reality.  I.e., if you never leave your village, you'll only have the views of the villagers and the village occupations.

An example of that, I think, is the discussion on electric vehicles.  All the time, around here, I'll hear somebody say something like "we'll they'll never work here. . . har, har, har."

Well, they will, and are. Technology is advancing.  On top of it, they don't build cars and trucks for Wyoming.  Not once, in the entire history of the automobile industry, as somebody in the industry said; "so what do Wyomingite's want?  We better build that".

No, they build cards for Denverites, and Daytonites, not people who live in Bairoil.

But if you live in Bairoil, and always have, well how would you know better?

Politics at a certain level evolves from a concern of working people, who man it at the lower levels, to people who have a lot of time on their hands. That's why, at one time, the legislature, which meets in the winter, was made up of ranchers. Shipping had happened, and gathering was yet to come.  Hanging out in nice warm hotel rooms in Cheyenne sounded okay and they had the time to do it.

That's repeated in the party in a different way today

At the upper levels today, we have a rancher of course, but we also have figures who are retired military officers.  The latter is particularly weird for the isolationist anti-government GOP today, as how somebody who spent their entire career in the most expensive branch of the government living off the government teet would suddenly hate the government hard to explain, but whatever.  They have the time.

People on county commissions, etc., they don't have the time.

So the closed circle at the top, fed by the disgruntled populist at the bottom, is convinced of extreme right wing positions. 

Those at the very top of elective office, not universally, but pretty commonly, repeat the positions.

But is it out of genuine belief?

I doubt it.

Indeed, of the top elected officials at the state and the national level from this state, there's only one that I think might believe part of what that individual is saying, but only part, and I don't know how that person, whom I once knew somewhat, got there. Back in the day, I would have thought that person, based upon that person's circle of friends, to have been a liberal Democrat. 

I may have well been wrong.  If they were really right wing, they kept it to themselves.

Which brings me to cowardice.

I'm not referencing that person today, but many others.

I can't say how many times I've been somewhere where somebody said a racist joke, or made an extreme political comment, and nobody said anything.  Probably thousands.  Most people don't want a fight or an argument, and most people who do want a fight or an argument are complete and total assholes.  Indeed, people who say "well I want to be a lawyer because I like to argue", and mean it, are actually saying "I'm a total asshole".

It's so much easier to simply smile at a comment and move on it isn't funny.   When the local anti-maskers made comments, that's what we often did around here. And when the Trump supporter in the lunchroom spouts off, figuring everyone else agrees, it's easier just to take a drink of coffee and comment on something dull, like football.

But at some point, you should say or do something.

The Apaches used to have a custom in which hey'd sacrifice a young woman annually.  It endured into the horse era, during which, at one annual such event, a young man rode in, scooped up the young woman, and carried her off. The event never happened again.

That took courage, but it changed the course of things.

On rare occasions, I've seen people do that in conversations.  Simply state what they believe when that belief seems to be contrary to the audience, and people immediately start agreeing with the stated.

In others, it makes the person a pariah.

But in an era in which we're asking why has so much gone wrong, and much that's being ignored is going wrong, it's time to say something.

The advice here isn't Bayard Rustin's "Speak truth to power" maxim, and it sure isn't Noam Chomsky's "speak truth to the powerless", but rather, simply; Speak the truth.