Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Monday, November 3, 2025
Wednesday, November 3, 1875. A fateful day.
Sunday, November 2, 2025
They were careless people.
They were careless people, Tom and Daisy- they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.
Dodgers Win World Series
Dodgers Win World Series
Indeed, they did.
I was rooting for the Blue Jays.
I was really looking forward to this series, but when it arrived, I really didn't watch it. It was a great series, but I just couldn't get into it. I didn't even watch all of the concluding game, I was simply too tired and at some point went to bed. Toronto was leading at the time.
This whole year has been sort of like that. Stress, anxiety, fatigue, for a variety of reasons, take their toll.
Religion, J.D. and Usha Vance.
"Outside the Church there is no salvation"846 How are we to understand this affirmation, often repeated by the Church Fathers? Re-formulated positively, it means that all salvation comes from Christ the Head through the Church which is his Body:Basing itself on Scripture and Tradition, the Council teaches that the Church, a pilgrim now on earth, is necessary for salvation: the one Christ is the mediator and the way of salvation; he is present to us in his body which is the Church. He himself explicitly asserted the necessity of faith and Baptism, and thereby affirmed at the same time the necessity of the Church which men enter through Baptism as through a door. Hence they could not be saved who, knowing that the Catholic Church was founded as necessary by God through Christ, would refuse either to enter it or to remain in it.847 This affirmation is not aimed at those who, through no fault of their own, do not know Christ and his Church:Those who, through no fault of their own, do not know the Gospel of Christ or his Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere heart, and, moved by grace, try in their actions to do his will as they know it through the dictates of their conscience - those too may achieve eternal salvation.848 "Although in ways known to himself God can lead those who, through no fault of their own, are ignorant of the Gospel, to that faith without which it is impossible to please him, the Church still has the obligation and also the sacred right to evangelize all men."
Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Vance can of course hope, and should hope, that Usha converts, as her chances of salvation are heightened. Does that mean that if she doesn't, she's damned to Hell? Well, we can't know the state of anyone's soul, but the fact that she hasn't would suggest that she's not consciously rejecting Christianity, but rather hasn't overcome something.
Vance himself should be worried about the state of his soul. Catholics reject IVF, which he's been backing, and lying on serious matters is a serious sin, which Vance has been doing at an epic level.
At any rate, Vance isn't doing the wrong thing by hoping his wife becomes Catholic. He's completely correct to wish for that, including openly.
This is, however, where the liberal side of American culture, and even the American Civil Religion, and frankly the Evangelical Christians, all come into conflict with Catholics.
At some point in American history and in American culture, and it goes back pretty far it became really common for people to be sort of religious relativist. "It doesn't matter what religion you are, as long as you are a good person." Well, it does in fact matter what religion you are, and of course you should be a good person no matter what religion you are.
Catholicism was an oppressed religion in the United State up until basically the 1960s. Open oppression of it lessened steadily in the century prior to the 60s, and in fact was intense prior to the 1860s. Catholics really kept themselves in a major way as a result, and only really began to enter the wider culture after World War Two. Al Smith's Catholicism is generally regarded as what made it impossible for him to win the Presidency prior to the war. An early Casper politician of Irish extraction was controversial in the town's Catholic community because of the distance he put between himself and his religion. The first Catholic Governor of Wyoming was probably Frank A. Barrett, who was a devout Catholic who went on to become the state's U.S. Senator thereafter. Joe Hickey, another Catholic came after him. Both Barrett and Hickey were Governors in the 1950s. Of course, Kennedy broke the dam in 1960, but in part by pledging basically not to let his Catholicism influence him, which was a despicable pledge.
Vance hasn't pledged that.
The only U.S. Army generals known to be Catholic during World War Two, we might note, were Lieutenant General John E. Hull and Major General Patrick J. Hurley. This fits into the culture of the professional military class at the time and it might be noted that the first Jewish general in the U.S. Army, Maurice Rose, was a practicing Episcopalian. Patton, often noted to be very devout, was an Episcopalian, as was Marshall.
Anyhow, as noted, it's not the case that Catholics feel all non Catholics are going to Hell as they are not Catholic, and Catholics certainly do not believe that all Catholics are going to Heaven as they are Catholic. Rather, Catholics believe that the Catholic Church, which is the oldest and original form of Christianity, is the church Christ founded and the one entrusted with the instruments of salvation. In some ways, everyone who is ultimately saved is saved in some way because of the Catholic Church. As, to use a mistranslation of von Balthasar's statement, we wish "for all men to be saved", we want everyone to be Catholics as that makes it much more assured.
This puts us way outside of the American Civil Religions' views that all religions, or perhaps all Christian religions with Judaism thrown in for good measure, are equal.
One thing it should also do, however, and recent conversions should help cradle Catholics to refocus on this, is to be concerned about people in our immediate orbit. Vance is basically doing that, but frankly he's in a bit of a tough spot because he and his wife married before his conversion.
Simply being in a marriage in which one member is a Catholic and the other is not, if the Catholic is a sincere Catholic, has some real challenges. Catholicism is different and even after decades the non Catholic spouse can be really surprised by the application of the Faith by the Catholic spouse. In "mixed" couples where the non Catholic spouse is a member of one of the churches that's very close to the Catholic Church this is less so, but even here I've known couples who attended Mass faithfully where one was a Catholic and the other a Lutheran, for instance, with the Lutheran never converting in spite of the two churches being so close.
As Yeoman's First Law of Human Behavior is a powerful force, general run of the mill Protestant spouses may attend Mass and support their Catholic spouse early on, but over a period time, simply stop attending as most Protestants aren't under a requirement to attend any service on a Sunday. That's inevitably extremely hard on the Catholic spouse who soldiers on. This has to be even more difficult in a situation such as Vance's in which the other spouse isn't even a member of a Christian religion at all.
Indeed, at one time Catholics were very much discouraged from marrying non Catholics, although its always occurred, and it was often a stipulation by the Catholic spouse that the other convert. I've known several Catholic couples where this was what happened, although I think it much less common now. The religion where this frequently occurs is the Mormon religion, which is not a Christian religion and which isn't compatible with any. Of note there, usually fallen away Mormons simply become intensely anti religious, rather than some other religion.
Catholics only marrying Catholics was a lot easier when Catholics pretty much were associated, culturally, only with other Catholics. That day is long gone, but there's still some wisdom to the old custom here. As with many things, the Catholic viewpoint on something like marriage is much different than the cultures, if taken seriously. Catholics married to non Catholics are adding weight to their cross, no matter what. And part of that weight is the hope the other spouse become Catholic.
Tuesday, November 2, 1875 Fourth Wyoming Territorial Legislature.
Best Posts of the Week of October 26, 2025
The best posts of the week of October 26, 2025.
Monday, October 26, 1925. Doolittle wins the Schneider Trophy.
Wednesday, October 27, 1915. Abandoning the Endurance.
Last edition:
Best Posts of the Week of October 19, 2025.
Saturday, November 1, 2025
Gilded Age Brothel School of Interior Design
Nuclear weapons should not be entrusted to anyone pleased by Trump’s Gilded Age Brothel school of interior design.
George F. Will.
Going Feral: Nesvik tells Colorado to say no to Canadian wolves.
Alrededor de la vieja fogata (Around the ol’ campfire) - WyoFile
More Wyoming football, less propaganda
Thursday, November 1, 1945. The sabotage of railways in Mandatory Palestine.
The Jewish Resistance Movement sabotaged British railways in Palestine.
Twenty-one German bankers were arrested for war crimes.
Last edition:
Tuesday, October 30, 1945. Rushing the Nationalist North.
Friday, October 31, 2025
Friday Farming. Um. . .large farmers.
On Friday, this blog tries to post something about farming, but it often lets everyone down by failing to do so, posting instead on various other inanities, such as a legislative committee passing a goofball ignorant bill on chemtrails.
Och!
Anyhow, we've been watching the news as first soybean farmers, and then later cattle farmers, have come on the news and stated, effectively, "we didn't think leopards would eat our face!" after Donald Trump took the tariff club and beat them upside the head and then decided that the Golden Arches could serve up Big Mac's with carne molida rather than ground beef.
What a bunch of amadán breallach. Oh well, it's hard to feel sorry for them. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes. Put that in your Happy Meal, bucko.
But this thread isn't on that.
Rather its on this.
We admire farmers and ranchers, as is rather obvious. It's our true vocation, even if an unfulfilled one. And we are familiar with actual farming, not the Green Acres/Hallmark/Homesteading type of agriculture.
But we're also agrarians.
Anyhow, I can't help but note this, even though its rude.
The spokesmen for soybean farmers have, at least on some occasions, been enormously fat.
That's a bad look. They're huge. And they're not huge in the way that some large people are who are pretty fit, and I've known more than a few. Indeed, I've known some outdoor employed people, both blue collar and in the sciences, who were really big, but quite fit. You could tell that what was at work with them was genetics. But many of these farmers, or at least the snipped I've seen, are just flat out fat.
This isn't the case with working ranchers.
I guess that shows us the extent to which mechanized farming has become, well, mechanized. At least one of these great big farmers has been interviewed in his farm machinery as he and it are working in his fields. And that's just not conducive to living well. Ranching is still a pretty physically active line of work.
With these guys, I suspect, but of course don't know, that they're still consuming a farm diet that developed prior to the 1980s. Say, perhaps, before World War Two. Big breakfast, followed by heavy activity, big lunch, followed by heavy activity, and a lighter dinner. . .sometimes followed by heavy activity. Now, however, you can omit the heavy activity.
Which gets us back to, I guess, the state of the world in general. Our technology is, frankly, killing us. We really weren't meant to live that way, or much of the way our technological world is having us live.
And, as a minor fwiw, you really can't come on to television seeking sympathies for farmers if you look like, to use an analogy, a fat cat. You guys have obviously been eating well. Yes, that really shouldn't matter, and its not a moral failing, but it doesn't look good in the presentation.
Saturday, October 31, 1925. Subpoena for Coolidge?
Billy Mitchell's defense was considering subpoenaing Calvin Coolidge.
It was Halloween, and the Mills Tavern was having a party, with lots of elk.
The new Ajax was out:
And, well, Coolidge looked safe.
It was a Saturday.
Last edition:
Friday, October 30, 1925. Not Guilty.
Thursday, October 30, 2025
Thursday, October 30, 1975. King Juan Carlos I of Spain became acting head of state of the country after Franco conceded he was too ill to govern.
King Juan Carlos I of Spain became acting head of state of the country after Franco conceded he was too ill to govern.
Last edition:
Tuesday, October 21, 1975. Franco approaches the end.
Tuesday, October 30, 1945. Rushing the Nationalist North.
The Sheridan Press reported that the Nationalist Army, whom they reported as "regulars", were being rushed to Mongolia to fight the Communists.
That was correct. The U.S. was aiding in that effort through air lifting.
A local brewer that no longer exists advertised in the issue:
Monday, October 29, 1945. Noting the Chinese Civil War.
Friday, October 30, 1925. Not Guilty.
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Arches.
Sigh. . .
White House fires arts commission expected to review Trump construction projects
So, if you've been distracted or are just sick of reading stories about the toddler in the White House, here's what this is about:
What we know about White House plans for an 'Arc de Trump'
The BBC article discounts Trump's ability to get this thing built, but that was penned before Trump showed that he'll just ignore the law in this area, as with everything else.
The United States needs a triumphal arch about as much as it needs to build its own version fo the Brandenburg Gate, which we should have blown to bit at the end of World War Two. At least its not as butt ugly as McCreery's gigantic garden shed that will be a temporary "ballroom" attached to the White House. That will get partially constructed and then ripped down, to be followed soon after by:
Did you work on illegal White House construction projects? You were likely exposed to asbestos and should sue the ass of off Donald Trump, call . . .
Anyhow, Triumphal Arches date back at least to the Romans, and they're particularly associated with them. The gigantic one in Paris, the Arch de Triomphe, we can blame on Napoleon whom, we should remember was deposed by a coalition of non wacky powers in the 19th Century and sent to die on Elba, where he was likely poisoned.
Triumphal Arches have been emulated ever since the Romans built them, and they appear in many countries. They are particularly associated with autocratic powers, which suffer from knowing they aren't worthy and therefore try to monument themselves into worthiness, but there are some in democratic states including in the U.S.
There's probably a smaller chance that construction gets started on this before Trump leaves office or collapse in his Happy Meal while babbling, but again, getting it rolling wouldn't be too surprising. Keeping it up? That's another matter.
I give the White House Garden Shed about an 80% chance of being torn down. If an arch goes up, I'd give it about a 40% chance.
A 2026 Election Storm Warning.
Donald Trump attempted to steal the 2020 Presidential Election and failed. Having won the 2024 election, he's now working on stealing the 2026 mid terms.
The 2026 election will be the critical one. Republicans are going to try to use everything they can think of, legitimately, nad illegitimately, to control the outcome of the 2026 midterms. If they fail, they'll refuse to accept the results.
The 2026 election may well prove to be the election that breaks the republic.
Monday, October 29, 1945. Noting the Chinese Civil War.
The press noted the outbreak of a civil war in China. . . which in fact had been going on for a couple of decades, having broken out in August, 1927.
Yet another war related loan drive.
Last edition:
Saturday, October 27, 1945. Navy Day.
Thursday, October 29, 1925. No Free Speech.
Free speech didn't work as a defense for Bily Mitchell.
Last edition:

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