China's civil war was acknowledged now to be a major conflict and two Game Wardens were found dead near Rawlins.
The Chinese Civil War was the topic of a political cartoon as well.
The murdered Game Wardens were Bill Lakanen and Don Simpson who were killed by ardent Nazi sympathizer and German immigrant Johann Malten. The same Game Wardens had arrested Malten for game violations when investigating, interestingly enough, claims that Malten had been involved in espionage and was relaying weather reports on shortwave, something that was illegal during the war when there was a blackout on weather reporting as the information was useful to submarines. Upon visiting Malten's cabin in the Sierra Madres they found he had committed numerous game violations.
On this occasion they were stopping by to see if Malten had continued to ignore the law. They were shot down out of hand when they arrived.
Malten burned his cabin down and it was officially reported that he'd died within it, although the evidence of that is very poor. There were reported sightings of him for years thereafter.
And a selection of 1945 cartoons.
I knew about this story because former Wyoming Game Warden David Bragonier wrote about it in his book about Wyoming Game Wardens, Wild Journey: On the Trail With a Wyoming Game Warden in Yellowstone Country. It's a good book, and I recommend it.
Bragonier discusses this event, although I clearly don't remember everything I read in his account. That's probably not too surprising as I read the book in 1999. What I recall but didn't see in the accounts on the murder you can find here is that the investigation was associated not only with the killer's German nationality and his strong Nazi sympathies, but also with shortwave radio transmissions that could not be pinned down.
There's a bunch of interesting things that could, and if a person had time, should be explored here as the story raises all sorts of undeveloped oddities.
One of them is that Lakanen and Simpson are two out of the three Wyoming Game Wardens who were murdered by immigrants (to the extent I know why the various ones who lost their lives in the line of duty did). I'm not saying that immigrants murder game wardens, but this is an interesting fact. The other one is John Buxton, who was murdered by a youthful Austrian immigrant in 1919. In that instance he had taken a .30-30 Savage rifle from a 17 year old who drew a revolver and killed him. The reasons that Buxton was checking the boys is unclear. Stories frequently claim they were hunting out of season, but that seems incorrect. They were certainly overarmed for rabbits, however, with a .30-30 being way too large for that pursuit. Buxton might have been checking them as their activities seems suspicious, which frankly they do, or because there was a state law at the time that prohibited aliens from carrying firearms.
The killers handgun, we might note, was concealed.
I only note this as its odd. Hunting is common in Germany and Austria, and indeed there's a strong hunting culture there, but it's highly regulated. As a result, poaching is fairly common as well, even though its highly criminal. Indeed, one of the SS's units during World War Two, the Dirlewanger Brigade, was originally made up of convicted poachers, although it moved on to other criminals over time.
Anyhow, I wonder if these people were just hugely out of sink with any culture at all.
In the earlier murder, it's been noted that the young men had been in run-ins apparently with Italian immigrants in the same location. Austro Hungaria and Italy had been on opposite sides of World War One. Again, I'm not saying that caused the murder, but I do wonder if they conceived of themselves as being very much on the outside of things.
Another interesting thing, although having nothing to do with the focus on this page, is the lingering Nazi sympathies in some quarters amongst German immigrants who chose to continue to live in the country. That carried on, quietly, well after the war, even after the news of the Holocaust became known.
Odd.
If Malten was actually a spy, that may explain the killing in and of itself.
Another thing this story oddly brings up is the extent to which trapping remained economically viable.
Trapping was pretty common in Wyoming up into the 1970s, when there was a fur market price collapse. I had, well still have, traps, although I haven't set them for decades. In the 1970s high school kids like myself supplemented our incomes by trapping or hunting coyotes for their furs. The market was so lucrative at the time that there were people who flew in from out of state and hunted coyotes near Miracle Miles, something we didn't appreciate very much as we didn't have those sorts of resources available to us. The Federal Government was also big into predator control at the time which we also didn't appreciate much for the same reason.
Furs are, fwiw, an actual renewable resource fabric, one of the few.
Fur coats were a big deal for women at this time and would, again, be throughout the 1950s. They were not nearly as much of a luxury item as people like to remember. My mother had a heavy mink coat that she brought down from Montreal that she wore on really cold days. As a kid I loved it when she brought it out, due to the feel of the soft minks.
It was, in spite of Donald Trump and the Sweet Home Alabama crowe dof the GOP may believe, colder then.
I've never looked into it but I suspect that synthetic fabrics had as much to do with the decline in furs as anything else. That started during World War Two and is well evidenced by the Air Force's switch from sheepskin flight altitude flight jackets to synthetic ones. That trend continue into the 1950s and I suspect it just generally caught up with fur coats by the 1980s. Indeed, the association of fur with luxury somewhat increased in that time, with it generally being the case that things are regarded as luxurious not only for their scarcity, but because they really aren't needed.
More on fur clothing some other time.
I guess the final thing I'll note is how dangerous of job being a game warden is. A lot of the crimes you investigate are, by default, armed crimes.
Given that, it's amazing to look back and realize that when I was a kid wardens didn't carry sidearms. They weren't allowed to. I recall when that changed and many did not take up what was then the option to carry them. Now they're required to.
Indeed, I was recently stopped by a warden and frankly he wasn't very nice. That's a new trend as well. I don't like it. But not only was he not nice, he was extremely intimidating carrying a government issued handgun on a government issued gunbelt and wearing a government issued flak jacket.
I've really hated the militarization of the policy and this is all part of it. Everytime I see a policeman anymore, including a game warden, they're dressed like they're going into Hue in 1968. All policemen of every type are civilians. They're simply deputized civilians. They shouldn't look like an occupying army. And if the treat people rudely, and many do, and are standing their armed treating you like you are a detained Vietnamese villager, it's scary.
A little of that comes across, I'd note, in Bragonier's book, in spite of my recommendation of it. It's a good book, but he displayed an element of contempt for the public he served in it.
David Bragonier must be, I'd suspect, gone to his reward by now His biography indicates that he was born in Iowa in 1937 and moved to Wyoming after graduating high school. He became a game warden over twenty years later, in 1958, something that would be extremely difficult to do now due to the education requirements. He briefly worked for the Forest Service before that.
A man becoming a Game Warden at 39, which he did, would be really unusual now. Probably impossible.
I actually have twice tried to plow that field myself, rejecting it once as I just go engaged. I would have been about 30 at the time. It'd be completely impossible for me to become a Game Warden now as I not have a wildlife management degree. I suppose that requiring that specific degree is a good thing, but I do miss the days when a lot of Game Wardens were basically from ranching families. Even when I was that age, many of them fit that category. My cohort was probably about the last one that would meet that description.
I went on, of course, to a successful career in the law, and I was already a lawyer, of course at age 30, and had been for a few years. I took one fork in the road. You aren't supposed to look back. Luke tells us, in a different context, that "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God". I'll confess I've looked back a lot.
Having said all of that, I spoke the same warden (turns out he's very green) as I found a poached elk about two weeks later. I had to guide him in, by phone, to the location. He was very nice on that occasion, and that's how things should be.
Indian Inspector E. C. Watkins issued a report to the Secretary of the Interior which would end up helping to bring about Gen. Terry's campaign of 1876. Indeed, on the same day, Gen. Sheridan issued a confidential letter to Terry informing him that he had met with President Grant, the Secretary of the Interior, and the Secretary of War, and that the Grant had decided that the military should no longer try to keep miners from occupying the Black Hills: "it being his belief that such resistance only increased their desire and complicated the troubles."
Watkins was a lawyer and businessman by profession who has served in the Civil War, where he obtained the rank of Major. He'd been appointed Inspector of Indian Affairs in in 1875 and occupied that position for four years before returning to private life
Philip Sheridan was in command of the Military District of Missouri at the time. Interestingly, he had only been married, at age 44, for a few months, to Irene Rucker, who was 22.
British commander in Indonesia E. C. Mansergh ordered Indonesians to surrender their arms by 18:00 or face "all the naval, army and air forces under my command". Sukarno appealed to President Truman and Prime Minister Attlee to intervene.
Former Hungarian Prime Minister László Bárdossy was sentenced to death.
August von Mackensen, age 95, famous German Field Marshal, died, which seems somehow fitting, not only because of his advanced old age, but also because the Germanys he served had effectively died as well.
Planning for little emergencies: Because we never know when we, or someone else, will be in need, it's best to live life ready to share, writes columnist David Romtvedt.
Nuclear weapons should not be entrusted to anyone pleased by Trump’s Gilded Age Brothel school of interior design.
George F. Will.
Trump has now put a gold lettered sign outside the Oval Office which says "The Oval Office".
This has, of course, sparked derision, as its stupid. The question is, however, does Trump not realize that all the tacky gold crap is going in the dumpster just as soon as he's gone? He probably actually doesn't.
"I know nothing".
Mike Johnson hasn't seen it. Whatever it is, he hasn't seen that.
Poor Mike, knowing nothing is his only defense.
Freak Out!
At least based on Twitter, which isn't a good place to actually judge how people feel, MAGAs are freaking out about the election results, as in "it means nothing at all it isn't donny's fault he wasn't on the ballot and people love him groceries are now free and Saudi chicks have a lot of money and everything is fine and new york will be sorry as they elected an Islamic commie I'l ltell my ma when Iget home the girls won't leave the boys alone. . .
Get a grip.
Well, actually don't. The results do mean something and you took a dope slap.
Yesterday, November 4,2025, was metaphorically D-Day, June 6, 1944. The forces that will destroy you are now present on all flanks. They're on the ground to your south, to your east, and now to your west, and you cannot stop them.
Those who are not besotted by Der Führer know this. Indeed, they know that the leader is mentally unstable and in irreversible physical decline. He is, quite frankly, mad and getting worse. He's surrounded, of course, by seemingly loyal lieutenants. . . not all of whom are really loyal . . . or seem to be.
You can read the situation. He never had the majority of force, only temporary advantage brought on by shock. You went along as it seemed that he'd bring along constative values with him. Because he seemed to do that, even while leading an immoral life and surrounding himself with immoral men, you tolerated deep immoralities, including extra judicial killings and racist round ups. This seemed to be the price you had to pay, temporarily, in order to restore true conservatism to the country.
But it went too far, and it got too weird, and you were in too deep to do anything about it. You know that. You watched him decline into illegality and insanity, and stood by as it got worse and worse.
But you can still save yourself, and your movement.
He had sworn an oath. He was a Roman Catholic. He knew the leader was immoral. He knew the country was committing deeply immoral acts. He served his country's efforts anyway until the raving madness of Der Führer reached the point where he could not ignore it. The situation isn't the same, except perhaps metaphorically, in that there is a Roman Catholic, who has taken an oath, who is serving his country, and knows that what is occuring deeply wrong and that the Leader is mad. He could use, with help, the 25th Amendment.
That will involve deploying something that you never thought you'd see used, and you have to do it. Some of you on the inside, who are not members of the MAGA SA, have to deploy the 25th Amendment before it's too late. You can't wait until the Red Army is in Berlin . . . or the mushroom cloud is over the Korean Peninsula, or protestors are shot dead in Portland, or mayor and governors arrested simply for being opponents.
If you do it soon, you have a chance, but by this point only a chance, of making peace with the overwhelming force of the electorate. If you do that now, or very soon, you can keep on with a conservative government, but not one that is outright insane. You might be regarded as heroes. You might save many of your members from November 2026. You can still make an impact on the country.
And you might, just might, avoid bloodshed in American streets, or foreign dead from an illegally provoked war, perhaps a nuclear one.
Or, you can decide that Loyalty is Your Honor and go down in complete and utter defeat in November 2026 while your increasingly demented leader rants and decides that you failed, as you weren't sufficiently loyal to him.
Indeed, that's already started, hasn't it? The wild party with barely clad young women, the sycophantic adoration sessions, the purges of the less than loyal.
And, too, the wise are leaving, aren't they?
The 25th Amendment was for the rare and extraordinary. You know the leader is mad. You know that this is going to take conservatism down. You know is madness is resulting in death. You know that you can act.
His madness is unfortunately not out of the ordinarily for the elderly, which he is. But to have somebody in such a state of mental decline in power, and grasping for absolute power, is. He's sick, getting sicker, and seeks complete control.
Will you, to your difficult credit, act to uphold your sworn oaths to the country, and save the nation from a demented autocrat whose decline gets worse every day, or will you abstain and simply try to take the last plane out of Berlin?
They can be, sometimes, an indicator of things to come.
June 25, 2025
New York City Mayoral Race
Progressive Zohran Mamdani beat Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic Primary.
Mamdani, who immigrated with his parents as a child from Uganda to the US, is a self declared democratic socialist. He's a Shi'a Muslim. All of these things are setting off the populist far right.
Curtis Sliwa, founder of Guardian Angels, won the Republican primary for New York City mayor, but was unopposed. He stands no chancing of winning the general election.
September 22, 2025
Texas
Texas has an election this year, and it includes a bunch of ballot propositions, which are:
Proposition 1 (SJR 59): Texas State Technical College funding
Proposition 2 (SJR 18): Capital gains tax ban
Proposition 3 (SJR 5): Bail reform
Proposition 4 (HJR 7): Water infrastructure funding
Proposition 5 (HJR 99): Tax exemption on animal feed
Proposition 6 (HJR 4): Securities tax ban
Proposition 7 (HJR 133): Tax exemption for veterans’ spouses
Proposition 8 (HJR 2): Inheritance tax ban
Proposition 9 (HJR 1): Inventory and equipment tax exemption
Proposition 10 (SJR 84): Tax exemption for homes destroyed by fire
Proposition 11 (SJR 85): School tax exemption for the elderly or disabled homeowners
Proposition 12 (SJR 27): Changing the State Judicial Conduct Commission
Proposition 13 (SJR 2): Increased school tax exemption for homeowners
Proposition 14 (SJR 3): Funding for dementia research and prevention
Proposition 15 (SJR 34): Codifying parental rights
Proposition 16 (SJR 37): Clarifying citizenship requirement for voters
And so the demented New York octogenarian made it clear to thousands that they were going to vote for New York Democratic Socialist Mamdani.
New York has actually had a prior Democratic Socialist Mayor, David Dinkins, who served from 1990 to 1993. Trump made minor contributions to the Dinkin's election campaign and reelection campaign, the latter of which failed. The current mayor of Cheektowaga, New York, Brian Nowak, is a Democratic Socialist.
Trump made another post last night:
Early indications are that this election is going to be an utter disaster for the Republican Party, setting up a potential disaster next year, and causing those who wish to evade disaster to potentially start moving away from MAGA now.
Prop 50 will be on California's ballot, which may end up countering the anti Democratic moves of the Texas legislature.
Cont:
New York State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani won the race for Mayor of New York City, becoming the first Muslim to occupy that position, and the first Democratic Socialist since Dinkens to occupy it.
It's a generational change with Mamdani defeating two elderly opponents.
It's an important mayoral seat, but nobody who has occupied it has ever been President, and for the most part, its occupants do not rise further in politics.
Democrat Abigail Spanberger took the Virginia Governor's race, causing it to go from Republican to Democratic control. She's the first female governor of Virginia. Democrat Mikie Sherill took the Governor's race in New Jersey.
Democrats are going to take Texas' 18th Congressional District, Houston, but they already held that.
Proposition 50 passed in California.
The Democrats won everywhere they were running. It's a dope slap in the face for Donald Trump.
November 5, 2025
So Donald Trump, since I know you're watching, I have four words for you: Turn the volume up.
Zohran Mamdani.
Cont:
A race we weren't following was that for Virginian AG. T he race was won by Jay Jones. Jones made headline news because some absolutely horrible things he said about another member of Virginia's legislature came to light. They were awful.
Jones beat the Republican incumbent Miyares, which suggest a pretty significant move away from the GOP in Virginia. Jones is a practicing African American Catholic, which is interesting in various ways.
Notable in the races last night Hispanics began to pull away from the GOP. Catholics had been attracted to the Republican Party for various reasons that I've noted here on numerous occasions, the principal one being that they're social conservatives as a rule. The interesting thing here is that the GOP, which only recently attracted them, has treated them much like the Democratic Party treated ethnic minorities, which is to say to ignore them and more particularly, to offend them. Merely being Hispanic is putting people in the target zone for ICE and the GOP has broken out into outright open feuds of race recently, with some figures in the pundit class being openly racist.
This gets back for a moment to noting that Jones is a Catholic. The populist far right is strongly Evangelical, and Evangelicalism has attracted a lot of American Hispanics. But the nature of the Evangelicalism and MAGA has not been sorted out and now, in the wake of Charlie Kirk's assassination, the pot is really boiling. Quite a few on the populist far right have barely hidden contempt for women working, which most Hispanic women have to do by default. Some MAGA pundits are openly racist with Nick Fuentes now openly going after J. D. Vance, a Catholic married to an Indian, on the basis that he's a "race mixer".
This doesn't explain last night's results overall, but it fits into it. The price of things, a major factor in Trump's win, is now starting to be a major factor in a retreat from the GOP. The brutality and lawlessness of the Trump administration is disgusting many people. The outright stupidity of some the things the Trump Administration says is taking a toll. The Government shutdown is being blamed, rightfully, on the Republican Party.
The 2026 election is a long ways off but so far the Administration and MAGA's reaction to everything is to double down on it. That probably won't change, but what might is the extent to which Republicans who don't have to go down with the ship begin to abandon it. Some already have. Marjorie Taylor Green, who was a MAGA fanatic, now is an opponent, for example. Thune is suddenly, as of yesterday, sounding more moderate.
But you can't moderate a demented narcissist surrounded by sycophants.