Sunday, June 7, 2020

June 7, 1920. Prohibition Upheld, Probicity for Evil Commences, Koreans Prevail at Fengwudong (봉오동 전투)


On this day quixotic legal efforts to litigate against Prohibition came to an end when the Supreme Court upheld its validity.

Quite frankly, these efforts were doomed from the onset and fit into the category of pointless legal endeavors. A person has to wonder why they were even attempted given that they never had any chance of success. The 18th Amendment was clearly valid and, therefore, the Volstead Act clearly was as well.

The GOP Convention and its candidates were also engaged in some drama over who would be the nominee for the 1920 fall election.

One group that was happy about the Supreme Court's decision on Prohibition was the Kl Klux Klan, which was an ardent supporter of it as part of its nativist concepts that looked down on everyone other than white protestants.  On this day that organization started a publicity campaign organized by the Southern Publicity Association, an advertising agency founded by its leader, Edward Clarke, together with Mary Elizabeth Tyler. The two had previously organized the Daughters of America, a nativist group. The Southern Publicity Association would go on to have the Anti Saloon League as one of its clients, showing the strange alignment between nativist racism, anti-Catholicism, anti-Semitism and prohibition in some quarters.

The campaign was a success and is credited with boosting the organizations fortunes at a time at which its trajectory appeared to be sending it into ultimate obscurity.  The KKK unfortunately benefited from the work done by the pair, whose changes to its structure resulted in a system which is still apparently used at least in part today.  Clarke and Tyler also benefited from their work personally.

The pair took in 80% of the KKK members initiation fees, making it a lucrative occupation for themselves. They invested the money in businesses that made Klan paraphernalia and in working together, they started working together on an illicit relationship that caused Clarke’s wife to sue for divorce for desertion. This was causing problems as early as 1919 when they were rousted out of bed by Atlanta police, charged with disorderly conduct, and fined for possessing whiskey in violation of the Volstead Act. Given the support of the KKK for both prohibition and the “purity” of white women, the hypocrisy is notable, but the news did not become widely known at that time. It would break in 1921 and bring about Clarke’s downfall in the KKK in 1923. That year Clarke fled the country do avoid charges of violating the Mann Act but he ultimately plead guilty to those charges. He was still alive in the 1940s and died in obscurity after that. Tyler, who had been married multiple times starting at age 14 or 15, would marry one more time and would die in 1924.

Clarke and Tyler are interesting examples of hypocrisy at the leadership level of organizations of the type they lead and remind contemporaries of the leadership of the Nazi Party which was similarly weird and in which individual leaders might not measure up to the “purity” and virility platforms which they based their propaganda on. Clarke and Tyler were clearly brilliant organizers and campaigners and were hugely successful in their efforts even while violating the “purity” tenants they were espousing, just as the circle of strange people surrounding Hitler saved the Nazi Party from fading into Weimar German obscurity based on similar concepts which they themselves were not the best examples of.

The mess of the Great War induced collapse of the Austro Hungarian Empire was evident again as the Treaty of Brno was signed naturalizing people of Austria and Czechoslovakia based upon the language that they spoke.  

On the same day, Battle of Fengwudong (Korean: 봉오동 전투; Hanja: 鳳梧洞戰鬪) was fought between Korean militias seeking independence of the Hermit Kingdom and the Japanese Army in Manchuria. While Korean independence would be a long time coming, and would be brought about due to World War Two, and imperfectly, the battle was a Korean victory.

George F. Will. What he proposes, and what it means.

George F. Will, far left, in happier political days.

I try to keep my election posts, for the most part, all in one thread as sort of a running contemporary history thread.  But the most recent item, on George F. Will's recent column urging Republicans to abandon their party, and his former, party, which I featured here;
Lex Anteinternet: The 2020 Election, Part 8: May 31, 2020 Friday May 29 marked the last day to register for the Primary Election in Wyoming.  So, this is a good place to start ...
probably deserves a closer look in various ways.

Here's what I posted:

June 5, 2020

Yesterday conservative Washington Post columnist George F. Will came out with an editorial that not only called for election defeat of President Trump, but also for his "Congressional enablers".

Will is a very prominent conservative voice and can probably legitimately be regarded as being the premier conservative columnist in the country, a status he rose to even prior to William F. Buckley's death.  Together with Buckley he might be regarded as one of the two defining intellectuals of modern conservatism, although other voices have been prominent in recent years who have taken a different track from the sort of Buckleyite conservatism of the post World War Two era.  Will left the GOP, which he'd been a member of for decades, in 2016 when Trump was nominated.

In some ways the Will departure has always focused the sharp divide between Republican populist and Republican conservatives.  While the two do blend, they are different.  Early on in the Trump Administration there were a fair number of pundits who expected the conservatives to balk at the Administration, but they instead fell into line fairly quickly, especially when it became obvious that the Trump Administration would support conservative policies in economics. law and in the social arena.  Essentially a sort of quiet deal was reached where the conservatives supported the Administration as long as the Administration supported conservative goals.

This has managed to hold together in spite of a lot of strain and to the disdain of those like Will.  In recent weeks, however, the strain has beginning to really show and by this point there's real reason to believe that Trump will be a one term President and he might end up taking Republican control of the Senate down with him.  Only a couple of months ago there was, interestingly enough, some serious speculation that the GOP might regain the House.  Now that's definitely not going to be the case and there's concern that things are going to go very badly.

For some of Will's view the deal reached with the Administration has been so corrupting that they're now arguing against their party or former party.  Will knows that a victory like he's now urging, which would not only end the Trump Administration but also bring in a united government that would be the most liberal one the country has seen since the Great Depression, would permanently bring into the government ideas and concepts that he's opposed his entire life. That's how opposed to what is going on he is.

What seems to underlay this line of thinking is a belief that conservatives have been pushed out or aside in the GOP anyhow, and therefore there's not really a place left for them in the party.  By urging its defeat, they're essentially arguing that the game is lost for the sort of intellectual conservatism they represent and by bringing down the populist centered GOP they can rebuild a new conservative party.
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How this will develop will be interesting to see.  Will isn't so influential in Republican circles that voters are going to follow his lead because he's urged them to take this step, but it might indicate that others are thinking the same thing.  More probably, it likely means that the Republican center is abandoning support for the Administration's continuation in November and independents are very likely to have irretrievably left.  The recent events in Minneapolis and the President's handling of it may have begun to cement his fate, or are at least definitely impacting his campaign at the present time.

But what Will urges, and whether it sound for a lot of conservatives, raises a lot of interesting questions.

Will, I'd note, is a columnist I've long admired. I should note there that I read columnists from both sides of the political fence. He's a conservative columnist I've always liked and still like. This column, and indeed Will himself, however, more than anything point to the oddity and deficiency of a two party system.

Let's start with the obvious, which we've discussed before. A two party system, which has become institutionalized in the United States, makes no sense at all and in fact is anti-democratic. Will's departing the GOP in 2016 illustrates that in a way that is dramatic and recent, but not unique.
Will is an intellectual conservative. Trump is not. Trump is a sort of quasi libertarian, sort of, populist. There's some common ground there, but frankly there's a lot of common ground between quasi libertarians and the radical Democratic left. Indeed, the candidate most like Trump on the Presidential scene is, in some significant ways, Bernie Sanders. The politician that most resembles Trump today who is simply on the political map may be AOC.

Huey Long, the legendary Louisiana populist.

That may seem like an odd thing to say but all of those politicians are populist without a deep attachment to a philosophical core in a lot of what they say. They'd hotly dispute that, but its their pitch to populism that most characterizes them. Their meme, if you will, is Huey Long.

Now Trump has shrewdly overcoming this by allying himself with Mitch McConnell, who has done the same, for their mutual political self-interests. But the significant thing here in this post is that Trump and Will aren't really in the same political party, if we assume that Will is a Republican. Will and McConnell, however, are in the same party, which may explain part of Will's overall anger that at his fellow conservatives who haven't followed his path.

The question then becomes for people who are in the same party as McConnell and Will on where to go.

That's where what Will urges will not work for large numbers of the people who admire him and want to follow his lead.

Will is an anomaly among Buckleyite conservatives. He's one of them, but in significant ways he's not like them at all.

William F. Buckley with Ronald Reagan.

Buckley defined and informed the modern conservative movement. He was an intellectual who gave a philosophical base to a conservative movement in the United States which had never had one before. There had been conservatives, but they were instinctual conservatives, with their conservatism often founded on nothing in particular other than a gut feeling. Liberals in the country, however, tended to be the opposite. They always had a strong philosophical base. Ironically, they lack one now to the degree they once had, having abandoned much of the intellectual core that once defined them. This is, indeed, making them much more like the populist we noted above, who also lack a philosophical core.

Buckley's vision was so strong that over time it displaced the old conservatism that had been around for the entire 20th Century through the 1950s. It first started to assert itself in the late 1960s but it really started to come into its own in the late 1970s and saw its first victory with the election of Ronald Reagan, a President who was hated by liberals to nearly the same degree which Trump presently is, but for completely different reasons. Founded on a real intellectual core, the Reagan reforms of government were deep and very long lasting, still exhibiting a major influence on the government today. Anyone born after the Reagan Administration is unlikely to be able to grasp how different the government was prior to that, and how both the right and the left tended to look back on the model of Franklin Roosevelt's Administration and emulate it. By way of an example, Richard Nixon would be regarded as a Democratic centrist today if he were running for office.

Buckleyite conservatives, held, at their core, that there were certain things that were dictated by nature, of which human nature was part. That defined their approach towards everything and their view was, to a large degree, Thomist in nature. Interestingly, this was also true of one of the two branches of American liberalism that emerged in the mid-19th Century and which was still influential throughout Buckley's life, which would explain why Buckleyite conservatives and some liberals were easily able to come together on some issues, civil rights being primary among them.

Holders of that view held that nature was real and physical, and that human beings were subject as part of that to human nature. They also held that the world was broken and always would be. Humans were incapable of producing a Heaven on Earth, but they would do as well as possible by observing, accepting and acting in accordance with nature, to include human nature. As noted, one significant branch of American liberalism held the same thing and differed only on the degree to which human interaction could and would improve things. Conservatives tended to take the view that except in certain areas conserving action was the best approach, whereas liberals tended to take the opposite view.

In contrast to both of these veins of thought were those liberals who held that nature was solely subject to human definition, including human definition, and anything could be changed to make a self-created Utopia. This has actually come to underpin liberal philosophy in recent years and it constitutes its underlying weakness in basically being based on nothing. In its most extreme form, it underlined the philosophy advanced by Marx and it came to influence the global left through his massive early 20th Century influence even though its contrary to nature and its application tend to be extraordinary problematic.

Buckley’s influence on the conservative movement was so strong that he can basically be regarded as modern American conservatisms, and perhaps even western conservatism’s, founder. As he advanced in intellectual spheres he gathered to himself those who he influenced and in distinct ways formed their thought. So its important to note that Buckley’s thoughts weren’t just Thomist in their basic nature but they shared an underlying belief. Buckley was a devout Catholic.

More than a few, but not all, of Buckley’s early acolytes were likewise deeply Catholic men, although not surprisingly as time went on many of them fell in comparison. Buckley was one of those interesting examples of somebody who remained personally and professionally loyal to his deep convictions and cannot be accused of hypocrisy no matter what a person may think of his ideas and ideals. Many of those he likewise influenced are also highly admirable in that way, but not all have proven to be. At any rate, the significant thing here is that not only did Buckleyites take a view that conservatism was founded on nature and that human nature was part of nature, but underlying it they accepted the proof of God’s existence, something that has to be denied in denying nature itself, as the ultimate underpinning of the natural order.

Which makes Will the exception and which may explain why his views aren’t really ones that other conservatives can readily accept.

George F. Will, age 79 now, was the son of a philosophy professor and was provided with an excellent early education. His BA was in religion from Trinity College in Hartford Connecticut, but unlike Buckley and many of his close fellows, Will is not a religious man and has claimed to hold atheistic views which in fact don’t come across that way. A protestant by heritage, his first wife was a diehard Presbyterian and his children were raised in that faith. That may explain his view as much as anything as his primary exposure would have been to Calvinism rather than to the Apostolic faiths which are the foundation of modern western thought. Will himself really basically places himself in the category of being unsure about God but disinterested this oddly places him in the position of being a supporter of religion while not being a member of any. He’s frank about his views on natural law and nature underpinning conservatism.

Will came up through Buckley and was the editor of Buckley’s magazine National Review at an early age. But in his later years his problem has been that its become increasingly obvious that his work, while always interesting, actually built simply on the shifting sand of being a conservative without having a deep foundation. Indeed, he has an avowed dislike of intellectuals even though he is one, which in some ways may be his way of avoiding the obvious, nature exists and there’s a reason for it, you simply can’t say it is.

But that view is why Will can take the positions he’s taking and not face the same issues that others do. Will really isn’t loyal to anything in particular as nothing makes him be loyal. So there are no moral issues for him, at the end of the day. And that makes his philosophy inherently weak.

Other conservatives can’t take that view in an election For those whose conservatism is founded on the metaphysical, rather than the physical, the natural order cannot easily be departed from. Voters who regard all human life as sacred don’t have the option that Will does of voting for an order that not only supports abortion but which would increase it, for example, and that’s only one such example.

Indeed, seemingly only having the common urban American’s view of the world, Will’s world outlook is remarkable small, and that also makes his election choices remarkably broad. He’s shown disinterest in some large issues of the day that require scientific inquiry. And for those things that many Americans engage in and have a fanatic loyalty to, he only seems to be a fan of baseball outside of his office. I’m a baseball fan too, but to just have this intellectual life, and baseball, is amazingly narrow.

Of course, I don’t know him, and all of these things may prove to be untrue. But they seem to be, and explain why Will can argue to just throw his former party to the wolves, accept the inevitable outcome that would mean, and then rebuild towards a new conservatism. He doesn’t have to worry about the now in that analysis.

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: First Lutheran Church, Watford City, North Dakota.

Churches of the West: First Lutheran Church, Watford City, North Dakota....:

First Lutheran Church, Watford City, North Dakota.



This Gothic style church is the First Lutheran Church in Watford City, North Dakota. The church was originally built in 1915, expanded in 1939, but destroyed in a fire in 1945.  The church was rebuilt in 1950.

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Best Posts of the Week of May 31, 2020

The best posts of the week of May 31, 2020.

It was an interesting contemporary week all throughout the country.

Sunday Morning Scene (A repeat): Churches of the West: Stop! Don't change that Church!


Strife


Days of Rage*


Mid Week At Work: The shipbuilders.


Today In Wyoming's History: Updates for June, 2020


The 2020 Election, Part 8


The Cruel Indignities


"Fredericksburg's controversial slave auction block removed early Friday morning." But was that the right thing to do?


Marine Corps bans Confederate Flags. . .and that was the right thing to do.


Blog Mirror. A Hundred Years Ago: 1920 Estate Electric Range Advertisement


Today In Wyoming's History: June 5, A protest

Blog Mirror. A Hundred Years Ago: 1920 Estate Electric Range Advertisement

Once again, we find that the excellent A Hundred Years Ago blog has touched on a topic of the type that this blog was formed to address, but which we constantly miss.

This shows up in the context of this item:

1920 Estate Electric Range Advertisement


One of the things the advertisement notes is that the electric range is "cool".

Cool?

We've never thought of that, and I don't know how we've missed it.

Now, we've certainly dealt with stoves more than once, and even had a photo essay devoted to them in this post here:

The Kitchen Stove

Moravian kitchen stove, late 20th Century

Ranch kitchen stove, 1940s.

Cow flop fueled kitchen stove, Montana, 1937.

Kitchen stove, Vermont, 1939.

Gas stove, Arizona, 1940.

Gas stove, Texas. 1940.

Minnesota, 1940.

North Dakota, 1940.

Girl reading by kitchen stove, New Mexico, winter 1943.

Colorado, 1938.

Gas stove, 1924.

Electric stove, California farm, 1944.


And in our incredibly slow moving novel, we even have a section about a morning stove warming up the house.

Why didn't we think of what that must have been like in summer?

Wondering what it was like?  Stop in and visit that post.

Marine Corps bans Confederate Flags. . .and that was the right thing to do.

The Commandant of the Marine Corps has put the stop to the Stars and Bars in Marine Corps settings.


The Confederate flag is something that even now I'm always taken off guard when I see it. 

When I was a kid growing up in the Rocky Mountain West I never saw it here.  Indeed, I really didn't see it around here until I was an adult, when you'd start to see it around. Somehow, it's really spread, and not just because people like Lynrd Skynrd.

Well, there's no getting around it.  The Confederacy was about one thing. . . keeping blacks enslaved, and that's what they fought for.  The men who served that cause, no matter what you otherwise think about any one particular one and how they lived their lives, were traitors to the United States, particularly when they had been serving officers in the military who had taken an oath to the United States (I'm willing to give more of a pass to conscripts, which is what a lot of Southern enlisted men were, including militiamen, but they still served an evil cause).  That's what that flag symbolizes.  It shouldn't be showing up on US military bases now.

"Fredericksburg's controversial slave auction block removed early Friday morning." But was that the right thing to do?

The newspaper article notes:
But was that the right thing to do?  That is, remove it?

The block was a sandstone block in Fredericksburg, Virginia, which according to the article:
Now, I understand the comment about it being a traffic and pedestrian hazard, but it seems to me that removing the block does more to wipe out the memory of the horror of slavery than to honor those who were enslaved.

Out of sight, out of mind, as it were.

And if not completely out of mind, at least the conditions in a "oh my gosh, do you see that?" way.

I'd have left it there.  If a picture is worth a thousand words, seeing something in person is worth even more.

Today In Wyoming's History: June 5, A protest

Today In Wyoming's History: June 5:

2020  A second gathering in protest of the death of George Floyd was held in Casper.  An earlier Casper event occurred several days prior, organized by a local group, where as this one was organized by one centered in Colorado.

Friday, June 5, 2020

The Cruel Indignities

Put up just this morning:
Lex Anteinternet: Steady Rain: We've had an entire series of these items recently: Lex Anteinternet: Heavier Rain : After just posting this, this morning: Lex Ante...
And now this:
WYDOT to close 10 rest areas as a cost-saving measure
CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Governor Mark Gordon has announced that Wyoming Department of Transportation (WYDOT) will close 10 rest areas located throughout the state as a way to reduce the agency’s operational costs.

The closures are effective June 15 and were prompted by a need for WYDOT to reduce costs due to budgetary shortfalls. They were approved by the Wyoming Transportation Commission during its recent special meeting. 
“This is a painful reality but a necessary step given our state’s fiscal situation,” Governor Gordon said. “This will have real impacts, not only for travelers, but for the custodial staff contracted to provide services to these facilities. These workers are our friends and neighbors in Wyoming communities around the state.” 
The rest areas that will close include Lusk on US 18; Guernsey on US 26; Greybull on US 14-16-20; Moorcroft on Interstate 90; Star Valley on US 89; Ft. Steele on Interstate 80; Sundance on Interstate 90; Upton on US 16; and Orin Junction and Chugwater, both located on Interstate 25. 
“We took a hard look at all of our rest areas and came up with a list of those that we feel we can close with a minimal amount of impact to our travelers,” said WYDOT Director K. Luke Reiner. “It was a hard decision but one that we came to based on the needs of the public and to ensure we maintain a balanced budget.” 
WYDOT officials sent letters to local community leaders and the contractors who work at the rest areas notifying them of the closures. 
The rest area closures will result in a savings to WYDOT of approximately $197,453 from June 15 through Sept. 30, which is the end of the fiscal year. After that, the department will save about $789,812 per year. 
“Although these rest areas will close, motorists will still have access to facilities in neighboring communities,” Reiner said. “Each of the rest areas that are closing are within a reasonable distance of a town that has facilities for the public.”

Steady Rain

We've had an entire series of these items recently:
Lex Anteinternet: Heavier Rain: After just posting this, this morning: Lex Anteinternet: Rain : Pennys started out as Gold Rule.  This is the first one back in the day, i...
Yesterday the Governor indicated that the State may engage in layoffs due to its budget crisis. 

Another one of those stool legs. . .

June 5, 1920, Sailors, Politicians and Rescuers.

On this day in 1920, the Jones Act, a major piece of legislation,  went into effect.

Merchant sailor trainee in boiler room during World War Two.

The act regulates a variety of things associated with maritime operations, most significantly that ships involved in coastal trade in the U.S. must be U.S. flagged ships, a requirement that has over the years preserved what little merchant fleet the U.S. retains, but which has been controversial in some quarters.  It's best known to most people who know if it, however, as it addresses the civil litigation rights of injured merchantmen.

On the same day, the Women's Bureau came into existence in the Department of Labor, where it still exists.


Congress adjourned on this day in 1920 and some Republicans immediately departed for the Republican convention in Chicago.

Henry Cabot Lodge on this day in 1920.

Pat Harrison who attended the Republican and Democratic conventions.

And high school girls in Massachusetts were studying first aid.