Sunday, January 30, 2022

School Daze. Does Wyoming's Superintendent of Education Selection System Make Sense?

S. H. Knight Science Camp classroom, Albany County, Wyoming.

We recently reported on our ongoing series on the 2022 election,  Lex Anteinternet: The 2022 Election Part VI. The Early Landing Li..., the following:

January 25, 2022

On a totally different topic, and not really related to the election directly, the Wyoming Superintendant of Education recently resigned, which means a new one has to be picked.

That entails forwarding three names chosen by the populist controlled far right Republican Central Committee to the Governor.  The Committee has now chosen their three picks. They are:

1.  Thomas Kelly, who occupies a position with the American Military University, and who indicated in his application that he relocated to Wyoming, which he did only very recently, from Colorado as Colorado's schools, he asserted, were teaching climate change, mulitple genders and white supremacy.

2.  Brian Schroeder, who is an educator by profession and head of Veritas University, a Christian K through 7 school in Cody.

3.  Marti Halverson, a far right wing Republican East Coast/Chicago ex pat who arrived in Wyoming in 1996 and who has been in the legislature.

The choices were obviously very political and fit in with the Central Committee's current populist hard right wing view.  The last superintendant to fit that bill, who was elected to the position, proved to be highly unpopular with Wyomingites.  Nonetheless, the Central Committee's candidates leave the Governor with little choice but to pick somebody far to the right.

Chances are, I'd guess, it will be Schroeder, who appears to be the most qualified and least politicized.

One committee member, Tom Lubnau of Gillette, raised concerns that the process used to pick the candidates was unconstitutional, as the committee is not longer proportionally representative. Given the current atmosphere everywhere, that should be a clear warning that whomever is chosen is likely to end up with their qualifications to hold office challenged in court.

Governor Gordon has five days to pick from amongst the three.  Whether he has a choice to send back for a redo I don't know.  He does with judicial nominees, but that process is likely different.

Whoever occupies this position will only be doing so until November, or upon their reelection in November.

This entire development sort of nicely tees up the current conflict in the GOP and the state's poltic's in general.  Traditionally the WEA, the teachers union, has been one of the very few strong unions in the state and used to have a very strong influence over who occupied this position.  None of the candidates in question will have that relationship with the WEA.  Jilian Balow had been careful to monitor the spirt of the times, while not diving too deeply into it, but chances are that two out of the three here would not be so restrained.

January 25, 2022 cont.

Tom Lubnau's prediction of a lawsuit was correct.  It was filed today, and he's one of the plaitniff's.

This is an extremely interesting development as it would suggest the mainstream part of the GOP is attempting to stage a comeback, and throught he court.  With the GOP having just sidelined the Natrona County delegation, and this suit now coming on, the party may be facing a litigation backlash that will be essentially taking on the current leadership.

Anyway a person looks at this, this is going to amount to airing some dirty laundry, and the nominees to the Governor aren't going to get up there quickly. Chances are the court will order a stay on the nominees and this will carry on for at least a little while.

At the same time, a Carbon County Legislature raised the eligibility of a Laramie County Legislature who has been very active as a respected establishment Republican to continue to serve in the Legislature, asserting that redisctricting may have zoned him out of his district. This was raised as an asserted question, but it can't help be noted that the challenge comes from the populsit righ against a legislature who openly spated with Anthony Bouchard of the populsit right.  The matter has been referred to the Secretary of State.

January 26, 2022

Federal Judge Skavdahl enjoined the Governor from slecting a Superintendant of Public Education until he could consider the issues in the new suit.

January 27, 2022

The Trib is reporting that the Court ordered the Governor not to make a choice until he "makes a decision" today.

Wrong.

What he did, is to enter a termporary order holding:

ORDERED that Governor Gordon shall not fill the vacant position of Superintendent of Public Instruction with any candidate forwarded to him by the Case 0:22-cv-00016-SWS Document 11 Filed 01/26/22 Page 1 of 2 Defendants prior to issuance of this Court's Order on the Motion for Temporary Restraining Order, which shall be issued no later than 12:00 p.m. MSI on January 27, 2022.

That doesn't mean that the Court will have made a decision on the case.  Far from it.  The Court, today, will make a decision on the Temporary Restraining Order.


January 28, 2022

Yesterday, the Court lifted its TRO on the basis that the plaintiffs' suit was unlikely to prevail on the merits.  Accordingly, Governor Gordon selected Brian Schroeder as the new Superintendent of Public Instruction.  Schroeder was fairly clearly the only realistic pick out of the three who were nominated.

Indeed, with the injunction lifted, the Governor was statutorily obligated to make his choice yesterday.

It has to be presumed that Schroeder will announce for this position and run for it, rather than simply choose to occupy it for a few months.

South Pass classroom, 1974.

This drama has now sort of concluded.  Brian Schroeder, a recent import to the state of Wyoming who is the head of a Christian academy, will be the new Wyoming Superintended of Education, taking position over Thomas Kelly, another recent import who has a position with the American Military University, a non profit on line university, and Marti Halverson.  Kelly moved to Wyoming from Colorado as part of the populist import thing going on, complaining about what he feels is a liberal based deterioration in education, or educational values.  The third finalist was Marti Halverson, a far right wing Wyoming politician originally from Chicago.

The names of all of those submitted are:

  • Michelle Aldrich
  • Megan Degenfelder
  • Reagan Kaufman 
  • Thomas Kelly 
  • Jayme Lien
  • David Northrup 
  • Joseph Heywood
  • Joshua Valk 
  • Marti Halverson 
  • Brian Schroeder, Sr.
  • Keith Goodenough
  • Angela Raber
I don't know who they all are, but to the extent I know something or have learned something, and taking out those already discussed;

Boxelder School, Converse County Wyoming.

Aldrich:  She is a professional educator and has been (or is) on the Cheyenne City Council.

Degenfelder:  She's' apparently a regulatory specialist with an oil and gas company.

Kaufman: She's a professional educator in Cheyenne.

Lien.  Don't know, which doesn't mean anything.

Northrup.  Former legislature, maybe a farmer.

Heywood.  Educator with Wyoming Virtual Academy.

Valk.  Educator with Casper College and a recent arrival.

Goodenough.  Long time Natrona County politician.

Raber.  Educator at Northern Wyoming Community College.


Okay, now if we assume (and maybe we aren't) that you should be an educator, or maybe a demonstrated administrator, who would we have been looking at.

Aldrich:  She is a professional educator and has been (or is) on the Cheyenne City Council.

Kaufman: She's a professional educator in Cheyenne.

Heywood.  Educator with Wyoming Virtual Academy.

Valk.  Educator with Casper College and a recent arrival.

Kelly.

Raber.  Educator at Northern Wyoming Community College.

Schroeder.

Well, two out of those six names made the finalist.

One of the Casper high schools from the air.

Of all three, however, we certainly see political views at work.  Gordon was left with three choices, but really two of them were pretty much untenable, really.

Now, here's a dirty little secret of the Wyoming nomination process.  Boards very frequently nominate two no goes and one go, knowing that they're not really leaving the Governor with three choices, but only one.  You see it all the time. The Central Committee likely knew that there was no way that Gordon was going to pick Halverson and that picking Kelly was highly unlikely. Effectively, they may have simply picked Schroeder and then weighted the dice.

That's politically legit, of course.

But is Schroeder the best choice?

Well, if you have a certain world view, no doubt.

But does this system of choosing a replacement make sense?

No, not really.

It might have at one time.  

Bolsler Consolidated School, Bosler Wyoming.

This system was dreamed up when most people didn't graduate high school.  The general gist of it was that something around 40%, more or less, of Americans made it all the way through school.  A good 60% left school before they were finished.  More males left than females, and for a solid reason. They were going to work and, up until really after World War Two, having a high school education didn't give you that much of an advantage if you were going into blue collar work.  One local rancher around here, for example, took his kids out of school at 8th grade.  By that age, he reasoned, they'd learned everything useful that they were going to that related to their future agricultural career.

Those going on to white collar occupations were more likely to stay in school.  Girls were also more likely to stay in as female employment was quite limited and dropping out of school, for most of them, meant domestic employment at home. Who would opt for that if they had anyway to avoid it?

Education, moreover, was extraordinarily local early in the state's history.  Towns, like Casper, would hire a teacher who worked for the town.  The teacher was nearly always a young woman who had some sort of education.  Not too infrequently she simply had a high school education, but relatively early on we began to see "teachers colleges" that specialized in educating teachers.  And here's an important clue on the current system.

The western states realized that one of the ways they suffered enormously was from a largely uneducated population.  Farming and ranching was fine, but they felt that if they were going to have mines, industry towns and cities, they needed to emphasize education.  Education, in facdt, became a huge deal in the West, with Western states being nearly manic about it.

This saw the creation of teachers colleges as part of this movement and concern.  Chadron State in Nebraska, for example, was originally a teachers' college.  And it also saw the creation of the system we now have, with local school districts and school boards controlling schools locally, and the Wyoming Department of Education heading it up overall.

In a society in which high school graduates were either a minority or a slim majority, and everyone pretty much appreciated the need for education, or at least the classes involved in politics at the time really appreciating it, the system worked very well, and it made a great deal of sense that the head of the whole thing was an elected superintendent.  That person had a role that pretty much everyone agreed on, the complete and full education of students and keeping them in school.

Is that still the case?

There's reason to doubt it.

No matter what the cause of it may be, a person doesn't have to be paying all that much attention to realize that over time the number of topics hotly debated as to what will be taught regarding them has expanded enormously, and politically.  There were early examples, of course, with the Skopes trial being a prime example.  But by and large, in most places in the West, people took the view that a good education was the primary goal.  People didn't have a lot of debates about what should be in science books.  I don't recall a single kid being dragged out of a science class for discussing evolution.  I'm a child of two devout Catholics, but when we came home with a note about "sex ed" in high school, my father read it and put it aside.  100% of the students attended, including all my co religious.  It was information, we knew, not a values suggestion.

For that matter, a weirdly disorienting introductory film to the topic was shown to us kids in grade school with no note being sent home at all, perhaps because the film actually taught so little it conveyed no information at all.  All I can recall about it was the information that calling girls on the phone caused nervousness (a true fact).

And so on.  Nobody stormed the school regarding history, etc. etc.  

And when my own kids went, which is pretty recently, the same was all true.

Now they aren't.

Starting with the South, or seemingly starting with Texas, there's been all sorts of fights once again about what is appropriate to teach both scientifically and historically in school.  The fight in the sciences is almost always over 1) evolution, and 2) climate change.  These are political, not scientific, fights. Nonetheless, within the last decade at least one person ran for a Wyoming school board in recent years whose own children were not sent to public school at all, and probably topic #1 had something to do with that.

We see this in the recent nominees.  One of the three nominees had, among his complaints, that the schools in Colorado were "teaching" climate change.  Most scientists agree that anthropocentric climate change is happening and is a real threat.  If the schools are touching on it, they're reflecting that fact, which is what they're supposed to do.  However, many people also confuse their economic views with their scientific ones, and feel that one follows the other.

Now, there's also all sorts of assertions that schools are teaching left wing social items.  Maybe some places they are.  But here they are not.  Nonetheless, the debate's spilled over into the state. 

All of this reflects the heavily divided nature of the country right now. The 1619 Project provoked the 1776 Project.  Debates rage on Critical Race Theory even if no school in the state is teaching it.  And fears that something will happen yield to the certainty that it is in fact happening.

This has caused an open debate to some extent about the schools and what they are teaching.  Wyoming's public schools are excellent, and there's no reason to believe that they're teaching subversive anything.  To listen to some quarters, however, you'd think the opposite.  For a time I ended up on a mailing list, for example, in which almost daily I received emails from the same author on all the horrible books that were in the Gillette schools, in the author's view.

Now, parents have a right, and indeed a duty, to educate their children.  This includes making value judgments, but it also includes approaching education, including home education, honestly.  The state Superintendent of Education, however, has an obligation to educate everybody's children.

That duty is distinctly different from a parent's duty in certain fundamental ways.  In this multicultural society, parents who have distinct cultural views that are not society's overall will have to take up the laboring ore.  For this reason, various religions have always sponsored private schools, with Catholic education being a prime example.   What the state doesn't have the right to do, however, is to impose distinct cultural views on the population as a whole . . . even though it sort of does has that right.

That last statement, no doubt, at first blush doesn't make a lick of sense.  How can that be true?  But that's a big part of this debate.  The hard left undoubtedly has its own social views, and they are largely at odds with most Americans. That the left has had some impact on education is true.  But by and large it has not co-opted it.  The fear that it has, however, has lead to a pretty massive counter reaction.  So, as an example that's already mentioned, we have some who are arguing for a massive overhaul of historical focus, which has created a counter reaction by those who would present a sanitized heavily patriotic view from solely a right wing prospective.

A really good example of this is provided by way of an advertisement for some sort of educational institution in the pages of a recent sporting journal.  Showing what is supposed to be a college classroom, apparently, the professor is telling the students how they'll learn to hate their country in the class, and how "FDR, Karl Marx and Malcolm X will be your new heroes".

That an ad like that ends up in a widely distributed magazine is stunning in and of itself, but the proposition shows how extreme people are now viewing their own history.  Marx isn't anyone's hero in the US out of a certain nutty far left caste.  FDR, however, was hugely admired by most Americans and still is.  To put him in the same camp as Marx is massively absurd.  Malcolm X, moreover, is a hero to some Americans including some who are neither Black Muslims or Muslims, and he is a uniquely American character quite frankly who has to be treated subtly to be grasped.  

A person may wonder what this has to do with this process, but right now the Wyoming GOP leadership is in the far right camp, and at least a couple of these nominees demonstrate that.  The electorate isn't, however, which cuts the other way.  But the overall question remains.

In a field which has become increasingly scientific over the years, and which requires professional certification to profess in, does it make sense that this position be a political one?  

It might not.  It might make more sense that the Superintendent of Education be appointed by the Governor from applicants qualified in their profession, and to serve a term that's staggered with the Governor's so it doesn't automatically change with each change in administration.

Best Post of the Week of January 23, 2022

The best posts of the week of January 23, 2022

Cliffnotes of the Zeitgiest Part XXVIII. The juvenile or nearly so femme fatale edition. Plus, the example of monarchy, Robbing trains, Expats and politics, M&M's, Tucker Carson and Carson Tucker.









I posted the above entry with the photo above, even though it goes on much longer than that, as the same photo was posted on Reddit's 100 Years Ago Today thread where it received a large number of likes and lots of comments.

I'm not sure what it is, and I don't know that I want to, but I've noticed that any photos of young women on Reddit tend to go a bit wild.  It's a bit scary.

Quite awhile back I posted on the same sub a photo of a couple of young Kurdish women and some people were nearly overcome by it.  If I recall, they were simply in traditional dress, getting water.

Anyhow, I'm often surprised but what people are really fascinated by and what they are not.  This is one such example.

As an aside, one sharp-eyed observer wondered if the girl on the right was holding a cigar.  I hadn't even noticed, but frankly I think she is.  Opinions?

I have to say, the two young women look very happy.  I hope their live were happy ones.

2022 Wyoming Legislative Session. Part I.




Saturday, January 29, 2022

Why is Putin Jonesing for Ukraine?

Ukrainian girl in traditional costume.

Well because he doesn't believe that there's such a thing as Ukrainians at all.

And hence he doesn't believe that Ukraine exists.

A lot of current commentators will claim that this makes him a neo-Soviet, a claim for which there's more than a little truth, but in real ways, it makes him a neo-Romanov.

A little history.

Ukrainians and Russian stem from the same early Slavic people, a group of tribesmen who lived in central Eastern Europe.  Indeed, modern Slavs are so closely related, genetically, that for the most part their DNA is of the same stock today.  I.e., if you looked at a DNA sample of a Russian, and a DNA sample of a Croatian, you couldn't tell who was from where.[1]   Only the Poles, who seem to have mixed more with their German neighbors, are genetically distinct.

Their origin is obscure, because the origins of all people are obscure.  It's not really possible today to determine exactly where they stem from, but it seems likely it was probably from an area that today is in fact in Ukraine

Or maybe not.  Some say it was in Pomerania.  

Hmm. . . 

Anyhow, originally all one people, they ultimately separated into East and West Slavs.  The Ukrainians are East Slavs, along with the Russians, the Belarusians, and the Rusyns.  You probably haven't heard of that last group, unless you are really up on things Slavic, and might not have heard of the Belarusians but for their communist government recently trying to flood Poland with Middle Easter refugees.

All told, there are 200,000,000 of them. . . which means that since World War Two their population has increased . . .well not hardly at all.  Of the groups, the Russians are the largest.  Rusyns are the smallest group, with there being just over 600,000 spread around Eastern Europe.  Ukrainian are the second-largest group, and indeed Ukraine is one of the most populous country in Europe.

Anyhow, no matter what their origin, like all expansive people they spread around, and as that happened, they eventually had separate cultural developments.  This is the same reason, for example, that the Germans and the Dutch aren't the same people even though they are linguistically and genetically very similar.  And it's the same reason that the Swedes and the Germans aren't the same people as well, even though they ultimately are both Germanic peoples whose distant ancestors were the same folks.

All of this gets more complicated the closer people are culturally related to each other.  Germans and Swedes may have all stemmed from the same people in some smokey village on the Steppes, before they started fleeing from the Slavs, but they clearly aren't the same people now. What about the Norwegians and the Swedes?

Well, as recently as the late 19th Century, that point was somewhat debated.  Yes, they were distinct, but not that distinct.  In Medieval times they were also distinct, but sufficiently close that they were often ruled by the same monarchs.  Their languages are, moreover, cognate.

Another example might be the Irish and the Scots.  The Scots are in fact descendant from Irish invaders into northern Britain in the 400s.  Since then, however, 1600 years has passed, and they clearly aren't regarded as the same people.

The Ukrainians and the Russians are something like that.  Ukraine might have been, or might not have been, the ancestral homeland of all the Slavs, but people and cultures changed as they moved about, and the Slavs really moved about, a lot.

As they did, the Russians became the most numerous and the most territorially aggressive, although occasionally the Poles would rival them for that title.  In both instances, Ukraine was frequently their victim, as Russians claimed Ukraine was Russian and the Poles claimed it was Polish. All the while, the Ukrainians kept claiming that they were Ukrainian, and given the chance, as they occasionally were, they'd form their own nation.  Usually that nation, however, has lived with the threat of Russian or Polish invasion, with both happening occasionally. The Poles threatened the then newly, and briefly, independent Ukraine as late as the 1920s, not all that long ago historically. And of course the Soviets reincorporated Ukraine into the Russian Empire in the 1920s, over the violent opposition of the Ukrainian state and then a Ukrainian guerilla movement.

Both reemerged during World War Two, making Ukraine's Second World War history complicated.  In some regions, there was widespread collaboration with the Germans, which was a reaction to heavy Soviet repression and the mass starvation that had been imposed on the region due to Soviet occupation in the interwar period.  In other regions, and more and more as the war went on, Ukrainians served in the Red Army or partisan groups.  However, a partisan movement also emerged that fought for a free Ukraine, that being the Ukrainian Insurgent Army emerged during the German occupation to resist it in favor of an independent Ukraine, and to resist the Soviets for the same reason.


During its existence, the UPA fought the Poles, Germans and the Soviets, with the Soviets and the Poles being their primary opponents, but the Germans being real ones as well.  Red Army mortality rates fighting the UPA after World War Two were higher than they were in Afghanistan, with some areas being particularly bitterly fought over, but without outside support, the Ukrainian guerrillas passed into history for the second time in the 20th Century, in this instance ceasing to exist probably around 1949, and in no instance later than the early 1950s.  The organization did not wage a "clean" war by any means, taking genocidal actions against displaced Polish populations.

So, historically, the region has certainly fought for its independence, not always admirably, from any other power.

The Ukrainians have their own language, but it's cognate with Russian, showing how closely related the peoples are.  The language shares some similarities with Polish, but they are not cognate, with the distinction being an odd one that has to do with listening to Polish in a studied manner in order to learn how to understand it.  Ukrainians have their own branch of Orthodoxy, Ukrainian Orthodox, which just received autocephalous status from the Greek Patriarch, although a branch loyal to the Russian Orthodox Metropolitan exists as well.  It also its own branch of Catholicism, that being the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church (the Ruthenians, with that name being the ancient name for Ukrainians).  Overall, over half of the Ukrainian people are members to some degree in one of the three Christian churches native to the region, with some being members of other Christian professions, and some Tartars retaining Islam.

The religious distribution of the country is revealing about the current situation, as is the linguistic one.  On its margins, Ukrainian speakers bleed into Russian ones, with it being the case that the closer a person is to the eastern border with Russia, the more likely it is that a person speaks Russian.  In terms of religion, most Ukrainian observant are Ukrainian Orthodox until a person approaches the Polish border, at which point Ruthenains dominate.

Ukrainians claim additionally culture distinctions beyond that, which no doubt exist, but which I'm not any sort of expert regarding.  Architecturally, not too surprisingly, the further west a person goes in the country, the more its architecture resembles that of Austria.  Supposedly, Russians are much more communal and gregarious than Ukrainians, and the legendary Russian association with alcohol supposedly does not carry over into Ukraine.

Like every region of the former USSR, there are a lot of Russians everywhere.  The Soviet Union was oddly admirable and not in regard to its view of its imprisoned nationalities, in that the Communist did elevate to high position many who were not Russian in ethnicity, Stalin perhaps being the most famous example.  At the same time, the USSR steadfastly engaged in a policy of Russification everywhere, exporting Russian populations to non-Russian regions, and conversely exporting wholesale some non-Russian populations elsewhere.  In this context, it is not surprising that there are large Russian populations inside of Ukraine's borders, and it's more surprising that they are not evenly spread, being concentrated instead on the regions which actually border Russia.

What is going to occur is now, to a degree, anyone's guess, but Putin appears to be taking a page out of Hitler's book in regard to Czechoslovakia in 1939.  The Donbas is Putin's Sudetenland, and the globe is already talking about concessions to Russia and its "legitimate" grievances.  Hardly noticed is that the Russian population declined by 1,000,000 people last year, 600,000 due to COVID deaths, and the country is a mess.  

There's no reason to believe that his appetite, in regard to Ukraine, or the former Russian Empire in general, stops at Donbas.  The real question is whether the Western powers, here and in the Far East, are now willing to allow the globe to step back into the geopolitical atmosphere of the late 1930s.  

Ukraine will provide the first test.

Footnotes

1.  Ukrainians claim that this is not true, and that you can tell the difference between Ukranians and Russians by mere appearance, with the Russians being more Finnic.

Whether the DNA bears this out or not, it would actually make a little sense.  As the Ukrainians are to the south of the Russians, their ancestors should not encountered what was the vast Finnic territory, originally, and its inhabitants the way the ancient ancestors of the Russians did.  In contrast, the Ukrainians heavily encountered the Scandinavian Rus, and ironically the Kievian Rus gave Russia its name.

Thursday, January 29, 1942. Iranian alliances, Integrated blood, Desert Island Discs.


Desert Island Discs premiered on the BBC. The show invited guests on to imagine that they were shipwrecked on a desert island, but could bring 8 records with them, then featuring the eight.

The show ran throughout the war, and has been revived from time to time.  The concept remains a popular one in the imagination.

Indeed, at least for the stressed, being shipwrecked on a desert island, as long as you have food and some comfort, starts to look like a pretty good thing. . . for a while.

As we learn from Sarah Sundin's blog; 
January 29, 1942: Iran signs treaty of alliance with Britain and USSR, which promise to depart Iran 6 months after Axis defeat.

Iran frankly didn't have much of a choice but to agree, and the Soviets would nearly have to be forced out after the war.

Persia had been long part of the "great game", along with Afghanistan, played between the United Kingdom and Russia.  As it was between the two, its position was untenable during the Second World War, and it was occupied, as we've previously discussed, by both powers.

The New York Times reported, on the previous days byline, that Prime Minister Churchill was standing for a vote of confidence:

LONDON, Jan. 28 -- Debate on conduct of the war raged in Parliament today with a political fury quite equal to the fighting on the fronts. At the end of one of the longest single day's sittings that Parliament has had since the war began, there was little doubt that Prime Minister Winston Churchill would get a big majority in a vote of confidence that will close the three-day debate.

He survived the vote.

African American enlisted men, white officer, 10th Cavalry, April 1942.

The NYT also reported that:

RED CROSS TO USE BLOOD OF NEGROES; New Policy, Formulated After Talks With Army and Navy, Is Hailed and Condemned WILL BE PROCESSED ALONE New York Delegation Criticizes Separation as 'Abhorrent' to Founding Principles

Hard to believe this was a concern with some people.

Blood is blood, but the "mixing of blood" to mean the mixing of "races" had been a long fear in a certain section of the United States, with no quarter of it being immune.  Laws existed nearly everywhere preventing mixed marriages, although the degree to which they were enforced varied enormously.

Scientifically, it was well known and had been for a very long time that there's no difference whatsoever between the blood of various humans, not matter what their ethnicity.  Indeed, the concept of "race" itself is a false one, although it's still widely believed.  The genetic variance between various human populations is slight, and to the extent it's real, it's real between various populations that are grouped into "races" as well.  I.e, there's a genetic variance, albeit slight, between, let's say, Irish men and Italians, and so on.

As we've discussed here before, it's widely stated, inaccurately, that World War Two brought about a phenomenal change in regard to women in the workplace, and hence society.  It'd be more accurate to say that about the status of African Americans in American society.

Their place, of course, had been fought over and struggled over since the end of the Civil War.  The Compromise of 1877 had caused a massive nationwide retreat in the cause of civil rights in the country, but the issue had not gone away.  The creation of the Lost Cause myth, its strong growth in the early 20th Century, and increased mobility, had brought about the Great Migration in the second decade of the 20th Century. World War One saw African Americans volunteer to fight in the belief that their performance in the war would bring about a final leap to full equality, but that not only did not occur, the end of the war brought a racist reaction with the Red Summer of 1919.

Still, things were slowly changing, and the liberal administration of Frankly Roosevelt at least held the promise of the advancement of civil rights for African Americans.

African Americans had served in some numbers in the U.S. military since the Revolution.  Interestingly, the Navy had been originally integrated, as we've also discussed here previously, but the Army had been segregated since large-scale recruiting of blacks first occurred during the Civil War.  The Marine Corps had not admitted blacks its entire history, going into the Second World War.  Given the excellent performance of black troops during World War One, it would be natural to suppose that the experiment would have been repeated during World War Two, but in fact the Army was, at least at first, more prejudiced during the Second World War than the First.

In spite of having longstanding all black combat units, prejudice from career officers, often with Southern roots, meant that the Army declined to deploy them as combat troops. For the most part, the Regular Army black units were busted up into service units during the war.  African American sailors likewise were relegated to service roles on board ship, something that had been the case since the steel wall Navy replaced the wooden wall one.  Blacks were allowed into the Marine Corps as the war progressed, but again in service roles.  Only late in the war, when pressure from African American groups and combat necessity required it, would this start to break down in the Army.

Still, the fact that the nation went to war espousing the ideal of equality made the hypocrisy a bit too much for society to bear.  Integration of the services would commence in the late 1940s and there was no going back.  This was brought about, in large part, due to the ideals expressed in the Second World War.

Related Threads:

Blacks in the Army. Segregation and Desegregation


Women in the Workplace: It was Maytag that took Rosie the Riveter out of the domestic arena, not World War Two

 

Friday, January 28, 2022

Wednesday, January 28, 1942. Comings and Goings.

"One of our Filipino boys, injured in the fighting on Bataan, January 28, 1942, being brought back to a first aid station by his comrades. Longoskawayan Point, West Coast."

On this day in 1942, the Germans and Italians retook Benghazi.

The Ninth Pan American Conference adjourned. Twenty-one nations agreed to sever relationship with the Axis powers as a result of it, although quite a few already had.  Brazil and Paraguay did that day.

From Sarah Sundin's Today In World War Two History blog, we learn the following:
January 28, 1942: 80 Years Ago—Jan. 28, 1942: US Navy PBO Hudson pilot claims to sink a U-boat off Newfoundland and radios “Sighted sub, sank same,” but no U-boat was sunk, an honest error. US Eighth Air Force is activated in Savannah, GA, under Brig. Gen. Asa Duncan; originally intended for North Africa but will serve in Britain. US Naval Magazine at Port Chicago, CA, is established as a subcommand of Naval Ammunition Depot at Mare Island.

And from our  Today In Wyoming's History blog, we learn this:

Today In Wyoming's History: January 281942   The USS Wyoming put in at Norfolk and began a series of gunnery training drills in Chesapeake Bay. Attribution:  On This Day.
Oakland Army Base, January 28, 1942.

Saturday, January 28, 1922. The Knickerbocker Storm.

On this day in 1922, a day in which in 2022 a major blizzard is expected on the East Coast, one hit the East Coast.



The storm is called the Knickerbocker Storm as it collapsed the roof of Washington, D.C.'s Knickerbocker Theater due to a heavy snow load, killing 98 people.


The Saturday Evening Post featured a trapper on its cover, while The Country Gentleman featured a tractor in the sunset.

What's wrong with Justices like Stephen Breyer.

Queen Anne addressing the House of Lords.

We noted the retirement of Justice Stephen Bryer on the day the news broke, here:
Lex Anteinternet: Courthouses of the West: Justice Stephen Breyer To...: Courthouses of the West: Justice Stephen Breyer To Retire. :  Justice Stephen Breyer To Retire. Just when you thought the news wasn't te..

Predictably, the New York Times is lamenting his retirement, noting: 

Yet Justice Breyer was anything but dull. As Linda Greenhouse writes in a guest essay this week, beneath his cool demeanor was a passion stirred by his clerkship as a young lawyer on Earl Warren’s Supreme Court. It was a court, she writes, “that understood the Constitution as an engine of progress.”

 

As his years as a justice on the court proceeded, Greenhouse writes that he ended up as the “quintessential Enlightenment man in an increasingly unenlightened era at the court.” Moreover, he found himself recently being urged by the left, at the age of 83, to retire lest the Senate fall into the hands of Republicans this fall and torpedo the chance that he would be replaced by a liberal or even a moderate on a court that has become increasingly conservative.

And this is part of exactly what was wrong with the Court and, dare we say it, part of how the country became the mess it is today, with a populist coup attempt just one year under our belt, and our commitment to democracy really shaky.

The Constitution is a law.  

It's not an engine of anything.  It was written in a certain place and time, by men who were elected to those positions at that date and time.

Understanding the Constitution as an engine, that is a driver, of progress assumes that an unelected panel of nine have a common definition of "progress", something that history suggests is problematic.  In the 1920s and 30s, for example, the most "progressive" Americans were far, far to the left of the nation as a whole, and even further to the left of the left today.  Is that progress?  Quite a few would regard "progress", both in political terms and in terms of what the court has imposed on the nation, undemocratically, since 1973, as not progressive at all, but rather as sort of a retrograde return to a sort of barbarism of earlier times.  Others would disagree, but the co-opting of the court of those issues has operated to keep them from being determined democratically or even to make a large section of the country feel completely disenfranchised.

That latter feeling is what gives rise, in part, to a "take my country back" or "keep our country" sort of feeling in part of the American electorate.  Losing at the polls is losing, but losing to a court, in a remote setting, on issues that no clear grounding in the Constitution is quite another thing.

And that's what has ultimately defined the much of the modern trend of the court.  Judicial conservatism, as understood by the press, isn't conservatism at all, but rather textual originalism.  If it isn't in there, it isn't

To go further, however, Breyer's career also demonstrates what's wrong with the Court.  Breyer didn't have to go into court in front of a judge on cases that had come in the door, from an insurance carrier, or on assignment from a boss.  He didn't have to puzzle out the meaning of a badly drafted statute and hunt down its legislative history.  He hardly had to work at being a lawyer at all.

And this is now common of the entire Court. Their tickets are punched by an elite Ivy League Law School that allows them to avoid practicing law and go on to making decisions for an entire country based on that early history.

The founders would not have had that in mind.

President Biden has already announced that Breyer's replacement will be a black woman.  There's a certain presumption, perhaps correct, that picking people by certain predetermined characteristics will achieve a certain result, although with the Supreme Court, that's tricky.  The most conservative justice on the Court, after all, is a black man.  There will no doubt be many black women lawyers who are qualified for the job.  We might hope, although it's hoping against hope, that whoever is chosen will not be a Harvard law graduate, nor even an Ivy League graduate.  We might also hope that the person isn't a sitting jurist, and isn't a college professor.

No, rather, a black woman lawyer who is actually practicing law.

That person will know what the law is about, how it is applied, and what real law is like.

It's not too much to hope for, but it won't happen.

Blog Mirror: Changemaker Profile: Renard Turner and the Central Virginia Agrarian Commons

 

Changemaker Profile: Renard Turner and the Central Virginia Agrarian Commons

Friday Farming: What's All The Fuss About Gas?

 What's All The Fuss About Gas.

Sustainability.


Derrick “talks to cows” Josi 
Seedling
@DerrickJosi
Is anyone else sick of hearing how agriculture is going to become sustainable? Farming the same property for over a century, we’ve been sustainable. I feel like agriculture is always trying to pull the knife out of its back put there by industry leaders trying to sell product.


A good novel

A good novel tells us the truth about its hero; but a bad novel tells us the truth about its author.

G. K. Chesterton.


Boston - Peace of Mind (Audio)

Thursday, January 27, 2022

A final Republic of China/People's Republic of China Showdown? Aftermath. Part IV

So if the PRC attempts to invade Taiwan, and it plays out like I've run it, what then.


It's hard to say. The government seems firmly entrenched, but then nearly ever authoritarian government does until it is not.

The Chinese economy is really not in as good of shape as it casually seems from the outside.  A war with the west, even a victorious one, would wreck it.  A lost war would be a national embarrassment and the end of decades of work with failure.  Chinese regimes that are embarrassed have historically not lasted, even though the country has never manged to be democratic.  It'd meet with massive internal discontent, aided by massive unemployment.

Even a victorious war, however, may not bring a victorious peace.

China's counting on its continued role as a global exporter. . . the role the US occupied in the world's economy following World War One and up until the 1970s, and which the British had occupied before that.  China's underlying belief is based on hubris, it's too important to be disregarded.

Those positions, the economic dominance of the US and UK, were, moreover, occupied under conditions in which trade tended to be more closed, and economies developed and changed much more slowly.  And they also existed under conditions in which the US, and the UK before it, retained a large native laboring class. We still have that class, but its nothing like it was before.  Much of it has moved into the quasi white collar middle class, and even keeping it in that position has become a matter of national policy to the point of subsidization, if necessary.

Nobody can really fully determine how this would play out.  History is our only guide, really.  But the long term history of nation's on China's path, that of Imperial Germany, or for that matter Nazi Germany, has not tended to be a happy one.

Hubris turns out to be a bad basis for making policy.  Hubris lead Hitler eventually into the Soviet Union. . . hubris lead Stalin to present a final set of demands to Hitler in 1940 that couldn't realistically be granted in exchange for the USSR becoming a Germany ally.

None of which will likely deter them from acting.  That lesson, for autocratic states, never seems to be learned.


Prior threads:

A final Republic of China/People's Republic of China Showdown? Part I.


A final Republic of China/People's Republic of China Showdown? Weighing the costs and benefits from a Red Chinese prospective. Part II