This Hole Looks Deep, Ctd

The concerns about deepfakes continue, as reported in WaPo:

Airbrushing and Photoshop long ago opened photos to easy manipulation. Now, videos are becoming just as vulnerable to fakes that look deceptively real. Supercharged by powerful and widely available artificial-intelligence software developed by Google, these lifelike “deepfake” videos have quickly multiplied across the Internet, blurring the line between truth and lie.

But the videos have also been weaponized disproportionately against women, representing a new and degrading means of humiliation, harassment and abuse. The fakes are explicitly detailed, posted on popular porn sites and increasingly challenging to detect. And although their legality hasn’t been tested in court, experts say they may be protected by the First Amendment — even though they might also qualify as defamation, identity theft or fraud.

Being a movie star just makes you a bigger target, as one of the biggest stars, Scarlett Johansson, reports:

“Nothing can stop someone from cutting and pasting my image or anyone else’s onto a different body and making it look as eerily realistic as desired,” she said. “The fact is that trying to protect yourself from the Internet and its depravity is basically a lost cause. . . . The Internet is a vast wormhole of darkness that eats itself.”

And, so far, there doesn’t seem to be any plausible approaches to this problem. I’m not saying that there won’t be any, but that, so far, none have come forward to thrust away the encroaching darkness.

So I’ve been musing on a contrarian approach, based on the old parents’ approach to the kid smoking cigarettes:

Here, kid, have thirty more, and finish them in an hour.

And then watch the kid puke all over the place and never smoke again.

That is, I’ve been considering the idea that our country’s elites should commission deepfakes using their own visages. Consider, perhaps, the head of Senator Mitch McConnell doing it with the head of Senator Harris, or perhaps (better yet) with soon-to-be-ex-Speaker Paul Ryan, said heads mounted on suitably young and lascivious bodies. Multiply that by thousands. Involve movie stars, sports stars, broadcasters, governors, zookeepers, your neighbors.

And then flood 8chan and all the other sites currently used by the creators of deepfakes with these videos. Absolutely bomb them. An overwhelming torrent of fake porn involving people who are being abused, or potentially could be abused, but now under their own control. Set up a site named MyDeepFakes.org just to display them.

One of the salient factors motivating the outrage and mortification caused by deepfakes is the old, and now out of date assumption, that video doesn’t lie. People can lie, forget, misremember, and confabulate, but the film, the cold and objective eye of technology, does not lie. That is one of the underlying bulwarks of humanity’s romance with technology.

And now that bulwark is being corrupted. It’s becoming a myth.

So, if we can’t stop the corruption, let’s wipe out that myth. If deepfakes of an obviously ludicrous nature become easily available to everyone, we can begin the process of removing concerns that someone may actually believe a fallacious deepfake. This could be a game changer. Consider this remark by media critic and deepfake victim Anita Sarkeesian, from the same WaPo article:

Sarkeesian said the deepfakes were more proof of “how terrible and awful it is to be a woman on the Internet, where there are all these men who feel entitled to women’s bodies.”

“For folks who don’t have a high profile, or don’t have any profile at all, this can hurt your job prospects, your interpersonal relationships, your reputation, your mental health,” Sarkeesian said. “It’s used as a weapon to silence women, degrade women, show power over women, reducing us to sex objects. This isn’t just a fun-and-games thing. This can destroy lives.”

But she is right for only so long as videos are taken as serious evidence of reality. Destroy that myth, and most of the damage can no longer be inflicted by these despicable moral children, because that damage depends on the credibility of the medium, and this proposal tries to destroy that medium.

I actually do hesitate to put this thought forth. After all, objectivity is an important facet of the scientific method, and invalidating technology that has provided objectivity is somewhat dismaying. But if no other solution can be found, this counter-attack may be the only way to keep our society sane. I can see block clubs where everyone agrees to contribute photographs of their heads, from a number of angles, and a fee, and a few weeks later there are a thousand videos of everyone on the block having sex with everyone else on the block.

Or, gratifyingly, imagine receiving a blackmail email from some dud threatening to send a video of you having sex with someone other than your spouse, to your spouse, and your reply is “Hey, see this link where I’m doing it with President Trump, it’s up on FB where my spouse has already seen it, isn’t it cool you dud?”

It’s enough to make a Bishop’s head spin.

Book Review: Secular Cycles

The Wheel of Fortune, Hortus Deliciarum, copy of miniature from Manuscript by Herrad of Landsburg (1130-1195), Hohenburg Abbey, Alsace.

This semi-academic book, published by Peter Turchin and Sergey A. Nefedov in 2009, is on the topic of how societal structures and population interact. The title SECULAR CYCLES refers to demographic cycles lasting a minimum of a century.

CHAPTER 1, the introduction and most interesting chapter, briefly fills in the background of the subject, covering earlier theories ranging from the simple Malthusian conjecture concerning population and resources, through Monetarist theories, to Marxist thought on the matter; each receives criticism, mostly in the realm of their failures to explain the data as it is understood. It establishes some of the key concepts and terminology used by academics, problems with data collection and the importance of distinguishing raw data from trends. Careful consideration of this area will prove key to novice readers such as myself.

Structural-demographic theory is then defined:

In this book we examine the hypothesis that secular cycles – demographic-social-political oscillations of very long period (centuries long) – are the rule rather than the exception in large agrarian states and empires.

The demographic portion of the theory draws heavily on Malthusian theory, introducing important concepts such as carrying capacity, resources, etc. The social portion defines elites (the owner of rents) vs commoners (payers of rents), and how the former extract resources from the latter. The political portion of the theory concerns the actions of the State, which appears to be the important contribution of the authors. The State provides, or fails to provide depending on its health, law & order as well as other services, such as public health and (unmentioned, I think) currency support, an important part of a healthy economy.

From here we progress to the two phases of the cycles.

In the integrative phase, particularly the first segment or subphase, the commoner (peasants, serfs, or whatever the local term might be) population is growing, the elite population is relatively small and unified, and the State is more in less in agreement with the elites, strong, and effective in its putative tasks of maintaining order. External, successful wars are not inconsistent with this phase, especially if they add territory into which the expanding population may move, thus relieving pressures which will lead to the second phase, below. The economy is perking along, often resulting in a period characterized as a Golden Age in retrospect. But as the integrative phase grows long in the tooth, overpopulation, defined in the context of carrying capacity of the land, forces the per capita (or per household) income of the commoners downward, while prices increase. During this stagflation subphase, the elites enjoy their Golden Age and, crucially, their numbers increase beyond reason.

The disintegrative phase’s beginning is marked by one or more crises of either exogenous or endogenous source. Commoner populations decline precipitously from either migration or mortality, and the elites enter crisis as their true basis of wealth, the commoners, suddenly decrease in number. The elite crisis results in the depression subphase, marked by often extended, vicious civil wars. The violence discourages the commoners from basic economic activity, thus depressing replacement rates of commoners, while elites are busy exterminating themselves. The State is often broke and unstable, and sometimes in danger of being captured by the elites. The depression subphase often lasts several generations, until the elites become tired of the warring and dying, and have been reduced to a more reasonable number. The peace permits the commoners to venture forth from their sanctuaries, grow food, and raise their replacement rate, marking the beginning of the integrative phase of the next secular cycle.

To say Chapter 1 is the most interesting is not to denigrate the following chapters. I had envisioned these sections, which are case studies of how well structural-demographic theory fits the data available, to be dry and boring. To the extent possible, however, Turchin and Nefedov’s presentation is interesting, using proxies where raw data is not available, such as the temporal distribution of coin hoards or indictments for infanticide, and referring to lurid episodes (assassinations, massacres) from time to time. Both spark the imagination!

King Edward II of England, hapless victim of demographics?

The case studies are of the Plantagenet and Tudor-Stuart periods of England, the Capetian and Valois periods of France, the Republican and Principate periods of Rome, and the Muscovy and Romanov periods of Russian history. Since I’m neither a historian nor an avid reader of any of these particular historical subjects, these were relatively new to me, and thus interesting.


My Takeaways

As a reminder, this book’s conclusions are confined to agrarian societies, defined as societies where at least 50% of the population is working the land, and often it’s a far higher percentage. Attempting to apply their conclusions to today’s societies is undoubtedly an error, but quite tempting.

Perhaps most salient for me is that the three population groups, commoners, elites, and State, have the same motivations – namely, to survive and prosper – but define survival in starkly different terms.

The commoner faces the existential problem, as they work the land, pay the taxes, face stark death if the crop fails, and a brooding future as their numbers increase.

The elite’s definition of survival is to continue within their social stratum, not just as individuals but as families or clans. To sink back to the commoner level is to fail, and many or even most were willing to risk their lives in military service or civil wars to retain their positions.

Those of the State, usually of a monarchical position, look to maintain their positions at the center of power. While certain of these are willing to accept a degradation of status in exchange for continued life, most persist until they are ended violently in the disintegrative phase.

This polymorphic definition but constant framework suggests the basic psychology, perhaps evolutionary psychology, which drives the secular demographic cycle in concert with the implacable realities of limited food sources, land arability, and organisms dependent on ingesting the former for continued existence while reproducing without concern for the future – for most organisms, a simple, untranscendable reality – has to do with the relative definition of survival. It would be interesting to examine how and if a nominally celibate religious option, such as joining the Catholic orders or certain Protestant religious groups, acts as a safety valve for population pressure.

Another thought that occurred to me has to do with proxies. While I enjoyed how they used proxy metrics to at least measure the dynamics of the important metrics, if not the raw values themselves, I was a little disappointed that they didn’t mention the potential logical fallacies involved. Perhaps they expect that the trained reader is well aware of them, but for my own edification I had to realize that a proxy may suffer from the logical fallacy of affirming the consequent. That is, a proxy is implicitly a statement that

if dv changes then pv changes in some predictable manner

where dv is the desired value of the target metric, pv is the proxy value in a related metric, and predictable manner means some function f can be applied to dv such that

f(dv) = pv

and f is a reversible function. That is, it’s not a trapdoor function in the sense that it’s not easily calculated in reverse – a simple example is the exponential function, f(x) = ax, where calculating the xth root of some value is not nearly as simple as calculating the exponential value. The usefulness of a proxy value correlates directly to how easily the transformation function f(dv) can be reversed into a function g such that

g(pv) = dv

I’m a little off point here, so the fallacy which worries me is that it’s difficult to prove that the relation between a desired value and/or its dynamics and a proxy value and/or its dynamics for a desired measurement is an if and only if statement, and if it’s not, then it’s possible some independent, and uninteresting value, may be moving that proxy value. For example, at one point Turchin and Nefedov use the recorded heights of military recruits as a proxy for measurement of the available food rations. But what if a new religious cult has come into vogue that forbids consumption of certain foodstuffs containing the nutrients which boost people’s heights? Using this simple proxy may seem to show oncoming famine, when in reality it was simply a cult becoming popular.

That’s just something to keep in mind, especially for the untrained reader, like myself.

Conclusions

I dove into this book in the belief that demographics are, as ever, humanity’s future, and I came out of it with that belief only bolstered. The details of how the demographics change, even if confined to agrarian societies, was fascinating and instructive in suggesting that the evolutionary survival strategy of boundless reproduction appears to lead inevitably to the human tragedies of war, famine, and disease.

War is the fierce battle over resources as they become scarce relative to the number of people demanding them, whether they be for survival or for maintenance of societal position.

Famine comes when that battle over resources actually blots out those very resources over which the battle began, or when exogenuous factors, such as climate change (think of a super-volcano explosion cooling the world’s atmosphere into a mini-Ice Age).

And disease often ravages us when our numbers grow to the point where we’re too crowded and our medical knowledge cannot compensate.

If this is a subject of interest to you, it’s worth a read.

Recommended.

Winter Art

During our recent trip to Traverse City, MI, to visit my Arts Editor Mom, she took us to see a locally famous Christmas display, and I thought it was nice enough to take pictures. Unfortunately, the smartphone is a sub-optimal choice when it comes to night-time pics, but here’s the best of what we did take.

These two illustrate the general effect, if not the size.

Here we have some lovely animals which we suspect are hand crafted.

And here’s a few more random decorations.

It was far more impressive than these poor pictures may indicate.

Belated Movie Reviews

The essence of goodness is being short, the essence of evil is height and long noses. Every child should know this.

The silence and paucity of dialog cards in Cinderella (1914 – yes, a silent movie) forced me to pay more than normal attention to the gestural content of this movie, and the sometimes ambiguous content of these old scenes illustrating this old folk tale, whatever might be said about their competence at telling that familiar story, brought into a vivid relief the alternate view of this story.

Classically interpreted as a karma story, the problems for the tale begin with the observation that the Prince’s motivations in searching for a wife do not end with the normal urge to have a wife and a family, but with the additional and unusual duty to continue the royal line. This leads to the question of how Cinderella’s future will turn out, since she’s potentially reduced to the role of breeding stock for the royal family, and no matter how nice the royal family might be, a monarchy is difficult to justify, a priori, as a governmental system. History has indelibly taught us that no family has consistent access to the sort of wisdom required to run a country, even a small country. In fact, the most difficult task a country faces is discovering how to reliably find policy-makers who will wisely lead the country forward.

With this in mind, Cinderella then moves from her initial role as the oppressed daughter, barely a member of the family as her step-sisters have pride of place, into a role where she’ll enable a ruling family to continue their reign, which may end up wrecking the country.

And what of her qualifications? While it’s inarguable that the fairy-godmother selects her for, shall we say, promotion based on her kindness, this is accentuated through contrast with her wicked step-sisters, who mistreat her and others. Why is Cinderella the victim? Once again, the motivation is based on blood lines, as Cinderella is a virtual Outsider in her own family (in this version, where is dear old Dad anyways?), now headed by the equally wicked stepmother. This innate reliance on blood relations in both principal families of the story speaks to the evolutionary drive to propagate the genes which have so far resulted in successful progeny, with little regard for the more abstract concepts of justice which better society.

But back to her qualifications, and, at least in this portrayal of the story, it appears to consist of her beauty and her apparent financial endowment, which is the illusion provided by the fairy godmother. There’s no apparent appreciation of the intellect or wisdom she might bring to the problem of ruling a country.

In other words, taking this story to heart is to revert to an older, unenlightened time. Don’t do it.

It’s a fun production to watch, and I counted at least four nose prostheses during the movie; the still, above, suggests a fifth I missed during the performance. If it were only the wicked stepmother and her daughters bearing the devices, then we could take them to suggest how to identify the bad guys, but the King & Queen also have them, so either this hypothesis is falsified, or there’s a lot more going on behind this story than is present in most renditions of this story. Special effects are charmingly effective, and if I thought Prince Charming looked a bit like a doofus, no doubt he was quite the hot pistol when the movie is made, as the actor, Owen Moore, was married to lead Mary Pickford at the time.

But the real treat of the movie was the live musical accompaniment. We saw this at the Music House Museum in Traverse City, MI, in an informal cinema setting, and the music was provided by Dave Calendine, an accomplished organist who basically played what he felt was appropriate for each scene. He later explained to my Arts Editor that this was how the movie was originally presented 104 years ago (precisely!), and that he considers it an art form worthy of resurrection.

I wouldn’t quite recommend it, but we had a lot of fun. If you can see it at the Music House Museum, do so, and if they invite you upstairs to inspect how one of their music machines work, take it. We were fascinated at the elderly machines, still slogging along.

But They Had Their Chance

Paul Waldman in The Plum Line argues that there’s only one way to end the government shutdown, and that’s for the Democrats and the Republicans to do the impossible – ignore the Executive:

So the only answer may be for everyone, Democrats and Republicans alike, to ignore President Trump. Act as though he doesn’t exist and this has nothing to do with him.

By which I mean that members of Congress should shut their ears to Trump’s tweets and threats and fulminations, pass something that House Democrats and Senate Republicans can live with, and then dare Trump to veto it. Because I doubt he has the guts.

There’s two problems with Waldman’s proposal.

First, the Republicans already had that opportunity. The House and Senate had already substantially agreed on a bill to end the shutdown, but the Republicans in the House retreated when faced with an enraged Trump. The flip side of being a member of The Party of Trump is that you have to be his lap dog, or you won’t stand a chance of winning an election for dog-catcher, much less a substantive elective position, in any district controlled by the Trumpists – and, so far as the Republicans go, that’s most of them. The President is a vindictive, petty man, unleavened with wisdom or even cunning, and what that means for the hopefuls in the Republicans Party is that they can no longer exercise good judgment on certain topics popular with the Trump base, such as immigration reform. It is true they can defy him on more obscure topics, such as most areas of foreign relations – but most members lack relevant expertise.

Second, it doesn’t matter if Trump has the guts to veto the legislation, because he’s not the one making such decisions. It’s Fox News making those decisions. All they have to do is appeal to Trump’s inherent sense of victimization and remind him that he’s betraying his base, and he’ll veto the bill, and then he’ll storm and threaten and pound his fist.

And the Republicans will melt, because they don’t dare exercise good judgment.

When I heard Fox News was manipulating the President into rejecting the shutdown bill, I had some hopes the Republicans would show themselves to be mature adults, finally, now that many of them are leaving Congress, but this was a fool’s hope, thankyouverymuch. I don’t know if Trump is going to blink or if the Dems will cave, but the best Dem strategy may be to sit tight, investigate Trump when they come into control of the House, and let Trump stew and take responsibility for his shutdown.

And perhaps the Democrats can take advantage of the situation by labeling this adventure as the #TrumpShutdown. And the wall? Resurrecting an old but deadly Republican curse, label it the #TrumpBoondoggle.

Because that’s what it is.

Belated Movie Reviews

Murder, My Sweet (1944) is a bit of a mixed bag. An adaptation of Farewell, My Lovely, a noir crime novel by Raymond Chandler, which I’ve read in the last year, its fidelity to the novel is somewhat mixed, and of course that weighs on the audience familiar with the novel.

Taken on its own, it’s a fairly tight story of Phillip Marlowe, Private Investigator, who is hired to find a woman named Velma by a huge man, Moose Malloy.  In a bit of a jarring interjection, Marlowe is also hired by another man, Marriott, to assist in the ransoming of a woman’s jade jewels from some thieves. At the exchange point, however, Marriott is sapped to death, and Marlowe is attacked and loses consciousness. He awakens, finds his dead client, and ends up chatting with the police, who are a suspicious lot.

Back at his office, a woman reporter braces him for information, but he brushes her off until she reveals she knows more than she should. Soon enough, he discovers her last name is Grayle, which matches a name he already knows – Helen Grayle, owner of the stolen jewels.

Marlowe and the young Grayle repair to the Grayle estate, where Marlowe discovers Helen Grayle is young, shapely, and married to the elderly Mr. Grayle, himself the father of the faux-reporter. He’s soon hired to continue to hunt for the jade – and nearly seduced by Helen. She knows a name the police have mentioned, Anthor, a man working a blackmail con on troubled, rich women.

Marlowe plans on talking to Anthor, but Malloy shows up and drags him to Anthor. Malloy wants his woman, Anthor the jewels – and Marlowe a little relief from being pushed around. Not giving up information, he’s slugged and drugged, but escapes.

After a few more plot twists, we discover Helen at the Grayle beach house. She’s at work on manipulating Marlowe into doing some dirty work for her, and Marlowe gives her reason to believe he’s bought. But when he returns the next night to report on his progress, Malloy is with him. While Malloy waits outside for his woman, Marlowe finds himself in a double cross with Helen, and then things get tricky as Mr. Grayle and his daughter also show up. Eventually, Helen is revealed to be Malloy’s Velma, and both end up dead, along with Mr. Grayle, and Marlowe is blinded.

In a final scene, Marlowe gets the girl.

And, in a supposedly noir film, that’s right out.

While noir is often about just desserts, it’s rarely about happiness or rewards for the good guys. It’s a chronicle of people pursuing their base urges with abandon, and the unhappy results which attend not only them, but those around them.

And for a noir film, it’s hard to see those motivations. That there are attempts to convey such characterizations is definitely true, but they feel ineffective. Perhaps they ended up on the TV channel’s cutting room floor (TCM was the purveyor), but I doubt it. It just didn’t quite feel real.

Part of the problem might have been the coincidence of Malloy looking for his woman, and her being in another of Marlowe’s cases – assuming that was a coincidence. Perhaps Anthor had told Malloy, but Malloy, given how he’s depicted, would have simply charged into the Grayle estate; hiring Marlowe was far too subtle for Malloy. In the book, Malloy is in fact not connected with Anthor, as I recall.

And that connection to the book may be part of the problem. The book is more vivid, more clever, and more expansive than the movie, as well as being more racist. I cannot help but see the movie through the lens of the book. I appreciated how the movie managed to get at least a few of Chandler’s colorful similes into the movie through Marlowe’s inner narrative, but it’s not really enough.

And the happy ending really ruined it. For me, anyways.

But don’t let me discourage the interested audience member from seeing it. It’s not poorly acted, nor poorly constructed, although sometimes the audio is a bit muffled. There are worse ways to spend a snowy night.

The Market Seems Jumpy, Ctd

Yesterday’s market jump was among the biggest ever, much less this year. But between yesterday’s absurd jump in market indice values (the Naz over 5%), and today’s drop in indice value, at least as of this typing, there’s been a lot of sophisticated hand-waving as to the reasons, but no one has mentioned the obvious.

Yesterday, the President was out of the country, finally visiting a war zone, and taking advantage of this opportunity to lie to them. Today, he’s back.

I think investors thought he might take advantage of being out of the country to not return. That is, given his unprecedented legal troubles (“No President has ever had legal troubles like I’ve had!”), I would be unsurprised if he sought a haven in a country lacking an extradition treaty with the United States, and tried to run the Executive from abroad.

And then, of course, today’s drop reflects the disappointment upon his return.

It makes the most sense, after all.

Conservative Rehabilitation Will Be Tricky

Over the 30-odd years of consciousness I’ve had (which is to say, once I made it past the age of 25), some aspects of the United States have been encouraging, and some have been quite bewildering. In the latter category I can thrust many organizations and beliefs that, honestly, have seemed anti-rational. Some of these are a-political, such as quack medicines (homeopathy, apitherapy, acupuncture, anti-vaxxers), which can be understood, if not excused, on the theory that medicine and healing are hard subjects.

But others have found political alignments. I can think of gun rights, creation science, religious sects, movements for special religious rights, the “stewardship” just means environmental rape movement, End of Days folks, and perhaps a few which escape me at the moment, all of which have a general conservative alignment. Hell, let’s throw in the Newt Gingrich-inspired politics of No Compromise With The Liberals, because, while I can see the impetuous embracing it, I do not expect to see an entire political party being so foolish as to follow it.

Being an independent, I should, of course, have a list for the liberals, but oddly enough I don’t. I daresay some of the more daring theorists on the left do get things wrong – which I don’t fault if they’re willing to admit to it. The Antifa movement probably belongs on the liberal list of the anti-rational, although I haven’t dug into that particular movement deeply. Andrew Sullivan’s remarks concerning their University, anti-liberal declarations and actions do suggest they are anti-rational.

To return to my point, as a young person, you ambitiously think you should be able to understand these sorts of things, even if you don’t agree, but as you grow older you come around to the perspective that perhaps you’re just not bright enough to comprehend their conclusions, and you just have to accept that.

This conclusion may turn out to be wrong, though.

(What follows is premised on one data point, about which much is merely guessed at, and a huge amount of speculation. Take it with an open mind and perhaps a bit of liquor.)

There’s an implicit assumption in that position that these fellow Americans, however much I might find their position(s) to be incomprehensible, have at least reached them using honest processes and facts. But as we’ve learned during the Trump Administration, at least one of the sources of this inexplicable behavior, the NRA, has come under investigation by the FBI for possibly improper financial ties to Russia.

That’s my data point. Merely an investigation.

So let’s expand on it a trifle. Let’s stipulate, not at all unreasonably, that the Russians used their financial ties to influence the top leadership of the NRA, a group long extremist and long entrenched in that position. For example, Wayne LaPierre has been part of the NRA leadership since 1991, damn near 30 years now. And their agenda of unrestricted gun rights, the rise and fall of Dr. Lott, the use of simplistic logic concerning the arming of everyone in America, the misreading of the Second Amendment to the Constitution, and the dangers of liberals to “authentic America” has been an undoubtedly divisive approach to communicating with American society.

And who would benefit most from a divided, at each other’s throats America? Why, its greatest adversary: Russia.

It is a daunting thought to wonder just how much your fellow Americans have been influenced by a subtle, malignant national adversary, but it’s not hard to imagine. America is often a provincial place that barely believes there’s anywhere outside of its national borders, and the very thought that the whispers in our fellow Americans’ ears might be of some entity inimical to all they hold dear would and will strike them as nothing more than paranoia.

My evidence is circumstantial, without a doubt. I plead guilty to that. But I have to note that if we add in the idea of a national adversary, such as Russia, working to damage us subtly through division, then that explains many of the otherwise incredible conclusions my fellow Americans reach. For example, we clutch the results of science and technology to our very breasts, in so very many fields, and yet a substantial portion of the American citizenry is mortally offended at the very idea of biological evolutionary theory – despite the fact that both biology and medicine are premised on its very existence, and that many examples of evolution may be found in the paleontological record. Is it so hard to visualize a malignant Russia supplying financial and ideological aid to the Discover Institute, the prime supplier of the utterly ludicrous creation science position of Intelligent Design? No, it’s not. I’m not suggesting that they needed to create it, since opposition to evolutionary theory has existed for just as long as evolutionary theory has existed – but simply boosting what would otherwise be an obscure position populated by loonies is an easy enough thing to do, if you have national resources with which to do it.

One more example: the obduracy of the Republicans over the last twenty years. It is an aphorism that elections have consequences, and a tradition that the parties will cooperate in governing the nation. Furthermore, it’s compromise is good policy, as it permits us to link arms and dip our toes into what may be quicksand, rather than abhor the “enemy” and tumble headfirst into treacherous currents. The Republicans have demonstrated the foolishness of obduracy time over time since the 90s, between farming legislation that left egg on their faces, the passing of the ACA without any Republican support in the face of soaring health insurance rates which left even software engineers financially gasping, and a Republican hypocrisy towards Federal financial matters of a magnitude which left the serious observer breathless at its brazen dishonesty; and, no doubt, other examples.

Many, many attempts were made to explain these frankly crass and dishonorable Republican behaviors, but one that was hardly ever mentioned was the possibility that their behaviors were neither the result of inborn character defects nor simple corporate corruption, but the subtle influence, financial and cultural, of a national adversary who found the Republicans a good subject for manipulation. Not that the left has not been the subject of manipulation during the Cold War, for this has been well-documented.

But now it may be the Republicans’ turn.

OK, enough with the wide-eyed speculation, because, beyond the nugget of investigation of the NRA, there’s nothing definite, nothing to wrap around our hands around. But, if you stipulate it, then you have ask:

How do we fix it? How do you overcome conservative denial that their culture has been controlled by an enemy? By what icons do you draw their eyes from the prisms through which they view anything and demonstrate that they’ve been misled?

In some fields, it’s a simple case of logic. In others … the present generation, and perhaps the next, will simply have to die out. Some problems cannot be fixed.

But it’s something worth contemplating.

It’s A Trifle Disingenuous, Ctd

With regard to the Maine contest for the seat of incumbent Rep. Bruce Pouliquin (R-ME), the game – for now – is over:

With two courts ruling against him, the Republican will no longer dispute Jared Golden’s election, but maintains that Maine’s voter-approved system is unconstitutional and illegal.

Rep. Bruce Poliquin on Monday dropped his legal challenge to the ranked-choice election in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District in which he lost his seat in the U.S. House.

In a statement he released on Twitter on Christmas Eve, the two-term Republican said he continues to believe ranked-choice voting is unconstitutional, but “it’s in the best interests of my constituents and all Maine citizens to close this confusing and unfair chapter of voting history.”

Press-Herald

The real point, beyond the termination of Rep. Pouliquin’s attempt to retain his Congressional seat, is that this is not a final determination in the battle over ranked-choice voting (RCV). Indeed, Pouliquin continues to reiterate his claim that RCV is confusing, unfair, and illegal. To the first two points, he presents no evidence but his own personal and irrelevant testimony, and two federal courts have disagreed with his third point.

This may be just the first step in a long campaign by the GOP against RCV, since “first past the pole” voting is far more to their advantage, while RCV favors the more fragmented nature of liberal politics. I expect more court challenges to RCV in the future, at least at the Federal level, and I also continue to believe this may be one of the more important court campaigns of the future.

Shooting Yourself In The Foot, The Hand, The …

I’ve previously mentioned the lame-duck sessions in Wisconsin and other states, which are passing legislation to strip incoming Democratic office-holders of the powers traditionally associated with those offices. In a related development, it appears the Republicans don’t really take voter-approved initiatives seriously, as Steve Benen notes:

In Florida, for example, voters easily approved Amendment 4, which is set to restore the voting rights of an estimated 1.5 million former felons. Florida Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis (R), a former far-right congressman, is now “slow walking the implementation” of the voter-approved measure.

And in Utah, voters approved a measure legalizing medical marijuana, prompting the Republican-led legislature to intervene and pass a more restrictive measure – supplanting the policy approved by Utahans.

The question that may come to mind is whether or not voters of all stripes will be outraged at this usurpation of voter privilege. Regardless of whether or not you approve of any particular initiative, or the entire concept of voter-initiated legislation/constitutional amendments, decisions by State legislatures to ignore or attenuate this aspect of democracy must be unsettling.

With this in mind, I’m here to report that, in a recent visit with my Arts Editor’s family, outrage has already been expressed at these GOP power grabs, and this in a conservative part of the country. I’m beginning to suspect the Republican Party is in the process of handing a real big hammer to the Democrats for the 2020 election, if only the Democrats can recognize and use it effectively.

In a way, it’s not surprising that the second- and third-raters who make the leadership of the Republican state parties would commit an unforced error of this sort (repression of anti-gerrymandering measures, as may be happening in Michigan, is more of a forced error, I’ll grant). It’s ever the curse of third-raters that they can’t think beyond the end of their prejudices.

But that doesn’t mean the Democrats can effectively take advantage of this set of blunders.

Currency Always Has Costs, Ctd

The bitcoin phenomenon continues to fascinate. Somewhere on this thread back a few months, I commented on the energy costs incurred to calculate new bitcoins. This is becoming a bigger and bigger factor in its viability, as Douglas Heaven notes in NewScientist (15 December 2018, paywall):

The blockchain is kept going by miners, who run expensive, energy-hungry computers in exchange for the chance to be rewarded with bitcoins each time they update the ledger. In the boom times, mining operations sprang up in places with cheap sources of electricity, essentially as a licence to print money. But as bitcoin falls in value, miners are being paid less and less. Unable to cover electricity and hardware costs, many are packing up.

“You have to constantly explore to find cheap power,” says Idon Liu at Node Haven, a company that provides cloud computing services to miners. With bitcoin around the $4000 mark, you need to be buying electricity at no more than 5 cents per kilowatt-hour to break even, he says. But it is hard to find power that cheap. “Now we’re at $4000, people are getting nervous,” says Liu. “They are dumping hundreds of thousands of machines.” Last month, GigaWatt, a large mining operation near Seattle in Washington, went bankrupt. Pictures online show miners in China clearing out wheelbarrow-loads of servers.

The editors of NewScientist pile on in an editorial:

But here is the good news: we should be celebrating bitcoin’s downfall. What began as an interesting experiment has morphed into an environmental disaster. It is estimated that running the bitcoin network now consumes 45.5 terawatt-hours per year of electricity – enough to power more than 4 million homes in the US. As the world seeks to cut down on our energy use, shrinking bitcoin seems like an easy win.

It’s hard to argue. As I said previously, I don’t disagree that currencies controlled by governments are subject to abuses. Indeed, the recent controversy over President Trump’s alleged interest in removing Fed chair Jerome Powell has highlighted the acknowledged dangers of letting amateurs get their hands even near the levers of monetary policy, never mind the actual printing presses.

However, exposing currencies to open markets, inexperienced users, and speculators, and powering them using a technology which is, ultimately, endangering civilization, is beginning to appear to be a mistaken experiment. If most or all of our electrical grid were supplied from carbon-neutral sources, and there was plenty, it’d be worth leaving bitcoin in operation as a human experiment, and let the pieces fall where they may. But in the absence of an overwhelming advantage to bitcoin, its energy demands are making it a flawed approach to the problem of fiat currencies.

If You’re Squirming

Ever have that uncomfortable feeling when you agree with someone you loathe? Andrew Sullivan may be having that in connection with Trump’s surprise announcement of withdrawal from Syria:

Or consider what a shocked Lieutenant General Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr. of the Marines, the incoming commander of Central Command opined after hearing the news of Trump’s withdrawal of 7,000 troops from Afghanistan yesterday: “If we left precipitously right now, I do not believe [the Afghan forces] would be able to successfully defend their country. I don’t know how long it’s going to take. I think that one of the things that would actually provide the most damage to them would be if we put a timeline on it and we said we were going out at a certain point in time.”

Get that? After 17 years, we’ve gotten nowhere, like every single occupier before us. But for that reason, we have to stay. These commanders have been singing this tune year after year for 17 years of occupation, and secretaries of Defense have kept agreeing with them. Trump gave them one last surge of troops — violating his own campaign promise — and we got nowhere one more time. It is getting close to insane. Neoconservatism, it seems, never dies. It just mutates constantly to find new ways to intervene, to perpetuate forever wars, to send more young Americans to die in countries that don’t want them amid populations that try to kill them.

We could just conclude that Trump, like a broken clock, is at occasionally, if accidentally right. I have little opinion on what to do about Syria, which is just another example of the lethal politics the inhabitants of those parts seem to indulge in far too casually.

But, more importantly for the United States, is the lack of leadership that President Trump has once again demonstrated. At heart, he’s an autocrat, the last thing America needs. He should have initiated and led a national debate on just what sort of intervention, if any at all, we should be engaging in, using the debate to inform the electorate as to what costs we might expect to incur, both tangible and intangible, and how intervention, or lack thereof, fits in with our strategic goals and moral character.

Trump did none of this. Perhaps this is just a maneuver on his part to force Mattis out. Maybe he had heartburn. Maybe … pick your random reason of choice. The point is, Trump has lost the confidence of everyone outside of the Trump Echo Chamber in any wisdom he has in anything. Even real estate.

Andrew may be completely correct in condemning our troops presence in Afghanistan and Syria. Maybe Trump is doing the right thing. But he did it absolutely in the wrong way, and therefore does not deserve any real credit, no matter how much historians praise the move 50 years from now.

This is why the instrumentality of government must move in approved ways, for otherwise confidence is lost.

New Horizons Next Stop

Spaceweather.com reminds me that deep space probe New Horizons is still functioning out there in the Kuiper Belt. If, like me, you were thrilled with its pictures of Pluto from three years ago, you should be ready to thrill again, because its current, and last, target, Ultima Thule, has mysteries of its own:

Last year, astronomers watched a distant star pass behind Ultima Thule. Starlight winked in and out in a pattern suggesting an elongated object with two bulbous lobes. Ultima Thule could be a binary system. You would expect the reflected brightness of such an object to vary as it rotates in the sunlight. Yet Ultima Thule does not behave that way. What’s going on? New Horizons science team members have different ideas. “It’s possible that Ultima’s rotation pole is aimed almost right at the spacecraft,” speculates Marc Buie of the Southwest Research Institute. Such an alignment, however, is unlikely.

“Another explanation,” says the SETI Institute’s Mark Showalter, “is that Ultima may be surrounded by a cloud of dust that obscures its light curve–much the same way that a comet’s coma often overwhelms the light reflected by its central nucleus.” 

“A more bizarre scenario is one in which Ultima is surrounded by many tiny tumbling moons,” suggests University of Virginia’s Anne Verbiscer, a New Horizons assistant project scientist. “If each moon has its own light curve, then together they could create a jumbled superposition of light curves that make it look to New Horizons like Ultima has a small light curve.” 

Data from the probe should reach us Jan 1 or 2. Can’t wait to see what it looks like!

The Ol’ Fake News Gambit

The Mainstream news is fake news meme that President Trump has exercised himself to spread does raise a question: how to effectively refute it?

Oddly enough, one approach is by energetically exposing fake news within the mainstream media. WaPo has published just such a report, concerning a now-former star reporter for the German weekly Der Spiegel:

When an out-of-town journalist showed up in Fergus Falls, Minn., in February 2017, Michele Anderson couldn’t help but feel skeptical. Claas Relotius had been telling residents that he was writing about the state of rural America under President Trump. Anderson, a community arts administrator with progressive political views, was uncomfortable with “the anthropological gaze” that had been cast on communities like her own after the 2016 election. Hopefully, she would later recall thinking, an award-winning international journalist would at least manage to capture more nuance than the pundits had in the months following the election.

As it turned out, the piece that appeared in the respected German weekly magazine Der Spiegel a month later was even worse than she could have imagined. Not only did it rely on stock stereotypes of provincial, gun-toting conservatives, but many of the details were blatantly false.

At one time any self-respecting media outlet would fact-check their reporters, so ya gotta wonder what went wrong at Der Spiegel. But it sounds like Relotius had some panache and charisma working for him:

On Wednesday, [the concerned Fergus Falls residents] were vindicated. Der Spiegel announced that Relotius had “falsified his articles on a grand scale” since at least 2016 and had resigned after admitting that he had fabricated quotes and invented fictional details in more than a dozen stories, including his dispatch from Fergus Falls. The magazine’s investigation found that the 33-year-old writer had faked interviews with the parents of Colin Kaepernick and falsified material that appeared in award-winning features about children kidnapped by the Islamic State and a prisoner at Guantanamo Bay. Before it all came crashing down, he had also managed to convince editors that a co-worker who expressed suspicions was the real liar.

Sounds like a current President of our experience, doesn’t he?

The real message here, though, is that the mainstream media self-corrected. It demonstrated not an allegiance to a political ideology, but to a far more important ideology, that being truth matters.

It’s not dispositive on its own, of course, but for conservatives sucked into the fake news meme, this sort of article should give them reason to pause and think again.

The Swirling Whirlpool Has Ensnared Trump

If you’re wondering just how we ended up in a government shutdown, WaPo (among others) has a serviceable description which actually makes me laugh. At one point, Trump was ready to accept that he couldn’t have funding for the wall. Then this happened:

But on Fox News Channel and across conservative media, there was a brewing rebellion. Prominent voices urged Trump to hold firm on his wall money and warned that caving would jeopardize his reelection.

Rush Limbaugh dismissed the compromise bill on his radio program as “Trump gets nothing and the Democrats get everything.” Another firebrand, Ann Coulter, published a columntitled “Gutless President in Wall-less Country.” Trump even found resistance on the couch of his favorite show, “Fox & Friends,” where reliable Trump-boosting host Brian Kilmeade chided him on the air Thursday.

The president was paying attention. He promptly unfollowed Coulter on Twitter. And he pecked out a series of defensive tweets blaming congressional leaders for not funding the wall, while also assuming a defensive posture. He suggested that a massive wall may not be necessary in its entirety because the border already is “tight” thanks to the work of Border Patrol agents and troops.

Trump proclaims that he’s the branding master, which is all about image and messaging and television, and yet there he is, being brazenly manipulated by his masters at Fox and allied media outlets. At this juncture, we’re seeing policy being made by television personalities, people whose expertise is not in budgeting, immigration, or anything relevant – but how to look pretty and speak articulately on TV.

That’s it.

The Reality TV star that Trump used to be is caught in his own trap, and, worse yet, he doesn’t even realize it. For him, television is reality. For the rest of us on the ground, it’s not, and that’s going to be the worst for us.

There are so many adjectives applicable here: vacillating, manipulable, unfocused, and unintelligent simply arise from this one episode alone.

But added to what we’ve seen over the last three years, including the campaign, we can quite validly say that the best adjective is simply this:

He’s weak. The weakest President the United States has ever seen.

Belated Movie Reviews

There are some of the elements of a good mystery story in The Thirteenth Guest (1932, aka Lady Beware [UK]), but it’s an incomplete set, and they are offset by two very poor elements.

Thirteen years earlier, a husband and father read his newly revised will to his family & friends, numbering twelve, and then he dropped dead. The twist? The will gives the bulk of the vast estate to the unnamed 13th guest.

Now the young daughter, just turned 21, has received instructions to return to the abandoned estate. While there, she’s electrocuted and dies; her taxi driver calls the police, who notify the family and begin investigating.

By the time she pops up again, alive and kicking, things are interesting. Add in another plot twist, a takedown of the entire family for being too hoity-toity for their own good, and a private eye with some attitude, and there’s some good elements.

However, the police are portrayed as buffoons, which grates on the nerves, even if it is a poke at nepotism. Worse yet, though, is that the person truly responsible for the murders, well, you would never have guessed. Not because of the portrayal of that character, but lack thereof. She is just another face in the family, and there is no big reveal of a grievance or psychosis or immorality which explains the mildly clever murders.

In the end, it was a pleasant way to spend an hour, especially following a medical procedure which required I rest, and if you’re a Ginger Rogers completist, this should be on your list of movies to see. She doesn’t distinguish herself, but she’s competent in the ensemble. And I liked the innovative manner in which the credits were handled.

Too bad about the bad guy.

Here’s the movie itself.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwKXAD2soDM

Ready, Set, Create

I must admit I was fascinated when I read this report from a few months ago in D-brief on tropical cyclones, but then it fell through the cracks. I remain fascinated, though:

Recent research suggested tropical cyclones are moving toward the poles. But these analyses used data collected from instruments over a relatively short time period and the results sometimes disagreed with each other. [Forest dynamics expert Jan] Altman and the team of scientists wanted to find out how tropical cyclone activity changed over a long time and what ramifications the storms had.

Homes aren’t the only things impacted by cyclones, forests also get heavily damaged. Hurricane Katrina, for example, was estimated to have killed or seriously injured around 320 million trees. The team used that damage to determine the impact of changes in tropical cyclone activity. The researchers analyzed tree rings from six forests in northeastern Asia. The study areas traverse a latitudinal gradient from the southern tip of South Korea northward to costal Russia. The team examined tree rings from 54 species for tree growth and disturbance. Then they compared the data with a 40-year historical record of tropical cyclones in the region.

The farther north the researchers assessed, the more scientists realized cyclones were increasingly damaging trees over the past century, the team reports today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“The findings provide evidence that northward tropical cyclone track migration caused more frequent forest disturbances during the last century in the western North Pacific,” Altman said.

Tthe changes in CO2, leading to a warmer world, causing weather patterns to change, is of leading interest because this suggests landfall at locations not accustomed to such violent weather phenomena. Indeed, given that new storm tracks are inevitable over the ocean itself, will these new tracks cause other unforeseen consequences as areas that have not seen storm turbulence on this scale begin to experience it?

This should be an area of slow but unstoppable interest.

Dumb-Ass Of The Day

It has to be Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC). I saw him on TV tonight, outraged at Trump’s decision to withdraw from Syria. Remember, this is the guy who went from NeverTrump to being Trump’s sock puppet, playing golf and carrying water for him. Here’s one of his milder reactions; the one I saw on TV showed him spitting bullets.

You’re outraged, Graham? Really? Really? You’re up close and personal with this man-child of a President, and it didn’t occur to you that he has no concept of responsible governance?

Really, you must be fucking kidding because Trump’s incompetence has been highlighted over the last two years. In this regard, Graham, this is on your head. This is on the head of a GOP terrified to impeach and convict a President who has repeatedly demonstrated incompetence.

And, please, stop lying, you bloody fucking idiot. You said Obama was wrong to withdraw from Iraq? You bloody well know that he was legally constrained to leave Iraq due to a treaty signed by his predecessor, President Bush. Please stop saying Trump’s done so many good things. You’re just lying through your teeth and you know it. If you don’t, then your understanding of government is impaired and you should resign for the good of the Nation.

You want to fix this? Call for impeachment. Hell, I know Speaker Ryan collapsed, as usual, when Trump put the pressure on him regarding the Continuing Resolution, but maybe you can harass him into calling for a snap impeachment during this lame-duck session. Then it’ll be on you Senators to decide if your loyalty to a pathogen-laden Party leader who can’t find his ass with both hands is really more important than your loyalty to the President.

‘cuz I’m really fucking tired of your covering up the shit your dog keeps dumping on the carpet of what used to be a great Nation.

The Rebirth Of The Polity

In some ways, the advent of Trumpism may be the smoke of the fire that will be the rebirth of American Democracy, the final, back-breaking error which will drive home to another three or four American generations the abject error of voting in someone like Trump.

With this in mind, I submit the South Carolina GOP is a ways behind virtually everyone else:

The South Carolina Republican Party could cancel its marquee presidential nominating contest in 2020 in a move to protect President Trump from any primary challengers.

Drew McKissick, chairman of the South Carolina GOP, said he doesn’t anticipate Trump would face a primary challenge and emphasized that the state party executive committee hasn’t held any formal discussions about the contest, dubbed “first in the South” and usually third on the presidential nominating calendar. But McKissick would pointedly not rule out canceling the primary, indicating that that would be his preference.

“We have complete autonomy and flexibility in either direction,” McKissick told the Washington Examiner on Tuesday. “Considering the fact that the entire party supports the president, we’ll end up doing what’s in the president’s best interest.”

Washington Examiner

Come on. There’s no way this ends well for McKissick.

  1. He’s so personally in the tank for Trump that he might as well get plastic surgery so he looks like his omniscient Party Leader.
  2. The primaries are meant to winnow out the poor candidates in order for the Party to present an excellent candidate. By eliminating the primary, McKissick perverts his responsibility.
  3. Either he’s not paying attention to Trump’s terminal troubles, or he’s so bought into the ludicrous fake news meme that if his hypothetical divorce were mentioned in the local media, he’d declare it false and try to kiss his ex-spouse, sans permission.
  4. If Trump is so fragile that he cannot withstand a primary challenge in South Carolina, then what of the declaration that “We are the party of President Donald J. Trump?” Is this just the South Carolina GOP elite trying to enforce an unwanted discipline on the base?
  5. Speaking of that declaration, candidate Katie Arrington, its author, did not succeed in becoming Representative Arrington; her blind embrace of Trumpism, in particular its projected ruination of the sea coast of South Carolina, is one of the primary factors favored by analysts in her defeat by Democrat Joe Cunningham, the first Democrat to represent the district since at least 2000 (Ballotpedia’s data doesn’t go back further). Many of those contests even lacked a Democratic challenger. That a declaration of Trump-adoration resulted in the loss of what should have been a safe Republican seat should have McKissick seeking better alternatives – before he loses more seats in 2020.

Yeah, this report from the Examiner made me laugh and laugh, but then my understanding is that South Carolina politics of any brand can be best understood in the context of an insane asylum. Ah, here we go:

South Carolina is too small for a republic and too large for an insane asylum. — James L. Petigru, 1860

It’ll be interesting to see how many other state Republican organizations will fail in their responsibilities in the same way, and how many of their respective members suddenly decide to leave the Party. The general situation is already not so good, as this latest Gallup poll on Party affiliation speaks volumes:

Democrats are picking up affiliations while the GOP appears to be static. In reality, I suspect right-wing extremists are moving into the GOP, forcing more moderate members out in disgust, who then join the Independents, while more Independents join the Democrats. But sometimes even elected GOP officials will jump parties, as four recently did in Kansas. This is noteworthy, even important, because that switch in allegiance is an implicit denial of a central GOP tenet: that the Democrats are somehow evil. While I’m sure the four defectors will cast as apostates to the remaining Kansas base, if they can communicate their reasons to the base, some parts of the base may follow suit, if not in formal allegiance, then in the voting booth.

So McKissick is roughly four steps behind the political times, I’d say, and he has a lot of scurrying to do if he doesn’t want South Carolina Republicans, not to mention himself, to become a historical curiosity gaped over by a citizenry who finds their activities incomprehensible in the greater context of a secular society bent on excellence in politics, which is something we certainly don’t have in the White House and the Senate. The House remains to be seen.

Belated Movie Reviews

It’s a very traditional retelling of a rather amazing story: The Great Escape (1963) presents the tale of an attempted mass escape during World War II from Stalag Luft III, a German POW camp, by prisoners from the Allied forces. Led by Major Roger Bartlett (in reality, Bushell), they meticulously planned and executed a plan to drain the camp of 250 prisoners in one explosive night through the digging of long tunnels to a nearby forest, the latter of which were dug over the course of weeks.

The movie documents the methods, eccentricities, and, most importantly, the ambitions that men can conceive and execute on in contrary circumstances. In this regard, this movie falls into the category of inspirational stories that teach us to see opportunity where we may initially see only limitations. Another lesson is that of cooperation, realizing that while not everyone is gifted in the same way, sometimes those varied gifts together will help accomplish the seemingly impossible.

In the end, the prison break only results in 76 escaping before the operation is detected and shutdown. Of those 76, 50 were summarily executed (for movie purposes, as a group, but in reality in small groups), two more died during their escape attempt, three made it to the neutral countries of Sweden and Spain, and ten or so are returned to the camp.

But it’s a mistake to focus on the concrete results: it’s a metric-selection error. As Major Bartlett states at the beginning, he’s not trying to escape so much as open a new front in the war. At this point, Germany is desperate. Nearly all able-bodied men are at the front or dead, or they are members of the Cowards’ Brigade, as I call them, the Gestapo, the uniformed bullies who kept the civilians in line, and hunted down “traitors” to the Homeland. The escape diverts precious resources from the fronts where the Allies are hammering away, uses up precious fuel, even the bullets are becoming precious.

Did few escape? Sure. But the primary mission was, in reality, accomplished. And that’s what makes this story so interesting. It’s not the destination which is important, but the journey.

Very well made, and virtually overrun with stars, both matured and in the egg, this is an excellent story that can strain credulity – and yet it’s true.

Book Review: The High Window

Raymond Chandler’s The High Window has too many similes.

This is actually not a throw-off, but an attempt on my part to understand why The High Window is not as good Chandler’s Farewell, My Lovely (which I’ve not reviewed). I’m only partially through The High Window, but I think it’s not holding my interest as well as Farewell, My Lovely due to the abundance of similes, some of which seem far-fetched. It depends too much on the similes and not enough on vivid characters.

It’s A Trifle Disingenuous, Ctd

While I had noted that a Trump-appointed Federal judge had rejected a lawsuit from Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R-ME) that sought to invalidate an election result generated from ranked choice voting (RCV), the game isn’t over yet, as the Bangor Daily News reports:

Attorneys for U.S. Rep. Bruce Poliquin are asking the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston to prevent the state of Maine from sending a certification to Congress that says Jared Golden won November election in the 2nd Congressional District. …

As with Poliquin’s original complaint, the latest motion claims that ranked-choice voting violates the U.S. Constitution’s due process clause because it prevents voters from knowing which candidates will be in the so-called instant run-off election if no candidate gets a majority of votes in the first round. It also argues that ranked-choice voting violates the Equal Protection clause by allowing “certain voters, but not others, the ability to shift their vote from candidate to candidate, thereby affording them a greater degree and different kind of electoral power.”

But I think there’s more going on here at a national level than many realize. RCV is an important change to the voting landscape because it obviates the advantage Republicans have over Democrats when it comes to voting discipline. As has become increasingly apparent over the last three decades, Republicans vote Republican, and rarely is there a second conservative in a general election[1].

This is not as true of Democrats. A Democrat, miffed by a rejection in the primaries or at the caucuses, will be seen running as an independent, or as a Green Party member. More generally, there are more party options on the left side of the spectrum than the right, and that has the tendency to split the vote – and that’s disaster for the Democrat. Remember the candidacy of Ralph Nader in 2000? Without him splitting the liberal, it might have been President Gore[2].

RCV has the potential to relieve that disaster. For the Republicans, anyone other than a Republican winning is unacceptable because there are no other real independent conservative parties, not since the Libertarians chose to join the Republicans.

But Democrats can easily work with other liberal parties if necessary. They already do that in the United States Senate, where Senators Sanders and King are not Democrats, but Independents – but both caucus and vote with the Democrats.

And since RCV will allow a liberal voter to list their personal favorite candidate first, and the Democrat second or even third, and get the same result as listing the Democrat first, all of a sudden the Republican disciplined voter advantage disappears.

Maine is the first State in the Union to use RCV, and that’s why this is the first time there’s been serious litigation over it. Because of the tactical consequences of the final ruling on the issue, it’s worth keeping an eye on it. If RCV is approved by SCOTUS itself, the Republicans will find one of their built-in advantages has disappeared.

And this will be a good thing. Not because more Democrats will potentially win, although I don’t have a problem with that, but because one of the key pillars of Republican validity will disappear, the one that says We hold power, therefore what we’re doing is right! There’s a lot of moral momentum behind electoral victories, because it seems to say that voters approve of what you’re doing. That is the naive viewpoint; sophisticates are aware that vote splitting by multiple candidates on the liberal side of the spectrum, voter suppression tactics, even foreign adversary interference, can swing an election, if it’s undertaken with suitable panache.

And, contrariwise, a string of losses should lead to introspection and modification. A single loss, no, but when you start stringing them together, there’s an indication that something is going wrong, and while it’s popular to blame marketing and messaging, there’s always the worry that a core ideological position has been judged to be inferior by the electorate.

And that’s how change for the better can occur.

Make no mistake, the more I think about this, the more convinced I become that the Pouliquin suit is one of the most important election law suits of the next 50 years.



1 A notable exception is Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), who, after rejection by the Alaska Republicans in the primaries, won her seat on the strength of a write-in campaign in 2010. This exception is more a commentary on the weakness of the Democratic and official Republican candidates.

2 Mr. Nader, for the record, rejects this conclusion himself. However, there are many election watchers who do accept that conclusion.