Word Of The Day

Sintering:

Sintering is a heat treatment process in which a large quantity of loose aggregate material is subjected to a sufficiently high temperature and pressure to cause the loose material to become a compact solid piece. The amount of heat and pressure administered during the sintering process is slightly less than the material’s melting point. [Corrosionpedia]

Noted in a press release I ran across, “Siemens expands additive manufacturing portfolio through acquisition of Atlas 3D“:

Siemens announced today that it has signed an agreement to acquire Atlas 3D, Inc., a Plymouth, Indiana-based developer of software that works with direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) printers to automatically provide design engineers with the optimal print orientation and requisite support structures for additive parts in near real-time. Atlas 3D will join Siemens Digital Industries Software, where its solutions will expand additive manufacturing capabilities in the Xcelerator portfolio of software.

Belated Movie Reviews

Keeping mementoes of prior careers?

The awkwardly named The Beast With Five Fingers (1946) is a relatively sophisticated foray into damaged personalities and how they can lead to horror. Francis Ingram is a former concert pianist who has suffered an accident that has paralyzed one of his hands, and has retired to a small village in Italy to recover. With him are his secretary, Hilary, a composer/arranger, Bruce, along with a nurse to whom Francis has become attached, Julie. Hilary and Bruce’s relationship with Francis is a dependency, as neither are capable of making a living on their own, while Julie is tiring of Francis’ constant demands, and is considering leaving and returning to America.

And then, one night, Francis suffers some sort of visual problem and plunges down the stairs in his wheelchair.

The vultures appear immediately, in the form of a former brother-in-law and his son, Raymond and Donald, and soon enough, the latest will, signed just a few days before, is read: Julie, who is all set to leave, is the sole inheritor. When Raymond hectors her, she digs in her heels. The lawyer then secretly consults with the in-laws and suggests the will is illegitimate, which pleases them.

Until they find his dead body the next day.

Slowly but surely, the police and the survivors are lead to the conclusion that the late Francis’ single working hand, mobile and malignant, is responsible for the lawyer’s death, and other attacks, and the tension builds until a night or two later, when one of the survivors can hear and see the hand actually playing the grand piano.

Nicely plotted and acted, with minimalist but effective special effects, this is a comfortably competent member of the horror genre, with the exception of the last five minutes, which becomes an odd comedy piece that doesn’t fit the rest of the film. The greatest mystery may lay in that odd little vignette.

But otherwise, it’s not bad. A period piece, if you like.

This Doesn’t Seem Right

I must admit I am looking forward to the results of this case:

The Supreme Court agreed Friday to hear the case of two people ordered to repay $26 million they bilked out of Chinese investors through a program that gives U.S. visas in exchange for foreign investment in the United States.

In 2016, the Securities and Exchange Commission accused Charles Liu and Xin Wang of pocketing millions of dollars paid by a group of Chinese investors who were seeking to take advantage of the EB-5 visa program, which offers U.S. visas and a chance at citizenship to people who invest a certain amount in qualifying U.S. business ventures. …

In 2017 a California federal judge found Liu and Wang had violated federal securities law through the scheme and ordered them to pay back the full $26.4 million they brought in through their operation, a remedy known as disgorgement.

Before the two could appeal the order, the Supreme Court ruled in the case Kokesh v. SEC that disgorgement qualifies as a penalty. Liu and Wang cited Kokesh on appeal to the Ninth Circuit, saying that disgorgement is not among the punishments SEC is authorized to seek under federal securities laws, and that the District Court had been wrong to order it.

With the federal appeals court relying on pre-Kokesh, however, it ruled against them, setting the stage for Liu and Wang’s petition for certiorari. [Courthouse News Service]

The key for me is the classification of disgorgement as a punishment, which in standard English doesn’t pass the smoke test – making a victim whole should not be considered a punishment for the malefactor, but an obligation, a step on the path to rejoining society.

However, too often standard English can’t be used when interpreting legalese, so I don’t put my above opinion forward with any great enthusiasm, even if the idea that those convicted in Liu v SEC may retain the money they apparently illegally scammed from the Chinese. I’ll just note that it looks like the Kokesh v SEC decision was a mistake.

A big mistake.

Made not by five or even six justices.

By all nine Justices.

OK Boomer!

I noted this morning that there are still folks who haven’t run into the OK Boomer meme, so I thought I’m ruminate on it a bit. I’m not a fan of the whole demographic ‘generations’ thing, but I do know Boomers are people who are roughly my age, say 55, on up – nominally, I’m on the tail-end of a generation for which I’ve never felt any kinship. The top end of the boomers are in their mid-70s.

If you look at the political and theological fields, the members of the leadership class are dominated by Boomers.

Since it came out of the niche in which it evolved, OK Boomer has been causing some screams of outrage, since the folks to which it is applied, or potentially applied, tend to be occupying positions of importance in the power hierarchy. I see one dude considers it to be the ‘n-word of ageism.’ So what’s going on?

Understanding the usage of OK Boomer requires understanding who is using it, and that usage is typified by the recent incident which brought it to the attention of everyone outside of the social media platform Tik-Tok and one other, which escapes my memory. This happened during a speech by a New Zealand MP on the topic of climate change, 25 year old Chloe Swarbrick, when an older MP interjected a remark, and she retorted “OK Boomer.” In essence, those folks who are in age range of Swarbrick, let’s say 30, and younger, are using it. Wikipedia tells me these are the Millenials and the GenZ folks. (whee-ha. Generation names. Nevermind.)

So what’s going on? Let’s first admit that the outraged boomers, when they make claims about experience trumping youth, have a surface point: yes, experience matters.

But when experience is overshadowed by irrationalism, it becomes immaterial. The Western Civ Millenials are growing up in a world of technology of unprecedented levels. It’s everywhere. And technology is the child of rationality, of the imperfect but generally improving study of reality.

What do the Millenials see? Climate change, pollution, rising costs, falling salaries, greed, greed, greed, coddling of elite classes (see France’s attempt to raise taxes which reportedly didn’t impact the elites and led to riots), and overpopulation, and while Western societies are seeing birthrates slowly falling, other countries are making up for those falling birthrates, with the end result being minor wars breaking out, such as the Syrian Civil War.

And what do the Millenials see in the political class these days? Not much engagement with reality, at least on the conservative side. Trump joins with fundamentalist religious leaders to call climate change a hoax. Some UK or Aussie Minister with a technology portfolio demanding that the government have access to encrypted private communications, and pouting when told that it’s not currently possible – we’ll be needing a mathematical miracle for that one, boomer. A battle royale over the funding of health care in the United States, when the rest of the Western world has more or less socialized it – successfully, in their eyes. Even calls for a higher birthrate by such figures as Rep Steve King (R-IA).

The political and religious class Boomer leaders did not grow up in a world of constrained resources and technology everywhere they looked. Sure, things were changing quickly, but nothing like today – and add in over-population, another quickly-denied reality by many of our Boomer leaders, and the situation is becoming critical.

The problem – an inevitable problem in societies in which individualism and greed are considered to be unalloyed goods (see libertarianism, a wing of the GOP, in the United States), and the practice and improvement of the communal good, the responsibility of government, atrophies – is the investment in rigid ideological & theological positions divergent from reality. I use the word investment almost literally, because for those who have bought into such philosophies, many, even most, have literally put time and wealth into those ideologies order to acquire & solidify wealth and prestige.

Tell them they’re wrong to have done so, and they’ll squall and scream and wiggle and cry out No! But I have respect and power!

OK, Boomer.

Because of these investments, the Boomers in question continually fight wars with their opponents that are slowly – or quickly – becoming quite surreal.

Here’s a snowball, the world is not getting warmer. Really? Why do all our measurements disagree with you?

Abortion is evil. In an over-populated world of scarce resources? Should I permit this fetus to mature into a child and then bring it up in poverty, or die in war?

God gave us stewardship of the world and therefore strip-mining, pollution, and other forms of ruining the environment is ok. Really? How will the Millenials live in such an irremediable world?

Guns in the hands of everyone makes the world better. Let’s ask those folks in Las Vegas who cowered and died from the shooting from on high.

Profits before humans. And how does that lead to a better world?

These are all statements I’ve run across from our purported leaders, and there are many more. The Millenials are quite right to dismiss those who’s propagate them as right with OK, Boomer.

OK, Boomer.

OK, Boomer.

It’s simply a polite way of saying FOAD, Boomer, from forty years ago. Fuck Off And Die Already, Boomer. The Millenials will have to clean up after the Boomers, after all. It’s time to start stripping power from them so the mess isn’t quite so large.

But not all of them. Not all Boomers are stuck in their ideological foxholes, shooting at those who’d tell them that they’re wrecking the world. In a sense, everyone invests in ideological positions, if only by default, and those investments grow stronger as they age; it’s a rare person who flits from ideology to ideology, although some will change the window dressing frequently. It’s just that some pick a scalable ideology, a phrase I just made up. They select ideologies that retain their validity as conditions change, as knowledge grows and changes and matures.

In the end, OK Boomer selects those political and religious leaders who haven’t kept up with realities on the ground, who pursue their outdated dreams and stick to their now-irrelevant ideological and theological positions, and thus are damaging the future for those who come after them.

It’ll be interesting to see how often it’s misused to label all Boomers as misguided and not worth listening to. Personally, I hope I have the wherewithal to return fire with OK, Boomer, and let them puzzle over it.

Three Measuring Sticks, Ctd

As readers may remember, two gubernatorial contests were held last week in Kentucky and Mississippi, and while the latter was won relatively easily by the Republican candidate, the Kentucky contest between incumbent Republican Bevin and challenging Democrat Beshears resulted in the narrow loss of the governorship by the Republicans. It’s close enough that the Board of Elections hasn’t yet certified the results, and Bevins, unless I missed an announcement, has yet to concede.

That left me wondering just how red the State of Kentucky might be considered to be, so I did a bit of research, enough to make me tired of my graphing tool, and convincing me that the old adage that all politics is local is probably quite true.

In the below, I chose to show number of votes, rather than percentages, in order to get a feel for how the magnitude of votes has changed over the years. The first chart is of Senatorial contests since 1996.

While there have been some competitive contests, clearly the Republican competitors have had more appeal than the Democrats.

The second chart is of Presidential contests since 1996.

Clinton barely beat the wooden Dole in 1996; Democrats Gore, Kerry, Obama, and Clinton clearly had relatively little appeal. But coal mining, a major Kentucky industry, has been waning for quite a while, and blame has often been cast at big government, since Democrats have had the temerity to point out the polluting aspects of the fossil fuel.

Finally, here’s the chart for the recent Kentucky gubernatorial contests.

While Republicans would like to say Kentucky is a red state, I have to think, given the variance in the charts, that the perception of the candidates appears to be an important factor in voters determining the victor in contests. Republicans like to claim Bevin was deeply unlikable, yet Bevin survived a contested primary before being defeated by Andy Beshear, the son of former Governor Steven Beshear – and that family connection may have been important as well.

The supremacy of the Republicans in Kentucky Senatorial contests will be on the line in 2020 when long-time Senator McConnell will be once again running for re-election, unless he decides to retire. Recent polls have shown that he has become deeply unpopular, but I don’t think that’ll be enough. The Democrats will need to find a Kentuckian to run who appeals to the state’s residents, while still being able to tell them some hard truths.

This may be more open than the Kentucky GOP wants to think.

From One End Health, The Other …, Ctd

Getting back to this thread on pharma and its production overseas where environmental standards are laxer than here in the States, WaPo has a report on the valiant efforts of a tiny pharmacy named Valisure to ensure the drugs it dispenses to customers are actually what they’re ordering.

The pharmacy, Valisure, is a start-up with only 14 full-time employees. But since its scientists alerted American regulators that Zantac and its generic form, ranitidine, contained a chemical thought to cause cancer, more than 40 countries from Australia to Vietnam have either stopped sales, launched investigations or otherwise stepped in to protect consumers from possible health risks.

In the United States, the Food and Drug Administration this month confirmed unacceptable levels of the chemical, N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), in some ranitidine products — including in some syrups taken by babies. FDA officials have urged people not to panic, because the levels of NDMA are similar to the amount found in grilled and smoked meats. The agency is still investigating and asking companies to recall ranitidine and a similar drug, nizatidine, if they discover unacceptable amounts of NDMA. The agency’s testing suggests Pepcid, Tagamet, Nexium, Prevacid and Prilosec do not contain the chemical.

The item catching my eye was this:

For Valisure’s scientists, finding NDMA in ranitidine was a particularly dramatic example of the kind of discovery they make routinely. Valisure checks the chemical makeup of drugs before it ships them to consumers, and rejects more than 10 percent of the batches because their tests detect contaminants, medicine that didn’t dissolve properly or pills that contain the wrong dose, among other issues. Since late 2018, Valisure has reported more than 50 problems directly to drug companies. Occasionally — as in the case of Zantac — their scientists find a problem so urgent they play the role of watchdog.

Yeow! 10% is way more than I want to hear, now that I’ve become old, decrepit, and dependent on the health system to stay upright and pretend to be vital. But connecting to this thread is this:

Much of the concern over the quality and safety of the drug supply has been propelled by a massive movement of drug production to foreign factories in recent years, “driven by the pharmaceutical industry’s desire for cost savings and less stringent environmental regulations,” Woodcock said in testimony submitted to Congress in October.

The FDA rigorously evaluates drugs for effectiveness and safety before approval, including visits by inspectors, who review records to ensure compliance with requirements — including that companies test batches of medicine before distributing them, Kahn said.

2016 Government Accountability Office report found that almost a third of 3,000 foreign drug establishments licensed by the FDA may never have been inspected, although the FDA said it has now caught up on the backlog.

Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), has sent letters to the FDA questioning the adequacy of its foreign drug inspection program.

It sounds like neglect of product safety in favor of profits to me. So how to punish companies who are single source suppliers of drugs that many consider critical to their life styles, and sometimes even lives?

I suppose you could hang Forfeit of patent over the heads of the pharma company, although it’s a bit of a buzzkill for those who develop drugs for profit. Would it work? I’m not sure.

Mutual Revenge?: Or, No, This Guy’s Been Neutered, Ctd

A reader writes concerning Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III kick-off TV ad for his campaign to regain his old Senate seat:

That’s the most blatant act of self-abasement since Zelenskyy’s pathetic brown-nosing on the Trump-Ukraine phone call.

I think it’s a hard call. However, Zelensky has an entire nation under siege by Russia, while Sessions, who should have gone into retirement following his resignation from the AG spot (he’s currently 72 and, based on his statements as AG, significantly out of touch with much of America), is merely attempting to extend his political life.

I think I must disagree with my reader: brown-nosing to help an entire nation survive is not as morally revolting as brown-nosing merely to restart a political career. Indeed, in the latter case, ‘brown-nosing’ doesn’t seem to adequately describe the pathetic sight of Sessions’ humbling himself before the Altar of Trump. He should be kicking the crumbling marble, spitting on it with sulfuric acid, and leading the general revolt against this blasphemy called Trump. Instead, he … he …

Perhaps I should suggest Sessions should visit a geriatrics doctor to see if he has dementia.

Another reader writes:

He was a bad senator before.

Well, he certainly didn’t seem to have done much in the Senate, at least that I can remember or find in Wikipedia; and Trump didn’t pick him to be AG for his outstanding skills or contributions:

Sessions, a Republican former senator from Alabama, was among the earliest and most high-profile supporters of Trump during a GOP primary campaign in which the real estate mogul and reality television star was shunned by most elected officials in Washington.

“You know, the only reason I gave him the job is because I felt loyalty,” Trump said on Fox News. “He was an original supporter.” [WaPo]

A sort of non-starter.

There’s A Clue

WaPo notes a veteran Republican’s analysis of the problems the Republicans didn’t overcome in the recent 2019 election cycle in Virginia, where the state House and Senate were lost to the Republicans for the first time in a generation:

“We need candidates who can run strong campaigns with a conservative agenda that actually people are attracted to and not repelled by,” said Dick Wadhams, the former state party chair in Colorado who has also worked in Virginia. “That may sound trite, but I’d swear sometimes people act like they have never heard such a thing.”

Wadhams is a long-time Republican who evidently is a little slow in understanding how the Republicans have changed over the last few decades, because he appears not to understand how his own party has become the Party of Absolute Truth. In other words, his last phrase, but I’d swear sometimes people act like they have never heard such a thing, is not only mostly true, but also anathema. Change is not acceptable to the most holy, ya know.

As Goldwater forecast so long ago, the party has been taken over by those who believe they have the truth, the whole truth, and anyone who disagrees with them is evil. If my reader has doubts, they should consider the recent draconian abortion laws passed in Alabama and other red states, which are basically theology dressed up in camouflage; the frantic flaying of powers from the governorship by a lame duck meeting of the Wisconsin state legislature after the Scott Walker (R-WI) lost his re-election bid to Tony Ever (D-WI); the threat to ignore the will of voters in Kentucky in the recent gubernatorial contest lost by incumbent Matt Bevins (R-KY) to Andy Beshears (D-KY); and the proposal of AZ GOP chairman Dr. Kelli Ward, who suggests an electoral college system be implemented at the state level for gubernatorial elections, as such systems magnify the power of the rural population at the expense of the city populations.

It’ll be interesting to see how quickly the Republicans adjust to the reality that some of their political positions are simply not acceptable to most Americans. I suspect what we’ll see is a gradual change as the more theological Republicans die off from old age, and then as the party begins to change, the more rigid Republicans leave in protest. But how quickly will this happen? Hard to say.

This Is Driving Me Nuts

For two days now, too. Perhaps I’m too literal or something, but on CNN’s front page, this article was headlined:

Original ‘Marlboro Man’ dead after a life spent not smoking

And, from the article:

The rancher and philanthropist best known for playing the original “Marlboro Man” has died after a life spent not smoking.

NO NO NO NO. You don’t spend time NOT doing things!

Now, look, I’m an inadvertent advocate of new ways to express, in writing, inner thoughts in order to convey them to your readers. Contending adjectives, verbing nouns, contradictory assertions, all that sort of thing.

But this doesn’t work. It evokes nothing but annoyance. Simply say he played a smoker, but wasn’t. He didn’t waste his time with it. Something like that.

Stop it, CNN.

Belated Movie Reviews

I wonder why monsters never practice good hygiene. Is it just that hard for Godzilla to get an appropriately sized toothbrush? Or is it really that good to have gobbets of flesh stuck between your incisors?

A cursed heart from Africa – a bit of a conceptual pun in itself – is at the heart of another movie that, surprisingly, didn’t suck: Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer (2007). The story concerns the travails of plumber Jack Brooks, a man whose childhood loss of his parents and sister on a camping trip to forest monsters has left him with anger management issues. Now a young man, when the professor of his night course in chemistry asks him to check into a plumbing problem at his recently purchased house, Jack stumbles into a mess that his raging anger may actually play a positive part: the cursed heart, imported from Africa decades ago and messing with the house’s plumbing, breaks free and infects the professor.

And now it’s hungry.

Two classes later, the professor loses his fight to the heart and is transformed into a clown-like monster that begins to drain the life from the students in his course, a sensation no doubt familiar to many of my readers. There is much running about, screaming, and a few new monsters are birthed through transformation. Think how parasitic wasps use paralyzed spiders to implant their larvae, which then eat the still-live spider –

Yeah, maybe not. The analogy may be imperfect.

Yes, that would be a petard.

But Jack the Plumber strikes back, and in an epic battle extinguishes the monster, even hoisting it on its own petard, as Jack creates for himself a new career.

Monster Slayer.

This could have been awful, rotten, terrible. It’s not. Fifteen minutes in, I turned to my Arts Editor and exclaimed, “This doesn’t suck!” And then we stayed up ’til 2AM watching the whole silly thing, enjoying the humor, appreciating the professional acting (even the bloody dog did a fabulous job!), getting into the organic plot, and razzing the slightly cheesy monster costumes and special effects.

I’m not going to recommend it. This isn’t, say, Mad Max: Fury Road (2015). But it’s nicely put together, and if you like comedic horror, this little fragment of a gemstone might be right up your alley.

Mutual Revenge?: Or, No, This Guy’s Been Neutered

I wasn’t quite sure how Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III was planning to campaign to regain his old Senatorial seat, but outright groveling at the feet of the guy who busted his chops was certainly not on my radar:

Wow. So he’s not written a tell-all book, he hasn’t attacked Trump since Trump told him to get lost, he hasn’t stuck needles in the Trump voodoo doll, hell, he’s in full support of Trump’s agenda.

Shit. Doesn’t this guy have any self-respect?

But on further navel-gazing, this all makes sense. Trump is the top dog of the Trump cult, and if Sessions wants to be part of the game again, he has to ingratiate himself to the cult. Was he a good Senator prior to being the Attorney General? Does he have good ideas going forward? The cult, abandoning its responsibilities as Americans, doesn’t care.

And hell if I know. It’s 30 seconds of groveling. But this is a strategy which just might work for Sessions, because this is how the Trump cult works – you don’t have to analyze, you don’t have to judge what your leaders do, just be attentive and follow the clues Trump leaves. Maybe he’ll give Sessions a thumbs up. Maybe it’ll be a down.

But your accomplishments, your competency, everything that matters to a traditional voter, these things no longer matter if you’re a Trump cultist. Will Sessions adore Trump enough?

Time will tell.

While We’re Waiting

The Our Children’s Trust lawsuit against the government concerning the continued use of subsidies to buttress the fossil fuels industry, known as Juliana v. United States, presented its arguments to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit back in June. The counter-arguments advanced by the government, both under Obama and now Trump, is as follows:

In briefs to the Supreme Court, Solicitor General Noel J. Francisco wrote that “the assertion of sweeping new fundamental rights to certain climate conditions has no basis in the nation’s history and tradition — and no place in federal court.”

Even before Tuesday, lawyers in two administrations had made similar arguments in lower courts. But again and again, judges allowed the case to proceed. [WaPo]

While I certainly shouldn’t be commenting on the Francisco’s claim these are new rights – although I’ll note that this sounds more like a pollution case that perhaps the government should like – it seems to me there’s a rebuttal right there in the Constitution:

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, …

That the general Welfare is mentioned as a motivation for the Constitution makes it a responsibility of the government; that an action of the government, namely the subsidization of the fossil fuel industry, is having a deleterious and, if not yet, soon a substantial impact on the Welfare of the people, makes that action illegal.

By fighting this lawsuit, both Obama and Trump seem to be saying that they have a right to take actions which harm large parts of the nation. That’s not right. If they were fighting this on some sort of technical grounds, I might understand their point. After all, the power of the purse resides with the Legislature, so perhaps they’d have been a more natural target, but maybe they cannot be sued. In any case, in this the Executives (Obama and Trump) seem to be denying their very responsibility to keep the Nation safe not only from foreign powers, but from our own disastrous actions.

It’s disappointing. Stop the subsidies now.

Word Of The Day

Minatory:

having a menacing quality [Merriam-Webster]

Noted in “Moving to Mars – this show will help you become a real Martian,” Simon Ings (NewScientist, 26 October 2019):

STEP into Moving to Mars, an exhibition of Mars mission and colony design at London’s Design Museum, and you are confronted, immediately, with some very good reasons not to move there.

Minatory glowing wall-texts announce that Mars wasn’t made for you; that there is no life and precious little water; that, clad in a spacesuit, you will never touch, taste or smell the planet you now call “home”. As Lisa Grossman wrote for New Scientist a couple of years ago, “What’s different about Mars is that there is nothing to do there except try not to die”.

Taking A Wrong Turn In The 100-Meter Dash

Recently an argument over Trump broke out on a friend’s FB account, and it strikes me that it presents several teachable moments. Without permission, but omitting names and FB’s fbclids from links, I’m going to use it that way. It begins with my friend presenting the recent court finding that President Trump must pay a $2 million fine for misuse of the Trump Foundation’s funds:

[Friend]: “Our petition detailed a shocking pattern of illegality involving the Trump Foundation — including unlawful coordination with the Trump presidential campaign, repeated and willful self-dealing, and much more,” https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/judge-orders-trump-pay-2-million-misusing-his-foundation-n1078306

And the rejoinder from the Trump proponent:

[Pro-Trump]: sounds like a partisan hit job.. bet it was some SDNY judge… lol.. talk about conflicted interest and corrupted legal.. that judge should be challenged and unfrocked

[Friend]: Trump can ask for an appeal but facts are facts and they will still be guilty.

[Pro-Trump]: https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/420865-judge-orders-stormy-daniels-to-pay-trump-293k-in-legal-fees [the link’s title is Judge order Stormy Daniels to pay Trump $293K in legal fees]

And we’ll pause here to note that the Pro-Trumper has provided a link of no apparent relevance. This is the beginning of a classic maneuver, which I’ll elucidate in a moment.

[Pro-Trump]: No facts are NOT facts. If they were then Trump would not be being attacked while the clintons who actually did violate foundation laws walk free

And there it is. This is the attempt to divert attention away from the topic at hand to another topic, namely the Clintons, a name which has become a trigger word for political conservatives. The Pro-Trumper continues to pound away at the maneuver:

[Pro-Trump]: And, indeed, the multitude of connections that slowly turned out became hard to dismiss as coincidental. There was the fact that 85 of the 154 private interests who’d met with Clinton during her tenure at state were Clinton Foundation donors.

Emails turned up showing how the foundation intervened to arrange a meeting between Clinton and the Crown Prince of Bahrain, a country that had been a major foundation donor. A Chicago commodities trader who donated $100,000 to the foundation got a top job on a State Department arms control panel, despite having no experience in the area. On and on it went.

[Pro-Trump]: First, the Clinton’s almost immediately shuttered the Clinton Global Initiative and laid off 22 employees.

Now, fresh financial documents show that contributions and grants to the Clinton Foundation plunged since Hillary lost her election bid. They dropped from $216 million in 2016 to just $26.5 million in 2017 — a stunning 88% fall. Throughout Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State, the foundation pulled in an average of $254 million a year. (See the nearby chart below for a timeline.)

[Pro-Trump]: these are FACTS

[Pro-Trump]:

[Friend]: I see you are resorting to a straw man fallacy, rather than actually refuting the original argument that Trump is guilty.

The Pro-Trumper has rapidly deployed a number of facts and inferences in an attempt to turn attention away from the matter at hand. The Pro-Trumper makes one more statement, which betrays the maneuver for the careful reader:

[Pro-Trump]: I first refuted that argument… then I exposed you to facts and your strawman

Here are the points I’d like to make.

  1. The Pro-Trumper never addressed the facts of the matter, namely Trump being found guilty of misusing Trump Foundation funds, despite claiming he had. That’s classic.
  2. My friend recognizes the maneuver, and the agenda behind it, but I fear his riposte is weak because of the use of a semi-technical term, the strawman argument, which is too abstract. I prefer to use the term Buh-whataboutism! for this type of argument. As noted, the idea is to run quickly away from the topic on which one cannot win to another which, valid or not, one could possibly win, declare victory and go home.
  3. I’d like to note that the heart of the Buh-whataboutism! argument is not without its merits. We often use comparisons to make decisions concerning behaviors, from comparing consumer products to heroism in battle. But Buh-whataboutism! is invalid in this instance because the standard against which Trump is being measured isn’t the purported illegal behaviors of the Clintons, but the law. That is the one and only applicable standard when we’re discussing court cases. That the Clintons are brought up without reference to the facts of the matter at hand demonstrates the weakness of the fundamental argument for Trump; an honest conclusion from this court case suggests that Trump is a dishonest businessman who used a charity for personal gain. Of course, working from a single court case to characterize a man is itself intellectually dishonest, and so I shan’t do so, but point at his many other cases of lack of adherence to typical standards of American societal discourse in order to reinforce the conclusion. Just say it with me: Thirteen thousand lies….

In light of the first three points, I ‘d like to emphasize there’s no need to deal with the Clinton topic at all. However, given the weak presentation per the Clintons, I would like to present an observation or two.

With regard to evidence, it’s generally wisest to present the most generous interpretation possible during an argument[1], rather than, as the Pro-Trumper does here, come to the most harsh, yet unsupported, conclusion: impute criminal behavior. Why? It’s more believable when presenting the argument in front of an independent audience; the audience, presumably intelligent and not predisposed one way or the other, will recognize unlikely conclusions for what they are, and discount the proponent for not having facts of the proper character to rule out other interpretations.

So in the case of the Clintons, the presented facts are not incongruent with the conclusion of illegal behaviors, but they are not nearly dispositive, meaning that there are other possible and reasonable interpretations of the facts presented. Take, for example, the cited chart for the Clinton Foundation. I’ll stipulate to the numbers, as I researched a couple of them in Charity Navigator and they appear to match, but not to the conclusions the Pro-Trumper wants everyone to believe. In fact, there’s probably a couple of dozen alternate interpretations, but I shall only list a few to get the reader’s juices flowing:

  1. Operational incompetency. I do not mean the Clintons were skimming money off the top, because Charity Navigator actually places the Clinton Foundation in the top category for efficiency. I mean that perhaps the donor class perceived the Clinton Foundation as not being effective at its work, and chose to direct funds elsewhere.
  2. Disagreement with goals. Donors discovered that the Clinton Foundation’s goals were incompatible with their own goals as philanthropists.
  3. Major donor priorities changed.
  4. Major donor funds dried up.
  5. The Clintons are geriatric. No doubt about it, the Clintons are celebrities, but their advancing age is almost certainly making them less effective as fund-raisers. The diminishment of old age can be quite surprising, as I’ve found out recently.
  6. This is not a complete picture. The chart is for the Clinton Foundation and, by implication, covers all such charitable organizations linked to the Clintons. This is wrong. There appear to be quite the number of charitable foundations connected with the Clintons, most of them focused on precise problems or goals, and I don’t know, being a working dude with limited resources, if all of their numbers go up and down in concert – or if they don’t, meaning donors are shifting funds from one charity to another. The chart looks nice and authoritative, but having done a bit of research, I actually have my doubts.

I came up with the above on the spur of the moment; I’m sure a thoughtful reader would come up with even more interpretations. But a conservative who has already fore-doomed the Clintons is probably snorting in disbelief, because it’s hard to go against preconceptions, and in a sense, the above list is weak – because it doesn’t assert the Pro-Trumper is out and out wrong, it’s merely a presentation of alternative interpretations congruent with the presented facts.

So let’s move on to bigger hurdles.

First of all, let’s consider the behaviors of President Putin. If the Clintons were sleazeballs who could be bribed by donations to their foundation, then why did Putin end up taking the far more risky route of meddling in the 2016 Presidential election in order to ensure that Hillary Clinton, who as Secretary of State worked to roll back the illegal Russian invasion and annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, was defeated by Trump? This was all documented by Republican Special Counsel Mueller, by the way, which gives it far more weight than a non-Republican Special Counsel.

It’d be far more efficient and certain to have simply dumped $50 million into the Foundation. If a President Clinton then tried to work against Putin’s European plans, he’d have that lovely bribe, to use the unvarnished word, to hold over her head. But he didn’t, and I don’t take Vladimir Putin to be anyone’s fool. It’d have been cheap and certain, so why didn’t he?

Second, Why aren’t the Clintons in jail? Because they’re so smart? Nyah, it’s a rare person who can engage in such public hijinks and get away with it, and with the enemies the Clintons have made, the possibility seems zero.

But a properly cynical conservative will proclaim it must be corruption, the judge and/or prosecutors are taking bribes. Our Pro-Trumper actually did that in the thread above. But does this really make sense?

Look, I’m no lawyer. Most of us aren’t. But we all have a grasp of human nature. Do any of us think that prosecutors, who are traditionally highly ambitious lawyers, looking for that next step up the ladder or the big article in the newspaper, are really motivated by mere money and could be bought off not to prosecute?

Ignoring the problem of obscuring the bribe, that’s not how a prosecutor secures advancement. Can you imagine the improvement in the reputation of a prosecutor who put the Clintons behind bars? Similar to my favorite Benghazi incident argument, where I prominently and very sincerely thank the Republicans for publicly clearing former Secretary of State Clinton of any wrong-doing in that tragic episode, not just once, but a half dozen times, I conclude from the lack of prosecution that either the Clintons are fantastically master criminals who will never be caught for their crimes, and in fact should be given the Presidency on a permanent basis because their immense smarts makes them the best politicians to run the country[2], or … they’re not guilty of anything more than occasionally speeding.

The fact they’ve not even been indicted, despite the professional inducements for prosecutors, suggests that their criminality is either extremely well hidden, or non-existent. As an independent and a non-lawyer, I always hold the possibility out that they’ve committed horrendous crimes, just like maybe my next door neighbors could possibly do – but at the moment it doesn’t seem likely.

In the end, Trump was found guilty of misuse of funds. Indeed, he admits to it, as my Friend’s link emphasizes:

The settlement also included an admission from Trump that he personally misused foundation funds and called for mandatory training requirements for the now-defunct foundation’s directors — Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump.

It remains to be seen how often Trump’s supporters admit to this blotch on his reputation. For most other folks, I’d just shrug and say they were ignorant but then I might make the same mistake. But for the “… most stable genius in the world”?


1 However, investigators should take the most cynical view of the facts at hand, and then seek more facts to either prove or disprove that family of hypotheses. Why bother with a charge of bank robbery when you can jail someone on a murder charge? But a dishonest investigator is a dangerous thing.

2 This is an example of logical sarcasm, wherein what I just said actually makes a certain appalling sense, but I would never countenance the actual conclusion because it’s bad policy. Besides, Bill Clinton always makes my skin crawl.

Belated Movie Reviews

Which man should I have next?

I gotta say that I think the genre of humorous noir has to be one of the smaller categories of story out there, but I’ve finally run across one example. Another Man’s Poison (1951) uses a steady drip, drip of dry humor to accentuate the poor choices made by the lead characters of this story. Janet, a murder mystery writer, lives in one of those large Scottish mansions, writing her highly successful novels, with a secretary to type them up, and a housekeeper.

She also has an estranged husband, and on this stormy Friday night, her secretary and housekeeper gone for the weekend, the husband happens to be sitting in a chair in front of the fire in the great room.

Dead.

Conveyed home from the village pay phone (her phones are out) by the local veterinarian, she finds a strange man in the living room. He wants to see her husband. Why?

Her husband shot a man during a bank robbery committed by the two. And the stranger, George Bates, doesn’t want to take the blame for the likely murder committed by his partner.

But Janet doesn’t want any part of this mess, because, well, her husband met his untimely demise at her hands. A wee bit of poison, you see. Some sharp dialog, not to mention motivations, and soon the dead husband has been tossed into a nearby lake, and the stranger is permitted to stay the night.

Meanwhile, remember the phone call? Well, that was to her secretary, or more accurately, her secretary’s fiancee, because Janet, not to put too fine a point on it, is also in the business of swooping in on men vulnerable to highly successful women, such as herself.

And that ride home from the village pay phone? That vet, Dr. Henderson, has his own finely honed sensitivities. When George, the intruder, assumes the part of the estranged husband, who supposedly has been away in Malaya, Henderson would surely like to know what became of the tan he should have.

The metaphorical toilet bowl of doom which defines the noir genre is, in this case, wide, slow, but, as ever, inevitable. We watch as one bad decision after another ruins lives until bodies begin to litter the landscape. In fact, even literally.

And it’s well done. Perhaps the most grating part of the movie is the occasional assertion that Janet is beautiful, when, at least to modern sensibilities, she is not. Played by Bette Davis, she’s tenacious, aggressive, not afraid to go after what she wants, and not a wilting flower.

If you’re a noir fan or a Davis fan, you should see this for the sheer pleasure of it. For others, the pacing is not quite to modern tastes, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Make some popcorn, settle in with a sweetie, have a bit of patience.

And try not to distrust your partner afterwards.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkIcePp8WyY

The Ruts Get Too Deep

An old friend managed to drop this Atlantic article by Jerry Useem from 2017 in my path recently, and I found it fascinating. It’s all about Hubris Syndrome:

“Hubris syndrome,” as [Lord David Owen] and a co-author, Jonathan Davidson, defined it in a 2009 article published in Brain, “is a disorder of the possession of power, particularly power which has been associated with overwhelming success, held for a period of years and with minimal constraint on the leader.” Its 14 clinical features include: manifest contempt for others, loss of contact with reality, restless or reckless actions, and displays of incompetence. In May, the Royal Society of Medicine co-hosted a conference of the Daedalus Trust—an organization that Owen founded for the study and prevention of hubris.

It’s fascinating how the mind can allow itself to be molded by the reactions and assertions of those humans with which it interacts. My Arts Editor used to work for Wells Fargo during the reign of CEO John Stumpf, and Useem’s description of a Congressional hearing to which Stumpf was invited is more than interesting:

When various lawmakers lit into John Stumpf at a congressional hearing last fall, each seemed to find a fresh way to flay the now-former CEO of Wells Fargo for failing to stop some 5,000 employees from setting up phony accounts for customers. But it was Stumpf’s performance that stood out. Here was a man who had risen to the top of the world’s most valuable bank, yet he seemed utterly unable to read a room. Although he apologized, he didn’t appear chastened or remorseful. Nor did he seem defiant or smug or even insincere. He looked disoriented, like a jet-lagged space traveler just arrived from Planet Stumpf, where deference to him is a natural law and 5,000 a commendably small number. Even the most direct barbs—“You have got to be kidding me” (Sean Duffy of Wisconsin); “I can’t believe some of what I’m hearing here” (Gregory Meeks of New York)—failed to shake him awake.

Sure. The environment was not congratulatory, he was not being told he was a success – in fact, the implication was that he was a failure. And, it appears, he had no experience with being a failure – helicopter parents, take note! Totally lost at sea comes to mind.

But it’s not just attitude – it’s physical:

Sukhvinder Obhi, a neuroscientist at McMaster University, in Ontario, recently described something similar. Unlike Keltner, who studies behaviors, Obhi studies brains. And when he put the heads of the powerful and the not-so-powerful under a transcranial-magnetic-stimulation machine, he found that power, in fact, impairs a specific neural process, “mirroring,” that may be a cornerstone of empathy. Which gives a neurological basis to what Keltner has termed the “power paradox”: Once we have power, we lose some of the capacities we needed to gain it in the first place.

And it’s arguable that by losing those capabilities, one is losing survival characteristics in many situations. It suggests, unsurprisingly, that survival characteristics are context-dependent, much like morality. But I hadn’t guessed that a brain changed physically, and perhaps irreversibly, due to the environment – and let’s call it the toxic environment – of constant positive reinforcement.

It makes me wonder about parents who experienced failure as children and decided their kids shouldn’t go through such trauma, because it was just so awful. Not having any of my own, of course, I can’t really say anything important on the matter. But the phrase helicopter parents, so sorry to repeat myself, doesn’t exist without examples of the phenomenon being present.

[H/T TF, I think]

A Clear Statement Of The Problem

Former FBI Director Jim Comey, or his ghost writers, seems to have a talent for clearly stating situations. I liked this one, from his recent opinion piece in WaPo:

The president’s oath has always been slightly different. Because the holder of that office has unique responsibilities to the rule of law, the Constitution spelled out the exact words for that job. The president must promise not just to protect and defend the Constitution, but also to “faithfully execute the office of president of the United States.” And there is the problem for Trump, and every senator and representative.

If Congress passes a law giving a vulnerable ally hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid desperately needed to fend off a relentless Russia, and the president of the United States uses that money to coerce the desperate ally to provide electoral dirt on his likely opponent, is the president faithfully executing his office? And if the president conditions White House meetings on acquiring the same foreign dirt to help him get reelected? The answers are obvious.

Connecting the requirements incumbent on both the President and the Senators with a clear statement of the apparent facts of the Ukrainian matter, it makes it clear that, if the facts are as the Democrats claim they are, then the Senators, if they wish to retain their moral integrity, must vote for conviction.

Which leaves it up to the Democrats to make the case forcefully.

Allergies Don’t Make For Good Policy

Professor Adler evidently sneezes whenever he thinks of big government as he disses the Paris climate change agreement. Because of compromise after compromise, it wasn’t the greatest deal in the world, but I don’t think Professor Adler quite understands the side-points of such an agreement:

Instead of trying to find ways to shoehorn greenhouse gas policies into the Clean Air Act, through initiatives like the Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan, policymakers should be focused on spurring the technological innovation that will be necessary to provide low-carbon energy around the globe. Once this is achieved, there will be plenty of time for international agreements and other measures to spur technology transfer and deployment. Focusing on treaties and mandates first, however, is putting the cart before the horse.

Policymakers should seek to increase the rewards for climate friendly innovation, incentivize reductions in carbon intensity, and remove barriers to technological adoption and deployment.  This can be done through a combination of technology inducement prizes and a revenue-neutral carbon tax (such as a cap-and-dividend plan), combined with efforts to reduce regulatory and NIMBY barriers to the development and deployment of low-carbon energy sources. In short, give people more reasons to develop and adopt low-carbon technologies, and remove the barriers to their doing so.

My bottom line is that one need not embrace centralized regulatory measures, bureaucratic international agreements, or massive public works projects to address climate change. Big government is not the best way to be Green. But ignoring serious problems, such as climate change, should not be an option either. [The Volokh Conspiracy]

First of all, rewards for climate change innovation can come from agreements in this category. It establishes that there is a problem to be solved on an international level, and by doing so, signals the innovators to get to work, if only because the agreement will begin to manipulate the market to stop producing the green house gases. It may be anathema to a good libertarian to engage in market manipulations, and there’s plenty of reasons to feel queasy, but the market is not sensitive to subtle signals, especially when they are masked by hidden-agenda rhetoric and ideological/theological assertions. Libertarians may not like it, but the market is not the panacea they like to envision it to be. Sometimes it needs help.

Second, because climate change is not a sock-you-in-the-face phenomenon, a lot of people remain doubters, including both those who innovate and those who would reward the innovators – like the current Administration. An agreement in the league of the Paris Accords, as weak as it was relative to what might have been achieved, still signals not only to innovators, but to non-signatories to the agreement that a large number of nations agree there is a problem needing a solution, and if some non-signatory engages in activities contrary to the agreement, the transgressor, even though they are not a party to the agreement, may still face consequences. This fleet-in-port effect is an important, if difficult to measure, result of having such an agreement.

Third, such an agreement provides forums and even mechanisms for international market efforts as well. Climate change may be caused by those countries which emit large amounts of CO2 and methane, but everyone in all nations suffers for it, some more than others. Just as an example, if we want to embrace the use of carbon taxes as a way to lead industry away from practices which emit the problematic gases and develop replacement technologies, we also need to ensure that industry has no way to escape the taxes. Think of the squalling in the United States about overseas profits and how that money is never brought home by American corporations. The reason they don’t bring it home is because their accountants tell them that it’s more efficient to leave and invest that money overseas. But what would happen if they couldn’t use those countries to sock that cash away because the taxes were the same as ours?

That’s right, then they’d have deploy the cash with less of a concern for taxation. By the same logic, if it doesn’t matter where industry goes as they’ll still face comparable carbon taxes, then we don’t have to worry about inefficiency in those efforts caused by companies seeking taxation efficiencies[0], regardless of consequences to the environment, because those efficiencies, by and large[1], won’t exist.

Seeing such agreements as the Paris Accords as being inevitably in competition with innovators is a key intellectual mistake. Each part of the mechanism has a place to play in order to efficiently find and implements methods for reducing and even eliminating our climate change gases footprint.


0 For the anti-capitalist, seeking efficiencies should be translated as cheating.

1 Certainly, some areas will better administer such taxation schemes better than others, but that’s a truism of human endeavours. Having the legal foundation in place is the beginning of ironing out such unequal efforts, thus reducing the incentives for companies to go looking for ways around a tax.

Mutual Revenge?

NBC News is reporting that former Attorney General and Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III (R-AL) will be filing paperwork to run for his old Senatorial seat:

Former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions intends to announce this week his bid to reclaim his old U.S. Senate seat, two sources familiar with Sessions tell NBC News.

It has been made clear to Sessions that President Donald Trump intends to campaign against him in what is currently a crowded Alabama Senate Republican primary field. Sessions must file his papers to run with the Alabama Republican Party by 5:00 p.m. on Friday night, which he has yet to do.

Assuming he does file, this should make for an interesting race. First, he has a primary to survive:

There is a litany of other Republican candidates who have already announced their bids, including former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville and former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore, who lost to Doug Jones in 2017’s special election.

I suppose Moore and Tuberville should be considered Sessions’ most important opponents. But his strategy, as reported by National Review, is particularly interesting:

Sessions, a Republican, “will come out forcefully in support of [President] Trump’s agenda while denouncing Democrats’ impeachment efforts. And steps have already begun to hire campaign staff,” a person familiar with Sessions’ strategy told The Hill.

I suppose it’s simple enough to consider him to be a Republican, through and through, obedient to the ordained Party liturgy. But his strategy seems a little risky to me.

Suppose, as most political observers expect, that President Trump is impeached. Even without a conviction in a GOP-controlled Senate that has proven itself bound to President Trump, we can expect the airing of many embarrassing, even illegal episodes in Trump’s tenure.

Sessions, like all Trumpists throughout the nation, will find themselves under attack during campaigning by Democrats and even moderate Republicans for associating themselves with Trump. It’s true that there’s a difference between an ideological agenda and the moral character of the Administration attempting to apply it, but it’s also true that an ideological position can foster unethical and immoral activities by its adherents, due to the harsh requirements of that ideology. Sessions may find himself being asked if he agrees with the cruelties inflicted on the illegal immigrants at the southern border, the obstruction documented in the Mueller report, the corruption discussed during the impending impeachment and the trial, and other random bits of corruption of which we already know or suspect. Insightful rivals may even ask if his “agenda” fosters corruption and immorality in its adherents, and then let him splutter his way through a denial; followups could then highlight exactly how several facets of the ideology lead to corruption.

“Senator, do you anticipate being corrupted by your agenda’s requirements should you win the Senatorial race?”

Inflammatory? Sure. But I think it’s a valid concern and worth asking. Naturally, today’s Republican Party will take great offense, but given their recent behaviors both nationally and in some states, such as North Carolina, doth protesteth waaaaay too much.

Then add in Trump’s vow to campaign against him, which is exceedingly odd given Trump’s generally transactional nature, and although it’s certainly true that Sessions did the right thing in recusing himself from the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 Presidential election, his high profile position in the Trump Administration will work against him with the independents. Meanwhile, Trump’s dislike for him for his “failings” will alienate all the Trump cultists, and it’s hard to say how many will refuse to be disillusioned by the impeachment process of Trump himself.

Yep, that’s a dead whale. I expect the clingers to start letting go as the rot sets in.

I suspect that nearly all the boomers who currently cling to Trump will simply dig in with all their fingers and toes, riding their whale right down into the bottom of the Marianas Trench, rather than give up on their dream of resurrecting a past where their lifestyle, concerns, investments (not financial, but relating to position in the old power structure), and privileges are paramount. Their political ideology and, in many cases, religious theology demand that the world work as it did when they were young and middle-aged, and now that the raw problems of over-population are impinging uncomfortably, they squeeze their eyes and ears shut and cry out No!, and cling to Trump as the guy who’ll return everything to how it was. It’s understandable, if not realistic.

And that could easily doom a Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III who is depending on Party discipline and personal charisma to regain his seat, because I think the Trump cultists will break that Party discipline rather than vote for a former Trump appointee who proved to be such a disappointment to their hallowed Leader. If Sessions even wins the primary – and I expect Moore to win it, with Tuberville the most likely to upset Moore – incumbent Democrat Doug Jones may well win a full term to the Senate, defeating the former seat-holder.

And Just How Many Have Special Problems?

As in, If they all have special problems, maybe it’s not peculiar to any one of them after all.

The apparent defeat of sitting incumbent Republican Governor Bevin (R-KY), despite a campaign visit from President Trump, is being explained away by Trump allies, according to WaPo:

Many allies of President Trump rushed to explain away the poor performance of incumbent Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin (R) as an anomaly, while other GOP veterans expressed alarm about the party’s failure in a state where Trump won by nearly 30 percentage points in 2016 — and where he just campaigned this week. …

Allies of McConnell, the Senate majority leader, argued that Bevin’s loss did not indicate any looming trouble for him, who is up for reelection in 2020 and is working to hold the Senate GOP together amid the impeachment debate.

“Republicans won every office on the ballot except [Bevin’s],” Scott Jennings, a longtime McConnell adviser, tweeted. “Some unique candidate problems. GOP brand was fine elsewhere.”

But I have to wonder, because it seems every time I look at some Trumpist, they’re someone with unique problems. There are a variety of names which require little effort to dredge up: would-be governor of Kansas Kris Kobach, who thought it was a good idea to campaign with a machine gun in hand; former Minnesota Rep Jason Lewis, a paleo-conservative radio personality who repudiated his own positions on women the moment they became inconvenient during his campaigns; InfoWars host Alex Jones, the bull-roarer who claimed in divorce papers that his paranoia schtick was nothing more than entertainment, and later claimed, when sued over asserting that the Sandy Hook elementary school massacre was a hoax, that he’d been having a psychotic breakdown. And don’t forget Senator Graham (R-SC), who’s migrated from Never Trump Because He’s An Idiot to Brown-Noser in Chief, aka the Pathetic Kicked Puppy.

The point is, in a party in which team politics and swearing to embrace all the party positions, no matter how putrid or even nonsensical, has become mandatory, it’s becoming apparent that the personalities attracted to power through such a shit storm are going to be unique. They have to be unique, because to embrace what has been mandated by President Trump and the other, less well-known leaders and influencers of the Republican Party requires a personality bordering on cognitive dissonance and dependent on adherence to strict ideologies without reference to reality (think 2nd Amendment absolutism). Even Senator McConnell (R-KY), who I would not classify as a Trumpist, has become such a twisted caricature of a politician, due to Trump’s influence, that he really should be retired for his own good – if not for his legacy, which he’s already managed to destroy.

Jennings should be careful of his own observations. If he thinks the candidates he advises are normal people, he may be living in the epistemological bubble that pundits have been warning of for the last twenty years.

Foxes, Frantic, Or Partisan?, Ctd

Yesterday I discussed the behavior of the House GOP in the context of the impeachment inquiry, and now Roll Call has added another fact to the matter:

Republicans have for weeks blasted the closed-door impeachment process, but transcripts released this week of private depositions show most GOP lawmakers on the three panels at the center of the probe have simply not shown up.

The low attendance for most committee Republicans paints a very different picture of a party that recently stormed the secure room where the depositions have been conducted, demanding to participate in the process. Republican questioning during these private interviews have been driven by a handful of President Donald Trump’s allies and GOP staff.

Conservative Republicans, many closely tied to Trump from the hard-line House Freedom Caucus, have led the GOP questioning, a preview of the coming tumultuous public impeachment process. What is unclear is what role, if any, other Republicans will play.

An impeachment and trial of a President is an undeniably historic process, and should merit the most serious of attention of the Republicans on those panels. We, the voters, are not seeing that serious attention given, and even when the Republicans do show up, the questioning of the witness is not insightful; it’s merely an attempt to grandstand.

So I will have to add another category:

4. Too lazy to get the work done.

The power-hungry are not always known for their work ethic.