My Arts Editor plan for Halloween is to hand these out.
They were a hit with the teenagers last year.
From an endorsement from The Denver Post against sitting Representative Lauren Boebert (R):
We beg voters in western and southern Colorado not to give Rep. Lauren Boebert their vote.
Boebert has not represented the 3rd Congressional District well. Almost exclusively, she has spent her time and efforts contributing to the toxic political environment in this nation.
The good people in this district are not angry and abrasive; they are not hateful and caustic; they do not boast of their own prowess or sling insults as entertainment. The ranchers we know working the Uncompaghre Plateau, the teachers in Durango, the steel mill workers in Pueblo, and the farmers setting down roots in the San Louis Valley keep to themselves, watch their families grow, and pray for better days.
Boebert’s unproductive approach, combined with the efforts of others, has helped erode Congress’ ability to honestly debate public policy that could help people in her district.
This is a measure of the moral failures of the MAGA candidates: they don’t service their constituents, they don’t provide leadership, they are simply their for the ego-fulfilling aspects of the position.
Kudos to The Denver Post.
Some runners are beginning to stagger. Don’t let them touch you! In other news…
Getting near the end here. Oh I so hope. The last edition, grievously out of date, is here.
When the financial underpinnings of society give a hiccup, it’s time to stop and sniff the coffee.
Trouble is brewing in the world of U.S. Treasury bonds, prompting concern among investors and some Washington policymakers.
U.S. Treasury bonds are a key pillar of the global financial system, but there are signs that the pool of interested buyers could be in danger of drying up as an unintended consequence of rising U.S. interest rates.
For now, no one is panicking. But the market for U.S. Treasury bonds has lately displayed a level of volatility not seen since the beginning of the pandemic-related crisis in 2020, when the Federal Reserve cut interest rates to zero and went on to buy $1 trillion of treasuries and other financial assets to keep the global financial system functioning. [WaPo]
It’s not mentioned in the article, but you have to wonder if the potential takeover of all, or parts of, Congress by the Republicans are giving investors in American Treasury bonds pause. After all, it’s no secret that the House, if controlled by the Republicans, has threatened to not lift debt ceilings. If these investors, often foreign and savvy, are realizing that the Republicans are fourth raters who would likely implement their threats, they may come to the conclusion that exposure to American Treasuries that may fail is not in their best interest.
Some people are overjoyed, some are appalled.
An emboldened cast of anonymous trolls spewed racist slurs and Nazi memes onto Twitter in the hours after billionaire industrialist Elon Musk took over the social network, raising fears that his pledge of unrestricted free speech could fuel a new wave of online hate. [WaPo]
Me? It’s the most primitive of the social media platforms that I’ve seen, and seems to be built to inculcate addiction, just like all new sports and television shows. Musk claims this:
On Thursday, Musk tried to assuage advertiser worries in a tweeted letter in which he promised that the site would not become a “hellscape” or a “free-for-all” and pledged that the app would remain “warm and welcoming to all.”
Motivated trolls, desperate to satisfy their employers, their own egos, or both, will prove to be exceedingly difficult to control if Musk does, in fact, try to follow through on his stated intention of 1st Amendment absolutism. It’s the way it goes.
My guess on the future? He caves on the absolutism, or his $44 billion investment, which he tellingly tried to escape, will shrink in value to $44 million as advertisers and users walk away. But that’s a weak prediction, because the addictive, narcissistic power of Followers and Likes and All That Garbage is catnip to anyone who was not the Prom King or Queen.
Hey, I’ve been there. Uh, no, not Prom Royalty. The other thing.
So it’ll be interesting to see how this pans out. I think he’ll institute a set of rules to keep the trolls in check, wrapped in new clothes in order to claim he’s nothing like the C-suite folks he just fired. But social media addiction, the horrible anchor so many drag behind them, could save Musk.
What’s out lying in the backyard? You go look, I’m curled up in a chair. Meanwhile …
When you just need that dollop of out of date news from XX22, you can go here.
Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) has a critique of his Democratic colleagues – two of them, anyways – via Politico:
What’s happening: Sen. Rick Scott criticized two female senators — Sens. Patty Murray (Wash.) and Maggie Hassan (N.H.) — for being unlikeable, a political barb frequently used against female politicians.
The details: During a Wednesday interview on the Hugh Hewitt show, the Florida senator discussed the Washington and New Hampshire Senate races, showing support for the Republican candidates while hitting the female senators for being unlikeable.
Here’s what he said:
“Patty Murray, who’s been there 36 years, Patty Murray is just not likable. I mean, who’s likes Patty Murray? She’s not nice to anybody. And so I think unfortunately for Patty Murray, to Hassan in New Hampshire, they know her. They don’t like her.”
Uh huh. It won’t be classy, but I have to wonder if Scott is going to be met with something along the lines of Oral Sex Scott! chants at public rallies by those opposed to him.
Or who just don’t like him. Maybe Rep Matt Gaetz (R-FL), rumored to dislike Scott, will lead the chanting.
The Republicans are riven with factionalism and outright, no holds barred rivalry:
The McConnell-aligned super PAC Senate Leadership Fund has spent more than $5 million in ads attacking Tshibaka in a bid to help Murkowski win reelection. [WaPo]
This appears to be overwhelming the toxic team politics stricture of the Republican Party, and this is no surprise. The current inhabitants of the Republican Party have mostly pushed out the former, middle of the road, inhabitants through the RINO (“Republican in Name Only”) accusation tactic, and are motivated by greed (see: Trump), social prestige, and acquisition fever.
Of course, we’ve been seeing this for years, such as the attempted, and perhaps successful, RINOing of now-former Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI), and the bloody Republican primary in Alabama for Jeff Session’s open Senate seat, in which extremist Rep Mo Brooks was accused of being an ISIS supporter.
But when it happens between McConnell and Trump, two of the top political leaders, you have to wonder if it signals another step in the dissolution of the Republican Party.
This isn’t the last roundup. Not yet. In other news…
Last update here.
In case you’re not paying attention to the financial metrics of the political parties and are just assuming that Republicans are right when they assert that Democrats are spendthrifts, Steve Benen has a restorative chart for you:
Yes, that’s right. For the last half a century, the Democrats have to clean up the Republicans’ financial messes.
And that’s something to keep in mind two years from now.
Sure, go ahead and scream. Two years ahead is too much just now.
I’ve not had time for blogging over the last few days, but I’ve been a little fascinated by this WaPo article, entitled Murkowski, Peltola cross party lines to endorse each other in tight Alaska races. The title doesn’t quite say it all, either:
[Richard Peterson, president of the Tlingit and Haida tribes], the tribal president, said another motivating factor for his tribe to endorse [Rep Peltola (D), who upset Sarah Palin (R) in the special election to fill Rep Don Young’s (R) seat] was that the other candidates “take hard lines.”
Culture wars have been the norm on the right for decades, but now they’re showing up on the left, principally in the area of transgenderism, although one might make the argument that gay marriage is another cultural war object. To me, it was thoroughly discussed and best served to be legalized by either SCOTUS, as it was, or Congress, as an even treatment of the marriage status of citizens is an important and fundamental aspect of American society, unlike, say, gas taxes.
Errr, back to the point, the Alaskan tribes are on point when they express disinterest or disgust with the cultural wars. They have hard problems to solve, and have little time or interest in stroking the egos of cultural warriors such as are found in the lower 48 states.
And I think a lot, even most, independent voters throughout the States share the value of getting important things done with the Alaskan Indigenous People. Politics as performance art a la McConnell, Jordan, Gaetz, Greene, Cruz, Rand Paul, and so many others on the Republican side of the aisle, but I fear increasingly on the Democrats’ side as well. So far, if the Democrats have echoed the far-right extremists’ cry of baby-killers! with their own child-killers!, I have missed it, but I won’t be surprised if I hear it soon.
So what’s so small, per the title of this post?
A beginning. The beginning of a moderate party. I’m aware of a Forward Party, backed by former Presidential candidate and entrepreneur Andy Yang and others, but if it’s making progress, it’s not clamoring for my attention. But in Murkowski and Peltola, you have members of Congress who are representing a State with strong needs and, frankly, facing a tough future, when we factor climate change into it. That tends to strip away dross and, frankly, minor issues such as transgenderism or the faux horrors warned of by religious zealotry.
So will Murkowski and Peltola found some sort of a moderate party, maybe the Alaska Moderates Party? I don’t know. But there’s surely some potential here, especially if they are successful in reelection campaigns and in the projects they take on and succeed in bringing to fruition.
The far-right extremists of the Republican Party should be looking on in fright, and the Democrats need to take warning. Members of both who pride themselves on their extremism may be seeing their diminishment in Murkowski and Peltola.
Who both still have to survive the ballot box in November.
Perhaps the news is slowing. Perhaps I’m squinting.
Erick Erickson, in the face of fourth-rate – or worse! – Republican candidates, remains confident of success in a couple of weeks. Why? In an email that doesn’t appear to be on his blog: Oregon Democrats are panicking as Nancy Pelosi’s campaign team has pulled money from historically blue house seats because the Republicans are so far ahead. If true, that has to be of concern for those voters who find the candidates behind which Erickson stands to be of an enormously substandard variety. But of more interest from him is this post, which can be read, with only a few changes, as a condemnation of both parties for their absolutist elements. For the Democrats, their transgenderism stance, seemingly unconscious of the societal directive that parents guide and raise children, and not succumb to their every demand, is just one of his criticisms; while, Erickson completely unconscious of it, the absolutism of anti-abortion stands forth as a crippling intellectual failure for the Republicans. In a sense, these two positions are Scylla and Charybdis, a metaphor I’ve used before, the terrifying sea monsters between which mariners must sail, and independent voters are heading for that deadly whirlpool wherein they can pick a Republican Party that abandoned the principles of liberal democracy a decade or more ago, or a Democratic Party that has become increasingly arrogant and certain of itself, and flouted liberal democracy itself when it promoted transgenderism as the law of the land sans discussion. But if Erickson is right, then there’s the question of even those he might assume are his allies are instead abandoning him; see the next two news items.
The previous edition, scorned by many, is here.
There’s little doubt that the Democrats and the left – two different entities – have been using apocalyptic messaging concerning the upcoming mid-term elections. So, of course, this morning I find out that inflation has become the death of democracy, according to Erick Erickson:
Whether the crisis of the third century, the French revolution, the Russian revolution, or the rise of Hitler, inflation tends to destabilize economies and governments. Democrats have been so focused on Republicans as a threat to democracy that they themselves have become the very threat. Democrats have caused inflation, caused economic deterioration, and now voters are going to sweep them out of power even as Democrats claim the GOP is a threat. Their rhetoric and policies are profoundly destabilizing and voters are about to hold them accountable.
The balance of Erickson’s argument is a radio polemic, to which I did not listen.
Sadly, at least for Erickson, we’re not seeing nation-killing inflation. It’s up a little bit while the Democrats, once again, clean up after the Republicans and their economic mess.
We’re not, for that matter, seeing organized, armed Democratic revolutionaries storming the Capitol, chanting for the deaths of top elected political leaders. In fact, the Democrats are the political conservatives in this scenario. They are not promoting a coup, they are not dissembling when asked about accepting election results – they say, Yes, I will accept the results. The worst that they can be accused of is their calling for the end of gerrymandering, and the inflation of the number of seats in SCOTUS.
Can monetary inflation kill a governmental system? Sure. It was a primary culprit in the death of the Wiemar Republic – but that inflation was not the result of foolishness on the part of the German government, but the misguided Treaty of Versailles and its mandate of reparations for World War I, which in turn was the result of arrogance on the parts of, oh, let’s just say many governments of the nations of Europe and parts of Asia.
And their inflation was mind-boggling. Not this petty annual 8% that we’re seeing now. Yes, it’s annoying. There may even be lessons concerning unjust wages finally correcting to levels better for society present in that inflation. That is what we should probably be discussing.
But Erickson is off on his moral equivalence crusade, ever trying to balance January 6th insurrection – which, to be fair, drew a disgusted call from him to shoot the insurrectionists – with the horrors of the left. It’s hard to take him and his right-wing colleagues, who I notice tend to bray in unison, seriously.
So don’t.
Banging on the door, screaming to be let. In other news:
Turnout from Georgia’s first day of early voting set a new state record for a midterm election, nearly doubling the figure from the same time period in the previous midterms, state election officials said Tuesday. … More than 131,000 Georgia voters cast ballots since early voting began Monday, according to the office of Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. The figure represents an 85% boost over the 2018 midterms, when nearly 71,000 early votes were cast on Day One, the office said.
Georgia, of course, is the venue for the Warnock / Walker contest, so some the jump is attributable to that. Is it otherwise significant? Erick Erickson, exhibiting mainstream media paranoia, doesn’t think so: Some of you are falling for the doom scenarios that Democrats are turning out in record numbers in early voting so you might as well give up. Don’t fall into that mindset. It was obvious that would be a last-minute media narrative concocted by the Democrats and advanced by a partisan political press. Because voters are easy to discourage? No, they’re hard to encourage, but once they decide they’re voting, they’re voting. That’s one of the lessons of Kansas, earlier this year. The pro-choice voters were faced with polls predicting the proposed state Constitutional amendment that would enable the Legislature to strip them of their abortion rights would win. That didn’t stop the pro-choice voters, who rejected the proposal by 18 points.
The last time they let is here.
Put your lip between your teeth and bite down, it’ll make this go by much, much slower. In other news:
The surprised! update from last time is here.
Spaceweather.com has a report on an event that happened maybe 2.4 billion years ago – and just affected us a few days ago:
Oct. 17, 2022: Astronomers have never seen anything quite like it. On Oct. 9, 2022, Earth-orbiting satellites detected the strongest gamma-ray burst (GRB) in modern history: GRB221009A. How strong was it? It caused electrical currents to flow through the surface of our planet.
Yeow! And then that age thing:
Researchers have since pinpointed the burst. It came from a dusty galaxy 2.4 billion light years away, almost certainly triggered by a supernova explosion giving birth to a black hole. This is actually the closest GRB ever recorded, thus accounting for its extreme intensity.
I see that, by contrast, NASA is estimating 1.9 billion light years. And gamma rays are potentially dangerous, as the Wikipedia page notes. I wonder how much damage we’d sustain if that gamma ray burst had happened within our home galaxy, the Milky Way.
A day or two ago in my Senate Campaign Updates I noted the shocking survey from A+ rated Selzer & Co showing 89 year old Senator Grassley (R-IA) with only a three point lead over challenger Vice-Admiral Mike Franken (D) in his reelection race. Today, I see David Byler of WaPo doesn’t think Grassley needs to be worrying:
In math, there’s a procedure called the “sanity check” in which, essentially, you zoom out and see whether the calculations you’re doing align with your common sense.
We can do a similar gut check on the Iowa race by looking at polls from races in other states.
In national House polls, the parties are roughly evenly matched. The FiveThirtyEight aggregate has Democrats leading Republicans by less than a point, and the RealClearPolitics average has the GOP barely ahead. In Senate polls, the picture is similar: The same purple states that were competitive in 2022 are competitive again.
But there’s an even better sanity check available here, a race wherein the same pollster and almost certainly the same polled citizens are tested in a different way. That’s the Iowa Governor’s race. Let’s take Byler’s assumption that Iowa is reliably conservative, an assumption that is itself somewhat dubious. If true, then we should assume that a flawed Selzer survey should show similar results.
Does it?
No. Incumbent Governor Reynolds, another Republican, has a 17 point lead.
This suggests that the survey has a very good chance of properly representing the political makeup of Iowa. Byler tried to justify his position by gesturing to other states, to other parts of the country, but that approach to political analysis is flawed, because politics is local, local, local. Yes, polarization has gotten worse, but politics is often focused, quite properly, on the particular. Flawed candidates in other parts of the country are thought to be in trouble, and that may be one of the few constants across the country: from Perdue to Loeffler to Walker to Majewski in Ohio, if you’re flawed, inarguably flawed, your constituents may decide to vote for someone else, or no one at all. Indeed, one might observe that the toxic team politics of the GOP is an attempt to mask off incompetency in favor of blind loyalties.
So don’t count Franken out. The counting of the votes in Iowa may be a nail biting affair; that’s what the survey’s Reynold’s result has to say about the Senate race.
I figure, after Senator Lee’s (R) likely upset in Utah, Senator Grassley is the most likely unexpected disaster.
As the current Republican Party continues to burn, the question of what becomes the conservative alternative – the real alternative, not this collection of fourth raters – to the Democrats?
Current Republican Senate candidate in Colorado, Joe O’Dea, isn’t given much of a chance of winning in November, and I’d prefer Senator Bennet (D) win anyways. But this CNN/Politics report may point to his political future:
Joe O’Dea, the Republican nominee for US Senate from Colorado, fired back at Donald Trump on Monday after the former President slammed him as a “RINO” and suggested Trump’s supporters wouldn’t vote for a “stupid” person like O’Dea.
In a statement to CNN, O’Dea, the CEO of a Colorado construction company, didn’t walk away from the criticism he’s been leveling at Trump, including on Sunday when he told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union” that he would “actively” campaign against Trump and for other GOP candidates if the former President runs again. O’Dea also told Bash that Trump should have done more to prevent the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.
“I’m a construction guy, not a politician,” O’Dea said in his statement to CNN. “President Trump is entitled to his opinion but I’m my own man and I’ll call it like I see it. Another Biden, Trump election will tear this country apart. DeSantis, Scott, Pompeo or Haley would be better choices. These elections should be focused on Joe Biden’s failures – supercharged inflation, a broken border, rampant crime, a war on American energy – not a rehash of 2020. America needs to move forward.”
Sure, he’s wrong on several of those statements. Even crime isn’t rampant compared to other decades, and certainly Republicans of any stripe won’t be considered adults until they reconsider their stance on 2nd Amendment absolutism.
But these things come in steps, not gallumphs, and O’Dea is rejecting Trump, rejecting, by implication, the paradigm of the authoritarian leader who does what they wish, regardless of the law. Hopefully, he’ll continue down this path, rejecting the election denial disaster, affirming accepting the results of an election. As a non-politician, he has a better chance than most in the Republican Party of accomplishing these goals.
And if he does so? He and those like him may form the foundation of a future conservative party, the sort of party that respects liberal democratic tenets, and can balance a Democratic Party that desperately needs balancing by an articulate adversary.
This is like a spoonful of medicine, isn’t it? Just don’t drool, eh?
In mid-late September, a news story surfaced in which Franken was accused of sexual assault way back in March. Des Moines police refused to file charges, calling the accusation unfounded. The Emerson College poll came a few days after that, and perhaps the news, even with Franken’s denial and the backing of the Des Moines police, led some voters to pick Grassley over Franken.
Then the one and only debate between Grassley and Franken was held on October 6th, and the Selzer & Co poll occurred three days later. If Grassley’s performance in the debate was poor, or reminded voters that his positions are not consonant with their positions, then they may have swung back to Franken. Here’s a PolitiFact article fact-checking the debate.
That’s just guesses, though. Iowa goes back on the Could be an upset list.
Lee’s internal polling shows him up 18 points, according to his campaign. McMullin’s internal poll shows him ahead by one.
Someone’s in for a shock come November, but I’m not sure who. The last poll published by Deseret News gave Lee a four point lead, but with a large undecided segment, which arguably favors McMullin. Also, if you’re not a linear reader, then go back up above and see the Utah news about a poll by Hill Research.
That last update, already out of date, was a real mouthful.
On an administrative note, getting this blogging platform to retain paragraph breaks in the midst of “ul” lists is problematic, but I still apologize for extra-long, mixed topic paragraphs. Just because it’s the right thing to do.
Readers may recall the Tornado Cash platform, and an odd defense of it posted by industry insiders. Now Professor Henry Farrell and security guru Bruce Schneier have a response under the entertaining title “Tornado Cash Is Not Free Speech. It’s a Golem” on Lawfare:
We think that the most useful way to understand the speech issues involved with regulating Tornado Cash and other decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) is through an analogy: the golem. There are many versions of the Jewish golem legend, but in most of them, a person-like clay statue comes to life after someone writes the word “truth” in Hebrew on its forehead, and eventually starts doing terrible things. The golem stops only when a rabbi erases one of those letters, turning “truth” into the Hebrew word for “death,” and the golem ceases to function.
The analogy between DAOs and golems is quite precise, and has important consequences for the relationship between free speech and code. Ultimately, just as the golem needed the intervention of a rabbi to stop wreaking havoc on the world, so too do DAOs need to be subject to regulation.
It’s a curious statement, and the article makes for fascinating reading. Leaning into a ruling made in 1996 …
… U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel ruled that computer code is a language, just like German or French, and that coded programs deserve First Amendment protection. That such code is also functional, instructing a computer to do something, was irrelevant to its expressive capabilities, according to Patel’s ruling. However, both a concurring and dissenting opinion argued that computer code also has the “functional purpose of controlling computers and, in that regard, does not command protection under the First Amendment.”
Which I suspect is in need of updating, as at least this informal description suggests a poor understanding of the function of natural languages vs computer languages, the latter of which are little more than enhanced instruction sets that do not involve free will. In an odd way, this ties in with a complaint of mine a ways back that programmers tend to freely analogize with real world constructs, and sometimes that’s inappropriate. Natural languages’ primary usage is communication with other humans and, potentially, other sentient beings; not so computer languages. Back on point, though:
This disagreement highlights the awkward distinction between ordinary language and computer code. Language does not change the world, except insofar as it persuades, informs, or compels other people. Code, however, is a language where words have inherent power. Type the appropriate instructions and the computer will implement them without hesitation, second-guessing, or independence of will. They are like the words inscribed on a golem’s forehead (or the written instructions that, in some versions of the folklore, are placed in its mouth). The golem has no choice, because it is incapable of making choices. The words are code, and the golem is no different from a computer.
Which is a more artfully put criticism than mine, but essentially the same. The balance of the article’s coverage of Tornado Cash is both frightening and horrific; I can’t shake the feeling that the hidden attitude is inarticulate defiance.
In other crypto news, Coinbase is being sued. Who will win?
Sequelae:
How to say it: Sequelae (see-quell-lay).
What it means: Conditions or diseases that follow another.
Where it comes from: From Latin sequela meaning “sequel.” [verywell health]
Noted in “‘We are in trouble’: Study raises alarm about impacts of long covid,” Frances Stead Sellers, WaPo:
“It has always been the case that those who are sicker are more likely to have long-term sequelae,” [David Putrino, director of rehabilitation innovation for the Mount Sinai Health System in New York] said. “What is frightening is that the mild cases by far outnumber the severe, so even a small percentage of mild cases going on to develop long-term sequelae is a massive public health concern.”
The updates are thick and fast. Like mud off a bicycle tire.
But Nevada is also notoriously difficult to poll, partially due to the concentration of Latino voters who are just as notoriously difficult to poll. In fact, during the 2010 midterms, then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was famously left for dead by pollsters, who anticipated little to no Latino participation would lead to a drubbing by GOP insurgent candidate Sharron Angle. Instead, Latino voters turned out at a record rate of 16% (despite accounting for just 12% of the state’s registered voters at the time), propelling Reid to a 6-point victory.
The mention of the late Senator Reid (D) makes this a bit dated, but possibly still relevant. Eleveld is convinced that a recent Trump rally in Nevada will rekindle Senator Masto’s supporters’ willingness to vote, and may well be the reason she wins in November, if that does happen. She only has a little time left.
In other Pennsylvania news, Trafalgar’s latest poll gives Fetterman a 47.1% – 44.8% lead over Dr. Oz. Recall that Trafalgar tends to lean conservative, so this lead may be larger than it appears. Or not. It’s hard to say, what with conservative firms doing better in 2020 than neutrals and liberal firms, but the candidate list is positively littered with extremists on the conservative side which may not deserve, in the end, the same compensation as was awarded in 2020 and prior elections, as well as issues that lean towards the liberals on the balance.
The last snow squall of news is here.
1 Some younger readers may not be aware that “rags” is old jargon for newspapers, most of which are fading out as they lose the competition with the Web, with a few notable exceptions such as WaPo, The New York Times, The StarTribune, and a few others. Our societal losses due to this phenomenon is not comprehended by most people who are not journalists, and I’m not a journalist, so I’m not qualified to really tell you what you’ve inadvertently lost, but I’ve talked about it before. And it makes me sad to lose such an apropos bit of jargon, as newspapers often physically incorporate rags in their final form. Another bit of jargon is Ink-stained wretch, which is even more enjoyable.
I smiled at this, and then again. And now I wonder if a small enhancement might stir up trouble. Via kos @ Daily Kos:
Yesterday, the #Russian missiles left huge holes in the middle of our cities. All night long, 🇺🇦services worked to restore the damaged road connections & public services. Step by step, we’ll bring our cities to a peaceful routine.
📸Borys Filatov, Kyrylo Tymoshenko, Getty Images pic.twitter.com/Ho1CuKAu8r
— MFA of Ukraine 🇺🇦 (@MFA_Ukraine) October 11, 2022
Notice the crosswalks and other paint? I think the Ukrainians should develop some way to wear the paint away over the repaired sections. Sounds like fun?
No, this is serious. Say, Russian recon says we blew up this road over here tonight. The following morning, Ukrainian road repair fixes it and puts down the faux worn paint. Someone show someone in charge the worn paint.
And, after a while, Russian recon is no longer trusted. Maybe Putin shoots them. Maybe just fires them and the replacement is incompetent.
Stirring up trouble, just might give you more of an advantage. And read Wasp, an old pulp-era SF novel, by Eric Frank Russell.