About Hue White

Former BBS operator; software engineer; cat lackey.

When You Hate The Rules, Change The Judges ‘Round, Ctd

While the state legislature of Pennsylvania decides whether or not to commit gross murder upon the body of the PA Supreme Court, rumor has it that Representative Ryan Costello (R-PA-6) will not be seeking re-election. From City&State Pennsylvania:

Sources have told City&State PA that Republican U.S. Rep. Ryan Costello has decided not to seek reelection in Pennsylvania’s hotly contested Sixth Congressional District.

Despite filing petitions on Tuesday to run for another term, four Republican sources said Costello indicated at a recent meeting with state and local GOP officials that he intends to drop out of the race in the weeks before the May Primary. The sources all spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing the sensitive nature of the meeting.

Costello reportedly met with state party chair Val DiGiorgio, former 6th District Congressman Jim Gerlach and several other top Republicans early Friday. According to sources, he indicated that he intended to seek a job in the private sector rather than face a costly reelection fight.

Not knowing much about Costello, I entertained the delusion that he couldn’t stomach the idea of impeaching judges just because they rendered an unfavorable verdict. But no:

Many observers say the new Sixth District, in the highly competitive Philadelphia suburbs, is even more favorable for Democratic candidates – last month, Costello called for the impeachment of the state Supreme Court Justices involved in that decision. A bruising Republican loss in this month’s PA-18 special election also sent shockwaves across the national GOP landscape and is generally seen as an ill omen for upcoming midterms across the country.

Which leaves me with two alternative explanations.

First, he just isn’t cut out to be a Representative. Quite possibly the direction the House of Representatives has taken doesn’t sit well with him.

Or, second, he doesn’t think the impeachment effort will be successful in preventing the new district map in Pennsylvania, drawn up by the PA Supreme Court, from taking effect for the upcoming midterms, and he doesn’t see a re-election effort as being successful in a district in which the Democrats have a stronger presence.

I wonder if this is a signal that, even among PA Republicans, the impeachment effort is stirring up some concerns about going too far, and Costello is reading the tea leaves and getting out while the getting is good. Certainly, this kind of maneuvering may stir up anti-Republican sentiments among the independents, and perhaps even deflate the Republican faithful.

The Limits Of The Mind & Science

Long time readers are aware of my definition of science being The study of reality. However, a recent book review of philosopher Angela Potochnik’s book Idealization and the Aims of Science in NewScientist (3 March 2018, paywall) has brought another facet of science to the fore in my mind:

But philosopher Angela Potochnik’s ambitious book Idealization and the Aims of Science is an antidote to the view that the philosophy of science tries to pronounce grandly on what scientists ought to do. Even so, many might still resent her assertion that “science isn’t after the truth”. But she’s right. While our picture of the universe is in some sense truer than it was in the Middle Ages, and science typically does work its way closer to some sort of truth, that isn’t what scientists are trying to achieve.

What they want are useful, comprehensible, workable theories of the world. Understanding trumps truth: scientists will generally settle for a less accurate model if it is more cognitively transparent. They don’t strive to map models perfectly onto reality. This doesn’t seem so controversial. Even Hawking agrees, indulging in a bit of philosophy himself when he states: “There is no model-independent test of reality.”

Potochnik’s strength is in stressing the human dimension of the enterprise. Ultimately, scientists use simplified models because, as she says, our theories and models “are designed to facilitate human cognition and action”. It’s not a question of them being mere social constructions or fashion statements. She means we are looking for what works for us. Our theories must fit the human mind, although the universe need not. “Scientists’ cognitive characteristics and interests,” she writes, “can never influence what is true, but these can shape what generates understanding.” I’d like to think that the more thoughtful philosophy sceptics, like Weinberg, would have some sympathy with that.

Unmentioned, but lurking right under the surface, is the shark labeled Can we understand the Universe? Does the human mind, at its best, have the capability to understand the how this Universe works? Or are there phenomena for which we’ll never be able to account? Perhaps the orbital mechanics of galaxies, which supposedly betray the existence of dark matter, will be one of those phenomena, seeing as there is no direct evidence of dark matter. Or the small matter of consciousness, and how anesthesia extinguishes it.

So it’s a good point – we undoubtedly massage our observations to permit them to be processed in some rational manner by us, and we’re aware of this, but does this mean we can’t understand, fully, the Universe? Or we just need to keep working on that problem?

Just what are our limitations?

Tomatoes 2018

I’ve been neglecting my usual update of our tomato project to UMB. With my Arts Editor, Deb, out of town, succoring her mother, it has fallen to me to plant and raise the tomatoes. That doesn’t mean Deb hasn’t contributed, of course. The last two years we’ve started them on various platforms laid across the pool table in the basement, which has been fairly successful, but makes it impossible to play pool (as if I do on a regular basis), and the coolness of the basement renders the endeavour’s goals somewhat dubious. Heat rises, after all, and Minnesota in March doesn’t ordinarily feature a lot of warmth.

Therefore, this year she moved the tomato complex from the basement into my computer room. We have a southern facing window in this room, although it’s somewhat shaded. But the actual physical platform? Why it’s something that she was going to throw out when we married, and I insisted she keep – and now it’s useful! Here it is:

Grow lights above, sun to the south, and some motherly succulents down below to comfort the tomato plants. Here’s another pic, from an atypical angle:

And how’s it going? Quite well – nine of the ten varietals have at least one little green head showing. Only the Yellow Pear is being surly. Here’s a good angle on the Opalka and the Mortgage Lifters:

And a better angle on the Cherokee Chocolates and Grandma Mary’s Paste:

I planted on March 10th, and we have a long ways to go – but it still feels like success!

It’s Public Health Vs. Corporate Profits, Ctd

My reader remarks on corporate responsibility vs government responsibility:

This is precisely why I chose the word “effectively” because corporations are not moral actors, good or bad. But our current legal landscape allows them to act amorally to maximize their profits, and externalize their costs. And they do this because they’ve captured to a great extent the government whose responsibility you say it is to restrain that behavior.

Yes, capture is a well-known phenomenon, and no doubt explains some of the odder laws we run across these days. For example, consider this, from Daniel Webster at something called TEDMED:

Whether a gun dealer allows illegal straw purchases, colludes with gun traffickers, or fails to secure his guns depends on whether our policies hold them accountable.

Here’s a perfect example. In 1999, the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms – the ATF – published a report identifying the gun stores that had sold the most guns that were later connected to crime.10 At the top of the list – the nation’s leading seller of crime guns – was a gun shop near Milwaukee, Badger Guns & Ammo.

Within days of ATF’s releasing the data, Badger’s owners announced that they would voluntarily take measures to prevent their guns from being used in crime.

What happened next was amazing. The rate at which new guns were diverted to criminals after being sold by Badger immediately dropped 77%.

But in 2003, Congress passed a new law to protect gun dealers like Badger and prohibit the ATF from publishing or sharing data connecting crime guns to the gun dealers who had sold them.12

If the owners of Badger Guns & Ammo were polite, they sent a thank you note to Congress. The rate at which their new gun sales were going to criminals immediately shot up 200% immediately after the law.13 By 2005, Badger was back on top as the nation’s #1 seller of guns used in crimes.

Or think of the “Dickey Amendment,” which chilled government research into gun violence – apparently, the wording may be clarified to indicate that research isn’t prohibited. No doubt, whatever the identity of the captors of Congress in regards to this issue will not be pleased.

Returning to my writer’s point, yes, I think the scope of the government’s remit is the good of the people. Government has the resources, and more importantly, no one else is going to take that responsibility on. Corporations focus on provision of goods and services in return for money, and that’s more or less it – and it’s a little hard to blame them, since the resources required simply to envision the current status of the nation are beyond nearly any corporate entity – and, if they are available, they are often earmarked for dividends to the shareholders.

Sometimes corporate entities are the first to notice a problem, such as the ozone hole discovery my climate scientist friend worked on many years ago – but, as ever, their attention is to their primary mission, not to the country or world.

These Don’t Accidentally Kill People

From WaPo:

One schools superintendent has a novel way to keep his students safe from school shooters: arming them with rocks.

David Helsel, superintendent of a school district in northeast Pennsylvania, explained his plan to a legislative education committee last week, drawing a flurry of local media coverage.

“Every classroom has been equipped with a five-gallon bucket of river stone,” Helsel explained about his Blue Mountain School District in Schuylkill County, northeast of Harrisburg, in a video broadcast by ABC affiliate 16 WNEP. “If an armed intruder attempts to gain entrance into any of our classrooms, they will face a classroom full of students armed with rocks, and they will be stoned.”

I actually like this idea.

  1. A single rock won’t likely kill anyone, no matter how hard it’s thrown in anger during a fight.
  2. Dropping a rock won’t endanger the classroom.
  3. Their presence doesn’t spur violence.
  4. You can use them safely to hold down the pages of books.

And if someone does come in with a gun, well, I wouldn’t care to be met with a barrage of rocks from all sides. So long as the NRA is going to continue to endanger our children with their absurd claims, we might as well use relatively safe emergency procedures as a final backup.

Keeping in mind, of course, that this is not a solution – merely a stopgap until the adults can reassume control of this asylum.

This guy doesn’t sound like he gets it, BTW:

Kenneth S. Trump, president of the National School Safety and Security Services, a K-12 security consulting firm, told the Associated Press that the idea was illogical and could possibly cost lives, adding that it fills an emotional security need but does not actually improve security.

Given the number of gun accidents that happen involving even trained people, such as the police, neither does putting armed people – even SWAT officers – in schools.

The Saturday March For Our Lives

I recall seeing a headline somewhere that suggested the opinions of the teenagers and young adults should be disregarded. Since I didn’t read the article, I don’t really know the reason given, but I’ll guess it’s because they’re young and inexperienced.

But here’s the thing – the incessant school shootings are becoming the defining incidents for that generation. Remember your history, specifically how the assassination of JFK defined the Boomers? I once asked my Mom, who was about 20 at the time of the assassination, about some remark I’d heard about the nation’s mothers coming together to help raise JFK’s youngest child, JFK, Jr., after the assassination, and she replied that, yes, she and all the other mothers of that generation really had felt that obligation, a collective obligation towards the Kennedy family. They had felt it on that tragic, historic day that JFK’s coffin rolled down the street

As much as I’ve never felt a part of any generation, I do acknowledge that the idea of generations do exist for many people, tied together by some incident with a large impact. For those Americans currently in their early teenage years through, say, their early twenties, these school shooting incidents, and, to a lesser extent, other mass shooting incidents, taken together, are becoming their defining set of moments. It’ll tie them together, the background fear, the preparations to survive sudden death in the form of armed madness – and, for a few well-publicized students, the marching out of schools, hands held high, under the gaze of the police – and the bodies.

I must admit that I didn’t pay much attention to the news yesterday, being busy and not much of a news watcher in any case. However, my Arts Editor (and wife), who is currently in Michigan caring for her ill mother, did have the opportunity to watch a lot of news coverage of the event. I gathered two things from talking with her. First, she was impressed by the March.

Second, the variance in coverage. The traditional mass media covered in depth and seemed to be earnest about getting the story. Fox News?

Not so much.

But it doesn’t matter, because those of that age range who didn’t go will avidly pursue news about the March. We are a social animal, we look for cues from others as to how to behave. They are a generation raised in an ocean of information. They’ll find that information regarding the March, regardless of the failures of news organizations with slanted agendas, and think about it.

And they’ll remember. Granted, humans don’t get their brains fully connected and working until their twenties, often their later twenties. This is how science understands the brain today.

But they’ll remember. They’ll remember their dead schoolmates. They’ll remember the calls for gun control.

And they’ll remember who opposed the more sane approach to guns, the one used by many other nations around the world. Who was in control of Congress and did nothing? The Republicans.

Oh, they made some sad noises, didn’t they? But they’ve done just enough, in their minds. Clarifying the Dickey Amendment surely must mean something! 

This will become a blot upon the Republican brand. A big blot. The blot that drives away a generation.

And this may be the beginning of the end of the National Rifle Assocation (NRA) as an important political force. They are the 2nd Amendment absolutists who push the assertion that more guns of all kinds make for a safer society. As the years have passed, their statements have become more and more unhinged; with their unexpected victory in the Presidential campaign, they lost their biggest rallying threat – that a liberal President would take away everyone’s guns – and have resorted to incoherent statements seeking to invoke basic fears about government taking away our guns and enslaving us all.

Here’s their statement on the March, via MSN:

“Stand and Fight for our Kids’ Safety by Joining NRA,” it said. “Today’s protests aren’t spontaneous. Gun-hating billionaires and Hollywood elites are manipulating and exploiting children as part of their plan to DESTROY the Second Amendment and strip us of our right to defend ourselves and our loved ones.”

This was an opportunity for them to reverse their course and begin a reasonable conversation on how to reduce gun violence. It was a test of their sanity. They failed. That failure, that clinging to a failed ideology, that desperate grasp of power, will be remembered by the young Generation which held a peaceful, civic-minded March. In a country of often limited rights, the NRA are the ones shouting that their favorite right should be unlimited – that not even training should be required.

In the end, the reactions of the forces for 2nd Amendment absolutists will define their fate for the generation that made it’s way to the nation’s capital and demonstrated one of the highest forms of civil discourse possible in our society. If they continue to pursue a course marked by a refusal to acknowledge that rights are necessarily limited in any society, this generation will not contribute to them, be it bodies or money.

And those leaders in positions of responsibility who did nothing? Their legacy will be that of shame and dishonor, no matter how much they shout they did the right thing by doing nothing, by digging their heels in and indulging in ludicrous proposals. Because legacies are defined by those who came after, and that’ll be the generation that Marched.

A Generation that felt its lives were risked, and lost, for a fallacious ideology.

Belated Movie Reviews

OK, whose pigtails did he pull this time?

I’m not sure why, but somehow I never engaged with Forty Guns (1957). It’s undeniably a quality movie, with fine acting and a tight plot, but I think in my mind the characters never quite presented as sympathetic. Griff Bonnell and his brother, Wes, with reputations as killers, are now working for the government, looking to serve warrants on men located in the town of Tombstone. Riding the hills surrounding the town are Jessica Drummond and her forty men. Naturally, it’s one or more of her men that interests them.

But arrests are inadequate, as the local judge is in Jessica’s pocket. But not in her pocket is her own brother, Brockie, a young man with no self-control and no respect for others, and that includes injuring the current marshal of the town, who is suffering from blurred vision, just for giggles. Even though he has a position in law enforcement himself, he engages in a little light banditry on the side.

Griff and Wes become the targets of Brockie and his buddies for breaking up their fun, and after some missed opportunities, Wes is killed on his wedding day by Brockie or someone connected to him, who is subsequently arrested. Jessica, even knowing that Brockie is no good, tries but fails to secure his release: the judge and jury can no longer be bought. As she confesses her failure to her doomed brother, he takes the opportunity to seize upon the deputy’s gun and, using his sister as a shield, try to shoot his way out of town, but he runs into Griff. Griff, by now romantically involved with Jessica, shoots Jessica in a non-critical, unspecified location, and then deliberately kills Brockie after disarming him.

And then Griff and Jessica ride off into the sunset.

There’s a lot to like about this movie, from the acting and story to the big tornado scene (I loved the blurriness), but there was little to really like about the characters. True, Griff and Wes are not vicious killers, but they’re tough men going about their business. Jessica is leading those forty men about, but at least a few she’s playing games with, and that doesn’t go over so well. It didn’t help that the guys looked a lot alike.

But you may have a different reaction. There’s nothing here that’s a real turnoff here. I just didn’t ever get hooked into it.

Word Of The Day

Apitherapy:

Apitherapy is a type of alternative medicine that uses substances from honeybees — including honey, pollen, royal jelly, bee venom and beeswax — to treat a variety of conditions, from pain to arthritis, according to the American Apitherapy Society. Live bee acupuncture is a procedure that falls within apitherapy. [“Woman dies after ‘acupuncture’ session that used live bees instead of needles,” Amy B Wang, WaPo]

I’d be curious to know the “theoretical” rationale for this sort of therapy, if any.

History To Mitch, History To Mitch, Time To Wake Up

Andrew Sullivan’s latest column is quite the downer, as he compares Plato’s tyrant – who apparently arises from a corrupt and decadent democracy – to President Trump. I’ve never read that particular bit of Plato, so I don’t know the details, but there’s also a striking comparison to the last days of Rome’s old and impotent Senate:

The real possibility of a nuclear conflict with North Korea is getting more real by the day (can you imagine Bolton’s counsel for the Kim Jong-un meeting?); and with Bolton in place, the groundwork for ending the Iran nuclear deal is also finally complete. And what’s noticeable in all this is the irrelevance of the Senate. They refuse to reclaim their treaty-making powers with respect to trade (they could end Trump’s China shenanigans overnight); they have abdicated any influence on foreign policy and war just as they have done nothing to protect the special counsel. They are just like the Roman Senate as the republic collapsed. The forms survive; there is nothing of substance behind them.

And the key figure here is Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY). He’d have to rally his Republican colleagues, of course, but as their long-time leader, that would not be difficult; and I suspect the Democrats would be more than happy to remove Trump’s treaty-making and return that power to the Senate (I’m assuming Andrew has this assertion right). It’s within him power to do so.

But Andrew’s point concerning the current Senate is also true in the larger context. It’s been confirming the Trump appointees, rag-tag as many of them have been, with nothing more than a bit of whimpering, at least until Trump sent three very dubious candidates and had them rejected.

Additionally, their efforts to pass the AHCA (failed) and the tax change bill (successful) have not been impressive. Those sorts of efforts should have been a matter of months of work, with public hearings, testimony from experts, and all the usual grinding that goes on in a republic. Instead, they were written in secret by a small group devoid of expertise, and ramrodded through the Senate with no bipartisan support.

In short, Mitch McConnell’s record in this Senate has been pathetically inadequate.

Fun Political Tactics

Tactics in this class are probably not atypical, but it’s still disappointing to see them. WaPo reports on an attempt to subvert the attorney of one of the accusers of Alabama Congressional Senate candidate Roy Moore:

Days after a woman accused U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore of sexual impropriety, two Moore supporters approached her attorney with an unusual request.

They asked lawyer Eddie Sexton to drop the woman as a client and say publicly that he did not believe her. The damaging statement would be given to Breitbart News, then run by former White House strategist Stephen K. Bannon.

In exchange, Sexton said in recent interviews, the men offered to pay him $10,000 and promised to introduce him to Bannon and others in the nation’s capital. Parts of Sexton’s account are supported by recorded phone conversations, text messages and people in whom he confided at the time.

According to the article, this information eventually reached a federal prosecutor, who declined to pursue the matter. The article is quite long and in-depth, and it’s worth a read for a non-fictional account of how politics is sometimes conducted. By its existence, it characterizes the far-right extremists; I wonder how often the left indulges in these morally dubious practices. Go read it.

And if WaPo says your free articles are exhausted, stop supporting bad journalism and buy a subscription. Remember, free news sources are controlled by their advertisers. If you’re paying for a subscription, then at least that media source has some freedom from parties possibly hostile to the truth, which are the advertisers. That doesn’t guarantee that media source is a high quality, neutral source of news – but it removes one source of perversion of that ideal, doesn’t it?

The Market Seems Jumpy, Ctd

A reader remarks on John Bolton’s appointment as National Security Advisor:

It’s become abundantly clear that 45 abhors dissent or any resistance to his political or economic ideas. He is surrounding himself with “yes men” who blindly subscribe to his agenda. That’s his MO. It’s why his businesses have failed and so eventually will his presidency.

Yes, to some extent it makes dependence on the intelligence of the person on the top of the pyramid overly critical. And yet, if & when the failure comes, Trump’ll blame someone else.

That said, I was reading somewhere, I can’t remember where, that while Trump has clearly signaled his protectionist instincts, Bolton is supposedly an avid free-trader. How much this matters in the context of the post of National Security Advisor is unclear to me, but it does suggest Trump has some tolerance for dissidence, at least when it’s not front and center.

That said, we’ve seen how much Trump is influenced by what he sees on TV. Perhaps Bolton just comes across real well on the airwaves, what with pronounced views and a big mustache.

I forgot to post the latest market performance. Yesterday, the Dow was down 1.77%, while the S&P and NASDAQ were down more than 2%. Here’s the chart from the NYSE:

This suggests there is little confidence among investors in President Trump’s recent economic policies. However, the investment community hardly qualifies as all knowing, so I think we’ll just have to wait and find out if this is going to turn out poorly – or well. Keep an eye on the agricultural sector, especially the family farmers, as they’re exhibiting a lot of anxiety about a trade war, from what I hear.

Hopes For The Future

Conservative Hugh Hewitt uses WaPo to talk about his high hopes for new National Security Advisor John Bolton:

What to expect from Bolton? The bottom line is that Vladimir Putin’s worst nightmare just walked into the West Wing. Bolton can outlast and outthink anyone Putin, Kim Jong Un or Xi Jinping sends to negotiate quiet deals before the public big ones. A housecleaning at the National Security Council is coming too. Bolton knows everyone in the foreign policy set in Washington. Look for his old friends at the U.N., State, Defense and Justice to show up soon in the Old Executive Office Building and to work towards the implementation of the comprehensive National Security Strategy put together by his predecessor, H.R. McMaster, and company. It’s a great day for Reagan-era realism of which McMaster was a superb steward during his tenure.

And war on the Korean peninsula?

Critics charge that Bolton likes war — a ridiculous assertion. As he told me in one especially memorable two-hour interview back in 2007: “Nobody should want a war on the Korean Peninsula.” Chew on that, critics. What he is, however, is a Reagan realist. About Kim Jong Un’s father, Kim Jong Il, Bolton said that “He’s very good at negotiating about giving up his [nuclear] program. . . . He’s done it four or five times in the last 15 years.” That pointed to Bolton’s conclusion: “He’s not going to relinquish those nuclear weapons voluntary. No way.”

Yeah. It was Reagan who lost 200+ Marines in a few minutes in Lebanon. I don’t get all that jacked up about “Reagan realism.” Still, it’d be lovely if Hewitt is correct about Bolton not being as aggressive as his talk has implied over the years. But Hewitt is a long term apologist for the conservatives, so I’m not holding out a lot of hope here.

He May Not Be Excusing Roy Moore’s Actions, But Still…

Our neighbor to the east, Wisconsin, is home to a certain Governor Walker, the once-to-be-celebrated Presidential contender, who more or less fell on his sword during his short campaign. Scampering back down-eared to Wisconsin, he hired a couple of State legislators for his Administration, and then refused to hold special elections to replace them.

But his dubious strategy for avoiding electoral embarrassment, based on results from, well, all over the country, has come to a stop, as a judge he himself appointed just told him to do his job. From the Journal-Sentinel:

Dealing a setback to Gov. Scott Walker and other Republicans, a judge ruled Thursday the governor must call special elections to fill two vacant seats in the Legislature.

Walker declined to call those elections after two GOP lawmakers stepped down to join his administration in December.

His plan would have left the seats vacant for more than a year. Voters in those areas took him to court with the help of a group headed by Eric Holder, the first attorney general under Democratic President Barack Obama.

Dane County Circuit Judge Josann Reynolds — whom Walker appointed to the bench in 2014 — determined Walker had a duty under state law to hold special elections so voters could have representation in the Legislature. She said failing to hold special elections infringed on the voting rights of people who lived in the two districts.

It’s the sort of ruling a child could get right, and yet the Republicans seem to think they’re above the rules:

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) ripped the judge as an “activist Dane County judge” who had injected her “own personal opinion into how we conduct elections.”

He said he wasn’t aware Walker had appointed the judge but said her approach was endemic to judges in liberal Madison.

“It’s something about the water in Dane County,” Vos said. “That’s why I try to stay here as little as I can.”

An absurd remark, yet not surprising for the Republicans, who would happily find any loophole to repress the non-Republicans – the Republicans currently have a majority in both houses of the Wisconsin Legislature, as well as holding the governorship. It appears anything to keep power goes.

The sad thing is, I could see the Democrats playing the same damn game.

It’s Public Health Vs. Corporate Profits, Ctd

A reader remarks on the NAFTA negotiations:

American big corporations are out of control. They’re effectively evil spawn of satan spreading their tendrils and damage across the nation, and then across the world.

Oddly enough, at this juncture I don’t really agree. It’s become apparent that asking corporate entities to have the best interests of the country at heart is really quite beyond most of them. After all, they’re in the business of providing goods and services to the customer, and letting the customer make the decision to use them (an idealization, it’s true – some are quite deceptive and even manipulative of the customer) – they’re not in the business of asking whether or not the product is good for the country. And, heck, in this case the country isn’t even their” country[1].

It’s properly the government’s responsibility, and that’s where we’re falling down. Or at least Trump’s falling down.

Of course, historically we’ve been a country of merchants, of commerce, and quite often the government has fallen into line with the commercial interests. Getting struggling companies off the ground in the early part of the existence of the United States probably was required if they ran up against competition from foreign entities.

But at this point in our history, we should be beyond that.



1A somewhat problematic description in the age of international corporations.

Cool Astro Pics

From NASA‘s Juno mission to Jupiter, just to remind myself there’s more than what I blog about out there, and some of it is just ….

This composite image, derived from data collected by the Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) instrument aboard NASA’s Juno mission to Jupiter, shows the central cyclone at the planet’s north pole and the eight cyclones that encircle it.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/ASI/INAF/JIRAM

Wow.

Nunes Memo Roundup, Ctd

A forgotten missive finally grabs my eyes concerning the dud of a Nunes memo:

I can’t say enough bad things about Nunes.

However, the T45-Tribe fully believes the memo is the perfect proof of a smoking gun showing how the FBI and CIA are actually Democratic operatives trying to overthrow the Best Government Ever.

And they really do believe that, I think. Their opinions are reflected in the guy in the White House, so, getting the cart before the horse, they think all is wonderful.

I don’t know how many are going to be hurt by the tariffs and trade wars. I know the news is rife with farmers terrified of a trade war with China.

Spreading The Manure Around

The Democrats are not above gerrymandering, as it turns out. SCOTUS will be hearing a gerrymandering case out of Maryland in which Republicans are suing, not Democrats. From Reuters:

When Maryland Democrats drew new U.S. House of Representatives district maps in 2011, long-time Republican voter Bill Eyler found himself removed from a conservative rural district and inserted into a liberal one encompassing Washington suburbs.

Eyler, a retired business owner in the small town of Thurmont roughly 55 miles north of the U.S. capital, said he thinks he and others like him were being targeted by the Democrats because of their party affiliation. He was inserted into a Democratic-leaning congressional district in an electoral map that diminished the statewide clout of Republican voters.

“There’s nothing we can do or say or vote that will make any difference,” Eyler said in an interview.

Eyler is one of nine Republican voters who pursued a legal challenge against a portion of Maryland’s electoral map. Their closely watched case will be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday.

It’s self-serving crap like this which alienates voters, and alienated voters tend to permit extremists to win elective seats. It signals voters that fairness for everyone is superseded by advantage for the political Parties.

And it can discourage participation from the common, moderate citizen, while encourage the extremists, regardless of whether they are favored or disfavored by the changes, to come out of their holes.

How bad is it in Maryland?

Despite [Republican] Hogan’s 2014 victory that illustrated Republican strength statewide, Republicans currently hold just one of Maryland’s eight congressional seats because of the way the electoral boundaries are drawn.

Obviously, this isn’t dispositive – possibly the Republicans ran very weak opponents for those seats – but it’s indicative of a problem.

As The A-Religious Become Religious, Ctd

My reader thinks I’m seeing more than he is regarding Ana Stankovic:

I agree that “designing new government systems requires thinking about the ruthless” is an important point. But perhaps shame on me, I didn’t exert (or have) the brain power to derive that important point from Stankovic’s writing.

Nyah. I just made that part up.

The Market Seems Jumpy, Ctd

The markets took a tumble again today, and I’m just going to guess that President Trump’s replacement of H.R. McMaster as National Security Advisor with former U.N. Ambassador, advocate of the Iraq War ,and for bombing Iran John Bolton may be a factor in this retreat (I see CNN is also blaming worries about a trade war).

While in the past (real) war has not necessarily been a bad thing for business, this time around there’s a couple of flies in the ointment.

First, the weapons are becoming so potent that the damage can destroy consumers, markets, and the businesses themselves.

Second, the general recognition in the investment and commercial worlds of the mendacity and amateurism of this President must concern, even frighten, most  leaders of big international businesses, which must consider themselves vulnerable to the results of war, and investors must realize this as well. High tech firms may also find themselves targeted and vulnerable to cyber-attacks, and in this case the attacks may not even come from putative enemies, but merely adversaries which we are not currently targeting. This would be due to the attribution problem.

Bolton, of course, is trying to shed any responsibility for his ridiculously aggressive statements of years past. From CNN:

John Bolton said on Thursday that his past policy statements are “behind me” and that, after taking over next month as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, “The important thing is what the President says and the advice I give him.”

But Bolton’s history of provocative, often bellicose pronouncements, typically in the form of calls to bomb countries like Iran and North Korea — along with his unwavering support, before and after, for the 2003 invasion of Iraq — are impossible to pass off, especially as Trump considers tearing up the Iran nuclear deal and prepares for talks with Pyongyang.

It’s all in that second paragraph, isn’t it? President Trump presumably judges him on what Bolton’s said and done, and so must we. If Bolton still thinks the Iraq War was a good thing, even in the teeth of the disaster it became, not to mention the false pretenses under which it was motivated, then what kind of advice is he going to give to President Trump when he’s negotiating with, say, Putin, or Kim?

And just to stir the pot a bit more, former Republican diplomat Richard Haass wrote a tweet about the situation:

is now set for war on 3 fronts: political vs Bob Mueller, economic vs China/others on trade, and actual vs. Iran and/or North Korea. This is the most perilous moment in modern American history-and it has been largely brought about by ourselves, not by events.

This from a seasoned world observer – not a tin-pot real estate developer and his discredited National Security Advisor.

It’ll be interesting to see how long Bolton, and for that matter the tariffs, last. Trump hasn’t shown a great deal of backbone in the past, but you never know when he’ll find think it’s time to toughen up. No doubt just when you wish he wouldn’t.

Word Of The Day

Misfeance:

A term used in Tort Law to describe an act that is legal but performed improperly.

Generally, a civil defendant will be liable for misfeasance if the defendant owed a duty of care toward the plaintiff, the defendant breached that duty of care by improperly performing a legal act, and the improper performance resulted in harm to the plaintiff.

For example, assume that a janitor is cleaning a restroom in a restaurant. If he leaves the floor wet, he or his employer could be liable for any injuries resulting from the wet floor. This is because the janitor owed a duty of care toward users of the restroom, and he breached that duty by leaving the floor wet.

In theory, misfeasance is distinct from Nonfeasance. Nonfeasance is a term that describes a failure to act that results in harm to another party. Misfeasance, by contrast, describes some affirmative act that, though legal, causes harm. In practice, the distinction is confusing and uninstructive. Courts often have difficulty determining whether harm resulted from a failure to act or from an act that was improperly performed. [The Free Dictionary]

Noted in “Will We Ever Learn What Bob Mueller Knows?” Quinta Jurecic andBenjamin Wittes, Lawfare:

Reports issued by special grand juries don’t have to be confined to criminal wrongdoing: § 3331(a)(1) allows for reports on “noncriminal misconduct, malfeasance, or misfeasance in office involving organized criminal activity by an appointed public officer or employee.” But while the provision’s focus on wrongdoing by public officials would encompass a hypothetical Mueller report on, say, obstruction of justice by President Trump, it could make for an awkward fit with public disclosures on any activity that took place before the election, such as coordination with the Russian government during the campaign season.

As The A-Religious Become Religious, Ctd

A reader reacts on Ana Stankovic’s comments on Marxism:

I think Ana doth protesteth too much. It’s hard to tell exactly what she’s trying to say, other than to slam Marx, apparently for criticizing the Slavs (of which she is one, so it’s personal). Her writing is clever and colorful, but her organization and continuity suck the sense out of her essay.

I’m not sure if it was the criticism, or the occupation by Soviet forces (if in spirit only), which motivates her criticisms. But I do agree that it wasn’t entirely easy to follow her argument, although I tend to agree with her initial statements. Apologists for Marx do not appear to understand that designing new government systems requires thinking about the ruthless, ethics-free power-seekers, and how to keep them out – or at least under control. The purges and assassinations that tended to mark the march up the ladder of numerous Soviet personalities are symptoms of a maladroit system.

The saddest thing is that it might still have been better than the preceding monarchy.

Proper Categorization Is A Must, Ctd

A reader comments on the general trend exemplified at UW-Stevens Point:

It seems like many or most major universities and colleges have turned into profit-seeking vocational schools these days. I, like you, hated the humanities I was required to take in college, being in the Engineering school. But like you, it was simply my ignorance.

I think it’s a highly visible mark of how applying the goals of the private sector to the educational sector perverts the goals of the educational sector. The end result? The general, if slow, degradation of the citizenry; and, in a sense, a rip-off of the student (or “consumer”), who is paying for a full and general education to prepare them for the rigors of life – and getting substandard, or even no, education in subjects which my reader and I may not have understood in our youth, but is vital for an engaged citizenry in a republic such as ours.

That perversion in the name of more students prepared to immediately jump into jobs may end up ruining our country. A worker trained to a job is simply a worker who will eventually occupy a spot in the unemployed line. But if they are properly educated, they should be able to move on to other jobs as that first one evaporates, whether it’s due to evaporation or the continual advance of science and technology.