The Heisenberg Effect

The Heisenberg Effect is also known as the Observer Effect. Nick Brown notices that, in academic circles, an Expression of Concern (EoC) doesn’t seem to mean what it used to mean:

When I first came across the concept, I was told that an EoC was a sort of preliminary step on the way to retraction. The journal acknowledges that it has received information that suggests that an article may not be reliable. This information seems, on the face of it, to be quite convincing. The journal is still investigating exactly what happened, but in the meantime, here is an early warning that people who are thinking of citing this article might want to think twice. We could see it as the equivalent of locking up someone who is accused of a serious crime: They have not yet been found guilty, their detention is only preventive (and often under better conditions than those who have been convicted), but the prima facie case is such that on balance, we probably don’t want to have that person walking around unchecked. …

However, it appears that many journals or editors are using the term “Expression of Concern” to mean something else. This article has had an EoC on it for six years now. The editors of Psychology of Music just issued this EoC, but according to Samuel Mehr they have no plans to escalate to a retraction. The author of that last paper has also had five EoCs in place at another journal for over a year.

This type of EoC basically comes down to the following statement from the editors: “We have good reason to believe that this article is garbage, and you should not trust it. But we’re not going to do anything about it that might hurt our impact factor, or embarrass us by getting us into Retraction Watch.” It’s like a restaurant menu with a small sticker saying “Pssst: The fish is terrible, please don’t order it”. (Plus, the sticker is permanent. It’s inside the laminated cover of the menu.)

[Bold mine.]

And where did I find this? In Retraction Watch, of course, in their weekly roundup.

Who watches the watchers? The answer would seem to be The Watched.

Stop Worrying About All Those Neighbors

Over the last few weeks there’s been a few articles concerning overpopulation out on the Web, a matter of some concern in today’s world. First up is an article in WaPo which discusses the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on birth rates in the United States:

In a new report, economists writing for the Brookings Institution estimate that the United States could see “on the order of 300,000 to 500,000 fewer births next year” as a result of the economic recession triggered by the novel coronavirus.

The economists, Melissa S. Kearney and Phillip Levine, derive their estimates from data on birthrates during the Great Recession and the 1918 flu pandemic. Both of those upheavals had a considerable negative impact on fertility. …

The reason? Children are expensive, and having a child is in many ways a financial decision. The loss of a job or otherwise uncertain prospects for a steady income lead many would-be parents to postpone having kids until things are more settled. In economic jargon, birthrates are “procyclical” — they tend to rise during times of economic growth and fall during recessions.

But I’m disturbed by this:

Economists use a tool called the value of a statistical life, or VSL, to help put losses of life on a level playing field with other policy considerations. Using a standard VSL of roughly $10 million, the permanent loss of half a million births works out to an economic loss of about $5 trillion over the coming decades.

Where VSL is:

The value of a statistical life (VSL) is the marginal rate of substitution between income (or wealth) and mortality risk. The VSL indicates how much individuals are willing to pay (WTP) to reduce the risk of death. Applied properly, the VSL can be used in benefit-cost analysis to evaluate the efficiency of government policies designed to reduce risk.

There is no mention of the benefit to society of not having those births occur due to the reduction in stress on the environment. One missed birth is meaningless, but in aggregate there will be some positive effect.

Lloyd Alter on Treehugger seeks to soothe my concerns:

… a new study published in The Lancet with a paragraph-long title, Fertility, mortality, migration, and population scenarios for 195 countries and territories from 2017 to 2100: a forecasting analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study makes the point again:

Our findings suggest that continued trends in female educational attainment and access to contraception will hasten declines in fertility and slow population growth. A sustained TFR [total fertility rate] lower than the replacement level in many countries, including China and India, would have economic, social, environmental, and geopolitical consequences. Policy options to adapt to continued low fertility, while sustaining and enhancing female reproductive health, will be crucial in the years to come.

It’s happening almost everywhere; the working adult population is already dropping in China, it’s coming in India, and only sub-Saharan Africa continues to increase to the end of the century. The world population will peak after mid-century and decline significantly by 2100. This is good news, and bad news:

 Our findings show that some countries with fertility lower than replacement level, such as the USA, Australia, and Canada, will probably maintain their working-age populations through net immigration. Our forecasts for a shrinking global population have positive implications for the environment, climate change, and food production, but possible negative implications for labour forces, economic growth, and social support systems in parts of the world with the greatest fertility declines.

Concerns about labor forces can be alleviated through medical advances and voluntary reductions in consumption, preferably through price increases required by increasing wages to workers. I wish I was an expert in demographic forecasting, since it would be interesting to see how increasing prices would restrain population growth, as noted in the WaPo article, as well as Secular Cycles (Turchin & Nefedov).

Finally, Andrew Sullivan in New York Magazine highlights the impact of plague on population, society, and, as a survivor of the AIDS epidemic himself, on individuals in this longish article:

It’s strange that we now see America threatened by a plague. Because without plague, America, as we know it, wouldn’t exist.

It may have been the most devastating epidemic in the history of humankind — surpassing in its mortality rates any before or since, including the Black Death in the Europe of the mid-14th century. Smallpox arrived in America with the first Europeans and went on, with several other imported diseases, to wipe out up to 90 percent of the Native population in a relatively short amount of time — millions and maybe tens of millions died. …

We are wrong, therefore, to think of plague entirely as a threat to civilization. Plague is an effect of civilization. The waves of sickness through human history in the past 5,000 years (and not before) attest to this, and the outbreaks often became more devastating the bigger the settlements and the greater the agriculture and the more evolved the trade and travel. What made the American plague of the 16th century so brutal was that it met a virgin population with no immunity whatever. The nightmare that humans had been dealing with and adapting to in Europe and Asia for millennia came suddenly to this continent all at once, and the population had no defense at all. The New World became a stage on which all the accumulated viral horrors of the Old World converged.

[My bold.]

And overpopulation appears to be the mechanism, which is why I’m unsurprised at the Covid-19 pandemic, and will expect another one soon enough – as does Sullivan. One problem is unsafe practices in crowded conditions, but defining and banning all unsafe practices is not a simple thing to do in, ah, practice.

Plagues have often been catalyzing events, entering human history like asteroids hitting a planet. They kill shocking numbers of people and leave many more rudderless, coping with massive loss, incalculable grief, and, often, social collapse. They reorder the natural world, at least for a time, as human cities and towns recede and animal life reemerges and microbes evolve and regroup. They suspend a society in midair and traumatize it, taking it out of its regular patterns and intimating new possible futures. In some cases, a society redefines itself. In others, trauma seems the only consequence.

Investments, emotional and intellectual, are made void, freeing the survivors to rethink their roles and goals in society, as the roiling of society shows its fault lines. I have to wonder if Covid-19 was a necessary requirement for the George Floyd murder to bring our racial injustice problem to light, as well as the toppling of statues honoring people who had done nothing worthy of such memorialization. Or was Covid-19 too mild of an epidemic? We’re not exactly dropping in the streets, are we?

And, like most traumatic incidents, individual changes can be dramatic. I shan’t steal Sullivan’s prose any longer – go read it for yourself. His description of the consequences of surviving the Spanish Flu by Katherine Anne Porter is a little horrifying.

All of which leads me to an endpoint of thinking about E. M. Forster’s The Machine Stops (1909), a story of how most of humanity now lives in a vast underground honeycomb of apartments, served by machines, hardly ever seeing another person face to face, communicating via telecommunications, and their shared helplessness when things go awry. I read into it a meditation on how one approach to overpopulation, strict regimentation and dictation of the habits of the madding crowd, as it were, will have unintended and deadly consequences. There’s not really a great connection between this story and the articles I’ve discussed in this post, but The Machine Stops has stuck with me for more than forty years, and if it came to mind now, there’s a connection, if analogical in nature, that’s worth considering.

That $600

In case you were wondering why $600 was the weekly stipend, or “bridge payment,” to the unemployed from the Federal Government, Murfster35 on The Daily Kos thinks they know:

… there has always been something that bothered me about that $600 a week payment. As explained, it was meant to help families and workers cover the shortfall between what they would receive from unemployment, and what their full paycheck was before being laid off. And if that was the purpose, then the program was far oversubscribed for what it set out to do. Now my wife works in retail, so she’s not making Brad Pitt wages, and still, that $600 a week was multiples above what was needed to make her whole. I know that the whole object was to render as much aid to as many people as possible, but I would guess that in a majority of cases, people were actually profiting from the program.

The question that has bothered me every time I see that $600 in Teri’s account is Why $600 a week? The number can’t possibly be arbitrary, there has to be some kind of sensible reason behind it. It seems almost like the Democrats jammed it to the GOP because they had them over a barrel, which is fine by me, but that still doesn’t make sense. There has to be a reason why they settled specifically on $600 a week.

And last night, while just idly discussing the topic with Teri, it whupped me upside the head. Let’s start with a little simple math. It has to be simple if I’m going to do it. Start with $600 a week. Now, divide that $600 by a 40 hour work week. What do you end up with? $15.00 an hour!

Now that makes perfect, crystal clear sense. The Democrats have been pushing for a national $15 an hour minimum wage for at least the last three years. But there’s a problem with that, it’s purely conceptual. The Democrats talk about how great it would be, and everybody agrees that it would be great, but talk is cheap, and nobody had any way to know what it would feel like to make $15 an hour.

So the Democrats took the bull by the horns and showed them what it feels like to make $15 an hour. Without saying a word to tip their mitts, the Democrats used the terrible unemployment shortfalls to show every American making less than $15 an hour what it feels like to make $15 an hour. For 16 weeks they have handed the neediest Americans a weekly $15 an hour paycheck. And now the GOP wants to take it away.

Spreading discontent with Republican governance at every opportunity.

Another View On The Second Amendment

A friend sent me this missive concerning the Second Amendment by John M. DeMaggio (USN-retired):

The argument over the Second Amendment routinely centers on guns. But our Second Amendment right to “keep and bear arms” has just as much to do with casting off the stratification of the social class system and buttressing religious freedom. …

One cannot discuss the Bill of Rights independently but must consider it within a broader discussion encompassing two other pillars of our system of government: the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

Today people immediately consider “arms” to be guns. But in the long run-up to American independence — in medieval, pre-colonial and colonial times — arms for “bearing” were usually edged weapons, especially swords.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art tells us that in medieval times “generally speaking only noblemen were allowed to carry a sword in public.”

Plinio Correa de Oliveira writes in “What is the Symbol of Nobility and Power? And Why?” that “The people of the Middle Ages regarded the sword with a certain profundity, esteeming it as a symbol of man’s God-given nobility.”

French nobility prerogatives after 1440 included the right to “wear a sword.” The sword was used during the noble “dubbing ceremony,” still practiced by today’s British Crown[The Hill]

Here’s the problem with his discussion – he insists on contextualizing the Bill of Rights, which is great, but then he proceeds to ignore an important part of the Second Amendment itself – the entirety of the text, which is

A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

DeMaggio makes no mention of a well regulated militia, which makes his entire argument difficult to take seriously. If context matters, the entire Amendment, especially one so terse, should be addressed. Surely the clause considering a well-regulated militia needs a mention.

Worse yet, he engages in a bit of Fight-or-flight sleight of hand with his concluding paragraph:

I wonder if opposition to the Second Amendment’s right of people to “bear arms” might also be — at some level — a rejection of the “equal station” of all people, a reaffirmation of a sort of “Nobility,” a sense of privilege by an established “professional political class?”

This is a big red flag that this is not a serious essay, at least for me. The historical aspect has some mild interest to it, but as a serious defense of an absolutist interpretation of the Second Amendment, the contextual omission, the superfluous bit of rhetoric, and, additionally, the omission of any treatment of the differences between the weapons of today and the weapons of two, three, or four hundred years ago, really renders this piece as little more than a curiosity.

Overconfidence On Both Extremes?, Ctd

A reader reminds me of the events of four years ago when it comes to confidence:

The former Secretary of State leads Trump by 51% to 39% among registered voters nationwide, a new Washington Post-ABC News poll shows. (Time, July 2016 polls)

Yes, indeed, and he never really caught up. Here’s a time series of poll results from Real Clear Politics:

If only this had major events shown as well, such as the day Clinton sniffled and the right-wing media threw a tizz-fit over her poor health.

And, at the end, due to Electoral College oddities and a collection of independents and Democrats who didn’t trust Secretary Clinton, Clinton won the popular vote and Trump won the Presidency.

But history needn’t repeat itself. Among a positively huge host of differences, the most important might be Trump himself. Before the 2016 election, those who were paying attention knew Trump was untrustworthy.

Today’s FiveThirtyEight Trump Approval Results

But four years later, the gross incompetence facet of his personality has really, really come out. In fact, it’s so flamboyantly obvious that I’m actually discouraged that some 40% of the American public still approves of him. I suspect some 30% will stick with him even if he’s caught committing a crime, just because of his promises to bring back their version of the good times.

And Clinton had carried quite a load of mud from years of Republican Party assault on a person who was actually competent in her job, as both sides of the aisle acknowledged. Republican Party tenets couldn’t accept an expert, as we’ve come to see, and they still seethed from losing to Bill Clinton – twice.

But Biden, former Senator and Vice President, has never been under sustained attack, and is generally likable. His occasional lapses into stuttering, long-term union supporter, history of family tragedy, and other elements render him far more likable than Clinton, as at least I can see myself stuttering when making speeches on the topics he often addresses.

So, sure, there’s an element of “here we go again,” and that’s good – it’ll keep the partisans working and persuade the progressives to get out and VOTE. But it’s not a worrisome element for me. Each election is unique.

Lost Opportunities Will Come Back To Haunt You

I’ve been meditating on the editorial by Portland, OR NAACP President E.D. Mondainé in WaPo entitled “Portland’s protests were supposed to be about black lives. Now, they’re white spectacle.” There’s a lot that I perceive to be true in the piece, and yet there’s something I believe Mondainé is missing.

Early in his activism, Malcolm X was asked by a young white woman what she could do to help the cause of civil rights. He famously replied, “Nothing.” Years later, he regretted dismissing her so abruptly, because he came to believe there was much she could do to advance the cause of justice for black people in the United States. But I am quite certain that striking yoga poses nude on the streets of Portland, Ore., was not on his list of actionable items.

Images of “Naked Athena,” as the protester has been labeled, have gone viral, her unclothed confrontation with police earning her accolades as a brave ally of the cause. But I see something else: a beneficiary of white privilege dancing vainly on a stage that was originally created to raise up the voices of my oppressed brothers and sisters. In this, she is not alone. As the demonstrations continue every night in Portland, many people with their own agendas are co-opting, and distracting attention from, what should be our central concern: the Black Lives Matter movement.

From Feminist News.

It’s my perception that the original struggle of the BLM movement has, as Mondainé suggests, recently been co-opted, but not by Mondainé’s white allies, but by President Trump through the dispatch of anonymized federal officers.

The character of the response is the key feature that changes the situation out of Mondainé’s reckoning, I think. If the officers were wearing normal uniforms and ID and acting as normal law enforcement, I’d agree with Mondainé.

But they’re not. They’re acting, to put it in a simple phrase, as terror troops.

President Trump has proclaimed this a law and order matter, yet the mayor of Portland as well as the governor of Oregon have rejected the troops. These two factors, taken together, has transformed the struggle in Portland from a black civil rights matter into a Trump campaign maneuver, meant to influence the American public against the BLM movement as well as liberals in general.

Every move an adversary makes is potentially an opportunity, and I’m not sure Mondainé understands this.

If we engage them now, we do so on their terms, where they have created the conditions for a war without rules, without accountability and without the protection of our Constitution. This makes me fearful for the safety of everyone demonstrating in Portland. That’s why we need to remember: What is happening in Portland is the fuse of a great, racist backlash that the Trump administration is baiting us to light.

By engaging in what is essentially an immoral act, Trump has left himself vulnerable to a charge of corrupt morals. But, in order to communicate this to Americans from coast to coast, it must be emphasized. In previous struggles, the black community used non-violent confrontations, in which they sacrificed their bodies and, sometimes, their lives, to make the point that the morals to which they adhered were superior to those who beat them – and thereby shamed them.

If Trump’s barbaric attempt to boost his popularity as the elections near is to be rebutted, Americans of all colors who stand against him must rebut his charge vividly. Protests are communications, and communications benefits from contrast.

Terror troops?

Meet the Wall of Moms.

The latter function as a moral authority in a struggle that Trump transformed, but, because the latter occupy the moral high ground, Trump is engaged on the terms chosen by his opposition. The Wall of Moms shame his troops, through their peaceful protest and their position in society, which exists regardless of community.

Mothers are the sacrosanct source of peace.

Mondainé may wish to withdraw from the streets:

We cannot fall for their deception. We cannot settle for spectacles that endanger us all. This is a moment for serious action — to once again take up the mantle of the civil rights era by summoning the same conviction and determination our forebears did. We welcome our white brothers and sisters in this struggle. In fact, we need them. But I must ask them to remain humbly attuned to the opportunity of this moment — and to reflect on whether any actions they take will truly help establish justice, or whether they are simply for show.

Thursday night, I will lead a rally in downtown Portland to refocus public attention where it belongs: on redeeming a guilty nation. But recent events might be a sign that our work in the streets should be coming to an end.

But how will an American independent perceive that action? As the opposition being run off by the Federal troops, unwilling to put up or shut up? The independents hold political power in their collective hands. It seems to me that communicating that the protesters are willing to peacefully protest even in the teeth of barbarity will be more convincing than evacuating the streets.

Letting Trump’s terror troops prove their own depravity in a nation where votes will decide the future of this country only benefit BLM.

I think.

Overconfidence On Both Extremes?, Ctd

These state GOP officials who think the election’s in the bag are looking worse and worse, at least according to Fox News:

The other states Fox News polled are equally discouraging for Trump and his supporters. In the previous post I suggested a 10 point victory for Biden (and Senator Smith, up for reelection after winning the 2018 special election by 10+ points against a credible opponent with a famous hockey name known state-wide) was not an unreasonable expectation this November.

I may have been a trifle conservative.

There’s still a lot of time for Biden to step in a hole, or for Trump to suddenly start doing his job. But given his propensity of hiring sycophants who are not qualified for their jobs – and that’s a large part of any President’s job description – I don’t expect President Trump to turn it around through sudden competency.

Instead, he’ll try to stir the pot, and I hope that America continues to be a place of smarter and smarter citizens. I hope and believe they’ve learned not to take President Trump at face value, but instead investigate, not to take right-wing media “facts” on faith without checks, and not to jump and run on command.

And keep holding our breath that Trump doesn’t do much more damage than he’s already accomplished.

Video Of The Day

Pharrell William’s Freedom:

After a day of attending to personal matters, with the background worries about the pandemic, the racial justice vs President Trump tragedy, and wondering how to rescue those who, despite all the evidence of his vast incompetence, are still Trump supporters from their terrible misjudgment – yes, I know, that’s terribly arrogant – I found myself remembering this video. Yes, it’s years old, maybe everyone’s seen it, but it has a life and vividness and even droll humor that reminds me that hope can still be right around the corner.

Sure, his Happy video is fun as well, but I think the overt seriousness of Freedom makes it more memorable, and more apropos of the times.

Word Of The Day

Prelapsarian:

characteristic of or belonging to the time or state before the fall of humankind [Merriam-Webster]

Noted in “The Curious Case of the Electrified Épée,” Michael Farber, SI.com:

Sandy Kerekes is 95. Over a Wiener schnitzel lunch at Foyer Hongrois in early March, a Hungarian seniors residence on the edge of downtown Montreal, he says he sometimes still dreams about [Boris] Onischenko. Kerekes was nurtured in a prelapsarian sporting world and believes athletic competition—especially his sport—is meaningless if devoid of honor. Once Onischenko made the conscious decision to cheat, Kerekes says, “There were two ways for this to end. He could get caught. Or if he didn’t get caught and won, he would’ve been a total goddamn heel in his own head. This would have represented a downfall of a human mind. He would have lost his honor even if he would’ve been a hero for society and history.”

There’s an inherent difference in being the best and being a champion. The latter is just a guy with a trophy. Being the best, well, unless it’s best at cheating, it means something.

The Free Market And The Food Desert, Ctd

Getting back to the situation of having only a few massive slaughterhouses, with work forces vulnerable to Covid-19, and the problems of centralizing capacity in a few huge companies (starts here, last here), I see that the venerable Bruce Schneier is of the same mind, albeit coming at it from his famous perch as a computer security expert:

First, we need to enforce antitrust laws. Our meat supply chain is brittle because there are limited numbers of massive meatpacking plants — now disease factories — rather than lots of smaller slaughterhouses. Our retail supply chain is brittle because a few national companies and websites dominate. We need multiple companies offering alternatives to a single product or service. We need more competition, more niche players. We need more local companies, more domestic corporate players, and diversity in our international suppliers. Competition provides all of that, while monopolies suck that out of the system.

I cannot agree more. It’s not hard to draw an analogy between a market with many small and competing suppliers and the Internet itself, which is itself composed of interlinking subnets, potentially of different types of networks. This flexibility was designed into the Internet by the original designers, and there’s something to be learned there. Contrariwise, a network confined to a single platform type is a monoculture, which is a huge security risk, since a platform with a security hole means all of the instances of that platform has the hole, until it’s patched.

And patching’s usually a ragged, even irresponsibly managed, process.

It’s important to realize that the libertarians will tell you that our current situation of a few big companies is self-correcting. As the big boys become fat and sloppy, new competitors armed with new technology, processes, and business models will come in and knock over the current kings. They’ll have examples to show that it happens.

And sometimes it does.

But, as tempting as that model is for the government hater and, incidentally, the computer programmer who sees human interference in their programs and systems as loathesome[1], a few examples do not prove the case for the whole. Indeed, some potential examples, such as Amazon knocking over Barnes & Noble (increasingly irrelevant) and Borders (bankrupt), has resulted in exactly the opposite: concentration of the market in the hands of the few. Or one. To bring in some thoughts from the investing community, part of the calculation of a new competitor making good, and thus being a good investment, depends on the size of the moat, which is the amount of investment needed to compete, plus the critical intellectual properties owned by the current winners. A big moat has an inverse correlation with changes of success for the new competitor – and moats are often big, and manipulable into becoming artificially bigger.

I look forward to learning if Schneier will be, or has already, critiqued free trade in general.

(h/t CT)


1 Interference, as in adjustments, restarts, corrections of corrupt data. These all hint at imperfections in the program for the naive software engineer who is prone to an almost-religious devotion to their craft – I’ve known a few. Then they look at the economy and capitalism and see government regulation as an opportunity for corruption, and seek to prove it’s unneeded. Someone should write a book, Government Regulation For The Software Engineer: Why It’s Needed.

The Overgrown Path

All those paths in gardens you see in shows, so well kept and peaceful.

Bullshit.

Which reminds me I should go weeding right now. Tomorrow and the weekend are supposed to be fairly miserable around here.

Video Of The Day

An impressive résumé and introduction, even if you don’t live in Louisiana.

I think this is effective. It doesn’t attack any of his opponents, it presents himself as a highly competent and effective person who has experience as the public service bug. That’s the first step to getting elected. The Republican incumbent, Bill Cassidy, is running for reelection, and it’s worth remembering this:

Cassidy was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 2014, defeating incumbent Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and becoming the first Republican to hold the seat since 1883. [Ballotpedia]

If Perkins makes it out of the primary – and it appears to be a jungle primary – he may be a more formidable opponent than Cassidy is expecting in the current political climate.

Earl Landgrebe Award Nominee

Meet Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis:

Not a bad effort.

Symptoms Of Philosophical Illness

Even a relatively sane Republican such as Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) is puzzled concerning the flaming crash his political party is committing, as he explains in an interview with the Deseret News:

Sen. Mitt Romney says he doesn’t know where the Republican Party is headed as the president cozies up to dictators, and character doesn’t seem to matter in leaders anymore. …

Romney said Republicans were once insistent on reducing the national debt, but that doesn’t seem to be a priority anymore. Character, he said, used to be a critical element in selecting leaders but isn’t talked about in clear ways these days.

“I don’t know where my party goes,” Romney said. “I have to be honest with you in that regard.”

Even Romney suffers from the philosophical ills of living in the epistemic bubble. I’m not going to go into the structural troubles of the Republican Party, as I’m sure my regular readers’ eyes are starting to burn from the repetition. But I’ll say this to the puzzled Senator:

  1. Examine the philosophy of how the party is run, every tenet, every guideline. Nothing is holy.
  2. Quit believing the opposition is the enemy, they’re just friends with different views.
  3. Acquire some political friends from outside the bubble and have sober, serious discussions with them. They will see things not apparent from within the bubble.
  4. Talk to apostates! Maybe the most important thing Romney can do.
  5. Put facts and truth first, not the comfort – emotional or religious – of the base. If they all want to head south, but the best direction is north, tell them so and start marching! And teach them that facts come first. Religious fervor has turned out to be one of the rocks of doom, so get rid of it.
  6. Be uncertain. That’s the basis of true governance.

These are just some of the things that Romney and like-minded colleagues must do if they’re not going to rebuild a clone with the same destiny after the current Republican Party self-destructs.

Will they? I’m sure there will be a lot of screaming over all of the above and more. For example, the tenet of Winning at all costs seems like a great tenet, but it’s led to self-destructive primaries and campaign mendacity of staggering proportions. Or Ideology above all, another one that seems like a good idea, has led to a host of third and fourth raters occupying important positions – such as host of governor’s seats.

OK, I promised not to delve into old topics, and so I apologize. But Romney, et al, have to get this right. Not for the sake of their party, but for the sake of the nation.

Moving Up The Political Ladder, Ctd

And now President Trump joins his faithful band of minions in yelling at Rep Cheney (R-WY):

Rep Cheney has notably hawkish views, not unlike her father, former VP Dick Cheney (R-WY), while President Trump is fairly allergic to foreign military adventures.

That is a subject for another time: some such ventures are foolish, and some are important and beneficial. I am not an Isolationist. I will only note that President Trump sees these ventures in monetary terms, and appears incapable of strategic thinking, as do many of those in his Administration.

My real point is that the Amateur-in-Chief, recognizing a philosophical threat to what has become a primary Republican Party religious tenet, amateurism, has now joined in chasing out the rascal. If Rep Cheney apologizes or changes her tune, she may be allowed to remain in the Party.

Otherwise, she’ll become, at best, a ragtag relation. Maybe an independent. And, right now, she’s #3 in the GOP House hierarchy. No one but the President is immune to this grim treatment.

Meanwhile, one of the RINOers will get her post, or at least move up onto the leadership ladder, if she’s thrust out into the cold. Probably Gaetz, given his high profile roles in past debacles, who’ll be showered with praise by Trump.

And this is what happens when religious parties encounter deviancy from the core teachings.

Word Of The Day

Coruscating:

literary
flashing brightly

formal
extremely intelligent and exciting or humorous:
He’s known for his coruscating wit. [Cambridge Dictionary]

Noted in “The Lincoln Project understands that Trump’s enablers must pay a price,” Max Boot, WaPo:

In fact, the Lincoln Project’s founders have impeccable Republican credentials, but they are thoroughly disenchanted with the Party of Trump. One of the consultants affiliated with the Lincoln Project — Stuart Stevens — has written a forthcoming book called “It Was All a Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump” that explains in coruscating and compelling terms why he is done with a party he has served his whole life. Steven has run numerous GOP campaigns; he was Mitt Romney’s chief strategist in 2012. Yet he makes no attempt to paint Trump as an aberration. Rather, he sees the president as the distillation of decades of GOP dogma.

The Map Of Incompetence

I’m getting awfully damn bored of talking about it, but this map from Global Epidemics is a compelling illustration of those governors, celebrated just weeks ago in the right wing media, who have turned out to be terribly incompetent:

DeSantis of Florida, Ivey of Alabama, Kemp of Georgia. Abbott of Texas is looking worse. These are all Republicans. Louisiana’s governor is Democrat John Bel Edwards, and they’re not doing well at all, either. I have not heard what’s gone wrong for them. He’s a disappointment, as he’s a professional politician, which may sound like Hell to some folks, but bespeaks experience and even training (he’s a lawyer).

And, yes, parts of California also look bad. Governor Newsom (D) got off to a great start, but either he reopened too aggressively, or the people aren’t paying attention.

Here’s the link. It updates with new data, so your experience may vary from the above.

Echoes In The Epistemic Bubble

I cannot help but compare these two statements concerning Joe Biden by Republicans, and a comment on the Republicans by, ah, a Republican. Here’s those two on Biden:

“Joe Biden thinks he’s the heir apparent to Obama’s failed legacy, but let’s be frank — Obama can’t save his anemic presidential campaign,” said Trump campaign spokesman Ken Farnaso. “Make no mistake, since 2015, the political class and their partners in the media have consistently underestimated the connection between President Trump and everyday American families.”

Sam Nunberg, a former adviser to Trump, said that highlighting Obama could remind some voters why they backed Trump in the first place. “He is somebody who is not viewed as a competent president vis-a-vis the economy, the military and foreign policy,” Nunberg said of Obama. “That said, it would be better if he was not on the scene. . . . Trump’s reelection campaign was always going to have to have the most popular politician campaigning against him.” [WaPo]

Pushing personal opinion as fact when it comes to the other party is one thing. Pushing, again, personal opinion as fact when it comes to your own party is quite a different thing:

Does that mean the Lincoln Project favors a Democratic takeover of the Senate? Yup. But that doesn’t mean, as Trumpites blare, that it’s gone over to the far left. Its members have stayed on the center right while the Republican Party has been taken over, as [Republican consultant Stuart Stevens] writes, by “paranoids, kooks, know-nothings, and bigots.” Even staunch conservatives such as former national security adviser John Bolton and Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) are being excommunicated by the Trumpkins. [WaPo]

It doesn’t hurt, for me at least, that the paranoids, kooks, know-nothings, and bigots remark is congruent with what I and many others have been observing about the party, at least since the days of Gingrich, and I suspect Reagan’s days as well. The Republicans have been quite shrill for a long time. This is a consequence of the magical thinking rampant in the party.

Naturally, the Democrats must be careful not to become like the Republicans. Be raucous in your internal disagreements, my Dems, and walk away if a really wrong candidate has been nominated; only in this year should you ignore this advice. Always look for the most competent candidate, not the best ideologue.

Destroy And Rebuild

From Buzzfeed:

The Department of Homeland Security’s response to anti–police brutality protests in Portland, Oregon, has disturbed and angered many employees, who called the deployment of the federal force an unusual maneuver that could do long-term damage to the agency’s reputation. …

But conversations with 17 DHS employees, all of whom requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, reveal that many at the agency disagree with the show of force. Some called for an investigation, while others said they feared the long-term consequences for the agency’s reputation.

“Despite working at DHS, I watch and learn about every day’s new descent into lawlessness and authoritarianism just like the rest of the world,” one employee said. “Being a part of this corrupt regime, even as I play no role in the decision-making process, leaves me disgusted by my employer and saddened for my country.” …

Another DHS employee said they’d never seen anything like what’s happening in Portland in their many years at the agency.

“We have a lot of work ahead in terms of repairing the public’s trust,” the employee said.

Repair? Repair?

I don’t think this is the sort of damage that can be repaired. I think you fire everyone at the agencies involved, and then rebuild from the ground up. Each employee is responsible to the American public for their behavior, and this behavior, of anonymous officers playing catch and release with peaceful protesters, is not acceptable. That means that not only is the leadership that didn’t resign when directed to organize this debacle responsible, it means all the officers who went trotting out to harass citizens also deserve to be fired.

At least this employee gets it:

“I did not sign up nor was I trained to be a street cop,” said one DHS employee who had not been deployed but had reservations of others being sent there. “Civil societies have immigration laws that need to be enforced, but that does not mean we should be used as this delusional president’s personal attack dog just because we happen to be available.”

Now they need to act on it.

Moving Up The Political Ladder

Rep Liz Cheney (R-WY), Conference Chair (#3 position in the GOP House Leadership) and, of course, a legislator with far right credentials and a former VP for a Dad, has to deal with some hyenas:

Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., on Tuesday faced down a group of GOP Freedom Caucus critics who complained about her public support for Dr. Anthony Fauci and her support for Kentucky Republican Rep. Thomas Massie’s primary opponent.

Cheney, chair of the House GOP Conference, defended Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, during a closed-door conference meeting, according to a source familiar with her remarks.

On May 12, Cheney tweeted: “Dr. Fauci is one of the finest public servants we have ever had. He is not a partisan. His only interest is saving lives. We need his expertise and his judgment to defeat this virus. All Americans should be thanking him. Every day.” [NBC News]

Rep Gaetz studying a script for his bit part in Endgame. He’ll be playing a dead body.

Rep Matt Gaetz (R-FL), who should surely be acting in community theater rather than wasting his time in the House of Representatives, doesn’t seem repentant:

Steve Benen marvels:

In other words, while going after Cheney for failing to toe a pro-Trump line to their satisfaction, these far-right lawmakers pointed to an instance in which Cheney and Trump were aligned.

And while all of this internecine drama is interesting on its own — it’s not common for House Republicans to go after one of their own far-right leaders like this — let’s not miss the forest for the trees. Fifteen weeks from Election Day, Republicans have no platform, no policy agenda, no coherent vision, and no accomplishments to run on. They’re behind in the polls, facing poor odds, and confronting the possibility of a Democratic sweep.

It’s against this backdrop that several House GOP members are focusing their criticisms on one of their own leaders, who doesn’t appear to have done anything especially notable to earn their ire.

But I think Benen misses the key point: Cheney endorsed an expert. Remember, the Republicans, and especially the Freedom Caucus Tea Party members, can’t stand experts, because they might say something that infringes of their absolute freedoms.

Yeah.

Cheney spat right in the Holy Water of the Freedom Caucus, and it’s no surprise that Gaetz, et al, jumped in outrage.

From OnTheIssues.

I wonder how much longer Cheney, who’s otherwise a far right conservative, will remain in the Republican Party? It must be galling to discover your supposed ideological bedmates are actually mad as hatters. Or is she just hooked on the power and will overlook their, ah, warts?

And for Gaetz, et al, is this just squalling at the blasphemy, or is this also a RINO attempt, a chance to move up the political ladder?