Pages

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Moscow Mitch!

Joe Scarborough calling McConnell "Moscow Mitch" apparently hit a nerve.

Click here for an article in the Louisville Courier Journal by Ben Tobin, entitled "Mitch McConnell lashes out on Senate floor about 'Moscow Mitch' accusation."

I have to express my appreciation for Scarborough's moniker -- I hope it sticks -- and also for his tweet during the Mueller hearings:
Jesus, forgive me for ever being a Republican.

Which Party Supports The Principle Of Medicare?

Click here for an article in The Washington Post blog, The Plum Line, by Paul Waldman, entitled "Medicare just turned 54. Let’s remember what Republicans said about it."

Medicare was passed in July 1965, when the Democrats enjoyed huge majorities in Congress -- 295/140 in the House and 68/32 in the Senate. Johnson praised it at the time he signed the bill, saying:
No longer will older Americans be denied the healing miracle of modern medicine. No longer will illness crush and destroy the savings that they have so carefully put away over a lifetime so that they might enjoy dignity in their later years. No longer will young families see their own incomes, and their own hopes, eaten away simply because they are carrying out their deep moral obligations to their parents, and to their uncles, and their aunts. And no longer will this Nation refuse the hand of justice to those who have given a lifetime of service and wisdom and labor to the progress of this progressive country.
But the Republicans fought against it with everything they had. Here's what a rising Republican star -- Ronald Reagan, who would be elected to the first of his two terms as governor of California the following year, 1966 -- had to say on the subject:
“One of the traditional methods of imposing statism or socialism on a people has been by way of medicine,” he warned in a famous radio address. If Medicare were not stopped, Reagan said, “one of these days you and I are going to spend our sunset years telling our children, and our children’s children, what it once was like in America when men were free.”
Republicans have made concerted efforts over the years to rid America of this cesspool of socialism, but with little effect. As Waldman says:
Today there are 59 million people on Medicare and 73 million on Medicaid [132 million people], combining to make up a full 40 percent of the American population. So guess what: We have the socialism Reagan warned about, just not for everyone.
And yet that paragon of honesty, President Donald J. Trump, "wrote in a 2018 op-ed that was stunningly dishonest even for him, 'I also made a solemn promise to our great seniors to protect Medicare. That is why I am fighting so hard against the Democrats’ plan that would eviscerate Medicare.'"

Sunday, July 28, 2019

"Josh Hawley Is A Fraud."

Click here for the article with that title at Splinter, by Paul Blest. Hawley is the junior senator from Missouri, and a rising star in the Republican party. He defeated two-term Democrat incumbent Claire McCaskill in 2018.

The premise of the article is that while Hawley purports to represent the downtrodden workers of Missouri, he has a very elitist history:
Hawley’s father Ron is a banker. Hawley himself graduated with a B.A. from Stanford, then went on to receive a law degree from Yale and clerk for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court John Roberts. He then became one of the lead lawyers for the right-wing Alliance Defending Freedom arguing the Hobby Lobby case before the Supreme Court, and was elected the attorney general of Missouri at the age of 36. Josh Hawley has had a privileged childhood, an academic pedigree from two of the top private universities in the world (and then, briefly, was an academic himself), a place in some of most prestigious places in the legal profession all before he turned 35, and is now a United States Senator.
Blest points out that "during his successful run for Senate against Claire McCaskill, Hawley usually glossed over all of these details on the campaign trail in favor of anecdotes about 'hard work' and 'growing up in a small town.'”

Along with Tucker Carlson, Hawley was a keynote speaker at the recent National Conservatism Conference in D.C. Remember the name: He'll be a consequential Republican in years to come.

Something's Happening To The Concept Of "Conservatism"

Be afraid. Be very afraid.

Something's stirring in the belly of the Trumpist beast.

Click here for an article at The Washington Post by John Burtka entitled "Under Trump, a very different agenda for conservatives emerges." And if reading that article doesn't make you sufficiently afraid, click here for another article, again at The Washington Post, by Max Boot, entitled "What comes after Trump may be even worse." "President Tucker Carlson"? Now there's a phrase that ought to reduce you to a terrified, quivering lump of jelly.

On July 22, there was a gathering in D.C. called the National Conservativism Conference. It marked the beginning of a movement calling itself "national conservatism," an effort to explain the phenomenon of Trumpism within the conservative movement and the Republican party:
When Fox News host Tucker Carlson took the stage at the National Conservatism Conference last Monday in Washington, his tone was self-deprecating yet triumphant. Former deputy national security adviser Michael Anton has deemed Carlson the “de facto leader of the conservative movement,” and the audience wanted a coronation.

For the next hour, Carlson laid waste to the pieties of a thousand white papers and endless summer seminars promoting the dogmas of radical individualism, unfettered free markets and global hegemony — in short, all the things that made up American conservatism for the last generation. It was time, he said, to climb up into the attic and start tossing out the junk. And down it came: Speech after speech declared independence from neoconservatism, neoliberalism, libertarianism and classical liberalism. In substance and in tone, this was not the conservatism of National Review, the Weekly Standard or the Conservative Political Action Conference, but something consciously distinct and admittedly superior.

There has been much intellectual ferment on the right since the 2016 election but never a public gathering of this scale explaining what Donald Trump’s victory means for the future of the Republican Party. Under the auspices of the Edmund Burke Foundation, a new group of self-described “national conservatives” gathered to proclaim that big business is a greater threat to liberty than big government, that identity politics is a Freudian fraud and nation building is a chimera. In short, the aim of this new conservative politics is not more freedom but strong families, resilient faith communities and a thriving middle class. If the influence of Russell Kirk, American conservatism’s founding father, provided the intellectual framework for the conference, Pat Buchanan’s pitchfork populism replaced William F. Buckley’s Northeastern elitism as its animating spirit.
Here is Burtka's assessment of national conservative policy:
In economics, it would aim to strengthen the middle class, reduce income inequality and develop an industrial policy to ensure economic independence from China for essential military supplies. Policy proposals could include incentivizing investment in capital equipment and research and development; ending tax advantages for shareholder buybacks; federal spending on infrastructure; promoting skilled trades and vocational programs; busting up inefficient monopolies through antitrust enforcement; slowing immigration rates to tighten labor markets and raise wages for the working class; holding universities liable for student loan debt in cases of bankruptcy; and raising tariffs across the board while slashing taxes on the middle class.

As relates to culture, national conservatives would aim to support families by being pro-life for the whole life. Policy ideas might include paid family leave, increasing the child tax credit, federally funded prenatal and maternal care, reducing or eliminating income tax on families with three or more children, and working toward a society in which a mother or father can support a family on a single income. America’s Judeo-Christian roots would be celebrated, and churches and charitable organizations would be given preference in caring for the poor.

In foreign affairs, national conservatives’ goal is to protect the safety, sovereignty and independence of the American people. America’s regime-change wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and Yemen would be recognized as imperial hubris, and anyone involved in their promotion exiled from future positions in Republican administrations. Presidents who ignore congressional authorization for war would be impeached, and members of Congress who eschew their constitutional duties would be stripped of committee assignments and “primaried” in the next election. We would command the seas and space, bring the remaining troops home, secure our own borders and rebuild America.
All that rings a lot of the right bells: Who in the Democratic party could argue against any of the ideas I've put in bold above? Fine-sounding proposals, but how would they look in practice? Max Boot's article gives us an idea of what national conservatism might look like under President Tucker Carlson:
I fear that President Trump may not be an aberration but a prelude to something even uglier under a demagogue who really is a “stable genius.” (Trump is neither.)

A who’s who of Trumpian intellectuals (an oxymoron?) gathered at the Ritz-Carlton in Washington last week to propound an ominous ideology: “national conservatism.” As Reason reported, the conferees want to ditch the old conservative aversion to having the government micromanage the economy. Many speakers argued for an industrial policy based on tariffs and tax credits to reverse what “Hillbilly Elegy” author J.D. Vance described as “family decline, childhood trauma, opioid abuse, community decline, decline of the manufacturing sector.” In response, Rep. Justin Amash (I-Mich.) tweeted: “ ‘National conservatism’ is just collectivism rebranded for the right. It’s a form of socialism built upon fear of the new and different.” (Maybe it should be called “national socialism” instead? If only that term weren’t already taken.)
Boot concludes:
But the real star of the “national conservatism” conference, reports Jacob Heilbrunn in the New York Review of Books, was Fox host Tucker Carlson. An isolationist and nativist, he has called Iraqis “semiliterate primitive monkeys” and said immigrants make “our own country poor and dirtier and more divided.” At the Ritz-Carlton, which is a subsidiary of the largest hotel company in the world, Carlson’s theme was, “Big Business Hates Your Family.” (Maybe not Carlson’s family: His stepmother is an heir to the Swanson frozen-food fortune.)

There has already been talk of Carlson running for president, and, Heilbrunn wrote, “Carlson’s own coy disavowal on the podium was hardly a denial.” Tucker in ’24? Don’t laugh. Weep. The Fox host is more intelligent and disciplined than Trump. He could well be the new leader of authoritarianism in America. If that were to happen, we may look back nostalgically on our present craziness as the calm before the storm.
Click here for a third article at The Washington Post, entitled ""Conservatives want to revive a one-time trick from more than 100 years ago," by Megan McArdle, a discussion of national conservatism's "industrial policy":
Industrial policy was last hot in the 1980s, as an ascendant Japan seemed about to displace us at the apex of the global economy. Center-left policy wonks spent a decade urging us to copy them. By the time they’d convinced everyone, however, Japan was mired in its 20-year “lost decade,” and the United States was entering an unplanned economic boom courtesy of Silicon Valley. Industrial policy abruptly vanished from the national conversation.
She goes on:
The first thing opponents of industrial policy should note is that it can work. But there are some other things we should note, too: that while it can work, it usually doesn’t; that it didn’t cause most of the growth it gets credit for in Asian countries; and that the limited benefits it offers probably can’t be realized by modern-day America.

But first, the concession. Done smartly, strategic trade policy and targeted subsidies can boost a country’s competitive position in growth-promoting industries. And because those industries often cluster, successful national champions can be quite hard to dislodge — just think of Detroit’s decades-long dominance of the global auto market. Once a cluster is established, spillover effects can foster further growth in related sectors.

Unfortunately, industrial policy is rarely particularly smart. Even brilliant planners can’t actually predict the future, and if they guess wrong, they can squander a great deal of taxpayer money while actually making the economy less competitive.
McArdle points out times in history when other countries have adopted similar industrial policies, and gives reasons why she feels these policies would not be successful if applied to the present-day U.S. economy. She concludes:
The problem is, we can’t replicate it because we practically invented it — more than 100 years ago. And it’s a one-time trick that no country ever gets to repeat, no matter how carefully it plans.

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Mueller Report Summarized In 5 Minutes

Click here for a celebrity reading of key points in the Mueller report.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

Mueller Report For Dummies - With Pictures

Click here for an article at Insider entitled "The Mueller Report," subtitled "Adapted by Mark Bowden, author of 'Blackhawk Down.' With illustrations by Chad Hurd, art director at 'Archer.'"

Saturday, July 13, 2019

Speed Up Your Internet Connection

Click here for an article at How-To Geek by Tim Brookes, entitled "How to Speed Up Your Internet Connection."

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Doe v. Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein

Click here for the legal document charging Trump and Epstein, Case 1:16-cv-07673, filed September 30, 2016, in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York:

JANE DOE v. DONALD J. TRUMP and JEFFREY E. EPSTEIN Complaint for rape, sexual misconduct, criminal sexual acts, sexual abuse, forcible touching, assault, battery, intentional and reckless infliction of emotional stress, duress, false imprisonment, and defamation.

Jane Doe withdrew her case on November 4, 2016, saying she was "afraid to show her face" due to "numerous threats" against her.

Click here for a pertinent Twitter thread.

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Seinfeld: George, The Marine Biologist

Earlier in the episode, Kramer came over to Jerry's apartment, and George was there. He asked them if they wanted to come out with him to Rockaway Beach, because his car trunk was full of old Titleist golf balls a friend had gotten him from a driving range, and he was going to drive them into the ocean. (Jerry and George declined.)

George was dating a girl he had idolized in high school, and in order to appear successful, he told her he was a marine biologist. They were at the beach and found a beach whale, and George told the story:

Friday, July 5, 2019

Big Brother (a.k.a. Google) Is Watching You

Click here for Google's activity page. You can sign in, or if you're already signed in, it shows your Google searches in the past. Click here for Bob Rankin's article on the subject, entitled "Everything Google Knows About You (and How to Delete it).

Monday, July 1, 2019

Tag Your Emails

Click here for an article at How-To Geek by Rob Woodgate, entitled "How to Tag Your Emails For Maximum Searchability." Want to find an email you sent or received six months ago? Tags can help.