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A four years wait is over, sort of

The networks have finally called the election, and while it’s absolutely clear they would have called it two days ago had the situation been reversed, we can still feel good about things. In fact, I’ve decided to put a downer post that I’m writing on hold for a while, though rest assured, it will go up in the next few days.

I have to admit that I didn’t sleep well on election night after the polls closed. I was a checker at my local polling station. Probably 50 to 55% of the residents of this district had already voted. Most of the people who passed through looked relatively sane, though we did have to tell some very young Trumpers to take their MAGA hats off while in the polling place. Still, I expected when we called out the numbers at the end of the night that they’d be pretty lopsided. In fact, out of about 1200 votes cast in person, his lead was less than 100. I found out later that it was far more lopsided among the mail in voters, which was apparently true nationwide. Anyway, that, plus the red mirage kept me awake most of the night, even though I knew the bad numbers in states like Wisconsin were likely to flip.

Now we can celebrate. Call me an optimist, but I think given the total lack of evidentiary support for all the claims they’re making, that even this Supreme Court will respect the results.

I have a fantasy, something I’ve been mulling over for four years now. I live about three quarters of the way down Fort Hill here in Groton. I once heard, though I’ve no idea if it’s true, that the ascent up Fort Hill is the steepest climb the entire length of Route 1 from Florida to Maine. I have to take that climb almost every time I take a bike ride, and at the very top of the ascent, for four long years, I have had to see a Trump flag waving, which lately has been on a flag pole directly under an American flag, which flag is literally in tatters. Somewhat symbolic, that. Anyway, today I would really like to park a car across the street from that flag (which is still flying) and play Beethoven’s Ode to Joy on a loudspeaker directed at that house. Alas, only a fantasy.

Finally, let me share this, which was sent to me by a high school friend who is now something of a bigwig at C-Span, who also informed me that Trump was roundly booed by the revelers dancing in the streets around the White House.

Sort of a postscript. Only Donald Trump could make Joe Biden into a bit of a cult figure.

Mutual Aid Society

While reading this article, which relates Susan Collins’ firmly held belief that Roe v Wade is absolutely secure, it brought to mind a theory that I’ve been mulling over.

Lisa Murkowski voted for Barrett, despite the fact that, if anything, she makes Kavanaugh, who Murkowski opposed, look like a liberal legal titan in comparison. Collins voted for Kavanaugh.

Both want to be perceived as pro-choice “moderates”, but neither wants to actually stand in the way of a right wing takeover of the courts. It’s important, therefore, that any vote they cast against the Republican mainstream be symbolic only. Lisa got to go first, and oppose Kavaugh. I think it would be well founded speculation if one were to wonder whether this time around the two of them agreed that it was Susan’s turn, seeing as once again it would make no difference, and Susan is running for re-election while Lisa is not.

It’s all reminiscent of the catch and release policy the Republicans employed to keep “moderates” like our former Congressman, Rob Simmons, in line. They were allowed to cast moderate votes so long as the right wing outcome was secure; otherwise, they were expected to toe the line.

Which is it? Stupidity or criminal arrogance.?

Stories like this merely make me curl further into a fetal position as November 3rd approaches.

Jared Kushner, the son-in-law and senior adviser of President Donald Trump, privately bragged to journalist Bob Woodward in April about the president’s decision to shun the advice and opinions of health experts, just as the death rate from the coronavirus pandemic in the U.S. was reaching peak levels.

“It was almost like Trump getting the country back from the doctors. Right?” Kushner said in recorded conversations with Woodward. “In the sense that what he now did was, you know, he’s going to own the open-up.”

“Trump’s now back in charge,” Kushner also said. “It’s not the doctors.”

Kushner claimed that the U.S. was moving through the “panic” and “pain” phases of the pandemic, and experiencing the “beginning of the comeback phase” by reopening — a direction that was widely criticized at the time.

As Kushner made these comments, the seven-day average of daily deaths related to COVID-19 was above 2,200 per day. There were 754,037 coronavirus cases documented at the time, a figure that would double a month later and triple by mid-June.

Sure, this should just make us laugh at what a clown he is for letting Woodward tape him saying that stuff, but think about it.

Let’s start by bearing in mind that Kushner knew 1) he was being taped by Woodward, which meant he couldn’t deny his statements to anyone but Foxaholics; 2) presumably knew, or should have known, that his comments would likely become public prior to the election; and 3) knew, or at least should have known how unlikely they were to be helpful in any honestly decided election.

There are only two possible explanations for his actions.

The first is that he’s a monumentally stupid person who actually didn’t understand the potential political implications for such a statement. Despite his Harvard degree (I won’t libel Harvard by saying he had a Harvard education) he may in fact be that stupid. But in any ordinary election this would have been a very stupid thing to say, so we should not bet on this explanation.

In light of my conclusion above, the second explanation is more likely. That is, that Kushner, being the arrogant son of a bitch that he is, knew very well that in any normal time in this nation’s history, it was the last thing he should have said, but he was secure in the knowledge that the Republicans could steal the election no matter what the now almost overwhelming number of people in this country may think, want, or for which they may actually vote. We have already seen that Kavanaugh is absolutely willing to do what must be done to throw the election to Trump, and we mustn’t be fooled by Barrett’s recusal from a recent case; she is merely holding her fire.

It’s worth remembering, too, that this is hardly the only time that a Trump administration official has said something extraordinarily stupid, particularly about COVID. Just this past Sunday Mulvaney allowed, on national television, that they were just going to let it run its course. They have given up even pretending to care about their own supporters, never mind the American people. How else to explain the Pence spokesperson’s statement that it was okay if he held superspreader events because he himself has good doctors.

In any other year, in any other political time, given the current state of the polls and the improbability of any significant change in those polls, I would be avidly looking forward to November 3rd. As it is, I look forward with a strange mix of optimism and dread. Part of me can’t believe this nation’s judiciary has sunk so low that it would allow Trump to steal this election (which will take more fancy and transparently ludicrous jurisprudential footwork than Bush v. Gore), but the history buff in me sees the signs of decline too clearly. We should be ashamed as a nation that someone as mediocre as Donald Trump (no Julius Caesar he) and his hangers on may be the source of the Republic’s destruction, but there it is.

He shares my angst

I’ve mentioned before that I read the Boston Globe, primarily because my eldest works for them. They also have relatively decent comics, including Bill Griffith’s Zippy, of which I am a big fan. Griffith lives in East Haddam now, by the way, and often features local landmarks in his strip.

Lately Griffith has been sharing his pre-election angst with his readers, and it has definitely struck a chord so far as I’m concerned. He speaks to the legions of folks who are hoping for the best but dreading the worst. Here’s his latest.

More here.

I’m with Biden on this one

I was not a Biden fan during primary season, and I continue to believe that several of the other candidates would make better presidents than him, inasmuch as I think they are more aware of what this country needs to recover from not just four years of fascism, but years and years of Republican misrule, a misrule hardly interrupted by the Obama years.

Still, credit where credit is due. I think he’s run a smart campaign, and it seems fairly apparent that not only has he sought advice from the right people but he has taken that advice. Case in point, the “court packing issue”.

Some have accused Biden of punting on this issue, but if you want to call it that, then punting was what the issue required.

The media and punditocracy was hot to go after Biden on this issue, as a way of both siding the court issue. After all, if the Republicans have packed the court for years and years without a whisper of objection from the pundits, isn’t it reprehensible if the Democrats do the same? Shades of Franklin Roosevelt! Had Biden come out for court packing in its raw form we would not hear the end of it from now until the election, and there would be no recognition whatsoever that it is fully justified given recent history, not to mention the harm that a right wing court will do to the country if it continues to exist as a republic, something this court may be at pains to assure does not happen.

The pundits, just to be clear, are desperate to both sides the candidates; to come up with a whatabout that they can throw around about Biden to balance the multiple atrocities committed by the genius. They started beating on the court packing drum before Biden made his announcement, but so far as I can see, they’ve shut up since.

Biden is saying he would appoint a bipartisan commission to see what should be done about the courts, particularly the Supreme Court. I would agree with anyone who claimed that it’s a terrible idea because anything such a commission proposed by way of reforming the courts or the appointment process would promptly be declared unconstitutional by the very courts it was trying to reform. Sadly, for the most part, the courts would be right. The court system is set up in the constitution, and there’s not much you can do about it. There’s an argument to be made that you could legislatively set terms for Supreme Court judges, but they would certainly be struck down as applied to the sitting justices, and likely to all justices. There’s a crying need to change the constitution to deal with this very undemocratic and increasingly partisan institution, but that will not happen in the lifetime of anyone currently living.

I don’t know whether Biden is serious about this, or he’s just using it as a way to deflect on the issue. Either way, the pundits will all be mollified by what is patently bullshit and we won’t be hearing any more about scary (when the Democrats do it) court packing. Serious or not, he’s deprived the pundits of a drum to beat on. Right now the election is the most important thing, and Biden’s court proposal- it’s bi-partisan! after all-, is just the thing to keep the punditocracy silent.

A Sea of Troubles

Here’s my story, it’s sad but true.

About my troubles with CTBlue.

It took my words and ran away.

And was not fixed, for many a day

For the benefit of anyone born after 1955, the above is sung to the tune of “Runaround Sue”.

It is entirely possible that somebody, somewhere, noticed that this blog has been malfunctioning for the last several days. In case such people exist, they may be curious to know what happened, and that is the purpose of this totally non-political post.

I do all my blogging on my Ipad. I haven’t written a post on my computer for many a year. I write a draft on a Markdown app, of which I have several, and then copy and paste it into the WordPress App, and upload it from there.

Several days ago I wrote this post about my second-born’s new (and great) book, and when I went to upload it, I not only got an error message to the effect that it could not be uploaded, but I noticed that the post I had written before my book review had also not uploaded.

My site is hosted by a company called Blue Host, which is not related, so far as I know, to the Democratic Party, though it shares a color. I called tech support and, of course, had to make my way through a robot that demanded my “validation code”, as if I was supposed to know that I needed such a thing or knew where to find it. I find that yelling and screaming at these things usually leads them to transfer you to an actual person, which is what eventually happened.

After checking out my site, the guy who answered my call allowed as he was not expert enough to deal with it, and it would have to be kicked upstairs. My guess is that upstairs is in India, as the support emails I received all came in at around 6:30 in the morning and all the tech people had Indian sounding names.

Anyway, at first an expert (I think they kept handing it off one to the other) told me to enable a plug-in and check out a forum support page at WordPress, where people getting the same error message discussed a number of solutions, which did or didn’t work for various participants. I am computer literate to a certain extent, but as I told the expert in a follow up email, all this was Greek to me.

Anyway, after enabling the suggested plug in I tried editing a piece on my computer from within the WordPress site. It allegedly uploaded, but when I looked to see if it had, the entire site was down, with this message displayed:

Your PHP installation appears to be missing the MySQL extension which is required by WordPress.

If the theoretical personages that I posited above checked out the website during this period, that’s what they would have seen.

The tech people suggested yet another solution, which I tried, and that seemed to work, as the home page of the site looked fine. Except, as I was writing this post, and attempted to get the links to the two posts I mentioned above (don’t forget to buy the book!), I found that the links were inoperative. So, yet another day and another reply from India, with another solution, which this time seems to work.

So for about a week the world had to do without this blog. I sincerely hope the election is not affected, unless my literary absence increases Biden’s chances.

Who will document the atrocities?

I ran across this article on my RSS reader today, and it brings to mind something that really should be foremost in our minds: the multitudinous ways in which the present Administration, aided and abetted by the entire Republican Party, has perverted our government. The truly depressing thing is that not only does this abuse provoke no surprise, but it gets almost no attention from our mainstream press, which chooses not to cover such things in depth, or harp on them as they would were the genius a Democrat, since they are, in essence, only to be expected from this corrupt administration:

Public Citizen today filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to compel disclosure of coronavirus vaccine development and manufacturing contracts with major pharmaceutical corporations worth billions of dollars.

The suit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, challenges HHS’s withholding of records requested by Public Citizen under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) related to Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration’s initiative to accelerate the development of COVID-19 treatments and vaccines.

Operation Warp Speed, which is co-led by HHS, has given more than $10 billion to pharmaceutical corporations. The terms of these contracts remain secret. Public Citizen first requested Operation Warp Speed’s contracts with AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Moderna, Pfizer and Regeneron, among others, in May 2020. The contracts could shed light on critical questions like:

Will pharmaceutical corporations be required to set a reasonable price for their products, or will they be free to profiteer despite the public’s massive investment?
Will taxpayer-funded technology be held as corporate secrets, or can the U.S. government share technology with the World Health Organization to advance scientific research, accelerate manufacturing and more quickly end the global pandemic?
What rights does the U.S. government maintain in the factories it is helping build?

Here’s an easy prediction to make: these medicines, should they ever come to fruition, will be sold at the price set by their makers without any limitations or any obligation to even repay the federal investment. We, the taxpayers, will end up paying twice for a vaccine which should be free. The point of government from the Republican point of view, after all, is to pump money up to the rich.

Somewhere, perhaps, there is a person who has been diligently documenting the atrocities committed by this administration. If we manage to rid ourselves of the budding dictator, he or she may gift what will surely be a thousands page tome to the nation. It could, perhaps, serve as a source for the commission that should be set up to prosecute each and every criminal currently working for this administration, along with the crime boss himself.

Update: McSweeney’s has started on the job.

Get yours now!

I am pleased to report that what is sure to be the best book published this year is available for pre-order right now at Amazon. The fact that the author shares my last name and 50% of my genes is totally irrelevant to this assertion. Take my word for it. I’ve read it, and it’s good. Read the reviews. These people know of what they speak.

I actually had some small part in getting this brilliant piece of history published. I proofread the initial draft, and, thanks to the nuns at Our Lady of Sorrows School, who drilled us on such matters, I was able to supply missing commas and point out the stray grammatical error.It is a fact, by the way, at least based on my observations, that there are more errors of that type in books published since the dawn of electronic spell and grammar checking.

I personally will not be ordering my copies from Amazon, which is an evil entity. My local bookstore could, no doubt, use my bulk order, the contents of which will be distributed to various friends and relations. By all means, hector your local bookstore to stock multiple copies of what is sure to be a national best seller.

Democrats playing the long game? If only.

Anyone who has spent time reading this blog knows that I get a lot of my news from other left wing blogs or internet sites. One often needs to exercise a fair amount of judgment reading these sites. The facts are usually accurate but the spin put on those facts is often suspect. One such site is *Politicus USA” a site that tends to put an overly pro-Democratic spin on just about everything. This post, I thought, was just a bit over the top. It passes on generally accurate information about the fact that Republicans are planning to use the Supreme Court to destroy the ACA, something timed to happen after the election, so they won’t be held responsible. Jason Easley, the writer, sums up:

Republicans have engaged in nothing, but an endless series of strategic failures under Donald Trump, and the decision to ram Amy Coney Barrett through the Senate could end up costing them control of the entire federal government.

While Republicans are living for the moment, Democrats are playing the long-game. If they win the election, they can immediately replace the ACA when the Supreme Court kills it. They can make Roe V. Wade the law of the land. They can enact reform to kill Citizens United. The Supreme Court will become a lot less relevant if Democrats control the federal government.

Republicans will get their Supreme Court justice, but Democrats are using their strategic blunder to get control of the unfettered ability to make policy and federal laws for years to come.

Wow. If only any of this were true. Let’s start with paragraph one. If they get Barrett through, they will control the Supreme Court for the next 30 years or so, unless the Democrats increase the number of judges on that court, a move the Republicans will condemn and then copy the next time they have a chance. The Supreme Court is part of the federal government. As our system has developed, it is a fact that if you control the court you can frustrate almost anything remotely progressive.

Paragraph two: This is the very first time that I’ve read anything accusing the Democrats of playing the long game. I suggest Jason read Evil Geniuses, a book I reviewed a while back, to see who has actually been playing the long game. Amy Comey Barrett is the culmination of the Republican long game. They have been grooming legal fascists like her for years, and packing the courts with them in the expectation that they will not need to win elections if they control the courts. We have come to a sorry pass when we can’t even hope that John Roberts, an extreme right winger by any definition, will exercise a “moderating” influence, because even if he joins the rational three once in a while, they’ll still be outnumbered. Democrats, as opposed to long-game Republicans, are reactionaries in a sort of literal sense; they react to what is happening in the moment, but never think long term.

As to the balance of the second paragraph, the Democrats can’t make Roe v. Wade the law of the land unless the Supreme Court lets them. It won’t. The Democrats can’t enact reform to kill Citizens United unless the Supreme Court lets them. It won’t. The Democrats can try to stop voter suppression through legislation that will be unquestionably constitutional to anyone with a passing familiarity with the actual language and intent of the constitution, particularly the post Civil War amendments, but the Supreme Court can protect the suppressors, and it will.

The Supreme Court is yet another institution created by our sainted Founding Fathers that is fundamentally flawed, though you can’t necessarily completely blame Jamie Madison and his compatriots for this one, since the court itself made the determination that it has the power to declare a law unconstitutional. That actually makes a certain amount of sense, but it is obviously a power that can be abused, and it’s a power to which the constitution affords no effective check other than court packing, which obviously presents problems of its own.

The present court is one of the most partisan that has ever existed, and one of the most result oriented. It has exposed, once again, what may ultimately prove to be one of the fatal flaws in the constitution. Those flaws can be rectified only through constitutional amendments, which have become impossible to enact, because the amendment procedure is itself flawed, requiring as it does a super majority of states, without regard to the population of those states. Someone else can do the actual math, but I’d hazard a guess that states comprising less than 20% of the population could frustrate the passage of an amendment passed by states representing the other 80%, and it’s precisely because any amendments would and should make inroads on the ability of the minority to frustrate the majority that amendments will no longer pass.

So far as the Supreme Court is concerned, one obvious solution is to limit the terms of the Supreme Court justices, to stated terms, such as ten years, after which they would have to be reappointed to keep their seat. This is actually how it’s done for all judges in Connecticut, and it works fairly well. It’s rare that a judge is not reappointed, but the fact that he or she must go through the process greatly reduces the possibility that he or she will pervert the law to suit his or her political ends.

All of which brings me to the last paragraph I’ve quoted. The Democrats, should they prevail in three weeks time, will not have “the unfettered ability to make policy and federal laws for years to come”. They will be fettered every inch of the way by one of the three branches of our federal government, a branch they will definitely not control. We will see some judicial opinions so illogical, and so at odds with what was settled precedent, that it will make the heads of lawyers not members of the Federalist Society spin, but that won’t matter. The court will return us to the halcyon days of the Gilded Age, unless the Democrats take the drastic step of packing it.

On second thought, Be Evil

I hadn’t realized that Google had abandoned what was once the opening phrase of its code of conduct: Don’t be evil. Just as well, since it and its “contractors” are, not to put too fine a point on it: evil:

A year ago, 80 Google contractors employed by HCL America in Pittsburgh voted to unionize with US Steelworkers—a historic victory for white collar tech workers in the U.S. Since then, the fight to win their first union contract has been an uphill battle.

On Thursday, the National Labor Relations Board issued a formal complaint against HCL, alleging that the company has violated U.S. labor law by failing to bargain with the U.S. Steelworkers union, implementing unilateral changes, and transferring bargaining unit work to non-union members working in a facility in Krakow, Poland.

“[HCL] engaged in [the conduct described] because employees formed, joined and assisted the Union and engaged in concerted activities, and to discourage employees from engaging in these activities,” the NLRB complaint states.

In 2019, roughly two-thirds of the 80 contractors in Pittsburgh who work at Google’s Bakery Square office voted in favor of unionization. While they are not employed directly by Google, many of them work as analysts on Google Shopping.

Read the full story for all the gory details.

It takes a lot for the NLRB to file a complaint these days, given that it’s dominated by Republican appointees.

A few additional points. The article to which I’ve linked is from Motherboard. It’s a site well worth visiting. It often covers stories of real importance that are neglected elsewhere.

Also, don’t use Google. Use Duck-Duck Go. They actually aren’t evil and their search results are as good as Google’s.