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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.

A little fun

I saw this on Crooks & Liars and I thought I’d pass it on. I enjoyed it. Having cut the cord, I didn’t know this guy even had a show on American TV. The last time I saw him (James Corden) was in a video of him and Paul McCartney driving around Liverpool.

John Scott: Trump voters aren’t racists, they just vote for one

Today, the New London Day, exercising its usual bad judgment, gave front page prominence to this article, in which we are told that an outraged John Scott, speaking out in his role as the chair of the Groton Republican Town Committee (now dominated by right wing loonies), has demanded the resignation of Democratic Town Councilor Aundre Bumgardner:

Republicans are calling for Democratic Town Councilor Aundré Bumgardner to apologize and resign over social media comments he posted after President Donald Trump said, “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by,” during last week’s presidential debate.

Bumgardner posted on Twitter and Facebook that: “Trump says, ‘Proud boys, stand back and stand by.’ He fails to condemn white supremacists. He is a racist, and he doesn’t even care to hide it. If you vote for him, so are you.”

The news release, issued by Republican Town Committee Chairman John Scott, alleges that Bumgardner’s “post stated quite clearly that all Republicans, especially those who support President Trump are racists.” Bumgardner said he did not say “all Republicans.”

Before going on, I should disclose that this humble blog has dealt with Mr. Scott before, even going so far as to contemplate a lawsuit against him for plagiarizing one of my posts.

So, lets deconstruct this a bit. Nowhere does Scott deny that Trump is a racist. His argument, to the extent it is clear, is that one can vote for a racist, whose campaign has focused on inciting racial division (“stand back and stand by”, “Biden (read-black people) will destroy the suburbs, etc.), one of whose closest advisers (that would be Stephen Miller, may he rot in hell) is an out and proud racist, whose judicial picks have sanctioned voter suppression aimed at black people, without actually being a racist. The list of racist practices and policies is longer, but why belabor the point?

Why it’s a bit like-yes I’m going to go there- a German in 1932 saying he wasn’t an anti-Semite just because he was voting for Adolph Hitler. It’s almost worse, in a sense, because Hitler’s platform had other features than anti-Semitism, but Trump’s is now reduced to nothing but clearly audible dog whistles. If you’re voting for Trump, and you’re not voting for the racism, what are you voting for? Okay, possibly you just believe in some mythical form of Fascism that is not grounded in blaming some “other” for all your problems, but that’s a bit of a stretch, and it’s just as bad. So, if John prefers the term “Fascist”, I think Aundre should oblige.

All this is a bit rich coming from a guy who pretty much argued that you could label anyone a socialist who was in favor of bringing back tolls on our highways. I’d say the logical connection between Trumpism and racism is a lot stronger that that between tolls and socialism.

Finally, and this is directed specifically to John, Aundre didn’t say that all Republicans are racists, he basically said that any Republican, or anyone else, who votes for Trump is a racist. There’s a difference. No one is forcing any registered Republican, or anyone else, to fill in that little circle with the genius’s name next to it. When you do so, you are supporting a clearly racist agenda, carried out in both words and deed. Those little kids in cages all have brown skin, after all. It’s not a minor issue that can be lost among the other travesties that Trump has inflicted upon us; it is the major issue. A vote for Trump is a vote for racism.

DC Statehood

There’s been some talk lately about making both Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia states in order to increase blue Senators by four and to provide the representation to the people of those areas that they currently lack. I’m all for it, but, being a lawyer, and living in the era of a Supreme Court more politicized than, perhaps, ever in our history, I can’t help thinking about whether DC statehood would pass muster with the present court, which would certainly do everything it could to find a way to frustrate statehood for a region that is largely minority, does not suppress minority votes, and is likely to send two Democratic Senators to the Senate.

Like so many of the provisions in the Constitution, that providing for the existence of the District of Columbia is infected by the fact that the sainted Founding Fathers were far from perfect. It likely never occured to them that the District would contain more than a relative handful of people other than legislators. The provision provides that Congress shall:

…exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards and other needful Buildings.

Let’s start by agreeing that there’s no way we can get a constitutional amendment to clear away any constitutional impediments to DC Statehood. There’s no way states like Wyoming would see their way clear to letting the far more populated District have the same representation as them in the Senate.

In order for DC to be a state, it would have to exercise “exclusive jurisdiction” over the same subject matter as do other states. That is inconsistent with the constitutional provision cited above. One way around that might be for the Congress to essentially change the boundaries of the actual District to which the constitutional provision refers, such that the District of Columbia would essentially consist of a circumscribed area consisting of Capitol Hill, the Supreme Court Building and the White House, with everything else being in the new state. After all, the constitution says that the district can be no more than ten miles square. It can be less if Congress makes it so. So, you might create a state that looks a little like a doughnut, with a hole in the middle for the new and smaller District of Columbia.

In my own humble opinion that should take care of any real constitutional impediments, but I can easily see the present court ruling that if Congress re-defines the area of the District, then the area that is no longer in the District automatically returns to the states that ceded it to Congress in the first place, just as the area on which a federal fort or dock might stand would revert to state control if the government decided to abandon the fort or dock. In other words, Maryland might pick up a Congressperson or two. I may be wrong, but I think Virginia ceded some land too, so that state might gain some population. But there would be no new Senators, which is the short term point of those pushing the issue right now. I think the present court would be eager to frustrate DC statehood, so they would probably grasp at a legal straw such as this. Maybe it would be better to consider making American Samoa a state.

Why I didn’t watch the debate, and won’t watch the next one

I didn’t watch last night’s debate, but then, if you read the title of this piece, you already knew that.

I didn’t actually watch the Kennedy-Nixon debates, being only 10 at the time, but I did become aware, even then, that the “winner” was not the person who made the better argument, but the one who came across better. Poor Nixon (I never thought I’d use that phrase) lost the TV debate, in large part, because he refused to wear makeup and looked like he hadn’t shaven in several weeks. Radio listeners thought he won, since they couldn’t see his face. So we may have missing makeup to thank for delaying his presidency by eight years.

As the years went by, and debates piled up, the “winner” was inevitably the guy ordained by the press, not because he (or she) had the better of the argument on substance, but because he (no shes relevant here) made a snappy remark, like Reagan saying “There he goes again”, when Carter accused him of wanting to destroy Medicare, which no one bothered to point out was perfectly true. No, Reagan won because…well, because the press wanted him to win.

So what really matters is not what happens during the debate, but after. I had no desire to rant and rave at my computer screen while Trump lied unchecked. Better to wait until the morning after and just read the reviews. Less strain on the blood pressure.

The internet has facilitated some very awful things, but it has accomplished some good, one such good being the fact that the press is no longer the sole arbiter that decides who won or lost. On-line reaction is probably more important than punditry these days.

So, anyway, all the really matters is the post debate fallout, and you can assess that without even having to watch the highlights (lowlights?) of the debate.

My overall impression is that Trump lost the debate. Biden “won” by default, inasmuch as Trump acted as if he wanted to lose. People sometimes have trouble assessing policy positions, but they can usually spot an asshole without much effort, and Trump apparently acted like a total asshole, making it almost impossible for the press to both-sides it, and also, quite likely, making the attempts at both-siding it ineffectual. If there are any undecideds, and who are such people anyway, it’s quite likely Trump turned them off.

The next two debates will be more of the same, so once again, I’ll take a pass and wait for the post-game wrap-ups.

All that being said, I might watch Kamala destroy Pence.

A cynical pattern

It’s not hard to detect this pattern.

When Justice Thurgood Marshall, a giant of the civil rights movement died, the Republicans went out and found themselves a black person who could be counted on to help undo all of his achievements. They found him in Clarence Thomas.

Now, Ruth Bader Ginsburg has died. She was a giant in the women’s rights movement. So they went out and found themselves a woman who could be counted on to help undo all of her achievements. They found her in Amy Comey Barrett.

I never thought I’d be in favor of packing the court, but should Trump fail to steal the election, and should the Democrats take the Senate, I’m all for it. Turnaround is fair play. Or, to put it another way, tit-for-tat.

Our little Hitler

Not much time for blogging these days. I am the treasurer of our local town committee, and it’s been a busy time, as I have to account for the multiple donations people are making in exchange for Biden signs, which are going like hotcakes. There’s a lot of frightened people out there, and they’re doing what they can.

In my down time I’m sitting back reading Volker Ullrich’s Hitler: Downfall, the second volume of Ullrich’s Hitler biography and by far the most fun to read. I read Ascent a few years ago, but there’s only so much you can enjoy reading about a guy like HItler when he’s on a roll. It’s a whole lot more fun reading along as he slowly deteriorates, even though he does manage to kill millions of people in the process. Plus, you know the end turns out reasonably well, something we can’t say about our current situation.

I’m reading it on an e-reader. While I’ve been reading it I’ve been highlighting various things that remind me of our Hitler.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying Trump is just like Hitler. Hitler was a lot smarter than Trump and actually knew things. He was likely more evil as well, but, all in all, besides the obvious fact that both were racist sociopaths, they have some other similarities as well.

Hitler, like Trump, could become wedded to conspiracy theories, in the face of all evidence to the contrary. His delusions about the Jewish conspiracy is an obvious example, but there were many more, such as his insistence that an assassination attempt against him by a lone assassin was actually the work of a broad ranging conspiracy.

Hitler, like Trump, was obsessed with the loyalty of his underlings. He was far more interested in having underlings who were blindly loyal to him than competent to do the job they were chosen to do. Once any given underling became insufficiently sychophantic, Hitler would go out and find someone who would tell him what he wanted to hear. Just like Trump.

Hitler, like Trump, was convinced of his own infallibility. As soon as something he set in motion went awry, he would find someone else to blame.

Hitler, like Trump, was dependent on medications to get him through the day. His doctor gave him stimulus shots on a daily basis. It is overwhelmingly likely that Trump is addicted to Adderall, and who knows what other stuff he is taking. Since he’s the master of projection, his recent claim that Biden is getting injections of performance enhancing drugs is likely a confession of his own medical regimen.

It goes without saying that Hitler was, and Trump is, a bigot of the first order. Lest you think Trump is only bigoted against people of color, it is a fact that he is also anti-Semitic, though he can’t be as open about it as Hitler, and, to be fair, he may not yet have settled on a final solution so far as people of color are concerned.

Even the little things: Hitler, like Trump, during his decline, was unable to negotiate stairs and ramps.

I am aware that it is considered tacky to compare our Fascist to Hitler, since we’re not supposed to have fascists in this country, and any use of the word is by definition, according to much of our punditry, overblown. However, I think it’s instructive that Trump shares so many of the mental illnesses and pathologies that Hitler had, and that fact should be acknowledged. And, I am informed by Crooks and Liars that even the mainstream is beginning to recognize the reality, as Morning Joe and his cohorts spent an hour talking about the F word’s salience in these United States. Right now I think Trump has a better than even chance of getting the Supreme Court to steal the election for him, and if he is successful, we will become a full blown fascist state.

UPDATE: A great mind thinks like mine. I mean..Hitler, Stalin, what’s the difference. The megalomania is all the same.

Now for something completely different

One of the mysteries of the internet is the lack of websites devoted to connecting people who collect Kabuki Theatre Stamps.My brother in law, is such a collector, and he’s had a tough time connecting up with other collectors. As we’re sure I have multitudes of such collectors as readers, or, that such collectors will find this entry if they are googling around, I’ve agreed to let my brother in law put up the following.

See, even Argentina has kabuki stamps

Hello out there fellow collectors of kabuki on stamps! I now have an album of 224 pages identifying the actors, characters, plays and theatres of kabuki stamps. I have another album of 77 pages of kabuki frame stamps from Japan. Please contact me at mailto:evondorster@orange.fr to share your ideas, questions and comments. Or as they say in Japan, via Google Translate:
?????????????????????????? ??????????????????????????????224?????????????? ???????77?????????????????????????????? ????????????????????mailto:evondorster@orange.fr??????????