What internet politics looks like to normal people
I'd embed the YouTube video directly, but that way it comes with an intro ad. This is a link to PowerLine, where you can watch it without that annoyance, and maybe enjoy other PowerLine articles while you're at it.
I sure hope this is how the independents are seeing it.
Why'dya believe me? It was just a debate
Vice Presidential candidate Kamala Harris seems to be confused about the difference between a lawyer taking a position she doesn't believe during a trial, on behalf of a client, and a candidate for president taking a position she doesn't believe during a debate.
"These are my principles. If you don't like them, I have others."
"The Walls Are Closing In"
doctoring an email used as part of a process to secure court approval to renew surveillance on a onetime Trump campaign junior adviser, Carter Page. The Justice Department's inspector general, Michael Horowitz, referred the matter for criminal review. . . . Despite the federal surveillance of Carter Page, he was never charged with any crime.NPR reports the Klinesmith indictment pretty straight, with nothing like my title's nostalgia for how this kind of thing was reported when the shoe was on the other foot a couple of years ago. Not to worry, most of the rest of the NLMSM are is accompanied by headlines and ledes suggesting that the investigation does not, repeat not, point to any higher-up conspiracy of any kind, quit saying it does, nothing to see here, move along. When they're done with that message, they turn to worries that the timing of further Durham indictments may be calculated to affect the election. They also spend some time explaining that there's no indication--really! none!--that Klinesmith has cut a deal and is singing like a canary.
Medical Politics
I don't claim to know much about how COVID treatments work, but I find this article pretty persuasive.
Hiatus
Truth and justice prevail in my hometown
My county's citizens prevailed in their move to force the Commissioners Court to set a proposed bond for election. The powers-that-be are glum. The bond is mostly to fund the construction of a new courthouse, a project I believe would have been more likely to win voter approval in November if we (1) made it smaller and cheaper and (2) not tried to pull it off without an election first. But we'll see what my neighbors think. The proposed new courthouse, though expensive, is pretty nice, and our post-storm temporary quarters really aren't a long-term fix.
One of the pleasures of the process has been a woman who spoke at yesterday's contentious Commissioners Court meeting. Oh, she was a star! The whole package: telegenic, good writing, good delivery, seemingly effortless ability to deflect bullying. She spoke simply and intelligently for about five minutes about the importance of preserving the right to vote in a time when our civil rights are under assault. I'm determined to get her to run for office.
Bats and madness
Powerline notes in The Week in Pictures that the Libertarian presidential candidate has been bitten by a possibly rabid bat, and adds
That’s no way to compete for Biden’s voting base.
Sanity
it may be said in passing that thechief claim of Christianity is exactly this--thatit revived the pre-Roman madness, yet broughtinto it the Roman order. The gods had reallydied long before Christ was born. What hadtaken their place was simply the god ofgovernment--Divus Cæsar. The pagans ofthe real Roman Empire were nothing if notrespectable. It is said that when Christ wasborn the cry went through the world that Panwas dead. The truth is that when Christ wasborn Pan for the first time began to stir in hisgrave. The pagan gods had become purefables when Christianity gave them a new leaseof life as devils. . . . But it put upon this occultchaos the Roman idea of balance and sanity.Thus, marriage was a sacrament, but mere sexwas not a sacrament as it was in many of thefrenzies of the forest. Thus wine was a sacramentwith Christ; but drunkenness was not asacrament as with Dionysus. In short, Christianity(merely historically seen) can best beunderstood as an attempt to combine thereason of the market-place with the mysticismof the forest. It was an attempt to accept allthe superstitions that are necessary to man andto be philosophic at the end of them. PaganRome has sought to bring order or reasonamong men. Christian Rome sought to bringorder and reason among gods.
Always root for the underdog
After seven decades in power, the [Chinese] ruling party has faced potentially existential challenges over the past year, from pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong and an economic slowdown to a devastating coronavirus and, most recently, once-in-a-generation floods that have wreaked destruction across central China.But far from diminishing its stature at home, as some in the Trump administration appear to believe, the party’s response to some of these crises has helped solidify the support of existing and aspiring members — or at least neutralized grumbling.That’s right: WaPo’s Anna Fifield actually wrote a puff-piece celebrating that scrappy little Chinese Communist Party for overcoming long odds in a difficult year.
Violence and Growth
CItizens rise up
If the timeline hadn't been so mismanaged, we could still hold an election and get to work bringing the taxpayers on board, not an impossible task, since it's one thing to get 5% of voters on a petition but another to get 51% to vote down the courthouse project. As it is, however, the next available election date is in November, which means the whole thing has to wait until next year, because that's too late to dovetail the borrowing with the tax rate and approve them both by August 31. It's not ideal to delay the financing by a full year, but it beats denying the citizens a bond election.
The more I learn about "certificates of obligation" the less I like them. They were intended to give county governments a little emergency flexilibility, but there are no caps, so we are legally entitled to jam through $20MM in debt in a county whose typical ad valorem tax receipts are only $13MM, without an automatic election requirement. In some Texas counties, local officials have developed the unseemly habit of floating an ordinary bond proposal, losing the election, then jamming through a CO bond without an election, for the same purpose. The legislature put a stop to that by forbidding a CO bond that was identical to a failed general obligation bond election, which only inspired some counties to make trivial changes in the proposal and jam it through anyway.
It's going to be a serious problem for the county to put its reconstruction plans off for a year, but I'm beginning to think it's well worth it for the lesson in the consequences of overreaching with voters. I'm proud of my fellow citizens who stepped up. It's a small county, and the required 5% of registered means they need only about 850 signatures. In only two days, they've already collected about 500.