The Logic of the Gabbard Pick

I had forgotten this story about TSA placing Gabbard on a watch list.

In the discussion of the post below about her nomination to be DNI, I had mentioned that she was not an intelligence officer but a medical one. Thomas pointed out that she'd served in Civil Affairs, though as a reservist (not everyone realizes that Civil Affairs is a special operations posting in its active duty component, and thus entails some SOF training). She was a military police officer. None of that really points up why you'd pick her as DNI. [UPDATE: see comments for further corrections from Thomas, who is apparently a fan of her career.]

If the purpose is to de-weaponize the government so it isn't used against its own citizens, which is a noble and proper purpose, then the TSA story explains the choice. She has reason to be personally offended by what was done to her, as Trump does himself. It makes sense of what the project really is.

National Popular Vote Compact


That hoary left-wing idea for functionally disposing of the Electoral College is still a terrible idea. It technically only comes into force if ratified by enough states to make it binding, but it’s still worth pointing this out. 

Tulsi for DNI

That's a stunning pick. This is definitely shaping up to be the anti-establishment administration. Hopefully, it'll be exactly what we need.

Jim Hanson is happy with the SECDEF pick, too, which is a good recommendation from where I sit.

We bid farewell

This HotAir piece by David Strom is preaching to the choir, I know, but the final video is Schadenfreude in a bottle. Expert Dem analyst Dr. Arlene deleted her account shortly after the election, so I'm afraid we won't get to watch her updated post-election thoughts.

Her cackle rivals that of Harris and Clinton.

More Kilmer

A much less famous poem by Joyce Kilmer was featured in this Veteran’s Day piece at PJM. As noted in our earlier discussion of his poetry, Kilmer earned the right to express these sentiments by volunteering for hazardous scouting duty — duty that cost him his life. 

A Major Proposal

One of the things the incoming administration is proposing to do is to back national concealed carry reciprocity. In a way, this sounds simple. Exactly how your driver’s license is good in every state, your concealed carry license would also be. Crossing state lines wouldn’t matter; you’d be carrying legally in one state or another. 

And for most of us, it’s not that big a change anyway because most states already recognize each other’s permits. For example, if you have a permit in your home state of Florida, here’s the map of who recognizes your permit. 

That’s enough states to call a Constitutional Convention, propose and ratify an expansion of the 2nd Amendment. 

So for most people in all those green states, this is a minor change that would only slightly expand their functional liberty. 

The big change is that many states, including Florida, will issue permits to non-residents— for example, if you’re traveling there and your own state won’t. A strong Federal reciprocity law would effectively bring shall-issue concealed carry to all Americans. Even in California; even in Maryland; even in the District of Columbia. 

That’s a big deal. 

Veterans and Helene

A Washington Post photojournalist discovers what I've been telling you all along: veteran volunteers are at the forefront of the hurricane response. 
Their backgrounds make them well-suited for a disaster response of this magnitude. “This is what we do when we go to war. We go into bad scenarios with towns turned upside down,” said Mark Elkhill, an Army veteran with the relief group Christian Rangers. (The name Christian Rangers is taken from an exercise in Robin Sage, the nearly two-week special field “final exam” for would-be Green Berets.)

Most of the group with Elkhill are former U.S. Army Green Berets and this is exactly their mission: to train local people to recover, sustain and protect themselves, he said while taking a break from cutting firewood that locals will use to heat their homes this winter. “The only difference is we’re not getting shot at here, which makes it a thousand times easier,” Elkhill said.

I told somebody I was with during emergency operations that it was like 'the good-parts version of war.' It's all the eudaimonia without the downsides. It's small wonder that veterans are 'finding purpose' in it, to use the Post's chosen language.

Independence

I can't embed this YouTube short, but it's a fun one to click on.

Surprising shifts

Matt Vespa points out that this election was not just more of the "revenge of the white working class" dynamic. Some amazing precincts flipped red in places like New York's Chinatown and a Chicago ward.

You do that

I keep reading articles that flirt with awareness of where the Dem party went wrong, only to draw a laughable conclusion about the cure.
“Obviously this is a major reckoning for the Democratic Party in terms of, particularly as it relates to young men, Black and Hispanic voters and rural voters,” said Jef Pollock, a Biden and Harris campaign pollster. “If the economy were perceived by voters as swimming, things might be different. But for now, it’s clear these voters I’m talking about — particularly young men, Black men, Hispanic men, and rural White voters — do not see the Democrats as addressing their everyday needs, and that’s something we need to think about holistically.”
We certainly need to see a lot more political speeches emphasizing the holistic approach. More cowbell!

The linked article contains an excerpt from a WaPo piece, presumably behind a paywell, not that I'd go there anyway.

Veterans Day

A very happy day to all of you who served. 

Blinding insights

The Guardian notices that people hate leftists. They're still unclear on why:
Many of them, of course, have arrived at that conclusion thanks to outright bigotry.

Cast Iron & “Never”

Never and forever are neither for men.
You’ll be returning again and again. 

-Fritz Leiber, “The Circle Curse,” Swords Against Death

My wife of 25 years did something I warned ‘never’ to do: she put a piece of my cast iron through the dishwasher. This is the classic offense against Southerners’ sensibility that people from the north do after they move down here. This was a grill press rather than a skillet, but still  

Cast iron really is indestructible, though. It took some work to clean the rust and reseason it today, but it came out just fine. I shouldn’t have worried about it. 


It’s good as new, which is to say, not as good. But it’s good enough to get started rebuilding a new layer of seasoning. 

Happy Birthday, Marines

A message from the Commandant on the occasion of the 249th birthday of the United States Marine Corps. 

UPDATE:

Stolen from a friend. 



Helene's Wrath: A Visual

The Washington Post has an interesting satellite view that expands slowly out into a map of the area northeast of Asheville, and then to all of the nearby areas centered on that region. Most of that area is National Forest, sparsely populated in part because it protects Asheville's reservoir lake. The down side is that lake has been murky and full of sediment since the hurricane, complicating the recovery for Asheville residents whose water system is not set up to handle heavy sediments. Normally that water is pristine, at least for city water.

AVI will have seen a lot of those worst-hit areas on his trip down here, the one where he and family went up to Craggy Gardens on the Blue Ridge Parkway. That road overlooks the North Fork Reservoir, the lake I was talking about above. 

Old Fort, on the map east of Asheville along the I-40 corridor, is still said to be in bad shape. Asheville itself remains troubled. 

UPDATE: 

As you would expect, the drying downed trees create a fire hazard that exactly maps to the worst of the hurricane strike. 



Rabbit/Duck

Illinois just lost its assault weapons ban, based on a philosphical argument about the famous rabbit/duck graphic

Always nice to see philosophy used for the good. 

MarsLink

Now you're talking.
In a move that feels straight out of sci-fi, SpaceX has proposed “Marslink,” an adaptation of its Starlink satellite network, to deliver internet connectivity on Mars. 

Presented to NASA, Marslink aims to establish a high-speed data relay system—capable of transmitting 4 Mbps or more—across 1.5 astronomical units, the distance between Earth and Mars.

The concept envisions multiple satellites in Mars orbit, leveraging Starlink’s advanced laser communication tech to maintain a constant, near-instantaneous data flow between planets. 

This network could serve Mars missions, allowing real-time images and data streams from Mars to Earth, as well as supporting future ground operations and Mars orbit assets.

Let's go to the stars. 

Grownups

I saw a pithy GenX explanation yesterday, basically "You tried to shove a Nanny State down the throats of a generation that didn't have a nanny, that was barely supervised by parents." Apparently a whole swath of the population has some pretty solid libertarian leanings, which is a great relief to me after watching all the infantile tantrums by the "leave me alone but support me from a distance you rich jerks" crowd.

The meltdown brigade would do better to worry about the newest outbreak of pogroms, this time in Amsterdam. Israel, in any case, is alert and on the job. Not much infantalization happening in Israel these days.

The devil you say

CNN worries about how the second Hitler term will be even worse than the first:
[T]he staffing decisions this time around will be designed intentionally around individuals who will not work to undermine his agenda from within. . . .

The People Shifted to Trump

There are an endless number of election post-mortems today, focusing on how Trump overcame his 'baggage' (mostly people didn't believe the media's tales about him) and why he won. I'm going to talk briefly about why Democrats lost. 

The clear evidence of the vote was that the people shifted towards Trump almost across the board. College-educated? Up four points. Over 25% black? Up four points. Over 25% Latino? Nine points. Large population over 65? 4.9 points. Large population 18-35? 5.6 points. Literally not one county in America voted for the Democratic candidate at higher rates than in 2020.

Why did this happen? Because the Democrats refused to trust democracy. They had the chance to admit that the public had serous doubts about the age and mental stability of their candidate, Joe Biden. They could have held a primary to consult the people about who they should run instead. Had they done so, that primary would have produced a candidate with broad popular support among Democrats, who could contest the general electorate for its approval. 

Instead, they did everything they could to avoid democracy. The elites decided that no primary was to be held, and they did everything they could to prevent one. This included extensive lawsuits to keep opponents off the ballot, including the scion of the Kennedy family, RFK Jr. If they had let him compete against Biden and lose, he would have endorsed them after it was clear he had been fairly beaten in an election. Because they did it with trickery, lawfare, and even the infiltration of his campaign, he went over to Trump and threw his support there instead. 

Then, when it became crystal clear that Biden wasn't up to another term, the party once again refused to solicit popular opinion or input, and forced a replacement without debate or any sort of election. She lost because she never had any public support to begin with, because she never won a single election -- not a primary, not a single delegate to be a Democratic Presidential candidate, not this year and not ever. None of the process of building public support, working out what the people want and need from their candidate, none of that ever happened. They just tried to ram it through without consultation. 

Having done that, of course, she didn't really campaign. She hid from the press and from the people, took scripted questions that were designed to protect her from scrutiny, and didn't do the work of getting out there and getting to know the ordinary people, finding out what they need, winning their support. 

Meanwhile, that's all Trump did. He did democracy better than them. Much better, because he was the only one who even tried it. 

UPDATE: Or possibly there's a simpler explanation: ~15MM votes just evaporated from 2020, compared to other recent elections.