October 28, 2023
"Right now, I’m in trouble because the Jewish community is upset. But I cannot express this enough: No matter what you read..."
"South Park" lands a shot at Disney.
If suddenly called on to recite Shakespeare from memory, how would you do?
Judi Dench was on Graham Norton last night to push her new book about her life and work with Shakespeare. After making the point we quote Shakespeare daily without knowing it, this happened: pic.twitter.com/CIhP39b4Bs
— Justin Sherin (@wychstreet) October 27, 2023
L.A. guy finds it stressful to order a "scooped" bagel in NYC.
"So a couple of years ago, when I was doing some late-summer decluttering of my daughter’s bedroom..."
October 27, 2023
"The American Civil War began in 1861, and people were 'dealing with so much death and warfare in unprecedented ways'..."
"I believe that scripture, the Bible is very clear that God is the one that raises up those in authority."
"The hoedown was to celebrate the closing of the harvest season and thrown by Shani Mink, 29, the flower farmer and D.J...."
I'm sure Peckham is doing humor. Right?
Didn't we boomers all have back-to-the-land fantasies (and experiences!) back in the day? And didn't the NYT covered our madness too?
"Last Saturday in a small foundry, a man in heat-resistant attire pulled down his gold-plated visor, turned on his plasma torch and sliced into the face of Robert E. Lee."
I'm reading the New York Times version of the story of the melting down of the Charlottesville Robert E. Lee statue.
October 26, 2023
"Frances Bean Cobain, daughter of Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love, marries Riley Hawk, son of Tony Hawk, in ceremony officiated by R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe."
Metafilter discusses this event, saying things like: "The bride and groom are 31 and 30 respectively. You cannot fathom how old this headline makes me feel in my bones" and "My 46-year-old self, realizing that Frances is four years older than her father was when he died, is going to be sitting in the semi-dark this evening, listening to old albums and thinking about things."
What movie did I watch?
"SOMEWHERE IN THE U.S. SOUTH — It was a choice to melt down Robert E. Lee. But it would have been a choice to keep him intact, too."
"The welfare society is fundamentally a community, which is based on a mutual trust that we all contribute. All that is being seriously challenged by parallel societies."
"This simple two-by-two truthfulness matrix is a powerful tool for understanding politicians and how we react to them."
"Jamaal Bowman Charged With Setting Off False Fire Alarm/The congressman from New York set off the alarm in the Cannon House Office Building last month as Democrats were stalling for time to read a spending bill."
Mr. Bowman will plead guilty to the single false fire alarm charge, and has agreed to pay the maximum fine of $1,000.... Mr. Bowman was accused of intentionally pulling the alarm to cause a delay, but he claimed it was accidental....
“I am embarrassed to admit that I activated the fire alarm, mistakenly thinking it would open the door. I regret this and sincerely apologize for any confusion this caused,” Mr. Bowman said at the time. “But I want to be very clear: This was not me, in any way, trying to delay any vote. It was the exact opposite — I was trying urgently to get to a vote.”
I see the blog has a theme today: transparent lying.
The ACLU sides with Trump: The gag order is unconstitutional.
[U.S. district judge Tanya] Chutkan’s gag order, which is currently paused, bars Trump and his attorneys from speech that would “target” foreseeable witnesses, prosecutors in the case and court personnel....
The ACLU said the order is vague enough to violate Trump’s due process rights, contending he “cannot possibly know” what he is permitted to say.
“The entire order hinges on the meaning of the word ‘target,’” the ACLU wrote in its brief. “But that meaning is ambiguous, and fails to provide the fair warning that the Constitution demands, especially when, as here, it concerns a prior restraint on speech.”
The civil liberties group also contended the order is overly broad in violation of Trump’s First Amendment rights, saying it could prevent him from speaking about key points in the campaign, including the results of the 2020 presidential election and the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.
Boldface added (to highlight First Amendment doctrine).
This is the D.C. federal court case, but there's also a gag order in the civil fraud trial in state court in New York. Trump has been fined twice for violating the state court gag order, and Trump took the stand in in that case yesterday.
The state court judge, Arthur Engoron, questioned Trump about his saying there is a “very partisan judge with a person who is very partisan sitting alongside him, perhaps even more partisan than he is.” Was he talking about the judge's law clerk? Trump testified that he was talking about Michael Cohen! How was Michael Cohen, a witness, "sitting alongside" the judge?
Did Trump lie under oath? That's a separate matter, of course, with no bearing on the question whether the gag orders violate Trump's free-speech rights.
ADDED: If you're trying to picture the seating arrangement: "The judge's clerk, Allison Greenfield, typically sits right next to the judge, and during pretrial hearings often questioned attorneys for the two sides herself."
October 25, 2023
Oh! They actually elected a Speaker of the House.
Hmm. Okay. Mike Johnson.
"Rep. Mike Johnson elected speaker, breaking weeks-long stalemate" (WaPo): "He is antiabortion, voted against Ukraine aid and supports LGBTQ restrictions.... Johnson received votes from all 220 Republicans present."
From the NYT: "Who Is Mike Johnson? One of the House’s Staunchest Conservatives. A lawyer and former chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, he played a pivotal role in congressional efforts to overturn the 2020 election.": "Mr. Johnson’s hallmark in Congress has been combining his hard-line views with a gentle style. He emerged at a moment when members of the conference were worn down and ready to accept someone who they did not view as an obvious choice. Instead, he passed a lowered bar: They view him as someone sufficiently conservative and who they do not personally despise."
"The footage has become a widely cited piece of evidence as Israeli and American officials have made the case that an errant Palestinian rocket malfunctioned in the sky..."
"I had a series of caves and each had different amenities – some were next to springs, or near better fishing, hunting and foraging."
Writes Donny Dust, in "A moment that changed me: I had a heart attack at 37 – so I went to live in a cave" (The Guardian).
"Amid the impasse, [Kevin] McCarthy is floating a plan that would reinstall him as speaker and make Jordan, a conservative Trump ally, the assistant speaker..."
Otis.
Wow...seeing #HurricaneOtis rapidly strengthen from a Tropical Storm yesterday at noon to a Category 5 Hurricane at midnight is astounding...almost mind boggling. #Acapulco #Hurricane pic.twitter.com/9jgOu1F8Bg
— Meteorologist Zach Maloch (@ZachMalochWX) October 25, 2023
"I pulled both emergency shut off handles because I thought I was dreaming and I just wanna wake up."
... Emerson told police officers that he thought he might’ve been having a “nervous breakdown” and disclosed that he hadn’t slept in more than 40 hours and had consumed psychedelic mushrooms for the first time....
One more reason to adhere to your ethics even when you are having a lucid dream.
"Think Chris Van Allsburg’s 'Jumanji' gone darker, crossed with Fritz Lang’s 'Metropolis.'"
There are more, not fewer, abortions in the year after Dobbs, but isn't the increase in the earliest weeks of pregnancy?
Even as... restrictions reduced the legal abortion rate to near zero in some states, there were large increases in places where abortions remained legal. Researchers said they were driven by the expansion of telemedicine for mail-order abortion pills, increased options and assistance for women who traveled, and a surge of publicity about ways to get abortions. The response by abortion providers and activists to the end of Roe v. Wade, it seems, has resulted in more access to abortion in states where it’s still legal — not just for women traveling from states with bans but also for women living there.... In the 12 months after the Dobbs decision in June 2022, there were on average 82,298 abortions a month, compared with 82,115 in the two months before Dobbs....
I'd like to see more detailed information. I had to look up how late into pregnancy an abortion pill works. The answer is 10 weeks. What if Dobbs hasn't reduced the number of abortions, but it has motivated women to seek early abortions? Has there been a decrease in mid- and late-term abortions?
"K-12 schools only manage 10 percent of children’s time, and they do it pretty equitably."
October 24, 2023
"We New York Jews have always voted for the Democrats.... Why do Jews vote Democratic?..."
"In truth, there are no good options for an Israeli ground offensive in Gaza. No matter how successful the operation proves..."
Writes Tom Beckett, "a retired lieutenant general of the British Army and executive director of the Middle East for the International Institute for Strategic Studies," quoted in "Israel Says It Will Destroy Hamas. But Who Will Govern Gaza? Israel has set itself a stiff challenge in aiming to vanquish Hamas. But an even bigger question looms: Once in Gaza, how and when does Israel get out?" (NYT).
"The Manhattan district attorney is part of the 'progressive prosecutor' movement, which seeks to use prosecutorial discretion to reduce mass incarceration and racial disparities."
"Anything that turns up the temperature and becomes controversial is where the online fundraising comes from."
"Just came home to hundreds of people outside of my apartment here in NYC calling for Intifada... mostly... white far-left extremists in masks...."
This anti-Israel protest is mostly comprised of white far-left extremists in masks… pic.twitter.com/XxDlmjkHGn
— Eli Klein (@TheEliKlein) October 23, 2023
"Killers of the Flower Moon" provides an occasion for a Slate writer named Rebecca Onion to decry "the white man’s food."
If the idea is to stir up interest in a big new movie when a strike is depriving the press of access to actors, this is not the way to do it. I'd consider going out to see "Killers of the Flower Moon" just because it's a Martin Scorsese movie that reviewers have praised. I'm hesitant though, because I know the thing is 3 hours and 26 minutes long, so I need to believe it's not boring. And then I see this:
"What if I weren’t a writer? Would I be allowed to repeat a story at a cocktail party? Are comedians allowed to repeat things on stage?"
Said David Sedaris, quoted by Gabb Schivone in "The Hot Dogs and the Notebook/How David Sedaris turned me into one of his freaks" (Slate).
"Part of me shudders to view the unfolding catastrophe in Israel and Gaza through the provincial lens of America’s cancel culture debate."
Writes Michelle Goldberg, in "With War in Israel, the Cancel Culture Debate Comes Full Circle" (NYT).
October 23, 2023
It's difficult for Arnold Schwarzenegger to get old, because he was was in perfect shape, but...
"As the planet warms, larger volumes of warm water are bathing the undersides of West Antarctica’s ice shelves, the giant tongues of ice at the ends of glaciers."
"In the compulsively watchable 'The Insurrectionist Next Door,' Alexandra Pelosi visits rank-and-file people arrested because of their roles in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol."
Writes Nicolas Rapold, in "'The Insurrectionist Next Door' Review: Getting Personal In her latest film, the documentarian Alexandra Pelosi has disarming chats with people who participated in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol" (NYT).
"Perhaps the portrayal of Black idleness will always be, if not haunted, then framed by a broader context that makes it seem like an act of resistance rather than a simple fact of life."
Writes Emily Lordi, in "The Visual Power of Black Rest/Black people are generally pictured as doing anything but relaxing—as being attacked, or agitating, or performing. The Black Rest Project aims to widen the lens" (The New Yorker).
Trump decries "a red haired weirdo."
In his interviews with prosecutors [in the classified documents case), Mr. Pratt recounted how Mr. Trump once revealed to him sensitive information about American nuclear submarines, an episode that Mr. Trump denies....
The Failing New York Times story, leaked by Deranged Jack Smith and the Biden “Political Opponent Abuser” DOJ, about a red haired weirdo from Australia, named Anthony Pratt, is Fake News. I never spoke to him about Submarines, but I did speak to him about creating jobs in Ohio and Pennsylvania, because that’s what I’m all about.... Maggie Hagerman and the Misfits never called me for a comment. Why would they, they just write anything they want. Whether it’s correct or not is of ZERO importance to them. “All the News That’s Unfit To Print.” That’s why we call it the Fake News!
Should Trump be calling a man "a red haired weirdo"?
October 22, 2023
I just like that his name is Jordan Character.
But here's a whole paragraph from "What’s in Your ‘Spend the Night’ Bag? A toothbrush, sure, but some people bring everything they need to feel comfortable (and a whole lot more) for a romantic overnight" (NYT):
Jordan Character is a natural health specialist in Los Angeles, so when he’s staying at a woman’s home, he brings a change of underwear, socks and an assortment of natural hygiene products that include fluoride-free toothpaste, shea butter and natural soap (“I’m definitely not washing my body with Dove”). He usually carries psychedelic mushrooms and essential oils on him, so that’s coming, too. “I bring my own water as well,” he said, adding that it’s alkaline. “I’m not trying to get caught up drinking tap water, bro.” He also brings all-natural lube and non-latex condoms: “I just bring one because I don’t want to seem like I’m there just for that.”
"If you love dogs, maybe don’t get one."
That's the subheadline to the Atlantic article "Too Many People Own Dogs" by Rose Horowitz.
I feel like I know what this article says and I agree with it... all before reading it. Do you?
Let's see.... "American humans" these days are more anxious than ever, and it's no coincidence that dogs are anxious too... or anxious humans are just interpreting their dogs as anxiety ridden. Lots of dogs these days are getting dosed with Prozac. Therefore, we're told, getting a dog is "ethically murky."
People who adopt "rescue" dogs may feel proud of their ethics, but they're more likely to begin with a dog that is already anxious. And the way people live today, they may plan to keep the dog indoors nearly all the time. Then they are going to worry about this dog of theirs that seems to be mentally ill.
"The ability to spot danger in advance and prepare for it is the test of a body’s functioning."
Netanyahu once said, quoted by Yair Rosenberg in "The End of Netanyahu/He sold Israelis a story about their safety. It turned out not to be true" (The Atlantic).
Israelis do not forgive failures to secure their safety. Golda Meir left politics after the debacle of the 1973 Yom Kippur War, in which Israel lost nearly 3,000 soldiers following a surprise Egyptian and Syrian attack. Her name is reviled by some in the country to this day. But what happened on October 7, 2023, was worse than what happened on October 6, 1973. Meir lost soldiers—people who had purposely put their lives on the line. Netanyahu lost civilians—the people the state and its soldiers were supposed to protect.... In the end, the man known as “Mr. Security” failed by his own standard, and he failed to fulfill the fundamental expectation of his fellow citizens.....