November 11, 2023
"When elites pine for a third-party candidate, they usually imagine someone like Michael Bloomberg, a fiscal conservative and social liberal."
"The prosecution wishes to continue this travesty in darkness. President Trump calls for sunlight."
"To be sure, many men are fantastic people and partners, and I’m sure many women are loathsome, creepy, or otherwise disrespectful...."
Jordan Peterson overwhelms the NYT columnist Pamela Paul and Cruz crushes Bill Maher.
"When you’re president and you’ve done a good job and you’re popular, you don’t go after them so you can win an election."
Said Donald Trump, quoted in a Guardian article with a title that seems to have been written by someone pretending not to understand sarcasm: "Trump suggests he would use FBI to go after political rivals if elected in 2024 Trump said: 'If I happen to be president and I see somebody doing well and beating me very badly, I say go down and indict them.'"
"Progressive belief isn’t purely an elite phenomenon, but the Great Awokening has largely wielded influence through what Nate Silver calls the 'indigo blob'..."
Writes Ross Douthat, in "Conservative Thinkers Didn’t Create Trumpism" (NYT).
"She didn’t really like doing certain things.... She appeared to find it cringey the way Jill Biden always seemed to be hanging around Joe..."
November 10, 2023
"I’m just saying he has a path to victory. As the former Obama adviser David Axelrod has been saying, Biden has to make this a comparison election..."
Writes David Brooks, in "Democrats: You Can Chill Out Now!" (NYT).
"With West Virginia off the Senate chessboard next year, Democrats must win every race they are defending — and depend on President Biden to win the White House..."
"One of the first questions men ask Angela Liu on dating apps is 'What are you reading?' The question is a softball for Ms. Liu..."
Racial sensitivities spell an end to the long history of the political cartoon.
"So here’s my question, if as the Republicans claim DOJ is weaponized against republicans, how in the heck did this Democrat get prosecuted? Just asking republicans?"
The top-rated comment at The Washington Post, on "Ex-Baltimore prosecutor Marilyn Mosby guilty in federal perjury trial."
Baltimore’s former top prosecutor, Marilyn Mosby, was convicted of two counts of perjury Thursday after she had been accused of lying about her finances to withdraw money from her city retirement account under a program designed to help people struggling financially during the coronavirus pandemic...
Prosecutors said she falsely claimed to suffer from financial hardships to access $90,000 from retirement funds that she later used to buy two homes in Florida....
The trial centered in large part on Mosby’s travel business, Mahogany Elite Travel....
"In Haley’s eyes, everyone else was a squish...."
Writes Benjamin Wallace-Wells, in "Nikki Haley Takes On the Scum at the Third Republican Debate/Donald Trump has dominated the primary season, but his former U.N. Ambassador is the best debater in the field—and she would probably be the G.O.P.’s most effective candidate against Joe Biden" (The New Yorker).
November 9, 2023
"I don’t need to read a single word this shooter wrote to know that there are no answers to be found."
Said a parent of one of the murdered schoolchildren, quoted in "Who should see a shooter’s journal? In Nashville, a leak heightens debate" (WaPo).
The right question is not Who should see? — it's Who should have the power to suppress?
Anyone who doesn't "need to read a single word" to know what to think can refrain from reading. As for everyone else, we are entitled to freedom of information, and that should not depend on our motives or what questions we have or how likely it is that we will find answers. One question, which some may find distasteful, is whether the killer was transgender and whether that had anything to do with the shooting spree. The leaked writing seems to make it less likely that transgenderism motivated the murder. It looked as though the motivation was hatred of affluent white people. There may be no absolute answer to be found, but it sheds some light.
Maybe some people feel that caring about the mind of a murderer is wrong and that you ought to shut yourself off entirely from whatever poisonous thoughts lead to murder. I would say make that argument to your fellow citizens. Tell us to turn off our "true crime" podcasts and Dahmer biopics and all the perverse titillation of murder stories: Turn to the light, to what is wholesome and lifegiving. Don't censor.
"Manchin, 76, had previously flirted with the idea of running on a third-party presidential ticket, an idea pushed by the group No Labels."
I'm reading "Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin says he will not seek reelection" (WaPo).
Somehow, on the same day, "Jill Stein launches 2024 bid as Green Party candidate" (The Hill).
"Rumblings in town had suggested that Gal Gadot, the Israel-born star of Wonder Woman who served in the IDF years ago, was behind the event...."
"Today is yet another really rough day in media; dozens of my Vice colleagues are being laid off globally and we just got news..."
Hillary at her best — summarizing the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.
The best summary of the recent history and current situation you will get in under 10 minutes. https://t.co/g2LHtaxp2H
— Bari Weiss (@bariweiss) November 9, 2023
On the occasion of Nikki Haley's calling Vivek Ramaswamy "scum," I look into the history of "scum" in my archive.
1. October 23, 2019 — blogged here — Trump called his antagonists "human scum":
The Never Trumper Republicans, though on respirators with not many left, are in certain ways worse and more dangerous for our Country than the Do Nothing Democrats. Watch out for them, they are human scum!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 23, 2019
2. On October 24, 2019, I wrote "Troubled by Trump's use of the phrase 'human scum,' I decided to trace its usage, over the years..." This post traces the use of the phrase "human scum" in the NYT archive, beginning in 1897. I note: "The epithet rarely appeared until 2003, when it began coming up repeatedly in statements from the North Korean government. The first person called 'human scum' by the North Koreans was John Bolton."
2. In December 2017, according to The Daily Beast, Facebook was banning women who call men "scum" (because it, supposedly, "classifies white men as a protected group"). I wrote: "I don't support what Facebook is doing, but I do think the use of the word 'scum' warrants a historical note on 'SCUM' — The Society for Cutting Up Men. The author of 'The SCUM Manifesto,' Valerie Solanas, wasn't joking....'The Manifesto argues that SCUM [a revolutionary vanguard of women] should employ sabotage and direct action tactics... "If SCUM ever marches, it will be over the President's stupid, sickening face; if SCUM ever strikes, it will be in the dark with a six-inch blade."'" Solanas became famous for shooting Andy Warhol.
3. On December 11, 2020, I blogged about a Wisconsin State Journal headline "Sen. Ron Johnson called 'delusional scum' for considering challenge to election." I asked "why is the fact that somebody hurled one particular epithet the subject of a headline? If the insult-hurler isn't important enough to name in the headline, why put one nasty insult in a headline?"
4. Back in January 2015, I blogged the immortal words of John McCain: "Get outta here you lowlife scum!"
"The more time Vivek spends around the GOP establishment, the more contempt he harbors for them, and rightfully so."
Ha ha... "two of them." One is Haley. The other is DeSantis in his elevator boots. I thought it was a cheap joke when I heard it last night and started yelling. It's only this morning that I noticed the "two of them" swipe at DeSantis. That's absurd and subtle enough to lift the joke to a new plane and get my respect.The more time Vivek spends around the GOP establishment, the more contempt he harbors for them, and rightfully so.
— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) November 9, 2023
The neocon GOP of 2002 never went away. They just pretended to under Trump. You see that now as they're partying as if it's Sept 12, 2001:https://t.co/zCSgizB63R
"Minnesota Supreme Court dismisses effort to block Trump from state's primary ballot/A group of voters has been trying to ban Trump from the 2024 GOP primary and general election ballots based on 14th Amendment grounds."
"Each subsequent decade has gotten the hyperrealist sculpture it deserves. Right now we’re living in a moment defined by an erosion of trust in what is and isn’t real..."
"Scientists in Japan have identified a virus that selectively kills males — and it happens to be inheritable, creating generation upon generation of all females."
"He was talking quickly and kind of oscillated in his words."
.@VivekGRamaswamy drops Ukraine red-pills pic.twitter.com/2zPA0F1vGi
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) November 9, 2023
November 8, 2023
"Hamas leaders say they waged their Oct. 7 attack on Israel because they believed the Palestinian cause was slipping away, and that only violence could revive it."
It was necessary to “change the entire equation and not just have a clash,” Khalil al-Hayya, a member of Hamas’s top leadership body, told The New York Times in Doha, Qatar. “We succeeded in putting the Palestinian issue back on the table, and now no one in the region is experiencing calm.”...
“I hope that the state of war with Israel will become permanent on all the borders, and that the Arab world will stand with us,” Taher El-Nounou, a Hamas media adviser, told The Times....
The dentist is going to clean your mind and your soul.
"I love YouTube, and I want to be famous on YouTube, because I want a lot of money..."
"The National Zoo’s giant pandas will board a flight to China on Wednesday, ending an era that spanned half a century...."
If "resign" is trending on X, does that mean it's about the person you want to resign?
BREAKING - TRENDING: Republicans calling for Ronna McDaniel, the RNC Chairwoman, (@GOPChairwoman) to resign following election nightmare. 'Resign' is now trending on X. pic.twitter.com/xDW0oPsPwi
— Simon Ateba (@simonateba) November 8, 2023
"I turned into a dolphin/I rang Maud, told her the latest...."
I don't think you can buy "Chapters" in the U.S. yet, but you can read just about everything at Instagram, here, including this:Book’s out now. Link in bio. This sort of thing. 🐬 pic.twitter.com/JrB0PduW7F
— Tim Key (@timkeyperson) November 6, 2023
"The Supreme Court seemed ready on Tuesday to rule that the government may disarm people under domestic violence orders...."
"Twenty-two Democrats voted with 212 Republicans to censure Tlaib, and four Republicans voted with 184 Democrats against the resolution..."
"Ohio voters approved a constitutional amendment on Tuesday that ensures access to abortion...."
November 7, 2023
"When Trump was president I started every morning by reading the New York Times, followed by the Washington Post, and would track both papers’ websites..."
"... regularly throughout the day. To be less than vigilant was to fall behind.... My friend Mike likened this constant monitoring to having a second job. It was exhausting, and the moment that Biden was sworn in to office I let it all go. When the new president speaks, I feel the way I do on a plane when the pilot announces that after reaching our cruising altitude he will head due north, or take a left at Lake Erie. You don’t need to tell me about your job, I always think. Just, you know, do it. It’s so freeing, no longer listening to political podcasts—no longer being enraged...."
Wrote David Sedaris, in "Happy-Go-Lucky," which came out in 2022 (I earn a commission through that link).
I recalled that passage as I was listening to Monday's NYT "Daily" podcast, "Swing State Voters Are Souring on Biden/A new Times/Siena poll finds Donald Trump leading President Biden in five of six key battlegrounds."
"Women, it’s all your fault there aren’t enough children any more. They’ve disappeared, according to the Tory MP Miriam Cates...."
"Problems arise if the drug slows down the stomach too much or blocks the intestines...."
"But who knew (other than paleontologists) that there was a time in Earth’s history when it rained for a million years?"
From "Reinventing the Dinosaur 'Life on Our Planet,' a new Netflix nature documentary, renews our fascination with our most feared and loved precursors" (The New Yorker).
Where are all the articles saying Trump's trial testimony was a disaster?
The testimony isn't even the top story at the NYT. Israel is the top story....
"How much is abortion still motivating votes?/How much of a drag is President JOE BIDEN?/Do Democrats have a Black and suburban turnout problem?/Does any of it matter for 2024?"
It's Election Day, and those are — according to Politico — "Four big Election Day questions."
Branding.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 7, 2023ADDED: I was going to create a new tag for Musk's new AI project, but typing in the letters, I saw that I already had a tag "grok" — lower case "g" — so I just used that, even though I knew the existing posts with that tag had to be just about the word "grok." I wasn't going to create a second "grok" tag, with an upper case "G." I don't like tag proliferation, but — more important — I wanted to publish this post with the old tag so I could click on it and see what I'd done in the past.
Now that we can read (some of) the Nashville shooter's writing, can we understand why the parents of surviving students wanted to suppress them permanently?
“The damage done today is already significant....” said Brent Leatherwood, a parent of three Covenant students.... He called whoever had leaked the photos “a viper” who had allowed someone “who terrorized our family with bullets to be able to now terrorize us with words from the grave.”...
So, the NYT forefronts the parents and the idea that to get information about the criminal's thought process would be to "terrorize" the children. On this theory, we ought to be protected from all hate speech. There should be no news reports of terror attacks. I would have thought the main reason not to publish a criminal's writings would be that the promise of publication might spur on other killers.
November 6, 2023
Compliments are loved, even in New York City... especially when they are so beautifully articulated... by a man who might look like Errol Flynn.
The NYT is live-blogging Trump's testimony at the civil fraud trial.
Let's check in, here.
"The people call Donald J. Trump" and "Trump plods to the witness stand.""This girl wanted life! This girl wanted love!"
"The former president believes he can fight or talk his way out of most situations. "
I'm reading "Trump’s Credibility, Coherence and Control Face Test on Witness Stand/The former president will testify Monday in a trial that threatens the business empire that created his public persona. He will be out of his element and under oath" in the NYT.
"I normally bring nice clothes to travel, but this time I brought my worst, items I could chuck in the trash — where they belonged three years ago."
"Does even this trigger-happy Supreme Court want to be seen as stripping from women in mortal danger from their intimate partners whatever safety this 29-year-old law has provided?"
Research shows that the presence of a gun in the hands of an abuser makes it five times as likely that a female victim will be killed. That inconvenient fact will remain a fact even for a court more attentive to life in 1791 than death in 2023.The Supreme Court is reviewing a 5th Circuit opinion that that struck down a federal law that criminalized possession of a firearm by someone subject to a domestic violence restraining order.
November 5, 2023
"It would resemble a banana republic if people came into office and started going after their opponents willy-nilly. It’s hardly something we should aspire to."
"Honestly any poll that shows a preference for Trump over Biden should be understood as an indictment not of Biden, but of Americans."
Ric Wedge of Brooklyn writes in the top-rated comment on the NYT article, "Why Biden Is Behind, and How He Could Come Back/A polling deficit against Trump across six key states is mainly about younger, nonwhite and less engaged voters. Kamala Harris performs slightly better."
No, it won't.
In the morning, it's light much earlier.
Too much of a bad thing.
I'm reading "Headwind Cycling Race Called Off Over Too Much Wind Storm/Ciarán, which has battered Western Europe this week, proved too much for a quirky Dutch cycling competition" (NYT).
Even in a country where cycling is one of the most popular modes of transportation, many might wonder why anyone would submit themselves to cycling through such treacherous weather conditions. “I wonder that myself sometimes,” Mr. Stoekenbroek said. “There’s a group of people that likes to suffer.”
The country is the Netherlands.
"Anastasiya Nigmatulina, 28, a beautician in Vinnytsia, a city in central Ukraine, said she had watched the show over and over since the war started."
Wisconsin, the outlier.
Discontent pulsates throughout the Times/Siena poll, with a majority of voters saying Mr. Biden’s policies have personally hurt them....
"The night before my surgery, feeling perhaps a bit of sadness at losing my identity as a 'large-breasted woman'..."
Writes Xochitl Gonzalez, in "Me and My Bosom/I wasn’t ready for the 'Doña Body'" (The Atlantic).
"Once a thinker begins to conceive of politics as a pitched battle between the righteous and those who seek the country’s outright annihilation, extraordinary possibilities open up."
A coalition of intellectual catastrophists on the American right is trying to convince people... that the country is on the verge of collapse. Some catastrophists take it a step further and suggest that officials might contemplate overthrowing liberal democracy in favor of revolutionary regime change or even imposing a right-wing dictatorship on the country.... If Mr. Trump manages to win the presidency again in 2024, many of these intellectual catastrophists could be ready and willing to justify deeds that could well bring American liberal democracy to its knees.
Who's the catastrophist here? The writer of this article or the people he's writing about?
Who is he writing about?
Obama is doing something now, in saying that. Does it "move" anything "forward"? Is this, too, "complicit"?
Barack Obama offered a complex analysis of the conflict between Israel and Gaza, telling thousands of former aides that they were all “complicit to some degree” in the current bloodshed.
If we are "complicit," what did we do? What could we have done? But Obama, who was President, doesn't even know what he could have done:
“I look at this, and I think back, 'What could I have done during my presidency to move this forward, as hard as I tried?' But there’s a part of me that’s still saying, ‘Well, was there something else I could have done?'"
He's doing something now, in saying that.
He goes on: