SocraticGadfly

July 06, 2026

Once again, fuck off Blue Anon Mother Jones

Mojo blames Trump for Social Security's looming issues.

Reality?

As I told Kuff, where I saw the link on a recent "weekend link dump":

Uhh, Social Security's problems are driven by both hands of the duopoly. No president this century of either party has made a proposal to increase the FICA income tax cap. No Congress led by either party has done that, either. 
But Biden's expanding Social Security to federal employees without adding money? That bill came from Congress, and had been kicked around by both parties since 2013

You could extend that to a lot of other things.

Let's take COLAs. Why doesn't the FICA tax cap have a COLA, like income tax brackets, or like Social Security payments?

For that matter, why didn't Pelosi COLA what turned out to be the last minimum wage increase bill, in 2007, which I called for at this site at that time?

Hell, per Mojo, why do we have a separate FICA tax?

Cuz FDR said Social Security "mustn't have a dole." And so:

Almost alone among advanced industrial societies, the United States thus defined old-age pension support not as a civil right but as a property right, and built the Social Security system on a private-insurance model.

Just like health care. 

Why did it not go to farmers and domestic workers originally? In part to cut out the self-employed, but even more, to cut out Black folks; without that, I think FDR was afraid he didn't have the votes. But it got all but 33 votes in the House and all but 6 in the Senate. As with Jews, maybe he just was that much more conservative than Eleanor. (Per Wiki's page, 65 percent of Black Americans were excluded.) 

But Mojo's duopoly-tribalist at end and that's that. 

 

July 04, 2026

Tad Stoermer's McResistance™: A steaming pile of shit

A Resistance History of the United States

A Resistance History of the United States by Tad Stoermer
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

GACK. 

And, per the header, I can't think of a better piece to post on the Semiquincentennial. I said "McResistance™" in the header; it's like The Resistance™carried over from Trump 1.0 to Trump 2.0.

Full of seemingly mendacious framing, what I'll call lies by omission and more. And, probably all in the nature of grifting at the left edge of BlueAnon.

A few preliminary notes.

First, I follow Stoermer on Substack. (That will be changing, though.) I had not seen anything wrong with what he says, while noting that everything is paywalled and usually the paywall is pretty quick, as in, within 100 words or so. Boy, is the reality different.

Second, I am not sure that I noticed there that he is a former staffer to a US Member of Congress, maybe because I didn't click the "about" and was otherwise fooled. Since we have no third-party members (sit down Bernie Sanders) that means he’s a Democrat, and hence, as a talker about “resistance,” almost surely a member of The Resistance™. His personal website has more. Very “conventional,” even insider-ish on background. Owns two houses per that, and per IMDB, also does time in the Bahamas. Teh Google does not tell me what Congresscritter he worked for; I am curious and “goes to motive, your honor.” Scratch that; he has an older Wordpress, with an about page and it was for Mary Landrieu. Maybe that's just because he was in Louisiana, in law school at Tulane. But, she was a clear ConservaDem, on about anything other than civil rights.

(Side note: I find it interesting he went by "Taylor Stoermer" earlier. And his IMDB has the Danish "Størmer." Interestingly, that's not his

The first section? Rejecting Edmund Morgan’s late 20th century interpretation of Bacon’s Rebellion when many historians both Black and White used that as their framework for criticizing the 1619 Project (my links?) is a bold move — and contrarian. I've discussed, and critiqued, critics of the project and the project itself here

The second? Yes, even if Giles Corey didn’t say “more weight,” it was resistance to authority. Stoermer doesn’t even explain why he remained silent, for one thing. He also doesn’t note that 1692 Salem still had a “state church” and that none of the people there had fled for the religious freedom confines of Rhode Island. Salem 1692 has little relevance for today, other than to remind people what the First Amendment is all about, or to remind them what hysteria and sociogenic disorder or functional neurological disorder (the old conversion disorder) are about.

Speaking of? He doesn’t seem to mention the First Amendment here. I don’t know that for sure because there’s no index, always a ding.

Related on the issue of relevance? Per a 3-star reviewer, I bet a lot, a lot of people were expecting events more modern than this. While I doubt a 1-star reviewer’s claim that this is AI, a prescheduled book tour and other events does make it look like Tad Stoermer, like many others, is trying to make a buck off the semiquincentennial.

But, by 100 pages in, I’m figuring this is probably 2-star, and I’m not willing to totally reject the AI idea, and I know that I am not likely to read every word and that I am likely to unfollow him on Substack.

But wait, it gets worse!

Lightly grokked chapter 3. I already know what Somerset is, and contra some of the 1619 Project’s critics, said it DID play a part in the Revolution. Stoermer also ignores that it was a wartime policy, as Britain maintained slavery in the Caribbean until the 1830s, and that Black Americans who fled to Nova Scotia faced degrees of racism there. He also has a subsection, “Why we weren’t told this story,” which implies that “they” hid the story.

Chapter 4? Madison, the man who opposed chaplains in Congress, did not write the Bill of Rights for largely, let alone purely, cynical reasons. In an era where all New England states had state churches, the First Amendment alone was far from cynical. Stoermer also knows, but won’t tell you, that in 1787, the “Virginia Plan” DID want to federalize the constitution. And, Virginia's state-level Bill of Rights had both a religious freedom section and a freedom of conscience section.

In the same chapter, we get a WHAT THE FUCK moment. “Zuinglius”? The man commonly known as the Reformed movement reformer “Zwingli”? Nobody spells it in fully Latinized version. It comes off as snooty, when you recognize he's talking about Zwingli, or so it does to me, as if he's trying to shove erudition down your throat. And Stoermer doesn’t tell you that, mixing church and state, to use modern American terms, he was killed in battle. (And, he was more than "just a chaplain"; don't believe any claims to that end.) So, in this chapter, we have multiple lies by omission, and I am thinking he’ll be lucky to be above 1 star.

He also doesn’t tell you that, in 1776, Washington reversed his stance on banning new Black soldiers. Indeed, Blacks were fighting in the Virginia Battalion under Lafayette in 1781.

Patrick Henry as a McResistance model? The man who, unlike Washington, freed ZERO of his slaves at his death? Uh, sure.

If you want an anti-Federalist who took a pass on national office under the Constitution? Why not Sam Adams, who owned zero slaves in the first place?

That said, I’m puzzled otherwise. With this degree of talk about resisting the Constitution, for its flaws, with THIS DEGREE of talk, is Stoermer saying that he thinks the Articles of Confederation were better? Or, is this a chapter for McResistance as cosplay? Neither idea is good, nor palatable.

Chapter 5 on Oney Judge? Washington’s scheme was indeed illegal. I had always before thought the six months were consecutive, but that’s not true. That said, the original 1780 law, and the new in 1788, did not apply to members of Congress. Washington avoided seeking a ruling as to whether executive officials were covered or not.

Chapter 6 on Thoreau? Learned nothing new other than his grandfather resisted patriots in the Boston area and spent a night or two in jail as well.

Chapter 7 on the Underground Railroad and Fugitive Slave Act trials? From a book I recently read, “Freedom Ship,” I know now that, to coin a phrase, more enslaved Blacks freed themselves via The Underwater Submarine than via The Underground Railroad. I had not heard of Chloe Cooley before, or Upper Canada’s 1793 Act Against Slavery. That said. Stoermer oversells it. It’s no different than New York State’s law for gradual emancipation. It did not abolish slavery for any currently enslaved people, it allowed them to be sold within Upper Canada, and back into the US. And, it did nothing to save Cooley. She was taken across the Niagara River and Wiki’s page on her says her fate after that is unknown. (Her page ends by saying New York State’s emancipation act was very similar to that of Upper Canada.) See? Mendaciousness and lies by omission.

And, on history books, feeling the need to repeatedly look shit up, stuff that I'm not sure is less than fully true but about which I have suspicions, is guaranteed to piss me off. I skipped the rest of the chapter because I’ve read books about the Underground Railroad as well as “Freedom Ship,” two bios of Charles Sumner and more.

Chapter 8: I’ve read a bio of John Brown, a dual bio of Brown and Lincoln and other material about Brown’s funders. Largely skimmed.

Chapter 9: Reconstruction. Nothing new.

I then have the insight, after seeing no index at the end, but a “Resistance toolkit,” that he’s like the Indivisible dudebros of the first Bernie Sanders campaign. My thoughts about them and their grifting here.

And yes, grifting is the word, and it’s the word I’m ready to use about Stoermer by the 100-page mark.

I mean, think about it. Book officially comes out in June, tour already lined up. (I’m shocked his website doesn’t have a “merch” page.)

A quote from my Indivisible takedown is relevant:

What's also "funny" is that the sheepdoggers, per Ted Rall, seem to talk more about resisting than about proposing specific ideas. Maybe because they know that today's national Democratic Party, with its neoliberal foundations, is largely bankrupt. And we haven't mentioned foreign policy.

But wait, beyond my Goodreads review, I'm not done kicking Stoermer in the nads.

Per the last sentence of the pull quote?

What’s his stance on Gazans resisting Israel? Russia resisting US-NATO imperialism (while expanding its own)?

Back domestically, what does this former Army officer and son of a Navy officer think of “large standing armies” and whether ours today is too big, not too small?

Otherwise, typical of McResistance, he’s on Instagram, but not Book of Face, even though Hucksterman owns both. He’s of course on Blue Sky and of course not on Shitter. 

Scratch that! Actually, he WAS on there. Academia.edu and one other site both sent me that link, with one calling him “History Doctor” before the link. Further per the three-star reviewer calling him an armchair revolutionary, his LinkedIn lists him as living in Denmark. Guess that armchair came from across the Kattegat direct from Ikea in Sweden? And yes, we’re very much in the land of snarkin’ not cotton. And, per the “shape-shifting” feeling I’m getting — “Taylor” to “Tad,” “Stoermer” vs “Størmer,” etc.? That LinkedIn also says he got his Tulane law degree back in the middle 1990s. Say, age 25 in 1996, and thus, 55 now? Interesting that he’s never landed a tenure-track academic position. Maybe he just didn’t want one. But, even if tenure in a place like Tex-ass has less security than it did in the past, nonetheless, in general, tenure offers a degree of financial security.

Beyond that, actually looking through his Substack? A post that, before the paywall, excoriates any “Hang more [sic, we hung about none] Confederates” ideas? Lost me right there. I’ve long said the biggest thing wrong with Reconstruction’s military force was that we needed 100,000 troops for a generation instead of 20,000 for a decade on occupation duty. Contra Spielberg’s myth-making, Abe Lincoln’s rosewater wouldn’t have been that much better than Andy Johnson’s rosewater + open racism.

Beyond that, actually looking through his Substack? A post that, before the paywall, excoriates any “Hang more [sic, we hung about none] Confederates” ideas? Lost me right there. I’ve said the biggest thing wrong with Reconstruction’s military force was that we needed 100,000 troops for a generation instead of 20,000 for a decade on occupation duty.

As for who he reads? Largely left hand of the duopoly types. The Minnesota nicely odious Garrison Keillor is one.

Per a three-star reviewer on Goodreads, he's an armchair revolutionary, if any. Besides that, even within nonviolence, does he do anything? I mean, like BDS? I check the label all the time on olive oil to make sure none of it's Israeli. I don't buy any Unilever products because of their "tireless" effort to silence the actual Ben and Jerry. I don't buy Coke products. 

Ditto on oil. We have to have gasoline from somewhere, if we don't own electric vehicles, but I still can, and do, boycott eXXXon by brand. 

 View all my reviews

July 03, 2026

"The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution"

The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution: A Thousand-Year HistoryThe Making and Breaking of the American Constitution: A Thousand-Year History by Mark Peterson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

4.5 stars rounded down. The first 2/3 were absolutely 5 star, the big framing issue followed by the actual US Constitution up to 1890. The latter 1/3, though, would probably do only 3.5 stars at best.

This is a long review, even more so with expansion off the Goodreads version. 

This is a magisterial and thought-provoking book that argues the US Constitution was at its core, a land-acquisition, land-development, and land-management tool, along the lines of one of the three written documents that form the core of the British constitution. That said, I don’t totally agree with all of his thought, especially near the end of the book, and am expounding on that part further here.

First, that word. “Constitution.” Peterson notes that the US "Founding Fathers" used it for a system as much or more than a single written document, not only under the Articles of Confederation but in the first years after 1789.

Otherwise, Peterson is serious in this framing, complete to using land and realty terms like "allodial" and "cadastral." 

First, those three documents? Many fairly serious history buffs recognize two of them — the 1689 Bill of Rights and Magna Carta.

The third? William the Conquerer's 1086 Domesday Book.

No, the US Constitution is not an appraisal district book. But? Peterson notes it establishes a decadal census, that the "enumeration of the populace" already in the 1790 Census included more questions than "how many people live here," and that those questions expanded over time, and that part of the purpose of this was for federal government direct taxation. (Until the 16th Amendment, the US government could only tax directly in proportion to a state's population, thought this was ignored in the Civil War, with taxes levied directly on income regardless of state of residence AND having a multi-tier progressive style of taxation. Weirdly, just about zero Civil War histories discuss how it was unconstitutional.)

In addition, Peterson doesn't directly mention it, but Article III, about the US Supreme Court and inferior courts, talks about its powers in all cases of "law and equity." That's not equity in the 21st century version. That's land.

Peterson explains how, while Britain has an “unwritten” constitution, it has written elements — the 1087 Domesday Book, Magna Carta, original form in 1215 but reissued in rewritten forms at various times (tho not explicitly mentioned by him) and the 1689 Bill of Rights.

And, the US, though backboned by a “written” constitution, has unwritten elements — legal jurisprudence, what might be called constitutional common law and more. That’s contra “originalists” or “strict constructionalists.” He references these and other theories, all of which he considers as overlapping highly, near the end. Just as different interpretations of the British constitution wound up unconstrainable by the 1770s without some sort of major action, he notes already by 1990 and 200 years of the US written version, we were facing the same thing.
“No written document can ever completely define, let alone create, a governmental system and the fundamental principals that shape its nature.”

From there, starting with a parallel track, he talks about the Confederation creating the Northwest Ordinance, because Virginia and other states had competing land claims north of the Ohio that they surrendered, but no Southwest Ordinance, because the land claims to the Mississippi south of the Ohio were non-competing and thus not surrendered. From there, he notes that Georgia ratified the Constitution so quickly because it had zero money or troops to fight Indians, and how the Constitution reserved Indian land issues to the federal government.

From there? He excoriates Chief Justice John Marshall for validating the Yazoo land deals, for fetishizing "sanctity of contracts" even in the face of clear fraud, and for also using these cases to put Indian land claims on a lesser tier. (Peterson doesn't explicitly ponder if Marshall would have fetishized "sanctity of contracts" had the issue been something other than lang.)

Re the 1770s, he notes that the British constitutional system had evolved for a land-poor, and (relatively) people-heavy situation, while the US colonies faced exactly the opposite, as part of the situation, even problem.

Peterson notes the rhetoric of “permanence” in all written documents. Notes Madison, Federalist 48 and “parchment barriers.”

He notes “revolution,” pre-1776, per etymology, originally meant “restoration — a turn of the wheel back to an earlier condition.”

“Neither the state constitutions begun in 1776 nor the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 was a stroke of originary genius.

That pull quote, plus the non-pull quote above it, will get further thought below.
 

==

Chapter 1

Part of the Stamp Act’s problem was that it demanded payment in sterling, which Parliament expressly forbade colonies to coin, under the 1764 Currency Act, killing off Connecticut’s nutmeg shilling, etc. Ben Franklin added that, since it was to pay for troops, even if not all the coin went to Britain, much would go to Quebec and the Floridas, the new colonies. Before that, Peterson notes that as “new colonies,” the trio were not considered to be ready for representative government at that time.

He says the Articles of Confederation were “a treaty organization for mutual defense.” And not much else, and without the ability to tax to pay for much of a national army, they weren't even much of that. (That's something to keep in mind in light of Tad Stoermer's "McResistance" book, which is being reviewed tomorrow.)

==

Chapter 7: The President who failed to bark

I had never before read in detail Jefferson’s constitutional concerns not only about the Louisiana Purchase itself, but, looking forward, over the admission of states from that land, given that he believed the constitution and definitely its state-making process applied only to land east of the Mississippi, the US created by the Treaty of Paris, this was generally eye-opening.

He thought a constitutional amendment was needed, as part of his strict constructionalism, but Republican allies said no, and he agrees not to raise this in public. That's the "failed to bark."

Opponents of Louisiana’s admission, like Sens. Josiah Quincey of Massachusetts and Rep. Samuel Dana of Connecticut raised just that issue on the Congressional Dana even introducing such a proposed amendment requiring each of the original states to consent. Jefferson was the dog that did not bark in 1812. And Peterson fairly excoriates him.

As part of this, he also notes the Article IV provisions for how states were to be created. This is one area where I really had trouble with his line of thought, especially when I looked up the full Article IV, and went specifically to Section 3, about the admission of new states beyond the original 13:

New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.

Well, there are several issues, whether it's more with the thinking of Thomas Jefferson and the strictest of strict constructionalists, Peterson's analysis, or both.

I see nothing in that language that precludes creating states from lands outside the Treaty of Paris borders of the US. Yes, there could be an implicit understanding that "this union" meant the 1783 borders, but, to hoist strict constructionalists by their own petard, does it say that? No.

For one thing, the treaty-makers in Paris gave half a shot at trying to get East and West Florida from Britain. Although they failed, they weren't giving up. Also, although the War of 1812 invasion of Canada was more about general antagonism to Britain compounded with pursuing northern Indians across the border, nonetheless, the Revolutionary War dream of incorporating parts of Canada surely hadn't died. So, the Founders and those immediately in the next generation were surely mentally prepared for new states outside of the original Constitutional boundaries. As for Jefferson's cited worries about the foreign-ness of New Orleans, that hadn't prevented Congress itself from trying to detach French-background Quebec from British control, nor from angling to try to get Spanish-background, but British-controlled since 1763, Floridas.

Peterson doesn't do the best job on this, nor does he cite how many people disagreed with Jefferson, nor note that Federalist opposition in Congress was mainly politicized opposition trying to hoist Jefferson by his own petard. 

Let's also not forget that Jefferson had been planning the Lewis and Clark expedition even before proposing the buying of New Orleans, let alone the acquisition of the whole Louisiana territory.

Essentially, Jefferson strikes me as a pseudo-Hamlet, a fake ditherer, and for whatever reason, Peterson — wrongly in my book — takes him too seriously. 

Heading back to Peterson, if the U.S. Constitution really were a land-acquisition, land-organizing, and state-organizing machine, and were largely intended as such by the Founders, they would have been thinking of land acquisition beyond Treaty of Paris boundaries, and of treating such land, for purposes of potential statehood, just like land inside Treaty of Paris boundaries but outside the 13 original colonies/states, after the Northwest Ordinance in the northwest, and after eventual individual state land surrenders in the "Old Southwest."

So, either his tacit support of Jefferson's interpretation is wrong, or his grand theory's legs aren't quite as strong as he thinks. 

 Chapter 8 The Machine Runs Amok: Expansion, Slavery and the Civil War

Peterson talks about the Domesday Machine continuing to the Civil War. The admission of Missouri, Jefferson’s “fire bell,” is next. The Boon’s Lick (as he has it spelled) area was one-third its population then. Next, Texas, and Americans moving there to force eventual union with the US.

Chapter 9 The Machinery Stalls Out: The Challenge of the Arid West

OK, during the Civil War, as many buffs know, Nevada clearly came in unconstitutionally, but Peterson really picks it up in this chapter. As part of this, he discusses John Wesley Powell and his western drainage basins, and Henry George and his single land tax. After that, it was politics. Republicans split one Dakota Territory into two states and rebuff a Democratic compromise to admit New Mexico. (It already then had more population; remember, Mexican citizens were granted US citizenship by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.) Although the constitutional population is 60,000, the informal rule was that a would-be state should have at least as many people as the smallest current state. Wyoming fell far short in 1890, and until the admission of Alaska, remained short. Eventually, Alaska passed it, and it went back to the smallest US state.

OK, that's the end of Part 1. He's mentioned what the Constitution was FOR, in his opinion. What happens when its original purpose is largely gone? What replaces that? That's theoretically what Part 2 is about.

Chapter 10 is about three distinct sub-nations — North, South and West. Really, the Old Northwest felt this way pre-Civil War, but Peterson picks this up as the first chapter of his Part 3, with the start of the second century of the US Constitution, the immigration to the Old Northwest and its industrialization in Chicago, Milwaukee, etc. But Peterson misses Turner’s “close of the frontier” thesis, which would have tied in here. (See how this book is thought-provoking, but yet has a miss here and there? It will have more misses in the future.) I mean, the original "for" is done because .... the frontier is gone! And, missing this put my skeptical antennae up.

I took side notes here about various US Censuses both before and after 1890, re my note above.

1790 asked over/under 16 years of age by number, male/female by number (for military reasons) and any slaves.

By 1820, the age breakdown was under 10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45 and over 45, male and female, less granular age breaks for both slaves and free blacks, and also foreigners not naturalized.

By 1840, it was 5 year increments up to age 20, then 10 year up to 100. Then, you were asked your employment, not by individual company, but by seven broad classes of commerce, like agriculture, mining, trade, shipping, etc. Educational levels were first asked about on this census. Today's census wingnuts would have been erupting already then.

By 1860, the censed were being asked yet more detailed economic conditions. Remembering that farming was still the big occupation, you were asked what types of crops you were growing, and their estimated yield. Just like a county appraisal office today. By 1840, and expanding by this time, the Census was also moving beyond individual enumeration. Washington was gathering information on how many libraries, schools and such each county had. Here's the Census Bureau's official link for 1860. Mortality issues began to be asked at this time.

1870 saw the elimination of stats about slaves, of course. As the economy changed, more economic questions were asked about manufacturing.

By or before 1900, questions about marital status, number of children of each adult, whether currently living or not, whether currently at home or not, years of residence for the non-natives whether naturalized or not, whether a home was owned or rented and more, were all on the census. The wingnuts would really be apeshit. Anyway, the Census questions are moving beyond agriculture, mining, forestry and related.

Near the end of Chapter 10, on 243-44 he falters, in my opinion, claiming the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments undermined the Philadelphia compromise. I can halfway buy that about the Sixteenth, even though Peterson ignores that the Civil War income tax was unconstitutional for not being levied in proportion to state population itself. (Again, why do either Constitutional or Civil War scholars not pick up on this?) Later on, I started thinking, he is a bit like a more modernized Walter Karp in some ways.

The Seventeenth? I totally reject his thesis here. The only thing changed was going to direct popular election. The equality of states in the Senate was preserved. Frankly, his discussion on page 245 seems to misunderstand what was most at concern in the "New Jersey plan," and that was equal state representation, not indirect election. But, the idea of an indirectly elected Senate was was readily accepted in the "Great Compromise." The "Virginia Plan" also had a bicameral legislature, also with indirect election for the upper house. In its case, state legislatures nominated candidates and the U.S. House elected them.

He is right about how the US more and more has the "virtual representation" that the Founders rejected. Yes, I know that at the time of Philadelphia, it was thought that election by state legislatures would bind states more firmly to the Constitution, but that was 130 years ago as of the time of the amendment and the Civil War was 50 years ago. And, the Philadelphians explicitly rejected any "unit rule" idea for Senate voting, which partially weakened the direct state ties. Also, the first potential amendment to this end was proposed way back in 1826, which Peterson doesn't mention.

Chapter 11: The Great Transformation

Primarily about the rise of regulatory agencies, which of course started with Theodore Roosevelt but really took off with the New Deal. Not much special here.

One side note here: The Federal Housing Authority encouraged banks et al to punish mortgagees that did not install AC. Even "Cadillac Desert" didn't mention this.

Chapter 12: The Long Crisis of the Constitution

This starts with a partial overlap with chapter 11.

His first plaint is the Supreme Court's "insular cases" distinguishing "incorporated" from "unincorporated" territories. It's why there's subminimum wages in Guam et al today. To put it more bluntly, the rulings were racist for Caribbean and Pacific islands that were non-white. (Hawaii, with its white sugar plantation owners overthrowing the kingdom, was "incorporated."

It's "Brains Trust" as a plural. Surprised Peterson missed that.

He notes the post-WWII national security state was alien to the spirit of 1787. He notes the "War on ... X" mentality. Militarization of the US. Takes Ike’s comment about the military-industrial complex at face value, ignoring that, in exchange, Ike substituted the spying-snooping-overthrowing complex. (He's not alone on this; lots of people give Ike an unwarrented pass.)

A short epilogue "Toward 2090" notes the US has been "constitutionally adrift" since the end of the Cold War. Peterson wonders what the country and Constitution will be "for" in 2090. He cites a 1974 book by Rexford Tugwell et al that notes the founders (and others around the Euro-American world) cited "natural rights" but not "natural duties." Tugwell called for a Bill of Responsibilities, and further empowering the House.

The epilogue concludes with a bit of turd-polishing the Founders. It was, in reality, as he notes in the beginning in discussing "revolution" etymologically, a conservative re-turning in 1787. (Interestingly, Shay’s Rebellion as a partial cause of the Constitutional Convention is never mentioned.) Plus, as he notes, there was not "originary genius" at Philadelphia.

As for replacing today’s constitution, just as the Founders replaced the Articles of Confederation? With the amount of wingnuttery running around America, I’m far less sanguine of a good result from that than Peterson is.

That’s where I really thought of him as a new Walter Karp and falling to 4.5 moved downward.

Karp?

The first book of his that I read was great, for his exposure of the Machiavellian hypocrisy of William McKinley on things like the Philippines (all new to me at the time) and the posturing of Woodrow Wilson (generally not new). The second book? Middling, in part because Karp seemed to fetishize the Constitution too much. The third book? Pretty bad, between a mix of guzzling Jeffersonian Kool-Aid to being a sociological version of a constitutional originalist, and other things.

With all of this, if Peterson publishes another book and I see it at my library, I'm certain to read, but won't expect genius.

View all my reviews

July 02, 2026

Texas Progressives

Off the Kuff notes Greg Abbott's pseudo-evolution on data centers, in which even Sid Miller is making him look bad. 

SocraticGadfly talked about self-hating Blacks, Hispanics and Muslims attending the GOP state convention.

Talarico told Texas Democrats in convention the party must stop taking Blacks for granted. Black Democrats agree, beyond Jasmine Crockett's tepid support for him, which will remain tepid through November. That's why people like Kuff need to pump their brakes.

Bernie Sanders hater Dolores Huerta, not the most democratic person in Nevada, told Texas Democrats to "save democracy." See here and here for my take on 2016 and 2020 Nevada primaries.

Neil at the Houston Democracy Project posted on Abbott’s likely far-right pick for Texas Secretary of State. With Harris County having a Black Muslim progressive woman as Democratic nominee for County Judge & Texas Republicans being anti-democratic and bigoted, we must be prepared for anything. 

Big John Cornyn makes a tiny break with the GOP establishment, worrying about closed primaries backfiring. 

Texas rabbis rip the Jewish fig leaf off "Judeo-Christian" over the State Board of Ed's proposed list of bibul verses for public school reading. Yeah, there will be lawsuits. 

In something parallel, the Monthly says "Christian nationalists are cheering" for the SBOE's proposed changes to school curricula. 

Contra RRC claims about doing all it can about old well blowouts, Russell Gold talks about "the Dead Sea of Texas," a Pecos County brine lake that's been around 20 years. 

SpaceX: Unsafe workplace.

"'Hunter vs United States': The most important criminal case of the term" is a very good and very important read about Justice Neil Gorsuch's likely thought on expanding the scope of jury trials, and as a sidebar, how, on at least some issues, SCOTUS conservatives don't all fit in one package.

The Texas Signal celebrates Pride in Caldwell County.

Your Local Epidemiologist highlights the great success of the HPV vaccine.

July 01, 2026

Desal and cloud seeding for the Colorado? Shock me

Per Grist, because the seven Colorado River Compact states still refuse to face reality, those are the top items.

Cloud-seeding? Doesn't work that well. Besides, to the degree it does work? A Plains state is just waiting to sue for water deprivation.

Desal? Environmentally disastrous, and ain't that what got is in this situation in the first place?

Even nuttier things, like "mining" deep desert groundwater, stuff perhaps deeper than the Ogallala, speaking of the plains? GACK!

And, nationally, timid Democraps are part of the problem with "climate hushing." 

Oh, carbon capture doesn't work, either. Pro Publica has a great piece. The real sad problem is that, just like Big Tobacco, as described in detail in another story, is Big Oil buying off scientists to do its bidding. Related? Pro Publica does a deeper dive of how Big Oil, and specifically BP (stands for "Bullshitting about Petroleum") specifically bought off Princeton scientists in its "Wedges" study 22 years ago. https://www.propublica.org/article/wedges-climate-research-bp-fossil-fuel-princeton

The Observer now in the tank for Proposition 4 ideas

I stand by what I said last April: Prop 4 will be a big economic boondoggle.

I called out librulz (sic) last year October for supporting it while ignoring that it was not only an economic boondoggle but environmentally destructive.

But yet, here's the Observer, running a piece about how we should, even if the science ain't there yet, find a way to use produced water. Beyond the fact that the science may never totally be there, this encourages fracking, even having the rest of us subsidizing it, which of course boosts the climate crisis. 

Sadly, but unsurprisingly, they're not alone. The Sierra Club said vote yes, including supporting it at Lege testimony. (Sadly, a real environmental org like Center for Biological Diversity wasn't there.) That merited another callout

Even worse, the Tex-ass Green Party supported it, which led to yet another callout, along with me proclaiming myself an independent leftist at the state as well as national level. As of now, on the three Greens on the state ballot on statewide races, I'll only be supporting one. (It's also sad they got a candidate for lite guv, not guv, and also, no RRC candidate. I do get the ballot fees; maybe next year's Lege will approve what was considered in 2025 and let them be recycled to party coffers.)

And, this once again shows that while the Observer may be left-librul, it's not leftist.