SocraticGadfly

March 07, 2025

Notes for The Resistance 2.0 on trying to own the MAGAts on Christianity

Friendly reminder for The Resistance 2.0 (pussy hats optional):

The same Jesus reported in Matthew 25 as asking if you fed the hungry, clothed the naked and visited the prisoner said in Matthew 10: "I came not to bring peace but a sword." He continues by noting he has come "to turn a son against his father and daughter against her mother."

Isaiah and Micah talk about beating swords into plowshares, but Joel mentions beating plowshares into swords.

Yahweh himself orders a genocide, a holocaust, in 1 Samuel 15, in the Tanakh or Old Testament.

Ecclesiastes says there's a season for everything.

Related?

There is no theology of the bible, and you can mine whatever you want, as far as what "Christianity" is.

Related?

The same is true for Judaism, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism. One can make all sorts of claims about any world religion from its own scriptures.

More relative to the matter at hand?

Paul says in Romans that people should submit unto the governing authorities. Jesus says, in the "whose image" dialogue, essentially, pay your taxes — all of them.

March 06, 2025

Texas Progressives talk state judicial reforms, hypocrisies, more

SocraticGadfly went one better than Court of Criminal Appeals presiding judge David Schenck on real judicial election reform in Texas

A&M System regents have banned drag shows, and their claiming that part of the reason why is because such shows are anti-woman is specious hypocritical bullshit. That's even as Tranny Dannie Goeb is getting the state Senate to further whack its version of the state budget for higher education, claiming public universities are still too much in thrall to diversity, equity and inclusion measures.

The Observer is right: The Tex-ass Senate's new bail bills will just needlessly jail people who can't afford it. 

Per the Monthly (I found a non-paywalled version via Firefox's Pocket several days ago but didn't save it, Dripping Springs shows that both HOAs and exurbanites are deep in Dantean malebolges of hell.

Mike Miles' old Odessa charter school may have cheated, not offering required social studies classes, but giving kids grades. That's a longform from the Observer.

Off the Kuff looked at January campaign finance reports for Houston-are state legislators.

Greg Tepper worries that the school voucher proposal could really harm Texas high school football. 

Olivia Julianna believes in vaccines. 

Deceleration notes how Elon Musk is boosting climate denialism globally.  

The Eyewall worries that the Muskian rampage will halt or even undo progress on hurricane forecasting.

The Observer reports on local law enforcement agencies getting involved with ICE.

March 05, 2025

Buy Nothing Day may not have accomplished much

Per this piece, which is of course very preliminary, and doesn't appear to have looked at shopping AFTER Feb. 28, that's about what I expected when I skeptically mocked the idea, both based on past history and on wondering what oversight John Schwartz has.

Amazon? Actually up slightly. Overall e-commerce down 4 percent from the Friday before and 6 percent from a year ago. But, how much of that is due to this and how much is due to economic fears, from tariffs and other things, who knows? In addition to the People's Union, Target had been targeted (I see what I did) for all of February by Black groups made it rolled back diversity, equity and inclusion measures. These groups may also have thought Schwartz was late to the part, bigfooting them or whatever.

Also, there's the question of will this last. A good comp here is sales tax holidays. Do you buy any more shirts, socks and undies for a full year, or even six months, just because you buy a bunch on a sales tax holiday? I don't.

But, back to Schwarz. His People's Union, or "People's" Union until he has more transparency, is going more grifting:

Starting in the second week of March, I will be releasing exclusive member only video blogs right here on The People’s Union USA website! These will be powerful, inspiring, and detailed video messages covering:
  • How we can organize more effectively
  • Upcoming events & strategic actions
  • Updates on the movement, website, and progress
  • Real discussions on where we go from here
This is just the beginning of something bigger. Together, we are building a movement that cannot be ignored. Stay tuned, stay engaged, and let’s keep making history.

And, how much will a membership cost?

Zelensky IS on ever-thinning ice, whether The Resistance 2.0 knows it or Nat-Sec Nutsacks™ will admit it

A MUST READ on this issue? The piece that Der Spiegel dropped on March 3. It non-snarkily portrayed Zelensky as a would-be Churchill whose popularity had pretty much cratered on broken promises before the Russian invasion. It also notes that then-PM of Britain Boris Johnson did NOT sabotage a peace deal. It references his comment and analyzes it:

"Nobody can tell me that anyone can simply talk President Zelenskyy out of something like that, not even Boris Johnson. His closest advisors can’t even do so,” says Reznikov, the former defense minister. "The conditions laid out by the Russians were completely unrealistic,” says Mykhailo Podolyak, one of the Ukrainian negotiators.

That's within the context of also saying Bucha, where Russia upped the ante on war crimes (of which Ukraine is not innocent, whether at Bucha or more broadly) was also a deal-breaker at the time. 

As for realness or unrealness? Ukraine's insistence, per Wiki, at least before Trump became president, that Putin and other top Russians be prosecuted for war crimes and that it surrender all lands, including I presume the Donetsk and Luhansk that were supposed to be guaranteed autonomy under Minsk, is more unrealistic than Russia's stance today and, AFAIK, in mid-2022. If you want back the post-2022 lands, Zelensky, I can buy that, even if it's not totally realistic? Crimea? Even if I discount Putin for lying levels at 50 cents on the dollar, blame the US and the Maidan. Per Counterpunch, the likes of John Mearsheimer had Putin worried the Crimea would be like an aircraft carrier: 

Mearsheimer presents the basic outline of Putin’s response to the coup. If Ukraine joined NATO, the Crimean port of Sevastopol would serve beautifully as a US/NATO military launching pad. The act of incorporating Crimea into Russia was “not difficult given that Russia already had thousands of troops at its naval base in the Crimean port of Sevastopol. Those forces were augmented by additional troops from Russia, many of them not in uniform. Crimea was an easy target because roughly 60 percent of the people living there were ethnic Russians, and most preferred to become part of Russia.

You're not getting it back. On the third hand, Yeltsin did pledge to respect Ukrainian territory; presumably, at least in 2000, Putin accepted that. On the fourth hand, in light of Counterpunch, the Maidan made that null and void.

That said, on the other side, the level of demilitarization of Ukraine that Russian President Vladimir Putin wanted, along with just what constituted "denazification," were unreal on the Russian side. The latter was perhaps face-saving, but there was no way Ukraine was going to shrink its army by two-thirds or whatever. See this long piece for all the issues being faced at Istanbul in spring 2022.

None of this is to say that Johnson's framing of Zelensky had no effect. His referencing Zelensky as a new Churchill would have increased his willingness to dig in. But, he already had the support of his full government, and a vast majority of the populace, at the time.

One other thing must, MUST be raised here, which I already knew, but is further backgrounded by Der Spiegel. Per the Ukrainian constitution, Zelensky can “undeclare” martial law and ask the Rada to approve that; he can then hold an election after all.

We have parallels in the US. We held midterm elections in 1814, even though the British had burned the White House in late August and the threat of further invasion stood overhead. The first Tuesday following the first Monday in November was not a uniform election date then and many states held elections on other dates. Per Wiki, the dates were April 26, 1814, to August 10, 1815. Eight states were between Aug. 29 and Oct. 11, 1814, in the shadow of the Aug. 24 burning. Of more direct relevance yet? On Sept. 25, 1862, Lincoln declared nationwide martial law and nationwide suspension of habeas corpus.  We still held midterm elections. Later, tho not nationwide, Lincoln both declared martial law and suspended habeas in Kentucky, starting July 4, 1864. The presidential and lesser elections that fall were still contested in Kentucky like elsewhere. To add to that? More than once, and most recently since the dustup in DC, Zelensky has promised to resign — with new elections following — in exchange for Ukraine getting into NATO. So, you're wrong, Ms. Nat-Sec Nutsacks™ fellow traveler at The Dissident. Zelensky just said you're wrong.

Zelensky, as Der Spiegel makes clear, doesn't want an election because he's almost certain he'd lose. And, I read through him enough to think that, for this and other reasons, he wants the end of the war to be very far away, per his March 3 statement. (One other reason is that he fears for his life if a peace treaty has any real land concessions. On that, I can't blame him; the Ukrainian neo-Nazis and fellow travelers are deadly serious.)

More here from Spiegel:

He has a powerful challenger in Valerii Zaluzhnyi, the former head of the armed forces, who everyone believes is going to go into politics.
Second, once this war ends, Zelenskyy will have to take responsibility for an odious deal with Russia, which is likely to force Ukraine into difficult concessions. "Sixty percent of people want a deal. But when he signs, even these 60 percent will gather in front of the president’s office and protest against it,” says a close associate of the president.
"Zelenskyy will become a scapegoat. Everyone will pin their dashed hopes on him,” says Golovaha, the sociologist.

Can't argue with any of that. 

If that's not good enough? Ivan Katchanovski:

That's the bottom line.

Beyond elections? Zelensky's idea to make the EU into a covert NATO for Europe is laughable. EU members that aren't in NATO have even less desire to spend more on defense budgets than do NATO members, in my opinion. Yes, EU head Ursula von der Leyen is proposing a spending hike; call me when it happens, as in, not just approved by EU member states, but when it happens. Beyond that, with Germany already staring at recession, a stare that helped trigger its snap election, the US now staring at a recession that will spread abroad and more, there's just no appetite for this.

As for the "Churchillian" angle? Spiegel nails that. Zelensky has an image investment:

"I think Zelenskyy is not yet psychologically prepared for the end of a war in which he is not the victor,” says Fesenko, the political scientist. The president, he says, has literally become one with this war, Zelenskyy demonstrates this by his beard, his paramilitary outfit and his evening addresses. "If he were to suddenly stop giving speeches and start wearing a suit and tie again, it would come as a shock to the Ukrainians.”

Exactly. He either can't, won't, or some mix of the above, on not letting go. And, this isn't new:

"Zelenskyy is consciously playing the role of Churchill, and he plays it well,” says historian Yaroslav Hrytsak. "But he won’t play it to the last consequence because he still can’t utter one sentence that Churchill said: 'I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.’”

There again, it's hard to tell whether it's "can't" or "won't" that was in the driver's seat. But, the result is the same in any case. 

Anyway, go read the full thing. Zelensky wasn't alone in thinking that Ukraine could make the war end with a Russian capitulation. We're talking his advisors here, not Boris Johnson or US Nat-Sec Nutsacks™.

As for the war itself? No, Russia hasn't had millions of casualties, contra Trump's blather. It's had a lot fewer, relative to population, than Ukraine. And, though Zelensky had great military PR with his excursions into Russian lands last summer, with Trump cutting off the US military pipeline, that bird is very much coming home to roost now.

None of this is to excuse Trump's version of American empire, which would not come with actionable security guarantees. None of this is to excuse Bagger Vance's sandbagging.

But? Even were Kamala Harris president, and trying to push Zelensky half as hard toward a peace with concessions, and without a shakedown, Zelensky would still resist just as much. 

That said, after both US and European media posted 48 hours of blather from Trump surrogates, while Zelensky and his team smartly kept radio silence, he has now said he still wants to see progress — but with a vacuous statement that doesn't indicate anything has changed on his end. Per Binoy Kampmark, he in all likelihood won't change.

On the last hand? Vladimir Putin as president of Russia is as much an obstacle as Volodymyr Zelensky as president of Ukraine, as noted up near the top. He, too, wants a maximalist solution, because of how much he's invested after the initial failure to blitzkrieg Kyiv. You should have read Colin Powell. This all said, I don't think he believes his own bullshit or his internal press clippings as Zelensky believes HIS own bullshit or Western press clippings.

To summarize? Zelensky is in trouble, but even if Kamala Harris were president, would still be obstinate. Putin is still greedy, despite the fact that, contra the Nat-Sec Nutsacks™, Trump is not his puppet. And, Trump is always greedy. A recipe for continued disaster bubbles on the stove.

March 04, 2025

Texas leaders fiddle while measles burns

The West Texas measles outbreak is officially exploding, more than doubling last week, with 20 hospitalized by the end of the week. Meanwhile, top state officials? Radio silence — and action silence. The Trib notes other states have excluded unvaccinated kids from schools during active outbreaks, or done quarantines. One out-of-state health official, Dr. Alan Melnick, is on the record as basically being appalled that unvaccinated kids in Gaines County have been allowed to remain in school. That's despite state law requiring a 21-day exclusion — in certain circumstances.

“I’m just blown away,” he said. “This is not politics. I’m just talking science and medicine here.”
School districts in Texas are required to exclude unvaccinated students for at least 21 days after they are exposed to measles. Because measles is so contagious and can remain in the air for up to two hours after an infected person has left the area, large numbers of students could be excluded from school at once, Texas Department of State Health Services spokesperson Lara Anton said.
But to proactively exclude unvaccinated students before they are known to be exposed requires the Texas health commissioner to declare a public health emergency, which can be activated when there is a health threat that potentially poses a risk of death or severe illness or harm to the public. Anton said there are no plans to declare an emergency at this time, noting that more than 90% of Texans are vaccinated for measles.

There's the basics.

Per the first link, here's why it's so bad:

In Texas, the virus has concentrated on the Mennonite community in Gaines County. One of the county’s local public school district with only 143 students, according to 2023-24 school year data, has the highest school vaccine exemption rate in the state — 48% of Loop school district students have conscientious exemptions from required vaccinations. In 2023-24, less than half of all Loop kindergartners — 46% — were given the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine, according to state data.

Declare the emergency, boot the kids proactively, and quarantine them otherwise. Or, as their Mennonite parents would understand? Make it a community shunning.

And, yes, "shunning" is more Amish within the Anabaptist world, but Old Colony Mennonites have similar. Here's more about the group in Gaines County. Having lived in both Hobbs and Odessa long ago, I can confirm their isolatedness.

I mean, even Brainworm Bobby is urging a measles vaccination. (OTOH, he's also urging use of Vitamin A; you can't remove the pseudomedical quackery from him.)

March 03, 2025

Commenting policy changed

You have to have some sort of Google account now.

For people who don't like that? Blame Cort Greene. 

Cort, moderation is still on, but this way, I at least have a name associated with the comment I'm rejecting.