SocraticGadfly: 4/30/23 - 5/7/23

May 06, 2023

Colin Allred, Beat-0, Gilberto and TexDems SS Minnow, and Lyin Ted

Trust me, as normal, I'll tie this all together.

First of all, Colin Allred is the third-term Metromess  ConservaDem Congresscritter who is the first Democrat officially announced to run against Ted Cruz.

Havana Ted. Or Cancun Ted during Winter Storm Uri. Or Lyin Ted, as a past master and even a conoisseur  of the art of lying, Donald J. Trump, called him.

Lyin Ted claims ConservaDem Colin is part of the radical left that wants open borders, wants to sic new IRS agents on you (and not Ted's rich buddies or some of Colin's) and wants to take your guns. Interestingly, Abortifactant Ted doesn't mention THAT issue — abortion.

Texas Dems were already yesterday touting Colin as the new Beat-0, as I call Pander Bear Beto O'Rourke for Strangeabbott handing his ass to him. Justin Miller at the Observer, per that blogging link, tabbed ConservaDem Colin, a year ago, as an option, though he wasn't the A-lister. I thought about Clay Jenkins; that said, the Dallas County Judge is surely eyeing Colin's seat now.

As for ConservaDem Colin's chances? First, he needs to NOT do the rural red county hokey pokey, unlike Beto the Pander Bear with going out to Muleshoe. Do NOT listen to him. Do NOT listen to his advisors. They're idiots. Also? Do NOT listen to RuralDem county chairs begging for your time. They don't do shit, and Beto was dumb enough to give them the time of day. Rather, beyond urban and suburban counties, he needs to do "exurban" counties of the next ring out from the Metromess, Helltown, Alamo City and Neoliberally Weird Austin. Focus No. 2 should be small to medium actual cities, not towns, primarily in East and Central Texas. I'm talking the Waco-Killeen-Temple triangle. College Station. Tyler. Maybe Lubbock, with Tech, but I wouldn't chase Amarillo. 

THAT's your campaign battleground,and if you stray from it, you're sunk, Colin.

Don't drink the Beat-0 rural Kool-Aid.

Also don't drink the Gilberto Kool-Aid. That's your other boat anchor. The Texas Democratic Party had the chance to get rid of Hefe Gilberto Hinojosa a year ago (although the options weren't fantastic) but took a whiff on shoving him off the SS Minnow. Per that link, you need to reject the idea that demographics is destiny, at least the "Hispanics will turn Texas blue" demographics. Instead, noting that Beto beat Ted in 2018 among Texas native-born, your data-crunchers need to find those people to focus on. IGNORE the Californiators moving here. They're from the libertarian portions of the Bay Area, and the OC nutters who aren't moving to Phoenix. They hate you. 

As for the Texas contingent of BlueAnon on Twitter touting "Straight Talking Beto"? That Pander Bear link has the truth.

And, of course, all of this advice applies to Roland Guitierrez and any other Democrat who enters the primary, if they top Allred.

May 05, 2023

The CIA got Tucker Carlson fired!

Or maybe it was mobsters on a grassy knoll! Or the ghost of LBJ! Or any Castro scions running around Cuba!

Contra Jefferson Morley channeling David Talbot, JFK conspiracy theory mongering had nothing to do with Cucker Tarlson getting fired. Also via there, contra Counterpunch, no, Cucker was not fired for talking about US troops possibly fighting in Ukraine (he's not the first to make that claim) or related. And, contra Jonathan Cook there channeling Glennwald, Tucker is only on a new path of populist pandering.

This is yet another chance to remind you that, three years ago, Morley claimed he was no longer a JFK conspiracy theorist. And he said that with a straight face!

The fact that he could tell bullshit like that only further undercuts the credibility of any and all JFK conspiracy theory pronounciamentos he has made since then — and he's made many of them.

So Howie Hawkins is cutting blank checks to Ukraine?

 

 

And Eric Draister, Mr. Counterpunch Radio, is along for the ride?

(Howie, at left, is addressing North Texas Greens in Denton, Texas, in 2019, and not, surprisingly, the Council on Foreign Relations or some Nat-Sec Nutsacks™ Harvards.)

I missed when this started in January, but I'm still weighing in.

Howie is a founder or cofounder of the Ukraine Solidarity Network. Interestingly, though he, and Margaret Flowers, have repeatedly urged the West to judge China "on Chinese terms" on things like the slave labor and cultural genocide — I did NOT say "genocide," pseudoleftists! — of the Uyghurs, she did not cosign this piece of bullshit. (I totally called them out on cosigning Xi Jinping's bullshit.) I guess she thought it was a Potemkin bridge too far. (I do love mangling metaphors.)

I saw it when I saw "Green Party" trending on Twitter a week ago. Turns out, a lot of it was about the British Green Party, but the top tweet in the list for me was Ajamu Baraka calling out Howie over this.

I quote-tweeted Baraka and said that Hawkins and Draitser should both read or listen to some Norman Finkelstein, who says good leftists don't have to apologize for Russia fighting a war of self-defense. Baraka then referred to Angela Merkel's use of the Minsk Accords as a stall tactic, and other things related to that, which I've covered here.

Draitser, I discussed about a year ago. I later noted he's gotten pushback within Counterpunch, over his review of a book on the war by Medea Benjamin and Nicholas Davies. 

From that CP link, I'm going to quote, because it applies just as much to Hawkins and his Ukraine Solidarity Network:

The review begins by accusing Benjamin and Davies of presenting a one-dimensional view of the war that is too close to the official Russian narrative used to justify the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Draitser scores some points here; this history, strongly influenced by the authors’ opposition to the role of the U.S. and NATO in helping create the conditions for the conflict and then escalating it, ignores certain complexifying facts and tends to relieve Putin of all responsibility for the invasion. But he does not advocate a shared responsibility for the conflict and a shared duty to end it. His conclusion (which he labels a “sound leftist position”) is that Ukraine needs to win the war and the Russians need to lose it.
Eric may be right to allege that the Ukraine conflict is more than an “easily understood proxy war,” but whatever other factors may be involved in this conflict, it is a proxy war by definition. Eight years of civil warfare in the Russian-speaking Donbas provinces are not simply the result of some demonic Putin plot.
In any event, this is not the main reason anti-war radicals call for peace negotiations. They do so not only because Russia has legitimate security interests that the U.S. and NATO have refused to recognize, but also because seeking a “victory” by the Zelensky regime is likely to kill hundreds of thousands more people, turn Ukraine into a bombed-out desert, and generate escalatory spirals.
The key questions, it seems to me, are how to end this ghastly, increasingly destructive war, to guarantee Ukraine’s long-run independence and security, and to establish a sustainable basis for peaceful relations between Russia, the U.S., and Europe. Advocating a Ukrainian “victory” by any means necessary does not answer these questions even if the advocacy is dressed in the language of self-determination. Negotiations – the sooner the better – are urgently needed.

There you are.

Or, let's reference John Pilger's piece in Counterpunch recently. 

In 2014, neo Nazis played a key role in an American bankrolled coup against the elected president, Viktor Yanukovych, who was accused of being ‘pro-Moscow’. The coup regime included prominent ‘extreme nationalists’ — Nazis in all but name.
At first, this was reported at length by the BBC and the European and American media. In 2019, Time magazine featured the ‘white supremacist militias‘ active in Ukraine. NBC News reported, ‘Ukraine’s Nazi problem is real.’ The immolation of trade unionists in Odessa was filmed and documented.
Spearheaded by the Azov regiment, whose insignia, the ‘Wolfsangel’, was made infamous by the German SS, Ukraine’s military invaded the eastern, Russian-speaking Donbas region. According to the United Nations 14,000 in the east were killed. Seven years later, with the Minsk peace conferences sabotaged by the West, as Angela Merkel confessed, the Red Army invaded.

Again, there you are.

And, Draitser, by retweeting a piece like this about Western (and Saudi) oligarchs grabbing Ukrainian land, Zelensky's land law of 2020 showing him to be an EU-US economic lackey and more? The longer the war drags on without a settlement, under Zelensky's regime, the more it becomes a Western economic lackey.

As for other signatories? I don't recognize a single major GP thought leader. There are a lot of DSA Roseys, which IMO just denigrates the whole movement more. Note this long piece by two DSA Roseys that, despite Pope Francis' repeated calls, despite Xi Jinping's mentions, and despite the Goldilocks three bears of Kissinger, NYT op-ed board and Chomsky's urgings a year ago, never mentions the phrase "peace talks." Also, that piece has a certain degree of smug to it, where, in talking about things like the Maidan and its aftermath, the two Roseys claim that many leftists, in essence, don't know what they're talking about. Of course, Draitser has a certain amount of that smug, too.

Under lesser GP leaders is a national committee member from California and another from Wisconsin. There's one former GP elected official, but as vice mayor of a smallish town in California where municipal elections are officially nonpartisan. There are several identifying as "Green Party member." And that's it.

Further trumping Howie? Andrew Cockburn notes how US sanctions (nowhere discussed by Hawkins) may have actually HELPED Putin do some internal reforms. This is based on a paper by James K. Galbraith, here. And, speaking of that, for people who really follow Russia-Ukraine war issues, and may have heard of Nadin Brzezinski? They were a nutter long before this. (I'll be writing in more depth about the sanctions issue next week, and that is now up.)

That said, there's a problem with the callout by Baraka and others. Hawkins is, as I now see it, not just half-wrong, but closer to two-thirds, on Russiagate. But, he's not totally wrong. So, I disagree with them that (DNC PR portions aside) it is totally a hoax. And, I'm sure they would disagree with my callout of both Hawkins and Flowers (and others) on China. And, by the end of 2019, as I noted, this had led to the rise of conspiracy thinking on the issue within the Green Party. Howie's going in the tank will only increase this.

Dario Hunter still is not likely to have a change. Instead, libertarian pseudo-Greens and their new, currently unrecognized AFAIK state parties will try to crash the stage with Jesse Ventura. Others will promote Jimmy Dore or some other conspiracy theorist.

And, this is why I'll continue to remain an independent leftist, which has passed the 2-year mark.

May 04, 2023

Big North Texas bond issue with regional impact causing fallout

That BIG issue, and one that I would love to see pass, is NOT a school bond issue. Rather, it's one to fund the expansion of McKinney's airport — and its development of commercial passenger service.

Indeed, I devoted part of a newspaper column to that. I noted how it would address the growth of the Metromess up the North Central Texas/75 corridor, and to a lesser degree, up the I-35 north corridor. (A decade plus ago, residents of Lancaster did low level preliminary tire kicking on expanding its airport to light commercial service, and an airport in Ellis County got occasional mention, but I don't see the former happening at all and the latter for 20 years, if at all.)

Anyway, even if just at three-quarters the gateage of Love Field, a new commercial airport would be big. Presumably, given Southwest's near monopoly at Love, and American's at D/FW, the FAA would have Delta and United Continental first in line for gate slots. With that, almost all United flights would go either to its big hub at Houston Bush, and anywhere else from there, or secondarily to its Denver hub, with anywhere in the Western states from there. (A few nonstops would go to Chicago.) Delta, of course, would send all sorts of flights to its massive hub in Atlanta (cue old joke) and probably a few to its secondary hub in Salt Lake City. Starter (in the past decade) airlines might get a gate or two. And McKinney Mayor George Fuller says he can't name names, but, the interest is there. His assistant city manager says the same.

Anyway, the possible expansion is not popular everywhere. Neighboring small-town mayors are afraid of noise pollution. McKinney's mayor says the concern is overblown. And, besides, their town's voters don't have a vote. Add in that, 40 flights a day, 15 years from now, is not that much noise being generated. THAT said, contra McKinney's Mayor Fuller, IMO, you need that airport running MANY more flights than that if you want real economic development. (Current projections are here.) At that size, it's still not much more than a vanity project. (And, he may know that and isn't talking all the facts.)

Personally, I still fly Southwest out of Love, but last year's Christmas fiasco has made me ever more leery of it.

UPDATE: Unfortunately, from my perspective, the bond failed.

May 03, 2023

Texas Progressives talk elections, homelessness, abortion, more

The Texas Juvenile Justice Department, with an assist from the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, has Joshua Keith Beasley's blood on its hands. And, this likely won't be a one-off as TJJD sends more juveniles disturbing the juvenile justice system off to adult prisons rather than spend more time and money addressing their psychological conditions in-house.

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Could Jeebus Shot Sid Miller get himself personally and/or the Texas Department of Ag sued over his anti-transgender dress code? Could conservatives like him learn, and articulate, the difference between gender and sex, since only the latter is biological? And, kudos to the Observer for pointing that out.

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Travis County DA José Garza will testify about Daniel Perry's conviction to the Board of Pardons and Paroles, as Strangeabbott's announcement he planned to pardon him, even before his appeals played out, may have backfired. The board will also hear from Garrett Foster's family. Remember, as Shrub Bush liked to point out over Karla Faye Tucker, a gov can only issue a pardon, per the state constitution, based on board recommendation. It also could backfire as Perry's personal background, not presented during the trial, WILL be presented during his sentencing and will also be part of what the board hears on this two-track process.

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Off the Kuff takes another look at the evidence-free claims made by Republicans in their lawsuits to overturn 2022 elections in Harris County.

SocraticGadfly takes a close and skeptical look at Tablet Mag's puff-piece interview of RFK Jr.

Smartmatic wants BOTH more money out of Fox than Dominion got AND a full retraction. Dominion laid out the playbook, so Fox is going to be pushed even harder to settle on the money terms. A retraction? Would that include takedowns of old show clips on Fox's website and YouTube? Replacement with somebody reading a retraction statement? Depending on details of the ask, there will be a LOT of pushback.

Bill Walton has a serious idea to address homelessness. Yes, THAT Bill Walton.

Ronna McDaniel says GOP candidates must take a definite position on abortion. But (and yes, she's not a candidate herself, at least not for 2 years after her chair re-election) she refuses to say what that position should be.

Diego Alvarado calls attention to the large number of Texans who die on the job, and what we should do about it. 

The Fort Worth Report asks who would want to be the new Tarrant County elections administrator. 

The Dallas Observer reports on the allegations of sexual assault and a purported cover-up in Navarro College's cheer program. 

The Houston Press gives an update on the new processes in place in Harris County for the May election. 

The San Antonio Report attended the Cornynation drag show.

Top blogging of April

As is normal, these are the 10 most viewed blog posts in April, and not necessarily FROM the last month. This month, though, most of them are.

First, my cataloguing of various issues the Texas Observer, IMO, needs to face and fix before it gets fiscally (and editorially, in some ways) better.

Second, my take on the recent Pentagon leak.

Third? The hilarity, or more, the inanity, when a bad book gets even worse social media reviews.

Fourt, as I seemed to have a sort of run about writing and journalism issues, my cold take on various issues at New Mexico magazine.

Fifth? Journalism, broadcast version, with my snappy take on Fox, Cucker Tarlson et al.

Sixth? I heap scorn on Ryan Grim's puff piece on Marianne Williamson.

Seventh? One of the Texas Progressives round-ups for last month, calling out both local and Texas Lege stupidities.

Eighth goes back to the theme of the top half of the list, as I called out a media critique of reporting on COVID, for having its own problems.

Ninth, in what could become an occasional series on foreign policy issues for the Nat-Sec Nutsacks™ et al, Lula vs Merikkka.

Tenth, a Tumblr-length snarky piece about Finland joining NATO.

And, in what I don't think has happened in quite a while, all of my Top Ten for a month were indeed written in that month.

May 02, 2023

Trump Train vs Biden Bus

Two of the eight metaphorical Trump Train riders who harassed the literal Biden (campaign) Bus during the 2020 campaign swing through Texas have settled the lawsuit that Wendy Davis et al filed against them. The two "apologized" as part of otherwise undisclosed settlement terms, but like many Jan. 6 criminal defendants, this may be weak tea. The two apologists, Hannah Ceh and Kyle Kruger, are daughter and fiance-in-law of two of the organizers of one of the big Trump Trains. Here's what Kruger said, re the weakish tea:

“I knew that my driving was risky, but I wanted to express my opposition to their campaign and send them a message to leave my community,” Kruger added in his apology. “While I regret now participating in such risky activity, and apologize to the occupants of the bus for my part in the actions that day, at the time I and other Trump Train participants were happy that, after our actions, the Biden campaign canceled the rest of the bus tour.”

Per the rest of the story, he was more aggressive about this than her. Trying to get in bigly good with the future in-laws?

We'll see what happens with the other six. And, are they also legally self-representing?

Big Bend getting big revamp; generally good, more needed

The following is from Strategic Government Partners, based on a National Park Service news release.

(All photos in this piece and linked blog posts are mine.)

Big Bend National Park is often referred to as “Texas’ Gift to the Nation.” Area leaders believe the infrastructure of the park needs immediate attention. That work will begin soon, thanks to $22 million from the Great American Outdoors Act. Work will start with the replacement of Chisos Mountain Lodge. The facility has a shifting foundation and numerous cracks in the floors and walls.

The lodge, built in 1965, houses a restaurant, gift shop, check-in counter and administrative offices. A convenience store, currently next to the Visitor’s Center, will be demolished and a similar shop will be integrated into the new building. The potable water systems will also be replaced, which will require reconstruction of the grounds and several roads.

Renderings depict a glass, two-story building. It will be fire resistant, to be less susceptible to wildfires, and energy efficient, with solar panels, dark sky–friendly lighting, and a smart water-usage plan. An outdoor patio and seating area will move from the first floor to the second to keep visitors and wildlife at a safe distance. 

Work is also being done to find a solution to a growing trash problem. Big Bend is one of two national parks with an on-site landfill which is almost at full capacity. Alternatives could include a transfer station or landfill outside the park that could be privately owned. 

More here on the need, with a video at the link, from the Park Service. Discussion of the proposed new lodge dining and more starts at about the 20 minute mark on the video. Before that, you'll see how bad of shape parts of the kitchen area, especially, are currently in. The upgrade has been under discussion for a couple of years.

I told SGI that I hope the fantastic plate-glass picture windows view from the current restaurant will not be changed, and that appears to be the case. In fact, it looks like views will be improved in other directions beyond the Window, on the second floor, and yes, it's going to be a two-floor deal. Specifics of layout start at about the 28-minute mark, with the preferred alternative starting at about the 31-minute mark. Getting solar panels in is part of the design. 

Casa Grande, pictured at sunset, would be visible from the east end of the new dining room.

That said, the park needs to expand either the Cottonwood or Rio Grande Village campground, or maybe add another, not necessarily big one, elsewhere. It could be primitive. Expand Hannold Draw, which is relatively easily car-accessible, into 10-12 spots, for example. No water, and a biffy instead of flush toilets. Croton Spring could probably also be expanded. (In exchange for that, charging for primitive camping would, if not eliminated, have its price reduced; I've not been to BB since 2019, when it announced, but before it launched, such charging, on a per-day basis, discussed here. Fees are currently $10 a day.)

The park is set to get a small expansion, including parts of Terlingua Creek, on the west side. It also added a new trail north of Panther Junction. Click that link to set a sample of what's involved with creating a new trail in a Park Service unit, particularly when it's in officially designated wilderness. As the Austin area becomes more and more Californicated, Big Bend traffic will only pick up. From 2016-21, in part, yes, due to COVID, visitation increased 50 percent.

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Per previous blogging, from many previous visits?

Big Bend also needs more light pollution protection on both sides of the river but does NOT need more cellphone towers. It also needs massive federal wilderness designation, per that post, if it's not yet been granted.

BB needs road improvements (and better Millennial visitors). Of course, the former problem is Park Service-wide. I think the latter is becoming more and more that way.

BB's nature? Don't change it.

May 01, 2023

Texas Lege: Blank checks for guns, back of the hand for gun violence; ditto on fentanyl issues

 



That's just one of several takeaways from last week's work by the Lege, courtesy of the Trib, but it's a biggie.

The House voted to REQUIRE schools to have armed guards (as well as every classroom to have a panic button). Some version of this will surely pass the Senate and the final bill be signed into law by Strangeabbott. The Trib notes that both houses continue to give the back of the hand to Uvalde families who want the sales age for semiautomatics raised to 21. The Trib doesn't even mention lack of discussion about a serious red flag law.

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A parallel is playing out on drugs, where both houses are passing "tough on crime" bills while Sen. Joan Huffman continues to block a House bill to get fentanyl test strips legalized. As the story notes, it's weird because she's actually been supportive of other addiction help. And, addiction support groups are right; murder charges for fentanyl distributors and others will just make low-level dealers, and users who know  them, even more leery of law enforcement. More War on Drugs stupidity.

Noam Chomsky vs Margaret Kimberly

Yes, he met with Jeffrey Epstein, and yes, he met with him more than once, per a leak of Epstein's calendar, reported on by the Wall Street Journal. And, yes, he got tetchy when asked.

But, contra Margaret Kimberly's bullshit on Twitter:

Israel-Palestine is the only specific foreign policy issue mentioned as having been discussed by the two in the WSJ piece. 

As for Libya? Took 5 secs, via Democracy Now, to show his position was "nuanced." I don't agree with him on even supporting a no-fly zone; Noam should have seen the "flypaper" possibilities. But, gatekeeper? No. Reminder: The no-fly zone was a UN Security Council measure by official vote. NATO member states were authorized to be the "enforcers," yes, but it was a UNSC action.

As for Chomsky opposing BDS, mentioned elsewhere in her thread? The details, per Mondoweiss, and at The Nation, followed by responses from people at The Nation, are ... nuanced. They're more nuanced than Norman Finkelstein's, who simply flat-out rejects the one-state solution ideologically, not on pragmatic grounds, and because of that, flat-out rejects BDS. As part of that, Chomsky says that Israel's actions are actually worse than South African apartheid.

And, behind that, per another tweet in her thread, I reject the conspiracy theory (not held by her alone) about Epstein being a Mossad agent. And, Barry Levine's book on Epstein is good, non-conspiratorial, and unlike Julie K. Brown's, not self-serving. And, at this NY Mag roundtable, Brown, along with three of four others responding to the particular issue, rejects the idea he was a Mossad agent. It IS bullshit from "a master bullshit artist" who "cultivated this entire persona," per Gabriel Sherman. Brown herself, there says "suicide with help," while three of the other five say "suicide" period, a fourth says "I really don't know" and only one says "he was whacked." And yes, Epstein killed himself, unless you think Lee Sirhan Ray offed him.

I told Kimberly her hack job is not surprising and I await Danny Haiphong doing even worse. And, I added that Black Agenda Report continues to go downhill.

As I noted about BAR and the pair drinking the Tulsi Kool-Aid several years ago, BAR has gone in the crapper since Bruce Dixon died. This is just the latest example. Kimberly and Haiphong are all about Max Blumenthal-type clickbait.

And, I've already tackled Noam the duopolist myself. At one time, nearly a decade ago, he seemed to leave the door open for non-duopoly voting by saying that if no third-party candidate existed, one might have to vote for the least bad duopolist. Setting aside the idea of undervoting a race that he ignored, this seems to indicate that he supported third-party voting when available. But, I wasn't so skeptical of him nearly 20 years ago to try to further nail him down.

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That said, re Chomsky and others who met with him after his 2008 conviction and completion of sentence. Congrats for believing in rehabilitation. Does that extend to poorer and non-white people? I think it does with Chomsky, but am more skeptical about the others.