A bit too snarky for us (quite a bit). Thank you, appreciate the sentiment.
A skeptical leftist's, or post-capitalist's, or eco-socialist's blog, including skepticism about leftism (and related things under other labels), but even more about other issues of politics. Free of duopoly and minor party ties. Also, a skeptical look at Gnu Atheism, religion, social sciences, more.
Note: Labels can help describe people but should never be used to pin them to an anthill.
As seen at Washington Babylon and other fine establishments
July 28, 2023
Antiwar is as dead as Justin Raimondo?
A sympathetic look at Waco — maybe too much?
Waco: David Koresh, the Branch Davidians, and A Legacy of Rage by Jeff Guinn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is good to very good but not quite great as pop history, and OK-plus but not quite very good as semi-academic history. It’s also one of those books whose possible rating changed in my mind while writing up this review. (It's really a 4.25, which is what it got at StoryGraph.)
The good? First, Guinn gives a detailed, and accurate, history of Branch Davidian’s history, starting with the foundation of Adventism, then through Davidian’s start as an offshoot of traditional Adventism. Connecting Cyrus Teed to Koresh via Lois Roden getting his one book sent to the Waco-McLennan County Library. (I know Sean Sutcliffe from days of living in Marlin, Texas. I also from days of living in the Metroplex, know Carlton Stowers.) His idiomatic interpretation of “Messiah” as someone chosen by god for a specific purpose is also good, and probably assisted by biblical scholars who helped him. In all this, it's generally a good work.
His description of how ATF’s surprise was blown, not by ATF itself, nor by the Waco Trib’s start of a story series, but by a clueless KWTX cameraman who should have been fired if he wasn’t, is also good. So, too, is the backstory on why ATF pushed to go through with the raid even after local leaders knew cover had been blown. Later in the book, the description of differences between ATF and FBI in hierarchy, organization and lower-level autonomy is important.
Getting ATF people to talk, whether on the record or on background, is also good. That said, with two other new books out for the 30th anniversary, I don’t know if Guinn was any more successful on that than the other two authors.
Really good? His alternative 4 on how the fire started — neither FBI-deliberate (I reject that as he also seems to do), nor Branch Davidian-deliberate (the compound was too disorganized) nor accidental, but Koresh-deliberate, based on a literalistic interpretation of a “wall of fire” from Zechariah. OTOH, that assumes that under that much stress, that Koresh could have popped up such an idea is perhaps questionable.
Issues? And, this is where we extend off the Goodreads review.
Also, even though he’s written a book about Jonestown, Guinn doesn’t try to draw parallels. Personally, by the end of the book, I was more reminded of Heaven’s Gate, though it, unlike Jonestown and Mount Carmel, did not end in a battle with government forces. Jonestown, though, had a number of people starting to become disillusioned before the denouement, whereas Heaven’s Gate, like Mount Carmel or even more, had all true believers.
That said, the epilogue, “Clive Doyle is Waiting” was good, illustrating him as the truest of surviving true believers. And it ends with him dying.
As did some people 2,000 years ago.
And, that's the final missed parallel. Beyond not comparing Mount Carmel to Heaven's Gate, Guinn in general doesn't "play it forward." And, on the political connections, that's the biggest failing of the book and it ties with giving Arnold uncritical airspace.
View all my reviews
July 27, 2023
Thierry Tchenko joins Dems' battle to replace Havana Ted Cruz
I don't think he has much of a shot in the primary vs Colin Allred and Roland Gutierrez, but I wouldn't write him off, looking at his resume.
I guessed correctly by the name that he was a first-generation immigrant, part of the "new African diaspora," and that he was likely from a Francophone country. (Cameroon.)
He has been "networked" into campaign efforts at both state and national levels ever since Dear Leader's 2008 run, which is one reason I wouldn't write him off.
In terms of racial calculus, being Black with a Hispanic wife, he can stand up to both the others.
What exactly he means by running "for" something instead of just running against Havana Ted isn't spelled out further. (Shock me.)
I would say he's got the inside edge in Greater Houston, between the above, his nonprofit organization, and membership in a Black evangelical megachurch. Allred would be the leader in DFW and Gutierrez in the Valley and presumably San Antonio. That leaves Austin, the Triangle and other areas up for grabs.
Bernie Sanders gets an early start on sheepdogging
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
This is a review bomb and I don't care if you don't like that, #BlueAnon. Bernie needs to be called out on this.
Clearly, Bernie's getting an early start on sheepdogging for the left hand of the duopoly for the 2024 election, and enlisting the help of Green Party hater John Nichols from The Nation. (He is a Green Party hater and I know that from personally tangling with him, as I've done multiple times on Twitter, I think going back to the 2016 general election and possibly earlier.)
And, Bernie's a sheepdogger.
As for being angry about capitalism? He's right as far as he goes. But, he doesn't go that far.
But, does Bernie talk about defense contractors? Does he talk about being a general warhawk, related to that? Does he talk about his own decades-long lust for F-35s? No and no. (And yet, as I blogged yesterday about "recent stupidities at Counterpunch," it let him rail about the new NDAA — even while said railing deleted his hope stated two weeks ago that the Senate would try to do something about Biden sending cluster bombs to Ukraine.)
Did he talk about being an actual socialist, as in a corporate socialist for Big Ag? No.
I didn't one-star it because what he says is good enough as far as it goes. But, it can't get more than 2 stars because it's sheepdogging for the 2024 election. And, for time No. 927 or whatever, this is why I don't subscribe to The Nation.
July 26, 2023
Texas Progressives talk border, Greens, Ukraine lies
Various recent stupidities at Counterpunch
The biggest is running a presser by Bernie Sanders talking about the NDAA and how it's too much defense spending. In this statement, Sanders doesn't talk about how, two weeks ago, he was looking toward a Senate attempt to block Warmonger Joe's plan to send cluster bombs to Ukraine. And, he doesn't at all talk about his two-decade lust for F-35s.
Second-biggest is Melvin Goodman, usually much more sensical, talking about a grain airlift from Ukraine, based on the assumption that Russia would allow this, or perhaps, from his comparison with 1948 Berlin, the assumption that US-NATO could pull it off without planes being shot down. John Helmer notes that part of why Russia shuttered the Odessa grain export deal was its belief that weapons were being smuggled in on grain freighters.
White supremacy was indeed involved with the War in the Pacific's portion of World War II, but trying to reduce the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings to just that and little more is as stupid and as factually untrue, as trying to claim they were ultimately about sending a message to Stalin. Sadly, this hot mess is at Counterpunch+. That said, I'm sure St. Clair, Frank and Cockburn, both behind and in front of the paywall, will offer more such stupidities in the run-up to Aug. 6. On this issue, to use Jeff St. Clair's own words, the site is part of "the more credulous precincts of the left."
I'm sure Eric Draitser has a new Counterpunch Radio coming up that will only add to this.
July 25, 2023
Biden's federal oil-drilling reforms — one quick thought
Increasing the royalty payment, per High Country News' list of all that President Biden's proposed reforms include, sounds good.
But?
At the state level, it gets Western states with lots of drilling on BLM or Forest Service land even more addicted to oil money. That's especially if they're relatively low-population and also relatively poor.
Looking at you right in the eyeballs, New Mexico and fake green governor Michelle Lujan Grisham. Note that between federal, state and private land, New Mexico oil drilling has almost doubled in the past five years. It has passed North Dakota into No. 2 on state oil production. (Most the recent explosion in shale drilling in the Permian Basin is on the NM half of the Delaware Basin.)
'Humaste' and more in the North Texas heat
July 24, 2023
Cowards Biden and Garland vs Strangeabbott and McCraw
So, why hasn't President Joe Biden's Attorney General Merrick Garland publicly announced that he's starting a federal investigation into Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's blockading the Rio Grande and DPS Executive Director Steve McCraw's enforcement of it? Yeah, the DOJ says that Strangeabbott has until today to "commit to" (big loophole right there) removing it.
Update, this afternoon: Wallmonger Joe is suing, after all. Why no criminal charges?
Abbott's border offensive is probably not that effective, per the WSJ (as well as not being wanted by many Texas border counties and burning a hole in the budget) but it is inhumane. Border/Lines discusses in more detail, as well as discussing Biden and the Border Patrol.
Above and beyond that, why hasn't Biden told Strangeabbott: "Since you think you and McCraw are so damned good at border protection, I'm removing ALL Border Patrol from the Texas sector immediately"?
Reality? As places like Border/Lines have long reported, Biden has replaced Trump's Title 42 with a tech-neoliberal equivalent of it, and somebody in the White House knew that that's what Biden's craptacular-working smartphone app for asylum application would be. Jeff St. Clair talks more in the second half of last Friday's Roaming Charges.
Bottom line is that Appmonger Joe and Strangeabbott are playing kabuki theater with each other.