SocraticGadfly: 5/12/24 - 5/19/24

May 18, 2024

Debate duopoly fraudulence, part 2

I was going to post this to my original piece about the presidential debate annoucement, since I didn't see it until 12 hours after that posted, but then thought it would be burying the lede.

So, it goes on its own.

Per the curmudgeonly Jack Shafer, riffing back to that first piece, why is Nate Silver bitching anyway about "Biden breaking norms" when he has admitted his own self in the past that there's at most a two-week or so bump? Could it be that he's addicted to horse-race journalism? Add this:

Whittling Silver’s observation to a sharper point: Among well-known candidates, Trump and Biden are the most well-known ever. The Trump megaphone has been working at high volume for most of his adult life and this will mark his third appearance on the national ballot. Biden runs for president on a schedule that rivals migratory birds for periodicity. If you haven’t formed an opinion on them by now, you’ve likely been living in a fallout shelter with only a hand-cranked Conelrad radio for information.

Bingo.

As for the Commission on Presidential Debates' proposed timetable, which is now null and void?

Shafer agrees on the early voting issue, and notes that Trump as well as Biden raised it. Seems Silver is out of touch with that is now a new norm.

Back to the issue of horse-race journalism. Here's Shafer again:

Unless Trump changes his act or Biden takes a meal-sized dose of Adderall, don’t expect the CNN or ABC debates to move the election either way. But we should be happy for our friends in the press and their loyal readers for the improvement it will bring to their copy. As with Detroit cars in the ‘50s and ‘60s, when a few changes in sheet metal could create the illusion that a new model has been designed, a couple of summer clashes between Trump and Biden is just what political pros and hobbyists crave.

Couldn't put that one better, either.

The unbearable lightness of Scottie Scheffler

By now, every golfing fan and his or her grandma has heard about the early Friday morning incident at the PGA Championship, that is, the arrest of Scottie Scheffler. Update Saturday May 18: "Shock me" that Louisville Metro Police say they have NO bodycam footage of the arrest. The first Tweet below takes on added seriousness. (For more on the serious angle, see below if you want to cut to the chase. You can always scroll back up to read the snark, and snark-cum-seriousness, in order.)

Of course, Twitter is the place to snark.

So, from earliest to latest posts on Friday by me, here you go:

First

Then

And

Next

And

===

Update: More seriously, per the update above, pants-ripped Gillis either had no bodycam or else didn't have it turned on. And, yes, as Black folk often face:

[Louisville Metro Police] procedures states that officers are required to "maintain their BWC [body-worn camera] in a constant state of operational readiness."

"The BWC will be used to record all calls for service and law enforcement activities/encounters (e.g. arrests, citations, stops, pursuits, Code 3 operations/responses, searches, seizures, interviews, identifications, use of force incidents, collisions, transports, warrants, official conversations on departmental smartphones, etc.)," the procedures said. "Members are mandated to adhere to the following procedures in order to capture law enforcement-related activity."

The procedures further state that officers "will immediately activate their BWC in recording mode prior to engaging in all law enforcement activities or encounters."

There you go.  And, per the ESPN link above, since Scottie is not only White, but 0.1 percenter, if not 0.01 percenter, rich, the charges WILL be dropped. And, any legal action may be the city of Louisville and Louisville Metro PD lawyering up with immunity claims vs possible lawsuit.

===

Back to the snark.

Followed by

Then

Followed by

And capped with:

And, that may be a wrap.

==

Not quite a wrap. Not only were the charges dropped May 29, but we found out that Gillis has a bad record:

And is a cop grifting with a collision investigation service on the side.

Why did it take a rich White guy being arrested for this to all come to light?

May 17, 2024

Moab development and the magic name of Cactus Ed Abbey vs Clarke Abbey

 This is funny as hell.

A developer in Moab, per High Country News, planned to name a new subdivision after Cactus Ed Abbey. As the piece notes, this is the antithesis of everything he stood for.

Side note: Cactus Ed never claimed to be an environmentalist, and in fact disdained the label. He preferred to be called an anarchist, and with his master's degree from the University of New Mexico being in philosophy, and per his first book-cum-movie, the book as "The Brave Cowboy," the movie as Kirk Douglas' "Lonely are the Brave," knew whereof he spoke about himself. More on that and more here from an Outside mag piece.

A speech of his in the 1970s, quoted, at the HCN original link, shows that:

In a 1976 speech at a symposium on environmental problems in Vail, Colorado, Abbey said, “I say the industrialization of the Rocky Mountain West is not inevitable and that to plan for such a catastrophe is to invite it in all the more readily. Planning for growth encourages growth. To plan for growth is to concede defeat before the battle has been has been fully joined.”

I don't think Dave Foreman ever put sand in the gas tanks of construction vehicles, or wrapped bands around or stuck shanks in frames and rafters, though. Ditto for people building new ski lodges in places like Vail. Only logging vehicles. 

And, Ed was wrong. Yes, "managed growth" is a semi-anachronism, per Ed's old aphorism that:

Growth for growth's sake is the theology of the cancer cell

But not totally so. And, Ed never really looked at the migration to the Sunbelt besides the recreational tourism. And, arguably, by spending his later years in exurban Oracle, Aridzona, was kind of a hypocrite.

This:

According to the most recent data, the median household income for Moab is $52,000 — likely a conservative estimate, since it probably undercounts seasonal workers as well as lower-income folks.

Is why managed growth isn't full hypocrisy, and why Ed blew it on not looking at the permanent moves, or the second-homers, or a phenomenon unknown in his time, the AirBnB types.

That said, back to the piece's start point.

Developer Michael Bynum was full in! This:

Subdivision streets were named in honor of some of Abbey’s more controversial characters, such as “Hayduke Court,” named after George Hayduke, the ring leader of a fictional group of eco-terrorists who plant explosives on Glen Canyon Dam in The Monkey Wrench Gang. (The development is also home to a “Monkey Wrench Way.”)

Shows that.

That said, HCN was largely riffing off a piece in the Durango Telegraph, an alt-ish weekly tabloid competitor to the Durango Herald. It deserves a read on its own, starting with:

For the developer’s part, Mike Bynum, a Moab native who is highly involved in the local business community, said the decision to use Abbey themes was made years ago as an homage to the author. Especially since Abbey, in a roundabout way, put Moab on the map with his formative book, “Desert Solitaire,” chronicling his time as a park ranger at Arches National Park in the 1950s.

More ironic yet. This wasn't some move-in dudebro doing this. An associate of Bynum's said this was meant as sincere homage.

And, it riffs on what Ed's still-living disciples think:

“Ed would spin many times in his grave,” Jack Loeffler, an author and longtime friend of Abbey, said. ...
“Jesus Christ,” Doug Peacock, a friend of Abbey’s since 1975 and whom the character Hayduke was based on, said. “That’s a goddamn shame.”
“Oh my god,” Art Goodtimes, a fellow writer who met Abbey in the early 1980s, said. “Oh my god.”
“I think,” Andy Nettell, former owner of Back of Beyond Books in Moab, said, “it will become a laughingstock within the community when the signs actually do come up.”

Nettell was a ranger at both Arches and Canyonlands before starting Back of Beyond. He later notes this isn't new, but a smaller subdivision built out long ago was on a site where Abbey once owned land, and is now owned by Ken Sleight, aka "Seldom Seen Smith."

The burn!

Note the "was," though.

Ed's widow, Clarke Abbey, the wife he couldn't run off, remains jealously protective of his legacy. (In my opinion, she was that while still alive, and that's why he couldn't run her off.)

Was, as in, for now at least, ain't happening:

According to the Durango Telegraph, developers have responded to the request of Clarke Abbey, the writer’s widow and holder of his estate, by deciding not to proceed with naming the subdivision after him.

And, we click that link above about the Telegraph to read more. 

==

Side note 1: Here's my poetic tribute to the 40th anniversary of Desert Solitaire. There was also a 50th gathering. Probably most of Ed's acolytes will be dead by 2028.

Side note 2: With his own warts and all, the best real take on Abbey is by someone independent enough not to be an acolyte, and that's the late Chuck Bowden. Many of Abbey's friends/acolytes (Loeffler comes particularly to mind) are hangers-on types. This includes Bowden noting that Clarke seemed to buy into the Cult of Ed, and I presume for glory reasons, and even more, for fiscal ones.

Indeed, from Red Caddy, one commenter on HCN's Facebook said this:

Once, when I was working at the newspaper, I got a call at home from a reporter who’d stumbled onto the fact that Edward Abbey, the enemy of growth, had applied under someone else’s name to have his piddling acres on the edge of the sprawl rezoned for higher density. As I listened to the woman’s excited voice, I knew what was going on: that a huge subdivision was going to surround his hideaway and he had a choice of moving out now and letting the buyer rezone it to cash in or rezoning it and taking some money with him. The whole situation had a wonderful quality to it since the person wheeling and dealing downtown for the soon-to-descend subdivision was a former mayoral candidate [Abbey, jokingly] who’d run his campaigns under the aegis of Cactus Power. God, I love my town.

Hypocrite Ed!  Speaking of, per my caption above, I've called out HCN for what is not Ed Abbey, as he was dead long before 2015, and is ergo either a model, or somebody doing AI and backdating it 9 years, when he was still dead anyway.

Side note 3: Jim Stiles is still kind of a blowhard. I went to Canyon Country Zephyr but didn't see any takes by him. And, that's because ... he's dead!

Here's my takedown obit.

Side note 4: There's even a Cactus Ed Deadhead fan site! A lot of that shit there is old. I think Abbey pretty much faded for many after the 40th anniversary event.

Side note 5: Per Amy Irvine, Ed did (along with the racism and sexism Bowden notes) have a white privilege for Desert Solitaire on which he based that.

Side note 5: The MAGAts (what took them so long?) are, years after HCN cut off onsite comments, finally swarming its Facebook page.

Side note 6: I am going to have to publish myself a mini-short story satire I wrote about Stiles and Abbey. I've sent it twice to Jeff St. Clair at Counterpunch and nothing.

Interesting, as of mid-June, Counterpunch has NO obituary, whether straight news obit, eulogy or takedown, of Stiles. That's even though St. Clair did pieces for HCN 20 and more years ago, at the same time as Stiles.

May 16, 2024

Presidential news roundup May 16 — #ChickenshitJoe and more

Add #ChickenshitJoe to #GenocideJoe. Afraid that Chicago 2024 will be a repeat of Chicago 1968, he and other Democratic Party leaders are trying to move online as much of the convention as they can. As Ken Klippenstein snarkily said in a Substack note: "Democracy is on the ballot." Add in that the city of Chicago is extending the idea developed under Shrub Bush and vastly expanded by Dear Leader, of "kettling" protestors away from the president and now wanting to make that THREE miles away, along with already denying permits to some protest groups.

What's "interesting" is, per the first link, Team Biden is trying to blame Brandon Johnson being a rookie mayor in Chicago for their thoughts and possible decisions when Johnson's already out there doing everything Biden might want. But, Johnson can't control protestors who march without permits, as happened in 1968.

It's also noteworthy that, at that first link, Politico itself is willing to throw Johnson under the bus, near the end of the piece. But, that's within context of overall Illinois politics; the author says there is no Democratic "machine" in Illinois any more — and seems saddened by that.

Speaking of, where's Dear Leader?

==

Pro-choice activists trying to restore or expand abortion rights in various states don't want national Democrats, or statewide Dem political candidates, either, trying to bird-dog on their efforts, noting that such work in the past has involved independent and Republican voter support.

==

Bob Jr. has submitted more than double the minimum number of signatures to qualify for the ballot here in Tex-ass. Kuff may be forced to write something about him. It's a big, big deal. I can't remember when an independent candidate last qualified for a statewide race here in Texas. That said, I do wonder if any of Bob's signature gatherers gaslighted people like they did in New York.

==

SoS Tony Blinken is a liar on Israel-Gaza and a crack-smoker on Ukraine. That said, per a commenter on Ken's site calling this a press release, not a leak? It is a leak, but one of those types of leaks that in reality walks, talks and quacks like a press release. Probably from SoS staff two levels below Blinken, is the leaker. Anyway, the crack-smoking, like the lying, is at the behest of his boss.

==

Nikki Haley continues to give Trump the cold shoulder. I suspect she may never endorse him. 

==

Bernie Sanders is sheepdogging again.

==

Just when you think he has brains, Mittens Romney proves me wrong, this time saying that Biden should have pardoned Trump.

Duopoly fraudulency on the presidential debates deal

The top news presidentially from yesterday? Two presidential debates this year, one in June and one in September, and outside the aegis of the Commission on Presidential Debates. That's the agreement reached yesterday between Biden and Trump campaigns.

Nate Silver was going off on Biden for ditching "norms," after Biden noted two of the originally scheduled debates fell after the start of early voting. He called for Biden to negotiate from there.

He did, Nate, and this is what happened.

Meanwhile, you have non-skeptical leftists or pseudolefists like Richard Ebright doing a "gotcha" on the #DementiaJoe angle, and Silver ignoring that both the Rethuglicans and Democraps, connivingly, ditched norms decades ago when pushing the League of Women Voters to the ditch.

And, we know why that happened.

It was to exclude non-duopoly candidates.

Anyway, per a previous GOP resolution against participating in CPB-sponsored debates and other issues, no, the norm for this had been junked by both parties. Was Biden supposed to pull a Clint Eastwood and talk to an empty chair?

Beyond that, both candidates want this. It lets gaffes be neutralized well in advance of voting.

And, both colluded to exclude Brainworm Bob, anyway.

So, note to Nate Silver? Stop blaming Biden when this is bipartisan.

Beyond that, Trump caved. Interesting. 

Also "interesting" that at Ballot Access News yesterday, Winger got it wrong, saying Bob Jr. might be let in, even after I and multiple others posted comments saying he was wrong. As for the time I wrote this, he had yet to correct.

May 15, 2024

Texas Progressives talk floods, runoffs, Zionism

Meet Troy Nehls, joining Havana Ted Cruz as elected Rethuglican money-launderers.

#TotsAndPears about East Texas flooding. This still won't wake up climate change denialists, and the Trib's platitudinous ending doesn't help.

Anti-Palestinian administrative thuggery at UT-Austin continues. Zionist Kuffner will continue to ignore.

University of Houston is also cracking down on pro-Palestinian protests.. Kuff has ignored.

The city of Clarendon just told Mark Lee Dickson and his localized anti-abortion lawsuits mill to go fuck himself. I'll have much more on Mr. Dickson in a couple of weeks.

The dominoes are falling. Two political consultants pled guilty in the Henry Cuellar bribery case. And, yes, they're "flipping."

SocraticGadfly notes how, 20 years of statewide control on, Republican candidates still blame Democrats for issues like K-12 education. 

Dade "Dade" Phelan has entered Pander Bear territory in his official status as state Speaker of the House as his primary runoff date approaches.

Off the Kuff looks at the Q1 2024 finance reports for Democratic Senate and Congressional candidates.

Law Dork looks at the next Voting Rights Act lawsuit coming to SCOTUS. 

The TSTA Blog looks for the real meaning of Teacher Appreciation Week. 

The Austin Chronicle reports on SxSW's expansion to London. 

 Reform Austin convers Pastors For Children, a coalition of pastors from nine states dedicated to fighting against efforts to privatize education across the United States. 

The Houston Press highlights two book-banning moms in Montgomery County.  

Daniel Cohen provides his endorsements for the Democratic Primary runoffs in Harris County.

 

May 14, 2024

High Country News goes weak on environmentalism

Contra this piece

It's not "just me" if somebody throws a banana peel in the forest. Bananas aren't native in most places, first. Second, fruit peels in general don't decay in the open as fast as most people think.

As for playing music outdoors while hiking? Oh my fucking god, that's noise pollution.

==

Johnny Thompson head-fakes that he's going to oppose alfalfa on the Colorado River, then shows his reality. Shock me. Here's the reality, written by me just after Thompson's piece, just over a month ago. To put it another way? Thompson needs to read Lyle Lewis' "Racing to Extinction." Amazon reviews here.

Of course, elsewhere, Johnny fellates Biden. Counting reversals of Trump actions on public lands, which went beyond Shrub Bush's, is not really fair. And, that was just a year after saying Biden had a "mixed record." Which is it?

May 13, 2024

Disagreeing more with Mondoweiss on Biden

A month ago, I offered my critical thoughts ("critical" in the more technical, more than psychological) on Mondoweiss claiming that President Biden's knee-jerk support of Bibi Netanyahu and Zionism in Israel seemed to be just politics as usual. I said that, in my opinion, to some degree, he was really "in" on what I called on Twitter being "a Zionist fellow traveler." I joked that maybe he read Leon Uris' "Exodus" too many times, or saw the movie too often. I don't know. (Somebody else on Twitter noted he — as is Trump — is older than the nation of Israel.)

Every think I've seen since then supports my contention.

One of the latest was a Substack from Ken Klippenstein May 8. The whole focal point of the piece is Biden's outright and undisguised hostility toward campus protestors, right from the start of the piece:

Yesterday, President Joe Biden addressed the college protests for the first time in days, not even bothering to lend his support to the most moderate of demands, that civilians be protected and Palestinians get their long-promised homeland. Instead he focused solely on antisemitism, citing the protests as an example thereof.

Sorry, Phil Weiss, but that sounds like more than "fear of AIPAC."

Ken continues:

It was Biden’s first public mention of the campus movement since last Thursday, when he gave a blistering speech on the demonstrations, striking a law-and-order tone reminiscent of Richard Nixon during widespread anti-Vietnam War protests.
In the speech, Biden decried “chaos” and declared that “order must prevail.” He repeatedly condemned threats of violence, again failing to address the substantive demands of the protesters, reducing the problem to antisemitism and threats to ‘national security.’

Agreed.

My currently pinned Tweet has a link to a WaPost article and says:

What else is there to say?

Well, there is more from Ken, comparing and contrasting Genocide Joe to Dear Leader:

The irony of Biden’s speech is that it took place in the Roosevelt Room of the White House — the same place former President Obama once addressed protesters over an issue that was also fraught: police brutality. But instead of exclusively focusing on the instances of vandalism and unrest, Obama met with demonstrators to discuss criminal justice reform (even though he did almost nothing).
Police brutality is obviously politically safer territory than Israel, but polling consistently shows police enjoy some of the highest public approval of any institution in the U.S., as well as overwhelming opposition to efforts to “defund the police.” Yet despite that, Obama at least engaged in dialogue with the protesters, inviting them to the Roosevelt Room.
That’s not to say that Obama went along with all or even most of their demands, as any veteran of police reform efforts at the time can tell you. But he talked to them, at times even defended the general thrust of the movement, and offered some concessions, like the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing, created in response to the protests against police brutality after the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
By contrast, President Biden hasn’t met with any of the college protesters and declined to even address them beyond castigating the unrest and buying into the purported “national security” dimensions of the protests.

So, is Biden Tricky Dick Nixon reincarnated, as far as hiding what he knows about arms sales? Or is he LBJ?

On Sunday, Rep. Ro Khanna, a Democrat from California and Biden defender, told Face the Nation that he thought Biden should visit some college campuses.
“I think the president should and will get out there on campuses,” Khanna said, adding that “young people are upset at what’s going on in the Middle East.”
It’s perhaps not surprising that Biden, an octogenarian so old he literally predates the state of Israel, is out of step with how youth see the world — a problem I’ve previously written about.
But if Biden is going to win a looming election against someone he’s repeatedly cast as a threat to democracy, you’d think he might be interested in addressing his youth problem.

Ken doesn't address the issues of maybe whether, like LBJ, he's AFRAID to walk on a college campus. Wouldn't surprise me.

That's even as we've gone beyond protests to hunger strikes. Mondoweiss profiles one hunger striker at Princeton.

Then there's this, straight-up Zionist-type racist tropes:

 This only further reinforces my stance that Mondoweiss is wrong. (I await an update.)

And, there's this.

#GenocideJoe leaves himself a Mack truck sized loophole: He will cut back arms for Israel if Bibi launches a "major invasion" of Rafah. And, guess who will define "major"? And "cut back," since I Heart Zion Biden didn't say "none"; cut back what? Two percent? 

And, there's a House staffer, already a semi-careerist with 12 years for three Congresscritters, criticizing Ryan Grim for criticizing Genocide Joe. My take on that?

Finally, per the latest from Klippenstein? Reading this rightly, new IRS powers would, in Tricky Dick fashion, let them go after pro-Palestinian protestors.