SocraticGadfly: 7/28/24 - 8/4/24

August 02, 2024

Texas "pergressuve" bloggers and the downfall of Dementia Joe

Two weeks ago, I blogged about Susan Glasser, presumably representing a whole class, exemplifying DC media insiders pointing fingers at each other for not reporting the facts early on about Dementia Joe. 

The reality, per Jeff St. Clair, is those facts were available back in 2021.

For the last three years, Biden has been so befuddled and inarticulate that his staff has kept him from meeting with the House Democratic Caucus about legislative issues. The president’s deteriorated condition became obvious to House Democratic leaders in October 2021, when Pelosi invited Biden to the HIll to make the pitch for his infrastructure bill. But, according to reporting by the Wall Street Journal, “in 30 minutes of remarks on Capitol Hill, Biden had spoken disjointedly and failed to make a concrete ask of lawmakers…After he left, a visibly frustrated Pelosi told the group she would articulate what Biden had been trying to say.”

There you are. (Shouldn't the Pergressuve Cucks like AOC point fingers at Pelosi?)

Or, per other blogging by me, that they were available in 2019, per Julian Castro.

But, per St. Clair, many BlueAnon pergressuves preferred to be like Ken Burns:

Ken Burns: “History recognizes actions that are bigger than self. Joe Biden will go down as one of the great ones, having led the country out of the disastrous term of his predecessor and quietly doing good things for all Americans, red state as well as blue, accomplishments that put him up there, in terms of legislative action, with LBJ and FDR. Joe, I can’t imagine where we’d be without your selfless service.”

I've talked before about Burns and American exceptionalism, calling him America's "Empire whisperer." This is no surprise.

Timothy Snyder was even more unctuous on Twitter.

And, people like Charles Kuffner (who still ignores Gazan genocide, as I commented there, albeit belatedly due to vacation) were the same as foot soldiers.

He simply regards himself as a scrubbeenie, as is clear in his post about Biden's announcement, complete with his accepting Monkey-Wrencher Joe's blanket endorsement of Kamala is a Cop without saying "wait a minute."

As for claims by Kuff's followers that he focuses on local items? Bullshit. He links to national news in his weekend link dump and what he rounds up for the Texas Pergressuve Alliance. So, bullshit.

The reality about the Cop?

First, claims she tried to soften up Genocide Joe on Gaza were shown last week to either be lies, or else something she discarded as political detritus. In either case, per St. Clair, she's a "Cop" on pro-Palestinian protestors now. She's now OK with fracking, too.

And, not every pergressuve, including not every identitarian, is OK with her. See here.

Gainesville, other Texas juvie detention centers cited by federal DOJ

Per press release from the DOJ's Eastern Division of Texas, it's disgusting:

“Children are committed to TJJD facilities to receive treatment and rehabilitation so that they may return to their communities as law-abiding, productive citizens,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division in the release. “Our investigation showed that, far from achieving those objectives, TJJD engaged in a pattern of abuse, deprivation of essential services and disability-related discrimination that seriously harms children and undermines their rehabilitation. State officials have an obligation to keep these children safe, to teach them, to provide them necessary health services and to treat them fairly, without discrimination. The Justice Department is committed to protecting the rights of vulnerable children in juvenile facilities. We look forward to working with state officials to remedy these violations, institute needed reform and improve outcomes for Texas children.”

The full investigation, of more than 70 pages? Worse. Re Gainesville, here's a couple of the findings:

A December 2019 report from the Bureau of Justice Statistics provided TJJD with additional notice of a pattern of abuse in its secure facilities. The Bureau of Justice Statistics found that, in three of the five TJJD secure facilities, children reported some of the highest rates of sexual victimization in the country. At Ron Jackson, fourteen percent of the children reported being sexually victimized by staff or other children. The rate was even higher at Gainesville and Mart, where one in six children reported abuse.

 And:

In August 2022, the Office of Inspector General sustained allegations that a boy at Gainesville forced another to perform oral and anal sex.

Disgusting.

But, like the years-long foster care scandal here in Tex-ass, I suspect Kenny Boy Paxton and TJJD staff will try to run out the clock on this as much as possible. Already, in an email to an online news organization, we have hand-waving as part of the response:

TJJD worked closely with DOJ investigators during their site visits in 2022, the peak of the agency’s unprecedented staffing shortages. We provided extensive responsive material and appreciate the DOJ’s professionalism throughout this process.

Yikes.

"Unprecedented staffing shortages" is one thing at a widget factory. Entirely another, here.

Semi-yikes? This Samuel Gaytan of Lone Star Live letting that TJJD email run anonymously, unless it was part of an official on-background guarantee.

But? A separate DOJ press release from the Southern District of Texas essentially called bullshit on that:

“The conditions in the facilities are unacceptable,” said U.S. Attorney Alamdar S. Hamdani for the Southern District of Texas. “Our investigation found that children in these facilities face sexual abuse by staff and other children. Tragically, this is not the first investigation into allegations of sexual abuse at TJJD facilities. Since the early 2000s, other investigations by Texas state agencies and the Texas Rangers substantiated sexual abuse allegations of the children at TJJD facilities, yet this horrifying problem persists. Working with Texas’s other U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, the Civil Rights Division and the State of Texas, my office hopes to provide protections to the vulnerable and help right wrongs that have existed for far too long.”

There you go.

Speaking of 2022? Here's the bottom line, from Texas Public Radio, about the TJJD facing Sunset Commission review at that time:

TJJD has been in perpetual crisis since it was formed in 2011, according to Sunset Commission staff. It was formed after the scandal-plagued Texas Youth Commission and the Texas Juvenile Probation Department were merged.
Other than staffing, one big reason is leadership changes.

And, Abbott stealing money from it for Operation Lone Star and Schwertner focused on new buildings rather than more staff exacerbated the issue.

Per the site where I saw this, TJJD promised a statement by yesterday afternoon. As of 4:30, nothing.

Side note: The Trib was way behind the curve on this. As of 4:30 yesterday no story. (It finally dropped something later yesterday evening.)

Gainesville, from what I know, beyond the current report, has long been considered one of the worst of the worst of the current and former juvenile state schools. 

Oh, speaking of? The claim that school location makes it hard to hire people is bullshit, at least in this case. Gainesville is just 30 miles from Denton and an hour from the Metromess proper. Beyond that, the TDCJ, while it has had some degree of shortages itself, has prisons all over the state.

August 01, 2024

Brainworm Bobby showing slippage to Kamala is a Zionist Cop

So says The Hill.

A few takeaways.

First? He's been slow to pivot to the post-Biden Democratic world. That, in turn, makes one wonder about the seriousness of the brainworm level.

Second? The money tap is slowing down. And, apparently, Veep choice Nicole Shanahan has not, as of now, offered to open the tap to more personal spending, nor have their been reports of RFK Jr opening the spigot on his sliver of the Kennedy family fortune (if much of that didn't go up his nose 30 years ago).

Third? By not ruling out officially lying down in bed with MAGAts, to riff on the old phrase, he's kneecapping what bits of appeal he has to some independents who really hoped for an actually independent campaign and aren't leftist. I guess the Mises Mice are also in the Trump crab bucket in places where they can't kick Chase Oliver off the Libertarian Party ticket.

More, as prompted by Independent Political Report, to whom I sent the link from The Hill.

Beyond Brainworm Bobby being slow to pivot, the fundraising partnership with the Libertarian Party, mentioned in the story, and detailed further at IPR, is interesting on multiple counts.

First, will the LNC eventually gut it, re the pushback? 

Second, will RFK Jr actually get that much money from it? 

Third, until his next round of federal numbers reporting deadlines hit, will he lie about it, like Winger reported at BAN him lying about getting the most signatures of any independent candidate in history?

Texas Progressives talk this and that

Off the Kuff has a roundup of potential candidates for the vacancy in CD18. 

 SocraticGadfly offers a roundup of hominid-related and other science news of recent note.

Neil at the Houston Democracy Project visited Washington, D.C. If enlisted men could be 97% of American dead in the Korean War, then politicians who have navigated our systems bringing authoritarian outcomes can do whatever is needed to fight the anti-democratic right.  (huh, Neil/?)

Equality Texas released its 2023 legislative scorecard.  

Law Dork heard the signals that this Supreme Court was sending out to the far right. 

 City of Yes finds a lesson on urbanism in the movie Jaws.  

Reform Austin profiles Democratic legislative candidate and former Miss Texas Averie Bishop.  

Sara Cress can tell you from personal experience why CenterPoint's communications are terrible.

Tarrant County has adopted formal policies for facility rental, just several weeks after the Texas True Project was at the Botanical Gardens, owned by the city of Cowtown.

Quakes in the Snyder area, up to 4.9 magnitude, were caused by fracking. (Reminder: Kamala Harris is now pro-fracking.)

Despite some libruls applauding it because it would seem to crack the black box of social media companies' algorithms, the Kids Online Safety Act could be a Trojan horse for wingnuts to mind-filter those kids.

July 31, 2024

The Kingdom, the Power and The Glory: but no Red Heifer

The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism

The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism by Tim Alberta
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This was a HARD book to rate, and so, as I’ve done once or twice before, I’m doing sub-ratings. These come from my dual background as a newspaper editor and a secularist with a graduate theological degree. And, I'm expanding on one issue from my original Goodreads review.

OK, subratings:

1. Conservative evangelicals in bed with Trump? (Note the word “conservative” and see below.) 3.5. The TL/DR answer that Alberta doesn’t expressly note (until the epilogue, spoiler alert)? Conservative evangelicals, or a large chunk of them, want to “own the libs,” like Trump. He says this indirectly, but no more than that, before that one aside in the epilogue. (That said, David French, Russell Moore and others appear to blow this as well, or else maybe they — and maybe Alberta, too — don’t want to admit that the desire to win, which Alberta does discuss, is that simple — and that crude. And, while more inchoate, was held long before Trump.)
Side note: Per my observation about Russell Moore last year, Christianity’s entanglement with politics in the US isn’t totally new either, per things like Teddy Roosevelt’s “Muscular Christianity.” And per that link, I have a more skeptical eye on Russell Moore’s past than Alberta does.

1A. Conservative evangelicals’ other problems, such as their version of the Catholic priests’ sex abuse scandal? 4.5. The interviews with Rachael Denhollander and Julie Roys and their legal and journalistic work, respectively, was very good. So was Denhollander’s speculation that whichever way the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Life Commission breaks on the sexual abuse database issue, it’s going to cause a denominational schism.

1B. In brief, Alberta's starting with the Reagan era is good, as he shows evangelicals' interest in politics — and per Falwell Sr. being focused on taking down Jimmy Carter — as being an early driver. Could have been explored more, namely, the degree to which evangelicals overlooked Reagan's religious failings, such as divorce, child conceived (tho not born) out of wedlock, consulting astrologers (contra legends, Ronnie, not Nancy, took the initial lead on this long before the presidency) and more, just like with Trump. Let's also not forget that the National Day of Prayer was pushed on Ike by evangelicals, and other related Cold War items. 3.25 for not more explicitly making these ties, especially the pre-Reagan ones. Alberta is sincere in his worries about politics overtaking evangelical Christianity today, but, whether he's actually less sincere, or he just didn't want to go into depth on this, he risks looking less sincere by not having explored these ties more.
Beyond the focus of this book, I suspect that my childhood Missouri Synod Lutheranism, without a formal schism, will have 10 percent of its congregations hive off over the next decade or so and that Matt Harrison will stop being able to even halfway thread the needle over the Lutefash issue.

And, speaking of not exploring ties more? ...

1C. Where’s apocalypticism and where’s Israel? I only thought about that at the end, but .... See point 5 and explication for more. 2.5 as a placeholder, but also lowered the rating on broader political commentary, especially re the issue of Israel. On apocalypticism and eschatology, no, not every evangelical has the same take, but, they’re all generally contra mainline Protestants, and Catholics and Orthodoxy’s, amillenialism. And, hellz yes, this influences their interaction with politics, and especially, in foreign affairs, Israel. (NO 1- or 2-star reviewer picked up on this; 3-star reviews were too many to read but I expect it was missed there, too. I'll expand on this, either here or at my blog sites.)

And, yes, this is the issue that gets expansion.


The Wikipedia page on millennialism is a good starter. For more on the three main options within Christianity, go to its pages on premillennialism, postmillennialism and amillennialism.

Premillennialism has two different stripes, one ancient and the other modern. Both, though, believe in a literal millennium, a 1,000-year rule of Jesus on earth. They differ on things like where to place the "Rapture" (scare quote needed) and the "Tribulation" vis a vis the millennium as a whole, but have broad similarities. Overall, historic premillennialism is less literalistic than modern dispensationalist versions, though, and it's those that drive the folks like Tim LaHaye and his "Left Behind" set.

To be complete? Postmillennialism is, per Wiki, more of a catch-all. That said, all varieties believe Jesus' second coming will not happen until AFTER a millennial period, hence the "post-" prefix. How literalistic or not to understand that millennial period itself has a wide variety of stances.


Amillennialism? Anything the bible says about a 1,000-year period is figurative.

As Wiki notes in the main article, some early church fathers were Historical Premillennialist. Others may have been around that. Postmillennialism in any form had no real foothold among the ante-Nicene fathers.

But then Nicaea happened. And everything related to it, like the legalization of Christianity inside the Roman Empire, followed by it being made the official state religion by Theodosius II less than 60 years later. And, no tribulation or any other premillennial verschnizzle had happened. (This is why, in the bible, most scholars think II Thessalonians is apocryphal; it totally ignores Paul's "Man of Lawlessness" of 1 Thessalonians. See here for the difference between that person, the Beast of Revelation and the various antichrists of Johannine epistles.)

Amillennialsts say that there is no literal millennium, and that Revelation is just referencing the time between Jesus' ascension and his return. There will be no reign of the righteous or improvability of the earth before he returns, contra postmillennialism, nor will he return to start a 1,000-year battle with the powers of darkness, let alone look for a rebuilt temple in Jerusalem after a spotless red heifer is found or anything like that.

So, per Alberta's book, who believes what?

Catholics, Eastern Orthodox are strongly amillennial. So is the Lutheranism of my youth. So is traditional Calvinism, including Alberta's Presbyterianism. Ditto on Anglicanism and Episcopalianism. "Fundamentalism" within old mainline Protestantism, as well as more liberal views of theology and interpretation in mainline Protestantism, are at least on paper, still amillennial today.

Baptist groups, and the broader Anabaptist tradition from which they arise? Also generally amillennial.

That said, premillennialism in modern times is not a 19th-20th century American issue. Many Puritans held that, seeing themselves as a "New Israel." And, tying that to the "ingathering" and conversion of all Israel. (Paul may have been speaking literalistically in Romans. But, he was still wrong.) It really exploded among 19th century British evangelicals, where John Nelson Darby essentially launched what became modern dispensationalism, then exploded further here in the U.S. with Cyrus Scofield and his infamous Scofield Reference Bible. Its impact was expanded even more by being printed right before World War I. Although Baptists' history is amillennial, dispensationalism has a strong foothold there. It does as well among charismatic and Pentecostal types.

As for where we're at now? The 1948 establishment of the nation of Israel factors largely into many dispensationalists' thoughts, including, yes, rebuilding a temple and other things.

And, ALL of this, and how it affects modern evangelical or fundagelical politics, versus Catholics, Methodists, Lutherans, and on paper, Alberta's childhood Presbyterians, is ignored by him.

2. Defining “evangelical”? 3 Alberta admits it’s complex, but, without using the word “fundagelical,” takes a pass in one way. See below. Let’s also not forget that “evangelical” arose in part as a “branding” term.

3. Biblical and early Christian interpretation, even within “fundagelical” culture? 2.5.

4. The above, outside that? 2.25

5. Broader political commentary? Rating based in part on overlapping past political coverage with Alberta: 1.75

A weighted average of all of the above, weighting more for the 1 and 1A gives 3.2 stars. An unweighted average is 2.8.

Summary: I think Alberta is sincere in his description — as far as it goes. Why it doesn’t go even further, on evangelical history, and the unmentioned elephant in the room, I don’t know. Get’s a gentleman’s C 3 stars. Because of his sincerity, and because at least one of the 1-star reviews is crap, this is a solid rating. But, if he writes another book just about evangelicalism, figure out his audience and pitch first. If he writes another book about evangelicals’ intersection with politics, and it doesn’t cover that elephant, don’t read it.

Early on, like Bart Ehrman’s Armageddon, Alberta appears to have a Marcionite view of the Old Testament. (Later, he talks about the sweetness of the New Jerusalem in Revelation, but ignores the amount of divine wrath there. He ignores Tertullian’s riff on Lazarus and Dives with Christians taking joy over the torments of the dammed.)

Also early on, Alberta indicates a belief in American exceptionalism, such as talking about America’s “miraculous” victory over Great Britain. Nothing miraculous about it when you recognize that Yorktown was a 75 percent French, 25 percent American, win, which doesn’t appear in Alberta’s narrative.

There’s also problems with biblical interpretation and criticism elsewhere. Contra page 131, no Nero didn’t persecute Christians after the Great Fire and the Tacitus account is almost certainly an interpolation by a minor church father circa 400 CE.

The page before is an error that even a fundagelical should not make. Saul/Paul did NOT “supervise” the stoning of Stephen and the plain text of Acts never says that. What Acts 7:54-58 DOES say:

54 When the members of the Sanhedrin heard this, they were furious and gnashed their teeth at him. 55 But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit … 57 At this they covered their ears and, yelling at the top of their voices, they all rushed at him, 58 dragged him out of the city and began to stone him. Meanwhile, the witnesses laid their coats at the feet of a young man named Saul.


A few pages later, from that same Wheaton conference? Maybe part of why evangelicals think, wrongly, they’re being persecuted today is even more than conservative Catholics, they’ve swallowed myths of early Christian martyrdom that Candida Moss showed more than a decade ago simply aren’t true.

Much later, on page 386, this howler: “If these women had complied with the Jewish norms of the day, which forbade women from instructing men in public spaces…” then “it’s true that Paul wrote in one letter that women should not teach men.” Alberta never delves into the issue of inerrancy, nor the critical theology knowledge that Paul didn’t write those words in 2 Timothy, but a pseudonynomous author did circa 120 CE.

Yes, I know this is not a book of biblical, and ante-Nicene and post-Nicene Christian church fathers criticism. Nonetheless, with the exception of Saul/Paul and Stephen, getting these issues wrong, and continuing to wrongly hold them, especially combined with American exceptionalism (including as expressed by Alberta) means that evangelicals, whether they continue to try to be highly engaged politically or not, will in some way get their relation to politics wrong.

The idea of dividing the book into three sections, on “The Kingdom, The Power and the Glory,” riffing on the end of the Lord’s Prayer of today (that almost certainly was not part of the original, per textual criticism) was good. But, where was Augustine, specifically, “The City of God,” in the Kingdom section? He’s referenced in passing twice in the Power section by people Alberta interviews, and that’s it. MAJOR failure there.

Also? Not all evangelicals are conservative evangelicals and Alberta makes an error of omission here like many of his theological kin do. For example, Sojourners magazine, the people behind it, and the mag’s average readers? Nowhere mentioned in your book. (I checked the index; the Russian Orthodox Church, which is definitely not a US evangelical church, is mentioned five times, and Sojourners zero.) Per Wiki, the Sojourners Community that founded the mag started at Trinity Evangelical, and I’ll venture Alberta knows this. Alberta isn’t the only person to get this wrong. So does Fred Clark at Patheos, whom I suspect knows better, and who may be loath to identify himself as a “liberal evangelical” if he is one; The New Republic, which doesn’t; and others. Whether “liberal evangelical” is totally the right word for folks like Sojourners, I don’t know, but, at least, “moderate evangelicals.” And, Jimmy Carter still self-identifies as an evangelical, I think. And, what about academics in exegetical theology who accept historical-critical methodology in general but are on the conservative edge of it like a James McGrath? They’re not fundamentalists, not in a narrow sense.

There’s also the question of who’s an evangelical and who’s a fundamentalist? I consider the conservative Presbyterian church in which Alberta grew up, does have “evangelical” in its name, but? After all, “The Fundamentals” arose from within Presbyterianism, at least as far as the Stewart brothers who funded it. And, I consider the conservative wing of Lutheranism, whether the larger Missouri Synod or the smaller Wisconsin Synod (one of the events Alberta attends is at a Wisconsin Synod church) to be fundamentalist too. (These Lutherans, including my Missouri Synod pastor’s wife sister, hate being called fundamentalists, but it’s true, even if their fundamentals aren’t Presbyterian ones.)

There’s also the question of what the core audience is? If it’s conservative evangelicals, maybe it’s not long enough. If the general public? Too long. 450 pages in relatively small font and leading for todays hardbound book world is pretty long. See the top portion of my ratings.

There’s also a bigger background issue, via a question not raised by Alberta. And, Jeopardy style, I’ll provide the answer via Ed Abbey:

“Growth for growth’s sake is the theology of the cancer cell.”

Indeed, per a biblical reference missed by Alberta, in Acts, Gamaliel says that if the movement by Jesus’ disciples is from god, it will succeed and if not it won’t.

Setting aside divine origins, for any organization that is convinced in a non-arrogant way of the rightness of its mission and ideas, focusing on growth for growth’s sake simply shouldn’t happen.

Then, there’s the general politics coverage.

On 298, Alberta repeats the canard (it is, Tim) that national Democrats generally support “abortion on demand.” Once again, he either knows better or decided not to know better.

Many, many Democrats in the House and Senate supported the Hyde Amendment, barring Medicaid funding of abortions, from when Henry Hyde first wrote it. That includes our current president, Joe Biden, while in the Senate.

Related and connected? Biden, as well as Clinton and Obama, failed to ask Congress as the start of their respective administrations, when Democrats controlled both houses, for legislation offering any federal protections for any portion of Roe that could be federally protected. Alberta knows that, too.

Also, at one point in the book, Alberta seems to treat with a half-sneer the idea in the Shrub Bush administration of looking for “moderate Muslims.” If he didn’t mean that, then, he needs to be more careful in how he describes Muslims in America.

Finally, in a BIG old issue that Alberta totally ignores? And that’s of new relevance since Oct. 7, 2023? At least on paper, the mainline Lutheranism of my youth still doesn’t cut blank checks to Israel. This, and apocalyptic thought in general, and how it fuels and festers fear, is an issue for both political coverage and the intersection of religion and politics.

Related? As I said in 2018 (maybe he’s gotten better) Alberta is not a smart / informed political writer, to put it politely, or he’s … well, he’s the same word as he is on Democrats and abortion, to put it somewhat less politely, or an l-word, to put it totally unpolitely, about Beto O’Rourke’s political stances. I interviewed Beto, per the background to that link, and during the 2018 Senate campaign general election race, not the Dem primary. Beto talked about "access for all," and said single payer was "one way to get there," but contra Alberta, that's not single payer. Period. He refused to cosponsor John Conyers' HR 676 in the House. And, he said he didn't like Sanders' similar bill in the Senate. Now, Alberta wasn't alone in drinking the Kool-Aid; so, too, for reasons of her own, did his primary opponent, Sema Hernandez. That still doesn't excuse Alberta.

==

Finally, sidebar observations. One two-star reviewer needs to actually read Alberta with an open mind rather than chastise. She won’t recognize herself in the mirror (nor allow comments). Another in the same vein.
And another:

The craptacular one-star review is by an apparent Gnu Atheist.

View all my reviews

July 30, 2024

RIP Steve Curry


 Golden Canyon at sunset (my photo).

Steve Curry was nobody famous. He was just someone who loved to hike, and who fatally pushed his luck in Death Valley. (Yes, this story is a year old, but I saw it via another website, which talked about how climate change is making med-evac helicopter rescues in summer in the Southwest more and more problematic, because of lesser air lift in hotter temperatures.)

Since he's not famous, this isn't a takedown obit, but it IS a precautionary obit.

First, he was 71 years old. By no means does that mean, go to a retirement home. It does mean work within your limits, and know that as we (I'm no spring chicken any more) get older, our bodies get less efficient at thermoregulation in both extreme heat and extreme cold.


I hate rock circles and cairns, but this was 20 years ago, and at least I played with it in Photoshop. Golden Canyon, my photo. And, a reminder to enjoy hiking.

Second, know your adaptedness to the conditions. He was from Sunland, a "foothills" neighborhood in Los Angeles. He didn't regularly get exposed to Death Valley weather or close to it. Me, I'm in Tex-ass. Not the most humid part, but certainly not the least humid part. I'm used to 100-degree temperatures with 40 percent or more humidity, which produce heat indexes near 110. Also, even North Texas (not the Panhandle) is at a lower latitude than LA, so I'm used to sun more nearly directly overhead than Curry was.


Badwater Basin from the west side; HDR photography. Author photo. Click to embiggen.

Related? It sounds like he'd never hiked DV in anywhere near full summer, and like some of the nutbar Germans who do similar, decided he had to do this:

But on Tuesday, Curry collapsed after completing a hike in Death Valley, one of the hottest places on the planet, and died of what officials believe were heat-related causes.
“He went having accomplished something he wanted to do,” said Rima Evans Curry, his wife of 29 years. “He wanted to go to Death Valley. He wanted to do a hike.”
The temperature in the park Tuesday was unbearably hot, but Curry was intent on completing his round trip from Golden Canyon to Zabriskie Point, a scenic overview overlooking the sun-drenched moonscape. ...

More later on that:

“He had talked about Death Valley for at least a week or more,” his 76-year-old wife said. She told him she was worried about the temperature. “But once he got an idea like that ...” she trailed off.

Wrong move, if you hadn't done this before.

That leads to No. 3.


I've done Zabriskie Point and Golden Canyon before. In January and in April. I would never do that in July, because I know this:

Around 10 a.m., Curry stopped to rest under a metal sign, the only spot of shade at Zabriskie Point. He declined offers of assistance, determined to finish what he set out to do.

Yeah, wrong.

Fourth? Stop comparing yourself to others.

It had taken him about two hours to reach Zabriskie Point — and the return hike would take longer — but he said he was mostly worried that he wasn’t keeping pace with younger people he had seen out walking.

Since I'm not a spring chicken, whether it's in the Desert Southwest or a 14er in Colorado, as was the case last year? I expect to get passed left and right by younger people. Sadly, tying this in with Point 1, it sounds like he couldn't accept that he was 71 years old.

Fifth? Know what other things will and will not do.

SPF 50 sunscreen? Great at keeping you from sunburn. Does nothing to cool you off, other than the cooling from not being sunburnt. In other words, it's not spray-on Freon. (And, please, folks, don't think that a bottle of computer keyboard cleaner will get you around DV incident-free, either.)

Fifth, part 2? Per what I said about that environmental website, know that, even in what seems to be a well-traveled place, medical help may not get to you. This is also going to apply to some degree to other popular state and federal outdoors sites in the U.S. Southwest. In other words, don't be a Steve Curry at Mojave National Preserve, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, Joshua Tree National Park, etc. Also, contra both German tourists and some Americans, don't listen to Google Maps.

Sixth, here's more to know on what heat can do to you.

If you want to "visit" Zabriskie Point with fiery heat, do it another time, and do a Michel Foucault, drop a tab of acid there, and wait for a fiery vision. And also, be poetic about your deserts.

July 29, 2024

Biden's Supreme Court reform is unconstitutional

Yeah, I'm not a lawyer and Elie Mystal at The Nation is, but he was wrong two weeks ago when this was rumored, and Liberalmonger Joe is wrong now.

Term limits for justices are unconstitutional. The "good behavior clause" seems clear.

Update: Constitutional law scholar professor Erwin Chemerinsky agrees with me:

The problem with term limits for Supreme Court justices, and certainly ones that would apply to the current justices, is that they would require a constitutional amendment. The Supreme Court has long said, starting with McCulloch v. Maryland in 1819 and increasingly in recent years, that history and tradition are important in interpreting the Constitution. The tradition has always been that a Supreme Court justice holds the position for life, unless the justice resigns or is impeached and removed. Article III, Section 1, makes that clear: “The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behaviour.”

Can't be clearer than that.

For that matter, arguably, so is a binding code of ethical conduct.

And, the "no immunity for presidents"?

I've said it before. Blame Watergate and a legally nugatory OAG Office of Legal Counsel position. 

Now, of course, it could be made constitutional, by amendment. Different story.

On Chemerinsky, unfortunately, he transitions to a duopoly-based plea to beat Trump without looking at larger issues of how "librul" Supreme Court justices have been less than perfect on the First, Fourth, and Sixth Amendments, among others, or how other issues of court reform are also needed.

==

An in-depth brand new post challenging further, and generally tribalist, nuttery on this issue by the likes of Law Dork Chris Geidner, is now up.

TPA belated roundup from being on vacation

Posting the roundup for the week of July 22.

The Texas Progressive Alliance mourns the passing of Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee as it brings you this week's roundup.

 Off the Kuff had more to say about Hurricane Beryl and its aftermath

. SocraticGadfly looked at cities being cheap by eliminating swimming pools. ==================================== 

 And here are some posts of interest from other Texas blogs.

 Nonsequiteuse eulogizes Rep. Jackson Lee. 

 Matt Angle begs the media to not rewrite Donald Trump's sordid history. 

The Dallas Observer reports on a Ken Paxton parody website.

 The Current is unimpressed by Elon Musk's business moves. 

 The Eyewall knocks down the myth of "it's just a Category 1 hurricane".