Everyday Erinyes #292

 Posted by at 11:34 am  Politics
Nov 142021
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

I am not a professional historian, or even all that much of an amateir one, but I have, over the years, picked up bits and pieces. And I’m pretty sure there was a time in England – probably before the Civil War (theirs, not ours), when being “armigerous” was absolutely connected to a title or deed of nobility – that if you were a knight, or a baron (viscount,earl, marquis, or duke – or a royal), you had the right to “bear arms” in public – and if you weren’t, you didn’t. I actually hope the “originalists” on the bench never get hold of this. Because if they wanted to argue that the point of the Bill of Rights was to give everyone rights (including those rights only the nobility previously had), I for one could certainly not argue against that.
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Why are medieval weapons laws at the center of a US Supreme Court case?

A gun rights advocate walks through the rotunda of the Kentucky Capitol. Some lawyers argue that the 1689 English Bill of Rights created the legal basis for public carry of weapons in the U.S.
Bryan Woolston/Getty Images

Jennifer Tucker, Wesleyan University

In the opening scene of “The Last Duel,” the new film set in 14th-century France, a herald announces the rules for conduct at a tournament to the death. He declares that no members of the public – whatever their social background – are allowed to bring weapons to the event.

This scene might seem far removed from 21st-century America. But medieval weapons laws – including a 1328 English statute prohibiting the public carry of edged weapons without royal permission – are at the center of dueling legal opinions in a case now before the U.S. Supreme Court, New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen.

The plaintiffs are challenging New York’s “proper cause” gun law, which tightly restricts public carry of firearms. If they win, similar laws in several other states will be called into question. That means that concealed carry licensing laws could be broadly liberalized for millions of Americans currently living in those more restrictive jurisdictions.

Few people realize how big a role history has played in the battle over gun rights – the topic of a 2019 collection of essays, “A Right to Bear Arms? The Contested Role of History in Contemporary Debates on the Second Amendment,” that I co-edited with Smithsonian Museum of American History curators Barton Hacker and Margaret Vining.

The book explores how courts in the United States have turned to history for instruction in how guns should be treated – decrees, laws and interpretations of the past that are at the forefront of the case before the Supreme Court today.

Scalia points to the English Bill of Rights

The United States legal system grew out of the English legal tradition. This connection – which is often referenced by originalists – is crucial to making sense of the arguments around gun rights in America today.

Originalism is a legal philosophy that attempts to interpret legal texts, including the Constitution, based on what lawyers think is their original meaning.

An important victory for gun rights advocates took place in District of Columbia v. Heller. In that 2008 decision, the Supreme Court for the first time ruled that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm for personal self-defense in the home.

Majestic white courthouse with columns.
New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen is the most significant gun rights case before the Supreme Court since 2008.
Ron Watts/The Image Bank via Getty Images

Justice Antonin Scalia, author of the 5-4 majority Heller opinion, claimed that there was a long tradition of the English state’s granting freedom to possess weapons dating back to the 1689 English Bill of Rights, which includes a clause that reads “the subjects which are Protestant may have arms for their defence suitable to their conditions and as allowed by law.”

Scalia’s argument relied heavily on the work of historian Joyce Malcolm, the author of “To Keep and Bear Arms: The Origins of an Anglo-American Right” and a Second Amendment scholar at the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University. Malcolm and lawyers who support the expansion of gun rights argue that this clause created the legal basis for having weapons for personal self-defense in Colonial America.

Having prevailed in Heller, gun rights activists are seeking the liberalization of restrictions on public carrying of guns outside the home. In the New York case, some lawyers and other parties are now arguing that medieval statutes restricted only public carry that “terrified” the public, and that such statutes were never actually enforced to prevent “normal” public carry.

Historians object

However, most scholars of English and American history vigorously dispute the accuracy of this claim. In fact, since the Heller decision, the history of firearms regulation in England and the U.S. has been the focus of what Fordham University law professor Saul Cornell has called an “explosion of empirical research.”

Many of these findings appear in an amicus brief presented to the Court in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen.

Signed by 17 professors of law, English history and American history – including me – the brief demonstrates through a review of historical evidence that “neither English nor American history supports a broad Second Amendment right to carry firearms or other dangerous weapons in public based on a generic interest in self-defense.”

It highlights 700 years of trans-Atlantic weapons regulations, from the English tradition of restricting public carry through the American tradition of doing the same.

The brief makes clear that limitations on the public carry of dangerous weapons, including firearms, are a centuries-old legal and cultural norm.

Early royal proclamations dating as far back as the 13th century regularly prohibited going armed in public without special permission. In 1328, the Statute of Northampton banned the public carry of swords and daggers, open or concealed – this was before the invention of firearms – without express permission from the authorities.

As legal scholar and historian Geoffrey Robertson, an expert on the English Bill of Rights, put it: “There was never any absolute ‘right’ to carry guns. As the Bill of Rights (1689) made clear, this was only ‘as allowed by law.’”

Two pistols.
A pair of flintlock pistols that were common in 17th-century England.
Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images

An American tradition of limiting public carry

The English tradition of broad public carry restrictions continued across the Atlantic into the Colonies.

During periods of heightened risk of attack, some Colonies required certain individuals to carry guns to church or when working in fields away from fortified or populated areas. However, this obligation was not understood as establishing a right to carry firearms in public.

After the American Revolution, states continued to adopt regulations echoing the Statute of Northampton. Recent scholarship has uncovered that early-to-mid-19th-century firearms regulations varied considerably by jurisdiction and geography, but 19 states had restrictions for public carry on the books.

After the Civil War, as the lethality of firearms increased exponentially through technological advances, municipalities and states like Texas imposed even broader public carry prohibitions.

By 1900, there was a legal consensus that states and localities generally had the authority to limit public carry. While the American approach to public carry restriction was fluid – varying across time and jurisdiction based on social and political changes – there is a consistent history and tradition of many American Colonies, states, territories and municipalities imposing broad prohibitions on carrying dangerous weapons in public, particularly without a specific need for self-defense.

An invented tradition?

So how did a 1689 English Bill of Rights that never gave any absolute right to carry guns turn into a key justification for that very right in the U.S.?

Patrick Charles, the author of the 2019 book “Armed in America: A History of Gun Rights from Colonial Militias to Concealed Carry,” argues that pro-gun advocates have selectively interpreted the historical record to justify a personal right to possess and carry weapons in public.

Essentially, they invented a tradition.

[Over 115,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletter to understand the world. Sign up today.]

“Invented traditions,” a concept highlighted in the 1983 book “The Invention of Tradition,” which was edited by historians Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger, are cultural practices that are thought to have emerged from long ago but actually are grounded in a much more recent past. A classic example is the Scottish tartan kilt, once believed to derive from the ancient garb of the Scottish Highlanders but actually invented in the 18th century by an Englishman.

The “individual right” to carry firearms in public seems to be another.The Conversation

Jennifer Tucker, Associate Professor of History and Science in Society, Wesleyan University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, fortunately, the history is far more complicated than my picked-up bits and pieces would suggest. Even so, I personally would want to pay more attention to the beliefs of (now long retired) Justice Stevens, I believe it was, who recommended that the Second Amendment be abolished on account of the enormous increase in destructiveness of weapons developed since the Amendment was written. Of course, I don’t see that ever happening. But then, I don’t see universal love for each other ever happening either, and that doesn’t prevent me from supporting it.

The Furies and I will be back.

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Nov 142021
 

Yesterday, On the morning trip, there was enough cloud cover I didn’t have to use the visor much, though it was very helpful when I did. Coming home – well, let me back up a little. First, the visit was good and Virgil returns all greetings.OK. I already said the package with the visor contained some other things. What they were was clear-plastic-lined fabric screens, each about 16″x 20″, stretched with a wire frame flexible enough to fold them into about a 9″ circle if you’re smart enough – I’m not, but they came that way. I opened two and didn’t touch the second two. They came with little suction cups but there’s not an obvious place to put them. I clipped a couple of binder clips to one and took it and a second one to the car. As much as we talk about the sun moving from East to West, we often ignore in our speech the effect of the earth’s axis on that. Here in Colorado, the axis is so skewed at this time of year that the sun sets virtually due South – to the left of the car from Las Animas to Pueblo, and left and behind me when I’m heading north to Springs. As I got to Pueblo and the dangerous-due-to glare turns, I stopped, and clipped one of the scrrens to the driver’s window, far enough back not to interfere with the left rear view mirror. When I started going north, that screen was far enough back to slow down the sun – not strong enough to stop it, which itself coul have been dangerous, just effectively enough for it not to hurt my eyes and drive me nuts. So I guess now I know what they are for. Between them and the visor extender, driving is now a lot easier and feels much safer. Mission accomplished.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

Common Dreams – ‘Arrogant Insensitivity’: Defense Lawyer in Arbery Murder Trial Ripped for Bid to Bar Black Pastors
Quote – Gough, referring to the founder and marketing mascot of the fast-food chain Kentucky Fried Chicken, curiously added that “if a bunch of folks came in here dressed like Colonel Sanders with white masks sitting in the back,” before trailing off.
Click through for story, which is all over but this is a good take on it. Personally, I think the prosecution should give Sojourners a call (and possible also ask the black pastors) to look for white pastors to put on the stand who will really shame the defendants with both barrels.

DHS Sounds Alarm On RW Terror Against School, Health Officials And Congress
Quote – DHS issued a bulletin Wednesday warning that the holiday season ushers in a “diverse and challenging threat environment” with threats “posed by individuals and small groups engaged in violence, including domestic violent extremists (DVEs) and those inspired or motivated by foreign terrorists and other malign foreign influences.” You can substitute the term “right-wing extremists” for “domestic violent extremists.” Probably not all DVEs are right-wing but it’s clear from the DHS bulletin that the ones it’s most worried about are:
Click through for more. My, it’s nice to have a DHS that actually cares about our secuity,not just bashing people of color and other minorities.

Wonkette – What’s In The Infrastructure Bill? What’s In Build Back Better? Which Is Which? Wonkette Gets Servicey!
Quote – On the off chance you may have missed it, the House passed the Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework (BIF) late Friday [11/5], with the second, much larger part of Joe Biden’s first term agenda, the Build Back Better reconciliation bill, likely to be passed the week prior to Thanksgiving, as long as Joe Manchin doesn’t decide it needs to include tax credits for diesel pickup trucks that “roll coal” on bicyclists and drivers of Prii. In Monday’s White House presser, Principal Deputy Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden would sign the infrastructure bill into law sometime next week…. Obviously, Biden wants to use the passage of the BIF as leverage to move Build Back Better to completion, which seems like a pretty sound strategy, and if your House or Senate critter is doing town halls this week, let ’em know you want Build Back Better to pass, yes, even if they’re Republicans.
Click through for what we got. There is also a companion article, What’s In The Build Back Better Bill? Your Servicey Wonkette SUPER MEGA-LISTICLE!, which details what we hope to get. Wonkette may have a frivolous attitude, but it also has facts.

Food for Thought –

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Nov 132021
 

Glenn Kirschner – Insurrection Defendant Gets 41 Months in Prison. But What of the Cases that are Set for Trial?

Thom Hartmann – Why Is The Judge Hiding Rittenhouse’s Ties To White Supremacy? (Shades of Zimmerman)

Rebel HQ – Crooked Judge In Kyle Rittenhouse Trial EXPOSED

PBS – Amanpour & Co – Chase and Takota Iron Eyes. Yes, this is almost 20 minutes.

RepresentUs – Limp Democracy

Cracked – If Dating Apps Were Honest

Beau – Let’s talk about a message from a small government conservative…. [This is the video which contains Beau’s method for predicting what Republicans will do.]

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Nov 132021
 

This is the last in my “The Next Gandhi” series, taken from a long essay I wrote several years ago about our political and other woes. I have made adjustments due to changing circumstances and new information.

Everywhere you turn these days, people are pounding the drums of Doomsday. Experts of one kind or another point to evidence that our society is on the verge of collapse. Economic troubles, crumbling infrastructure, vanishing resources, climate change, drug-resistant supergerms – the list of bogeymen is long, and many of these worst-case scenarios are all too plausible. Our society is far more fragile than we realize, and a lot of people are denial. We think everything is going to be OK, we believe the gold-plated B.S. that the Panglosses and Pollyannas churn out, we let ourselves get distracted by celebrity gossip and ball games on TV. We close our eyes and pretend that the elephant in the room is not there. We tune out bad news and accuse the Cassandras of being fear-mongers who are trying to instigate stampedes.

Some, however, say that these are not the signs of collapse, but of a coming drastic change. And what is this drastic change? Perhaps it is a major shift in our thinking, in how we feed and clothe and house and medicate ourselves. A major shift in how we view economics. Time and again I hear and read we need to move beyond the idea that an economy must rely on growth for prosperity.

Many things that people have suggested on TV shows, blogs and the like appear to be sound solutions to the multi-headed crisis facing us. Localizing production, insourcing, living with less, moving to a post-capitalistic economy – these are drastic and painful changes to make in our lifestyle, but necessary if we are to survive as a society. We do need to prepare for the worst, prepare for the thou-knowest-what hitting the fan. We cannot go on whistling in the dark and pretending that some deus ex machina will descend from the heavens and magically make everything hunky-dory again. We need to be more reliant on ourselves and our neighbors, and get more involved in government at all levels. A good government is important to help solve our problems, but we must not rely on legislature for everything. Remember the fiasco after Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans?

On the other hand, though, we shouldn’t be too pessimistic and think that the totality of our society is going to go kablooey so that we will go all the way back to a pre-industrial lifestyle. We need to realize that, in times of crisis, people do a lot more cooperation and looking after each other than trying to save their own a**es. Also, human ingenuity has almost no bounds, and nothing brings it out like adversity.

Human beings are naturally good. We evolved that way. Civilization would not have been possible if we were not ethical and moral by nature. On top of that, we are tough as all get out. The Great Depression was the crucible that created the Greatest Generation – the men who fought and won World War II, the legion of Rosie the Riveters who gave birth to the Women’s Libbers. Tough times never last, but tough people do.

Now is a great time to get a major movement for positive change started. Americans are seriously p***ed off about a lot of things. CEOs are drawing salaries that seem downright obscene while the working class struggles to put meals on the table and keep up with rent and bills. Getting the minimum wage increased requires effort that makes moving heaven and earth seem like child’s play. Right-wing bugnuts howl about a “stolen” election. Republicans in Congress block any and all efforts to make voting easier because they care about their party – and thwarting President Biden – more than they do about this country and its citizens. Big Businesses pull the strings of government in order to squelch efforts to reduce humanity’s contribution to climate change.

Wherever you turn, you see injustice. George Zimmerman acquitted after slaying Trevon Martin. A spoiled rich brat gets not even a slap on the wrist after killing four innocents while driving drunk. Poor, weak people receive bloated sentences and are bled white with outrageous fines and fees while the wealthy and powerful get away with everything. Bankers not being punished for robbing people of their savings and homes, money being the only thing that matters in our “justice” system – one need not even cherry-pick to get a basket full of examples.

Several people I have talked with agree that, right now, the USA is a powder keg. Hell – it is a boxcar full of nitroglycerin. The right person or the right incident can give it the right shock, and KABOOMBA! In some ways it is like Russia during the last days of the Czars, when the rulers and nobles were lolling in their mansions, oblivious to the suffering and rage of the peasants and workers. Our situation is, in a major way, worse, because the Russian people had already been living in horrid poverty for generations; but many people in the U.S. who are now struggling once knew a decent standard of living. Also, we are far better informed thanks to the Internet. Finally, don’t forget the good ol’ American spirit of independence and self-reliance, as well as our right to keep and bear arms. It all adds up to an extremely volatile situation, one that could easily explode, possibly thanks to an unanticipated stimulus, one of the sort one doesn’t associate with setting off revolutions. We experienced a straw-that-broke-the-camel’s-back moment with the tragic and inexcusable death of George Floyd – suddenly, the Black Lives Matter flared into action, and people by the thousands took to the streets. Those protests were mostly peaceful; unfortunately, some loose cannons and agent provocateurs caused trouble.

All this anti-Congress, anti-Wall Street, anti-establishment, anti-politics-as-usual sentiment carries a great deal of energy; but it must be properly gathered and harnessed before it dissipates. The Big Bad Guys are relying on matters simmering down, on people having short memories and even shorter attention spans, of the Occupy types getting bored or distracted. They hope that we will continue to complain but just mill around rather than organize and get active. Remember, the only thing necessary for Evil to triumph is for the forces of Good to do nothing. When good people get off their rear ends and start really doing things, evil is toast.

Our numbers will be few at first, but that is true of any great movement. The Indian independence movement and the Civil Rights movement both started small and weak, but because the leaders were dedicated and determined, they grew and accumulated support. Like the proverbial snowball that gets larger as it rolls downhill, we can make this new movement grow in power and clout if we can maintain the momentum.

Most importantly, we need the right people with the right vision running the show. The wrong leader, the wrong group will get us out of the frying pan but lead us into the fire. Look at the Russian Revolution and the rise of Communism, or Germany between the World Wars and see what happens when the wrong folks lead the charge. We can change this country for better, we can drag it out of the current downward spiral towards a police state where a handful of people control nearly all of the wealth. We can restore freedom and justice to the USA, and prevent unspeakable tragedy.

So, where can we turn for support? EVERYWHERE!!! America – indeed, the whole world – is lousy with groups of people, already fairly well organized and funded, who are ready to rally for the sweeping changes we need to bring about. Even if all they can do is march in protest while holding a banner, or sign a bunch of petitions, hordes of people are just waiting for that Great Organizer to stand up and start speaking. All thanks to the Internet, a ready-made army of 99%ers, progressives, ecological activists, privacy advocates, human rights defenders and so on awaits the next Gandhi.

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Nov 132021
 

Yesterday, I mostly got ready for today’s drive. I also tried to collect a little extra news and videos, so Saturday’s posts may be a trifle dated.  Also yesterday, Steve Bannon was indicted by the DOJ on 2 counts of Contempt of Congress – one for not providing documents, and one for not providing testimony

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

Mother Jones – The Furriest, Cleverest, and Hands-Down Cutest Way to Fight Climate Change
Quote – But it’s tricky to quantify exactly how much carbon a healthy kelp forest gobbles up. A redwood tree, for instance, grows to be massive over hundreds of years, locking away lots of carbon over long timescales. (Unless it catches on fire, in which case the carbon goes back into the atmosphere.) Things are more in flux underwater. All manner of critters, including sea urchins, are nibbling on kelp—and pooping out the carbon. Plus, the churning sea breaks off bits of the forest, which fall to the seafloor and decompose, releasing stored carbon. So a kelp forest constantly decays and grows back, sequestering and releasing carbon all the while.
Click through for story. So long I have been screaming into the wind that messing with nature when we don’t know what function everything serves is simply suicidal. This explains a lot. Just don’t get dizzy from all the twists and turns.

Kansas School District Bans Pulitzer Prize-winning Books
Quote – It’s not just Kansas. In Virginia, one school district is hard at work removing “sexual content” from their libraries. Two board members, Courtland representative Rabih Abuismail and Livingston representative Kirk Twigg, said they would like to see the removed books burned. “I think we should throw those books in a fire,” Abuismail said, and Twigg said he wants to “see the books before we burn them so we can identify within our community that we are eradicating this bad stuff.”
Click through for story, including a list to a list of 29 books from Kansas.

GOP leaders say little to condemn violent political rhetoric
Quote – The GOP’s reluctance to crack down on — or even mildly criticize — violent rhetoric in its own ranks is part of a broader pattern in which the party tries to minimize such behavior. Gosar removed the tweet aimed at Ocasio-Cortez, but the Arizona congressman and his digital director said those offended by his tweet should “relax.” Trump, meanwhile, has attempted to divert attention from the Jan. 6 violence at the U.S. Capitol by saying that last year’s Election Day was the “real insurrection.” There was no insurrection on Election Day. There was a free and fair election won by Biden.
Click through for examples. GOP condoning violence? By GOPs? Surprise, surprise!

Food for Thought –

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Nov 122021
 

COP26 Day 12 | It’s finally crunch time

 

Euronews Green delivers a Special COP26 email to my mailbox every day during the two weeks it is running (01-12 November 2021). I’ll publish it in its entirety for those who are interested. This is the ninth in the series.


Today’s takeaway

COP26 was due to wrap at 7pm CET today but there is still no white smoke for a final agreement as this newsletter goes to publication. If the almost 200 countries involved in the talks are unable to strike a deal this evening, it is likely COP26 will go into overtime.

A new draft decision published early this morning appeared to water down the language from the previous text calling to end all use of coal and phase out fossil fuel subsidies completely. While the change has sparked criticism from climate activists, some conceded that the draft text at least had the merit of retaining a mention to fossil fuels for the first time in decades of UN climate talks.

The draft cover deal has also retained a core request for countries to set more ambitious climate targets next year. But this request appears to use weaker language than the previous draft, saying the upgraded pledges should take into account “different national circumstances.”

On the positive side, many observers find the new text stronger on climate finance. “We’ve moved from richer nations largely ignoring the pleas of developing countries for promised finance to tackle climate change, to the start of recognition that their calls should be met,” said Greenpeace chief Jennifer Morgan.

“A small number of key issues remain which require our urgent collective attention,” said COP26 chairman Alok Sharma this afternoon as he urged “a final injection of can-do spirit” to deliver on an ambitious climate deal.

Looking ahead, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates will host the next COPs in 2022 and 2023 respectively, following announcements in Glasgow yesterday. An Egyptian official said the North African country would hold the next climate talks “on behalf of Africa.”

In case you weren’t able to follow along on Thursday, here are five key takeaways from Day 11.


At a glance

Latest draft of COP26 deal ‘waters down’ language on ending coal use

The change in wording suggests a shift away from unconditional demands that some fossil fuel exporting nations have objected to.
Read more

What is ecocide and why is it so important that we enshrine it into law?

Ecocide can literally be translated as “home-kill,” making clear its violence and absurdity. It refers to the destruction humans knowingly do to the environment, from deforestation to ocean plastic pollution. So why is it legal?
Read more

Meet the filmmaker who swapped a London flat for an off-grid boat

In the third episode of Euronews Green’s new video series Low Impact Living, we speak with adventurer and filmmaker James Levelle about being a ‘river nomad’.
Read more


Social exclusive

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Nov 122021
 

Glenn Kirschner – This is from the Stephanie Miller show from October 31. So nothing new, but phrased and inflected differently whan he’s talking with Stephanie.

The Lincoln Projrct – Last Week in the Republican Party

Meidas Touch – Kyle Rittenhouse FAKE CRIES on stand as trial goes OFF THE RAILS!! (Sobs but no tears…)

Thom Hartmann – Media Lies Said Youngkin was Education Candidate

RepresentUs – More on Gerrymandered Pizza

Really American – Garland Stalls, Trump and Accomplices Roam Free of Consequences

Beau – Let’s talk about an internal Democratic party debate….

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Nov 122021
 

Yesterday, I took advantage of some halfway nice weather to go out and install the visor extender. It fits perfectly. I also started a file to keep track of the time of sunset – I really only need to know in the day I go, but to have an idea in advance of roughly how late it is, and even which direction it is going, is helpful.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

Crooks and Liars – FAIL: ‘QAnon Shaman’ Tries Forrest Gump Defense
Quote – Chansley “[riled] up other members of the mob with his screaming obscenities about our nation’s lawmakers and flouting the ‘opportunity’ to rid our government of those he has long considered to be traitors,” U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves and assistant U.S. attorney Kimberly Paschall wrote in the 28-page sentencing memo.
Click through for more. I used the quote even with its error in diction. I doubt anyone but me noticed.

Daily Kos (Eleveld) – Turns out McConnell gifting the party to Trump is killing Senate GOP recruitment
Quote – Notably, Trump is playing key role in nearly every one of those Senate contests. In almost every state, Trump has done at least one of several things: repelled a top-tier candidate, made an endorsement, radicalized the GOP field, or become a complicating factor by incessantly pushing his election fraud lies and demanding absolute fealty.
Click through for specifics. Sounds like good news, but it is contingent on there being enough sane Republicans left in the country. That was not somethng we had to worry about in 2010. There were crazies, yes, but they weren’t the majority, or in control, or the face of the party.

Sojourners – AN OPEN LETTER TO THE GOVERNOR OF OKLAHOMA
Quote – “I was a juror on the case… and this thing has weighed on me for a long time. What happened was, several of us from the jury were getting on an elevator. This was well before deliberations. And one of the jurors said, ‘Well, they should just take that n—– out back, shoot him and bury him under the jail. It didn’t matter what happened, this was a Black man that was on trial for murder. He did it.’”
Click through for the full letter. Our national shame of still exercising capital punishment and our national shame of racism are both on display here.

Food for Thought –

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