It’s a busy day here in the CatBox. I am watching the bogus, treasonous attempt by Trump*, Hawley and the Republican Reich to overthrow the government of the US. They are trying to discard valid electoral votes for Biden, chosen based on the popular vote in those states, and replace them with bogus electoral votes for Trump*, chosen based on their obedience to their Nazi Fuhrer. I have also been watching the Georgia Senate runoffs. Warnock has officially won, and although Ossoff has not, he has a comfortable enough situation that I am certain that he has. At the beginning of Campaign 2020, I predicted that Democrats would hold the House of Representatives. Thank God I was right. I predicted that Democrats would win the White House. Thank God I was right. I predicted that Republicans would hold the Senate. Thank God I was wrong! Tomorrow I should be in the saddle, but busy. It’s a grocery delivery day, and I’ll have a big order, as Store to Door was off two weeks. It’s also a WWWendy day. She will be coming late in the afternoon. Happy Hump Day to all!
Jig Zone Puzzle:
Today’s took me 3:52 (average 4:46). To do it, click here. How did you do?
Cartoon:
Short Takes:
From The New Yorker: Advancing a new conspiracy theory during a rally on Monday, Donald J. Trump claimed that the United States Constitution is invalid because it was signed by dead people.
“All we’re hearing is, the Constitution this and the Constitution that,” Trump said. “I’m telling you, as sure as you’re sitting there, that every person who signed that piece of paper is dead.”
Trump said that he had his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani investigate the signatories to the Constitution, “and he found a scandal bigger than Hunter Biden’s laptop.”
“Their signatures do not match the signatures of any living person,” he said. “Not only are these people dead, but they have been dead for a long, long time. This should never have been allowed to happen.”
Dang Andy! Is that satire? Trump’s* surprise that the founding fathers are dead is completely credible. RESIST!!
From YouTube (a blast from the past): The Byrds – Turn! Turn! Turn!
It’s a tired day here in the CatBox. Yesterday, WWWendy and I had lots to do. We set refills for pain meds and scheduled my next infusion for Friday the 15th. WWWendy picked up Subway sandwiches. I’m enjoying them, but I trust Mitch (ours, not BBBMMM) will confirm that any NJ denizen knows what comes from Subway isn’t a sub. I’m listening to election day in GA. I look forward to good news. Tomorrow I may have no more than a Personal Update, depending on how much time I need to spend watching Hawley’s Hookers trying to steal the White House AGAIN. Tuesday is Flush Your Republicans Day. If they smell like shit, there’s a reason for that.
Jig Zone Puzzle:
Today’s took me 3:24 (average 5:25). To do it, click here. How did you do?
Cartoon:
Short Takes:
From Daily Kos: The polling says the runoff races for the two Senate seats in Georgia are tied, and if the polls don’t say that, they’re likely wrong. We don’t need a poll to tell us what we just saw weeks ago in the November general election: Georgia is balanced on a razor’s edge, and the victor will be the party that best gets its voters to the polls. How’s that for a hot take?
But of course Georgia has been voting for weeks, and as such, we have some hints as to what’s coming when the votes are counted.
This article is superior analysis. Click through for much more. RESIST!!
From YouTube (MSNBC Channel): ‘It’s Unconstitutional’: House Member On Challenges To Biden’s Win
I agree that it’s a bad time to impeach Trump*, as much as I would like to do so. Let’s make Biden the center of attention, not Trump! RESIST!!
From YouTube (a blast from the past): The Animals – House of the Rising Sun (1964) High Quality [HQ].flv
GEORGIA – Really American – the CC is truly weird (English, but nothing to do with what’s being said)
GEORGIA – Meidas Touch
Don Winslow Films
I mentioned this ad to Lona in a reply to a comment of hers the other day (on Erinyes), and was going to post it yesterday, but it took me longer to find than I expected.
Parody NYC Farewell to Trump* from Colbert show
Keith – from yesterday – this is the one I was expecting but didn’t want to wait yoo long for.
It’s a very busy day here at the CatBox. WWWendy is coming early, and we have lots to do. I’ll be back in the saddle tomorrow, barring unforeseen circumstances. Oh God, it’s Monday!
Jig Zone Puzzle:
Today’s took me 2:58 (average 4:53). To do it, click here. How did you do?
Cartoon:
Religious Agony:
Damn Orb blew it again! However, I trust it will do better for my new team, the Portland Chiefs. Oregon deserves them. They are too good for the state that elected Sen. Josh Hawley!
Short Take:
From YouTube (a blast from the past): The Mamas & The Papas – Monday Monday
Oh God it’s Monday Monday! Ah… the memories! RESIST!!
It’s a busy day here in the CatBox. I’ve had a ton of beginning-of-the-year file keeping to do. It the past, I’ve planned for and done most of it well in advance, but this year, I was not supposed to need it. I’m caught up on most of it. For the first time in my life, I won’t bitch about paperwork. Today is a Holy Day in the Church of the Ellipsoid Orb. My Broncos are playing the Raiders in their last game. Of course it’s not televised here. Tomorrow please expect no more than a brief Personal Update. It’s a WWWendy day, and she’s coming earlier in the morning than usual because of her schedule. May the Holy Orb shine its blessed light on your team, unless they raid lost wages.
Jig Zone Puzzle:
Today’s took me 3:24 (average 5:11). To do it, click here. How did you do?
Cartoon:
Short Takes:
From Daily Kos: One of the criticisms of former President Barack Obama in his first term was a lack of focus on judicial nominations, letting many vacancies go unfilled even while Democrats held the Senate. President-elect Joe Biden learned the consequences of letting nominations languish and is already on it, contacting Democratic senators to get their recommendations for judicial candidates. And not for just any good candidates: for the kinds of judges that have been lacking in the federal judiciary.
“With respect to U.S. District Court positions, we are particularly focused on nominating individuals whose legal experiences have been historically underrepresented on the federal bench, including those who are public defenders, civil rights and legal aid attorneys, and those who represent Americans in every walk of life,” reads a Dec. 22 letter obtained by HuffPost from incoming White House counsel Dana Remus to Democratic senators. Remus continued that Biden doesn’t just want those names for a list for potential nominees, he wants recommendations—as soon as possible and with a final deadline of Jan. 19—for any existing district court vacancies. That sets him up to get those nominations rolling literally on Day One, Jan. 20. Additionally, Remus told senators that Biden will expect nomination recommendations from them “within 45 days of any new vacancy being announced, so that we can expeditiously consider your recommendations.”
I am pleased to see and do support the areas in which Joe wants to focus with respect to fixing the judiciary. However, without both GA Senate seat wins, it’s meaningless, given the smug smirk of Blatant Bought Bitch Midnight Moscow Mitch. RESIST!!
From NY Times: Vice President Mike Pence signaled support on Saturday for a futile Republican bid to overturn the election in Congress next week, after 11 Republican senators and senators-elect said that they would vote to reject President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory when the House and Senate meet to formally certify it.
The announcement by the senators — and Mr. Pence’s move to endorse it — reflected a groundswell among Republicans to defy the unambiguous results of the election and indulge President Trump’s attempts to remain in power with false claims of voting fraud.
Every state in the country has certified the election results after verifying their accuracy, many following postelection audits or hand counts. Judges across the country, and a Supreme Court with a conservative majority, have rejected nearly 60 attempts by Mr. Trump and his allies to challenge the results.
And neither Mr. Pence nor any of the senators who said they would vote to invalidate the election has made a specific allegation of fraud, instead offering vague suggestions that some wrongdoing might have occurred and asserting that many of their supporters believe that it has.
The senators’ opposition to certifying Mr. Biden’s election will not change the outcome. But it guarantees that what would normally be a perfunctory session on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to ratify the results of the presidential election will instead become a partisan brawl, in which Republicans amplify specious claims of widespread election rigging that have been debunked and dismissed for weeks even as Mr. Trump has stoked them.
I suppose the fly got away with whatever gray matter that evil Republican Vice Fuhrer Pence used to have. Stay tuned. Wednesday is going to be a zoo, and I’ll be following it closely. RESIST!!
From YouTube (a blast from the past): Jefferson Airplane – Somebody to love
Ah… the memories. If they had ruined the beautiful music quality, if they had changed the weed in the clip to Clorox, and if they had changed “love” to “hate, this would have become the Republican theme song. RESIST!!
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.”
This is an “Oregon Leads the Way” feel-good story. With information, and leads to more information, for any state which wants to do what Oregon has done.
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Oregon just decriminalized all drugs – here’s why voters passed this groundbreaking reform
According to Oregon law, possessing a small amount of drugs for personal consumption is now a civil – rather than criminal – offense. Peter Dazeley via Getty
Those drugs are still against the law, as is selling them. But possession is now a civil – not criminal – violation that may result in a fine or court-ordered therapy, not jail. Marijuana, which Oregon legalized in 2014, remains fully legal.
Oregon’s move is radical for the United States, but several European countries have decriminalized drugs to some extent. There are three main arguments for this major drug policy reform.
#1. Drug prohibition has failed
In 1971, President Richard Nixon declared drugs to be “public enemy number one” and launched a “war on drugs” that continues today.
Criminologists find that other consequences of problematic drug use – such as harm to health, reduced quality of life and strained personal relationships – are more effective deterrents than criminal sanctions.
Arresting, prosecuting and imprisoning people for drug-related crimes is expensive.
The Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron estimates that all government drug prohibition-related expenditures were US$47.8 billion nationally in 2016. Oregon spent about $375 million on drug prohibition in that year.
Not everyone who uses drugs needs treatment. Decriminalization makes help accessible to those who do need it – and keeps both those users and recreational users out of jail.
New York’s ‘stop and frisk’ policing most often resulted in marijuana possession charges and targeted young Black men. It was declared unconstitutional in 2013. Third Eye Corporation/Getty
Freed up from policing drug use, departments may redirect their resources toward crime prevention and solving violent crimes like homicide and robbery, which are time-consuming to investigate. That could help restore some trust between law enforcement and Oregon’s communities of color.
“I think it sends a really bad message to them, and influences their perception of the risks,” James O’Rourke, a defense attorney who helped organize the opposition to measure 110, told Oregon Public Broadcasting in October.
But U.S. states that legalized marijuana haven’t seen adolescent use rise significantly. In fact, marijuana consumption among teens – though not among college-aged Americans – actually declined in some states with legal marijuana. This may be because legal, regulated marijuana is more difficult for minors to get than black-market drugs.
Customers must be 21 or older to purchase marijuana from dispensaries like Oregon’s Finest, in Portland. Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images
Research also shows that for some people, particularly the young, banning a behavior makes it more alluring. So defining drugs as a health concern rather than a crime could actually make them less appealing to young Oregonians.
Another worry about decriminalization is that it will attract people looking to use drugs.
The local government shut down Platzspitz Park. But rather than chase off or arrest those who frequented it, it began offering methadone and prescription heroin to help people with opioid use disorder. Public injection, HIV rates and overdoses – which had all become a problem in Zurich – plummeted.
Certain parts of Oregon already have higher rates of public drug consumption, namely Portland and Eugene. Because public drug use is still illegal in Oregon, however, we don’t expect a Platzspitz Park-style open drug scene to emerge.
These places should benefit from the expansion of methadone programs and other medication-assisted treatment, which is endorsed by the American Medical Association.
[The Conversation’s science, health and technology editors pick their favorite stories.Weekly on Wednesdays.]
Upside – and downside
There are risks with any major policy change. The question is whether the new policy results in a net benefit.
In Portugal, full decriminalization has proven more humane and effective than criminalization. Because drug users don’t worry about facing criminal charges, those who need help are more likely to seek it – and get it.
================================================================ Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, treating misuses, abuse, and addiction of and to drugs as a public health problem rather than a political problem just makes so much sense. And it’s not as if we don’t have models for how this approach can work, and even for transitioning to this approach from approaches which don’t work. Look at alcohol. (BTW heartiest congratulations to Sir Anthony Hopkins on 45 years sober.)