An outside opinion posted in the interest of expanding conversations.
An outside opinion posted in the interest of expanding conversations.
Looking at the news this morning, an unfortunate question comes to mind: Is the US siding with the enemy now? If it were just one story where we seem to be on the wrong side of history, it might be less of a worry, but as I’m looking over just today’s headlines, discounting others that have been building up over the past couple of years, I am genuinely concerned that we’re heading down a road that eventually paints the US as one of history’s most villainous regimes to ever exist. Hang with me a moment as I explain why.
The first headline out of the box this morning was this: Apple supplier Foxconn rejects married women from India iPhone jobs. Now, both Apple and Foxconn (owned by Taiwanese firm Hon Hai Precision Industry, LTD) claim that their policies prohibit such discrimination. For Apple, especially, being a US company, this revelation could open it up to substantial lawsuits. There are multiple issues here.
First, both Apple and Foxconn use outside hiring firms for assembly and production facilities. They do this because, especially in the US where both companies have multiple facilities (including one in Plainfield, IN), using so-called “temp” agencies gets around laws requiring them to provide benefits such as health insurance. Few, if any, of the “temp” workers ever transition to company employees resulting in a continual turnover of workers, allowing companies to keep wages low. See how deviously that works? Both companies are making billions of dollars in profit, but heaven forbid they pay people a living wage.
Second, the companies know this behavior is going on! As part of their investigation, Reuters talked with a former human resources executive at Foxconn India. The HR executive’s statements were then corroborated by 17 employees from more than a dozen Foxconn hiring agencies in India, and four current and former Foxconn human-resources executives. Reuters writes, “The agents and the Foxconn HR sources cited family duties, pregnancy, and higher absenteeism as reasons why Foxconn did not hire married women at the plant, located at Sriperumbudur, near the city of Chennai. Many of these people also said jewelry worn by married Hindu women could interfere with production.”
When asked for a response, both Apple and Foxconn said, “Yeah, that used to happen, but we dealt with that issue in 2022.” All the discriminatory practices documented by Reuters at the Sriperumbudur plant, however, took place in 2023 and 2024.
Here’s where the really bad stuff lies: The Taiwanese company has extremely close ties to China. They operate several plants there, several involved with the production of iPhones. Apple, for its part, routinely bends its rules, ignoring US law so as to not make waves with the less-expensive Chinese labor force. They’re quite willing to let ethics and proper business practices slip out the door in order to maintain the profits they receive from working directly with a country that is actively trying to undermine the US.
If we were a country that cared about human rights and doing what’s right, we’d stop buying iPhones and demand that Apple stop any and all forms of discrimination and partnering with anyone who does business with China. But that’s not us. We’re happy to look the other way as long as those new iPhones keep coming.
Reuters is on one this morning. Scroll down the page just a little bit and there’s this headline: Exclusive: Trump handed plan to halt US military aid to Kyiv unless it talks peace with Moscow. This is a problem because it plays directly into Russia’s hands. Just last week, Putin said he’d negotiate a cease-fire only if Ukraine allowed Russia to keep the territories it currently has under its control. Since when do we base US policy on what Russia wants? Granted, these plans get dumped in the trash if the Orange Felon is not elected to office, but current polls are much too close to assume that he won’t return to the Oval Office.
This new pro-Russia headline follows closely on a continuing theme from the former president and convicted felon that he would allow Russia to do “whatever they want” with NATO members who he thinks aren’t paying their fair share. The convicted felon is more than willing to allow Russia to run amok without any interference.
Is there any question that this type of policy wouldn’t end badly for both the US and the European Union? Of course not. What it hints at is a duality of fascist strong men taking over the world. The felon would take North and possibly South America, Russia would overtake Europe, and China would dominate Asia. How they might split up the African continent remains to be seen, but there’s little question that behind-the-scenes collusion is taking place that would allow the world’s strongest military superpowers to dominate everything.
Oh, let’s not forget that this morning the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Russia’s former defense minister and its military chief of staff for attacks on Ukraine’s power plants, the third time the global court has accused senior Russian leaders of war crimes. Of course, neither Russia nor the US are members of the court so don’t expect any justice to come on this matter.
The US relationship with Israel is certainly one worth questioning at the moment as well. Prime Minister Netanyahu says he won’t agree to a deal that ends the war in Gaza, testing the latest truce proposal. Let’s make this very clear: Netanyahu is not backing down on his assault on the Palestinian people, whom he equates entirely with the terrorist organization, Hamas. The Prime Minister said regarding a cease-fire that the US supports, “But we are committed to continuing the war after a pause, in order to complete the goal of eliminating Hamas. I’m not willing to give up on that.”
How can we continue to side with the people who are wholesale slaughtering Palestinians? Where do we come out good guys in this scenario? Already, Experts say Gaza is at ‘high risk’ of famine despite increased aid to the north. Netanyahu says Israel is winding down its Gaza operations. But he warns a Lebanon war could be next. On Sunday, the headline was At least 39 people killed in Israeli strikes across northern Gaza right after having killed 25 the day before. The number of medical specialists and surgeons killed in the bombing of Palestinian hospitals puts basic healthcare in danger. There is no upside to this situation!
The days when we can give Israel a pass because of their severe genocide in World War II are gone. There can be no excuse for their current behavior and absolutely zero excuse for continued US support. As long as we continue to be their “best buddy” in the world, we are just as guilty of war crimes as are they.
Those may be some of the more obvious reasons to question the US’ future, but there’s so much more. Consider the fact that Boeing sent two astronauts to the International Space Station on June 6, and now they can’t get them back home. At last report, there are five known hydrogen leaks in their spacecraft. NASA comes off as complicit in this endeavor for not running sufficient safety checks to make sure that the spacecraft really could get up there and back safely. While some think that Boeing officials should face criminal charges for their continued 737 foul-ups, the US reputation still takes a hit for what appears to be stranding two astronauts in the space station.
I can remember a time when regardless of the poll one looked at, the US would come in, at the very least, among the top five in most any international question. We were the happiest, most productive, most intelligent, kindest, and most ethically-driven people in the world. Now, any recounting of those polls has to begin with “Once upon a time, in a country far away…” We are nowhere close to being humane, civilized, or forwardly progressive in becoming better people. We are insidiously selfish, obstinately stubborn, insanely religious, and foolishly disregarding of science.
Our current path does not take us into a good place in history. I’m not talking about a political solution, either, though such might help. The US needs a strong philosophical shift or else it is ultimately disregarded as a cautionary tale of what happens when a society becomes too full of itself to see the disaster that it has become. We cannot allow belief systems based on mythologies to dominate the culture. We cannot continue to place profit before people. We cannot continue to indulge in the wastefulness of convenience while ignoring the damage we are doing to the planet and its non-human inhabitants.
I grew up feeling patriotic and proud of being an American. Today, I find myself questioning the veracity of that patriotism on a daily basis. Why should I feel proud to be a citizen of a country so deliriously out of sync with humanity, reason, and any ethical foundation? Why would I want my name to be forever attached to such a catastrophic human disaster as the United States risks becoming?
I optimistically believe that this listing ship can still be uprighted, but I don’t know how much longer I can maintain any hope. We are on the brink of catastrophic collapse into the annals of villainy and evil and I’m not sure there are enough people left who care.
Hallelujah, we’re up and running! A MASSIVE amount of thanks to Michael Schlagenhauf for helping us out by bringing in an old box with 32 MB RAM and swapping parts and pieces around until we had a functional machine!! The CPU is slower, but it works and survived a night full of Windows updates without needing my direct intervention. Photoshop Beta and Bridge have been installed and are working. I’ll decide later today what additional software I want to run. One thing I’ve learned over the past few weeks is that there was a lot on the old system that I really didn’t need or use. We’ll see if I can avoid making the same mistake again (I doubt it).
For his part, Michael survived the onslaught of kids, cats, and dogs while he was here. Belvedere was rather chill about our visitor, but Hamilton and Frankie, the smashed-face wheezer kitty, were right there trying to assist with every step of the process. Frank is still staying pretty close, not sure what to think about the new box with its red glow. I enjoyed getting to know Michael a little better and greatly appreciate his experience in taking things out of one box and putting them in the other. That has never been something I’ve done especially well.
Now comes the task of recreating all the personalizations and deciding what shortcuts I want where. I don’t like having to hunt for things I use often, but at the same time, I don’t like a cluttered desktop or taskbar. I’m still giggling over how adamantly Microsoft’s Edge browser tried insisting that I didn’t need to download Chrome or make it my default browser. Edge developers tried really hard to sway my opinion. 🤣
With the PC issue out of the way, I can get back to other distractions, such as, “Why is my right knee hurting all the damn time?” You know that pain you get when you need to pop a joint? That’s what I’m living with right now and it’s bad enough that it disturbed my sleep quite a bit. I’m hoping that it comes from having to be down on the floor a lot the past couple of days. Any soreness should go away after a day or two. I’m old, though, and how many peers do I know that have already had multiple knee surgeries? That’s kinda the last thing I want to endure. Let’s cross our fingers that this all goes away.
Odd thing. I was coming back from the restroom a little after midnight and noticed a bunch of trash on the bedroom floor next to the bed. Where the hell did it come from? I know neither of the dogs moved from where they were sleeping, but it seemed like a lot more than what a cat would bring in and drop. None of the clutter was anything of consequence and was easy to pick up and throw away, but I’m still stumped as to its source. We have enough trash without it reproducing on its own!
Elsewhere, heat and flooding are the big stories. Over 100 million people have been affected by the heat and flooding across Iowa and South Dakota is simply insane. More than 1,300 people died during Hajj, many of them after walking in the scorching heat, which is a bit mind-blowing. The tourist death toll from the Greek heat wave has risen to 6, with some still missing. Thousands have been displaced in floods in north-eastern India. At least 30 are dead as torrential rains lash Central America. So, I’m wondering, should I have the kids mow the lawn this morning or not? Zoning can look the other way until this heat dome lets up, can’t they?
Here’s something frightening: A Conservative-backed group is creating a list of federal workers it suspects could resist plans should the Orange Felon become president again. With a $100,000 grant from the influential Heritage Foundation, the goal is to post 100 names of government workers to a website this summer to show a potential new administration who might be standing in the way of a second-term Trump agenda — and ripe for scrutiny, reclassifications, reassignments or firings. This is on top of Heritage’s own Project 2025 is laying the groundwork, with policies, proposals, and personnel ready on day one of a possible new White House.
So, let me ask you these questions. 1. At what point are you willing to abandon the US and move elsewhere? 2. To what country would you consider moving? 3. Assuming that large numbers of people would choose an EU country, how many of us would they take before we become an immigrant problem? It could be interesting to see how opinions change when we’re the ones needing to ask for asylum. Answer the questions in the comments, if you dare.
I’m really not feeling the lawn thing. My knee hurts and Belvedere had me up at 5:00 this morning. Maybe I’ll just go back to bed. Who’s with me?
Let’s get real for a few minutes: The United States today holds little resemblance to those scrappy 13 colonies responsible for founding a new country. We’re no longer a nation of gentrified farmers; landowners who held slaves so that they had time to sit and write about what was necessary to form a country that held rights in high esteem without actually giving rights to anyone who didn’t already have them. We’ve moved beyond that by quite a bit, to the point that any comparison between us and them pretty much has to end at the fact that, presumably, we’re all human. We’ve evolved as a country and as a society. Therefore, it is my solemn belief, that we need to evolve electorally as well.
We tend to hold our founding fathers as something close to saints, but there were plenty of people who were lacking and some of them almost cost us the war. Of course, you most likely are familiar with the traitor, Benedict Arnold, whose name some have tried, in vane, to rescue. There was also Major General Philippe du Coudray who was so fucking stubborn that he drowned while crossing the Schuylkill River because he wouldn’t listen to advice. Also to be considered was Major General Charles Lee, who everyone initially thought was going to be a great addition to the Continental Army. Wrong. First, he went and got himself captured by the British. Then, he started collaborating with the British. Those are just a couple of examples of early losers who proved that not everyone in 1776 was a brilliant politician or philosopher.
Let us also not lose sight of the fact that it was largely a group of teenagers and young men in their 20s that were dominating the Revolutionary War. What, you didn’t already know that? Okay, here’s a short list of the ages people were on July 4, 1776:
A few things about that list are specifically applicable to this discussion. First, if you don’t recognize all the names on that list and their contribution, you need to look them up and educate yourself. Not knowing who these people were should automatically disqualify you from holding any elected office in the United States. Second, not all these people signed the Declaration of Independence (which you should know). The youngest person to sign, Thomas Lynch, Jr., was 26. The oldest person to sign, Benjamin Franklin, was 70. The average age of the Declaration’s signators was 44. George Washington did not sign the Declaration.
Why is this important? Because you’ll find that, with many of them being as young and idealistic as they were, opinions changed as they grew older. The “truths we hold to be self-evident” were not as obvious for all of these people as they grew older. Had they been given the opportunity, they would likely have changed both the Declaration and the Constitution of 1787 considerably by the time they died. Thinking that the “originalists” were somehow infallible is ignorant. Many of them didn’t even consider their own work that impressive.
For example, on the last day of the Constitutional Convention, James Wilson read the following speech from Benjamin Franklin (the elder stateman being too ill to deliver the speech himself).
“I confess that there are several parts of this Constitution which I do not at present approve…. [But] the older I grow, the more apt I am to doubt my own judgment, and to pay more respect to the judgment of others…. In these sentiments…I agree with this Constitution with all its faults, if they are such; because I think a general Government necessary for us…[and] I doubt…whether any other Convention we can obtain, may be able to make a better Constitution. For when you assemble a number of men to have the advantage of their joint wisdom, you inevitably assemble with those men all their prejudices, their passions, their errors of opinion, their local interests, and their selfish views. From such an assembly can a perfect production be expected? It therefore astonishes me…to find this system approaching so near to perfection as it does…. Thus I consent…to this Constitution because I expect no better, and because I am not sure, that it is not the best…. If every one of us in returning to our Constituents were to report the objections he has had to it…we might prevent its being generally received, and thereby lose all the salutary effects and great advantages resulting naturally in our favor among foreign Nations as well as among ourselves, from a real or apparent unanimity…. On the whole…I cannot help expressing a wish that every member of the Convention who may still have objections to it, would with me on this occasion doubt a little of his own infallibility, and to make manifest our unanimity put his name to this instrument.”
If Franklin, the most experienced and perhaps most intelligent of the Framers, had doubts about the efficacy of the Constitution in its original form, then we cannot sit here over 200 years later and think anything differently.
Taking things even further, Thomas Jefferson wrote in a letter to James Madison that the Constitution should expire every 19 years. Here’s his reasoning:
“The question Whether one generation of men has a right to bind another, seems never to have been started either on this or our side of the water… (But) between society and society, or generation and generation there is no municipal obligation, no umpire but the law of nature. We seem not to have perceived that, by the law of nature, one generation is to another as one independant nation to another…
On similar ground it may be proved that no society can make a perpetual constitution, or even a perpetual law. The earth belongs always to the living generation…
Every constitution, then, and every law, naturally expires at the end of 19. years. If it be enforced longer, it is an act of force and not of right.”
This is why I see red every time someone, especially a member of the Supreme Court, tries to interpret “the original meaning of the Framers.” The Framers did not see their Constitution being adequate this far into the future. Their expectation was that not merely would it change, but that it would be replaced by something more appropriate as both society and the country developed.
The Constitution of 1787 was unquestionably better than the first version, the Articles of Confederation delivered by the first Constitutional Convention in 1777. There were several reasons why those Articles were never ratified by the states, but chief among them was the fact that the Articles were practically impossible to amend, a problem that came to the forefront almost immediately.
We need to latch onto the idea that the Constitution is not infallible. In fact, the Constitution has always been flawed and in need of updating. Our reluctance to do so not only demonstrates our ignorance of how the document was developed but also the severe degree to which parties have utilized its shortcomings to cement their power within the federal government. In changing the Constitution as we should have been doing all along, we take the power away from career politicians and put it back in the hands of the people.
The problem with that idea is that “the people” are stupid. Don’t believe me? Of course, you don’t. I wouldn’t expect you to believe this claim without evidence and that evidence is critical to my ultimate thesis. Let’s start with the topic of IQ comparison.
On an individual-to-individual basis, I don’t like IQ scores as a measurement tool because they fail to adequately measure what a person actually knows. However, as a comparative diagnostic, it works because IQ tests are administered the same regardless of the country of origin or its educational methods. Therefore, when we compare countries based on IQ, income, education spending per participant, and average temperature (which affects one’s ability to learn), we end up with a table looking something like this:
Rank | Country/Region | IQ | Ø Income | Education expenditure per inhabitant | Ø Daily maximum temperature |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hong Kong * | 106 | 35,304 $ | 1,283 $ | 26.2 °C |
2 | Japan | 106 | 40,964 $ | 1,340 $ | 19.3 °C |
3 | Singapore | 106 | 41,100 $ | 1,427 $ | 31.5 °C |
4 | Taiwan * | 106 | 26.9 °C | ||
5 | China | 104 | 4,654 $ | 182 $ | 18.5 °C |
6 | South Korea | 103 | 22,804 $ | 1,024 $ | 18.4 °C |
7 | Netherlands | 101 | 45,337 $ | 2,386 $ | 14.6 °C |
8 | Finland | 101 | 42,706 $ | 2,725 $ | 8.0 °C |
9 | Canada | 100 | 40,207 $ | 2,052 $ | 7.4 °C |
10 | North Korea | 100 | 15.3 °C | ||
11 | Luxembourg | 100 | 71,380 $ | 3,659 $ | 14.1 °C |
12 | Macao * | 100 | 44,051 $ | 1,448 $ | 26.0 °C |
13 | Germany | 100 | 39,920 $ | 1,883 $ | 14.0 °C |
14 | Switzerland | 100 | 70,399 $ | 3,556 $ | 15.5 °C |
15 | Estonia | 100 | 13,777 $ | 749 $ | 10.3 °C |
16 | Australia | 99 | 42,959 $ | 2,344 $ | 24.3 °C |
17 | United Kingdom | 99 | 40,670 $ | 2,079 $ | 12.9 °C |
18 | Greenland * | 99 | 24,486 $ | 4,518 $ | 0.3 °C |
19 | Iceland | 99 | 47,106 $ | 3,814 $ | 8.0 °C |
20 | Austria | 99 | 42,634 $ | 2,341 $ | 13.8 °C |
21 | Hungary | 99 | 11,391 $ | 585 $ | 16.9 °C |
22 | New Zealand | 99 | 30,141 $ | 2,024 $ | 17.5 °C |
23 | Belarus | 99 | 4,661 $ | 251 $ | 11.9 °C |
24 | Belgium | 98 | 40,525 $ | 2,507 $ | 14.8 °C |
25 | Norway | 98 | 75,130 $ | 5,425 $ | 9.6 °C |
26 | Sweden | 98 | 49,535 $ | 3,419 $ | 10.0 °C |
27 | Denmark | 98 | 53,149 $ | 4,122 $ | 12.5 °C |
28 | Cambodia | 97 | 776 $ | 16 $ | 33.2 °C |
29 | France | 97 | 37,610 $ | 2,042 $ | 17.2 °C |
30 | United States | 97 | 49,861 $ | 2,609 $ | 19.0 °C |
31 | Poland | 96 | 10,505 $ | 545 $ | 13.5 °C |
32 | Czechia | 96 | 15,552 $ | 712 $ | 13.5 °C |
33 | Russia | 96 | 8,241 $ | 338 $ | 8.9 °C |
34 | Spain | 95 | 26,463 $ | 1,176 $ | 21.4 °C |
35 | Ireland | 95 | 43,914 $ | 2,501 $ | 13.0 °C |
36 | Italy | 95 | 32,103 $ | 1,380 $ | 19.0 °C |
37 | Croatia | 95 | 11,649 $ | 508 $ | 18.3 °C |
38 | Latvia | 95 | 11,243 $ | 585 $ | 11.0 °C |
39 | Lithuania | 95 | 11,331 $ | 550 $ | 11.7 °C |
40 | Israel | 93 | 28,975 $ | 1,807 $ | 26.7 °C |
41 | Mongolia | 93 | 2,241 $ | 128 $ | 8.6 °C |
42 | Portugal | 93 | 19,253 $ | 1,005 $ | 21.6 °C |
43 | Bermuda * | 92 | 108,349 $ | 1,748 $ | 24.5 °C |
44 | Bulgaria | 91 | 5,702 $ | 224 $ | 18.4 °C |
45 | Greece | 91 | 21,101 $ | 782 $ | 22.6 °C |
46 | Ukraine | 91 | 2,375 $ | 143 $ | 15.3 °C |
47 | Vietnam | 91 | 1,446 $ | 70 $ | 29.5 °C |
48 | Kazakhstan | 89 | 6,380 $ | 225 $ | 13.5 °C |
49 | Malaysia | 89 | 7,665 $ | 443 $ | 32.0 °C |
50 | Myanmar | 89 | 667 $ | 14 $ | 32.8 °C |
51 | Thailand | 89 | 4,260 $ | 182 $ | 33.0 °C |
52 | Serbia | 89 | 4,876 $ | 208 $ | 18.4 °C |
53 | Barbados | 88 | 14,602 $ | 822 $ | 30.2 °C |
54 | Brunei | 88 | 29,737 $ | 1,020 $ | 32.1 °C |
55 | Chile | 88 | 10,195 $ | 482 $ | 19.0 °C |
56 | Costa Rica | 88 | 7,480 $ | 487 $ | 28.8 °C |
57 | Iraq | 88 | 3,757 $ | 193 $ | 32.4 °C |
58 | Romania | 88 | 7,109 $ | 249 $ | 15.5 °C |
59 | Uzbekistan | 88 | 1,445 $ | 85 $ | 21.8 °C |
60 | Argentina | 87 | 8,795 $ | 454 $ | 21.5 °C |
61 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 87 | 4,118 $ | 18.7 °C | |
62 | Mexico | 87 | 8,898 $ | 440 $ | 30.4 °C |
63 | Turkey | 87 | 8,879 $ | 335 $ | 21.4 °C |
64 | Georgia | 86 | 2,901 $ | 84 $ | 20.6 °C |
65 | Azerbaijan | 85 | 3,763 $ | 121 $ | 22.7 °C |
66 | Sri Lanka | 85 | 2,442 $ | 53 $ | 27.2 °C |
67 | Montenegro | 85 | 6,056 $ | 20.4 °C | |
68 | Bahamas | 84 | 28,639 $ | 753 $ | 29.7 °C |
69 | Fiji | 84 | 3,914 $ | 212 $ | 29.6 °C |
70 | Cuba | 84 | 5,538 $ | 486 $ | 30.1 °C |
71 | North Macedonia | 84 | 4,018 $ | 138 $ | 17.9 °C |
72 | Brazil | 83 | 7,586 $ | 427 $ | 30.8 °C |
73 | Philippines | 83 | 2,330 $ | 67 $ | 31.9 °C |
74 | Iran | 83 | 4,545 $ | 173 $ | 27.0 °C |
75 | Colombia | 83 | 5,037 $ | 231 $ | 30.4 °C |
76 | Laos | 83 | 1,157 $ | 32 $ | 32.2 °C |
77 | Venezuela | 83 | 8,025 $ | 273 $ | 32.4 °C |
78 | Albania | 82 | 3,513 $ | 118 $ | 22.9 °C |
79 | United Arab Emirates | 82 | 38,644 $ | 805 $ | 34.4 °C |
80 | Dominican Republic | 82 | 4,964 $ | 157 $ | 31.8 °C |
81 | Lebanon | 82 | 6,428 $ | 157 $ | 23.9 °C |
82 | Afghanistan | 81 | 473 $ | 16 $ | 25.6 °C |
83 | Jordan | 81 | 3,091 $ | 114 $ | 27.8 °C |
84 | Libya | 81 | 9,089 $ | 28.7 °C | |
85 | Pakistan | 81 | 992 $ | 25 $ | 31.0 °C |
86 | Peru | 81 | 4,311 $ | 150 $ | 24.7 °C |
87 | Indonesia | 80 | 2,355 $ | 79 $ | 31.6 °C |
88 | Oman | 80 | 15,332 $ | 798 $ | 34.1 °C |
89 | Qatar | 80 | 58,614 $ | 2,331 $ | 33.7 °C |
90 | Palestine | 80 | 2,614 $ | 132 $ | 27.4 °C |
91 | Bolivia | 79 | 1,912 $ | 153 $ | 26.3 °C |
92 | Ecuador | 79 | 4,159 $ | 199 $ | 27.9 °C |
93 | Egypt | 78 | 2,175 $ | 92 $ | 30.1 °C |
94 | Algeria | 77 | 3,684 $ | 255 $ | 27.6 °C |
95 | India | 77 | 1,164 $ | 47 $ | 31.5 °C |
96 | Madagascar | 77 | 420 $ | 13 $ | 28.7 °C |
97 | Saudi Arabia | 77 | 17,468 $ | 1,265 $ | 33.6 °C |
98 | Sudan | 77 | 1,168 $ | 25 $ | 36.5 °C |
99 | Syria | 76 | 4,532 $ | 252 $ | 25.5 °C |
100 | Bangladesh | 75 | 936 $ | 19 $ | 31.0 °C |
101 | Chad | 75 | 630 $ | 16 $ | 36.0 °C |
102 | East Timor | 74 | 2,090 $ | 54 $ | 30.9 °C |
103 | Jamaica | 74 | 4,356 $ | 251 $ | 31.9 °C |
104 | Kenya | 74 | 939 $ | 62 $ | 28.8 °C |
105 | Tanzania | 74 | 702 $ | 29 $ | 29.1 °C |
106 | Zimbabwe | 74 | 843 $ | 48 $ | 28.4 °C |
107 | Senegal | 73 | 1,135 $ | 56 $ | 35.6 °C |
108 | Angola | 72 | 2,396 $ | 83 $ | 27.6 °C |
109 | El Salvador | 72 | 2,912 $ | 113 $ | 27.9 °C |
110 | Morocco | 71 | 2,567 $ | 139 $ | 24.4 °C |
111 | South Africa | 69 | 5,941 $ | 336 $ | 26.1 °C |
112 | Somalia | 69 | 514 $ | 1 $ | 33.3 °C |
113 | Nigeria | 68 | 1,758 $ | 33.6 °C | |
114 | Belize | 67 | 4,209 $ | 275 $ | 31.1 °C |
115 | Ethiopia | 67 | 379 $ | 21 $ | 27.7 °C |
116 | Honduras | 67 | 1,665 $ | 115 $ | 31.8 °C |
117 | Yemen | 67 | 919 $ | 84 $ | 30.3 °C |
118 | Cameroon | 67 | 1,234 $ | 36 $ | 31.0 °C |
119 | Congo (Dem. Republic) | 64 | 316 $ | 7 $ | 30.3 °C |
120 | Central Africa | 63 | 388 $ | 6 $ | 32.6 °C |
121 | Ghana | 61 | 1,166 $ | 74 $ | 31.8 °C |
122 | Ivory Coast | 61 | 1,289 $ | 68 $ | 32.1 °C |
123 | Guinea | 56 | 598 $ | 15 $ | 31.3 °C |
124 | Equatorial Guinea | 56 | 7,625 $ | 29.7 °C | |
125 | Gambia | 55 | 648 $ | 14 $ | 33.3 °C |
126 | Guatemala | 55 | 2,830 $ | 92 $ | 35.0 °C |
127 | Sierra Leone | 52 | 412 $ | 16 $ | 29.9 °C |
128 | Nepal | 51 | 595 $ | 22 $ | 25.6 °C |
I hope you’ll notice that on this list, which looks at data ending in 2019, the United States comes in thirtieth despite a significantly higher personal income level. Being richer than everyone else doesn’t make us smarter. You’ll also likely notice that per capita spending on education in the US, $2, 609 per person, is significantly less than many of the countries that rank above us. Yet, the GOP wants to eliminate the Department of Education and give more funds to private Charter schools rather than providing better funding for public education.
But wait, there’s more!
Quoting results from Pew Research Center in 2017 (the most recent year for which this data was compiled by the firm): One of the biggest cross-national tests is the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), which every three years measures reading ability, math and science literacy and other key skills among 15-year-olds in dozens of developed and developing countries. The most recent PISA results, from 2015, placed the U.S. an unimpressive 38th out of 71 countries in math and 24th in science. Among the 35 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which sponsors the PISA initiative, the U.S. ranked 30th in math and 19th in science.
Feeling stupid yet? You should be.
Based on such educational information, there is every reason to amend the Constitution to require a competency exam for anyone running for public office. Why? Because being led by a bunch of unintelligent idiots leads us to … uhm… exactly where we are now: At the bottom of almost every list that matters. We are not happy people. We are not high-achieving people. We are not well-governed people. We are not free people. Instead, we are people with big mouths and empty heads who don’t even understand the difference between a Democracy and a Republic, nor how that difference matters.
Socrates, that esteemed philosopher of Western Thought, found pure Democracy to be a vile thing. In The Republic, the general principles of which are ultimately what our Constitution upon, Socrates called for, among other things, the rule of Philosopher Kings. In explaining himself, he asked this question:
If you were going on a sea voyage, “who would you ideally want deciding who was in charge of the vessel, just anyone, or people educated in the rules and demands of seafaring?”
I disagree that only the elite educated people among us should have a vote. Every person needs to have a say in how they are governed. That should be, by now, an established fact, though there are certainly plenty of people in the US who would challenge that notion.
However, when it comes to who should be elected to a position of authority, the people we choose to lead us forward as intelligently and appropriately as possible, Socrates has a point. We need the leadership of people who know what the fuck they’re doing, not some random big mouth who says things that sounds nice to those who failed 8th-grade civics. The best way I can find to establish who is fit to serve in any electoral capacity is to administer a test. Not an especially difficult test, either. A simple, ten-question test on the relevant issue. How about it?
First, let’s look at that good ole’ flawed Constitution of ours. What does it say are the qualifications for running for office?
Article I, Section 2, Clause 2:
No Person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the Age of twenty-five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.
Almost immediately, I need to point out that those rules have been suspended by the House of Representatives on numerous occasions when it suited them. See, e.g., 1 Hinds’ Precedents of the House of Representatives § 418 (1907) (discussing John Young Brown of Kentucky, who waited over a year from the time of his election before taking the oath of office on account of the age qualification requirement); 79 Cong. Rec. 9841–42 (1935) (same); cf. 1 Hinds, supra note 7, at § 429 (discussing the case of James Shields of Illinois who was disqualified from his Senate seat on account of not having met the citizenship requirement at the time he took the oath of office). The House has a bad history of making shit up as they go to maintain the party power they want. It would take another extremely long discussion to resolve the matter of corruption within Congress.
As much as the qualifications for Congress may need to be reconsidered, however, they cannot legally do so themselves. Proof? the Supreme Court held in Powell v. McCormack (1969) and U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton (1995) that neither Congress nor the states, respectively, can add to the qualifications stipulated in the Constitution. A new Constitutional Amendment would be necessary to change the qualifications for office and Constitutional Amendments are not easy to come by because, in case I wasn’t clear earlier, we stupidly think that the Constitution is infallible. In fact, there are too many people of the opinion that the Constitution was ordained by God. Again, explaining why that sentiment is false would take another very long article.
If we’re going to dream, though, we might as well follow that dream all the way to its conclusion. If we’re going to test whether or not one is fit to serve, what would such a test look like? My first thought was that a simple ten-question competency test would be sufficient. I looked around and had difficulty finding such a test that wasn’t biased by other education factors, so I asked ChatGPT 4 to come up with something. This is what it gave me:
That won’t work because it’s exclusively math-based and we need a person to know more than how to calculate the area of a triangle. I tried re-framing the question in different ways and didn’t come up with anything more usable. There’s still a lot of issues that AI is not ready to address and this is definitely one of them.
After looking around and considering several different sources, here’s a short exam that anyone running for Congress (or President) should be able to pass.
Those really are such basic, fundamental questions that I would be severely disappointed in anyone who can’t correctly answer at least eight of the ten questions. You should be able to answer all ten. Just in case you’re not certain, here are the answers:
How did you do? Do you consider yourself smart enough to run for Congress? Here’s the catch: I’d be willing to bet that at least a third of sitting members of the House and perhaps ten percent of the Senate would score less than 80% on such an exam. Wishful thinking is responsible for much of the error.
Of course, one can’t and shouldn’t apply the same exam to all office holders. For example, what questions should we be asking of people who are running for your local school board? After all, that is an extremely important position as we’ve seen in recent years. When a school board is overtaken by stupid people, education comes to a grinding halt. If I’m writing the exam, it’s going to look something like this:
This test is arguably more difficult than the one given to prospective members of Congress because it assumes that one has a minimal amount of teaching education. Every question on this test is covered in Education 101. If anyone can’t pass it, they have absolutely no business telling professional teachers a damn thing other than Thank You. Here are the answers:
I dare anyone to copy/paste those questions into an email and send them to their current school board members. I’m willing to bet you won’t like the results. Perhaps you’ll vote differently next time.
Conclusion: Intelligence is too important an issue to disregard it completely when considering whether a person is fit for any type of elected office. The Constitution should be amended and both state and local bodies should implement appropriate tests at every level of elected office. Continuing to vote for people because they’re nice or because they say pretty words is the height of stupidity. Everyone is not the same. We can’t keep electing people who’ve never seen a boat and expect them to not run the boat aground.
The time has come for a severe change and it’s one I’m willing to champion. How about you?
Juneteenth
When the first sip of the first cup of coffee hits your lips in the morning, it’s eye-opening, mind-changing, attitude-reversing clarity that lasts just long enough to remind one that they need to take another sip because this day isn’t going to run itself without sufficient caffeine. There is no such thing as a “calm” day anymore. Even when the majority of the day is spent in bed either sleeping or whimpering in pain, as yesterday was, coffee is still needed to keep from biting the heads off cohabitants or fellow employees or cats just looking for a place to sleep. There is no margin for error when coffee is in short supply, and even then, there are days when pot after pot just isn’t enough.
Today is Juneteenth, a holiday if you’ve not been paying attention. Your bank is closed. There’s no trash pickup, which means it’s on a slide schedule for the rest of the week. There’s no mail service. Government offices are closed (which may be a blessing). Some businesses may close, though I’ve not seen a list of such.
What saddens me is that there are too many people who refuse to recognize Juneteenth. They say there’s no reason for the day to be a holiday. These would be the same people who, over the course of several days last week, posted AI-generated images of impossible displays of the US flag with the caption, “This is my pride flag.” I’m going to assume these people are ignorant. If you don’t understand why Juneteenth is important, click here and educate yourself, moron.
Yes, I just used the word moron. I’m done placating stupid people. We have reached a point where the level of stupidity is dangerous. Juneteenth is about freedom, but let’s be clear: As long as there are stupid people in charge of anything, we’re not free. Consider the following:
As we celebrate this year, we must remember that there are still too many people, millions of people, in the US who are not free. They are slaves of a political and corporate establishment that holds them down, pulls them back, and refuses to recognize them as human. That, after all, has been the American way since the Constitution was written. Never forget that the founding of this country, a war fought on the backs of slaves, Indigenous peoples, and those too poor to own land, was done for the sole benefit of male property owners. They may have used the phrase, “all men are created equal,” but what they meant was men like them: white, educated, property owners. Every right that the rest of us have has had to be fought for every day since 1776, and we’re still having to fight. Every goddamn day.
There were tears in my eyes Monday morning when I looked at the list of Tony Award winners and saw that Suffs had won for both best book and best score. Suffs, if you don’t know, is Shaina Taub’s telling of the 2013 women’s suffrage movement. It is one example of a fight for freedom that never ends, especially if you’re a woman of any color. I know I shared this video on Facebook earlier this week, but I’m posting it here to continue making the point: The fight for freedom is never over. Not today. Not tomorrow.
In case you can’t hear the song for any reason, here are the lyrics:
[ALICE]
You won’t live to see the future that you fight for
Maybe no one gets to reach that perfect day
If the work is never over
Then how do you keep marching anyway?
Do you carry your banner as far as you can
Rewriting the world with your imperfect pen
Till the next stubborn girl picks it up in a picket line over and over again?
And you join in the chorus of centuries chanting to her
The path will be twisted and risky and slow
But keep marching
Keep marching
Will you fail or prevail, well, you may never know
But keep marching
Keep marching ’cause your ancestors are all the proof you need
That progress is possiblе, not guaranteed
It will only be made if we keep marching, keep marching on
Keep marching on
[ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[ALICE]
Keep marching on
[ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[ALL]
And rеmember every mother that you came from
Learned as much from our success as our mistakes
Don’t forget you’re merely one of many others
On the journey every generation makes
We did not end injustice and neither will you
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
Neither will you
[ALL]
But still, we made strides, so we know you can too
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
Know you can too
[ALL]
Make peace with our incomplete power and use it for good
‘Cause there’s so much to do
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
So much to do
[ALL]
The gains will feel small and the losses too large
Keep marching
Keep marching
You’ll rarely agree with whoever’s in charge
Keep marching
Keep marching ’cause your ancestors are all the proof you need
That progress is possible, not guaranteed
It will only be made if we keep marching, keep marching on
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[OTHER ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[ALL]
Yes, the world can be changed
[OTHER ENSEMBLE]
We’ve done it before
So keep marching
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[OTHER ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching
We’re always behind you, so
[ALL]
Bang down the door
And keep marching
[SOME ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[OTHER ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching
And let
[ALL]
History sound the alarm of how
The future demands that we fight for it now
It will only be ours if we keep marching, keep marching on
[OTHER ENSEMBLE]
Keep marching on
[ALL]
Come on, keep marching, marching, marching
Come on, keep marching, marching, marching
Come on, keep marching, marching, marching
Come on, keep marching, marching, marching
Come on, keep marching, marching, marching
Keep marching on
Taub’s words couldn’t be any more spot on: “On the journey every generation makes
We did not end injustice and neither will you.” “…your ancestors are all the proof you need
That progress is possible, not guaranteed.”
Over the course of the past few years, we’ve seen the Voting Rights Act demolished, Roe V. Wade overturned, and even now, as you’re reading this, state and county GOP committees are looking for ways to make it impossible for you to vote.
Juneteenth is a celebration of what is possible, but it must also be a reminder that NOTHING is guaranteed. We cannot sit back and take a damn thing for granted. We must keep marching, keep yelling, keep protesting, keep fighting, and keep voting even when/where they don’t want us. If we don’t, then we’ll lose every freedom our ancestors fought so hard to give us.
I find it no coincidence that we celebrate Juneteenth both in the middle of Pride month and just two weeks after Memorial Day, even though neither holiday had been established when news of the Emancipation Proclamation reached the ever-stubborn state of Texas. There’s always this big push to honor WWII veterans, though few remain. There’s always this talk about how they fought for our rights, to keep us free. I don’t challenge that. But let me be very clear: there is a constant and frightening popular threat to those freedoms headed by an orange felon who never served, never sacrificed a damn thing, and holds no regard for anyone’s freedom except his own. Given free reign, he will strip all of us of every freedom we ever thought we had.
When I woke up this morning, the dream I was having was perhaps frighteningly prophetic. There was an Indigenous family of four, Mom, Dad, and two teens about the same ages as G and Tipper. They were at some event that had a carnival-type atmosphere. They seemed to be having fun. Toward the end of the dream, they were all standing in line to sign up for something. My dream was not clear as to what, but they all seemed excited about it. The kids went through first, signed up for whatever it was, and then the man behind the desk shut the laptop and announced that they had reached the allowable limit. No one else was able to sign up. The parents reached out for their children as the kids were ushered off into darkness. It was then that I woke up.
No matter how long I live, I will never forget both my mother and my Uncle Windjammer telling me the story of why my great-grandparents refused to sign the Dawes Roll. Signing the Dawes Roll meant being affiliated with a tribe, recognized by the government as being Indigenous. The government said that being on the roll would come with certain rights and privileges. My great-grandparents didn’t buy into that spiel. Allegedly, the words of my great-grandmother were something along the lines of, “The last time they [the government] put our names on a list, they rounded us up and marched us across the country. We’d be fools to let them do it to us again.”
Never forget that we had no rights when the United States was founded. We’ve had to fight every damn step of the way. We cannot stop fighting now. There are too many people who want to push all of us back, keep us marginalized, slaves to a system in which we have no voice.
Don’t let it happen.
Keep marching.
Tell Me Like I’m Five
The inflationary ride of the past four years has been wild and while it’s better than it was, for a lot of people it seems that everything is more expensive than it was. While the reality seems to be different, when we look at the speed with which our bank accounts dry up, we want to blame inflation for the lack of funds available. If we’re to be honest here, though, inflation at the moment isn’t as bad as it was four years ago. Take a look. Here are the latest findings from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) published June 12:
Look at those numbers and compare them to what you see on your grocery receipt and in your checkbook. Eating out is really costing us! That’s where the biggest cost increase remains. Everything else is below or close to the two-percent inflation rate the Federal Reserve expects. That is the number that primarily decides whether the Fed will raise interest rates. Furthermore, BLS also revealed last week that grocery prices are finally going down, a whopping 0.2 percent. That may not sound like much, but depending on what you buy, you could start getting more for your dollar at the store. Personally, I’m still waiting for the meats, poultry, fish, and eggs category to come wayyyy down, but a lot of that depends on how you vote.
Yes, the prices we see in the stores are a direct reflection of the policies set by the President and Congress, both of which are subject to your vote. Since this is an election year, we all have to become economists to a certain extent in order to understand exactly what presidential nominees are talking about and whether or not they’re lying.
Hint: they don’t have a fucking clue what they’re talking about. Someone hands them a piece of paper with a bunch of numbers on it and they assume that those numbers are correct. Most of the time, however, regardless of which politician is behind the podium, the numbers are, at best, incomplete and frequently fictional.
This is currently important because last Thursday, while speaking with Republican members of Congress, the Orange Felon said that, should he become president again, he would raise tariffs by 10% and reduce taxes. He later said that he might eliminate the income tax and replace it with tariffs. A lot of ears perked up when this statement was made public. Every responsible economist in the country responded with, “There’s no way that works!” In theory, that should have been the end of the discussion.
Of course, the official GOP line is to support their nominee. SO, RNC spokesperson Anna Kelly said “The notion that tariffs are a tax on US consumers is a lie pushed by outsourcers and the Chinese Communist Party.”
If that’s the case, then every economist in the United States is affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party? We’re gonna call bullshit on that and on Anna Kelly who, like every other political affiliate, doesn’t have a fucking clue what she’s talking about.
In response, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said in recent days that the world risks a new “geopolitical divide” and urged governments to respect international trade rules, which are designed to keep tariffs low.
If you and I are to make intelligent decisions when we vote, (which, admittedly, isn’t easy), then we need to understand how this all works. Let’s start with tariffs.
What Are Tariffs
To answer this question responsibly, let’s look at how tariffs are defined by the Council on Foreign Relations:
A tariff is a tax imposed on foreign-made goods, paid by the importing business to its home country’s government. The most common kind of tariffs are ad valorem, which are levied as a fixed percentage of the value of the imports. There are also “specific tariffs,” which are charged as a fixed amount on each imported good (for example, $2 per shirt), and “tariff-rate quotas,” which are tariffs that kick in or rise significantly after a certain amount of imports is reached (e.g., fifty thousand tons of sugar).
Tariffs can serve several goals. Like all taxes, they provide a modest source of government revenue. Several countries have also used tariffs to help fledgling industries at home, hoping to shelter those local firms from foreign competitors. Some tariffs are also meant to address unfair practices that other countries have used to make their exports artificially cheap.
Almost every country imposes some tariffs. In general, wealthy countries maintain low tariffs compared to developing countries. There are several reasons why: developing countries might have more fragile industries that they wish to protect, or they might have fewer sources of government revenue. The United States, for instance, maintained high tariffs for decades, until income taxes supplanted tariffs as the most important source of revenue. After World War II, tariffs continued to decline as the United States emphasized trade expansion as a central plank of its global strategy.
Tariff Rates Vary by Income Level
No Description
The Constitution grants Congress the power “to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states,” which it used for more than a century to impose tariffs. Perhaps most infamous, Congress raised close to nine hundred separate tariffs with the 1930 Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, which many economists say worsened the Great Depression. But over the past ninety years, Congress has delegated more and more trade authority to the executive branch, in part a response to its mistakes in Smoot-Hawley.
Several pieces of legislation underline this trend. The Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934 gave President Franklin D. Roosevelt the power to negotiate tariff-cutting trade deals with other countries. This was followed by the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which granted the president authority to negotiate tariff reductions of up to 80 percent. The Trade Act of 1974 [PDF] allowed the executive branch to strike trade deals—with negotiating objectives set by Congress—that were then subject to an unamendable up-or-down vote, known as fast-tracking. Both Democratic and Republican presidents have used this authority to lower tariffs and enter into a range of trade deals, including the agreement establishing the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Just to add a wee bit of perspective, remember that Stamp Tax that prompted the Boston Tea Party? That was a tariff. Our founding fathers tended to care about them a great deal more than you and I do. The sad fact is that very few American citizens know what a tariff is nor the degree to which it affects almost everything they buy. Even items that are labeled as “made in America” may have components from another country that were subject to tariffs. We pay higher prices because of tariffs and never realize it because the tariff is built into the final cost.
So yes, tariffs are definitely a tax that you and I pay, and for that reason, we should pay attention to when and where tariffs are levied by anyone in our government.
What about income taxes?
Income taxes have technically been around since the Civil War. President Abraham Lincoln instituted the first income tax in 1861 to help pay for that bloody war. Since then, there have been a number of changes. Here’s the timeline of significant tax events:
Every time income taxes come up, there are always some zealots who pop up saying that income taxes are illegal. Those silly people are wrong. The 16th Amendment provides all the authorization the government needs to impose and raise taxes. Read it for yourself:
The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.
That’s one broad, sweeping authorization! Whether we like it or not, it’s law. Today, income tax is responsible for over $3 trillion in federal revenue and factors significantly into whether the federal government is able to balance the budget and pay its debts. This creates a problem when we start talking about changing the income tax rates. The 2024 federal budget requires revenue of $6.5 trillion. Some of the difference is made up of corporate and other taxes, and $30 billion in new tariff revenue. However, there are still not enough taxes to balance the budget. We are looking at a $348 billion deficit just for this year, according to the Bipartisan Policy Center.
Trying To Make The Numbers Work
Now that we have some understanding of tariffs and income tax, let’s try putting together the numbers according to the Orange Felon’s proposal and see if it works. First, he wants to add 10% in tariffs across the board. The Office of Management and Budget reports that in the last “Fiscal Year” — October 2023 to September 2024 — CBP officers collected over $80 billion in tariff money, nearly as much as their Treasury colleagues got from all the taxes on inheritances, gasoline, liquor, and tobacco put together. Add the $30 billion in new tariff revenue and we have $110 billion. Next, we add the proposed ten percent. That gives us $121 billion.
Okay, children, which number is larger: $3 trillion or $121 billion? Can $121 billion replace the $3 trillion without increasing the federal debt substantially? No, it cannot. The numbers don’t add up. We have a problem, and it doesn’t involve Chinese communists even a little bit.
Granted, we can’t exactly expect a felon convicted on fraud charges to be especially good at math, or logic for that matter. Again, he’s most likely basing his random vocalizations on numbers he’s heard during briefings he mostly slept through. Still, we, as voters, need to understand the dangers of proposals such as the ones he’s spouting because ridiculous ideas like this have a way of becoming law.
First, we have to realize that levied tariffs don’t exist in a vacuum. When a tariff is levied against a country, that country almost always, especially in today’s competitive environment, responds with a similar tariff on US export goods. According to Forbes:
For example, if a broad 25% tariff on all imported goods is placed, the cost of every imported good will go up by at least 25%. Retailers and manufacturers will pass that added expense on to consumers, and prices will necessarily go up on any imported goods or goods that contain imported materials. This will cause consumers to choose domestically-produced lower cost goods, to the extent they are available.
As demand shifts to American made goods, in the absence of a matching level of increased production in every sector of the economy all at once, there will be more demand for domestic goods than supply. Prices will skyrocket just as they did during past supply chain crunches.
In essence, tariffs act as a regressive tax. They were broadly eliminated in favor of an income tax in the late 19th century for just that reason. Their regressive nature means that lower and middle-income consumers would bear the brunt of the cost of financing the public fisc—effectively experiencing an immediate and substantial increase in their cost of living.
Forbes estimates that it would take something close to an 85% increase in tariffs to replace revenue generated by the income tax. Even that number is probably much too low. A more realistic number is well over 100% and at that point, things start getting very scary for the US economy.
Let’s consider the calculations of an expert: Paul Krugman, Nobel laureate in Economics. Taking to the X platform, he laid the math out for everyone to see.
Imports are about 14 percent of US GDP. Federal income tax revenue (not including payroll taxes) is about 8%. So you might think replacing it would require a tariff rate of 8/14 or around 57 percent. But tariffs would raise the cost of imports to consumers, so we’d import less, which would mean you need a higher tariff rate. But this reduces imports further, meaning a still higher tariff, and so on how high you have to go in the end depends on how much prices affect import demand — the elasticity. I assume an elasticity of 1, which is what you sometimes get for the medium run, although the long run is probably higher (which makes it worse).
With an elasticity of 1, the estimate looks like this: t*14/(1+t) = 8 Work this through, and the tariff rate is 8/6 = 1.33, that is, 133 percent. With a higher elasticity, it would go higher, maybe to infinity. So how is it that in the 19th century the federal government largely paid its way with tariffs? Because back then the government was much, much smaller. Believing that we can go back to those days is just ignorant.
133%! Consider that, according to the American Center for Progress, the ten percent increase in tariffs would cost Americans, on average, $1,500 per year, then, assuming straight across-the-board equivalencies, a 133% percent increase would cost Americans several thousands of dollars more, possibly well in excess of $10,000 per household!
I don’t think that’s quite the tax cut the Orange Felon thinks it is. Of course, what would we expect from someone who cheats on every financial deal he’s ever encountered? Oh, and the financial break would look something like $1.5 million for the 1% of Americans currently hoarding way too much money. That’s just a blip on the radar for Elon Musk, perhaps, but that always means more coming out of the pockets of people like you and me.
So, know that if you go ahead and vote for the Orange Felon, whatever your misguided reasons may be, the end result is going to cost you a lot more money than you’re paying now. Thousands more.
In my opinion, he’s not worth it. No one is.
My children (the four-legged ones) woke me shortly after 6:00 this morning. Did I sleep at all last night? It certainly doesn’t feel like I did. Toss, turn, flip, repeat. If I was a piece of meat simmering over a low flame, I’d be burned by now. This isn’t how I like to start the morning. I walked into the living room and noticed that the cats had broken yet another glass-covered frame.
While I was out with the dogs, three jets passed overhead, leaving IND just as fast as air traffic control could get them off the ground. They seemed to be taunting me, “We’re escaping and you’re not, loser.” I’ve not been outside Indianapolis since my last trip to Chicago, four years ago. Being around so many people whose minds are warped from generations of belief in mythology, who are mistakenly convinced that the 1950s morality was better, and who think they have a right to force their morality and opinions on others, is crippling. I’d leave, but where am I going to go, and, more importantly, who is going to take me there?
A perfect example of why this is a horrible state is found in yesterday’s state GOP convention. We already knew that, following the primary, Mike Braun is the unfortunate choice for governor. Braun has been useless as a US Senator, so I doubt he’ll be any better as a governor. He had chosen state Rep. Julie McGuire as his running mate. But noooooo, Indiana is so fucking stupid that they chose ultra-right-wing pastor Micah Beckwith. This classless idiot “is known for his far-right stances on gender, sexuality, and abortion. He cast himself as a political outsider who would keep the governor’s office in check, limit property taxes, and oppose school efforts to support the LGBTQ+ community,” according to the Associated Press. Braun says he’ll hold Beckwith in check, but can we rely on that? No, we can’t. Beckwith lobbied for over a year to get this position. We’ll painfully feel his influence if he’s elected. Can Democrats win? No. They’re underfunded and continue to nominate people who are unelectable from the outset. Indiana is going to be one of the worst places to live on the planet.
But then, I’m not exactly happy with the rest of the planet, either. These are some of the headlines greeting me this morning:
Do you see the repeating pattern in all those headlines? How fucking stupid are we to stick to a faulty constitutional amendment just because of who wrote it? We’ve said it again and again and again, the US is the ONLY industrialized country with this problem! We need to get the fuck over this stupid worship of a single statement by people who lived in a very different society.
Maybe I should move to Denmark or Finland. I wonder if they let old people in.
A forecasted high of 96 this afternoon most likely nixes our weekly walk in the park. The Brickyard Vintage Racing Invitational is making noise over at the track. One would have to be a real fan of old race cars to endure all the short little races that are on the schedule. Apparently, there aren’t many of these fans left. They can fit all the parking in the infield. Still, we have to put up with the noise.
My sugar was stupid high again last night. I’m not sure if it was the hamburger bun, the cheese, or the mashed potatoes that is at fault. On their own, I wouldn’t have expected any of them to send my glucose skyrocketing, but together they generated a frightening number. Maybe that’s why I’m so cranky.
There WILL be a new video posted, probably a little later this morning. I managed to finish everything except the rendering last night. We’ll see what kind of hoops I have to jump through to get it posted. The last one had to be FTP’d onto the server. This one’s larger. Yikes!
And yeah, we still need help with that new machine. Venmo: @C_I_Letbetter or CashApp: $ciletbetter. We don’t need all that much. I just have nothing left to give to it myself.
Maybe I should go back to bed and stay there the rest of the day.
Morning came earlier, and more painful, than I expected. No, it wasn’t the storms that moved through just after midnight; I weathered those without much issue. Jack-Jack, our dear mane coon mix, was balancing himself on my one-inch-wide headboard and decided to play with the one photo that was standing on a shelf. All the other photos are secured to the wall, but not this one. Jack decides that is a good enough reason to knock it off the shelf, onto my head, breaking the glass and giving me one hell of a headache to start the day. Fortunately, the glass broke into large pieces and stayed in the frame. I wasn’t cut by anything. And I didn’t curse as loud and vehemently as I wanted. I’ve taken the appropriate pain medication, but I have a feeling I’m still heading for bed once I finish this.
We stayed in most of yesterday. I think the high here got up to 91 yesterday. It will be close to the same every day for a while. I think Monday’s forecasted high is 96. I’m not sure what that means for any kind of Father’s Day activity.
I feel sorry for the guys who pick up our trash this week. As the kids have been re-arranging everything, they’ve been filling bags with trash that should have gone out days/weeks/years ago. Our trash bin is piled high. But as I took the last two bags out this morning, I looked down the street and saw that ours isn’t the only bin piled high. Our trash guys work hard any day, but they really have their work cut out for them this week.
The card and related material for my new Medicaid replacement insurance came in yesterday’s mail. The policy takes effect July 1, which can’t come too soon. The good news is that not only will it cover transportation to the doctor, but to the pharmacy, curbside grocery pickup, and the social security office. I may try the curbside grocery pickup. Maybe if I do that the ice cream won’t be melted by the time I get it in the freezer. The big question, though, is whether it will cover assisted living costs. I won’t have full access to the information until the first of the month. We’ll cross our fingers and hope for the best.
Apparently, the Pentagon has been playing dirty. Again. Reuters is reporting this morning that “At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. military launched a secret campaign to counter what it perceived as China’s growing influence in the Philippines, a nation hit especially hard by the deadly virus. It aimed to sow doubt about the safety and efficacy of vaccines that China was supplying.” As if there wasn’t enough misinformation and questions about the whole pandemic, does anyone need the Pentagon jumping and making intentionally false statements? This is not the type of activity that we need from our military. Of course, considering who was president at the time, I can’t say I’m surprised. Perhaps it makes sense that the Pentagon would follow the example of its Commander-In-Chief and lie about… everything.
Abortion rights supporters are understandably happy about the unanimous decision by the Supreme Court to maintain the availability of Mifepristone, a widely-used abortion pill. Be aware, however, that the ruling doesn’t actually change anything, and anti-abortion zealots are determined to get it off the market through any means possible. As this decision was being handed down, Republicans in Congress blocked an attempt by Democrats to push a bill that would have guaranteed a woman’s access to IVF, the latest enemy of anti-choice nut jobs. The issue isn’t going away, is most likely to get most nasty in state-level elections, and is critical to guaranteeing a woman’s autonomy over her body. I am hoping that more angry women step up to the plate and strongly defeat Republicans (mostly old white men) on this issue.
There is a video circulating that appears to show the orange felon attempting to kiss a young lady who is obviously turning him down. I’ve seen the video, though, and I’m not sure it’s legit, which is why I’m not sharing it with you. I worry about this form of possible misinformation. Does it sound like something the former president would do? Yep. We all know he’s a predator. We knew that back in 2016 and yet he was elected anyway. What bothers me is the number of people for whom that isn’t a problem. Both presidential candidates tend to give off creeper vibes around women and how either of them is on the ticket astonishes me. Are ya’ll really okay with that? Are you okay with your wives and daughters being treated so crudely?
My head is really hurting now. Thanks, Jack. I can tell this is going to be a wonderful day.
Feeling okay and doing well are two separate things. I felt fine yesterday when the day started. Tipper and I took a walk to the store, though, and I found myself running short of breath before we got there. I only needed olive oil and freezer bags, but when we got to the register, I forgot the sequence of the numbers in my PIN. I remember which numbers are involved, just not the order. Tipper was able to handle the olive oil for me, but not the freezer bags. I still need freezer bags.
I wasn’t sure I was going to make it home without having to stop and rest. The round trip is only three miles, a trip that we’ve taken often without any problem. It easily fulfills the 6000-step recommendation for the day’s activities. Yesterday, for reasons I can’t explain, my body wasn’t having it. I came home, went to bed, and pretty much stayed there. There was lunch in there somewhere, G made stew for dinner, which was really good. Still, it wasn’t all that late when I made all the cats scoot over and make room so I could go to bed for the night.
Today may be more of the same. I don’t feel rested. I need a shower and should do a load of laundry or two, but sitting here this morning I’m not convinced that any of it is actually going to happen. I wish it were easier to know which disease is causing which problem. If I did, I could contact the appropriate doctor and perhaps we could make some adjustments in medication. As it is, I just have to put up with what I hope are mere side effects to the overall situation.
I don’t know if you saw last night’s rant about the stupid things people are doing, but looking through the headlines this morning, and that’s all I’ve had time to do, I’m beginning to wonder if stupidity is part of our DNA. I’m not sure how science would prove such a concept. There would have to be a specific stupidity marker at the very least, or possibly even a stupidity gene that is handed down from generation to generation. I think the matter is worth the investigation. Let me tell you why.
2000-year-old DNA from skeletal remains found at Chichen Itza show a pattern of child sacrifice as part of religious ceremonies long before there was any European influence. They were all boys, often siblings, sometimes twins. We already know that ancient Phoenicians, Canaanites, Assyrians, and some branches of post-Abrahamic Israelites (Yahwists) all committed child sacrifice. For me, this makes an argument that void of any scientific understanding of the world or the universe, people make incredibly stupid decisions in the hope that those decisions might somehow change whatever is being experienced. Who/where they are doesn’t seem to make any difference. Stupid was there in the beginning.
Today, we sacrifice our children in different ways. Sometimes we call it war. Sometimes we call it religious rights. Sometimes we can call it safety and security. No matter what we call it or how it is achieved, the results are exactly the same: dead children offered up to appease some unknown and unknowable force in hopes that the world will get better. We blindly think that if we can just dominate this group, if we can overpower that country, if we can force this opinion over the whole populace, that things are going to get better, and if our children have to die in the process, then so be it.
Think about that for a minute. How does what we’re doing today make us any different than the ancient Assyrians, Yahwists, Phoenicians, or Mayans? Are we supposed to be comforted by the fact that we dress them up in smart uniforms and arm them with weapons that allow them to kill and be killed by enemies they never see?
This morning, there are Russian warships in Havanna Harbor. Remember what happened 60 years ago when that was just a threat? I was still little, but the memory of the fear my parents felt is still present. This morning, G7 leaders decided to use the interest from seized Russian assets to pay for Ukraine’s defense against the invading bully. Despite the UN’s demand for a cease-fire, Israel pushes deeper into Rafah and Hamas leaders say proposed amendments to the cease-fire are “insignificant.”
It’s been 1,000 Days since the Taliban barred girls from secondary education. Pro-Trump influencers fire up fears of migrant ‘invasion’ and the people they’re using don’t even know they’re being involved. Denmark recalls some Buldak spicy noodles as social media dares spread because that stupid gene apparently doesn’t fall far from the tree. Democrats are forcing a vote on women’s right to IVF in an election-year push on reproductive care. Oklahoma Supreme Court dismisses lawsuit of last Tulsa Race Massacre survivors seeking reparations because even our justices don’t really believe in Justice.
So please, dear geneticists around the world, would you mind looking for a DNA-level sign that we humans are inherently stupid? It would explain a lot of our behavior, both historic and current, and if we can identify what’s causing the problem, perhaps we can do something to curb it, if not eliminate it entirely.
Please. I’m starting to wonder how much longer we can survive ourselves.
Nudity is an appropriate response
Life on this planet is not easy. Every part of this planet is trying to exterminate us, from floods to hurricanes, a “wall of water” in Florida, earthquakes, volcano eruptions, and bears that are sick and tired of being compared to creepy white men. This is not a planet that is especially kind to human beings. You’d think we’d be more careful to band together and make sure that we are all living the best lives we possibly can. But no. We stupidly have decided that killing each other, disrespecting each other, and just plain being mean is how we want to behave.
Okay, maybe let me filter that a little bit. That is how the far-right portion of the country, dominated politically by Southern Baptists and the GOP, chooses to behave. I’ve not seen too many people outside of that group being such poor examples of humanity, though there certainly are some. Mental illness is usually the excuse given to them. Still, the GOP and their felonious leader are intent on disrespecting, if not outright eliminating, the lives of everyone who doesn’t agree with them. Whoever gave them the idea that they have the right to do that needs to have their noggin examined, but since no one is taking responsibility for that, we have to take them to task ourselves.
I’m going to look at three specific things that happened recently and were reported today. These things matter because if we don’t lock them down and yell and scream our absolute disgust and outrage, they’ll keep happening and, ultimately you will pay the price. Personally, I plan on dying sometime in the next twenty years, so I’ll probably avoid the worst of it. But the rest of you are in danger. Consider this your warning.
A lot of people like to accuse the good folks of Seattle, Washington of being liberal and soft on crime, but that’s not the case of Aaron Brown Myers, a 51-year-old resident of the city who apparently thinks he’s a one-person police force. This fucking idiot decided that he was going to sit outside a Big 5 Sporting Goods store in Renton, Washington “just in case” the place were to be the victim of a violent crime. WHY he thought that the sporting goods store was going to be targeted no one seems to know at this point. Still, this self-proclaimed “security consultant” sat out in the parking lot and waited for something to happen.
Along come three kids, two of the kids had Airsoft guns on their person, one in a back pocket, the other in a coat pocket. They intended to return or replace the guns because they weren’t operating as they should. It’s important to understand that Airsoft is a game, not a brand. The compressed air-powered weapons can be purchased legally from a variety of sources and, because they’re not considered lethal, can be purchased and carried by people under the age of 18. Because of the wide variety of brands and the popularity of such games, it’s not too surprising that some guns would be prone to being faulty.
Seeing the three kids, Myers makes the stupid decision that they must be about to violently rob the store and decides to intervene. He ended up killing a 17-year-old. The teen was shot once in the side and six times in the back. King County senior deputy prosecuting attorney Lauren M. Burke wrote in a case summary, “In this case, the defendant attacked three teenagers who had not committed any crime and at every stage of the interaction chose to escalate with more and more violence until it culminated in the defendant taking the life of 17-year-old H.R.”
Myers’ attorneys are claiming that he “feared for his life,” but you and I both know that’s total nonsense. He was told that the boys were only carrying Airsoft guns, not real ones. And shooting anyone in the back six times is overly aggressive. Furthermore, this isn’t the first time Myers has pulled this stunt! According to public records, on March 22, Myers called 911 and said that a person on a bicycle was holding a gun and pointing it at people. He told the 911 operator that he (Myers) had a pistol and “might have to intervene.” That time, the police got there and discovered that there was no weapon. Left to his own devices, Myers would have shot a totally innocent person.
This is one of the biggest problems with the broad outline of the Second Amendment. Myers isn’t part of some “regulated militia!” He’s a fucking menace! It’s because of him that the very concept of “good guys with a gun” is null and void. Just earlier this week, the FBI announced that murders across the country are down by 15% over last year! We don’t need fuck-ups like Myers taking it upon himself to sit in random parking lots and look for potential robbers. He’s killed someone completely innocent. A kid who had his entire life in front of him and probably was himself a gun proponent. Because of idiots like this, you and I are better off shopping from home.
Long before they showed up in Indianapolis this week, we knew the Southern Baptist Convention was going to do some stupid things while in town. The fun thing is that the headline being spread around sounds like they didn’t. “Southern Baptists reject ban on women pastors in historic vote” is the headline being pushed by USA Today. As is often the case with this particular news source, the headline is not 100% accurate.
While the 10,000 or so “messengers” fell short of the two-thirds majority to change their constitution, they only did so narrowly. 61% voted in favor of the measure. Southern Baptists still hate the voice of women, still reject the historical and biblical authority of women, and have their heads completely up their asses and stuck deep in their bowels as to how women could actually help the rapidly declining population of the denomination. Being a woman in a Southern Baptist church is like being a mole on someone’s back: no one notices until it turns cancerous and starts causing trouble.
Let’s be very clear: what Southern Baptist rejected was allowing the national organization, or any subset thereof, to control the actions of individual churches in any way, shape, or form. This was about governmental autonomy, not women. One of the hallmarks of the SBC is that each of their churches is independent. There is no council that keeps pastors in line, there is no committee that can slap sanctions on a church that steps out of line. This is why they have no database, no hard records, and no way of defrocking ministers who are guilty of rape and sexual abuse, both of which are, according to previous outside reports, rampant across the entirety of SBC churches. They’re a bunch of ministerial predators who want to avoid anything that could get them caught and result in a large number of pastors and youth ministers ending up in jail. THAT is what the SBC rejected this afternoon.
Making their hatred of and desire to dominate women even more obvious, the SBC also voted today to condemn IVF procedures. In my opinion, this may be one of the most cruel statements they’ve ever issued. What the statement essentially does is allow local churches to excommunicate, or in their terms, “remove from fellowship,” any woman who avails herself of IVF procedures at any time, whether it works or not.
Disclaimer: I have both family members and very dear friends who are the fortunate parents of darling children whose birth would not have been possible without IVF. I might be a bit biased on the issue.
Why in the world would the SBC [and the Catholic church as well] villainize a medical procedure that holds the potential of bolstering their sagging membership? Because IVF has become the new center of the ridiculous abortion argument. Mind you, it’s not a debate. A debate occurs between two reasonable people based on established facts. The anti-abortion side is not reasonable and refuses to recognize established medical facts. This is a sloppy and unnecessary argument that no intelligent person would engage in were this a reasonable society. The far-right is afraid of reason, however. They fear that reason will keep you from believing in their deity (which is likely true). Therefore, they abandon reason altogether and come at us with one stupid idea after another.
IVF has helped millions of families conceive and have beautiful children who are loved and cherished. The process (which I just had to explain to Tipper because she was looking over my shoulder) involves taking an egg from the mommy and the sperm from the daddy and introducing them to each other in a petri dish. If the egg likes the sperm and becomes fertilized, it is then planted back in the mommy who then becomes pregnant. Nine months later, if everything goes well, a beautiful little baby is born.
The problem, from a medical perspective, is that not everything goes well. In fact, the chances of a mother’s body rejecting the zygote (calling it a fetus is wrong) are pretty high. That’s why doctors don’t do one at a time. Repeated rejections would be extremely difficult on the mother’s body and could keep her from ever carrying a baby to term. To remedy that problem, they take multiple eggs (and plenty of sperm) and then only reinsert the most viable zygotes. This is why you’ve seen a dramatic increase in the number of twins, triplets, and quads over the past few years. It is safe to assume that if they’re not identical (all from the same egg) siblings, then they are likely IVF babies.
Again, you’d think churches would be excited about the prospect of more babies! But no, they’re worried about the leftovers, the ones that are either ethically destroyed or frozen in case the couple wants to try again somewhere down the road. In the opinion of the church, destroying those eggs and sperm, most of which have not yet been brought together and likely never will be, is the same as abortion.
See? I told you they don’t recognize established facts! These are not viable fetuses that we’re talking about! If implanted in a mother’s womb, there is a severe potential they could do incalculable damage to the woman’s body. And you know what else? The SBC wants other couples to “adopt” these frozen specimens and “bring them into a full life.” Do you even begin to comprehend how fucking dangerous that is? Getting IVF to take hold is rough enough when only the biological parents are involved. Bring in another family and the chances for everything to go wrong, including but not limited to the death of the woman, rises astronomically! Who the fuck would want to encourage that? Slapping everyone across the face with an iron skillet would be less painful!
This is exactly how wrong Catholics, Southern Baptists, and the GOP are on reproductive rights. They’d rather see people die than listen to science and/or allow a woman to have control over her own body. They’re happy to risk the lives of adults if it “saves” a fucking zygote. There are no working brain cells in their argument! This is idiocy at its worst and if you’re buying this load of crap then you’re just as big an idiot.
Yeah, I said it. Intelligent people trust the science, not the mythology.
And that’s just a part of the crazy that has taken place today. You might as well strip down and run around naked in your front yard. You still won’t be as crazy as the far right and their felonious leader.
How the hell is it the middle of June and it’s 46 degrees outside this morning? The dogs were snuggled up so tight against me this morning, that for a moment I thought someone liked me (until Ham wagged his tail). This cool front is supposed to leave by tomorrow, but damn, I’m going to have to put on long sleeves to take the dogs out in a bit!
The good news is that I did make it to the doctor yesterday. My glucose is down considerably, so there’s no need for insulin at this time. My blood pressure was still stupidly high, though, so we’re going back on Jardiance to address that and latent heart and stroke issues. We’ll check everything again in three months unless the numbers start getting high again.
Shortly after getting back home, my check hit the bank so I was able to order the groceries that we needed. The biggest challenge was trying to get all the frozen food into one little freezer. Since there’s not a store that carries fresh food within walking distance, we use a lot of frozen veggies to make sure we’re not going to get scurvy or anything like that. You wouldn’t think that would take a lot of space, but it does. Still, it’s a problem I’m glad to deal with. Seeing an empty fridge/freezer is rather frightening.
Another bit of good news came this morning as Hamas says it accepts UN-backed Gaza truce plan. There are still details to work out, and Israel has to stop bombing the living hell out of everything in Gaza, but after eight months of the two sides trading war crimes, I think the rest of the world is ready for them to stop. Since they’ve been behaving like spoiled children, perhaps we put them in separate corners of the region and make them sit facing a wall for a couple of centuries until they learn their lesson. Do you think that might work?
After going all day yesterday saying that his plane was missing, officials now confirm that Malawi vice president Chilima was killed in a plane crash. Malawi isn’t in the news a lot and their politics rarely get lively enough for the rest of the world to notice. However, this is the second high-ranking government official to die in an aircraft “accident” in the past month. You’ll remember that Iran’s president was killed in a helicopter “accident” a couple of weeks ago. I hope this isn’t the start of a trend.
The FBI’s latest data shows a ‘historic’ drop in crime across the US, citing a decrease in violent crime of 15% for the first three months of the year. From a pure numbers perspective, this is great news. However, perception is reality on this issue and what ultimately matters is whether people feel safe. This is still going to be a huge hot-button topic for election campaigns and expect to see some absolutely ridiculous claims from the far right. The national media is partially complicit here, sensationalizing every shooting they can find. The fact that there are fewer of them gets lost in the headlines that are part of making people feel unsafe.
One more thing and I’ll shut up for a few minutes. ABC News is reporting that the Biden administration plans to ban medical debt from credit reports. On one hand, this is good news for millions of Americans. However, it raises a couple of issues. First, why not eliminate medical debt completely with a national healthcare plan that simply covers everything? Wipe money-grubbing insurance companies and greedy hospital executives off the map and the debt goes away. Second, the change doesn’t have the full weight of the law. It exists in a rule change within the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. That means a subsequent president could have the rule overturned, which puts everyone in a precarious position. The economy needs people to have better credit scores, though, so that sales of big-ticket items such as homes and cars can increase. Take the win for now, but be careful that it’s not a real solution to the cost of healthcare in the US.
Oh yeah, I’m looking at my web stats and noticing that no one has looked at the article I posted yesterday afternoon, “Dealing With Adobe’s New ToS.” I thought for sure that my creative friends would be all over this one. I’m a bit disappointed. I included pictures and everything! LOL!
For some reason, today doesn’t feel like a Tuesday. I’m getting more of a Wednesday vibe, except that Kat’s here, which doesn’t happen on Wednesday mornings. The lawn needs to be mowed, but we’ll have to wait until the temperature outside at least hits 60. I’m not sending the kids out in coats!
You and I both need more coffee. Fill your cup and maybe I’ll have a surprise later this morning.
Fridays are supposed to be fun, aren’t they? At least, that’s the general premise. We take our time at work, complete what absolutely has to be completed, and then go out with “the gang” for drinks and frivolity. At least, that’s the myth that gets spread around. Honestly, I think that scenario probably ended sometime in the 1980s, but it’s still fun to think that it might happen. Of course, the reality is that we have to work like hell to get everything done by the end of the week that we’ve been putting off the other four days. By the time we finally do get around to leaving, we’re too tired to go out. We go home, drink alone, and then pass out.
None of that, either the myth or the reality, will be happening here today. There’s still no check in my account. That likely means that there won’t be anything deposited until Monday at the earliest. This puts Tuesday’s doctor’s appointment in jeopardy because I won’t be able to afford a fucking ride. Once Medicare kicks back in on July 1, they’ll pay for the transportation, but until then, I’m on my own. We’re out of milk and butter (margarine) but there’s no point in walking to the store because we already know that they won’t have any more milk until Wednesday of next week.
I think we’re okay on other food as long as no one wants to sit around and snack. Giving credit where it’s due, I have to congratulate G on doing a wonderful job with dinner last night. He made chicken with fresh asparagus and it was absolutely delicious. It really helps a lot that he can cook as well as he does. There are so many times when 5:00 rolls around and I’m struggling just to sit upright. Yesterday was definitely one of those days so his volunteering to cook is greatly appreciated.
My knees have been screaming at me since before Jack Jack forced me out of bed this morning and my hips aren’t feeling much better. Is this a chemo effect or arthritis? I have no idea how to tell. All I know is that it hurts like hell and I really don’t want to leave my chair.
Other things killing my mood this morning are these headlines:
St. Louis lawyers who waved guns at protesters get records expunged, want guns back. These idiots should have been disbarred in the beginning. They threatened to kill people. They don’t have the right to get their guns back or be a part of normal society.
Methodist church regrets Ivory Coast’s split from the union as lifting of LGBTQ ban roils Africa. It’s a poorly written headline, for starters. There’s a lot going on but at the core of it all, Africa is stupid conservative and acts like it’s afraid that LGBTQIA+ people are going to eat them or something.
Georgia to move ahead soon with bill curbing LGBT rights. They’re talking about the country, not the state, although something tells me the state would probably try something similar if they thought they could get away with it.
Tennessee governor OKs penalizing adults who help minors receive abortions, gender-affirming care. Tennessee likes to project this image of “Southern hospitality,” but the last thing they are is welcoming to anyone on the LGBTQIA+ spectrum. In fact, they may be the most dangerous state in the union for anyone who is not cis. Don’t buy the fucking lie. Tennessee is not friendly, not safe, and should be avoided like the plague it is.
I think I may just shut my door and avoid directly interacting with people for the rest of the day. I’m toxic at the moment and the only thing that’s likely to improve my mood is that check hitting my account. I’m going to have to completely delete my current shopping cart and start over because all the sales are going to end before I have any money. I fucking hate being dependent like this. The government is not reliable. It never has been. I can remember Grandpa Slover having to wait on his check at times as well and that was 40+ years ago.
What’s worse is I don’t see anything changing. Happy fucking Friday.
One of the many things that have raised my ire this week, separate from computer issues, has to do with the manner in which religion is obstinately and intentionally interfering with people’s lives and, ultimately, in government. For example, the head of the Ethics Committee for the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) said on Monday (June 3) that IVF is immoral and that Baptists should oppose it. First of all, the idea that Southern Baptists, those stalwarts of sexual abuse and denial, have a committee addressing ethics is laughable. Secondly, the statement mirrors that of the Catholic church, which the SBC has historically positioned itself opposingly on almost every issue.
But more ridiculous and harmful than the insidious idiocy of the SBC statement is the fact that this bullshit ends up having an influence on legislation. The chairman (of course, it’s a man) of the ethics committee wrote in a letter to the U.S. Senate: “We urge legislators to develop and implement a system of federal oversight that protects and informs women and ensures embryos are treated with care, even as we oppose the general practice of IVF.”
What the living fuck is going on with that? Why would a political body even give a shit about the SBC’s stance on anything?
Because, while the First Amendment limits Congress from the “establishment” of religion, it does not limit Congress nor any other political body from inserting religious inference into their governance of any and every issue to which someone thinks it might apply, and 99.99% of the time, it is a Christian influence that policymakers assert. Over time, that influence has grown, especially through the 20th century. The phrase “one nation under God” was not added until 1954 in an effort to distinguish the US from communist states. And while God is never mentioned explicitly in the US Constitution, which is the way it should be, it is mentioned in the constitutions of all 50 states. By invoking the name of any deity at all, those states, and the nation, are implicitly establishing a religion, which makes the whole mess unconstitutional.
Now, we find ourselves in this mess over reproductive rights, which no religious document explicitly mentions in any way, shape, or form, and in the name of some make-believe deity women’s rights are being taken away. First, it was the right to abortion, which the Supreme Court stripped under the influence of the Orange Felon, and now, invoking the same mythology and absence of reasoning, they’re going after IVF!
Consider what Vice President Kamala Harris had to say to Jimmy Kimmel last night (June 4):
There are better ways to run a country than to do so under the misguided influence of a mythology. In fact, if we extrapolate existing research, the argument can be made that we would be happier if we were not governed under the influence of any religion. Consider that persistent annual research has shown that the following countries are among the happiest:
Meanwhile, the United States isn’t even in the top 20, coming in at a dismal 23rd place. While the research does not directly target religion, it is worth pointing out that the countries I’ve listed are all explicitly secular in their governance. Religion is forbidden from playing any part. That does not mean the people who live there are not religious, but they do not allow their religious beliefs to interfere with how the country operates, how its laws are formed, or how its people are treated.
I can’t imagine what it must be like, how different it must be, to live full-time, to grow up, be educated, and pursue one’s life’s work, in a country that is not constantly trying to hammer everyone into some form of religious compliance. It would be so very different from the country we now live in. Do you know what country demands religious adherence? Afghanistan. Want to know where they land as far as their people being happy? At the very bottom of the scale. Dead last.
Stop and ask yourself: do we want to become the next Afghanistan? Because the way we’re headed now, that’s exactly where we’re going to end up.
There is a particular stereotype about the people who spread misinformation on the Internet. Generally speaking, we imagine that they’re middle-aged single/divorced men who have nothing better to do than gripe about everything and have the technological skills to spread their hate of all things by using bots they’ve created. This has been the mental picture we’ve been encouraged to hold for years now and we’ve happily played along, assuming that these lonely souls are just creepy guys who are fat, lazy, and jobless.
Turns out, we were wrong. New research published this past week (May 30) in Science affirms a 2019 study showing that the people most responsible for 90% of all misinformation spread on social media are women! Specifically, older women with an average age of 58, and largely Republican (64%). They make up 60% of the 2000 so-called superspreaders that dominate social media. One in 20 internet users follows at least one of these superspreaders and shares the misinformation they post. No bots. Just a bunch of old ladies with an agenda sitting around hitting the retweet button on X over and over and over until their casserole is done.
The researcher stated, “It does not seem like supersharing is a one-off attempt to influence elections by tech-savvy individuals, but rather a longer-term corrosive socio-technical process that contaminates the information ecosystem for some part of society.”
Two key words in that sentence: corrosive and contaminates. This is critical because such labels potentially limit this kind of communication from the shield of free speech. By now, we should all understand that the First Amendment guarantee of speech does not cover language that is potentially harmful to others. If we can prove that the deliberate and intentional sharing of misinformation is harmful, then it becomes illegal and the persons involved would be subject to prosecution.
Sure, no one likes the image of seeing grandma in handcuffs, but then, we didn’t imagine that instead of pestering her daughter-in-law about the grandkids grandma was making a deliberate attempt to destroy Democracy, either. Because of this misinformation, our elections are in danger. People who vote are making choices based on this misinformation and the result is that we get more people like Marjorie Taylor Greene making fools of themselves and the people they represent.
The authors of both studies, as well as other experts in the field, think that platforms should limit the number of times someone can “share” something. The suggested number is 50 retweets a day. I’m just going to go out on a limb here and say there’s no way in hell that Elon Musk is going to limit a damn thing on X. He doesn’t give a shit. He simply wants users and he doesn’t care what kind of bullshit they share.
Instead, I think people like you and I have to be a lot more aggressive about blocking people the first time we see something stupid show up in our newsfeeds. While Breitbart, InfoWars, and Gatewaypundit are the original source of most fake news, I would add Newsmax and Fox News to the list as well. Block them. Block everyone who shares their stories. Remember, you don’t have to follow them for their shit to show up in your newsfeed. Block them and, depending on which social media site you’re on, make sure you tell them that the material is offensive and false so that their misinformation is shared with fewer people.
Our Democracy is far too valuable to let a bunch of bigoted, homophobic, addle-brained, cookie-burning old ladies destroy it. Block the living hell out of them and let your DA (who is also an elected official) know that you consider misinformation damaging to the public. Let’s make it illegal. Shall we?
HAPPY PRIDE MONTH!
Pride Month is here! Yay! It’s time to celebrate all my favorite people! I love Pride Month and all the wonderful things that come with it. No, I’m not able to participate in all the activities because, you know, cancer sucks and I have no immune system. That doesn’t mean I don’t support them and would definitely be right out there with them celebrating who they are and the rights they deserve as humans. I don’t give a fuck what anyone else says, the people you’ll meet at Pride events are some of the most loving and caring souls on the planet.
As the partner/parent/ally of more LGBTQ+ people than I care to count, I love seeing them flaunt their true selves, fly their true colors, and express themselves as individuals. I also find myself being aggressively protective of them and their rights. I am deeply disturbed by the direction that ultra-right-wing conservatives have taken against the rights of people I love and care about, especially trans people. Let me be very clear about this: If you’re human, you’re human and you inherently have all the rights of every other human on the planet regardless of how you may present yourself, who and how you love, how you identify, or how you relate to the public in general. There’s no room for argument on this. As has been said over and over and over and over again, human rights are not a pie that we carve up into pieces. Acknowledging the rights of someone else does not take away anyone else’s rights.
One of the more telling headlines I’ve seen this morning came from a Reuters poll showing that the Orange Felon’s supporters are less likely to have a college degree. No, this isn’t surprising. For the past eight-plus years, we’ve observed the lack of critical thinking skills that allow one to justify supporting someone who not only is a bad politician, but a rather nasty person as a whole. However, it also explains how these same people take a combative and pugnacious stand against LBGTQ+ rights. They were fed a limited story growing up and they don’t know how to see that story for the myth that it is. They are cocooned in their own little make-believe world and not only do they not know how to break free, they don’t want to be part of reality and wish that everyone would stop trying to take them out of their snow globe.
Here’s the thing: stupid people elect stupid people. We’ve seen that for years and the situation has only gotten worse. Eisenhower Republicans were for expanding social services to the poor and needy, were for expanding the minimum wage, and for labor rights. That ended with Eisenhower, though. From Tricky Dick to Ronald Reagan and beyond, the party has become further and further removed from reality, from the needs of actual people, and supportive of rights for the rich and the white. These are the people who are actively trying to harsh the buzz of Pride Month with their own little “Day of …” bullshit in a vain attempt to deny the fabulousness that LGBTQ+ people bring to our society.
Celebrating Pride Month is a necessity, not an option. If we don’t stand up and let our voices be heard all month long, we’re likely to find those voices stifled by people who can’t form a complete sentence. Noise matters. Your presence matters. Participation matters. Visibility matters. We cannot allow ourselves and our friends to be dominated by people whose social and sexual education ended with Adam and Eve. That means making the most of Pride Month and then extending that to the rest of the year.
What may be most important in this election year is that straight(ish) people need to stand in defense of our LGBTQ+ family and friends. The ultra-right-wing conservatives think they can dominate by shouting louder, being more aggressive, storming state houses, city councils, and school board meetings, and just flat being mean. We have no choice this year but to shout them down, put them in the minority, and demand equity in human rights across the board.
Tipper loves running around the yard, and other places, in her furry costume. It’s hot, so she typically doesn’t stay in it for long, but when she does she never fails to get interesting looks. She wore the costume for a little while on race day. One father forcibly pulled his young daughter in the opposite direction. Why? Tipper wasn’t hurting anyone, she damn sure wasn’t trying to recruit anyone, and the only person to whom she might occasionally be a danger is her brother. I get the quizzical looks she gets because it’s an interesting costume, but she’s having fun. She’s more expressive when she’s wearing that giant monster head. She dances and interacts with people who she would never approach as herself. She loves seeing the smile on the faces of little ones when she waves those big furry paws at them.
Tipper has the same rights whether appearing as herself or in costume as everyone else on the planet. You respond negatively to her, you’re getting on my bad side real quick. No one’s asking you to put on a costume. Just give her and everyone else the space to be who they are, to joyfully express who they are, and to live peacefully in the same world as everyone else. That’s not too much to ask.
There’s rain moving in this morning. I forgot to take a pill last night so I’m hesitating to check my glucose. The pups and I may well spend the rest of the day in bed. The kids mowed the yard yesterday (with no small amount of arguing over who was doing their “fair” share) so that’s out of the way. Two of our three young trees are doing well and will appreciate the rain. Kat had a rough day yesterday, though, so I’m hoping today is a lot better, people are more friendly to her, and she can get a decent night’s sleep without cats waking her at 6:00 in the freakin’ morning. Zach, my eldest, is moving into a new apartment today, so that’s kind of a big deal. It will be interesting to see how often his mom and brothers visit.
Life comes at us fast, children. Celebrate every part of who you are while you can.
The System Worked As Designed
There can now be no question that we are living in historic times. I wish we weren’t, because too many of the “historic” things we’ve experienced have been bad. In a sane world, the Iran hostage crisis of 1979 wouldn’t have happened. The terror of 9/11 wouldn’t have happened. And a former president wouldn’t have broken the law (before he was president). In a sane world, people behave. In a sane world, people don’t lie. In a sane world, adults don’t respond like three-year-olds.
We obviously have never lived in a sane world. Ever.
When the news came across my phone that a verdict was ready in the former president’s hush money case, I turned on a live stream of ABC News and called the kids into the room. They needed to witness this because it will most likely affect them a lot longer than it will affect me. ABC displayed a simple graphic numbered 1-34, representing the number of counts against the former president. We watched together as the space in front of each one filled with the word “guilty.” There were no non-decisions, nor did they find him not guilty on any count. That was it.
The Orange Felon called the trial rigged, but let’s consider how we got here. First, there were charges. Each charge had to be vetted by the New York Attorney General’s Office to see if there was any chance of the charge being true. They concluded that there was. Next, a grand jury was assembled. It was the grand jury’s job to consider all the evidence and decide whether there was sufficient cause to go ahead with a full trial. Had there not been enough evidence, the case would have ended there. The case was scheduled for trial. Both sides participated equally in the selection of jurors. Both sides called their witnesses and pleaded their case, presumably to the best of their ability.
The jury deliberated for a mere ten hours over the course of two days. They had the judge’s instructions read back to them to ensure they followed the law. There was ample opportunity for any one of the jurors to muddy the waters. A single juror is all it would take to declare a mistrial. Had there been any question, the jurors could have debated for days, even weeks, about the efficacy of each count. That was their right and totally within their power. But that didn’t happen. This fairly and reasonably selected jury was unanimous and came back with one verdict on which they all agreed: guilty.
This is the way the system was designed to work.
I want my children to grow up believing in the rule of law. I want my children to know that no one, including a former president (or a sitting president, for that matter), is above the law. These matters are critical because without them we lose our Democracy.
I know that Reuters is reporting that Trump supporters call for riots and violent retribution after verdict. The media is going to hype that angle, perhaps to the point of making it come to fruition. Without all the media hype, I don’t think it would actually happen, but this is the way we apparently work now. And, honestly, when have the Orange Felon’s cult members not responded like three-year-olds who didn’t get their way? Ever? No, never. Every damn time. Why? Because three-year-olds don’t understand that they’re not that special. Three-year-olds don’t understand that there are consequences for disobeying rules. The difference here is that actual three-year-olds learn. The members of the Felon’s cult, don’t.
After the verdict, G made us all a delicious celebratory soup because the system worked. We ate the soup, took our meds, and went to bed. We slept well. Today, we’ll mow the lawn because it’s almost certain to rain tomorrow.
Our lives go on. I still have cancer and diabetes and high blood pressure and arthritis and I’m insane. The kids are still enjoying the few weeks of summer break they have. Kat will still do the most awesome work on people’s hair. The dogs will still bark at anyone who walks past the house. The cats will still leave hair on everything. Nothing changes for us.
But we go forward knowing that the system works, whether anyone likes the outcome or not. Fuss all you want, the law is the law. If you want to change the law, you have to vote. But then, who is going to change the law to allow for deceptive financial practices? There are enough loopholes already that corporations are exploiting.
By the way, can we end this talk of jail time for the Orange Felon? There’s almost zero chance of that happening. These are E-level felonies, the lowest possible in the New York system. While there is an allowance for jail time, that rarely happens. Probation, public service, and house arrest are the most common sentences handed down in this type of case. Because the Orange Felon is a former president and thereby entitled to Secret Service protection for the rest of his life, any jail time would present a considerable burden on both the Secret Service and the prison system. As salacious as jail time would be, I don’t see the judge making that decision.
Now, I need to get my day started. Ya’ll sit around here and fuss all you want.
Tuesday, May 21, the bastard formerly known as the 45th President* of the US, posted a video to the financially struggling social media app he owns containing blatant and intentional Nazi references, most specifically using the phrase “unified Reich” in reference to what the US will become should he win re-election.
Personally, I am of the opinion that he uses tactics like this, posting inflammatory statements and then taking them down, to get people riled up. What it does is reveal how many Americans are actually down for supporting the level of authoritarianism that your grandfathers and great-grandfathers squashed during World War II. Those now-dead American heroes were screaming “never again,” but yet, for America, this is very much Germany, 1938 all over again, and re-electing the indicted one would be the same as electing Hitler. Straight up. No apologies.
But rather than going on a rant of my own, I think it’s more entertaining, and definitely a better use of your time, to let someone else rant for me. Enjoy.
And then, there’s this opinion:
So, you’ve heard the dog whistle. Whatcha gonna do about it? Who has more political balls, you or a neutered dog?
Let’s just go ahead and change the name of the country from the United States of America to the United War Machine. Let’s be real. The one thing that really unites this increasingly third-rate country is that we like war. We like war a lot. It doesn’t even have to be our war. Let someone else go to war and we’ll happily supply them the bombs, guns, planes, tanks, bullets, and in some cases even personnel necessary to fight their war. We just can’t imagine the planet without a couple of wars going on. Imagine how much it would tank our economy if we didn’t have any reason to build the implements of war!
One of the many hundreds of problems with war is that the people engaged in it seem to think that there are no rules. Take Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, for example. His response to some of the horrible things Israeli troops have done since October 7 has been, “That’s just part of war.” The problem is, he’s wrong. There are humanitarian rules to war and everyone’s being very good at breaking them.
Who attempts to take the rule breakers to task? The International Criminal Court. The court was originally created after WWII to try Nazi officials for the unspeakable crimes they had committed during that war. Located in The Hague, Netherlands, the court is responsible for holding everyone accountable for war violations. The goal is to prevent the kind of atrocities experienced in WWII from ever happening again. Sounds like a good thing, right?
Sure, we think it is up until our best friend has a warrant out on their head. Earlier this week, the court applied for arrest warrants for a number of people related to the Hamas/Israel war in Gaza. The way the ICC works is that, unlike warrants here that only need the signature of a friendly judge, prosecutors must first gather a substantial amount of evidence that violations have occurred, a whole freaking panel of judges has to approve the application, or else the warrants are rejected. There is little chance for error. The rules are unfathomably tight. Here are a couple of critical accusations made in the application:
On the basis of evidence collected and examined by my Office, I have reasonable grounds to believe that Yahya SINWAR (Head of the Islamic Resistance Movement (“Hamas”) in the Gaza Strip), Mohammed Diab Ibrahim AL-MASRI, more commonly known as DEIF (Commander-in-Chief of the military wing of Hamas, known as the Al-Qassam Brigades), and Ismail HANIYEH (Head of Hamas Political Bureau) bear criminal responsibility for the following war crimes and crimes against humanity committed on the territory of Israel and the State of Palestine (in the Gaza strip) from at least 7 October 2023:
My Office submits that the war crimes alleged in these applications were committed in the context of an international armed conflict between Israel and Palestine, and a non-international armed conflict between Israel and Hamas running in parallel. We submit that the crimes against humanity charged were part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population of Israel by Hamas and other armed groups pursuant to organisational policies. Some of these crimes, in our assessment, continue to this day.
That addresses the crimes committed by Hamas. You’d think everyone would be happy about that. But wait, the prosecutor had more to say, and this is the part that has US politicians miffed.
On the basis of evidence collected and examined by my Office, I have reasonable grounds to believe that Benjamin NETANYAHU, the Prime Minister of Israel, and Yoav GALLANT, the Minister of Defence of Israel, bear criminal responsibility for the following war crimes and crimes against humanity committed on the territory of the State of Palestine (in the Gaza strip) from at least 8 October 2023:
My Office submits that the war crimes alleged in these applications were committed in the context of an international armed conflict between Israel and Palestine, and a non-international armed conflict between Israel and Hamas (together with other Palestinian Armed Groups) running in parallel. We submit that the crimes against humanity charged were committed as part of a widespread and systematic attack against the Palestinian civilian population pursuant to State policy. These crimes, in our assessment, continue to this day.
These allegations are backed by substantial evidence and interviews with people involved, deep with corroborating witnesses on both sides. This isn’t a witch hunt. This is how a fair investigation transpires. After months of work with prosecutors looking at both Hamas and Israel, taking everything into consideration, came to the conclusion that these crimes were and continue to be committed. How is this not a no-brainer?
Yet, the US, regardless of political affiliation, has one hell of a blind spot when it comes to Israel. I fail to understand it at all. Yes, what happened to Jews during WWII was unprecedented, but it does not equate to a blank check for the future. And, if we’re being fair, Netanyahu was never the dominant choice for Prime Minister in the first place. Israel had to hold five elections within a four-year period before the old fart could cobble together enough of a coalition to form a government. This is not the same young “Bibi” Netanyahu that won the election for the first time in 1996. This is an old, authoritarian prick who wants to dominate simply because he thinks he has a right to dominate. He needs to go away and let someone more reasonable guide the people of Israel.
But no, he’s not going away and the US, being the country ever obsessed with war, is doing their best to prop him up. President Biden called the allegations “outrageous,” and then followed with, “Whatever this prosecutor might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas.”
US Secretary of State Blinken added, “Hamas is a brutal terrorist organization that carried out the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust and is still holding dozens of innocent people hostage, including Americans.”
Okay, Mr. Blinken, as of May13, only 1,478 Israeli citizens have been killed compared to 35,562 Palestinian civilians, according to UNWRA. Uhm who, precisely, is carrying out a massacre? Are you fucking listening to the nonsense coming out of your mouth?
Oh, but it gets worse. GOP Senator and relentless asshole, Tom Cotton, wrote that “My colleagues and I look forward to make sure neither Khan, his associates nor their families will ever set foot again in the United States.”
Hey, jackass, guess who assisted in the ICC’s investigation: none other than Amal Clooney. You know George’s wife and one hell of a fucking attorney. Here’s what she had to say:
“More than four months ago, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court asked me to assist him with evaluating evidence of suspected war crimes and crimes against humanity in Israel and Gaza. I agreed and joined a panel of international legal experts to undertake this task. Together we have engaged in an extensive process of evidence review and legal analysis including at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
The Panel and its academic advisers are experts in international law, including international humanitarian law and international criminal law. Two Panel members are appointed as expert ‘Special Advisers’ by the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. Two Panel members are former judges at criminal tribunals in The Hague.
Despite our diverse personal backgrounds, our legal findings are unanimous. We have unanimously determined that the Court has jurisdiction over crimes committed in Palestine and by Palestinian nationals. We unanimously conclude that there are reasonable grounds to believe that Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Deif and Ismail Haniyeh have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, including hostage-taking, murder and crimes of sexual violence. We unanimously conclude that there are reasonable grounds to believe that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity including starvation as a method of warfare, murder, persecution and extermination.
I served on this Panel because I believe in the rule of law and the need to protect civilian lives. The law that protects civilians in war was developed more than 100 years ago and it applies in every country in the world regardless of the reasons for a conflict. As a human rights lawyer, I will never accept that one child’s life has less value than another’s. I do not accept that any conflict should be beyond the reach of the law, nor that any perpetrator should be above the law. So I support the historic step that the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has taken to bring justice to victims of atrocities in Israel and Palestine.
Today, my colleagues and I have published an op-ed and a detailed legal report of the Panel’s findings. My approach is not to provide a running commentary of my work but to let the work speak for itself. I hope that witnesses will cooperate with the ongoing investigation. And I hope that justice will prevail in a region that has already suffered too much.”
Amal Clooney
Barrister and Co-Founder of the Clooney Foundation for Justice
Shut the fuck up, Tom.
Here’s the thing, neither the US nor Israel signed onto the Rome Statute under which the ICC was established. Why? Because both countries (and several others) are fucking scared of the concept of non-biased justice. No US politician wants to be held accountable for their actions (hence, the chaos over someone’s multiple indictments). All we want is the freedom to support war, no matter how horrible it is, wherever we want, whenever we want. We don’t want anyone telling us that the wars we’re supporting are unjust.
However, as bloated as our national ego is, we’re not the only ones on the planet. Earlier today, Norway, Ireland, and Spain recognized the State of Palestine. Other countries are considering the move, such as France, though they’re not quite ready to commit. This is a big deal. The rules of engagement change if Palestine is recognized internationally as its own country. As that begins to happen, UN rules start to apply making the continued aggression by Israel all the more illegal and could potentially open the door for UN troops to fight on behalf of Palestine against Israel.
Understand, there are a truckload of steps that have to take place before anything like that can happen and we can all hope that a permanent cease-fire can be negotiated before there’s any reason to insert UN troops in the region. However, the possibility is there and will grow closer with each country that decides to recognize Palestine.
And for every day that there is no cease-fire, who do we blame? Look in a fucking mirror. The US, the United War Machine, is the country standing right next to Israel encouraging them to keep up their illegal and inhumane tactics.
I haven’t recited the Pledge of Allegiance in several years. This is why. I cannot, in good conscience, pledge a damn thing to a country that actively courts and provides for the global extermination of our own species. That I was born here and live here does not obligate me to support such idiocy. Rather, my citizenship requires that I yell, scream, and do everything within my power to stop it. Legally.
The problem with this situation is that when the bullshit is spread so thick in every direction, who the hell am I supposed to vote for? None of the major candidates will stand up to Israel. None of them have a spine.
Maybe you have an idea.
Whether you like someone or not is irrelevant. Everyone on the planet deserves a safe place to exist, a sufficient amount of food to eat, healthcare without prequalifications, personal dignity (respecting how they identify), and love.
You don’t get to deny them these rights. They don’t get to deny you, either. That’s the way it has to be.
IF YOU DON’T LIKE IT, THAT’S JUST TOUGH. SIT THERE AND BE BITTER BUT STAY THE FUCK OUT OF THE WAY.
FOREVER.
Today is the first official day of practice and qualifying open to the public at IMS. I’d tell you to not bother going and instead spend your money somewhere more deserving, and it bothers me when you don’t listen. Qualifying this afternoon is for tomorrow’s Sonsio Grand Prix. Who the hell is Sonsio? They’re the people who’ve been trying to reach you about your car/home’s extended warranty. It’s an insurance company and they damn sure don’t need your money. You’d be better off putting your premiums in a passbook savings account. I’m sure around 15,000 people will still be there because they have money to burn and no conscience for the rest of the world. It’s sad, really, how little these people give a shit.
It was 50 degrees when I took the dogs out this morning. Temps are on the low side all weekend and there’s a chance of showers every day, mostly in the evening/overnight. I’m looking at the calendar trying to figure out the best time to mow. Looking at the forecast, Sunday would be the best day, but that’s Mother’s Day and I’d rather the kids not be all sweaty when Kat gets home.
Interested in “eating the rich?” Be aware that there’s a showdown coming as the 2017 tax cuts for the super-wealthy are due to expire. I would tell you to contact your legislators but we all know they don’t pay a damn bit of attention because they know you won’t vote them the fuck out as they deserve. The American public is spineless. These tax cuts shouldn’t have happened in the first place and I don’t see any of you shouting out against them.
Oh, and get this: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he doesn’t give a shit if the US doesn’t send bombs for them to drop on Rafah. They’re going to invade and wipe out the border city anyway. This is how much of a bitch Netanyahu is. He doesn’t care how Israelis feel. He doesn’t care how the world sees the conflict. He’s a power-mad authoritarian who is turning history on its ear by engaging in the same form of atrocities against Palestine as the Germans did against Jews a century ago. Anyone who is not supporting a two-state resolution to Gaza is wrong and you’ll never convince me otherwise.
If there is any question that popular music has gotten worse over the past 50 years, here’s the proof. New research suggests that music since the 80s, including all of Taylor Swift’s eras, has become more negative, angrier, and more simple. Perhaps that’s why older music is still preferred by almost everyone with a brain. Or, it could be due to the fact that the world you’ve created is more negative and angrier and the music is reflective of that. Either way, ’70s music still rocks.
Oh, and just in case you’re buying into the claptrap that Elon Musk and other GOP mouthpieces are spewing, no noncitizens cannot vote in federal elections.
I’m in a mood this morning and coffee alone isn’t going to fix it.
There were few good moments yesterday as it would rain, then stop, then rain more, then stop, then wind, more rain, a threat of tornadoes, then nothing. My body didn’t have time to adjust too much so it decided to shut down. Our shipment of cat litter arrived before the kids got home so I had to be the one to carry it in. My body didn’t like that. Nausea hit so hard that I had to take a shower and change clothes. Most of the rest of the day was spent in bed or in the bathroom. Fortunately, the kids are good at taking care of themselves, but I actually had a decent dinner planned and couldn’t stand up long enough to fix it.
Tipper had a problem at school yesterday when someone in one of her classes wrote “Fuck [her name]” on one of the tables. Since no one admitted witnessing the act, no one was admonished or punished. Tipper is more than ready to graduate and never see those particular classmates again. Fortunately, she’ll be in a more supportive atmosphere next school year.
Ryn (aka Big Gabe) called yesterday and gave me an update on all the gossip in that part of the family. The biggest impact is that they’ve blocked their grandparents for refusing to recognize them as non-binary. Their grandfather’s 85th birthday is next week and Ryn’s refusing to go, which I totally agree with. The grandparents have been nothing but manipulative their entire life and if they can’t be supportive then no, Ryn has no obligation to associate with them.
The other big news is that I’m attempting to get back into photography. All the why and wherefore are in yesterday’s post. I’m looking for volunteers so I can update my portfolio appropriately. Contact me here or on Facebook. How I’m going to juggle this along with the chemo, I don’t know. To a large degree, it doesn’t matter. Congress isn’t likely to prevent the severe cut in Social Security scheduled for ’33, so I need to take preventative action of my own now, even if it causes further health issues.
Speaking of the dicks in Congress, House Speaker Johnson doesn’t seem to understand how the separation of powers works. Yesterday, he “demanded” that all trials against the former president must stop on grounds that they amount to election interference. Yeah, that’s really the tact they’re taking. Nimwits. That’s not the way the system works. Congress doesn’t get to interfere in ongoing trials. These idiots are power-hungry and severely delusional. Please, vote and replace them all.
The fog this morning is severe. More rain is forecasted for this evening so I’ll need to complete whatever I’m going to do early today. Not that I had much planned, mind you. Feel free to distract me with coffee.
Ouch, my calves hurt. Walking is such a fun challenge. After Sunday’s activities, my body didn’t especially appreciate having to move yesterday. I kept my activity to a minimum, edited some pictures that I may take down later, took the dogs outside as necessary, and did frozen pizza for dinner. The kids were happy and I didn’t risk straining anything. Today may be similar. the forecast shows a 100% chance of rain and if we end up getting some of the system that spawned tornadoes in Oklahoma last night (it will likely go south of us) then getting out of bed may be a struggle.
G has been given a chance to spend a week at Purdue this summer, earning both college and high school credit. Being a PPHS student allows him to attend for free. I’m excited for him to go not only because of the program but for the opportunity to experience a taste of dorm life and eating on a meal plan. Think back to your own college experience: how many kids bailed out quickly because they couldn’t adjust to campus life, being away from home, having to make basic decisions for themselves, and being responsible about meals? We’ve not been able to give him long overnight camp experiences. This is a chance for him to test his mettle without us being there looking over his shoulder.
Tipper, on the other hand, is bailing on her class’s trip to Chicago this weekend. The annual 8th-grade trip is supposed to be a reward for all their hard work, but Tipper only sees it as a long bus ride with a lot of people she doesn’t like. Of course, we’re not forcing her to go, but her lack of positive social interaction bothers me.
A pop-up notification from the National Weather Service just informed me that this afternoon’s storms could be severe, with high winds and possibly hail. Afternoon. When the kids are on buses. How do I not worry about that?
In reading an article this morning about re-drawing political district lines in Louisiana, I see that white voters are claiming that having districts favoring African Americans offends their (the white people’s) “personal dignity.” Okay, if you really want to start that fight, let’s go for it.
According to Deleware Law School, which seems to have the most concise and least confusing definition, personal dignity is defined as “the equal, inherent, and inalienable value of every person. It touches every important aspect of the human experience, from sexual and gender identity, to citizenship, equality and privacy, education and employment, healthcare, and more.” Okay, pretty straightforward. Sort of.
The International Journal of Constitutional Law, [Volume 10, Issue 2, 30 March 2012] makes the argument that “in spite of widespread international agreement on the importance of the principle, there is a significant degree of confusion regarding what it demands of lawmakers and adjudicators, and considerable inconsistency in its formulation and application in domestic constitutional law.” The author argues that “there is little or no consensus as to what the concept of human dignity demands of lawmakers and adjudicators. Indeed, for all the importance and emphasis placed on human dignity in the text of international conventions, domestic constitutions, and court decisions, the elusive nature of the concept has led many commentators to argue that it is, at best, meaningless or unhelpful, and at worst, potentially damaging to the protection of fundamental human rights.”
Most of the argument comes down to how loosely courts and legislators have played with the term, resulting in it having no practical meaning at all. Is “dignity” a right or is it a characteristic of something else?
Here’s my take: if “personal dignity” is a right that is defensible under the Constitution, then:
I could go on with that list for a long time but you’d stop reading before getting into the more detailed elements. The issue is “the relative looseness with which the term has been used by drafters, judges, and academics, as a consequence of which domestic constitutional law frequently defines “dignity” in a manner that cannot be reconciled with international human rights law.” [ibid.] We need a tighter definition that prevents courts and legislators from watering it down to the point it doesn’t exist. Until that happens, until we stand up for all human rights (which the US has yet to do), then none of us can claim any right to personal dignity. Attempting to do so only puts us at odds, possibly in violation of everyone else’s personal dignity.
If you disagree, feel free to present a reasonable and intelligent argument in the comments below.
The sad fact is that we only want rights and freedoms for people who look, act, and think like we do. We don’t understand universal freedom because we’re afraid of it, afraid that it might change the way we live, who controls the power, and how we might dominate those around us. To claim that allowing people of color to vote in a district designed to represent them violates your rights is racist and empty. You have zero right to deny someone else adequate representation in Congress or anywhere else.
I’m loudly in favor of breaking up the “good old boys club.” I’m unapologetically in favor of removing the influence of any religion from government. We need to re-think the whole mess in terms of global human rights because the movement of people across national borders, the ability to access and influence information without nationalistic or religious barriers, warrants that we protect the rights not only of those who live within our borders, but everyone who may, whether physically or digitally, visit our lands, our thoughts, our art, our education, or any other readily accessible portion of our existence. You can take your offense and shove it up your ass.
Meanwhile, I’m going to have leftover pizza for breakfast.
The cats are fussing with each other and keeping Kat from sleeping. This isn’t going to be a good day. I forgot to turn off my alarm, so the dogs demanded to go out the instant it went off. This isn’t going to be a good day. Rain went through early this morning, just enough to make me miserable. This isn’t going to be a good day. However, the twins are over here being cute and Tipper has already popped into the room to say hi. Maybe I’ll make pancakes.
The bright point of yesterday was G going on a “field trip” to Purdue. I put “field trip” in quotations because, yeah, that’s how his school had to classify the trip in order to use school transportation. But let’s be honest, this was a recruiting trip, no two ways about it. They visited the dorms. They ate in the cafeteria (which thrilled G). They visited the School of Business (I’m a little surprised it wasn’t engineering). He gained some new perspectives and has a lot of ideas. I kinda wish I could have gone with them, but this was a trip he needed to make independent of parental influence.
Other than that, we spent a lot of time in bed yesterday and are likely to do the same today. The pain reaches up into my cerebral cortex and is probably at least partially responsible for the low level of patience I’m feeling with things I cannot control. Not that I would change my opinion, mind you. I still support the pro-Palestinian protests because we have to find a two-state solution and without the protests, Israel will steamroll over millions of innocent people. Earlier this morning a report came from Rafa that an infant girl had died from the extreme heat. These protests aren’t antisemitic, but a demand for a humanitarian solution. Israel would like to wipe out the Palestinians completely. We can’t let that happen any more than we would tolerate the opposite.
I’m also more than a little pissed that the Republican National Committee is tying up courts in all fifty states (yes, Ms. Trump, there are only 50, not 80 as you claimed earlier this week). The RNC’s main goal here is to keep as many people from voting as possible. Let me make this clear: REPUBLICANS DO NOT WANT YOU TO VOTE. They know they can’t win a legitimate election. Their claims are baseless and void of evidence, but they will put every election into question. This is not democracy and they need to be punished severely for attempting to overthrow the government in this way.
Anger and pain are not a good mix. One fuels the other and I can’t be sure my reasoning is accurate.
No progress was made in finding a new place to live. So help me, property managers are the bain of my existence at the moment. They’re misusing technology in an attempt to avoid direct contact. Why the fuck do you need to know the name of my cats? Maybe I want to rename them Homer and Aristotle. How would that make any difference as to how they’ll behave in an apartment? Talk to me directly and I’ll tell you what I need. Don’t send me another fucking form to fill out.
Maybe I’ll re-process some more pictures of pretty people. Get used to that as it’s all I have left now.
There is no such thing as presidential immunity and anyone arguing so is a traitor.
I dare you to prove me wrong. We were all taught that no one was above the law. The entire purpose of the Constitution was to make dead sure that the United States does not fall under the absolute power of a king or dictator. Loathing should be directed toward anyone who advocates otherwise. To support presidential immunity is to advocate for the overthrow of the government through such acts.
Morning Update: 06/28/24
Before you bother asking, no, I didn’t watch the debate. I never do. There’s little point. First, there was no question from the beginning that the lies were going to be flying everywhere and by all accounts they were. Here is the AP list of lies. It’s not comprehensive because many of them were repeated in different forms throughout the night. Second, we have YouTube and other video sources now, so we don’t have to sit through all the punditry and pedantry of a live broadcast. From what I’ve seen this morning, President Biden looked a lot like Ronald Reagan did in ’88. The Orange Felon looked orange and spoke felonious. Third: Most people have already made up their minds and there’s little, if anything, that will change them. In that regard, the debates are merely moments of malarky. Are we good with that? Yes, I have my concerns, but they’re more at the state and Congressional level, not presidential (just yet).
If you’re wondering how my day went yesterday, I slept a lot, which wasn’t surprising at all given Wednesday’s fun activity. I woke up thinking I might be able to power through it, but by 7:30 I was back in bed and snoring. Nonetheless, the kids did finish mowing the yard and the construction crew finished enclosing the new house next door.
The moment of disappointment for the day came when there wasn’t a USPS morning scan email. In case you weren’t already aware, you can sign up to get an email notification of the mail expected to be delivered each day. This really helps when you’re expecting something valuable and/or important, such as a debit card. Unfortunately, there was no email yesterday which meant we didn’t have any new mail. No debit card. This is a problem because it has been 10 days since the card was ordered.
The letter containing the PIN for that card gave me the number to call and report the card missing. Of course, a missing card is a big deal. So, they had to cancel that card and issue me a new one. Fuck. Another wait. This time, they put a rush on the processing, so it should go into the mail today and be here by Monday. They kindly waived the standard rush fee since it’s already been 10 days and the other card never arrived. I’m sorry, but that means it will likely be Tuesday or Wednesday of next week before I can show you the pictures we took Wednesday.
What was entertaining is that the customer service person I had was quite happy. One of the first things she told me was that my name made her smile. She proceeded to call me “Mr. Let-Us-Be-Better” for the rest of the call. If that’s what shows up on my card, I’m not changing it. 😊 She hummed while she typed, and once was even singing along with a song I assume was playing either in the background or in her earbuds. Her positivity went a long way toward calming my anxiety about not having access to my funds, as meager as they are.
Reuters was kind enough to tell me that Fourth of July cookout costs in the US have risen by 5% this year over last year, and 30% over 2019. Meat and lemonade are the biggest factors there. I was able to catch a rack of ribs on sale earlier this month, so that’s sitting in the freezer. Hopefully, the few other things we’ll need won’t cost too much more, especially since it will likely just be me and the kids. It’s going to be too loud and chaotic in the neighborhood for Kat. In fact, I wouldn’t blame her if she ran and hid for the whole week. Our neighbors tend to start “celebrating” early.
Processing this morning’s picture reminded me that it’s been 14 years since I was last out on the West Coast. This lack of travel thing is starting to get to me. Wednesday’s adventure was fun and really hit at my inert wanderlust. I’m ready to go trekking into whatever wilderness, urban or jungle. Yet, flying with chemo is apparently a problem and Social Security gets upset if I’m out of the state for more than two weeks of the month. I’m sure there’s a solution out there somewhere, but my brain is too addled to think of anything that isn’t filled with prohibitions. Feel free to help me out there.
There’s rain in the forecast. The skies to the West looked dark and menacing when I took the dogs out earlier. Storms are in the forecast for Sunday as well. That will make for an interesting start to “Blow Your Brains Out” week. The rain might prevent houses from catching fire, but it won’t do much to keep digits from being blown off. We’ve been doing the whole fireworks thing long enough you’d think folks would have learned by now that black powder and stupidity don’t mix well. Yet, every year, emergency rooms fill up with too many examples of “watch this” syndrome and “we didn’t expect that” disease.
My stomach wants me to eat but it’s another hour before I can check my glucose. We don’t really have anything for breakfast, anyway. We’re out of bread, bacon, and cereal. Eggs by themselves don’t cut it. Maybe I’ll just eat leftovers from the other night.
Feel free to amuse me.
Share this:
Like this: