Whether federal overrides of states is good apparently depends where the Democrats are in power.

By Justin Katz | October 13, 2021 |
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A water drop and ripples

Nick Ciolino of The Epoch Times reports:

Psaki also says the health administration rule will override Abbott’s executive order.

“We know that federal law overrides state law,” she said. “I would note that earlier when we put out our guidance on the president’s announcement about mandates several weeks ago, it made clear that … requirements are promulgated pursuant to federal law and supersede any contrary state, or local law or ordinance.”

Remember when a statement from the White House that its orders overrode those of the states was considered a sign of the end of our democracy?  The only significant difference is that the Democrats occupy the White House, and they’re fighting Republican governors.

Next time the roles reverse and the usual suspects (mainly the media) act as if dictatorship is dawning, we’ll know it’s just B.S. and should respond appropriately.  (That doesn’t mean agreeing with whatever the policy might be, but we should ignore objections that aren’t made in good faith.

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The rabble must recognize friend and foe.

By Justin Katz | October 13, 2021 |
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David Teniers' Village Revel with Aristocratic Couple

Michael Morse is pledging never again to vote for the lesser of two evils.

On the whole, his “Saturday morning soapbox,” as he calls it, resonates very strongly with me, although I disagree with his pledge for prudential reasons — most significantly because it’s really very, very easy for activists and the news media to make fine people seem as if they ought to be “evil” in some degree, greater or lesser.  Given Mike’s clarity about how powerful forces have played us (“The Rabble”) as pawns, one would think he’d see this problem.

Another point of disagreement arises around a debate that Mike and I have touched on from time to time over the years (emphasis added):

The Rabble is what the elite fear, they know that there is strength in numbers, and if The Rabble gets out of hand, and actually gets together to demand honest government, accountability and quality candidates that cannot be influenced by narrow minded activists,, bought by big business, financial institutions and super wealthy donors their power will ebb, The Rabble will rise, unions and the workforce will regain the strength they have been steadily losing, income inequality will begin to reset itself, power will return to the people and the tiny fraction of people who actually have the ability to influence elections and steer the economy will feel the pinch, and watch all of their work at controlling the media, the government and the future be flushed away by a wave of indignation as the people come to their senses.

Here, the problem is that the top-down structure of labor unions and their pro-worker gloss made them the test case for how the elite have deceived, separated, and neutralized us.  That is why prominent union leaders in Rhode Island participated in a panel when the progressive Netroots Nations conference was in Providence and proclaimed the success of their “One Big Union” model.  There is no difference, to them, between the progressive movement that’s drowning our culture and our government and dissolving our rights and the labor movement.

To reverse this trend, working-and-middle-class uniformed workers are going to have to recategorize themselves in line with working-and-middle-class taxpayer and free-market advocates, rather than their union organizations, and both are going to have to find a way to show working-and-middle-class minorities that their common cause is with us, rather than with the elites who claim to speak for them.

Unions ostensibly organized to consolidate the leverage of a workforce into the hands of a few representatives who could thereby gain access to the executives’ offices.  That may make sense in the limited circumstance of a single category of workers in a single workplace, because the mission is narrow and focused on their shared interests.

What that model has become, however, is a board room filled with people who claim to speak for different groups all making decisions about every aspect of life, such that they can’t possibly represent their members’ shared interests.  (Do all teachers support identity politics?  Do all firefighters support abortion?)  Instead, the role of these organizations has become one of top-down force — ensuring that their groups’ resources are used to support the shared interests of the elite.

 

Featured image by David Teniers on WikiArt.

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How to respond when the police knock on your door asking about your Facebook post about a protest.

By Justin Katz | October 13, 2021 |
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A water drop and ripples

Cardinal Pritchard is right that this video from Australia shows the appropriate response when the police show up at your house to ask if a picture on your Facebook page is evidence that you illegally were present at a protest.

Summary: No comment, and who do you think you are?

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Hate on Patrick Conley Exposes Progressives’ Need to Dominate

By Justin Katz | October 13, 2021 |
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Theodor Aman's The Battle With Torches

One would have to know more about him than I do in order to defend Rhode Island’s historian laureate, Patrick Conley.  I still chuckle about the time I visited the State House gift shop after a year of sometimes-contentious debate about the need and cost of creating one and found it to be a Patrick Conley bookstore, but in my personal taxonomy of notable Rhode Islanders, he’s on the branch of Ocean State characters, rather than harmful establishmentarians.

Still, when I see sheer viciousness like Phil Eil’s attack on Conley, something in me screams to defend.  Don’t get me wrong.  The parts of Eil’s essay that aren’t pure ideological vituperation make some good points.  Conley has, after all, donated quite a sum to Rhode Island Democrats.  On the other hand, Eil blatantly teases out any little detail that might give him a handful of mud to throw.  From a very long list of activities and awards (puffed up, no doubt, as such lists tend to be), Eil focuses on Conley’s claim to be the “largest, private landowner” in Providence, but fails to mention the many lines that clearly qualify Conley to hold a title like “historian laureate.”

While Eil leaves many threads loose for the picking-apart in his essay (which clocks in at nearly 2,000 words!), limited time is better used highlighting what appears to be the core of his emotional motivation.  For somebody claiming to prioritize nuance and consideration, the blind spot is immense:

At a moment the city of Providence is engaged in a “Truth-Telling, Reconciliation and Municipal Reparations Process”; when the state’s lone law school is mandating a course on race and the law; when the University of Rhode Island releases a surprisingly strongly-worded message commemorating Indigenous People’s Day, Conley remains resolute. He is not rising to meet the moment; he is trying to yell loud enough to drown it out.

One can expect that, when history is written about our current our post-George Floyd, post-#MeToo era, it might be dubbed “The Great Re-Examination.” But this is also a time of backlash. Fox News, that unrelenting firehose of white grievance, remains the nation’s most watched network. State legislatures are passing laws that make it harder to talk about race in the classroom and protest injustice in the streets. Countless politicians and pundits are building careers out of anti-”woke” posturing and demagoguery. Conley is our local poster boy for these trends.

People who agree with Phil Eil, he permits to label themselves as “truth-tellers.”  Those with whom he disagrees, in contrast, are cynically “building careers out of anti-‘woke’ posturing and demagoguery.”  It’s not disagreement in the context of a free, open society with structures designed to help everybody find a way to live under the regime he or she prefers.  Rather, it’s the good guys versus that bad guys.

The biggest problem with that attitude is that it is totalizing.  For Eil, every institution in Rhode Island must be in sync with the state’s “progressive electorate” (which characterization we’ll allow for the sake of argument).  Yet, he clearly feels that other states are engaging in mindless “backlash” when they reflect their own conservative electorates.  In Eil’s world, you’re not allowed to live under the government you prefer; you must live under the government he prefers.  That is called, “progress.”

Thus, without sensing the problem with his own point, Eil lists a number of institutions that are pressing his preferred racist ideology, but ends the paragraph claiming that Conley — a largely unknown, powerless figure in the state’s culture war — “is trying to yell loud enough to drown” them out.  How is he doing that?  By writing op-eds now and then in the state’s daily paper.

Apparently, offering any counterpoint to the revolution is aggression.  The University of Rhode Island’s new president, Marc Parlange, can arrive fresh in the United States from Australia and issue a statement accusing his public institution, its state, and its country of “grave injustice, violence, trauma and genocide,” and that’s merely a “strongly-worded message” that Eil applauds.  But if Patrick Conley, a native son of Rhode Island who has spent his life teaching within and writing about his home state, should rise to offer a moderating point of view, he’s “a rich, old, reactionary white guy with an outsized platform.”

Eil’s audacity has the negating force and hypocrisy of the cultural guillotine.  He claims that what he finds “most bothersome” about Conley is his lack of nuance and (Eil asserts) his failure to “acknowledge… the limitations of his own… perspective,” but pretty much all Eil has, himself, is raw perspective.  Say what you like about Patrick Conley’s conclusions, but he has spent decades building up a record that unequivocally entitles him to the label of “expert historian.”  Yet, young Phil Eil brushes aside his work as “lazy,” with, here, a link and, there, an assertion that actually “rebut[ting] Conley’s points… would be too easy and obvious.”

Personally, I’ve always always found rebutting points to be the most thrilling part of disagreement.  For progressives, the levelling, all-consuming assertion of the torch provides the thrill.

 

Featured image by Theodor Aman on WikiArt.

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A random musical tip…

By Justin Katz | October 12, 2021 |
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A water drop and ripples

I learned this too late in life.  Whether you’re just getting started with music or have been playing for a long time, get yourself a pan flute (or zamponá).  Something about having to move to a different part of the instrument for each note by feel of the distance rather than by sight (as on the piano) has really helped my sense of the relationship between notes.  I noticed a very quick improvement playing guitar and (separately) picking out melodies.

If you’re interested, I recommend Brad White’s pan flutes.  (Go ahead and buy the corresponding case when you order it.  You’re going to want it.)  I haven’t found a good supplier of zamponás; the one I bought at a local music store was inexpensive, but it’s pretty much a toy, and I had to shove cork in some pipes to make it tolerably in tune.

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When Facebook matters… and when it doesn’t.

By Justin Katz | October 12, 2021 |
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A water drop and ripples

Writing in The Federalist, William Doyle describes how Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg helped buy Biden the election:

During the 2020 election, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg spent hundreds of millions of dollars to turn out likely Democratic voters. But this wasn’t traditional political spending. He funded a targeted, private takeover of government election operations by nominally non-partisan — but demonstrably ideological — non-profit organizations.

Analysis conducted by our team demonstrates this money significantly increased Joe Biden’s vote margin in key swing states. This unprecedented merger of public election offices with private resources and personnel is an acute threat to our republic, and should be the focus of electoral reform efforts moving forward.

Read the whole thing for details, but even on its surface, the episode makes one marvel that the news media spent years talking about how a very limited amount of Facebook activity ostensibly from Russia helped President Trump cheat, but on this… disinterest!

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Politics This Week with John DePetro: The Flustering McKee

By Justin Katz | October 12, 2021 |
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Dan McKee cuts a ribbon

On WNRI 1380 AM/95.1 FM, John DePetro and Justin Katz discuss:

  • Interpreting mysterious State Police behavior at anti-mandate protest
  • Reading the subtext of the Indigenous Peoples Day protest
  • Translating the media’s handling of ideological issues
  • Parsing the differences in the progressive infighting

 

Featured image from the governor’s official page.

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It’s unsettling to see journalists so credulous about YouTube bans.

By Justin Katz | October 12, 2021 |
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A water drop and ripples

The Associated Press takes YouTube’s framing completely for granted:

YouTube is wiping vaccine misinformation and conspiracy theories from its popular video-sharing platform.

The ban on vaccine misinformation, announced in a blog post on Wednesday, comes as countries around the world continue to offer free immunizations for COVID-19 to a somewhat hesitant public. Public health officials have struggled to push back against a steady current of online misinformation about the COVID-19 shot since development of the immunization first got underway last year.

They really can’t imagine differing ideologically from the Democrats and tech oligarchs, can they?

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The mask narcing shows the media’s alignment.

By Justin Katz | October 12, 2021 |
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A water drop and ripples

Maybe it’s a small thing, and at least WJAR has somebody there, but it’s telling that Katie Davis would mix their failure to wear masks with the substance of this story:

NOW: Group angry with @RIStatePolice and @GovDanMcKee deliver written complaints alleging brutality during protest outside McKee’s home to State Police HQ. None are masked despite requirement to mask in RI state buildings. @NBC10

Note that she chose to use limited tweet space for that detail rather than (say) what it was they were protesting outside McKee’s home (vaccination mandates on healthcare workers).

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The innocent must beware of Biden’s threat never to forgive or forget.

By Justin Katz | October 12, 2021 |
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Joe Biden "We will not forget"

Catching up on podcast listening over the weekend, I was reminded of Joe Biden’s declaration (video) after the terrorist attack on Kabul airport while his administration was struggling in its shamefully botched retreat from Afghanistan:

To those who carried out this attack, as well as anyone who wishes America harm, know this: We will not forgive.  We will not forget.  We will hunt you down and make you pay.

Of course, as we soon learned, the people whom Biden made to pay three days after his big talk were an aid worker and seven children, as well as several other relatives.

Now we receive this news, from Lorenz Duchamps in The Epoch Times:

The ISIS-K terrorist who carried out a suicide bomb attack in August outside of the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, had reportedly been released from prison just days before the Taliban’s overthrow of the government, according to a U.S. lawmaker.

“U.S. national security officials have now confirmed to me the reports that the Aug. 26 Kabul bomber was a known ISIS-K terrorist that was previously detained at the Bagram prison and was released along with thousands of others just days before the deadly attack,” Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.) said in a statement.

So, the White House initiated an historically tragic debacle, the Taliban released a terrorist from prison, that terrorist killed thirteen Americans, and in response Biden and his incompetent military commanders lashed out at an aid worker and his children.

What new twists could make this story any worse?  #LetsGoBrandon.

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