Monday, February 29

When Black Culture Meets White Culture.

If we're speaking only on race, may I make an observation?  I don't care much for black humor, because it comes across as misogynistic.  Woman-hating.  Women as sexual objects, all the time.  Chris Rock jokes about getting invited into Rhianna's panties bring back Kanye's jokes about having sex with Taylor Swift.  The black man directing the Oscars orchestra, who was lifted out of the orchestra pit for his moment of recognition only to be joked on by Rock as a way of getting the black man "laid" at the Governor's Ball... what choice had he but to laugh, but really, your lifetime of work saluted with a joke about getting laid?

Black humor seems to thrive best by cutting others down:  women ("Carol" was the third-best girl-on-girl actions I've seen this year... funny? Proper at an awards show honoring the work it takes to make such films?);  "yellow" jokes on Asians;  every white woman in the audience wondering if their work will be reduced to a sexist comment about their looks...

Last night, I saw a lot of diversity in the hard-working, non-English-first-speaking accents.  We saw gay people who had truly overcome discrimination in their lifetimes -- can't black people learn to model that?  We saw men thanking their fathers, fulfilling their dreams.  Can black people relate?  We saw women earning awards based on their career choices and again, hard work.  Can black men see that, beyond their hot bodies and beautiful looks?

I hope so, because the big white elephant in the country today is all of the African-American immigrants, non-native English speakers themselves, who are not holding themselves back blaming centuries of discrimination on their current cultural choices.  Black immigrants are succeeeding where native-born black Americans are not, precisely because they are not locked into the latter-day American mindset, where black men learn that they are baby-makers and women-collectors, and the women are there to serve their needs.

No joke.

Friday, February 26

Snark, Well Done...

None of this bleeding schoolboy stuff (ie/ He wet his pants!),
I like my snark witty, and well done...

Like this:

Also, Kate Turabian?
This is like calling the author of the iTunes agreement the "most-read author of all time"
in response to this:

Time lists Evelyn Waugh as a ‘most-read female author’

both by WaPo columnist Al Petri. He sounds like a sexist* to me...
--------------------
*haha!

Btw, How's the Golf Game, Mr. President?

Choose wisely, America. (Not choosing either is a choice too.)

Mr. Rubio and Mr. Cruz are both first-term senators who were elected by running to the right in Republican primaries. Both promise to be the first Hispanic presidential nominee.
Both have also improved as political athletes over the duration of this race. But they have settled into sharply contrasting styles that were on vivid display in Houston.
Mr. Cruz is cool and clinical, laying out his facts in a lawyerly manner and rarely flashing humor or emotion. He knows exactly how he wants to sell himself to voters, as a candidate of uncompromising ideological purity.
Mr. Rubio is animated and aggressive, speaking quickly and playing deliberately to the in-house audience. He projects an appealing personality without necessarily articulating an explicit case for his election as president.
For Republicans not sold on Mr. Trump, these are the main alternatives available to them, and Tuesday’s nominating contests may help resolve which man’s approach will be the final point of contrast with Mr. Trump.
I'm left with the image of Newbio y Cruz, young pups sitting outside a Texas whorehouse, hoping to get lucky w/the ladies inside...

Now imagine either one paired with Paul Ryan -- longtime Wisconsin rep who never made the leap to Senator status himself, ceding the seat to businessman Ron Johnson -- setting fiscal policy and national priorities for the nation.  Or not.

=====================

Make it a great weekend, folks.  Keep the wheels turning...
There are signs of spring out there, if you look closely enough.
(Lots of senses other than sight too.  Just sayin'.  Happy Spring!)

Wednesday, February 24

NYT Jumps Into the Judicial Nominee Fray.

Nevermind the American Enterprise Institute president embedded as a jounalist, what is up with this?  Semantics, people.

Mr. McConnell said that Mr. Obama “has every right to nominate someone,” and “even if doing so will inevitably plunge our nation into another bitter and avoidable struggle, that is his right. Even if he never expects that nominee to actually be confirmed but rather to wield as an electoral cudgel, that is his right.”

Senator John Cornyn of Texas, the majority whip, said, “We believe the American people need to decide who is going to make this appointment rather than a lame-duck president.”
...
First, Mr. Obama is not a “lame-duck president.” The lame-duck period is broadly understood to run from after the November election until a new president is inaugurated in January. November is more than eight months off.  ...
Who is to say what is lame?
Why can't we call another a duck?
Who copyrighted the phrase "lame-duck president" and owns its definition?  Get where I'm going here? ("He is not a lame-duck president... Is too.  Is not. Is too. ..."  You don't really want to go back there, do you? Lord of the Flies days?)

In other words, if it quacks like a duck, and you recognize the call, and you know it won't be flying away any time soon, why can't you call that a lame duck?
Second, no matter how often Republicans repeat the phrase “let the people decide,” that’s not how the system works. The Constitution vests the power to make nominations to the court in the president, not “the people.” In any case, the people have already decided who should make this appointment: They elected Mr. Obama twice, by large margins.
No need to comment on that last paragraph.
They just don't see it, yet.  You can lead a horse to water and all...

Deep.

"This is deep, very deep. Deeper than you think."
~ Bull McCabe.


White Votes Count.

"Contrary to what his campaign is trying to portray, Senator Rubio just endured another disappointing performance despite being the highest spending candidate in Nevada. Republicans are now left to wonder whether investing in Marco Rubio is throwing good money after bad."

Stopping Trump now looks like a steeper proposition after he trampled Rubio and Cruz on Tuesday, scoring huge wins across nearly every cross-section of the Republican Party. Entrance polls show Trump won moderate voters and very conservative voters by huge margins. He won in rural and urban areas, and among voters with only high school diplomas and those with post-graduate degrees.

Trump even handily bested Cruz among his supposed based of evangelical Christians, and, though the sample was small, topped his two Cuban-American opponents among Hispanic caucus-goers.

Trump reveled in the details. "I love the evangelicals!” he yelled. "“Number one with Hispanics,” he bragged.

And he pointedly called out the home states of his remaining rivals — Texas for Cruz, Florida for Rubio and Ohio for John Kasich — as places he now leads in the polls and will win the coming weeks.

-----------------------------

Ain't It Fun?
Where you're from
You might be the one who's running things
Well, you could ring anybody's bell and get what you want

You see, it's easy to ignore trouble
When you're living in a bubble

So what are you gonna do when the world don't orbit around you?
So what are you gonna do when nobody wants to fool with you?
...
Ain't it fun?
Ain't it fun?
Ain't it fun?
There's no cryin' to your mama, when you're on your own... in the real world
.
~Paramore.

Tuesday, February 23

Life's Healthier Here.

More respect for the law of nature and all:

Thirteen bald eagles were found dead over the weekend near a farm on Maryland's Eastern Shore in what authorities say is the largest single die-off of bald eagles in the state in 30 years.

Officials with the Maryland Natural Resources Police said they received a call about 2:30 p.m. Saturday from a man who said he was out looking for antlers that deer might have shed and came across what he initially thought was a dead turkey in a field on a farm in Caroline County. But he discovered it was actually four dead bald eagles.

When officers arrived, they found nine additional dead bald eagles in the field on Laurel Grove Road in Federalsburg.

It was not immediately clear what had caused the birds to die but one official said there were "no obvious signs of trauma with these birds," according to Candy Thomson, a spokeswoman for the Maryland Natural Resources Police.

~ Dana Hedgpeth
Eagles are scavengers, who enjoy roadkill and dead carcasses as well as field mice. I suspect poison; an autopsy will be telling.

Gotta watch those "helper" chemicals, and take care in their application. When animals die, humans are at risk too. Freedom symbolism aside. (13, you say?)

Monday, February 22

If You Liked Jeb! Bush, You'll Love Marco Newbio!

All the same policies,
in a fresh-faced package!

He's now become the media darling after Jeb finally quit flailing.
He was the Republican establishment-backed candidate in South Carolina, and still could not put away Ted Cruz. Will the American public be ready to elect another cute young historical-first candidate, so soon after we have seen what resulted from the first?  Are there enough Hispanics, and Hispanic lovers, to put him over the top to victory in a primary state?

Stay tuned, as the establishment media is pulling out all the stops...

#CandidateMcDreamy
#TellMeWhatYouWantMeToBe!
#FirstHispanicPresidentSameWorldEconomy...
---------------------------------------------
ADDED:     Maureen Dowd: Escape from Bushworld

I hope it is as exciting as Mad Max: Fury Road.

Rictus Erectus:  "I had a brother, a baby brother!  
And he was perfect. Perfect in every way."

Saturday, February 20

Northstars Beat the Blackhawks, 6-4.

It got competitive for a "fun" game.
It's the last time we're playing;
we're not losing = kind of mentality.

Outside, at the U of M stadium.
Tomorrow, the pros play on the ice...

Jeb Bush... Watercolourist.*

Who said he was following in his big brother's footsteps?  They've got distinct passions, afterall!
----------------------------
* Yeah, the British spelling seemed more appropriate.
Churchill dabbled in paints in the post-war years too, dontcha know?

(With the emphasis on post-war, of course.)

Spelling on Deadline.

"And, Kasich tells the crowd, he's been known to be "brusk" and "tough" in his home state of Ohio."
-----------------------
I believe that's "brusque."
Just sayin'.


Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/news/politics-government/national-politics/article61523207.html#storylink=cpy
-----------------

In the Land of Gamecocks, Trump Wins.

Are You Not Impressed Yet?

Thursday, February 18

Peace Through Strength.

That's OK...
He probably would not have liked Harry Truman's actions either.

The world needs a strong moral leader just like America needs a strong president.

Bravo to both men, for stepping up and speaking out re. what they see going wrong in the world we share.
-----------------------

* I believe... in the Separation of Church and State, with individual freedoms to practice your politics and religion, privately.

God Bless America, land that I love!

**  If tomorrow all the things were gone,
I'd worked for all my life...
And I had to start again, with just my children and my wife.
Well I'd thank my lucky stars, to be living here today...
Where that flag still stands for freedom...
And they can't take that away...

(Everybody now! )

And I'm proud to be an American
where at least I know I'm free....
--------------------------
** The Pope means well, Donald should be gentle -- not as tough on Francis as he is on Jeb and Ted and Marco, and  everyone should understand that the world will function better with a strong America, secure borders, and less people tempted to enter the country illegallly.

I'm not against immigration:  far from it.
I'm against importing workers who have zero civil rights protections, who are rendered invisible under the law when they are undocumented, and in hiding, in many ways.  Workers too need citizenship -- to vote.  Not just temporary work visas.

Instead of blessing the system as it is, both men are working for true Change.

Actions speak louder than words, and thus far, both men's words have stirred others to actions.

It takes all types to make the world go round... 
 Now the world don't move to the beat of just one drum..
 what might be right for you, may not be right for some...

Everybody's got a special kind of story...
Everybody finds a way to shine!

It don't matter that you got... not a lot. So what?
They'll  have theirs, you'll have yours, and I'll have mine...
And Together we'll be fine!

Cuz it takes ... different strokes to move the world, 
yes it does, it takes, different strokes to move the world!

4 on, 3 off...

Make it a great weekend, everyone!
-------------------------
Happiness is ... getting greeted by an old pup, who hasn't seen you in 2 weeks!
Happiness is... temps above freezing for the first time in... 2 weeks (at least?) !

Spring is in the air!

Impact of Scalia's Death Starts to Sink In.

There's not going to be "extra help" on this final, Mr. Bush maybe begins to realize*...

Jeb: 'I Should Stop Campaigning Maybe'

On Wednesday, MSNBC showed a clip of Jeb Bush at a campaign event. The former Republican frontrunner appeared frustrated.
"It's all decided, I mean we don't have to go vote I guess, it's all finished. I should stop campaigning maybe, huh? Let's just—it's all done! That's not how democracy works, right?"
-------------------------
*  I'd still keep my eyes peeled for dirty tricks.  People used to buying whatever they want will likely stop at nothing to install their favorite pro-business candidate, particularly those willing to throw over all the rules of military engagement and fairplay to secure international markets.

Glenn Beck Plays God.

On Tuesday, conservative radio host and vocal Cruz backer Glenn Beck asserted on his talk show that God brought about the death of Scalia so America would “wake up” and vote for Cruz.

Speaking in the voice of the heavenly father*, Beck told his audience, “You’re welcome. I just woke the American people up. I took them out of the game show moment and woke enough of them up to say, look at how close your liberty is to being lost.”
---------------------------------

* Beware those false prophets, people...
Oh, and I think you're supposed to cap the H and F in Heavenly Father, fwiw...

Bootstraps, People, Bootstraps...

Why Poland Needs American Support

My country needs NATO as a bulwark against Russian aggression.

Wednesday, February 17

God Bless Him, Donald Trump Is Sharp...

Republican Jeb Bush is among the latest candidates pranked after failing to protect a web address. Bush's campaign website is jeb2016.com*  -- but anyone who visits Jebbush.com is redirected to a site promoting GOP challenger Donald Trump.
 That's great!

 You('ve) got to be alert -- get up early in the morning as the old saying goes -- to catch the other candidates napping, with their guard down...

And something tells me he's not going to choke and knock himself out eating a pretzel ** either!

(Imagine:  an American president we personally can be proud of, once again... how long has it been? )



--------------------------

*  How lame was this?
JEB BUSH TWEETS PICTURE OF A GUN WITH HIS NAME ON IT, CAPTIONING IT 'AMERICA'

ADDED:  Compare and contrast:

TRUMP: My Special Interest Group is the American People

----------------------------------------
** Just putting it out there, for all those too young (or old?) to remember, who won't click the link:
WASHINGTON -- President Bush briefly lost consciousness Sunday after he choked on a pretzel while watching a football game on television in his living quarters, the White House said.

After fainting, the president tumbled to the floor from a couch, bruising his lower lip and suffering an abrasion the size of a half dollar on his left cheek, White House physician Dr. Richard Tubb said.

Tubb, an Air Force colonel, said Bush recovered quickly.

"I do not find any reason that this would happen again," Tubb told news agencies in an interview arranged by the White House. "He fainted due to a temporary decrease in heart rate brought on by swallowing a pretzel."
(A lot of people didn't buy it then;  thought it sure looked like someone socked him...)

Cleaning a Wound.

I worked for a time in the early 90s, as a weekday live-in companion for a couple of doctors living in a large house on a small lot in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., caring for her elderly mother who could not be left alone because of mobility issues -- a gaping sore on her diabetic leg that was very slow in healing...

One of my duties was accompanying her weekly to her doctor -- a nice older Jewish man who had recommended they bring someone like me into their home rather than going straight to nursing care.  I sat with her, sometimes held her hand, while he scraped away at the pus, separating the healthy healing part from the yellow infection.

Have you ever seen a wound being cleaned?
The angry red is the body fighting back, much like a fever is a good thing too:  the body elevating the temperature in pushing back against the germs invading...

It's necessary to scrape away all of the poisons regularly, in order to give the healthy parts a fighting chance.  To expose the fresh pinks of the new skin underneath, hoping for dried over scabbing, but clearing away as much yellow pus as possible to help urge along the slowly healing part of a wound...

It looked painful, but as he explained -- perhaps more for me than her, as she was a patient, tolerating West Virgina country woman who had lived in her body for years and had surely known worse discomfort than a doctor gently scraping the bad from the good -- it was necessary to help along the natural healing.

I think the Republicans -- I'm not a member of the party, but an independent voter looking for the best options -- are undertaking the natural healing in the party now in the post-Bush years (sorry Jeb!) to address and clean away the bad, so they can hope for healing in the days to come.

Politics is like cleaning a wound, or a family addressing a social problem:  if you never get it out in the open, preferring not to change the bandages and avert your eyes, there's no healing.

This scraping and examining -- the angry reds and pus-sy yellow infection buildup (he always quit cleaning when he got close enough to draw fresh blood underneath) -- are necessary for the healthy scabbing and healing.

God Bless the healers, especially those gently undertaking the work that needs to be done to address and clean the wounds, when it likely would be much easier just to be in denial and pretend everything is fine under the temporary bandages while underneath the poisons slowly advance, eating away unseen at the fresh flesh.

Tuesday, February 16

This One is Cute.

How to Think of Law,  written by a (self-described very tall) non lawyer who apparently reads about the law in the mainstream press and finds herself qualified to opine expertly.  Hmm.

Replacing a Justice Shouldn't Be So Excruciating
Longtime readers will easily guess that I generally prefer the jurisprudence of Antonin Scalia to that of, say, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and that I would prefer the next Supreme Court justice be more like him than like her. But I would also prefer to live in a country where the fate of the republic did not turn quite so sharply on which of nine unelected lawyers happens to die in a given year.
...
Far too many people on every side want to do an end run around the legislation process by getting unelected judges to declare their particular concerns beyond the reach of legislators. Why bother tediously lobbying senators and representatives, when you can simply win the White House, appoint a few judges, and get them to transform your most ardent desires into untouchable rights?

I remember having an argument over a controversial issue a few years back, in which I offered the opinion that a goal was quite desirable, and yet, probably not really mandated by the Constitution. It doesn’t matter what the issue was; you may insert your own favorite here, from abortion rights to drug legalization. Because whatever the issue is, there are people making exactly the same sort of bad argument about the law.
The fellow arguing with me offered the opinion that this issue was really, really important. I agreed, and repeated that it was still probably not really mandated by the Constitution. He explained, more slowly and loudly, how important this issue was. I said yes, but that doesn’t mean that it’s in the Constitution. The world is filled with many splendid ideas which are not covered by the Constitution. The chap I was arguing with looked befuddled, and then proceeded to reiterate how important this issue was. He was, I must point out, a Harvard-educated lawyer.*
Clearly, she does not understand legal interpretation or how legal analysis applies to the facts.  The smarter you are, you see, the harder it gets...

If it were just about "finding" something directly addressed in the Constitution, we could just write up a quick computer program to search and find, or deny legal rights.  Trust me:  it is a little more complex than that, whether you agree or disagree...

It's really not so simple as she makes it sound here, nor would we want it to be less complex.  That's why it is so important that we get this pick right, as we have seen in the recent inconsistent muffed flubs of the Roberts Court.

That's the beauty part of law compared to politics (and why we should be wary of mixing the two):  what you might get away with in inconsistent punditry is immediately on view in legal opinions that don't follow precedent == the case law telling us how we are to interpret the Constitution.  (Yes Virginia, even originalists believe in precedence, the necessity of crafting credible arguments built on what has come before)

It's really not political, it's intellectual.
There's a difference you know...
--------------------

* Yeah, but I wonder how many drinks he had downed before patiently trying to explain it to her at the dinner party...  This is written at the undergraduate, I-think-I-know-I-think-I know.... level with very little understanding of what she does not understand.  But hey, if it's good enough for Mr. Bloomberg, it's good enough for his readers....

Suffice it to say, some issues belong decided in the legislatures, but some issues definitely belong decided in the courts.  It's not a personal preference choice:  it's about the wisdom of knowing the difference and the courage to distinguish -- and patiently explain why some issues get elevated while others do not.  (ps. It's really NOT all political, despite what the pundits might have you believe.)

That's the beauty part:  ConLaw 101.
You really do have to hit the books and read the cases to understand where we are coming from... how American jurisprudence has developed and where we are going.  Don't knock it, or cheapen it, please.

You don't need a law degree to make an honest argument, but you do need to go a bit deeper than just conversation with friends, over dinner and drinks.  Unless, of course, you have friends a good cut above...
--------------------------------

* Before delving into the casebooks, I would recommend reading H.L.A. Hart's, The Concept of Law.  It's  a thin one, but by no means easy reading... Highly interesting though, and again, recommended if you really want to know more about legal rights and American jurisprudence, and why the courts rule the way they do.
The Concept of Law developed a sophisticated view of legal positivism. Among the many ideas developed in this book are:
  • A critique of John Austin's theory that law is the command of the sovereign backed by the threat of punishment.
  • A distinction between primary and secondary legal rules, such that a primary rule governs conduct, such as criminal law and secondary rules govern the procedural methods by which primary rules are enforced, prosecuted and so on. Hart specifically enumerates three secondary rules; they are:
  • The Rule of Recognition, the rule by which any member of society may check to discover what the primary rules of the society are. In a simple society, Hart states, the recognition rule might only be what is written in a sacred book or what is said by a ruler. Hart claimed the concept of rule of recognition as an evolution from Hans Kelsen's "Grundnorm", or "basic norm."
  • The Rule of Change, the rule by which existing primary rules might be created, altered or deleted.
  • The Rule of Adjudication, the rule by which the society might determine when a rule has been violated and prescribe a remedy.
  • A distinction between the internal and external points of view of law and rules, close to (and influenced by) Max Weber's distinction between the sociological and the legal perspectives of law.
  • A late reply (published as a postscript to the second edition) to Ronald Dworkin, a rights-oriented legal philosopher (and Hart's successor at Oxford) who criticised legal positivism in Taking Rights Seriously (1977), A Matter of Principle (1985) and Law's Empire (1986).

Why I'm Keeping the Day Job(s).

Remembering William Carlos Williams,  
 America’s Preeminent Physician-Poet

William Carlos Williams (1883 -1963)
master poet and model physician.

Posted by Stony Brook Surgery on March 4, 2013

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the death of physician-poet William Carlos Williams, famous for such poems as "The Red Wheelbarrow" and Paterson, his epic masterpiece.

He was 79 when he died.

Williams ("Doc" to his patients) produced a remarkable body of work, having started to publish his many books around the First World War.

Posthumously, in May of 1963, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Pictures from Brueghel and Other Poems, published the previous year.

During his lifetime, Williams published some 20 books of poetry as well as 17 books of prose, including novels, and he delivered more than 2,000 babies.

Williams has been called the single most important American poet of the 20th century. Why? Critic Adam Kirsch, in a recent review of three new Williams books, offers a good answer:
"Williams is the 20th-century poet who has done most to influence our very conception of what poetry should do, and how much it does not need to do."
Also a short-story writer, novelist, essayist, and translator  -- while practicing as a physician (he became chief of pediatrics at Passaic General Hospital) -- Williams played a leading role in establishing modernism in the United States, and our breaking away from the literary dictates of England. In the tradition of Walt Whitman, he championed and advanced American poetry.

Williams dedicated himself to writing poetry of finely crafted images of the world around him, in particular of New Jersey where he lived and New York City which he loved
"The poem springs from the half spoken words of the patient.... When asked, how I have for so many years continued an equal interest in medicine and the poem, I reply that they amount for me to nearly the same thing." — WCW
-----------------------------------------------

I think of all American artists, WCW was one who understood best the need to fuel the artistry through the practical daily work:  His poetry kep his artistic life alive; his job helped the artist inside survive.

While I'm no William Carlos Williams, I am a practicing attorney and a pretty good writer. 

The document review work is not like pulling babies from the womb, but allows me access to many (many!) of the documents behind the stories of our times (ie/ the headlining fall/bailed out rise, and subsequent lawsuits against, a major GoldStar financial firm -- confidential documents that even decent investigative journalists would not be privvy too, while I have confidential access and sometimes even work on the legal teams creating the privilege logs.)

Don't get me wrong, I'm not looking for fodder for my writing, and I respect the legal ethics of my work, which include confidentiality pledges, but I think I understand what WCW loved or needed about the balance.

His wasn't an esoteric life, like perhaps lived by those who solely write, or teach, or engage in artistic or academic pursuits.  Nor was I ever able to get by with just a good-paying job with good benefits -- after time, usually only a few years, something chafed and I was back chasing the meaningful outlets that meant more than just a steady paycheck.

By writing and working, making money and making something here for myself, I find that balance.

He won his Pulitzer posthumously and his practice never overcame but enhanced his written work.  He valued the art, but understood the primary importance of life too, delivering babies and practicing medicine.  He find time for both, and by all accounts, peformed beautifully.

Something to aspire too...
"A Sort of a Song"
 Let the snake wait under
his weed
and the writing
be of words, slow and quick, sharp
to strike, quiet to wait,
sleepless.
through metaphor to reconcile
the people and the stones.
Compose. (No ideas
but in things) Invent!
Saxifrage is my flower that splits
the rocks.  
 
 

An American President Once Again, or ..... "President of the World!!! " ?

Barack Obama, still out fundraising in Rancho Mirage, California, sounds confused about his job description, but reveals some juicy nuggets when he speaks freely...

President Obama on Tuesday offered an extended critique of the Republicans running to replace him, describing them as “troubling” to people around the world...
Good thing nobody here is running for President of the World.
Fixing America is a big enough job right now.

I can imagine the elites around the world like having the American people's money at their beck and call and would be troubled by a strong, honest American president representing our own country's interests, first and foremost...  

I can understand why they would be it would be "troubling" for some return to the days when American presidents:
  •  put America's defense and national security interests first; 
  • secured our borders (like we are paying into an Iron Dome to secure those of our allegedly more vulnerable allies -- can we ever spend enough for them to know true security?);
  • focused on our water quality and physical infrastructure rebuilding needs; 
  • cared about the growing angst in our population of unemployed, undereducated, ill-supervised young men;
  • threatened to widely distribute military weaponry to our citizens at home as deterrent defenses to protect themselves from overreaching local authorities;
  • spoke about the need to help our poor and oppressed women prevent conception while still single or financially dependent and help change the culture to teach them the true worth of their brains, and not to view themselves as special beautiful creatures empowered through beauty, and booty calls, and irresponsible babymaking that is rewarded here with government checks for baby and immediate access to social benefits programs;
  • helped true talent advance in our country via equal opportunities in all those places and workplaces that operate through slots reserved for legacy hires gained by networking, over honest competition (enough with the "it's who you know" valued more than the "it's what you know, and can continually deliver... at great value!")...
...and on and on and on...

Here's more California dreaming talk from our (?)  president (does he identify as ours, and we just share him w/the world?) who seems to think he is Leo DeCaprio playing... President of the World (King would surely seem a bit ostentacious)*:
 He added that his successor would have “the nuclear codes with them and can order 21-year-olds into a firefight and has to make sure that the banking system doesn’t collapse and is often responsible for not just the United States of America but 20 other countries that are having big problems, are falling apart and are going to be looking for us to do something.”

Bull-fucking-shit, pardon my French.  That's religious missionary talk, not smart political posturing.
I'd love to see the list of those 20 countries Mr. Obama thinks the American taxpayers are going to fund to ... "do something!"  -- I know Israel is number one, but now we've got 19 others huddling under our skirsts too???  The dumb ones will rely on us for help, instead of helping themselves best they can, because they overlook our track record of what our elites' understanding of "help" really means to the unlucky non-elite citizens, on the ground...

I hope he stays on permanent fundraising/golfing vacations for the rest of his term because our World President Dummy is apparently now is naming nation-building in Libya as a pie-in-the-sky goal:
He spoke more optimistically about Libya, saying that there was a recognition of the need for a coherent state. The United States, he said, would support efforts to put together a new government there.

Jesus Christ, it's like he has learned nothing on the job!
“The good news in Libya is that they don’t like outsiders coming in and telling them what to do,” he said.
Guess what, Mr. P?
People here on the local levels don't much cotton to outsiders coming in and telling them what to feed and teach their children; how their money for their own families and communities is needed to invest in other countries in our quest to fix the world;  don't like seeing our cultural traditions knocked any more than necessary to balance out the equal protections of the law guaranteed everyone (an admitted concession, if you support long-term democratic partnerships in a functional system that rewards the best people and best behaviors (best being defined here as "responsible and independent:  the two go hand-in-hand)...

We''ve proven we can draw distinctions between private preferences and public discrimination (ie/ you are free to object to having a gay person teach your children in public school, but the remedy is not replacing the gay teacher;  it's giving you the option to withdraw your own child and place him in a private school setting, where such discrimination is allowed, even encouraged, in some cases.   You want an all boys-school, with no girls around to distract them or compete with them?  Wonderful -- go private; don't expect the taxpayers to fund your discriminatory practices or beliefs that hold one gender, or race, or religion as superior over another.  Send them to Hebrew Day School, no problem, but don't expect people on a public bus to accomodate your religious preference not to sit next to an "unclean" woman because your religion teaches you that is wrong...

We have something beautiful here in America, still do, and that is a belief that private freedoms can co-exist alongside a strong national unity, that out of many comes on -- and that doesn't mean diluting everything and everyone down to simple black-and-white and rubbing out all of the beautiful shades of gray, because some people don't choose to share in all of our private cultural traditions or beliefs.

America has spend hundreds of years working out the special balance we have here, and we saw during both the Bush and the Obama years, how quickly we can begin to lose all that when we overspend, overpromise and overcommit abroad at the expense of investing in our country's needs, here at home.

You don't need wealth to be truly free -- sometimes the richest elites are the most trapped in their stations and schedules and find themselves answering not to their own instincts but to what they are paid to put out.

You do need to be financially independent though, and again -- look at our politcal campaign system -- the seemingly richest are often the ones held most in bondage here, I think, whether by the desires of wealthy parents wielding/withholding trusts (the power of the purse is often strong in wealthy families in keeping the younger generations dependent  -- some don't grow up until 26 or ever come out from their parents' shadows (see the Bush Boys, still trying to please Poppy and Babs and find independent career paths).

The best thing America could do right now is to return the balance to our nation AND the world by electing a strong AMERICAN president.  Someone who understands the quality of AMERICAN life is job #1, no matter how loudly 20 needy cultures cry out and

There are private world charities for that, like the Clinton Foundation say or religious missionary work that has been ongoing for centuries.  It's not a job for the American people, the American president, or the American economy though to fix the world.

Imagine if we fixed ourselves first how much better off the world would be!
 ---------------------------------

* Speaking of Kings, don't Americans understand anymore how Dr. Martin Luther King was able to achieve his dreams more fully through private, religious actions outside the government system by shaking things up so that the government had to recognize its failings and respond to the people amassed devoted to a cause?

He should be a good role model the next time the Bush Boys get an evangelical hunkering to paint people purple and make promises that maybe God can keep, but not the American taxpayers or military, or the Clintons want to help women in 3rd World countries (wonderful!  but, Don't do it for yourself, or as a way of fundraising or fundspending dollars that are not your own.)  We all see how devoted GWB was to his mission and principles -- it's like he forgot all about the people of the region he was allegedly devoted to helping once he got out of office!  Will Hillary Clinton prove to be the same, or does her missionary work abroad really mean something to her, even if she has to pursue it privately, with no calculated rewards for herself in mind?  Time will tell... as it always does.)

Oh, and good luck on the golf game, Mr. President!
Keep it up out there!, for as long as your family will tolerate your being away, playing this winter!

There's really nothing for you to bother trying to fix now in Washington or in the nation, on the local levels... Believe me.  You're better off, and we're better off as a country, we all realize now, when you don't even bother trying too hard...

Don't mess with us anymore, and in return, we'll politely see you out, ok?
(Oh, an whover provided/slipped you that false "World President" job description you've apparently been following these past 7-and-counting-down years?  You really ought to find the balls to fire him;  he did you no favors, if you have not yet come to discover that for yourself...)

ADDED:
Charity Begins at Home.
God Helps Those Who Help Themselves.
The World Does Not Owe You a Living.
.
 ((Those are private, not public, beliefs, which seems to make all the difference!)

Hunker in the Bunker = Leadership?

Dick Cheney points with pride to where he hid hisself (sic) on September 11, 2001.

In an interview with Bret Baier on Fox News on Sunday, former Vice President Dick Cheney said that Mr. Trump is doing a “disservice” to those who served in the wars in the Middle East.

Recalling being in the bunker after Sept. 11, he said, “I didn’t see Donald Trump there.”

That's like Mr. McCain thinking he gained experience as a great national and tactical military leader while he was serving as a Prisoner of War in VietNam.  (Cheney likely could not strategically plan his way out of a paper bag, and the man could not even take care of his own heart -- even had to mooch a new human heart off of somebody else, somebody he brags about ... not spending time thinking of.  That's a real Christian there...)

Respectfully?  No.

The Bush Boys still do not get it.
I wonder if their children and grandchildren will one day explain it to them:  what they cost the future generations of  American children with all their macho posturing and lack of planning.

Trump is right:
America, and the citizens of the region, would be better off with Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi and Bashar al-Assad still in power and leading their respective countries. What could be worse than what we are seeing now?

Luckily Russia has stepped in to prevent the overthrow of al-Assad because there is no party there strong enough, organized enough, or ready to assume leadership.

See, the American military is very good at destroying.  Killer good.
But the American military role is not to promote democracy abroad, install leaders in sovereign nations,  or nation build.  How exactly did that go in Iraq, with all the money American taxpayers pumped in.

Just like in the Revolutionary War, or VietNam, points go to those who live in the homeland defending their country.  They're there to stay.  Our soldiers/nation-builders just rotated in and out, with no thoughts of making the occupied countries their permanent home.  They had less skin in the game.

The military people, the smarter ones, are seeing that they were sent on a fool's mission.  Some made out well, some gave all.  But very few, I think, would support America overthrowing al-Assad, and volunteering to secure the country for the next two or three decades, while the "leaders" there eke out a new nation, like our forefathers did after our own Revolutionary War for Independence.

How long did that take to establish again?  And our fighters were permanently committed to staying and birthing a new nation for themselves.

Don't the Bush Boys understand fighting and winning? The tone is off...
“I’ve written two books, which has surprised a lot of people, particularly up east, who didn’t think I could read, much less write,” the former president said. “I’ve been one to defy expectations. I’ve been misunderestimated most of my life. And as a real shock to people, I’ve become an oil painter. But let me assure you I know that the signature is worth more than the painting.”
If GWB was so concerned for the people of the region where he was allegedly intent on establishing "democracy", why doesn't he put down his oil paints and demonstrate his leadership skills in providing for the refugees his military actions helped to displace?  Isn't that false Christianity?  Looking away from the victims you created, in their time of need, so you can joke with your brother, brag on your mother, and still be a boy?

Grow up, man.
Taking their Victory Laps. Participation Ribbons for All!

Kanye Kardashian Komments:

--------------------------------------
Great-grandson of ex slaves, eh?
He's lucky the Kardashians took him in, and are raising his biracial son and daughter, like Arnold and Willis got lucky with Phil Drummond with Kimberly extending a hand and providing shelter. (*sarcasm*)

Kanye heard the siren call of the wealthy white women in the Big House, and their promotional skills helped him create a fashion business to supplement his work in music.  Set for life now, he is, and his children too...

He's covered if the "colored people" fail to continue to respond to his music now that he's seen as a little less than authentic, party hopping with the white people and overspending once he was able to climb out of the suburban Oak Lawn ghetto where his mother, the English Department chair at Chicago State,* raised him alone while his father, once a Black Panther, remained behind in Atlanta.

(Funny, I never thought of Oak Lawn, Illinois -- my birthplace -- as a ghetto.  Nor was the South Side in 1968 when my parents brought me home from Christ Community hospital and intended to raise an intact family there.  Of course, racial reparations intervened in 1972:  less affluent and newcomer whites were forced from  our homes via predator realtors to cede the territory to incoming black people, who coveted our homes, schools and neighborhoods for themselves alone.  No whites wanted or welcomed.  It's a black battleground there now:  kids get shot up just playing outside or walking home from school... the structures still stand, but the community overall seems to have surrendered...)

Kanye is covered if the colored people fail to continue to respond to his music, now that he's seen as a little less than authentic, party hopping with the Hollywood people and spending money like it's going out of style.

Despite his self-reported financial problems (he's got a call out to Mark Zuckerberg and the other tech CEO's for financial help), Kanye sees himself as a kingmaker in the world of music, even taking credit for Taylor Swift, who won big, again, at the Grammys last night.

On his recent Tidal-released album The Life of Pablo, Kanye West took a left-field shot at Taylor Swift.
 “For all my Southside niggas that know me best 
 I feel like me and Taylor might still have sex 
Why? I made that bitch famous 
God damn, I made that bitch famous,” 
he raps on the track “Famous.”  Kanye allegedly asked Swift for promotional help and called "to ask Taylor to release his single ‘Famous’ on her Twitter account. She declined and cautioned him about releasing a song with such a strong misogynistic message," her rep says...

Who you gonna trust?

--------------------------
*  Where I come from, that's a very good job  No doubt she provided young Kanye with security from an early age, supporting him so that he was able to succeed with his musical career, instead of hopping into the workworld at 18 or 21, like most people in the working-class southwest surburbs do (or did, back when there were real jobs in America for young people.)

Why pretend that his mother too failed him; why slam Taylor's Swift's talent and popularity; why threaten publicly to cheat on your wife, who just blessed you with two children?  Boy's got ongoing issues with strong women, I think...

Taylor Swift has the better approach:
“As the first woman to win Album of the Year at the Grammys twice, I wanna say to all the young women out there: there are going to be people along the way who will try to undercut your success, or take credit for your accomplishments or your fame, but if you just focus on the work and you don’t let those people sidetrack you, someday when you get where you’re going, you’ll look around and you’ll know that it was you and the people who love you that put you there, and that will be the greatest feeling in the world,” said Swift.
Know hope, Kanye -- great-grandson of ex slaves, son of a Panther -- know hope.
Break those self-imposed chains... yes you can!

You don't need to beg wealthy CEO's for money to bail you out, just learn to live within your means, provide for your own, and work for a better tomorrow for yourself, independently.
In a fresh crop of posts, the @KanyeWest account issued direct pleas to Zuckerberg, chief executive of Facebook Inc, and Larry Page, Alphabet Inc.’s CEO and the co-founder of Google, asking that they funnel some cash into his ideas:
Mark Zuckerberg invest 1 billion dollars into Kanye West ideas
He should swallow his pride, stop tweeting, and share his problems with is wife, privately, at home.  Together, I am sure, they can overcome this financial setback and help his children have a brighter tomorrow.  It's worked for others, it will work for him too if he can commit to his own family and follow through over the years it will take to raise them in a place of strength.
John 14:2 My Father's house has many rooms; if that were not so, would I have told you that I am going there to prepare a place for you?
(and if you're not a believer or a God-fearing man, there's always the latest political savior to turn to:  many in his boat are turning to Bernie Sanders as the latest promised one, I am told.  You've got to invest your time and put your faith in something bigger..._but beware those false prophets.)

Monday, February 15

Ta-Nehisi Coates for the Court!

Let's just stop all this pussyfooting around
and help lift the black genius up where he belongs...

Far from the world below,
up where the clear winds blow...
He's supporting ... Bernie Sanders, dontchaknow?


Sunday, February 14

George W. Bush Changed All That...

When He Nominated Harriet Miers for the Court:

When Antonin Scalia was named by President Ronald Reagan to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court in 1986, the Senate considered the nomination for 85 days*, then voted to confirm him. The tally was 98-0.
That unanimity was by no means a measure of widespread agreement with Justice Scalia’s judicial philosophy. Rather it was the Senate’s customary acknowledgment -- at least until recently — that the president had fulfilled his constitutional duty and selected a clearly qualified person for the post.
Not so fast... don't they remember Harriet?  Should she have been confirmed to Sanda Day O'Connors' seat, out of polite respect for the president's politically correct choosing?  Is Harriet not a woman?

Again, the New York Times Editorial Board plays with facts -- and cites the dangers to the typical vulnerable crew of society victims they love to trot out when it serves their needs:  women in need of abortions, illegal immigrants who have broken no other laws while residing here, executives who can't get it done under the balanced rules of the game, who go rogue on the "executive actions".
A tie vote upholds the court ruling below and sets no precedent; it is as though the justices never heard the case in the first place. But this would do more than prolong uncertainty; it could, in some cases, perpetuate harm for great numbers of people -- women who have been grievously hurt by proliferating abortion restrictions at the state level, which have been challenged in the court; law-abiding immigrants Mr. Obama has tried to protect from deportation by reforming enforcement policies. 
The truth is:  the American people should have a say on who sits on the Court via their own votes.  Not directly, but indirectly.  We choose the president who chooses the nominee, and we choose the Senators who confirm, or do not.  We're at a precipice ... just like we were before Ted Kennedy died, and the Congress turned, and the Dems maneuvered outrageously to pass the Affordable Care Act over the will of our elected reps, with a lot of backroom armbending and special promises behind closed doors.  Like the Cornhusker kickback, remember that one?
Remember that the Senate only had 59 votes to pass the Reconciliation Act since Republican Scott Brown replaced Democrat Ted Kennedy.  Therefore in order to pass the Act Senate Democrats decided to change the rules.  They declared that they could use the “Reconciliation Rule (this is a different “reconciliation” than the House bill).  This rule was only supposed to be used for budget item approvals so that such items could be passed with only 51 votes in the Senate, not the usual 60.  Reconciliation was never intended to be used for legislation of the magnitude of Obamacare. But that didn’t stop them.

So both of the “Acts” were able to pass both houses of Congress and sent to President Obama for his signature without a single Republican vote in favor of the legislation.  The American system of governance was shafted.  To quote Democrat Rep. Alcee Hastings of the House Rules Committee during the bill process: “We’re making up the rules as we go along.”
It would do the country a grave disservice to once again try and achieve via political trickery what the country rejects.  We don't want identity-group candidates, we want the best qualified.  Even if he is a despised "white man", like Scalia was...

Look, everyone knows the country is divided, and Barack Obama's previous promises to bring together red voters in blue states, and blue voters in red states were D.O.A. once he took office.

We all remember, before the young black men began challenging the police and dropping dead in the streets, how he sided against the police with elite law professor Henry Gates, who refused to provide identification when police were called about a black man "breaking into" a home, which was true:  Gates was returning home after a vacation absence, found the door allegedly jammed, and was indeed forcing his way inside...

In my neighborhood, we would have thanked that neighbor, for being alert and watching our house while we were out of town, and calling in when they thought they saw something suspicious.  It wasn't his black skin;  it was how he was trying to enter the house!  Could have all been cleared up easily, if Mr. Gates had calmly provided identification with his home address on it, and "proven" that he was the owner, lived there, and had found himself locked out after an extended trip.  He copped an attitude and took offense;  the President took his side; and the young black people took their lead, it seems... with deadly results.

The country is divided, in so many ways now... and more and more, we are having our personal decisions mandated -- how we choose to invest our  own money in our health;  how we feed our children; what words and thoughts are permitted to be voiced.  Of course, when many thought that the mandate to purchase a product on the private market would surely be declared unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause precedent, Chief Justice John Roberts cooked up a creative twist:  despite the legislative history, he declared that the Obamacare mandate was legal because it was not a true mandate, and did not impose a "tax", but rather a penalty... There is no mandate to buy healthy insurance;  there is an opt out:  the IRS just intends to penalize those with minimal medical needs who incur no unpaid healthcare bills annually, and force them to share in covering the medical devices and prescription drug desires of others -- often those plenty wealthy who have disposable funds to use elsewhere on travel or luxuries.

The "little people" are being asked to pay for the expenses and errors of the banks, the businesses, the insurance and medical industries, and the huge and growing military needs of countries around the world.  To share in the ill-fated choices others make on their own behalf, passing the bills off to us.  We overwhelmingly reject this, as evidenced by the popularity of both Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders' campaigns.

More and more,  the American people realize we are just the can being kicked to finance the elite's wars, healthcare needs, social welfare programs, and religious missions, whether it be to support a "pure" religious state like Israel where the extremists gain more and more policy power or to bring democracy to all the people in the Mideast region, via our military.  Not. Gonna. Work.

I have no trouble whatsoever with the choices other people make if they pay their own way.  But if I don't choose something for me, why would I pay for that for you?

The best thing that could happen to America now is to turn to the balance of powers the forefathers foresaw.  We are at war on multiple fronts, without the Congress ever declaring war.  (Vague slogans like War on Drugs or War on Terrorism are not clearly defined missions, and thus will necessarily be lost because we're not even willing to define out specific acts that will be accomplished and when.  Just keep tossing money and weapons and keep your fingers crossed that the killings of innocents stays over there, and doesn't revisit our shores, like it did while George W. Bush was busy protecting us.)

For this reason,
the President should do what he likes, but not get too upset when his nominee is not confirmed.  We need to examine the records, and not feel "guilted" by the elites into seating a "son of immigrants' with two or three years judicial experience under his belt because.... "We've never had one of those on the Court before!".  We're not looking for the best Hindi jurist, or the best woman candidate available to be slotted, or even looking to find a conservative replacement for Justice Scalia.

We want someone very qualified, very set and not with something still to prove:  like Chief Justice Robers who seems to have paid President Obama back for that verbal swearing-in error all those years ago, by finding a "creative" solution to keeping the three-legged stool intact in Obamacare.  He might have pulled if off too, if Jonathan Gruber had kept him mouth shut and not bragged on what he helped to pull over on the American people and the Roberts Court:
In November 2014, a series of videos emerged of Gruber speaking about the ACA at different events, from 2010 to 2013, in ways that proved to be controversial; the controversy became known in the press as "Grubergate". Many of the videos show him talking about ways in which he felt the ACA was misleadingly crafted or marketed in order to get the bill passed, while in some of the videos he specifically refers to American voters as ill-informed or "stupid". In the first, most widely-publicized video taken at a panel discussion about the ACA at the University of Pennsylvania in October 2013, Gruber said the bill was deliberately written "in a tortured way" to disguise the fact that it creates a system by which "healthy people pay in and sick people get money". He said this obfuscation was needed due to "the stupidity of the American voter" in ensuring the bill's passage. Gruber said the bill's inherent "lack of transparency is a huge political advantage" in selling it.
At the same time, we had a group of self identified "Journ-o-lists", some of whom still work at the New York Times and have gone on to lucrative careers, who were willing to defy the neutral tenets of journalism, and meet secretly online to discuss ways to craft their stories to support the Democratic party in pushing Obamacare on the American people.  It was not journalism's finest hour, especially coming in the wake of the way they helped cheer on the Bush wars, instead of skeptically asking questions and independently investigating claims...

The American people are smart not to trust, anymore.
We've been sold out by too many alread.
We want a say...

The NYT, of course, is free to opine, even meet secretly with the president and report stories the way they are told.  If it earns them access, it seems, these days they are willing to make tradeoffs ethically in securing the story.  (See use of words like "muscular" and "strong" in writing about the administration's plans... even today, they are not urging "diverse" candidates be included based on their personal identity characteristics to the Court, merely "strong" ones.  But of course, they are.

(I don't believe that a man voted unanimously to his first judicial position only three years ago is the strongest candidate for the Supreme Court, even if his parents were Indian immigrants who worked very hard to get their son where he is today... I don't think Marco Rubio is specially qualified as president either, because of that, nor do the majority of Americans...)

But the elite, it seems only think in terms of identifty politics, and they trot out the reliable victims:  women, immigrant, who allegedly would be harmed if the outgoing president is not allowed to specially stock the Court with another pick.

Why are they so afraid of listening to what the American people choose for our country?
Why do they assume, even with so much evidence piling up to the contrary, that the elite are best positioned to make national choices on behalf of the rest of us?  (I don't even think they see us in "flyover country" but they sure do take our tax money for their Washington redistribution needs...)

Give the People What They Want...
Let them use their presidential votes to indicate what kind of balance we want on the Supreme Court.

The new president will take office in less than a year:  that's a very short time to wait for a lifetime position, whose decisions will affect the direction of our country for decades to come.

Don't override us, again.
We're on to you now...
--------------------------

*  Remember too:  the Scalia confirmation took 85 days because the Senate was concerned with elevating Wm. Rehnquist to the Chief Justice role, and the Scalia hearings only came after that.

Still Debatable Whether Rubio Can Think...

Independently on His Feet.

But Trump?  There's no question.
That's the beauty part.  He gives just as good as he gets.

Jeb!:    "Look, I won the lottery when I was born 63 years ago, looked up, and I saw my mom.  My Mom is the strongest woman I know."

Trump:  "She should be running."
-------------------

I think Bushie is full of beans here -- if he had told us he looked up as a 3 month old, after observing her on the job a few months... ok.  But as a newborn baby?  He was just judging her by looks then, if the story is true...

What I remember most about Barbie Bush was when she called Geraldine Ferraro a bitch, back in the day.*
Back in October 1984, when her husband was running for reelection as Reagan’s vice-president, Bush referred to Geraldine Ferraro, Walter Mondale’s running mate on the Democratic ticket, as “the four-million dollar  -- I can’t say it, but it rhymes with ‘witch.'”
The comment came the day after Bush and Ferraro met for their only debate -- the same day that George H.W. Bush was caught bragging to a group of longshoremen that he’d “tried to kick a little ass last night.”
(Earlier that week, Bush’s press secretary, Pete Teeley, had also landed in hot water for saying that Ferraro came across as “too bitchy.”)In the wake of all three comments, Ferraro responded that, “People who have the experience of the Bushes don’t do those things unknowingly.” Barbara Bush ultimately called Ferraro to apologize. 

Ferraro had the balls to run against her husband as VP, and Mama Bear made sure she fought hard for her man.  Likely, it's why her sons turned out the way they did -- always expecting someone else to fight their battles, and hiding behind mother's skirts when their actions led to a the need for a real ass-whooping by somebody stronger who was offended by their warring words and escalations.

It's never too late, you know, for a good ass-kicking.
Maybe you can teach a Bushy boy a thing or two, but you have to do it on terms they know:  overpowering and smashing them to smithereens.  Verbally and in legitimate competition, of course.   
Comprende senor?
-------------------------------

* Babs does not seem to like women politicians.  Maybe it's an independence thang?
In an interview set to air tonight, Barbara Bush makes it clear to Larry King that she doesn’t have much enthusiasm for the presidential campaign that Sarah Palin keeps threatening to wage.

“I sat next to her once. Thought she was beautiful,” the former first lady tells the CNN host. “And she’s very happy in Alaska. And I hope she’ll stay there.”

Bush’s apparently dim view of Palin as a politician isn’t exactly surprising. ...
In many ways, she and her husband typify the wealthy, Northeastern, culturally moderate WASP aristocracy that ruled the GOP before the Goldwater/Reagan forces took over.
WASP stings can be deadly.
There's a good reason we spray to avoid them.  Nobody wants the trouble they purposefully stir up.,,

Me and Cinderela...

We put it all together...
We can drive you home...
with one headlight.
(Nothing is forever. 
There's got to be something better than. 
in the middle...)
 ADDED:  Turns out, there WAS a guest who allegedly accompanied Scalia in on the flight to the ranch.  No word yet if the person stayed at the ranch Saturday night too, or who the person was.

That should come out.
Just like an autopsy should have been performed on a sitting Supreme Court justice who died with strangers, unexpectedly, and was declared dead of natural causes over the phone. 

The optics just look bad.  Family wishes are important, but in this case, authorities should have insisted on performing one before the body was embalmed.  Just like an autopsy would have been performed on any regular Joe who dies unexpectedly under those circumstances, despite what the family might request. 

So who was this guest who travelled with Cheney to the ranch, and what does this person report about the night Scalia died? 

Lest We Forget...

I noted in an earlier opinion the fact that the American Association of Law Schools (to which any reputable law school must seek to belong) excludes from membership any school that refuses to ban from its job-interview facilities a law firm (no matter how small) that does not wish to hire as a prospective partner a person who openly engages in homosexual conduct.

One of the most revealing statements in today’s opinion is the Court’s grim warning that the criminalization of homosexual conduct is “an invitation to subject homosexual persons to discrimination both in the public and in the private spheres.”

It is clear from this that the Court has taken sides in the culture war, departing from its role of assuring, as neutral observer, that the democratic rules of engagement are observed.

Many Americans do not want persons who openly engage in homosexual conduct as partners in their business, as scoutmasters for their children, as teachers in their children’s schools, or as boarders in their home.

They view this as protecting themselves and their families from a lifestyle that they believe to be immoral and destructive. The Court views it as “discrimination” which it is the function of our judgments to deter.
Rest In Peace.
May History Judge You More Kindly Than You Saw Fit to Judge Others...

(Wouldn't it be a hoot if St. Peter is a gay man, who objects to boarding a bigot in his stable in the sky?  Talk about turnabout being fairplay -- it's not discrimination, just protecting himself and his heavenly family from a judgmental streak that many, on earth and in heaven, believe to be immoral and destructive...)

Again, just sad that such a big family man died alone, with Last Rites posthumously provided, a death certificate called-in, and a middle-of-the-night embalming without an autopsy.  It doesn't dignifty the office that the body seems to have been treated no better than a common unnamed pauper, with all expenses spared.

More Details on the Death.

MARFA, Texas -- United States Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia’s heart stopped beating during his sleep, Presidio County Judge Cinderela Guevara told WFAA on Sunday.
Guevara officially pronounced him dead at 1:52 p.m. on Saturday. She will be the local official who signs his death certificate.
Hours earlier, the county judge told WFAA that myocardial infarction -- or a heart attack — would likely be the cause of death listed. Guevara later said she would confer with the Justice’s personal physician on what specifically to show as the cause of death.
Scalia’s remains were discreetly driven by van overnight to an El Paso funeral home with an escort from a procession of Texas Department of Public Safety Troopers and U.S. Marshals Service vehicles.

After arriving at 3:30 a.m. on Sunday, the Sunset Funeral Home embalmed Scalia’s remains, according to Chris Lujuan, a funeral home manager. Embalming is required by Texas law before a body can be transported out of state.

Sunset Funeral Home said it is collecting vital information for Scalia’s death certificate.

Lujuan said Scalia’s remains would likely begin the journey back to northern Virginia sometime on Monday, though it’s uncertain exactly how the body would be transported.

Judge Guevara said she was shopping in the neighboring town of Alpine on Saturday afternoon when Presidio County Sheriff Danny Dominguez called her on her mobile phone after lunch.

“He says, 'Judge, I’m at Cibolo Creek Ranch, and a Supreme Court Justice has just passed away, and I need someone here immediately. Both justices of the peace are out of town at this time,'” Guevara recounted to WFAA.
 I said, 'Sheriff, what did you say? Which Supreme Court Justice died at Cibolo Creek Ranch?’ And the phone went dead, because our connection was very bad,” she explained
.
Cell phone service is spotty in Far West Texas. There’s no service at the ranch.

“He called me back and he gave me a few more sentences until it broke up again. And that’s how the conversation went for 20 minutes,” the county judge recalled.

Guevara said she immediately recognized Scalia’s name as a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and pronounced him dead over the phone at 1:52 p.m. on Saturday.

and another:
Presidio County Judge Cinderela Guevara, who pronounced Scalia dead, told ABC News the death certificate will say the cause of death was natural, and that he died of a heart attack. She said no autopsy was necessary. 

Guevara said she talked to Scalia's doctor in Washington, D.C., who told her he had been sick and had been at his office Wednesday and Thursday before going on the hunting trip Friday. 

According to Guevara, Scalia told his group Friday at dinner he was not feeling well and went to his room early. He then missed breakfast and lunch Saturday and was found unresponsive in his bed.
For a such an allegedly smart men, he sure was kind of dumb about his life and health, it seems...
Scalia’s remains were discreetly driven by van overnight to an El Paso funeral home with an escort from a procession of Texas Department of Public Safety Troopers and U.S. Marshals Service vehicles.
After arriving at 3:30 a.m. on Sunday, the Sunset Funeral Home embalmed Scalia’s remains, according to Chris Lujuan, a funeral home manager. Embalming is required by Texas law before a body can be transported out of state.
Kind of odd, isn't it, that none of his 9 children or 36 grandchildren were on the first flight to Texas yesterday to retrieve the body and accompany it back home.  Didn't they like him?  He's already embalmed -- at 3:30 am on a Sunday morning, after the body was transported in the dark.  Odd.

Maybe sometime after midnight, alone in his Texas room, Cinderela says, his heart just stopped beating and he turned back into a pumpkin?  We'll likely never know what happened now.