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Daily Bread for 12.6.20

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of forty-one.  Sunrise is 7:12 AM and sunset 4:20 PM, for 9h 08m 41s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 65.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

On this day in 1821, the first Wisconsin post office is established in Green Bay.

Recommended for reading in full — 

Christopher Rowland, Lena H. Sun, Isaac Stanley-Becker and Carolyn Y. Johnson report Trump’s Operation Warp Speed promised a flood of covid vaccines. Instead, states are expecting a trickle:

Federal officials have slashed the amount of coronavirus vaccine they plan to ship to states in December because of constraints on supply, sending local officials into a scramble to adjust vaccination plans and highlighting how early promises of a vast stockpile before the end of 2020 have fallen short.

Instead of the delivery of 300 million or so doses of vaccine immediately after emergency-use approval and before the end of 2020 as the Trump administration had originally promised, current plans call for availability of around a tenth of that, or 35 to 40 million doses.

Two vaccines, from manufacturers Pfizer and Moderna, which both use a novel form of mRNA to help trigger immune response, are on the verge of winning Food and Drug Administration clearance this month. Approval would cap an unprecedented sprint by government and drug companies to develop, test and manufacture a defense against the worst pandemic in a century — part of the Operation Warp Speed initiative that promised six companies advance purchase orders totaling $9.3 billion.

As planning accelerated for distributing supplies, the government began to further lower expectations.

 Tim Miller writes This Is Your Brain on Newsmax:

I wanted to find out what these folks were being told, so I committed myself to hours upon hours of viewing. You may think you have a sense for what is happening on The Max, but I promise you it is much weirder, more alarming, and more debased than you can imagine. Here’s some of what I saw:

The president’s campaign lawyer saying that a former Trump official should be executed.

A host saying that Biden’s election would bring a war between the races and that Barack Hussein Obama is a “reprobate” who is “pimping” a book.

Hosts and guests suggesting several times an hour that Republican state legislatures should overturn the will of the people to keep Trump in power.

Fantastical stories of millions of votes being dropped off by tow trucks in the dead of night after nationwide blackouts.

The term “ballot harvesting” bandied about indiscriminately.

An endless stream of Lionel Hutz-level legal analysis.

 The ‘World’s Loneliest Elephant’ is Finally Getting a New Home:

Taing Rinith reports in the Khmer Times that A new journey begins for Kaavan in Cambodia:

In an exclusive interview, Khmer Times talks to Ministry of Environment spokesman Neth Pheaktra about the future of the ‘world’s loneliest elephant’ after arriving in his new home.

….

KT: Do you think it will be difficult for Kaavan to live in Cambodia, as he has been living alone for a very long time? What challenges have you faced so far?

Pheaktra: Known as the ‘world’s loneliest elephant’, we initially thought that it would take a long time for Kaavan to adapt to his new life in Cambodia. However, surprisingly, he seems to be adapting very well and quickly. In fact, it is going much better than we expected. First of all, he has started trusting and feeling close to his caregivers. Secondly, Kaavan is already enjoying walking and playing freely in his new home in the protected area.

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Film: Tuesday, December 8th, 1 PM @ Seniors in the Park, The Good Liar

This Tuesday, December 8th at 1 PM,  there will be a showing of The Good Liar @ Seniors in the Park, in the Starin Community Building:

(Crime/Drama/Mystery)
Rated R (Language, Violence)

1 hour, 49 minutes (2019)

A career con man (Ian McKellen) sets his sights on his latest mark: a recently widowed woman (Helen Mirren), worth millions. He means to take it all. But as they draw closer, what should have been another simple swindle takes on the ultimate stakes. A chilling thriller!

Masks are required and you must register for a seat either by calling, emailing or going online at https://schedulesplus.com/wwtr/kiosk. There will be a limit of 10 people for the  time slot. No walk-ins.

One can find more information about The Good Liar at the Internet Movie Database.

Enjoy.

Daily Bread for 12.5.20

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of thirty-eight.  Sunrise is 7:11 AM and sunset 4:20 PM, for 9h 09m 43s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 75.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

On this day in 1879, Humane Society of Wisconsin is organized in Milwaukee

Recommended for reading in full — 

 David Folkenflik writes ‘Substantial Likelihood Of Wrongdoing’ By VOA Parent Agency, Government Watchdog Says:

The U.S. Office of Special Counsel, a federal watchdog, disclosed Wednesday that it had found “a substantial likelihood of wrongdoing” at the parent agency of the Voice of America under the leadership of the CEO appointed by President Trump.

Since taking over the U.S. Agency for Global Media, CEO Michael Pack has turned it upside down, sidelining top executives, firing network chiefs, and deep-sixing requests for visa extensions for foreign staffers. Most notably, Pack had two senior political aides with records of strongly pro-Trump ideological statements investigate journalists for perceived anti-Trump bias and push for sympathetic news coverage of the president during the campaign.

The finding is yet another formal and stinging rebuke to Pack’s actions, though it is not a final determination. In late November, U.S. Judge Beryl Howell ruled that Pack had acted unconstitutionally in investigating his own journalists on political grounds. She ordered him to stop intervening inside VOA’s newsrooms. Suspended executives have separately filed a complaint with the inspector general of the U.S. State Department, which has jurisdiction over the agency.

 Catherine Rampell writes The November jobs report has no silver lining:

After a few strong months of job gains earlier this year, hiring has slowed dramatically. In June, for instance, employers added 4.8 million jobs; but last month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics report published Friday, that number had slowed to a trickle of only 245,000.

Yes, it’s good that U.S. employers are still hiring. In a normal, healthy economy, adding 245,000 jobs would be nothing to sneeze at. But it’s not nearly enough for the economy today. We remain in a deep, deep hole, dug when employers eliminated 22 million jobs on net earlier this year. As a result, the U.S. economy still has a greater jobs deficit today than was the case at the very worst point of every previous postwar recession, including the Great Recession. Which no longer seems so terribly “great” anymore, as this chart illustrates:

As you can see, we’ve recovered only about half the positions lost when the pandemic initially broke out in the United States and shuttered much of the economy. If hiring continues at November’s pace, it will take more than three additional years before the United States regains all the jobs lost in early spring. And that estimate does not account for expected population growth, which would call for more jobs than we had pre-pandemic.

The report contains other bad news, too.

The headline unemployment rate fell because people dropped out of the labor force entirely — that is, they stopped actively looking for work — and therefore are no longer counted as unemployed.

(Emphasis added. Rampell is right that, by job loss, this Pandemic Recession is far worse than the Great Recession. The Great Recession, however, was great – in darkness and danger – for its aftermath as much unemployment: stagnation in parts of America, addictions, malaise, and nativism. It was an illness half-treated, and so led to infections and worse maladies in many of its victims.)

Astronomers produce most detailed 3D map yet of the Milky Way:

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Trump: The O.J. Simpson of 2020

David Lauter of the Los Angeles Times aptly describes Trump:

Trump says he’s combatting fraud in the election. But, like O.J. Simpsonclaiming to be searching for the “real killer,” there’s no sign of an actual investigation. The filings in courts around the country from Trump and his allies have featured a pathetic lack of actual evidence.

Friday Catblogging: A Cat in the White House

Allyson Waller reports Once again, a cat is set to join the ranks of presidential pets:

When he was running for president, Joseph R. Biden Jr. said it was time for a pet to be put back in the White House.

First it was announced that Champ and Major, the German shepherds belonging to the president-elect and the future first lady Jill Biden, would roam the White House. And now, after an absence of more than a decade, a cat is set to also join the ranks of presidential pets, Jane Pauley of “CBS Sunday Morning” reported on Twitter on Friday.

In an interview with Fox 5 in Washington, Dr. Biden hinted that if her husband won the presidency, she would not mind getting a cat.

“I’d love to get a cat,” she said. “I love having animals around the house.”

….

Abraham Lincoln’s secretary of state, William H. Seward, gave him two cats, Tabby and Dixie, said Andrew Hager, historian-in-residence at the Presidential Pet Museum. Lincoln was a major “cat fan,” Mr. Hager said, and the president often fed Tabby from the dinner table despite his wife’s criticism.

 

Daily Bread for 12.4.20

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of forty-one.  Sunrise is 7:10 AM and sunset 4:21 PM, for 9h 10m 48s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 84.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

On this day in 1783, at Fraunces Tavern in New York City, General Washington bids farewell to his officers.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Susan Glasser writes The President Is Acting Crazy, So Why Are We Shrugging It Off?:

Donald Trump in defeat, it turns out, is even more whiny, dishonest, and self-absorbed than he was before his decisive loss to Biden a month ago. In the speech, delivered to an empty room and released straight to Facebook, for reasons that remain unclear, Trump repeated many of the election conspiracy theories, lies, and laments which he has been sending forth for weeks on Twitter and via emissaries like Rudy Giuliani. The news was that these baseless claims—the only impact of which will be to further undermine public confidence in the U.S. government—were coming directly from the President, as he stood at a lectern bearing the Presidential seal. And what words they were. The pollsters were liars. “Detroit is corrupt.” “Millions of votes were cast illegally in the swing states alone.”

….

There are only two possible conclusions from listening to this folly: either the President actually believes what he is saying, in which case he is crazy, or he does not, in which case he is engaged in the most cynical attack on American democracy ever to come from the White House. Is Trump “increasingly detached from reality,” as even the dispassionate, strictly nonpartisan Associated Press put it, in recounting the speech? Or is that conclusion, harsh as it is, giving Trump the benefit of the doubt by implying that he is just misguided or uninformed? There is another explanation, after all, for this reckless speech: What if, in fact, the President is not delusional but is the purposeful, malevolent creator of an alternate reality, knowingly spewing disinformation, discord, and division? Either variant, of course, is terrible.

 Silvia Amaro reports EU proposes a plan to revive U.S. ties and work with Biden:

The European Union announced a new plan on Wednesday to improve relations with the U.S. ahead of the inauguration of Joe Biden.

It’s been a tense four years of trans-Atlantic ties, with President Donald Trump and the EU clashing over trade, defense, technology and foreign relations — to name a few points of contention.

As the Biden administration is due to arrive at the White House on Jan. 20, the EU has not wasted any time and has prepared a new plan to reset that relationship.

“We are taking the initiative to design a new transatlantic agenda fit for today’s global landscape,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement Wednesday.

“It is time to reconnect,” she added. Meanwhile, the commission’s executive vice president, Valdis Dombrovskis, told CNBC the EU was sending a “signal that we are ready and willing to engage with the U.S.”

In a document entitled “A new EU-U.S. agenda for global change,” the European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, defined four major policy areas to focus on: health response, climate change, trade and tech, and security.

How Autonomous Robots Are Changing Construction:

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The Libertarian Remnant

Shikha Dalmia is a libertarian, and as a libertarian who is true to those beliefs, she is necessarily opposed to the authoritarianism of Trump and in Trumpism. Because the definition of libertarianism has been distorted beyond any true meaning by opportunistic or ignorant rightwing donors, she’s lost her job Reason magazine. Conservative donors pay the magazine’s bills, and demand that libertarians remain silent about Trump. (It’s a private magazine and of course they’ve a right to demand what they want, however intellectually dishonest is their project to cut a libertarian foot to fit into a Trumpist slipper.)

Dalmia did not remain silent, so they’ve shown her the door.

She writes of her dismissal:

After 15 years, the curtains came down for me at Reason today. My views, I was told, had become too out-of-step with those of the organization. Defending my work to donors and stakeholders had evidently made me too much of a liability. Reason has some amazing writers who do great work on a whole host issues that I will continue to read and share. And it has been an honor and pleasure to work with them. However, I had a staunch and uncompromising anti-Trump voice calling out his authoritarian tendencies unambiguously. That this made many libertarians uncomfortable raises all kinds of interesting questions about the state of the liberty movement. Once the dust settles, I will reflect on those issues in future essays.

Libertarianism is political philosophy that holds liberty as fundamental value (and advocates for individual rights, limited government, free markets, and peaceful relations with other countries). It is not a comprehensive view of all life, but a political view, a view mostly about government (and the dangers of government encroachment against liberty).

By its very nature, a political view that advocates for liberty rejects autocracy as immoral and impoverishing. There is no rational way in which libertarianism is compatible with Trumpism’s dictatorial actions (in enlargement of federal force, in rejection of individual rights, in abridgment of the rule of law, and in that vile creed’s ceaseless appeals to nativism). 

For many years, libertarians have negligently allowed conservatives to distort libertarian terms and concepts beyond all reasonable meaning. (Walker, in Wisconsin, has been a conservative like this: talking free markets but seeking to extend government’s variously meddlesome or pernicious reach wherever possible.) We bear the primarily responsibility for our own failure of diligence. We have slept too much, and worked too little, in defense of our views.

As Trump’s autocratic nativism has advanced, too many who once professed libertarianism, conservatism, or membership in a normal Republican party have become cogs in a decidedly autocratic wheel.

Too many, but not all.

Dalmia was right to stay true to her better principles.

Never Trump.

Daily Bread for 12.3.20

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of forty.  Sunrise is 7:09 AM and sunset 4:21 PM, for 9h 11m 57s of daytime.  The moon is a waning gibbous with 90.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission meets via audiovisual conferencing at 3:30 PM, and the Fire Department via audiovisual conferencing at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1775, the USS Alfred becomes the first vessel to fly the Grand Union Flag (the precursor to the Stars and Stripes); the flag is hoisted by John Paul Jones.

Recommended for reading in full — 

 Philip Rucker reports Trump escalates baseless attacks on election with 46-minute video rant:

Escalating his attack on democracy from within the White House, President Trump on Wednesday distributed an astonishing 46-minute video rant filled with baseless allegations of voter fraud and outright falsehoods in which he declared the nation’s election system “under coordinated assault and siege” and argued that it was “statistically impossible” for him to have lost to President-elect Joe Biden.

Standing behind the presidential lectern in the Diplomatic Reception Room and flanked by the flags of his office and of the country whose Constitution he swore an oath to uphold, Trump tried to leverage the power of the presidency to subvert the vote and overturn the election results.

The rambling and bellicose monologue — which Trump said “may be the most important speech I’ve ever made” and was delivered direct-to-camera with no audience — underscored his desperation to reverse the outcome of his election loss after a month of failed legal challenges and as some key states already have certified Biden’s victory.

A guide to Trump’s false election claims:

 Stephanie Saul, Kate Kelly, and Michael LaForgia report 2,596 Trades in One Term: Inside Senator Perdue’s Stock Portfolio (‘The Georgia Republican’s stock trades have included a range of companies within his Senate committees’ oversight, an analysis shows’):

An examination of Mr. Perdue’s stock trading during his six years in office reveals that he has been the Senate’s most prolific stock trader by far, sometimes reporting 20 or more transactions in a single day.

The Times analyzed data compiled by Senate Stock Watcher, a nonpartisan website that aggregates publicly available information on lawmakers’ trading, and found that Mr. Perdue’s transactions accounted for nearly a third of all senators’ trades reported in the past six years. His 2,596 trades, mostly in stocks but also in bonds and funds, roughly equal the combined trading volume of the next five most active traders in the Senate.

The data also shows the breadth of trades Mr. Perdue made in companies that stood to benefit from policy and spending matters that came not just before the Senate as a whole, but before the committees and subcommittees on which he served.

Nearly half of Mr. Perdue’s FireEye trades, for example, occurred while he sat on the cybersecurity panel, a role that potentially could have provided him with nonpublic information about companies like FireEye. During that period, FireEye landed a subcontract worth more than $30 million with the Army Cyber Command, which had operations at Fort Gordon, in Mr. Perdue’s home state. In 2018, Mr. Perdue reported capital gains of up to $15,000 from FireEye trades.

 Family in South Australia finds live koala in their Christmas tree:

An Adelaide family came home to find their Christmas tree topped with a new, furry decoration after a juvenile koala wandered inside their home, climbed up the plastic tree and sampled the leaves. The family immediately called the Adelaide and Hills Koala Rescue, but co-founder Dee Hearne-Hellon said the group didn’t believe the story at first. After being removed from the tree, the koala was released into bushland nearby.

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U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson: Ambitious, Compromised, or Crackpot?

Over at The Bulwark, Mark Becker, former Brown County Supervisor and former Chairman of the Brown County Republican Party, describes his Call With Ron Johnson: He Knows Biden Won But Won’t Admit It. Becker writes that on

November 14, 8:37 a.m. my phone rings. I do a double take on my caller ID and realize who is calling. I take a deep breath and answer the phone. The next 30 minutes and 32 seconds would be a conversation that was nothing short of surreal.

….

The TL;DR of the call was this: Senator Johnson knows that Joe Biden won a free and fair election. He is refusing to admit it publicly and stoking conspiracies that undermine our democracy solely because it would be “political suicide” to oppose Trump. I find this unconscionable.

Reading Becker’s full account, it’s hard to tell whether Johnson’s public denial about the election outcome is simple dishonesty (“he knew and accepted the fact that Joe Biden had won”), ambition (“political suicide” to oppose Trump), a consequence of being somehow compromised into lying despite knowing Biden won (see After Moscow Trip, Ron Johnson Says Election Meddling Overblown), or that Johnson’s a crackpot (Becker relates Johnson’s baseless speculation about Biden’s health).

If Johnson’s worried in post-election 2020 about political suicide, then is he looking ahead to his political health in 2022 (when he’d be up for re-election as senator or could run for governor)?

He’s odd for Wisconsin: he’s seems more cipher than man. Becker writes that Johnson is cordial in private, and implies he’s only acerbic in person. Johnson doesn’t strike as either, really, so much as a vessel of others’ concoctions. Some of these men so plainly believe what they say. Johnson sounds like a man who says what others believe.

On a weighted list of Wisconsin’s political topics over the next year, Ron Johnson belongs near the top.

Before Man & Movement, That Which Paved the Way

Trump did not spring from the ground; he did not fall from the stars. Neither horticulture nor astrophysics played any role in his rise. Before Trump and Trumpism, there were towns and cities into which he and his movement found receptive audiences. Patients already ill are often susceptible of worse maladies. So it has been in towns and cities before Trump and Trumpism.

A disregard – even outright dismissal – of high standards paved the way for low standards.

It’s true that some of us opposed Trump, and that (as in the case of Whitewater) majorities in our respective cities have voted, fortunately and almost blessedly, against him.

And yet, and yet…have we no responsibility for tolerating the lies, excuses, exaggerations, fallacies, dodgy data, and conflicts of interest that so insidiously prepared the ground for Trump & Trumpism?

These lies, excuses, exaggerations, fallacies, and conflicts of interest were the stock-in-trade of no one party or faction. Across groups, however aligned from left to right, there was – and remains – boosterism and Babbittry. (Boosterism: the accentuation of the positive while ignoring the disadvantaged; Babbittry: a small-town cult of boosterism.)

In a world of the aspirational, the ethical sounds old-fashioned.

So be it: it’s no less true for sounding old.

Daily Bread for 12.2.20

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of forty.  Sunrise is 7:08 AM and sunset 4:21 PM, for 9h 13m 10s of daytime.  The moon is a waning  gibbous with 95.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

 

On this day in 1954, the United States Senate votes 65 to 22 to censure Joseph McCarthy for “conduct that tends to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute.”

Recommended for reading in full — 

Maggie Haberman and Michael S. Schmidt report Trump Has Discussed With Advisers Pardons for His 3 Eldest Children and Giuliani (‘Rudolph W. Giuliani, who is promoting baseless claims of widespread election fraud, talked about a pardon with President Trump as recently as last week’):

President Trump has discussed with advisers whether to grant pre-emptive pardons to his children, to his son-in-law and to his personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, and talked with Mr. Giuliani about pardoning him as recently as last week, according to two people briefed on the matter.

Mr. Trump has told others that he is concerned that a Biden Justice Department might seek retribution against the president by targeting the oldest three of his five children — Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump and Ivanka Trump — as well as Ms. Trump’s husband, Jared Kushner, a White House senior adviser.

Donald Trump Jr. had been under investigation by Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel, for contacts that the younger Mr. Trump had had with Russians offering damaging information on Hillary Clinton during the 2016 campaign, but he was never charged. Mr. Kushner provided false information to federal authorities about his contacts with foreigners for his security clearance, but was given one anyway by the president.

The nature of Mr. Trump’s concern about any potential criminal exposure of Eric Trump or Ivanka Trump is unclear, although an investigation by the Manhattan district attorney into the Trump Organization has expanded to include tax write-offs on millions of dollars in consulting fees by the company, some of which appear to have gone to Ms. Trump.

Presidential pardons, however, do not provide protection against state or local crimes.

Christopher Krebs writes Trump fired me for saying this, but I’ll say it again: The election wasn’t rigged:

(Christopher Krebs is the former director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.)

The combined efforts over the past three years moved the total number of expected votes cast with a paper ballot above 90 percent, including the traditional battleground states. While I no longer regularly speak to election officials, my understanding is that in the 2020 results no significant discrepancies attributed to manipulation have been discovered in the post-election canvassing, audit and recount processes.

This point cannot be emphasized enough: The secretaries of state in Georgia, Michigan, Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania, as well officials in Wisconsin, all worked overtime to ensure there was a paper trail that could be audited or recounted by hand, independent of any allegedly hacked software or hardware.

That’s why Americans’ confidence in the security of the 2020 election is entirely justified. Paper ballots and post-election checks ensured the accuracy of the count. Consider Georgia: The state conducted a full hand recount of the presidential election, a first of its kind, and the outcome of the manual count was consistent with the computer-based count. Clearly, the Georgia count was not manipulated, resoundingly debunking claims by the president and his allies about the involvement of CIA supercomputers, malicious software programs or corporate rigging aided by long-gone foreign dictators.

Tonight’s Sky for December:

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Man and Movement

There’s Trump and then there’s Trumpism. The first (an ignorant, bigoted autocrat) has been defeated, the second (a nativism in the tradition of Know Nothings, Confederates, Klan, and Bund) will carry on. See Trump’s GOP Is Increasingly Racist and Authoritarian—and Here to Stay (‘Having already forsaken Republican principles and policies, his supporters are now willing to forsake reality, too’).

Trump did not, obviously, originate continental nativism (as the enumerated movements listed above long preceded him). He simply revivified the worst before him, and re-fashioned it as making America great again.

That Trump became president was a calamity for the American constitutional order, made less destructive only by his defeat this fall.

He will, like other autocratic leaders, struggle without the cloak of state power to insulate himself from the consequences of his transgressions, misdeeds, and crimes. See As Soon as Trump Leaves Office, He Faces Greater Risk of Prosecution (‘The president is more vulnerable than ever to an investigation into his business practices and taxes’).

His movement will outlast him, however, slithering on to torment others as Trump tormented the vulnerable these last four years.

About one thing the Trumpists have been accurate: Trump has been a consequential leader, understanding that consequences may be notable as detrimental.

The objects of concern during these years have been, sensibly, Trump, His Inner Circle, Principal Surrogates, and Media Defenders including officials advocating Trumpism Down to the Local Level.

Trumpism won’t fade with Trump; vigilance will be an ongoing obligation.