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Daily Bread for 5.4.22: Ron Johnson Recycles a Soviet Conspiracy Theory About AIDS

Good morning.

Wednesday — May the 4th be with you — in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of 57.  Sunrise is 5:43 AM and sunset 7:59 PM for 14h 15m 53s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 12% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1776, Rhode Island becomes the first American colony to renounce allegiance to King George III.


Ron Johnson’s recent openness to yet another conspiracy theory is a present-day recycling of a Soviet conspiracy theory. Henry Redman reports In interview, Sen. Johnson says it ‘may be true’ that COVID vaccines cause AIDS:

In a video interview published on the right-wing social media platform Rumble, Sen. Ron Johnson said it “may be true” that vaccines against COVID-19 cause AIDS. 

Johnson was being interviewed by anti-vaccine lawyer Todd Callender, who alleged that the shots induce AIDS and that the FDA knew so when the vaccines were approved for emergency use. 

“The way to approach this is from a criminal point of view because that’s what has happened. And until we start holding people accountable, [Dr. Anthony] Fauci number one, you’re going to see people still falling out, still getting sick,” Calendar said. “You’ve got more than a hundred doctors here, all of whom will tell you that these shots caused vaccine-induced AIDS. they purposefully gave people AIDS. They knew this.”

Johnson responded that it’s possible the allegations are true, but that anti-vaccine activists need to wait for public opinion to be on their side before criminally charging health officials. 

“Let me challenge you there, that’s way down the road,” Johnson said. “You’ve gotta do one step at a time. Everything you say may be true, but right now the public views the vaccines as largely safe and effective, that vaccine injuries are rare and mild. That’s the narrative, that’s what the vast majority of the public accepts. So until we get a larger percentage of the population with their eyes open to ‘woah, these vaccine injuries are real, why?’ You’ve got to do it step by step, you can’t leap to crimes against humanity, you can’t leap to another Nuremberg trial.” 

The claim that the COVID-19 vaccines cause AIDS is false

The false claim that COVID-19 vaccines cause AIDS is a refashioning of the equally false Soviet claim from the 1980s that the United States invented AIDS. Historian Douglas Selvage has studied this Soviet disinformation campaign

In September 1985, the Soviet State Security Committee (KGB) informed other Warsaw Pact foreign intelligence agencies that it had launched a new, major disinformation campaign. “We are carrying out a complex of [active] measures in connection with the appearance in recent years of a new dangerous disease in the USA known as AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome).” The KGB explained that “the goal of the measures is to create a favorable opinion for us abroad — namely, that this disease is the result of secret experiments by the USA’s secret services and the Pentagon with new types of biological weapons that have spun out of control.” Most likely, the KGB had initiated the disinformation campaign as early as 1983, but the September 1985 document — obtained by Christopher Nehring from the former Bulgarian State Security archive — is the earliest conclusive evidence that has turned up so far. (The former KGB foreign intelligence archive has never been accessible to researchers.)

Among the East European intelligence services that assisted the KGB in this effort was the East German Ministry for State Security (Stasi), which used the codename “Denver” when referring to the campaign. The KGB and Stasi relied on forged documents and inaccurate testimony from purported experts to suggest that HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, had originated not from infected animals in Africa but from biological warfare research carried out by U.S. military scientists at Fort Detrick in Maryland. Operation Denver proved remarkably effective, writes historian Douglas Selvage in an article featured in a recent issue of the Journal of Cold War Studies; indeed, even more effective than the KGB and Stasi had originally expected. Before long, immense numbers of people around the world (including in the United States) came to believe, falsely, that the U.S. government was responsible for AIDS.

See Lessons From Operation “Denver,” the KGB’s Massive AIDS Disinformation Campaign.

There’s nothing new with Johnson: it’s merely old lies and conspiracy theories, repackaged for our time, and placed in the mouth of a United States Senator from Wisconsin.  


Red-tailed Hawks Live Cam:

A Red-tailed Hawk pair has been nesting above Cornell University’s athletic fields since 2012. They make use of two different light towers for their nest sites. In 2012, 2015, and 2018–2021 they used a tower near Fernow Hall, and in 2013, 2014, and 2016, they used the tower nearest Weill Hall. We installed cameras at both of these sites to get a better look at the intimate behavior of these well-known birds as they raise their young amid the bustle of a busy campus.

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Daily Bread for 5.3.22: Law and Enforcement After Roe

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will see scattered showers with a high of 47.  Sunrise is 5:44 AM and sunset 7:58 PM for 14h 13m 28s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 6.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

 The Whitewater School Board meets at 6:30 PM and the Whitewater Common Council also meets at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1957,  Walter O’Malley, the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, agrees to move the team from Brooklyn to Los Angeles.


Josh Gerstein and Alexander Ward of POLITICO yesterday published a draft opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (a case addressing the constitutionality of Mississippi restrictions on abortion) that would overturn Roe v. Wade

For Wisconsinites there are two principal legal questions: (1) in the absence of Roe, what law would govern access to abortion in this state and (2) how might that law be enforced?

Wisconsin law has an unenforced pre-Roe ban on abortions:

940.04 Abortion.
(1) Any person, other than the mother, who intentionally destroys the life of an unborn child is guilty of a Class H felony.
(2) Any person, other than the mother, who does either of the following is guilty of a Class E felony:
(a) Intentionally destroys the life of an unborn quick child; or
(b) Causes the death of the mother by an act done with intent to destroy the life of an unborn child. It is unnecessary to prove that the fetus was alive when the act so causing the mother’s death was committed.
(5) This section does not apply to a therapeutic abortion which:
(a) Is performed by a physician; and
(b) Is necessary, or is advised by 2 other physicians as necessary, to save the life of the mother; and
(c) Unless an emergency prevents, is performed in a licensed maternity hospital.
(6) In this section “unborn child” means a human being from the time of conception until it is born alive.

Wis. Stat. § 940.04

Other states have similar statutes adopted long before Roe. See What would happen if Roe v. Wade were overturned.

There are (and would be more) court decisions — case law — interpreting Wisconsin’s state provision.

On the second question, how a state abortion ban in Wisconsin would be enforced, there are certain to be county-by-county differences in the willingness to prosecute cases. Wisconsin will prove to be as divided internally as some states are divided externally with other states. Those hoping to find a post-Roe harmony in Wisconsin will be disappointed.


Rocket Lab catches, drops rocket using a helicopter:

Launch firm Rocket Lab catches a falling rocket booster with a helicopter before dropping it into the ocean in a partially successful test of the company’s novel cost-savings approach to recovering used rockets for multiple missions to space.

Daily Bread for 5.2.22: The Short Distance Between Whitewater and the Kremlin

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 55.  Sunrise is 5:46 AM and sunset 7:57 PM for 14h 11m 02s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 2.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Equal Opportunities Commission meets at 5 PM

On this day in 2012, a pastel version of The Scream, by Norwegian painter Edvard Munch, sells for $120 million in a New York City auction, setting a new world record for a work of art at auction


Fellow travelers needn’t leave their homes. Russia’s viewpoint is a click of the remote away.

 It’s 4,937 miles from Whitewater to the Kremlin, but residents of Whitewater (or any city in America) can travel the rhetorical distance to Russian fascism without ever leaving their homes. They need only watch Fox News for an English-language version of Putin’s worldview. Stuart Thompson reports How Russian Media Uses Fox News to Make Its Case:

The narratives advanced by the Kremlin and by parts of conservative American media have converged in recent months, reinforcing and feeding each other. Along the way, Russian media has increasingly seized on Fox News’s prime-time segments, its opinion pieces and even the network’s active online comments section — all of which often find fault with the Biden administration — to paint a critical portrait of the United States and depict America’s foreign policy as a threat to Russia’s interests. Mr. Carlson was a frequent reference for Russian media, but other Fox News personalities — and the occasional news update from the network — were also included.

Sergey Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, who has made several false claims about the war — including that Russia never attacked Ukraine — singled out Fox News for praise last month.

“We understood long ago that there is no such thing as an independent Western media,” Mr. Lavrov told the state television station RT, adding that “only Fox News is trying to present some alternative point of view.”

Mentions of Fox News in Russian-language media grew 217 percent during the first quarter of this year compared with the final quarter of last year, as news coverage of Ukraine increased, according to an analysis by Zignal Labs, a media tracking company that reviewed social media posts, broadcast media and online websites. CNN, which has about three times the global viewership of Fox News, according to the tracking company Similarweb, was mentioned more often but grew less, by 71 percent.

Axis Sally once shocked and infuriated Americans. 

Our modern-day versions have found quite the approving audience. 


Tornado Rips Through Kansas:

Daily Bread for 5.1.22: Gableman Bites the Hand That Feeds Him

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 52.  Sunrise is 5:47 AM and sunset 7:56 PM for 14h 08m 34s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 0.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1898,  during Spanish–American War at the Battle of Manila Bay, the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy destroys the Pacific Squadron of the Spanish Navy after a seven-hour battle. Spain loses all seven of its ships, and 381 Spanish sailors die. There are no American vessel losses or combat deaths.


 Only last week, under pressure from Donald J. Trump, Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos agreed to allow Michael Gableman’s slapdash election investigation to continue. See Trump v. Vos (“Trump wins — Vos extends Gableman’s contract. No surprise that Trump’s assist gives Gableman more time. Vos has been walkin’ around with a laminated KICK ME sign on his back for months. Some office furniture may already be gone, but Gableman will likely get to keep his mouse pad a little longer…”).

As it turns out, gratitude is not among Gableman’s thimble of virtues. Patrick Marley reports that Days after Robin Vos extended Wisconsin’s election review, Michael Gableman stands with the Assembly speaker’s critics in the GOP:

On Saturday, Gableman responded by appearing on a stage with some of the Republican speaker’s most vocal critics on the right, including Vos’ primary opponent.

Gableman appeared at a rally on the state Capitol steps immediately after Vos’ opponent, Adam Steen, called Vos a traitor.

At the beginning of Steen’s speech, someone in the crowd yelled that Vos was a RINO, or Republican in name only.

“‘RINO’ is a nice word,” Steen responded. “I prefer the word ‘treasonous traitor.'”

Taking the microphone after Steen, Gableman did not mention Steen’s attack on Vos, but noted Steen had said any change had to go through the Legislature.

“Really the change, and what we want to see, is very, very simple and direct and common sense, and that’s why it’s going to take positive, persistent passion each day — each day — for all of us to show up and do what’s necessary to support the people who see it our way,” Gableman said.

….

The event featured a who’s who of Vos’ conservative critics who have maintained he has not done enough to review Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump in Wisconsin. (Vos’ many critics on the left say just the opposite — that he has spent too much time and money on studying an election that recounts and courts have found was properly conducted.)

The event was emceed by Joe Giganti, a host at Green Bay’s WTAQ-AM who has repeatedly called for Vos’ ouster and who on Saturday said the speaker’s name is “a three-letter cuss word.”


Tonight’s Sky for May:

Daily Bread for 4.30.22: Longwell on Why Trump Supporters Believe the Big Lie

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater will see showers and thunderstorms with a high of 59.  Sunrise is 5:48 AM and sunset 7:54 PM for 14h 06m 04s of daytime.  The moon is new with 0.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1864, Joseph Bailey Saves a Union Fleet:

On this date, Joseph Bailey began to direct the men of six regiments, including the 23rd Wisconsin, in a dramatic attempt to save the heart of a Union fleet during the Civil War. Bailey, who was from Wisconsin Dells and an experienced lumberjack, served as an engineer in the 4th Wisconsin Cavalry.

In a doomed campaign against the Confederates on the Red River in Louisiana, Union warships found themselves trapped by low water and the rocky river bed. As Confederate soldiers approached, Bailey employed water control techniques used by loggers to construct a series of dams that successfully narrowed the river, raised the water level by six feet, and provided enough surge to free the trapped fleet of gunboats. For his role in this rescue, Bailey was promoted to the rank of brigadier general. He also received a Tiffany punch bowl from his fellow officers. 


Sarah Longwell writes Trump Supporters Explain Why They Believe the Big Lie:

Some 35 percent of Americans—including 68 percent of Republicans—believe the Big Lie, pushed relentlessly by former President Donald Trump and amplified by conservative media, that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. They think that Trump was the true victor and that he should still be in the White House today.

I regularly host focus groups to better understand how voters are thinking about key political topics. Recently, I decided to find out why Trump 2020 voters hold so strongly to the Big Lie.

For many of Trump’s voters, the belief that the election was stolen is not a fully formed thought. It’s more of an attitude, or a tribal pose. They know something nefarious occurred but can’t easily explain how or why. What’s more, they’re mystified and sometimes angry that other people don’t feel the same.

….

Long before Election Day, the media had warned about a “red mirage” and alerted Americans to the possibility that Trump would have a large lead on Election Night only to have it dissipate as mail-in ballots were counted. But if you were watching Fox News, you probably didn’t hear any of this. Instead, Trump, MAGA-friendly politicians, and conservative media outlets were priming voters to see a conspiracy.

Trump correctly assumed that the majority of the mail-in ballots that would be counted late at night would go to Biden. So he cast mail-in ballots as fraudulent almost by definition. The woman from Georgia told me that mail-in ballots were “a crock,” without elaborating further.

Attempts to set the record straight tend to backfire. When you tell Trump voters that the election wasn’t stolen, some of them tally that as evidence that it was stolen. A woman from Arizona told me, “I think what convinced me more that the election was fixed was how vehemently they have said it wasn’t.”

America — the most technologically advanced country on Earth — did not attain this position because her people struggle to offer a “fully formed thought” or insist that factual claims are “‘a crock,’ without elaborating further.”

A higher standard has brought America to her present, developed position; the lower standard of the Big Lie — should it persist — will drag America down.

In beautiful Whitewater: a public school district spending millions, and a public university spending many times as much, and yet some of our fellow residents share views that require no learning or reasoning at all.

We are undemanding in our educational expectations: the baseless political claims of the Big Lie merit no deference.


Moon, Planets and Space Stations:

Italian astronomer Gianluca Masi made the following observations from Rome: Jupiter, Venus, Mars, Saturn and the Moon (26 April 2022); Jupiter, Venus, Mars, Saturn and the International Space Station (27 April 2022): Jupiter, Venus, Mars, Saturn, the Moon and the China Space Station (27 April 2022); Venus, Jupiter and the Moon (27 April 2022). Credit: Gianluca Masi/The Virtual Telescope Project Music: “Seaside Piazza by Aaron Kenny” courtesy of YouTube Audio Library

Daily Bread for 4.29.22: No Free Speech Problem for Trump Apologist Kellyanne Conway

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 61.  Sunrise is 5:50 AM and sunset 7:53 PM for 14h 03m 33s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 1.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1862, Union forces under David Farragut capture New Orleans.


Kellyanne Conway, mendacious Trump supporter, spoke during a visit to UW-Whitewater on Wednesday.  For all the conservative worry over supposed speech suppression on UW System campuses, Conway spoke without interruption of any kind. Henry Redman reports Kellyanne Conway speech about liberals suppressing free speech meets no protest at UW-Whitewater

Kellyanne Conway, a former adviser to President Donald Trump, gave a speech Wednesday evening at UW-Whitewater, focusing on threats to conservative speech from progressives as she spoke in front of nearly 200 people.  

Speaking for about an hour in the half-full Timmerman Auditorium — which seats about 400 — Conway railed against threats to free speech as she repeatedly told the audience they were on “the right side” of issues ranging from immigration to abortion access, critical race theory and charter schools, while dropping the names of the many famous conservative figures she knows, including Trump and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. Among the people in attendance was state Sen. Steve Nass (R-Whitewater).

In the auditorium, fliers left on each chair from the campus police department gave guidance for exercising free speech “safely, respectfully and lawfully.” A large number of police officers provided security at the event, which concluded without any disruptions inside or protests outside. The online announcement for the event included a statement that the hosts “reserve the right to remove disruptive or rowdy attendees.” 

Indeed, Conway — a defender of a Nebraska gubernatorial candidate facing complaints from eight women (including a Republican state senator) — was able to speak freely at UW-Whitewater without any protest.  

Redman also notes that the auditorium was only half full. Perhaps there’s not as much demand for downmarket Trump apologists as these Republicans believe.

A funny aside, though, presents itself on what the Republican organizers believe about themselves. One reads from FortAtkinsonOnline.com that “several seats within the auditorium were reserved for VIP guests.” 

So, at a Greyhound bus terminal, there are not separate sections for ordinary bums and VIP bums. No. There are only bums, each in the same unfortunate condition.

In a similar way, at a zoo, there are not separate sections for ordinary hyenas and VIP hyenas, but instead only animals of the same kind with mottled fur and crazed eyes. It’s nutty that these conservatives showing up for Kellyanne Conway would somehow think it’s possible to divide their ilk into separate classes.

There is only one.


Shanghai residents bang pots and pans in Covid lockdown protest:

Frustrated residents of Chinese city bang pots and pans to protest against living under a strict lockdown for nearly a month.

Friday Catblogging: Relaxed, Very Relaxed

Arnesia Young writes that a Japanese Cat Sleeping in Funny Position Is Compared to a Drunken Salaryman:

Cats are often known to fall asleep in a variety of amusing positions. But one Japanese Twitter user’s cat conked out in a position so odd that commenters are comparing the snoozing feline to a drunken salaryman on a Friday night. For those unfamiliar with the term, salaryman is typically used to refer to a Japanese white-collar office worker. And according to the common trope, salarymen are typically very loyal to their company, which often causes them to be overworked and quite stressed. As a result, it’s a common stereotype that you’ll find them passed out on the weekends—usually Friday nights—after blowing off some steam with a few too many drinks.

Here’s the original tweet:

And here’s someone’s interpretation of the cat as a soused salaryman:

Sure enough, that cat’s had too much.

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Daily Bread for 4.28.22: Exclusive Video — Kellyanne Conway Visits UW-Whitewater

Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 46.  Sunrise is 5:51 AM and sunset 7:52 PM for 14h 01m 01s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 5.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1881,  Billy the Kid escapes from the Lincoln County jail in Mesilla, New Mexico.


Kellyanne Conway, Trump apologist and serial liar (the former requires the latter) paid a visit to UW-Whitewater last night. FREE WHITEWATER has exclusive video of her appearance before at an auditorium in Hyland Hall:

What else has Conway been doing lately? Well, recently she admitted that she Knew Of ‘Sexual Allegations’ Against Nebraska Candidate Months Ago:

Former Trump administration White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said she heard last year about “some kind of sexual allegations” against GOP Nebraska gubernatorial candidate Charles Herbster — but she’s working to get him elected anyway.

Conway alleged on Steve Bannon’s “War Room” podcast that groping allegations raised by eight women, including a Republican state senator, were somehow cooked up by current Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts, who does not support Herbster, a corporate CEO who has never held office. 

Only the best people, only the best people…


Palate cleanser (to the extent that’s possible) —

French Pres. Macron Gives Celebratory ‘Dab’ for Supporters:

Daily Bread for 4.27.22: How Putin Conned the Right

Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 44.  Sunrise is 5:53 AM and sunset 7:51 PM for 13h 58m 27s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 11.5% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1945,  Benito Mussolini is arrested by Italian partisans in Dongo, while attempting to escape disguised as a German soldier.


As was true of some on the American left by the Soviets, or some on the American right by the Nazis, so now some American conservatives are in Putin’s enthrallment. Shay Khatiri describes How Putin Conned the American Right (‘He carefully planted the seeds for his popularity among conservatives’):

Putin made his first moves in the direction of conservative cultural leadership in 2013. The previous year, President Barack Obama had put social conservatives on a defensive footing by coming out in favor of gay marriage. Then, in 2013, the Supreme Court agreed to hear United States v. Windsor. Six weeks after the oral argument, the Russian Duma passed what would come to be known as the “anti-gay law,” but Putin didn’t sign the bill into law immediately. He let it sit on his desk for three weeks. Days after the Supreme Court struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, he signed it into law.

Later in 2013, a Kremlin-connected Russian think tank called the Center for Strategic Communications published a report titled, “Putin: World Conservatism’s New Leader.” The document repeated populist talking points that would prove influential during the 2016 presidential election. It rejected “ideological experiments” and called for social stability and conservative family values instead. It characterized immigration as a threat to the nation-state, and it framed Putin as a defender of sovereignty.

….

Putin’s information strategy is a continuation of the old Soviet information strategy. It prioritizes a large variety of low-cost operations; efforts and resources are multiplied for whichever works best. And just like the Soviet regime before it, Putin’s regime is impotent in understanding American politics, but it is well versed in understanding American societal divisions—and how to exploit them. For years, Putin’s strategy seemed to pay off, as a segment of writers and magazines and broadcasters on the American right praised him, or at least took it easier on him than they otherwise would have. But the war in Ukraine has shown the limits of Putin’s soft power: An overwhelming majority of Americans object to Russia’s invasion and view the Russian leader as a menace and a pariah.


Kyiv demolishes Soviet monument representing Russia-Ukraine friendship:

Daily Bread for 4.26.22: Trump v. Vos

Good morning.

Tuesday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 47.  Sunrise is 5:54 AM and sunset 7:50 PM for 13h 55m 53s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 19.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Board of Assessment meets at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1564, William Shakespeare is baptized in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England (date of birth is unknown).


Update, afternoon of 4.26: Trump wins — Vos extends Gableman’s contract. No surprise that Trump’s assist gives Gableman more time. Vos has been walkin’ around with a laminated KICK ME sign on his back for months. Some office furniture may already be gone, but Gableman will likely get to keep his mouse pad a little longer…

Michael Gableman’s contract ends soon, and he’s angling for an extension:

[Assembly Speaker Robin] Vos gave Gableman a $676,000 taxpayer-funded budget, which includes an $11,000 monthly salary. Since the review launched, Gableman has missed multiple deadlines to issue a final report.

….

In recent weeks Gableman appeared on former White House adviser Steve Bannon’s podcast to put pressure on Vos to extend his contract with the state beyond April — Vos’ deadline to complete the review. At one point, Gableman told Bannon’s fans to call and email Vos and ask him not to pick up his office furniture Tuesday

(Emphasis added to highlight the pathos of it all.)

Perhaps all is not lost for Gableman and his extra-wide office chair, as Donald J. Trump has come to his defense:

Without naming Vos, Trump suggested in a statement to his millions of supporters that the Rochester Republican will see a successful primary opponent if he does not extend former Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman’s contract with the state Assembly.

“Anyone calling themselves a Republican in Wisconsin should support the continued investigation in Wisconsin without interference,” Trump said. 

“I understand some RINOs have primary challengers in Wisconsin. I’m sure their primary opponents would get a huge bump in the polls if these RINOs interfere,” Trump said, using an acronym for “Republicans In Name Only.” Trump did not name Vos’ primary opponent Adam Steen. 

Molly Beck has the full beat-the-repo-man story at Trump turns up the heat on Wisconsin Republican leader Robin Vos to keep Gableman election probe alive.


Easter in destroyed Chernihiv: A message of hope and peace prevails:

Daily Bread for 4.25.22: ‘Ruscism’

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 45.  Sunrise is 5:56 AM and sunset 7:49 PM for 13h 53m 16s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 28.2% of its visible disk illuminated.

The Whitewater Unified School Board meets in open session at 5:45 PM, then enters closed session, resuming open session at 7 PM.

On this day in 1960,  the United States Navy submarine USS Triton completes the first submerged circumnavigation of the globe.


Timothy Snyder writes that Ukrainians have coined a new word to describe the ideology behind Russia’s invasion of their country: ruscism. Snyder explains The War in Ukraine Has Unleashed a New Word (In a creative play on three different languages, Ukrainians identify an enemy: ‘ruscism’):

The origins of the word “” give us a sense of how Ukrainians differ from both Russians and Americans. A bilingual nation like Ukraine is not just a collection of bilingual individuals; it is an unending set of encounters in which people habitually adjust the language they use to other people and new settings, manipulating language in ways that are foreign to monolingual nations. I have gone on Ukrainian television and radio, taken questions in Russian and answered them in Ukrainian, without anyone for a moment finding that switch worthy of mention. Once, while speaking Ukrainian on television, I stopped for a moment to quote a few words of poetry in Russian, a switch that was an effort for me. But Ukrainians change languages effortlessly — not just as situations change, but also to make situations change, sometimes in the middle of a sentence, or even in the middle of a word.

.…

The new word “” is a useful conceptualization of Putin’s worldview. Far more than Western analysts, Ukrainians have noticed the Russian tilt toward fascism in the last decade. Undistracted by Putin’s operational deployment of genocide talk, they have seen fascist practices in Russia: the cults of the leader and of the dead, the corporatist state, the mythical past, the censorship, the conspiracy theories, the centralized propaganda and now the war of destruction. Even as we rightly debate how applicable the term is to Western figures and parties, we have tended to overlook the central example of fascism’s revival, which is the Putin regime in the Russian Federation.

….

Few beyond Ukraine seem to know that millions of Ukrainians, exercising freedom of speech in a country that allows it, have invented and are deploying a new word. “Ruscism” will sound strange at first. So did “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing,” other words that emerged from (Eastern) European wars. The concepts that clarify our world today were once strange and new. But when they point to something, they can take hold.

In response to invasion and war crimes against their nation, Ukrainians have crafted a new word. They and the world would have been better if there had been no need for linguistic creativity. Yet there is such a need, and so they have plainly defined the ideology tormenting them.


How Nicolas Cage Parodies Himself in ‘Massive Talent’ | Anatomy of a Scene:

Daily Bread for 4.24.22: Mallory McMorrow Delivers the Required Response

Good morning.

Sunday in Whitewater will be cloudy with a high of 68.  Sunrise is 5:57 AM and sunset 7:48 PM for 13h 50m 38s of daytime.  The moon is a waning crescent with 37.9% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1977,  the Morris Pratt Insititute, dedicated to the study of Spiritualism and Mediumship, moves from Whitewater to Waukesha.


Politics affects all, but not all choose politics. For those who choose a political life, there should be — and for a well-ordered society must be — a commitment to respond to lies from one’s opponents.

The populists, now a blight on many communities, will say anything both to gain politically and to satisfy their own appetites. Adam Serwer was right about many of them: cruelty is the point.

The populists have a long list of those they’d like to wound and thereafter drive from society: those of another ethnicity, race, religion, nationality, or sexual orientation.

So insatiable are they in the infliction of injury that yesterday’s assaults no longer bring them pleasure; they crave new accusations against new victims.

In Michigan, a right-wing populist accused mainstream Democrat Mallory McMorrow, a state senator from the Wolverine State, of being a ‘groomer’ who was preparing children for sexual exploitation. False, of course, but an accusation that presented a choice: ignore or respond?

Sen. McMorrow made the right choice: she responded.

Every community has a few right-wing trolls, dwelling under Facebook bridges, casting sub-standard English in broken sentences of fractured reasoning at pedestrians traveling above. The populist menace is much greater than this: a major political party shares these disordered views.

McMorrow’s example is one that others, regardless of party, should follow when facing populist lies. I’m a libertarian, not a Democrat, but then appreciation of her approach shouldn’t be confined within a partisan boundary.

It’s stand or perish. Malloy McMorrow stood.

Admirable, so very admirable.

Strong winds fuel over 21,000-acre Arizona wildfire: