Archive for 2022

KATIE PAVLICH: Americans Are Noticing Something Odd About the Wuhan Coronavirus Tests Biden Sent Out.

Last week White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki defended the administration’s curation of tests from China, the very country responsible for the pandemic.

“I would say our objective continues to be to increase U.S. manufacturing capacity of tests. We also needed to meet a need that we had in this country for more tests and a shortage of tests and the understandable demand from people across this country to get tests and make them free and accessible, which required us purchasing some of those tests from China in order to meet that demand,” Psaki said.

Further cold winter weather, which the administration didn’t factor in when sending tests through the Postal Service, has invalidated a countless number of tests.

I threw out my “free” tests after pulling them out of the mailbox in 20° weather.

20 MINUTES INTO THE FUTURE: Ezra Levant: I think I know how this trucker rebellion is going to end. Hear me out. “To save the U.S. economy from a trucker rebellion, Joe Biden will lift his trucker vaccine mandate. Trudeau will have to follow, though he will be so enraged he’ll probably punch through the drywall.”

Read the whole thing.

ANNALS OF LEFTIST AUTOPHAGY: PETA pokes Fauci with mosaic photos of brutalized animals.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, upset with the use of animals to test drugs, including some at the agency COVID czar Dr. Anthony Fauci heads, today unveiled a mosaic of him made from tiny photographs of caged and brutalized animals. . . .

“No one likes Anthony Fauci more than Anthony Fauci,” said PETA.

Well, they’ve got that part right.

TOYOTA AD SAYS KAEPERNICK ANTHEM PROTEST WAS ‘SIGN OF RESPECT TO THE MILITARY:’

A new Toyota commercial featuring Colin Kaepernick claims the former NFL quarterback’s controversial national anthem protest was a “sign of respect to the military.”

The ad, which aired Friday morning on Howard University’s radio station, says Kaepernick’s decision to go “on one knee” during the national anthem “came as a sign of respect to the military” and “changed the world.” The commercial also calls Kaepernick a “two-time Super Bowl quarterback,” which is false. Kaepernick appeared in one Super Bowl, a 34-31 loss to the Baltimore Ravens.

“Colin Rand Kaepernick, a two-time Super Bowl quarterback and NFL record holder, first knelt on one knee during the national anthem in 2016 as a sign of respect to the military and a symbol of protest against police shootings,” the Toyota ad says. “He changed the world and sparked a peaceful form of protest that continues around the world.”

The ad also features an audio clip in which Kaepernick himself explains his decision to kneel. He does not mention the military in the clip—instead, he says he kneeled to “bring awareness and make people realize what’s really going on in this country.”

“This country stands for freedom, liberty, justice for all,” Kaepernick says in the ad. “And it’s not happening for all right now.”

The activist made clear in 2016 that he kneeled during the anthem to protest police brutality. In an interview at the time, Kaepernick said he would not “stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppressed black people and people of color.”

Audio at link; since Toyota apparently approves of Colin Kaepernick, then I’m sure they’re also OK with this protest as well:  “Toyota will not produce vehicles at their three Ontario plants this week. The Ambassador Bridge is effectively shut down. The Blue Water is slowed. Peace Bridge may shut this weekend. Good jobs may leave Ontario forever.”

KRUISER’S MORNING BRIEF: Dems’ Disturbing Soviet 2.0 Dream for America Is Coming True. “Back in the Cold War days, American Democrats had a thinly veiled admiration for all things Soviet Union. In fact, the Democrats never thought ill of the Russians at all until the 2016 presidential election, when they needed someone to blame for the fact that their precious Granny Maojackets lost to Donald Trump.”

YOU DON’T NEED A WEATHERMAN TO SEE WHICH WAY THE WIND BLOWS: Virginia Dems Abandon Liberal Schools, Vote To Let Parents Make Mask Decisions: Bill could end legal challenges to Gov. Youngkin’s executive order.

Democrats in Virginia’s state Senate on Tuesday voted to codify Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s (R.) executive order giving parents the right to decide whether their children should wear masks at school.

Ten Democratic state senators joined with their Republican colleagues to add the masking provision to a bill that would require schools to resume in-person learning, the Washington Post reported. If passed, the bill could take the air out of legal challenges to Youngkin’s Jan. 15 executive order.

School officials in Virginia’s liberal enclaves announced that they would maintain mask mandates hours after Youngkin signed the order. Loudoun County Schools suspended students who came to school without masks. Seven Virginia school districts filed suit against the order, which they say contradicts a state law directing schools to implement mask mandates based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance.

The amendment, proposed by moderate Democratic state senator Chap Peterson, passed 29 to 9. A longtime opponent of executive orders, Peterson slammed former governor Ralph Northam’s (D.) executive order mandating masks in schools.

Youngkin praised Peterson on Tuesday in a tweet vowing to sign the bill once it reaches his desk. The bill likely won’t encounter opposition in the Virginia House of Delegates, which Republicans took control of in November.

Democrats are finally figuring out that they overplayed their Covid hands horribly. They should have pivoted last summer.

MEMORY-HOLED: A report detailed the tech gap between China and the U.S. Then it disappeared.

China and the United States are in a race to develop the newest, hottest technologies of the 21st century as a technological decoupling looms. But the effects won’t be felt equally — according to a new report from one of China’s most prestigious think tanks, a full-blown tech decoupling will be even worse for China in the end.

The Peking University Institute of International and Strategic Studies (IISS) published its findings just days before the new year — China’s biggest holiday — and the beginning of the 2022 Beijing Olympics. The introspective report clashed with the festive vibes spreading across the country, as it concluded China will come out worse than the U.S. as tech competitions continue to escalate between the two nations.

“Both the U.S. and China will lose from ‘decoupling,’” the researchers wrote. “And at this point, it looks like China’s loss may be greater.”

The report was pulled from the internet within a few days of its publication, but by then, the text of the piece, titled, “U.S.-China Strategic Competition in Technology,” had already circulated widely on the Chinese internet.

Well, somebody important in China thinks there’s something to this.

AND THANK GOD FOR THAT: Sarah Hoyt: We Live Profoundly Unnatural Lives.

No, I’m not actually complaining. Most of the time natural means someone like me would have died in infancy if not before. And I don’t dislike wearing clothes, not having to kill my own meat and not being limited to eating what I can grow. (Particularly in Colorado, where I couldn’t grow much of anything, partly because I’m not the best gardener, partly because the soil was like cement.)

But it is important, sometimes, when reading/talking/writing about the past to realize that we live profoundly unnatural lives. Which need unnatural solutions or experiments sometimes. Or just reality check.

For instance, in reading historical books, I’m getting sick and tired of everyone in their twenties who is an orphan having parents who were killed “in a carriage accident.”

No, actually seriously. This is the go-to for all the young writers, who have absolutely no clue how many ways to die there still are, all over the world, much less in the past with no anti-biotics.

Seriously, I keep hearing people telling me that no, the life expectancy was about the same, if you survived childhood. Leaving aside the fact we don’t really have good enough records to claim that (other than for the very upper classes, where we do, but those were a different ball of wax, okay? and even they died younger and uglier than we do) it’s poppycock.

In pre-antibiotic world, you could die of a blister that infected. You could die of accidentally stabbing yourself with a needle. (One of the reasons my dad was obsessive about disinfecting my childhood cuts and scrapes.) You could die of a trifling cold. You could die of medical treatment (Okay, in that, you’re like moderns) and you definitely could die of child birth, hunting accidents, and just “an illness” that was never identified and that could be any of a dozen viruses we no longer even think about.

Sure, childhood — and old age — were particularly dangerous, but trust me, you arrived at sixty looking what we now think of as 80, because all the illnesses took a toll. (It’s still so in most of the world.)

But we live profoundly unnatural lives.

I remember being little and looking at people in their sixties, after the kids left home. They basically sat around waiting for death, with occasional outbreaks of grandkids visiting. It wasn’t like that for my parents, 20 years later. It’s not that way for us.

And thank God for that.

DON’T STOP UNTIL THEY’RE COMPLETELY BEATEN: No, the Revolution Isn’t Over: None of the fundamental drivers of “Wokeness” have relented. “One does not simply walk away from religious beliefs. What is called ‘Wokeness’ – or the ‘Successor Ideology,’ or the ‘New Faith,’ or what have you (note the foe hasn’t even been successfully named yet, let alone routed) – rests on a series of what are ultimately metaphysical beliefs. The fact that their holders would laugh at the suggestion they have anything called metaphysical beliefs is irrelevant – they hold them nonetheless.”

Then make the rubble bounce.

PHIL HAMBURGER: Intolerant Lawyers Shouldn’t Be Judges: Law school deans, faculty and students who stifle opposing views are unfit ever to sit on the bench.

What should be done about law-school deans and others in legal institutions who censor, cancel, blacklist, refuse to hire, fire, “investigate” and otherwise threaten others for their opinions? A partial answer lies in reminding them that their misconduct may disqualify them from ever sitting on the bench. At one point or another, most lawyers dream about being a judge. Lawyers and aspiring lawyers should remember that their conduct today may be the measure of their disqualification tomorrow.

The question came up last week at Georgetown Law School, when the dean, William Treanor, put a newly hired administrator and senior lecturer, Ilya Shapiro, on leave pending an investigation—merely because of a tweet about the pending Supreme Court nomination. Leaving aside that nonacademic opinion is no reason for punishing an academic, Mr. Treanor’s reaction is one more case of harassing dissenters.

The problem is now pervasive in law schools. On account of mere dissent, deans investigate faculty for their views, give them meager salary increases, bar them from teaching some subjects, and even threaten to fire them—as at Georgetown. It’s not only deans. Faculties or their appointment committees regularly refuse to hire people with the wrong views. Just as bad, student law-review editors exclude dissenting students from their boards and even threaten to fire editors whom they discover to have the wrong views, whether on pronouns or matters of law. Student editors also refuse to publish perspectives they dislike—at some journals, they have blocked conservative perspectives, originalist arguments, and “anti-administrative” (aka constitutional) positions. Many students and faculty therefore shy away from exploring such viewpoints. Quietly in the background, members of faculty oversight boards encourage or permit this narrow-mindedness. Cases therefore increasingly come before the courts, even the Supreme Court, with much academic literature on one side and little on the other. The intolerance thus becomes a due-process problem.

Elsewhere in the legal world, law firms discourage associates, even partners, from taking pro bono cases for dissenting individuals. At many large firms, representing terrorists after 9/11 was fine, even admirable. Now, representing conservatives can be a risky move for a young lawyer. Whether in bar associations or law firms, there are serious consequences for due process.

The situation has become so serious that it’s increasingly difficult to find academics and others to write or sign friend-of-the-court briefs on key issues—including freedom of speech. Many lawyers, even if apparently secure in tenure or partnership, are, if not afraid, uncomfortable being associated with what seem hazardous points of view.

What’s to be done? In the legal world, the first step is to remember that people who are intolerant aren’t fit to serve as judges or in other positions of legal authority.

If a dean, committee member, law-review editor, bar-association leader, or other person in authority cancels, blacklists, excludes, threatens or otherwise disadvantages scholars, students, lawyers or their work on the basis of their opinions, can he be trusted as a judge to listen with an open mind to conflicting legal positions? If someone can’t tolerate both sides, how can he be trusted to do justice impartially?

Otherwise-decent faculty, students and partners often go along with intolerance because they lack the stomach to protest it. They may tell themselves they’d do better on the bench. But academics have tenure, and partners have much financial security. So there’s little reason to think they’ll do better as judges.

I wouldn’t support Bill Treanor for the bench. Or Heather Gerken.

ICYMI: JOEL KOTKIN ON A NEW DAWN FOR THE WORKING CLASS.

Generally, these movements are not embraced but are largely met with disdain and even horror by gentry progressives and their media allies. As Edwin Aponte notes on the Bellows, a widely read Marxist blog, this ‘betrays the left’s allergy to the varied social character of the working class as it actually exists in 2022’.

These protests in the US, Australia and Europe are not led by Marxist intellectuals in quest of a new world order, but by those seeking to restore an increasingly threatened world, where individual workers still possess some power and small independent artisans or merchants can support a middle-class lifestyle. Given the persistent worker shortages and supply-chain issues, workers’ power to disrupt the economy and to push back is greater than at any time in the past half century.

This new leverage is rooted in demographic trends. The US’s working population – people aged between 16 and 64 – grew by more than 20 per cent in the 1980s. In the past decade, it has grown by less than five per cent. To make matters worse, an estimated one-third of American working-age males are not in the labour force, suffering from high rates of incarceration, and from drug, alcohol and other health issues.

This is not a uniquely American experience. China’s population, according to one recent survey, is expected to halve in less than half a century, and its population of under-60s may already be in decline. Germany, a long-established industrial powerhouse, suffers from a fatal lack of new workers – a factor in the notable slowing of its formidable manufacturing sector. Germany’s workforce is expected to drop by five million by 2030.

In Europe after the Black Death, the worker shortage led to a permanent reallocation of power.

GOOD. i HAVE NOTHING AGAINST THEIR HAVING SEX WITH THE CLIMATE:   Politico: 97% of Left Leaning Voters Want Climate Action.

Just don’t do it in the street and scare the horses.  Oh, that’s not what they meant? Then I encourage them to have sex with themselves. In the privacy of their own homes, and off zoom cameras. Just leave us alone while they do it.

WEREN’T WE ALREADY? I MEAN ANYONE WHO DISSENTS FROM THE NARRATIVE:  Are Climate Skeptics the Next to be Declared Terrorists?

Yo, DHS, thought it not terrorism. Suppressing the first Amendment, OTOH….. Y’all do remember we’re Americans, right?

KIM IS RIGHT:  Quote Of The Day.

I will add that the bombing of Dresden also didn’t make Dresden look ridiculous.