Archive for 2022

STOPPED CLOCK DEPARTMENT: George Moonbat is right on this one.

I revile George Monbiot. He is a columnist for Britain’s The Guardian whose writings are endlessly warning about the coming climate change apocalypse. These pieces convince nobody who isn’t already a member of the cult, so his tactic is perpetually scream louder and louder in the vain hope that sheer volume will substitute for reason and logic.

I follow him on Twitter because I sometimes suffer from happiness and low blood pressure, and he sets things right by outraging my sensibilities and making me despair, once again, for the salvation of mankind.

So imagine my surprise when I read a tweet of his that not only sparked my curiosity, but led me to the conclusion that contrary to my prior opinion, he is not always wrong.

Read the whole thing.

DON’T GET COCKY: Betting Markets Have Flipped to GOP Control of the Senate. After two months of bettors favoring the Democrats to retain control of the Senate, the markets flipped this week, and bettors now give Republicans a better than 60 percent chance of taking the Senate. Five Thirty Eight’s model still favors the Democrats (it gives them a 58 percent chance to retain Senate control), but Nate Silver says he personally considers it a toss-up.

SEND OUT THE CLOWNS: The CDC’s Inadequate “Reform Plan.” Instead of acknowledging the agency’s disastrous mistakes during the pandemic,  the CDC’s director is proposing to repeat them in the next pandemic — and as an added bonus, she wants to create an “equity office.” Tevi Troy translates the bureaucratese of her “reform” and shows what actually ought to be done.

MARK JUDGE: Radiohead Within the Forest Dark.

The clearest connection between Radiohead and Dante was Rachel Owen. Owen, who died from cancer in 2016, was an artist and medieval scholar who wrote her doctoral dissertation on Dante. Owen was also Thom Yorke’s partner for twenty-three years. The two met as art students at Exeter University and had two children together before separating in 2015. In his book Radiohead: Life in a Glasshouse, British journalist John Aizlewood notes that the composition of “In Limbo” off the band’s 2000 masterpiece Kid A was partly inspired by “the Dante’s Inferno audiotape Rachel Owen played in the car as she studied for her PhD at… University of London.” When Kid A was launched, fans went to the Radiohead website to find this quotation:

now must thou cast off all sloth…. for sitting on down or under blankets none comes to fame, and without it he that consumes his life leaves no trace of himself on earth, as smoke in air or foam on the water.
rise, therefore,
conquer thy distress with the soul, which conquers in every battle
if it does not sink with its body’s weight. there is a longer stair which must be climbed. 

This is a quote from the Inferno (XXIV, 46-55). While the press and people like Colbert have emphasized Radiohead’s activism around issues like climate change and the band’s explorations of living in the postmodern age of technology, celebrity, and mass culture, the band itself has offered a wider vision of their art. In 2003 they released Hail to the Thief, an album whose title seems an indictment of the recent election of George W. Bush. Of course, Thom Yorke was not a fan of President Bush, but in an interview he argued that the album had a deeper reach:

If the motivation for naming our album had been based solely on the U.S. election, I’d find that to be pretty shallow. To me, it’s about forces that aren’t necessarily human, forces that are creating this climate of fear. While making this record, I became obsessed with how certain people are able to inflict incredible pain on others while believing they’re doing the right thing. They’re taking people’s souls from them before they’re even dead. My girlfriend—she’s a Dante expert—told me that was Dante’s theory about traitors and authority. I was just overcome with all this fear and darkness. And that fear is the ‘thief.’

The above quote has striking relevance when considered in light of the recent grisly turn the sexual revolution has taken. One can be liberal or even a conservative accepting of gay marriage and minding one’s own business and still see something demonic in the surgical mutilation of teenagers undergoing questionable sex reassignment surgery –—as well as the “drag shows” that are put on for children. Reread Yorke’s words: “I became obsessed with how certain people are able to inflict incredible pain on others while believing they’re doing the right thing. They’re taking people’s souls from them before they’re even dead.”

Read the whole thing.

EVERYTHING IS GOING SWIMMINGLY: A Perfect Storm Of Transportation Disaster? “Thanks to the SuperGenius policies of the Biden Administration (plus a touch of bad weather), all three of the primary methods by which goods are transported around the nation are under near-term threat.”

ANSWERING THE IMPORTANT QUESTIONS: What Were the Top  20 One-Hit Wonders of the 1990s? (Video).

MAKE THEM PAY: Lawsuit by SJSU Professor Who Opposes “Repatriation of Native American Remains” Can Go Forward.

In this case, Elizabeth Weiss, a tenured professor of physical anthropology at San Jose State University, alleges that the University has retaliated against her for her speech expressing opposition to repatriation of Native American remains….

Weiss is a tenured professor of physical anthropology at San Jose State University … where she specializes in osteology, the study of human skeletal remains. Weiss is a critic of repatriation, which is a process through which Native American remains and cultural items are returned to tribes.

In 2020, she published a book titled “Repatriation and Erasing the Past,” which criticizes federal and state laws that require universities and museums to return Native American remains to tribes. She argues in the book that these laws “undermine objective scientific inquiry and violate the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution by favoring religion over science.” The book generated significant criticism, with about a thousand professors and graduate students signing an open letter calling the book “anti-indigenous” and “racist.”

And all of those people proudly call themselves “pro-science” as distinguised from the imaginary bible-thumpers in their heads.

BLUE STATE BLUES: California’s Economy Looks Headed for Disaster as Companies Flee in Droves.

California officials are sounding the alarm after recent statistics showing that less corporate and start-up activity in the state will lead to a decline in tax revenue, according to a report by Bloomberg News.

This year, just nine companies based in California have held initial public offerings, or IPOs, which is when a company first lists shares for sale on the stock market—considered a milestone in its growth after strong activity and high valuation, Bloomberg’s report revealed.

In 2021, California—whose start-up ecosystem in Silicon Valley is considered the most prodigious in the world—saw 81 companies conduct IPOs, making 2022 the year of a ninefold decrease.

Moreover, the value of these IPOs was far lower than in the past, raising $177 million, or 2% of the total amount raised by U.S. companies that went public in 2022. By contrast, in 2021, California’s share of the revenue generated by IPOs was 39%, by far the largest of any state.

Over the past few years, many companies have departed Democrat-run California for other states that are run by Republicans.

“Bad luck.”