Equal But Opposite

     I’ve written here of the use of gradualism to habituate a people to ever more rigid government control over their lives. It’s not a new idea. It has several names, according to the era in which it’s addressed. James Madison called it “consolidation.” Twentieth Century strategic thinkers called it “salami tactics.” Today, gradualism or habituation are the preferred terms. But the process is the same regardless of its cognomen.

     However, a kind of Newton’s Third Law operates in the shadows behind the gradualist enterprise. That is, as the State tightens its grip, an equal but opposite tendency to defy “the authorities” sets in among private persons. They do as they please, singly or in groups, while taking care to keep their actions hidden from anyone who would take exception. Black markets swell; men make quiet agreements with one another; private action and cooperation to mutual benefit continue ever more silently.

     Note that, in George Orwell’s dystopian masterpiece 1984, he had to introduce inescapable State surveillance through the telescreen to thwart that natural reassertion of freedom. Technology was incapable of such a device when Orwell wrote that book. There are indications that things are different today. However, it’s the impulse to rebel and the processes it engenders that are on my mind this morning.

     I believe that impulse to be unquenchable. But if so, just how powerful is it? Is it capable not merely of resisting the State but of overthrowing it?

     The evidence from history tends to be negative. In the tyrannies of which we have good records, private individuals have almost always contented themselves with operating in the shadows, if by doing so they can achieve a tolerable existence. While there have always been firebrands striving to incite open rebellion, their successes have been few.

     Still, the dynamic of resistance – what Glenn Reynolds has called Irish democracy — will operate. Overweening State power is antithetical to prosperity. As people want to live well, they will follow a course that allows it, if they believe that they can survive it. The outright popular rejection and destruction of the State, whatever may follow, is rare.

     Yet States do fall! Now and then they do so spectacularly, with a thundering crash. Is it thinkable that such an event could be entirely disconnected from the quiet, private rebellions that people embrace to make their lives tolerable? Can it be causally traced, or are its lineaments always obscure to the post hoc analyst?

     These are just early-morning thoughts, Gentle Reader. I’m struggling to integrate them with Robert Higgs’s thesis of crises as the keys to the expansion of State power, the pattern of outside interventions in revolutionary movements, and the Public Choice effect. But fear not! It’s not something you should allow to trouble you. You have us for that. The mad scribblers of Liberty’s Torch do this sort of thing so you won’t need to.

Pager-Gate Rumors Get More Entertaining

To whom does Iran apply for a refund?

Apres Biden/Harris, le Crash!

You know it. I know it.

All sentient beings know it.

Assuming that Trump takes office, expect MASSIVE economic downturns!

  • In the stock market
  • In banks/investment banks
  • In pension funds
  • In the value of housing
  • In employment (The only positive side is that, should jobs not be available, many immigrants will self-deport. It happened in Charlotte, in 2008. About 1/3 of my students in a Charlotte school left in a space of several months)

The ONLY thing that they are waiting for is for the election.

If Trump wins, they have no reason to hold back on the crash.

If Kamala wins, they may try to slow the crash down, but will not be able to stop it.

Take any investment money out NOW. Pay off debts, pay down your mortgage, put some under your mattress/in your preps.

Take cash out of accounts, other than that which is needed to pay bills over the next few months. I would bet on us coming back out of the smashup, but it would be more pleasant if we keep as much of what we earned intact.

Money in long-term savings/annuities should be RELATIVELY safe, for now. Most of those cannot be taken out without serious penalties, other than RMD, so I’d leave them. They MIGHT be taken over by the government, however, so, if you can borrow against them and put the money in a safe place/in hard coins, I’d consider doing it. Take that RMD early, though.

If Trump is in, this may be a hard slog to solvency, but I’d bet on him. It could be a Golden Opportunity to reduce the size of government, permanently. Massive RIFs, coupled with elimination of a LOT of jobs, would go a long way towards making a recovery, and putting the country on solid footing for the future.

Whatever you do, don’t give up.

The Explanatory Power Of Envy

     First, a few words from an obscure Fifties novel:

     “I’d like to see him beaten,” he said. “I’d like to hear him scream with pain, just once.”
     “You won’t, Jimmy.”
     “Why does he think he’s better than the rest of us—he and that sister of mine?”
     She chuckled.
     He rose as if she had slapped him. He went to the bar and poured himself another drink, not offering to refill her glass.
     She was speaking into space, staring past him. “He did notice my existence—even though I can’t lay railroad tracks for him and erect bridges to the glory of his Metal. I can’t build his mills—but I can destroy them. I can’t produce his Metal—but I can take it away from him. I can’t bring men down to their knees in admiration—but I can bring them down to their knees.”
     “Shut up!” he screamed in terror, as if she were coming too close to that fogbound alley which had to remain unseen.
     She glanced up at his face. “You’re such a coward, Jim.”

     Good people largely refuse to believe it. They can’t bridge the divide between their benevolence and the will-to-destroy of those whom envy has conquered. And so they act as if it’s unreal… a toddler’s tantrum: “It’s not fair!” But it’s real, and more powerful than the good people can imagine.

     Remember that on his first day in office, Joe Biden signed a number of executive orders reversing the executive orders issued by Donald Trump. Perhaps he, his brain already addled, didn’t appreciate the wave of destruction he was unleashing. His handlers did, most assuredly.

     The motive was not “the greater good.” The motive was not “lifting up the downtrodden.” The motive was not “advancing equality / equity.” The motive was the destruction of what the Left could never build, for that is the Prime Directive of envy.

     Most people who go into politics do so out of a desire for power and status. Note that in recent years, most of those have not been what a rational man would call “accomplished.” Try enumerating the objective “accomplishments” of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Proceed thence to the objective “accomplishments” of just about anyone on the political Left. How do they stack up against the accomplishments of Donald Trump?

     The Left is consumed by envy. Envy is hatred by another name. And hatred has one agenda: destruction.

     Have a nice day.

The Terror Is Evident

     In the wake of the second assassination attempt on Donald Trump, noted philanthropist and stateswoman Hillary Rodham Clinton deposeth and sayeth:

     “The press is still not able to cover Trump the way that they should,” Clinton told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow. “They careen from one outrage to the next … I don’t understand why it’s so difficult for the press to have a consistent narrative about how dangerous Trump is. You know, the late great journalist Harry Evans, one time said that journalists should, you know, really try to achieve objectivity, and by that, he said, I mean they should cover the object.”
     “Well, the object in this case is Donald Trump. His demagoguery, his danger to our country and the world. And stick with it.”
     […]
     “We can’t go back and give this very dangerous man another chance to do harm to our country and the world,” she added.

     Do you smell desperation? Ace thinks it’s about the Epstein files. Trump, once returned to the Oval Office, might just release them. Whose names will be tarred as willing serial child molesters? Perhaps a Clinton or two?

     Well, we must wait and see. In any case it’s plain that there will be no cessation of the inflammatory rhetoric from the Democrats. They can’t risk another Trump presidency.

     In response to this earlier piece, commenter Butch wrote:

     My greatest fear is that the next try will be attempted by someone with knowledge and skill. So far its been amateur hour. At some point I fear they will send in a professional.

     That’s a legitimate fear, but remember: to maintain deniability, the assassin must look like an amateur. He cannot have a background in black or paramilitary operations, or any ties to any portion of the government. Such persons are few and don’t come cheap. Moreover, in the main they value their own lives quite a lot and would hesitate to risk the likely consequences of an assassination attempt. That improves the odds – in Trump’s favor.

A Good Start

     Vivek Ramaswamy appears to have his head on straight:

     I definitely like this guy. But how about denying Congress the power to legislate on anything not mentioned explicitly in Article I, Section 8 and not forbidden by the rest of the Constitution? The regulatory agencies didn’t grow like cancers all by themselves. Unless the federal government is restricted to its enumerated powers, they’ll swell again – and faster than anyone can imagine.

Pager-Gate About To Erupt

Headline: Thousands Injured In Mysterious Pager Explosions

The opportunity to bash the Big and Little Satan is too good to pass up.

Could it be due to the Iranian geniuses needing to provide new fodder for its globalist press allies? That question will never be brokered by the other geniuses who blame Trump for the attacks on his own life.

Will We Miss It?

     “Change is hard, and difficulty makes people impatient.” — Arthur Herzog

     “It’s dangerous to challenge a system unless you’re completely at peace with the thought that you’re not going to miss it when it collapses.” — Jules Feiffer

     There are days that I wonder.

     “The system” – i.e., the current, reigning power structure, controlled by the current, half-vicious, half-inept political-bureaucratic Establishment, with its media clerisy and brain-scrubbing stations in our “public institutions” – has been in place for some decades. Arguably, it could be traced back to the New Deal, which is about when the original American ethic started to crumble to a degree that was plainly perceptible by ordinary citizens.

     All Establishments have a critical feature: they want to remain Established. That is, they seek political stability. As George Orwell put it, “The aim of the High is to remain where they are.” But to remain Established, the Establishment must create conditions conducive to stability among those it rules. It must seek economic and social stability as well. Otherwise, unsatisfied desires and ambitions among the ruled will give rise to currents of dissent and demands for change that might topple the Establishment’s towers.

     It was with the examination of that premise that I first began to understand the Twentieth Century.

***

     Garet Garrett, the preeminent chronicler of the New Deal and the erection of the post-World War II national / international order, gave us a summary of what the Establishment born in the Thirties had to achieve to cement itself into power:

     The first, naturally, would be to capture the seat of government.
     The second would be to seize economic power.
     The third would be to mobilize by propaganda the forces of hatred.
     The fourth would be to reconcile and then attach to the revolution the two great classes whose adherence is indispensable but whose interests are economically antagonistic, namely, the industrial wage earners and the farmers, called in Europe workers and peasants.
     The fifth would be what to do with business—whether to liquidate or shackle it.
     The sixth, in Burckhardt’s devastating phrase, would be “the domestication of individuality”—by any means that would make the individual more dependent upon government.
     The seventh would be the systematic reduction of all forms of rival authority.
     The eighth would be to sustain popular faith in an unlimited public debt, for if that faith should break the government would be unable to borrow, if it could not borrow it could not spend, and the revolution must be able to borrow and spend the wealth of the rich or else it will be bankrupt.
     The ninth would be to make the government itself the great capitalist and enterpriser, so that the ultimate power in initiative would pass from the hands of private enterprise to the all-powerful state.

     (Gentle Reader, if you’re unfamiliar with Garrett’s book, I solemnly assure you that no other treatise on the New Deal has ever penetrated as deeply to its core… or to what it was truly intended to achieve. Make time to read it, I beseech you.)

     While I’m sure many will cringe at what I’m about to say, I must say it: The political brilliance of the men who imposed the New Deal on the American nation has never been exceeded. I say it not because I approve of their scheme or how they implemented it – I most certainly don’t — but because, as Garrett says in his book, they knew exactly what they had to do and they made not one mistake. And in implementing their program, they set in place the foundation of a unique political-economic-social stability that won the allegiance of millions. This despite its departure from the nation’s founding principles and its incursions on individuals’ freedom.

     Change is hard, as Arthur Herzog says. People dislike change, especially if it requires strenuous adjustments. They love stability, if it includes a measure of comfort and security. And for about half a century (minus a few years for the Second World War) the New Deal’s program Established that very thing.

     This is not the place for a detailed examination of the mechanisms involved. Let it suffice to say that they embraced all the most prominent features of the Republic – the things that we of today call “institutions,” whether protectively or derisively – and bent them to the will of the Establishment. Think about the growth of the “defense industry,” the “educational system,” the “charitable foundations,” the media conglomerates, and the Fortune 3000 corporations, and you’ll have the essentials in hand. All these things were yoked to the Establishment’s harness to serve the desired political, economic, and social stability.

***

     It’s time to return to the question posed in the title of this piece.

     The stability of the post-World War II years has largely eroded. Certainly fewer Americans feel secure in their jobs, or in their ability to meet their needs and cope with their surroundings, than previously. Yet millions remain strongly attached to the “institutions” that, to a great extent, are the principal achievements of the post-War period. In some ways it seems impossible, despite the many indications of widespread institutional failure, that we might ever be without them… or do without them.

     Stability is like that. It’s addicting. The thought of losing that stability, of having to cope with economic or social instability, is enough to keep us awake at night. Only the man supremely confident in his powers calmly confronts chaos. I speak with some authority in this, having been intimately involved in several of the most prominent “institutions” throughout my adult life.

     Yet one and all, they’re crumbling. Their failures have become impossible to conceal. Many would say – I among them – that they deserve to crumble. With their rubble out of the way, we could make a fresh start. But the matter is not nearly that simple.

     Sweeping political, economic, and social change is massively painful. Millions of Americans are already suffering from the decay of our major institutions. They’re scrambling to keep their jobs and meet their bills. They’re straining to cope with the social changes among us as well. Millions of eyes look suspiciously on anyone who declaims against the institutions or proclaims that the wrong turnings of the century past must be corrected at once. The cry is Haven’t we already got enough to deal with?

     So just for a moment, we in the Right should ponder how we’ll feel if and when we manage to attain our political goals. There will be chaos during the transition. There will be carnage. No matter how fervently we maintain our convictions, no decent man can look upon widespread fear and suffering – even justly earned suffering – and fliply say “You can’t make an omelet without breaking a few eggs.”

     Remember with whose name that statement is most closely associated.

A Respected Voice Is Raised

     Up to now, it’s all been us “deplorables” saying it. We who are easily swayed and attracted to “conspiracy theories.” But who will say that of Mark Steyn?

     Ryan Wesley Routh got to within three-to-five hundred yards of Trump. From the corrupt G-men of the FBI:

     The FBI has responded to West Palm Beach Florida and is investigating what appears to be an attempted assassination of former President Trump.

     The alleged perp is said to have been “known” to the FBI, and, even more bizarrely, was favourably profiled in The New York Times last year for his efforts to organise a grand convergence of the Pentagon’s wars without end by recruiting Afghans to fight in Ukraine. Curious.
     […]
     My own line on failed assassinations is that of the IRA taunting Mrs Thatcher after the Brighton bombing: You have to be lucky every time; we only have to be lucky once.
     In the last two months, Trump has been lucky twice. There are another two months to go: can he be lucky thrice? Four times?
     […]
     The Secret Service failures in Florida are as crude and obvious as they were in Pennsylvania which means that, in the words of my former GB News colleague Neil Oliver, this is happening because they want it to happen. They want Trump to die, and they are willing to create the necessary conditions.

     At this time, Donald Trump is the only obstacle to the Leftist / globalist alliance. They will move heaven and earth if they must to get him out of the way – and so great is his popularity and his self-evident determination to soldier on that nothing will serve but his death.

     There will be further attempts on Trump’s life. There may be attempts on Melania or other members of the Trump family, as an intimidation ploy. Nor will Trump’s return to the White House put an end to them.

     “Graph it out, man!” – Tucker Carlson

     Stay tuned.

What Desperation Looks Like Part 2

     Courtesy of Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, we have the following collection of Democrat incitements to violence aimed at – who else? – Donald Trump:

  • Kamala Harris — repeatedly: “Trump is a threat to our democracy and fundamental freedoms.”
  • Kamala Harris: “It’s on us to recognize the threat [Trump] poses.”
  • Kamala Harris: “Does one of us have to come out alive? Ha ha ha ha!”
  • Joe Biden: “It’s time to put Trump in a bullseye.”
  • Joe Biden: “I mean this from the bottom of my heart: Trump is a threat to this nation.”
  • Joe Biden: “There is one existential threat: it’s Donald Trump.”
  • Joe Biden: “Trump is a genuine threat to this nation … He’s literally a threat to everything America stands for.”
  • Joe Biden: “Trump and MAGA Republicans are a threat to the very soul of this country.”
  • Joe Biden: “Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic … and that is a threat to this country.”
  • Tim Walz: “Are [Republicans] a threat to democracy? Yes. … Are they going to put peoples’ lives in danger? Yes.”
  • Gwen Walz: “Buh-bye, Donald Trump.”
  • Rep. Nancy Pelosi: “[Trump] is a threat to our democracy of the kind that we have not seen.”
  • Rep. Jasmine Crockett: “MAGA in general — they are threats to us domestically.”
  • Rep. Dan Goldman: “He is destructive to our democracy and … he has to be eliminated.”
  • Disgraced Harris staffer TJ Ducklo: “Trump is an existential, urgent threat to our democracy.”
  • Top Harris surrogate Liz Cheney: “Trump presents a fundamental threat to the republic and we are seeing it on a daily basis.”
  • Rep. Steve Cohen: “Trump is an enemy of the United States.”
  • Rep. Maxine Waters: “Are [Trump supporters] preparing a civil war against us?”
  • Rep. Maxine Waters: “I want to know about all of those right-wing organizations that [Trump] is connected with who are training up in the hills somewhere.”
  • Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz: Trump is an “existential threat to our democracy.”
  • Rep. Adam Schiff: Trump is the “gravest threat to our democracy.”
  • Rep. Gregory Meeks: “Trump cannot be president again. He’s an existential threat to democracy.”
  • Rep. Dan Goldman: “Trump remains the greatest threat to our democracy.”
  • Rep. Jake Auchincloss: “What unifies us as a party is knowing that Donald Trump is an existential threat to Democracy.”
  • Rep. Abigail Spanberger: “Trump is a threat to our democracy … the threats to our democratic republic are real.”
  • Rep. Annie Kuster: “Trump and his extreme right-wing followers pose an existential threat to our democracy.”
  • Rep. Becca Balint: “We cannot underestimate the threat [Trump] poses to American democracy.”
  • Rep. Jason Crow: “Trump is an extreme danger to our democracy.”
  • Rep. Raul Grijalva: “Trump is an existential threat to American democracy.”
  • Sen. Michael Bennet: Trump is “a threat to our democracy.”
  • Rep. Stacey Plaskett: Trump “needs to be shot.”
  • Rep. Steven Horsford: “Trump Republicans are a dangerous threat to our state.”
  • Rep. Gabe Vasquez: “Remove the national threat from office.”
  • Rep. Mike Levin: “Donald Trump is a threat to our nation, our freedom, and our democracy.”
  • Rep. Eric Sorensen: “He is the greatest threat to law and order we have in our country.”
  • Rep. Greg Landsman: “The threat is not over.”
  • Rep. Pat Ryan: “Trump is an existential threat to American democracy.”
  • Rick Wilson, The Lincoln Project: “They’re still going to have to go out and put a bullet in Donald Trump.”
  • Former Harris-Biden staffer Kate Bedingfield: Democrats should “turn their fire on Donald Trump.”

     And these come from after the second assassination attempt:

  • Rep. Hakeem Jeffries: “We must stop [Trump].”
  • Rachel Vindman, wife of disgraced impeachment hoax ‘witness’: “No ears were harmed. Carry on with your Sunday afternoon.”
  • Rep. Mikie Sherrill: “This really seems to be the confluence of two very bad things going on in the Republican Party … the attempts to divide, to enrage the population.”
  • State Rep. Steven Woodrow (D-CO): “The last thing America needed was sympathy for the devil but here we are.”
  • Lester Holt, NBC Nightly News: “Today’s apparent assassination attempt comes amid increasingly fierce rhetoric on the campaign trail. Mr. Trump, his running mate JD Vance, continue to make baseless claims…”
  • Alex Witt, MSNBC: “Do you expect there to be calls from within the Trump campaign to [tone it down]?”
  • Phil Bump, The Washington Post: “Another chance for Trump to frame Democrats as dangerous has emerged.”
  • Bill Kristol, The Bulwark: “Vance … incite[s] potential violence with lies.”
  • Ron Filipkowski, liberal commentator: “Was the golf course guy with the gun a migrant?”
  • David Frum, The Atlantic: “Trump and his running mate have spent the past week successfully inciting violence … today they want to present themselves as near-victims of violence.”
  • Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine: “Trump is a threat to democracy, and saying so is not incitement.”
  • The Cincinnati Enquirer: “The former president, Donald Trump, brings a lot of this stuff on himself.”

     I smell serious desperation… and the likelihood of at least one more attempt on Trump’s life before the election.

Is There A Way?

     Our favorite Graybeard has written a concise, well-stated piece on interstellar travel, and why it’s currently out of the question. Barring a huge surprise in physics, that adverb “currently” might better be “permanently,” for a simple reason Graybeard gives:

     Voyagers 1 and 2 are the farthest man made objects from us, and have been traveling for 47 years. As I’ve said before:

     Voyager 1 is currently 22 hours, 37 minutes and change away at light speed. I’ll call it 22-1/2 light hours away. The nearest stars are just over four light years away. Assuming it’s even going in the right direction, it’ll take Voyager 1 almost 77,000 years to get to the Alpha/Proxima Centauri star system.

     It’s safe to say that there’s no way we could mount a mission to the nearest star with any technology we know of. What moving machines do you know of that could work for 77,000 years?

     Don’t ask me to design one. But there’s another obstacle that looks just as compelling as the problem of the lightspeed barrier: Newton’s Third Law, a.k.a. the Conservation of Momentum. For a body of non-zero mass to acquire a velocity in one direction, it must eject mass at an appropriate speed in the opposite direction.

     Not only do we not have the time to get to the nearest star; we don’t have the mass.

     I’ve just done forty years of offhand, back-of-the-envelope calculations – Yes, really! Finished ‘em just this minute. Remarkable, isn’t it? – and I’ve reached the conclusion that even were we capable of using the whole mass of the Sun to accelerate a “generation ship” (Cf. Orphans of the Sky), not only wouldn’t we get anywhere fast enough to be worthwhile; we’d also piss off the galactic neighborhood by flinging all that high-speed mass at them. Worse, we wouldn’t have any mass with which to slow down when we neared our destination.

     Science-fiction writers have either ignored this limitation completely or have postulated loopholes in physics: “inertialess” ships / drives; “wormholes” and alternate spaces “above” or “beneath” our universe; or methods for altering the laws of physics around the ship (my favorite.) But these are mere speculations. None of them are possible as we understand the laws of physics today.

     Will our understanding change again in the foreseeable future? I can’t say either way. Such changes have occurred in the recent past: e.g., the discovery that certain quantum-mechanical phenomena can only be explained by postulating temporary violations of the Law of Conservation of Mass-Energy. All the same, I’m not going to put a deposit down on any extrasolar real estate just yet.

What Desperation Looks Like

     They fear they can’t beat him – even with “the most massive vote-fraud organization in history:”

     ‘Nuff said.

Why Is This Better?

     I missed this:

     WASHINGTON — Working to salvage an aid package to Ukraine, Republican senators pitched an idea to former President Donald Trump that they thought he’d like: Instead of a grant, the U.S. would give the country a loan that would be backed in some fashion by Ukrainian rare earth minerals worth trillions of dollars.
     […]
     Still, Trump liked the concept, GOP lawmakers who spoke to him said, and if he wins the election, some envision a new model taking hold in which the U.S. structures foreign aid not as grants, but instead as loans with countries putting up natural resources or other valuable assets as collateral.

     Despite my total disdain for politics and government, I support President Trump. However, this idea is no better than the outright gifts of money we’ve been showering on other nations since the end of World War II:

  • Government funds must be used for the purposes set out in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution.
  • The U.S. is too heavily in debt to be financing anything, much less the governments of other nations.
  • Repayment cannot be enforced, except by war – financially always a losing proposition.

     The “foreign aid” scam has gone on long enough. It’s created billionaire dictators and immense welfare states. It’s turned the U.S. into the world’s piggy bank. And it’s helped to destroy the soundness of the dollar. And as if more were needed, most of the nations we’ve “aided” resent us, if they don’t hate us outright.

     Let Isabel Paterson have the last word:

     Loans made by one government to another do not answer to any of the proper conditions of credit. The money lent belongs to the people of the lending nation, not to the officials who grant the loan; and it becomes a charge upon the people of the borrowing nation, not upon the officials who negotiate the loan and spend the money. There is no collateral, and no means of collection by civil action. If the debt is not paid, war or the threat of war is the only recourse. Meantime private production is wrecked; the economy of the lending nation has to meet the capital loss; while the economy of the borrowing nation is loaded with the dead weight of government projects (buildings, armies, etc.) for which the money is spent. It is an infallible formula for disaster.

     [Isabel Paterson, The God of the Machine]

     Give me a counter-argument, if you think you have one.

A Future To Be Avoided, Or a Present To Be Regretted?

     I’ve been reading a writer new to me: Henry Brown. And I’m impressed. He has a felicity of style buried within what looks at first like the flattest kind of narrative writing. And every so often, he looses an observation – within his fictional milieu, to be sure – that resonates with me. Here’s one from his unique time-travel novel Escaping Fate:

     Dad thanked [Officer Frey,] they shook hands again, and we drove off our separate ways. Officer Frey no doubt went off to meet some fellow cops and tell them a story over coffee and doughnuts that would eventually become an “urban legend.” We drove off to find Bonny Lass Road, of course.
     “Cops sure are different now, too,” I observed out loud.
     Dad nodded. “Once upon a time, decent men became cops. They wanted justice and to actually help people. Obviously, something changed. Maybe it was all the jingoistic cop movies and cop shows—I dunno. But it became just a way for would-be Hitler Youth to get their sick jollies pushing people around and hiding behind a badge.”

     I know a fair number of people who’ve had bad experiences with the police. I also know a few who speak consistently well of them. Where do the police of today stand, between “Dad’s” two poles? Are they nearer to the “decent men who want justice and to help people” model, or are they nearer to the “Hitler Youth” model as “Dad” put it above? In which direction would you put the trend? And how have your personal experiences factored into your evaluation?

My First Thought vs Taking a Breath

When I saw this, I immediately thought of putting it out on Facebook.

But, you know how that goes:

  • I’d be reported for “Fake News”
  • Immediately, the Die-Hard, Rabid Liberals/Progressives* would get in my face, telling me I HAD to show them my sources
  • It would all deteriorate into a He Said/She Said hot mess
  • And, most importantly, it would fail to gain traction in those who most needed to have their eyes opened

Too many people can not, will not allow any deviation from their set-in-stone, Trump is Horrible and NOTHING can be said that is good about him, reflexively DNC-programmed beliefs.

They have been programmed into the Cult of Anti-Trump, which is a descendant of the Cult of Sarah-Palin-is-BOTH-Stupid-AND-Evil, and which led from the George-W-Bush-is-BOTH-HItler-AND-Stupid congregation.

Whereas they MAY be able to analyze data or events in other parts of their lives, when it comes to politics/culture/race/Jews, they have 50 foot walls between the reality and their current beliefs.

We’ve tried – God knows, most of us have family and friends who have fallen victim to this cult. Short of de-programming, there may be little hope, other than a Damascus Moment for the True Believers.

It’s Group-Think, and those afflicted with it are incapable of using reason in topics relating to its tenets. The powerful pull of restricting their associations to that sub-group who agree with them is, for them, irresistible. They carefully avoid being in contact with the non-believers, recoiling like a Baptist offered a beer.

At best, they pity those not in the Cult. At worst, they rage against them, FURIOUS that they would resist The Truth.

It’s a hard thing to accept that, if any affiliation is to continue, large parts of conversation will have to be avoided. I think it’s past time to reinstate the phrase, “No Politics or Religion” when in mixed groups.

Fortunately, there is the opportunity to easily get in touch with others who are also non-Cultists. The danger there is that it’s too easy to fall into the Counter-Cults on the Right. For me, the Sweet Spot is finding ways to limit my news/opinion consumption.


I’ve picked up a new app for my phone and iPad – Productivity Wizard, which, I hope, will replace my planner of choice, the Franklin.

I’ve used the Franklin for over 30 years; it’s kept me semi-organized with regular use (My life is chaotic, even with the Franklin. My husband is ADD/ADHD, and it’s nearly a full-time job to keep the whirlwind at bay when he is in town.)

But, with age has also come joint pain. Use of assists, such as cane or walker, make it difficult to devote that much weight to a planner. I’ve looked at smaller versions, but have been unable to envision reducing the complexity of my various appointments, goals, and activities to fit the reduced size.

So far, the app looks like a winner. It is flexible enough to encompass my needs, and includes the features I want most. Google Productivity Wizard, and check it out yourself (I receive no compensation for this).


My husband is feeling better. His breathing is nearly clear, minimal coughing, and I have hope that he will be 100% again.

I’m still not back; voice loss is likely to be another week or two, at best. My ankle is what concerns me most; I fear it might be a stress fracture, which I’ve had in the past. I had my husband call in a request for an appointment with my ortho person, so we’ll see what develops.

Stay healthy, try not to obsess about politics, and enjoy what’s left of the summer.

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The Doomed Pursuit

     Enough of politics for the moment. There are a lot of things happening that way, but there are also a lot of people talking about them, so let’s leave off with that bundle of subjects and turn to something even more frustrating.

     The frequency with which I get “But why did you write that?” from a reader is truly staggering. (Yes, yes, I get “How much money can you make at that?” about as frequently, but I’ve been braced for that one from the start.) Considering how slender my sales are, and the relation of that paucity to the subjects I choose to address, it’s a reasonable question to ask.

     In part, the answer is that I believe those subjects to be important ones, and potentially beneficial to my reader. The prevalent anomie of our time cries out for a restoration of older standards and values. Included therein are the eternal verities that have been so roundly pooh-poohed by the glitterati who’ve dominated fiction for the century past.

     But that’s only half of the reason. The other is a search for something that no one has ever found… and that I know I won’t find either. It’s the Holy Grail of the fiction writer, and at least as elusive as the Grail pursued by Arthur and his knights: the objective correlative:

     objective correlative, literary theory first set forth by T.S. Eliot in the essay “Hamlet and His Problems” and published in The Sacred Wood (1920).
     According to the theory,

     The only way of expressing emotion in the form of art is by finding an “objective correlative”; in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a chain of events which shall be the formula of that particular emotion; such that when the external facts, which must terminate in sensory experience, are given, the emotion is immediately evoked.

     If you’ve ever encountered the term objective correlative before this, you’re probably around my age, if not older. It was once something high-school students were exposed to in tenth or eleventh grade, depending upon the school and its English teachers. Every fiction writer strains after it, whether he’s aware of it or not: “What words and actions will get my reader to experience the emotion I want him to?”

     And as the title of this piece suggests rather heavy-handedly, the quest is doomed from the first.

     Evoking particular emotions from a reader requires that that reader have a great deal in common with the writer. Obviously, the two must have a language in common, at least. Moreover, the reader must interpret the events of the story or poem, and the language in which they’re expressed, to have the meanings the writer gives them. Beyond that, they must have a fair commonality of cultural and historical background. And even with all of that, the writer aims his words at the reader in a very dim light.

     This difficulty goes a long way to explaining why younger people are often indifferent to tales that moved their parents and grandparents to tears. Our cultural matrices don’t match. We see the story of Romeo and Juliet against a historical backdrop of clan warfare and “forbidden” romance; they’re apt to look at it as a tempest in a teapot, if they’re familiar with that idiom. We read Wuthering Heights in awareness of the mores and standards of Emily Bronte’s milieu; they shrug and say “Why don’t they just have sex and get over themselves?”

     The elusiveness of the objective correlative is just as trying for contemporary tale-spinners writing for a contemporary reader. Human culture has experienced a kind of diaspora. Many people have claimed that “there is no ‘American culture.’” In point of fact, there are many American cultures – and no two of them have much in common. How does a writer like me, with my seven decades of experience, my classical, religiously informed education, and my life history evoke the emotions of a young man of twenty-five with whom I share virtually no formative experiences and very little cultural foundation?

     Yet I labor at it. Every writer does, unless he’s content to write for himself alone. If the writer is determined to tell tales that center on subjects to which his readers are numb, or to which they’ve never been exposed even peripherally, his challenge is monumental.

     But that’s the game. If we omit the dream of becoming the next Tom Clancy or Stephen King, the prize is mostly disappointment. Even so, if the stories and their messages about Mankind, how we should live, and the regrettable way we do live are important enough to us, we keep on.

     So I write about freedom and justice. I write about love and the prices it can exact. I write about the heroic choice. I write about Christianity and the greatest of all human institutions, the Catholic Church. For these things matter to me very much. I hope to make them matter just as much to whatever deluded fool might choose to expend a little of his valuta on one of my books. And I grope for the objective correlatives that will make the decisions, actions, and reactions of my characters resonate emotionally with that unknown soul, just as they do with me.

     I fail. I fail knowing that I’ll fail. But I have the pleasure of the effort, and the hope that someone will brush against the things that matter so much to me and will perhaps be moved. And every now and then I get a little fan mail. You can’t have everything.


     [With gratitude for the encouragement and friendship of Margaret Ball.]

Riding

I’m currently ensconced in a hotel in north-western Washington state, not quite the prog-nazi hellhole of Seattle but close to it. I’m doing my Tour of Honor ride, and I have to hit Blaine and then ride down I-5 to continue the trips.

Anyways, that’s why I’m here. The reason I’m posting is that because I’ve seen several Kamala Harris ads on TV while I wait for this particular rainshower to move on.

Folks, The Cackling Whore of Scat Fransicko should have this area in the bag. But they’re spending money targeting it. Why?

Because the polls lie even more than Harris does, and she’s not at popular as the media are trying to get you to believe.

They wouldn’t be spending money in Western Washington unless they absolutely had to do so. Which means that her base here isn’t solid. And this is the area that keeps re-electing prog-nazi tyrants like Jay Inslee, or Patty Murry.

Have hope, but buy more ammo.

Can You Believe It?

     No one knows any longer – for any value of “It.”

     “What do we really know of the time of our greatness? A few names of worlds and heroes, a ragtag of facts we’ve tried to patch into a history. The Shing law forbids killing, but they killed knowledge, they burned books, and what may be worse, they falsified what was left. They slipped in the Lie, as always…. There is no trust in them, because there is no truth in them…. It was the Lie that defeated all the races of the League and left us subject to the Shing. Remember that, Falk. Never believe the truth of anything the Enemy has said.”

     [Ursula Le Guin, City of Illusions]

     That was fiction, but it’s a damned good precis of what’s happening today. The Lie is ubiquitous. No one can be sure of anything he hasn’t personally witnessed – and even then, the arts of misdirection and deception have advanced so greatly these past few years that to doubt one’s own senses, if not confirmed by other sources, is becoming wise policy.

     And to think we used to joke about Baghdad Bob.

***

     I’ve ranted frequently about the loss of our formerly high-trust society, to little effect. People generally refuse to believe what they fear or disapprove. Make it go away! But it happens to be the case. Who among us reflexively trusts anything beyond the range of his senses, or anyone beyond his immediate acquaintance?

     Even among those who agree that the loss is real, there’s a lack of comprehension about the reason for it. As it happens, a high-trust society is metastable. A seemingly minor disturbance that’s not swiftly corrected can cause it to crumble.

     That’s somewhat obscure, so allow me an example. Imagine a society in which trust in others is ubiquitous or nearly so. Yes, there are liars and fabulists, but they’re known and treated as what they are: i.e., not to be believed. In effect, they occupy the society’s “skid row” of trust. They can’t get by on their fictions.

     But let’s add a few skillful liars who do manage to “get by” on their fictions. The historical archetype is the “snake-oil salesman.” He and his shills promote a quack panacea – available exclusively from him, of course – sell as much of it as they can, and blow town before the “cure’s” effects become widely known. Presently people are sick or dying from that “cure,” and the cause is obvious… but punishing the malefactor has become impossible. He’s succeeded in profiting from his lies and getting away unscathed.

     Success breeds emulation. His example will inspire others to follow his practices. More of his sort arise. The general willingness to trust a hitherto unknown individual who approaches with something to sell or trade has taken a blow.

     That much, most people will accept without objecting. What they find harder to grasp is the magnitude of the thing. For as long as any snake-oil salesmen profit by their practices, heightened wariness about the good will of strangers will persist. Moreover, for any selected individual – call him Smith – except for individuals Smith knows personally and closely, a particle of doubt will have intruded into Smith’s dealings with them. “Is he trying to put one over on me? After all…”

     The corrosion spreads with appalling rapidity, for those who are not trusted will themselves become disinclined to trust. It’s happened to us of the United States of America. As liars-for-profit have multiplied in accordance with the dynamic of emulation, we’ve become cynics who doubt anything and everything anyone tells us. Our old high-trust ethic is a fading memory.

     Metastable conditions are like that.

***

     If you’re wondering what’s got me chugging down this particular track, it’s the business about Haitian immigrants eating the cats and ducks in Springfield, Ohio. At one point, it was supposedly widely attested. Then “public officials” – dear God, is there any breed of vermin with more incentive to lie? – “debunked” the claims. Then pictures started to appear, supposedly verifying the claims. But now it seems those pictures aren’t what we were told they were… and one woman has come forward to claim that her Facebook post set off the whole miserable scandal.

     Can you believe it? Can you believe anything you haven’t personally witnessed while sober as a judge, not looking into the Sun, and not in proximity to David Copperfield?

     Please see also:

     …and try not to think about the upcoming elections.

Voiceless – Not Because of Politics

But, due to laryngitis. In my previous experiences, it can take a couple of WEEKS to come back.

I’m managing. I learned to use my iPad to have it speak my typed messages. I can use Alexa to alert my husband, who might be in another room. I can type a message in the app on my phone.

So, not helpless. But, without access to technology, very difficult.

The current discussions about the dangers of AI have been extensive. There are downsides, but also upsides. For the disabled, tech has made functioning independently possible; even if full independence is out of reach, it reduces dependency on people who may not be available, or – if family – overstressed.

I’m OK. This is a short-term problem, and a relatively minor one (if irritating).

As I’ve explored the Alexa app in depth, I’ve found that many, if not all, of my voice issues can be addressed. I know there are many who do not want to connect up to that extent. I respect that. It’s a choice.

But, for me, at this point, without it, I’d be near helpless, unable to get my husband’s attention in another room. OK, I could do as my sister did years ago, when she lost her voice temporarily due to radiation treatment, and use an old-fashioned bell. But that only works to the extent that he might hear it. Often, the TV is on, the fan is going, and he might be outside or in the basement. Using these devices frees me to act, and to live, without concern.

I’ve noticed that most nursing homes are not set up to help residents use what technology they can. They still rely on call buttons and remote controls that may be out of reach, or not able to be operated by the person for other reasons.

Setting up a clamp for a phone or iPad screen to be accessible to residents might ease loneliness, enable better self-sufficiency, and speed recovery, to the extent that it is possible. There will be money in it for someone who wants to set up a consulting service for assisted living centers and homes needing to set up equipment. Not necessarily a full-time business, but an important resource for those wanting a part-time income.

Brace For Impact

     Gold is flying: $2577.80 / Troy oz.
     Silver is as well: $30.58 / Troy oz.
     Platinum, palladium, and rhodium are all up sharply.
     Copper’s moving, too, albeit more gently.
     Would you like to know why? Just go here.

     The aggregate federal debt is now $35.3 trillion. That seriously exceeds the Gross Domestic Product: $27.36 trillion at the end of 2023. Just the annual interest on that debt now exceeds $1 trillion: more than the U.S.’s annual defense budget. And Washington keeps on borrowing and spending.

     The collapse of the dollar becomes ever more likely. The great majority of Americans are totally exposed to it. Even those of us who’ve worried about it and prepared for it for decades are somewhat vulnerable. It’s hard to get quit of the dollar, when so much of our “wealth” is just paper.

     Donald Trump has said his Administration will work to restore the dollar to its status as the world’s standard currency. I hope he’ll get the chance. Present trends continuing, he might not. As for you, Gentle Reader, buy gold and silver. Fill your pantry and your ammo stocks. If you expect to need it, get it sooner rather than later. And pray that we who study money and currency are totally wrong – that what we see coming never arrives.

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