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Sunday, October 31, 2021

Post #5414 M: McClanahan on Lincoln's Cooper Union Address; Tom Woods on the Education of a Libertarian; Ron Paul on Biden and China

Quote of the Day
here are two ways to get enough; 
one is to continue to accumulate more and more. 
The other is to desire less.
G.K. Chesterton  

McClanahan on Lincoln's Cooper Union Address

Tom Woods on the Education of a Libertarian

This is actually an alternative podcast interview with Woods with a lightning round discussion of libertarian scholars and celebrities. A copy of his sources is here. (I don't think he cites Bastiat there but you can find The Law online here.) I have to admit I haven't had the time to read all his sources. I would have added some others, like David Friedman, Hayek, and Walter Block among others, but that's more a reflection on the moderator's choices. Probably one of his better episodes from my perspective.

Ron Paul on Biden and China

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Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Tom Stiglich via Townhall

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

Paul McCartney, "Coming Up"

Post #5413 Social Media Digest

 Facebook


Twitter

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Saturday, October 30, 2021

Post #5412 M: Unconstitutional Tiny House Bans; Ron Paul on Biden's Mask Mandate

 Quote of the Day

The greatest remedy for anger is 
delay.
Seneca  

Unconstitutional Tiny House Bans

Ron Paul on Biden's Mask Mandate

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Political Cartoon

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

Lipps, Inc., "Funkytown"

Post #5411 J

Shutdown Diary

The latest stats from WaPo:

In the past week in the U.S. ...
New daily reported cases fell 3.8% 
New daily reported deaths fell 8.4% 
Covid-related hospitalizations fell 6.2% Read more
Among reported tests, the positivity rate was 5%.
The number of tests reported fell 21.1% 
In the last week, an average of 1.01 million doses per day were administered, a 31% increase  over the week before.

According to CDC:




The Delta wave continues to decline with cases down to nearly 72K a day rolling average.  Keep in mind this is still a six-fold increase from where we were in June and early July and is still only a modest decline over the past week (about 2%). And in fact we've seen significant increases in multiple states including in California and some mountain/SW/midwestern states. So obviously we haven't achieved herd immunity and the unvaccinated remain a big reason. Nearly all of the least vaccinated states are red ones, with a cluster of Northeastern states nearing or over the 70% fully vaccinated ones. I used to grab a separate breakout of new vaccinations off my second WaPo link, off a second chart; maybe they've reorganized things but I haven't seen it reported recently. A million doses sounds impressive until you realize it's about a third of a percent nationally over the week. I don't see a breakout, but it wouldn't surprise me if the spike is due to recent FDA/CDC liberalized distribution of booster shots. In a recent journal post I was puzzled by a breakout showing higher boosters among 50+ vs seniors. This was an anomaly because seniors are automatically eligible while other age groups are primarily the health complications and "essential worker" groups. So this post's chart is more like what I would have expected.

I'm getting more and more annoyed by the anti-vaxxer libertarian thread. (I also recently published a rant on my encounter with an anti-vaxxer troll on Twitter.) I refuse to republish most of this stuff in my daily blog, Just the title on a recent Ron Paul clip implied Pfizer vaccines for kids and others  was all a crony capitalistic corrupt scheme at the expense of the American taxpayer. Let's be clear: there is a global shortage of vaccine. The US government controls vaccine approval and has approved 2 other vaccines. I and/or my insurer would have gladly paid for a vaccine without government approval or single-payer control of distribution. I'm also tired of the incessant talking point by Woods and others that kids generally have low mortality/hospitalization risk and hence vaccines are unnecessary. Tom Woods is grossly incompetent in science. Viruses can and do infect children and can be propagated to others, including at risk kids. The flu is a top 10 killer of children, and there're data suggesting COVID-19 has killed more kids over the past year. As I write, the Pfizer vaccine for 5-11 yo has been approved by the FDA, meaning just CDC approval needed, which is expected next week.

Two younger siblings and their spouses have joined me in getting mRNA boosters. I don't know about the health circumstances of the 4 youngest.

Getting back to my rant on Woods, I'm rather tired of his tendency to cherry-pick scholars from "prestigious" colleges that agree with him (appeals to authority don't impress me much). Then there's these tiresome rants against mask policy (most recently on a Deist-Woods clip on my daily blog). Now I have my own criticisms, including the fact most facemasks do a poor job of protecting against bioaerosols, not to mention I'm not sure police can judge if they're worn correctly or within social distancing guidelines. But Wood focuses on these simplistic comparisons where the operational factor is a state facemask mandate. There are a number of assumptions here, involving a number of factors: population density, parity in infection rate, temperature/humidity, other preventive factors, etc. Just to give a simple example: Woods continues to hype Florida Gov. DeSantis (his alleged command of knowledge of relevant research) and his general unfavorable disposition to state COVID-19 policy. But let's point out that the state has a large senior population that's heavily vaccinated has a nearly 60% fully vaccinated base, slightly higher than average. Now you can argue that vaccination was a voluntary activity, but arguing laissez faire policies led to improved outcomes is disputable. In fact, some of Florida's statistics have been poor during part of the Delta wave.

I always forget to note an amusing Alaska visit promotion where the governor tongue-in-cheek notes you can even get a COVID-19 vaccination if you want to. Oh, yeah, thar's the ticket. It reminds me of my job-offer-by-extortion in Santa Clara where my boss specifically used vending machines with quarter cans of Coke. Of course, a spartan small apartment started at over $1300/month rent. I don't think I ever bought a Coke as long as I worked there.

Other Notes

Blog readership has clinched the best showing in 3 months with a day remaining; a lot of that was because of the first full week this month which had one of the best streaks in months. However, individual posts have been in a slump with only 1 post over the past week hitting double-digits. Usually a majority or plurality of posts reach double-digits. 

Accuweather, which originally announced it would end its free daily forecast service I've used for years this past spring, says it will end the service this month. I wasn't quite sure of the business model--monetize visits to its portal? It is promoting a pricey snow alerting system. Of course, I have weather alerts configured with Amazon Alexa and several weather sites bookmarked as well as cellphone apps readily available.

We're heading into the holiday season; Halloween candy has been out for weeks. My latest Lidl shopping ad front page is half full of Christmas merchandise. And we're already one week into Hallmark's Countdown to Christmas. I think I listed some of my favorites during their Christmas in July tradition. I've seen some favorites including:

  • The Most Wonderful Time of the Year
  • Holly and Ivy
  • Christmas with Holly.
The latter two deal with girls orphaned by the passing of their single moms. (The first also deals with a single mom.) But a 2012 film I hadn't seen in a while also touches on orphans: Love at the Thanksgiving Day Parade.

This film deals with Emily, aa single woman who's the parade manager, feeling threatened by Henry, a consultant hired by Chicago to evaluate the parade. Emily is quirky, trying to teach herself Spanish, she wears vintage and loves to eat at Jim's, a hole in the wall pizza parlor. (I remember when I was working at the EPA regional lab as a DBA contractor, there was this hole in the wall burger joint across the street which grilled onions for your burgers, hot tasty fries and a can of Coke for some cheap price; I loved it.)

Emily is in love with this commitment-phobe marine biologist Brian, who's an obvious self-absorbed jerk. Most Hallmark movies are very predictable. You immediately sense Emily is going to end up with her new nemesis Henry; the only thing that's not clear is how it's going to happen.

I don't want to give away the plot, but I think the most memorable part of the movie is when Emily finally breaks it off with Brian, whose world  had crumbled when Emily, expecting a proposal and being disappointed, broke up. Emily had accepted Brian's proposal primarily over Henry's objections. Brian is in utter shock. I'm paraphrasing, bur it's hilarious: "How could you pass on all this (pointing to himself)? Sailing around the world with ME, a marine biologist. ARE YOU CRAZY?" He is utterly clueless.

I don't pretend to speak for all men when it comes to women; I do think they can be more fixated and critical of their appearance. I once had a tall girlfriend (who had a model's portfolio but I don't know how successful she was). She complained she needed to lose 15 pounds. I had never said anything critical of her appearance; I'm like "From where?" I do think attraction is a part of the picture, but I think in my case a sense of humor, playfulness, kindness, positive attitude, self-confidence, and interesting conversation play roles. I remember during my graduate school days in Austin, I was walking down the Drag, and a shapely coed approached me from the other direction. Her t-shirt read "If you can read this, you're a pig." I really don't worry about what strangers think of me, but lady, I read the back of cereal boxes; I don't even recall her figure, just the shirt. It seemed paradoxical that a woman self-conscious of attention to her breasts would wear something calling attention to them, and my concept of a good time is not being with an ideologue who would have a meltdown if I held the door open for her out of politeness. I've had spectacularly bad luck in dating the wrong women. The ones I've really liked were already in relationships. 

Of course I have other interests, including renewing a professional certification and sports. As a Houston Astros fan (the only games I've attended in person.), we're in the World Series for the third time in 5 years, but down 1-2, going into tonight's away game. One of my alma maters, UT, has blown three consecutive fourth quarter leads against ranked opponents. My other alma mater, the 6-1 UH Cougars, has an early lead against SMU.

You can't get away from politics. We haven't gotten to the first pitch of the game yet, and I've seen at least 3 spots of Barry Obama pushing McAuliffe for VA governor in Tuesday's election.

Friday, October 29, 2021

Post #5410 M: Tom Woods and Jeff Deist

 Quote of the Day

The great man is he 
who does not lose his child's heart. - Mencius  

Tom Woods and Jeff Deist

Abbeville Institute This Week

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Political Cartoon

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

Blondie, "Call Me"

Post #5409 Rant of the Day: Anti-Vaxxer Rubbish

 One of the problems with dealing with trolls on the Internet and Twitter in general is you sometimes get unwanted attention. There's a reason I don't allow commenting on my blogs; I really don't to spend time reviewing unsolicited comments. Now Twitter does provide a means to filter prospective reply tweets. (Of course, your own followers might push back on your tweets.) And of course, you can always mute or block any Twitter user harassing you. Of course, I can't and wouldn't censor people disagreeing with me. I'm probably attracting maybe up to a dozen daily post readers, only one blog follower I'm aware of. Someone could spend his time and effort creating an anti-RAG blog, but what's the point? Even on Twitter I'm struggling to gain followers in the teens (number, not age), 

Twitter doesn't identify all reply tweets. I don't know how they decide which ones to notify me about--maybe impressions or status (one was a celebrity actress wondering if I was for real)? Now admittedly I sometimes poke a bear with a stick, so it's not entirely unexpected when s Twitter user snaps back at me. I don't keep a counter, but probably a plurality are pissed-off leftists, followed by Trumpkins, and a hodgepodge of others, even a slimy neo-Nazi I quickly blocked.

I'm not happy with anti-vaxxers, and I've fought the good fight on Twitter and in my regular journal post COVID-19 segments battling misinformation. The politics are seriously screwed up. I'm pro-liberty, but just to give an example from the recent news, FL Gov. DeSantis is looking to recruit police from around the nation alienated by vaccine mandates, even promising signing bonuses. What kind of message does that send to cops who have done the responsible thing in terms of contributing to herd immunity? Unvaccinated cops are basically transferring the cost and risk of any preventable COVID-related expenses to the taxpayer.

Now as a libertarian, I'm probably on the minority side of opinion, although I was highly critical of the federal government's botched COVID-19 test monopoly/rollout, harmful policies like Andrew Cuomo's decision to place infected patients into nursing home, Draconian economic shutdown policies creating a double standard for "essential workers", certain guidelines/heuristics translated into inflexible laws of dubious scientific merit (e.g., the mandated use of cloth masks). and Biden's attempt to force an employer vaccine mandates through an unconstitutional/illegal OSHA regulation.

Let's be clear: I'm not opposed to the concept of vaccine mandates, particularly in certain employment considerations, e.g., on a Navy ship where you live and work in close quarters or meat packing plant, health professionals/nursing home workers or other professions interfacing the general public and especially at risk populations . I would be more nuanced in my approach. For example, I would probably use health surcharges or tax penalties; in a country where over 76% of adults are at least partially vaccinated (presumably most working Americans), I question heavy-handed tactics. I seriously doubt most workplaces are super-spreader locations. You name it: trucking, landscaping, logging, fishing, farm work, remote IT work, professionals with their own offices or in well-spaced cubicles, etc. It just seems like employers are better able to judge workplace contexts.

But don't get me started on the anti-vaxxers. This is not the first time over the life of the blog. I was unhappy anti-vaxxers kept kids below herd-immunity allowing for multiple small-scale  measles breakouts, probably via foreign-traveling kids catching the disease and importing measles back into the states. Whereas I as a libertarian normally take a dim view of the State protecting us from making bad choices for our own health, it's a different case when people are conduits for the spread of contagions. Some people are sensitive to vaccines and a number are immuno-compromised, at high risk for severe health complications. The modest burden of an immunization seems a reasonable price to pay towards herd immunity. 

As someone who did reasonably well in high school and college science (I also did well in high school  district for the Texas interscholastic league science contests) I resent the fearmongering tactics and malicious rumors of anti-vaxxers or what progressives alternately call "misinformation". It's almost impossible to summarize most of them, but common ones include exaggerating the nature and extent of breakthrough infections and trying to portray mRNA vaccines as gene therapy. It seems a number of them try to turn the tables on arguments for vaccination. A good example is one Twitter user I caught trying to blame capacity hospitalizations on breakthroughs (people who get infected despite vaccination). It's almost like playing a game of Whac-a-Mole. No, a vaccine can't always fend off infection in a pandemic any more than an umbrella keeps you from getting wet during a hurricane. It almost always helps the body fend off a novel viral infection from more serious consequences. The duration of protection may differ on personal health condition and factors like age.

One point of contention is Biden's recent order for the military to vaccinate. (Disclosure: I was an Air Force brat, served honorably as a Navy ensign in my early 20's, and I've worked in the past on DoD contracts, so this ) Vaccination is a fact of life in the military with foreign assignments, and you would think after the March 2020 COVID outbreak on the Theodore Roosevelt, Biden's order for a vaccine mandate wouldn't be questioned. But I also picked up on a progressive talking point of Gen. George Washington's precedent against a smallpox infection breakout during the Revolutionary War. 

That's an interesting story for the unfamiliar reader.  No, we're not talking in today's terms of needles and injections. Jenkins' revolutionary cowpox vaccine was still years off. Back then was the alternative of variolation, of cutting into the flesh of a patient and inserting a thread soaked in the puss from an infected person's sores. The idea was to induce a typically milder case of  smallpox, and recovery often took a month or so. Interestingly, Washington caught the disease in his late teens. Smallpox had been endemic in Britain, but not in its colonies. This provided the British with a tactical advantage and there were rumors about the British deliberately exposing the troublesome colonists without herd immunity. So Washington attacked the crisis with a mix of quarantines and inoculations.

So, one anti-vaxxer Twitter user mocked my reference to the precedent by suggesting I also wanted to bring back the use of medical leeches. Of course, the dimwitted troll doesn't seem to realize leeches are used in circumstances even today to save lives and limbs. No, of course I'm not suggesting bringing back variolation again; the practice often killed as many as 5-10% of patients. But the statistics of those catching the disease naturally were worse, and Washington couldn't afford for his army to be eviscerated.

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Post #5408 M: McClanahan on CRT and the Constitution; UBI and the COVID Policy Experience

 Quote of the Day

Organizing is what you do before you do something, 
so that when you do it,
 it is not all mixed up.
A. A. Milne  

McClanahan on CRT and the Constitution

 UBI and the COVID Policy Experience

 Political Cartoon

 Choose Life

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

 Pink Floyd, "Another Brick in the Wall"

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Post #5408 M: McClanahan on Wokism; Social Spending > Bloated Military; Kibbe on the Real Cuba

Quote of the Day

Education is not the filling of a pail, 
but the lighting of a fire.
William Butler Yeats  

McClanahan on Wokism

Social Spending > Bloated Military

Kibbe on the Real Cuba

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Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

Queen, "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" 

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Post #5407 M: Stossel on Lessons From Venezuela; McClanahan on Slavery and the Constitution

Quote of the Day

Wisdom is not finally tested in the schools, 
Wisdom cannot be pass'd from one having it to another not having it, 
Wisdom is of the soul, is not susceptible of proof, is its own proof.
Walt Whitman  

Stossel on Lessons From Venezuela

McClanahan on Slavery and the Constitution

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Political Cartoon

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

Captain and Tennille, "Do That To Me One More Time"

Monday, October 25, 2021

Post #5406 M: McClanahan on Monumental Stupidity; The Growing Threat of China

 Quote of the Day

One man with courage makes a majority.
Andrew Jackson  

McClanahan on Monumental Stupidity

The Growing Threat of China

Political Humor

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Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Tom Stiglich via Townhall

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

Michael Jackson, "Rock With You"

Sunday, October 24, 2021

Post #5405 M: Corporate Welfare: Where's the Outrage?; Woods on Climate Change Alarmism

 Quote of the Day

People are always blaming their circumstances for what they are. 
I don't believe in circumstances. 
The people who get on in this world are 
the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want, 
and, if they can't find them, make them.
George Bernard Shaw  

Corporate Welfare: Where's the Outrage?

Woods on Climate Change Alarmism

Political Humor

Choose Life

Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Michael Ramirez via Townhall

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1980

KC and the Sunshine Band, "Please Don't Go"

Post #5404 Social Media Digest

 Twitter

Saturday, October 23, 2021

Post #5403 M: Does Money or Entitlement Ruin Video Games?; Tucker on How Capitalism Is About Love; The Right Size of Government

 Quote of the Day

From long familiarity, we know what honor is. 
It is what enables the individual to do right 
in the face of complacency and cowardice. 
It is what enables the soldier to die alone, 
the political prisoner to resist, 
the singer to sing her song, 
hardly appreciated, on a side street.
Mark Helprin  

Does Money or Entitlement Ruin Video Games?

Tucker on How Capitalism Is About Love

The Right Size of Government

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Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Gary Varvel via Townhall

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1979

Rupert Holmes, "Escape",  And that's a wrap on the 70's.

Post #5402 J

Shutdown Diary


In the past week in the U.S. ...
New daily reported cases fell 13.3% 
New daily reported deaths fell 5.2% 
Covid-related hospitalizations fell 8.4% Read more
Among reported tests, the positivity rate was 5.1%.
The number of tests reported fell 36% 
In the last week, an average of 770.3k doses per day were administered, a 4% decrease  over the week before.

According to CDC:








Daily case counts continue to drop, now roughly to a running average of about 73K a day. All the numbers are in the right direction  but make no mistake: unvaccinated people are at risk and dying daily. One odd note about boosters: 50+ appears to have a higher rate than 65+. 

Lots of developments this week; it looks like we may be about 2-3 weeks before Pfizer vaccines for 5-11 yo kids.  We now have approvals of Moderna and J&J approvals, including mix or match. (One of my siblings with a qualifying health condition, a J&J vaccine recipient, will take a Moderna booster next week.) Expect fireworks as some parents respond to school vaccine mandate. Be clear: yes, children are less likely to suffer severe COVID complications, bur some kids have serious health issues, and children can also propagate the virus to people in riskier health groups, including the elderly.

I think federal employees and contractors must have complied with Biden's vaccine mandate by early December. I'm not sure to what extent employee unions or challenges to HIPAA will successfully challenge the mandate (I'm skeptical of their success); I don't think contractor management likes the possible risk of staff turnover. I'm not clear on whether the vaccination card is uploaded to a government or company secure website. 

Windows 11 Is Here

Don't expect a detailed review here; I think only one of my PC's, a relatively new desktop replacement, qualifies. In fact, I'm writing this post on it. Just a few days ago I noticed download/upgrade button and launched the process. It was a lengthy process with multiple reboots.  There are some definite visual cue differences, including a floating taskbar and more of a drag/drop approach to the system tray. I was a bit confused by the Windows Update history page which reflected my Windows 10 history. There are multiple ways to verify you're on Windows 11, including the fact I soon thereafter downloaded and applied my first Windows 11 patch.

Other Notes

It's Medicare enrollment season, and I'm getting deluged with cable ads and junk ads. You know you're getting old when you recognize Jimmie Walker shilling Medicare Advantage. It seemed like the highlight of any Good Times episode was Jimmie's signature "Dy-No-Mite". At least he's an improvement over Joe Namath's 50 commercials a day. 

Well, Crown Jewel came and went. No title changes. They booked Lesnar into a screwjob loss to Reigns (the ref got knocked out by Lesnar's finisher to Reigns). They gave Lesnar a chance for revenge the next night, and Lesnar got suspended. There was an awkward exchange of women's brand titles, with Lynch teasing a reunification match. It's like Smackdown is teasing a Flair-Banks feud like the one a few seasons back where the title was flipped multiple times.

Friday, October 22, 2021

Post #5401 M: Deist on the Opportunity of COVID Policy Failure; Conservatives Should Favor Immigration

 Quote of the Day

Some people say that dreaming gets you nowhere in life. 
But I say you can't get anywhere in life without dreaming.
Rose Zadra 

Deist on the Opportunity of COVID Policy Failure

Abbeville Institute This Week

Conservatives Should Favor Immigration

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Political Cartoon


Courtesy of Steve Kelley via Townhall

Musical Interlude: #1 Hits of 1979

Styx, "Babe"

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Post #5400 M: In-N-Out and SF's Mandate for COVID-19 Vaccine Checks; McClanahan on the Southern Tradition

 Quote of the Day

People will try to rain on your parade 
because they have no parade of their own.
Jeffrey Gitomer  

In-N-Out and SF's Mandate for COVID-19 Vaccine Checks

McClanahan on the Southern Tradition

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Political Cartoon

Musical Interlude" #1 Hits of 1979

Donna Summer & Barbra Streisand, "No More Tears"

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Post #5399 M: McClanahan on Lowry and Secession; Civil Asset Forfeiture Abuse in Philadelphia; Kibbe and Rand Paul

 Quote of the Day

The secret of your future is 
hidden in your daily routine.
Mike Murdock  

McClanahan on Lowry and Secession

Civil Asset Forfeiture Abuse in Philadelphia

Kibbe and Rand Paul

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Political Cartoon

Musical Interlude; #1 Hits of 1979

The Commodores, "Still"

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Post #5398 M: Stossel on American Optimist; McClanahan on the GOP Being the Stupid Party; Woods on Airline COVID-19 Mandates

 Quote of the Day

The secret of your future is 
hidden in your daily routine.
Mike Murdock  

Stossel on American Optimist

McClanahan on the GOP Being the Stupid Party

Woods on Airline COVID-19 Mandates

Choose Life

Political Cartoon

Courtesy of Chip Bok via Townhall

Musical Interludes: #1 Hits of 1979

The Eagles, "Heartache Tonight"