Thursday’s Forum

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FILED UNDER: Open Forum
Steven L. Taylor
About Steven L. Taylor
Steven L. Taylor is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science and former College of Arts and Sciences Dean. His main areas of expertise include parties, elections, and the institutional design of democracies. His most recent book is the co-authored A Different Democracy: American Government in a 31-Country Perspective. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Texas and his BA from the University of California, Irvine. He has been blogging since 2003 (originally at the now defunct Poliblog). Follow Steven on Twitter and/or BlueSky.

Comments

  1. Bill Jempty says:

    Heavens to Betsy-

    WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said Wednesday that he will resign from the bureau next month, ending a brief and tumultuous tenure in which he clashed with the Justice Department over the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and was forced to reconcile the realities of his law enforcement job with provocative claims he made in his prior role as a popular podcast host.

    The departure would be among the highest-profile resignations of the Trump administration, coming as the firing of career agents has contributed to upheaval at the FBI and as Director Kash Patel faces continued criticism over his use of a government plane for personal purposes and social media posts about active investigations.

    All those images at AOL. Steven, where’s the Nazi like garb?

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  2. Scott says:

    I usually get up early (about 5am), make coffee, feed the dog, make lunches for wife and daughter, and sit down at the laptop to read the news and a few sites.

    I knew Trump was going to make a speech last night. You wouldn’t know it from much of the news. I viewed Memeorandum to get a quick overview of what may be important and it wasn’t mentioned until way down in the scroll. Top news was healthcare and Congress, Republican disfunction, Dan Bongino, Susie Wiles. No Trump. Still have read if he said anything of significance. Which is significant in itself.

    BTW, we are suckers for Christmas movies. Watched Love Actually again. One of those movies that are popular with many except for the critics. Don’t care. Will probably watch White Christmas and It’s a Wonderful Life again also even though we can probably recite the entire dialogue.

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  3. Jen says:

    So, gaslighting it was. I saw someone on BlueSky refer to it as the Festivus Speech, because it was a steady stream of airing of grievances.

    I did not watch live, no use in doing that to my blood pressure.

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  4. Scott says:

    @Jen: I wonder what percentage of the population is going: Hey, it’s the holidays. We don’t want to see your face or hear your voice. GTFOH.

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  5. Scott says:

    Texas has a competitive electricity market. The huge demand in electricity from these data centers will drive electrical prices higher for all Texans. For just 37 jobs at an average of $150K or $5.5M per year. There is already a lot of grumbling bubbling up.

    $2.1-billion data center set to break ground in North Texas

    Another colossal data center is headed to Texas–and this $2.1-billion campus could soon break ground on a 107-acre site in northern Fort Worth. The sheer scale of the campus dwarfs its projected employment numbers—37— a growing point of contention as cities across Texas court data centers with lucrative tax breaks.

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  6. Daryl says:

    Precious little Republican reaction to Jack Smith’s damning testimony, yesterday.
    I guess they were all just so excited by that amazing speech. Very Gettysburg-like, don’t you think?
    Or maybe they were just so excited by the new, eloquently written, plaques in the WH.
    https://apnews.com/article/trump-plaques-presidential-walk-fame-e6b496f68862f4b678bbe608a0efde95?utm_source=copy&utm_medium=share

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  7. Scott says:

    Faculty are leaving Austin’s anti-woke university over ideological differences

    The University of Austin, the anti-“woke” private university dedicated to heterodox beliefs and teaching “forbidden” topics, made a big splash when it was announced in 2021.

    The school, founded in part by Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale and then-ex New York Times journalist Bari Weiss, promised to upend the traditional university model, which its founders believed had become unwelcoming of dissenting opinions and open inquiry. And proud to never accept government funding, UATX announced earlier this year that a massive donation from libertarian billionaire Jeff Yass would make tuition free forever.

    Among the group of nearly 20 university employees that have left UATX this year were individuals in vital roles including the president, the provost, the executive director of admissions, and operations staffers.

    The article goes on but the following quotes from the article made me snort my coffee:

    In July, Larry Summers, the economist, former Harvard President and Jeffrey Epstein associate, said that he’d be stepping down from UATX’s advisory board.

    Summers’ fellow advisory board members, Robert Zimmer and fellow Epstein associate Steven Pinker, also stepped down from UATX not long after it launched.

    Pretty snarky for a mainstream newspaper article.

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  8. Scott says:

    We Pined for the Comforts of Home. We Got Tube Socks and Old Candy for Christmas Instead

    It started as a rumor. But like war stories, rumors tend to grow with the telling, and as deployment dragged on, the number of packages we were expecting doubled and doubled again, eventually reaching delirious heights that surpassed all reason.

    A hundred care packages?

    These mythical parcels had supposedly been assembled by the very best of front porch America, real Norman Rockwell patriots of some down-home church group connected to one of the guys on my team through his wife’s cousin’s roommate or something. And when this church group heard that a team of Green Berets was deployed to the beige desolation of Iraq for six months, they put out a call for care packages, and the pious congregation had offered up a most goodly bounty.

    Not that we were desperate for material salvation. Deployment to Iraq in 2018 was like a government-funded Lawrence of Arabia summer camp. We lived at the biggest base in the country, next to the Baghdad airport and far from anything going boom. We ate at chow hall with an omelet bar, slept in air-conditioned shipping containers converted into living spaces, and shopped at a small PX selling drinks and snacks.

    We even had a Green Beans coffee shop to supply us with mediocre lattes, and a rec center where I played Settlers of Catan every week with doctors and nurses from the hospital. It was austere, but for a combat zone, it was five-star luxury.

    What we found under those box flaps defied all our expectations: Fun-size Snickers and Milky Ways, decorated with jack-o’-lanterns—marking them as trick-or-treater rejects of three months prior—now grotesquely warped in their wrappers after melting in transit.

    Canned foods, hearty staples a hermit might select to line the concrete walls of a survivalist bunker: beef stew, baked beans, creamed corn. Dried ramen noodles, brittle in their orange plastic five-packs and adorned with green circular “99¢” stickers no one had bothered to remove.

    The senders, as if anticipating gastrointestinal distress from this dollar-store diet, thoughtfully included several rolls of toilet paper. And finally, in every box, there were exactly three pairs of bargain-bin white tube socks.

    At last, my teammate said what we all were thinking: “What the fuck? Do they think we’re deployed, or homeless?

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  9. Bill Jempty says:

    @Steven L. Taylor: You wouldn’t want me to assume that you are minimizing Nazi symbolism or being some kind of closest apologist for the administration, would you?

    Steven,

    This is the second time you have made these idiotic insinuations about me. I have defended myself once already to your personal attacks. Now put up proof I am some kind of Trump apologist or supporter and not just a critic of your writing OR SHUT UP.

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  10. Neil Hudelson says:

    @Scott:

    I used to find White Christmas to be just boring, well into my 20s. Then something switched around age 30 and now its my favorite, a must watch every Christmas. As I’ve aged, I’ve become a song and dance man.

    A couple of years ago the kids put on “8-Bit Christmas” on HBO. The trailer looked meh. It’s great! Has the makings of a family classic. If you haven’t seen it, add it into your rotation. Another potential classic, last year’s “The Holdovers” with Paul Giamatti. Just fantastic.

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  11. Scott says:

    @Neil Hudelson: Yep. The Holdovers was great. Plus watching with the grand children: Charlie Brown Christmas, Elf, etc. My DIL is addicted to Hallmark Christmas movies. The kind all filmed in Canada and employing most of the Canadian acting community.

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  12. gVOR10 says:

    @Scott: Somebody cracked – Hallmark movies, fifty actors, twelve locations, one plot.

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  13. gVOR10 says:

    Robert Farley at LGM links and excerpts a detailed NYT Magazine story on how Epstein acquired his wealth. No mention of the CIA or Mossad, just a handsome, charming grifter and gullible rich people. In fact, the story is so unexceptional one has to assume there’s a lot more of this sort of thing going on.

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  14. CSK says:

    Update from rehab: This is a very nice place I’m in for at least the next month. The food could be better, but that’s a minor complaint. (I have to say the kitchen made a wonderful tuna melt for my lunch yesterday.)

    I saw the surgeon last Monday, and he removed the staples and told me I no longer needed to wear the brace. Yippee!

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  15. Kathy says:

    I’ve been pondering two big ideas. I need to find time to post them here.

    One is that unproductive activities can make loads of money. That is, actions that produce little or nothing valuable can nevertheless generate large amounts of wealth. This is not a good thing.

    Second is that perhaps private healthcare, at least as far as hospitals, labs, and insurance go, should be a non-profit activity exclusively. This would tend to lead to government hospitals, labs and insurance.

    I’ll try to post more later. Hell Week marches on.

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  16. Jen says:

    That $1,776 bonus? He’s taking it from already-allocated funds and just slapping his name on it.

    (Pro tip: Renaming funds you were already receiving is not a bonus.)

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  17. CSK says:

    @Jen:

    Oh, FFS. Trump has less than no shame.

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  18. Sleeping Dog says:

    @gVOR10:

    That is a good article, here’s a gift link.

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  19. Sleeping Dog says:
  20. Kathy says:

    So, the Republiqan government cannot, and honestly will not, lift a finger to keep people from either going broke or doing without healthcare. But they will, most eagerly, screw trans minors over, and drive many to suicide.

    You will die from lack of care or suffer hardship by paying a lot more fo coverage than you used to. But mindless, pointless cruelty will prevail, never fear. Your prejudices are on top. Who cares about anything else.

    Reverend Jeremiah Wright meant something else, I know, but I think it’s still related. In any case, he was correct. God damn America.

    On the other hand, why should God do that? Americans already did it to themselves.

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  21. EddieInCA says:

    This is why some people get so frustrated with Democrats..

    R – Steve Hilton 18%
    R – Chad Bianco 17%
    D – Eric Swalwell 17%
    D – Katie Porter 13%
    D – Tom Steyer 6%
    D- Xavier Becerra 3%
    D – A. Villaraigosa 3%
    D – T. Thurmond 1%
    D – Betty Yee 1%
    ——

    You have seven Dems – five who have ZERO chance of being elected statewide, who are sucking up enough votes that the two GOP candidates will win the primary and we will have two Republicans vying for the Governorship*

    We could, very easily, get a MAGA Republican as the governor if a bunch of these morons don’t get out of the race.

    Fucking idiots.

    * California has a jungle primary. Top two, regardless of party go to a run off. Usually, it’s two Dems, but this year, five Dems with zero chance have chosen to help a MAGA Republican get elected. Again… Fucking idiots.

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  22. Kathy says:

    @EddieInCA:

    Country over party, that’s one thing. Country over personal political ambition, that’s something else.

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  23. Gustopher says:

    @EddieInCA: When is the primary?

    Some people “run” in the “primary” just to boost name recognition or impress a girl or whatever, and then drop out when the day to actually vote gets closer, because as fun as campaigning is, getting 3% of the vote is an ego crush.

    ETA: June 6th. I think everyone gets to play around until April or so. I’m not a fan of the Jungle Primary (we have them in Washington), but it’s likely harmless.

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  24. Kathy says:

    This totally does not have scam and payoff written all over it: the El Taco media company, owner of Pravda Social, is merging with a fusion power company.

    That’s like a candy company merging with Boeing.

    Worse yet, they intend to build “the world’s first utility-scale fusion power plant” next year.

    That’s like GM announcing they’ll release a time machine next year.

    Come, had this been published on April 1st, everyone would spot the spoof piece.

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