Wednesday’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. Daryl says:

    The AP on why Elmo and President Doughboy are full of skit on SS.
    https://apnews.com/article/social-security-payments-deceased-false-claims-doge-ed2885f5769f368853ac3615b4852cf7
    And re-posting from yesterday…
    https://www.wired.com/story/elon-musk-doge-social-security-150-year-old-benefits/
    I started receiving SS benefits in January of last year and still I hope they fuck up the system. Missed checks, late checks, wrong amounts, whatever. It’s the only way the cult will begin to grasp the incompetence.

    4
  2. Jen says:

    It is difficult for me to express how irritated this makes me. What, exactly, did these idiots think was going to happen when they willingly handed over powers that the Constitution expressly states is THEIRS?

    After ceding power of the purse, GOP lawmakers beg Trump team for funds
    […] Even as many Republicans praise the ultimate goal of streamlining the federal government, some GOP senators spanning the ideological spectrum from Katie Boyd Britt (Alabama) to Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) have lobbied the Trump administration to reconsider its cuts or pauses to federal grants that support biomedical research and labs, or for programs supporting Native American tribes.

    It’s a humbling turn of events for a body that has traditionally prized its power of the purse. The aggressive move to cut spending unilaterally “negates Congress’ hard-won power over appropriations,” said Jessica Riedl, a budget expert with the conservative Manhattan Institute think tank, who predicted lawmakers were “afraid” to more forcefully grab back their appropriations power given Trump’s popularity with the GOP base.

    “Eventually Congress is going to have to take back its power of the purse rather than nicely asking the administration for favors,” she said.

    6
  3. Daryl says:

    Apparently President Doughboy fired USDA workers focused on the Bird Flu, and is scrambling to re-hire them…just like the Nuclear Workers from last week.
    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/rcna192716

    4
  4. charontwo says:

    Watch the embedded video here and see Elon Musk’s comment on it to see what a sadistic sicko Musk really is.

    https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1891923570768384107

    Which supports my view that the main motivation for the government worker firings is the joy of hurting people and destroying the government. Saving money is mostly pretext.

    You can read the comments to see what a septic tank Twitter has become.

    3
  5. charontwo says:

    @charontwo:

    I was just taking a look at NMMNB, it looks like Steve M. agrees with me about Musk, Trump and a whole lot of MAGA’s:

    NMMNB

    And we should also point out that Musk is a bully. In The Washington Post, Pranshu Verma reports:

    Dylan Hedtler-Gaudette works at the Project on Government Oversight, a nonpartisan watchdog group focused on reducing bureaucratic waste. He also happens to be blind. So when he criticized Elon Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service in testimony on Capitol Hill last week, Musk unleashed an online attack Hedtler-Gaudette described as “surreal” in its juvenile bigotry.

    First, Musk retweeted a post on X noting that the “blind director of watchdog group funded by George Soros testifies that he does not see widespread evidence of government waste” and added two laughing/crying emojis. The tweet garnered more than 21 million views, and sparked dozens of hateful messages to Hedtler-Gaudette’s account.

    “He couldn’t see s— … perfect excuse for being unable to perform your job,” one poster said. “The dei blind guy can’t see fraud. U can’t make up this garbage,” another wrote. One person even called for posters to surface Hedtler-Gaudette’s bank account.

    The episode illustrates how Musk’s unparalleled online reach has given him a powerful tool to attack individuals who criticize DOGE, with one post able to spark hundreds of blistering responses from his followers.

    As a society, we simply accept the fact that right-wingers will abuse and threaten their targets, and that online right-wingers with large followings will summon armies to do the abusing and threatening. Musk gets emotional satisfaction from doing this — this doesn’t help make him rich, but because he’s a sick fuck, it makes him happy. I wish we could get across to the public how deranged this practice, and how common. (The popular X account Libs of TikTok is entirely devoted to this kind of trageting.) Trump, of course, also enjoys cruelty. But I think the vast majority of Americans have no idea that sadism is a key aspect of the DOGE purge. We need to find a way to get that across.

    5
  6. Jen says:

    @charontwo:

    You can read the comments to see what a septic tank Twitter has become.

    And yet, Musk is pushing all official government notifications to Twitter, and is now looking for “investors.”

    For those in the back of the room who haven’t been paying attention, Musk:

    1) Purchased Twitter
    2) Removed the guardrails, turning it into a cesspool, which caused advertisers to flee
    3) Lost 80% of its value (Musk decides to sue advertisers for leaving)
    4) [Election]
    5) Pushes all notifications of government activity exclusively to X, driving up traffic
    6) Tries to find investors

    In short, Musk bought Twitter, immediately trashed it, and is now using his government-adjacent position to revive what he killed, while lining his pockets.

    10
  7. Charley in Cleveland says:

    It may be too little too late, but it is heartening to see career federal prosecutors refusing to make the bad faith arguments they have been ordered to make by Emil Bove – Trump’s utterly conflicted hatchet man at DOJ. In a better world, judges would hold DOJ lapdogs who do lie and obfuscate in contempt of court. The legal profession has generally been good in policing itself. The disbarments and suspensions of the Kraken lawyers took some time, but they did happen. The entities that supervise attorneys – state supreme courts and various bar associations – should not overlook ethics violations by turds like Bove.

    4
  8. charontwo says:

    @charontwo:

    For those of you who do not click X/Twitter links, the video is shackles and chains being installed on deportees ready to be herded onto an airplane.

    Elon Musk comment: “Haha wow”

    3
  9. charontwo says:

    @Jen:

    2) Removed the guardrails, turning it into a cesspool, which caused advertisers to flee

    The advertisers are coming back, now that Musk has so much power.

    1
  10. Kurtz says:

    @charontwo:

    It should be more amusing to watch all these self-proclaimed chads on Twitter simp over two boys whose ‘masculinity’ is so conspicuous that the overcompensation is transparent. But the problems are real.

    Also, dude, “sick fuck” is not the preferred nomenclature, “suck fuck,” please.

    It is based on a Joyner typo in a front page post.

    I complemented the phrase in the comments, because it drew an audible laugh from me. Joyner replied “ha!” and explained it was a typo. IIRC, he said something like, the typo is more visceral.

    The “ha” made me almost as happy, because I cannot imagine James laughing.

    I tried to do a Google site search for the post. But Google is enshittified, so the results were crappy.

    Anyway, since that post, I’ve always hoped it would catch on.

    You all are a huge disappointment.

    Carry on.

    1
  11. DrDaveT says:

    It occurred to me this morning that what Trusk is doing to the federal government is probably the most sweeping and comprehensive violation of Chesterton’s Fence in history. Anyone who still thinks these people are ‘conservatives’ is a moron.

    5
  12. JKB says:

    Why no one trusts the “experts” in government anymore. They lie and lied. Strangely, this was what the clinical trials of the vaccine reported but she and Fauci led the war against anyone who tried to follow the science. The US doesn’t even require aspiration when administering the vaccine as Denmark and then the UK added to their protocols.

    They fear a link to the vaccine damage in young people when the bad protocol didn’t aspirate to ensure it wasn’t injected into a blood vessel as the scandal would rival The Tuskegee Experiment, which was still going on when Fauci joined NAID.

    Dr. Deborah Birx admits the COVID shots were pushed on the wrong people, saying the rollout on young people ignored the science.

    “The messenger RNA vaccine should have been rolled out for the people that were at risk for severe disease because that’s what the vaccine was developed for,” Birx said.

    1
  13. Kurtz says:

    @charontwo:

    The advertisers are coming back, now that Musk has so much power.

    Remember when the conservative line in opposition to government protections for minorities was that the markets would punish firms that discriminate?

    Then years later, when a firm would do something to show they don’t discriminate, those same conservatives boycotted. And we had videos of talentless singers shooting Bud Light cans.

    Separate, but tangentially related:

    My body initiates a gag reflex when I see “libertarian” in a social media bio.

    My body initiates projectile vomit when I see “Libertarian. Engineer.” in a social media bio.

    When I see an MD cheering on DOGE and using “number of lawsuits filed against the Trump administration” as a metric for Trump’s success; Or an MD-turned-Senator voting to confirm RFK, Jr. as HHS Sec. then days later tweeting concern about a measles outbreak in Texas, well…

    It makes me want to burn this motherfucker down.

    Come on, Pookie.

    8
  14. reid says:

    Here’s a comment taken from another site:

    “Outside looking in, it is interesting to see the dipshits cheering the downfall of their country.”

    It really sums up nicely how effective the propaganda has been.

    6
  15. Jen says:

    @charontwo: Exactly the point I was making. It makes me so, so angry.

    1
  16. Fortune says:

    @JKB: What does that have to do with Trump and Musk though?

    1
  17. Kurtz says:

    @JKB:

    Did you watch the video in full? ‘vigilant’ fox didn’t. Or they are lying about that Birx said. Or they are hearing what they want to hear.

    But it doesn’t matter, because most of the, to use their favorite insult, NPCs will not actually verify what was said. Or they will, wait for it, omit that Birx said the vaccine should be rolled out for “those over 65 first”.

    And the “not designed against infection” claim in the tweet is likewise out of context.

    How many lead paint chips did you eat as a kid?

    10
  18. Kathy says:

    @charontwo:

    They must be nostalgic for the days when shackles were put on DEI hires.

    1
  19. Kurtz says:

    @Fortune:

    I knew a comment from you was coming, because JKB got an upvote.

    The implication: this is why the bureaucracy must be dismantled.

    But you knew that before you asked, right?

    Of course, none of you acknowledge that a bureaucracy is characteristic of any large organization.

    But you know that, right?

    Or would you prefer I treat you like a know-nothing?

    You don’t engage when treated with respect. You act like a victim, and blame us.

    When exactly did you take the mirrors out of your house? I missed the RFK, Jr. op-ed about the link between self-reflection and docility. Can you send me the link?

    5
  20. CSK says:
  21. Daryl says:

    @JKB:
    This is a perfect example of what’s wrong right now.
    You have low IQ people ranting, quite emotionally, about how we cannot trust the Govt because “…they lie and lied.”
    But when you look at what they’re talking about it turns out that they are simply incapable of understanding what was said, much less the actual base material, and thus are wildly mis-stating it.
    Or, to use their own parlance…THEY ARE LYING.
    This is rampant on Social Media, and I believe it will ultimately be our downfall.
    My favorite illustration of this is Podcaster Joe Rogan. He has no understanding of physics or mechanics or history or social organization, and so cannot begin to fathom how the Great Pyramids could be constructed, and therefore he concludes that ALIENS BUILT THE PYRAMIDS.
    https://media1.tenor.com/m/eEEWVh8DscEAAAAd/loud-opinions.gif

    7
  22. Kingdaddy says:

    If you are merely angry about the betrayal of Ukraine, and not in a white-hot, incandescent rage, go watch the documentary 20 Days In Mariupol. Remind yourself of how much the Ukrainians have suffered at the hands of the Russian invaders. Then flash forward to yesterday, when one of the worst examples in modern history of blaming the victims happened, as a pretext for the betrayal.

    6
  23. Kingdaddy says:

    Just a reminder, trolls use the heated air generated from your outrage to inflate to become the expanded, empty gasbags they want to be. If you don’t help them inflate, they shrink down to the wretched, meaningless size they deserve to be.

    5
  24. @Kingdaddy: At this point, there can be no doubt that they just want attention.

    9
  25. gVOR10 says:

    @DrDaveT:

    Anyone who still thinks these people are ‘conservatives’ is a moron.

    No, modern conservatives are not “conservative”. But conservatives never have been. Corey Robin did a whole book, The Reactionary Mind, on how conservatism has always been reactionary radicalism. You need a program to keep up with the changes in rock-ribbed conservative verities. In practice “Conservatism” has always come down to defense of the currently wealthy and powerful. These days the way to get enough votes from the proles in support of the elite is radical “populism”. Another word that doesn’t mean much.

    As Dr. T reminds us, we got two and only two parties. One is, by default, liberal and the other conservative. And they call themselves conservative. Conservative is as conservative does. For any practical purpose, the heuristic Republican = conservative works fine.

    3
  26. gVOR10 says:

    @Kingdaddy: There is a short list of commenters here, a very short list, that I just skip over, having learned they have nothing useful to say. I also skip over any reply to them.

    4
  27. Kathy says:

    @Kingdaddy:

    You are entirely correct.

    The crux lies in how to keep people from feeding the trolls. It’s like getting people to stop buying from scalpers, or to boycott a business, or to stop voting against their self interest. No matter how many go along, enough won’t to make the problem persist for centuries past the heat death of the universe.

    3
  28. Grumpy realist says:

    Mass confusion here at my gov’t agency. We have a few people who took the “Fork in the Road” option, mainly because of the forced RTW issue and not wanting to move 200 miles. Exactly how all this is supposed to work out, nobody knows. They’ve been put on”Administrative Leave”, several with same day notice. In-agency HR has no idea what is going on. How the departed are supposed to get their time-cards in—nobody knows. No one knows what the code for “Paid because on administrative leave” is. They’ve been asked to return their laptops immediately—so how they’re supposed to access our internal time card system—unknown. “Someone” is supposedly going to file their time cards for them. Who is that? Unknown. Who they can contact if anything goes wrong? Unknown.

    The irony is—today I took the mandated yearly cybersecurity training. The entire time I couldn’t help thinking: how much of this has already been totally compromised due to Musk and his minions?

    7
  29. Jay L Gischer says:

    @JKB: Again, it’s as if you don’t really understand how science works. One scientist says, “we should have done X different” and you assume every other scientist was lying.

    WTF?

    Scientists are wrong about stuff all the time. Sometimes it is because of an agenda, but most of the time its because they are simply wrong. There are disagreements all over the place. That’s why, in the scientific method, what’s important is data, not opinion. Einstein himself can be called wrong, if the data doesn’t back him up. (I will note that through the 1910’s and 20’s and even into the 30’s, quantum mechanics, to many German physicists, quantum mechanics was po0-pooed as “that Jewish thing”.)

    But the data did back up Einstein, eventually.

    Some scientist said X does not mean A) she’s right or B) everyone else was lying.

    9
  30. DK says:

    @Daryl:

    You have low IQ people ranting, quite emotionally, about how we cannot trust the Govt because “…they lie and lied.”

    Only stupid people decline to trust the experts.

    “We won with poorly educated, I love the poorly educated.” – Donald Trump

    Say what you will, but he knows his base.

    On a not unrelated note, aside from the ongoing bird flu, there’s a tuberculosis outbreak in Kansas and a measles outbreak in West Texas rn, due to low vaccination rates in the affected areas. Stupidity has consequences. And it’s stupid to ignore expertise but trust unqualified pathological lying rapist reality TV buffoon Trump, drug addicted weirdo Musk, or brain-wormed heroin addict RFK Jr.

    Note: Trump has gutted our health agencies and silenced health experts, crippling our ability to contain these disease outbreaks.

    5
  31. DK says:

    @Grumpy realist:

    The entire time I couldn’t help thinking: how much of this has already been totally compromised due to Musk and his minions?

    President Musk’s unqualified, unvetted DOGE bros have found no fraud and cut no debt. But they’ve destroyed jobs, aviation safety, and nuclear safety — while starving kids, ruining farms, and exposing Americans’ private data.

    And done nothing to fix rising egg prices, egg shortages, or general inflation.

    I don’t believe Republicans will benefit long term from letting the world’s richest man (and biggest welfare queen) recklessly fire veterans and middle class veterans and workers. Not when ketamine kingpin Musk himself has raked in $20 billion in taxpayer money.

    5
  32. DK says:

    @Daryl:

    Apparently President Doughboy fired USDA workers focused on the Bird Flu, and is scrambling to re-hire them…just like the Nuclear Workers from last week.

    Because the Trump administration is reckless, chaotic and full of unqualified, incompetent clowns. Like Trump and Musk. Errors like these are piling up, party to the failed attempt to let a drug-addicted illegal immigrant oligarch cut spending by indiscriminately firing American citizens.

    Republicans in congress are too weak and scared to stop the craziness.

    4
  33. Kurtz says:

    @Jay L Gischer:

    Being wrong is exactly what makes science “anti-fragile”. Being wrong is moving in the right direction, as long as other conditions are met.

    We have now found another problem there is this recent piece from The Atlantic about the failure of the peer review process–one can likely find a ‘peer-reviewed’ article to justify whatever view.

    I have thoughts. But I will save them for another time. Here is the lede:

    Twice during his Senate confirmation hearings at the end of last month, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., America’s new health secretary, brought up a peer-reviewed study by a certain “Mawson” that had come out just the week before. “That article is by Mawson,” he said to Senator Bill Cassidy, then spelled out the author’s name for emphasis: “M-A-W-S-O-N.” And to Bernie Sanders: “Look at the Mawson study, Senator … Mawson. Just look at that study.”

    “Mawson” is Anthony Mawson, an epidemiologist and a former academic who has published several papers alleging a connection between childhood vaccines and autism. (Any such connection has been thoroughly debunked.) His latest on the subject, and the one to which Kennedy was referring, appeared in a journal that is not indexed by the National Library of Medicine or by any other organization that might provide it with some scientific credibility. One leading member of the journal’s editorial board, a stubborn advocate for using hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin to treat COVID-19, has lost five papers to retraction. Another member is Didier Raoult (whose name the journal has misspelled), a presence on the Retraction Watch leaderboard, which is derived from the work of a nonprofit we cofounded, with 31 retractions. A third, and the journal’s editor in chief, is James Lyons-Weiler, who has one retraction of his own and has called himself, in a since-deleted post on X, a friend and “close adviser to Bobby Kennedy.” (Mawson told us he chose this journal because several mainstream ones had rejected his manuscript without review. Lyons-Weiler did not respond to a request for comment.)

    Perhaps a scientist or politician—and certainly a citizen-activist who hopes to be the nation’s leading health-policy official—should be wary of citing anything from this researcher or this journal to support a claim. The fact that one can do so anyway in a setting of the highest stakes, while stating truthfully that the work originated in a peer-reviewed, academic publication, reveals an awkward fact: The scientific literature is an essential ocean of knowledge, in which floats an alarming amount of junk.

    1
  34. Kurtz says:

    @gVOR10:

    Hey, what was the title of the book you mentioned a couple times recently. The GOP mostly dominated by intuitionists?

    I could go back through recent threads, but you’re here. Thank you.

  35. Kurtz says:

    @DrDaveT:

    Nice move. But you’re trying to play chess with people who only know checkers.

    1
  36. Kathy says:

    @Jay L Gischer:

    Einstein was very wrong about many aspects of quantum mechanics. He spent his last decades vainly looking for a unified theory. And for all that, he made several contributions to the field. Even if he’s known best for Special and General relativity, revolutionary breakthroughs, he got the Nobel prize for a development in quantum theory.

    But Bell’s Inequality suggests very strongly the universe is not local. Einstein refused to accept “spooky action at a distance.” This must mean Einstein lied, Relativity is not real, and he should return his Nobel Prize.

    3
  37. DrDaveT says:

    @Kurtz:

    But you’re trying to play chess with people who only know checkers.

    Nah, I wasn’t talking to them. They’re either too stupid to get it or too evil to care. Either way, there’s no point. It was just an observation that I thought the regulars here might appreciate.

    2
  38. Mister Bluster says:

    February is Black History Month

    Jim Brown on his role in The Dirty Dozen (1967) : “I loved my part. I was one of the Dozen, a quiet leader, and my own man, at a time when Hollywood wasn’t giving those roles to blacks. I’ve never had more fun making a movie. The male cast was incredible. I worked with some of the strongest, craziest guys in the business.”

    Post submitted Wed. Feb. 19, 2025. 11:51pm cst

    2
  39. charontwo says:

    @Kurtz:

    Didier Raoult

    This is the guy who created the hydroquinone myth with bullshit “research.”

    3
  40. gVOR10 says:

    @Kurtz: Enchanted America. I expect you’ll find it informative. I’m in the final chapter where hopefully they’ll offer good advice. But so many books have a handle on the problem, but little useful advice.

    They note rationalism dominates the discourse. Which is true. If I say people believe cutting taxes is good and lowering the deficit is good so cutting taxes lowers the deficit, people will object that’s ridiculous. It is ridiculous. But it’s true.

    1
  41. CSK says:

    There’s been another small plane crash (two aircraft) in Marana, AZ. One person dead.

    ETA: Two dead.

  42. Grumpy realist says:

    @CSK: Unless there’s a control center guiding the airplanes around this most likely is a GA accident.

  43. CSK says:

    @Grumpy realist:

    Yes, it appears to be two small planes.

  44. Grumpy realist says:

    @CSK: I saw some pictures of the place. I think we’ll find out that it’s human error and a General Aviation airport.

  45. just nutha says:

    @Kurtz:

    one can likely find a ‘peer-reviewed’ article to justify whatever view.

    This has been a “thing” in educational research since before I started graduates school, in 1990. I eventually came to conclude that in teaching, everything works, but nothing works all the time, with every student, in every setting, with every teacher in charge, and/or equally well in differing situations. I suspect (but don’t know) that other fields have similarly soft boundaries for discovery and how to handle it.

    1
  46. Rob1 says:

    @Jen:

    It is difficult for me to express how irritated this makes me. What, exactly, did these idiots think was going to happen when they willingly handed over powers that the Constitution expressly states is THEIRS?

    Clearly these “holes” in our system were there to exploit all along. But the Republican Party became a collection point, a refuge for malignant personalities and their morally banrupt policies. They have no restraint against exploiting the margins of legality or respecting tradition. Our system has depended upon a certain degree of integrity that has now been completely cast aside by one party. We simply are not equipped to address this unfolding catastrophe.

    2
  47. just nutha says:

    If I say people believe cutting taxes is good and lowering the deficit is good so cutting taxes lowers the deficit, people will object that’s ridiculous. It is ridiculous. But it’s true.

    I think someone either misstated something here or is channeling Arthur Laffer’s disciples unintentionally.

    Or that I’ve become illiterate and innumerate. Either one is possible, though.

    1
  48. Jen says:

    Sad news about a very good boi:

    Hurricane, Dog Who Protected Obama White House From Intruder, Dies at 15
    […] A jet-black Belgian Malinois who loved Kong toys, Hurricane shot to a measure of canine fame a decade ago through his spirited defense of the grounds of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

    It was around dusk on Oct. 22, 2014, when a 23-year-old intruder scaled the steel fencing at the White House complex and came within 100 yards of the president and the first lady, Michelle Obama, who were watching a film in the White House movie theater.

    The man was about halfway across the North Lawn when he was met by another Secret Service dog, Jordan, a Belgian Malinois with a tan coat and a brown snout. The man managed to fight off Jordan but then faced Hurricane, who had raced his way from the east side of the lawn.

    Hurricane pushed the intruder back about 60 feet before wrestling him to the ground. Secret Service agents soon arrived to take the man into custody.[…]

    It’s amazing what dogs do for us.

    2
  49. gVOR10 says:

    @Kurtz: I find I was right to worry @gVOR10: . The last chapter of Enchanted America offers only very general advice, but what little they have is very good advice

    Rationalists need to learn how to talk to Intuitionists in their language. … Intuitionists “speak” a language that’s familiar to all of us. It’s the language we spoke as children. It acknowledges the emotional power of uncertainty, fears, and apprehensions. It is structured around the primordial heuristics that underlie our naive judgments. It recognizes the appeal of gut impulses and common sense. Yet when Rationalists “speak” the language of Intuitionists, it doesn’t mean abandoning the principles of science, reason, and fact. Rather, it means translating Rationalist values into terms that resonate with an Intuitionist worldview.

    It also offers a very good summary history of American politics since the 50s in terms of intuitionism and rationalism.

    2
  50. CSK says:

    @Jen:

    The most decorated dog in American history. RIP, sweet boy.

    2
  51. gVOR10 says:

    @just nutha: Apparently I wasn’t clear. I said people believe X, and people would say what I said was ridiculous, even though what I said was true. True that people believe X, not that X is true. It’s easy to misunderstand and dismiss my statement, illustrating why the dialogue doesn’t talk in terms of intuition or about intuitionism.

    It’s hard to write rationally about irrational thought. The authors of the book have the problem themselves. They cited a study asking subjects if people who burn a flag in protest should lose their citizenship. Far more intuitionists said yes than rationalists. They attribute this to intuitionists having less tolerance for dissent. That’s true, but they don’t note that intuitionists are much more influenced by symbolism. To them the flag is the country and the protesters are burning the country. That intuitionists are less tolerant of protest is a simple, rational statement, unlikely to get pushback. That to them the flag doesn’t just represent the country, but in some sense IS the country is equally true, but likely to get a lot of pushback. Hard to write about.

    2
  52. Bill Jempty says:

    @CSK:

    There’s been another small plane crash (two aircraft) in Marana, AZ. One person dead.

    ETA: Two dead.

    Tragic but general aviation accidents are very common and only notable if somebody famous was on board.

  53. Bill Jempty says:

    Kentucky Fried Chicken is moving its Headquarters to Texas. Will it rename itself TFC? Is Colonel Sanders rolling over in his grave?

    I don’t have the answers but I do love their cole slaw.

    1
  54. gVOR10 says:

    Given Boeing’s well known dedication to quality, Kathy should love this:

    President Trump, furious about delays in delivering two new Air Force One jets, has empowered Elon Musk to explore drastic options to prod Boeing to move faster, including relaxing security clearance standards for some who work on the presidential planes.

  55. CSK says:

    @gVOR10:

    Maybe Boeing’s having difficulties sourcing gold toilets.

    2
  56. Kurtz says:

    @gVOR10:

    They attribute this to intuitionists having less tolerance for dissent. That’s true, but they don’t note that intuitionists are much more influenced by symbolism.

    Have you read Ideology in America? I ran across it while I was adding Enchanted America to a list.

    Public opinion in the United States contains a paradox. The American public is symbolically conservative: it cherishes the symbols of conservatism and is more likely to identify as conservative than as liberal. Yet at the same time, it is operationally liberal, wanting government to do and spend more to solve a variety of social problems.

    I have not read it. I have a vague recollection of the title, but I do not know whether I happened to see it prior to today or if it was mentioned here. If the latter, it’s usually a good bet that it was a front pager or you.

    I am not sure that I agree with the implication of this phrasing:

    To them the flag is the country and the protesters are burning the country.

    I’m curious about your reasoning for this characterization.

  57. Beth says:

    @Bill Jempty:

    When I worked at KFC as a teen I like making the coleslaw. It was fun to feed a pile of veggies into the wood chipper they had. Then everything went into a tub and you got to dump in bags of stuff that had the color and consistency of semen into the tub. Best part was that the cooks hated doing it so you got left alone for like 30 minutes or so.

    But my favorite KFC coleslaw experience was this. Tangentially relevant to this story was that the KFC I worked at was Black owned and in a lilly White suburb. I was one of three White people who worked there, all teenagers, and for the sake of simplicity, lets just say all “boys”. One day Whiteboy Whose Name I Don’t Remember “WWNIDR” was on cole slaw duty. He was like a year younger and was always trying to impress me and Tim. The cooks didn’t care for him because was always starting shit. Tim and I mostly didn’t start shit and what we did could be boiled down to “Look at what those crazy ass White Boys are doing now”. Did we spray window cleaner into each other’s mouths like the Blues Brothers and shrimp? Hell yeah. Did we confuse the slightly older Black men that we worked with, oh yeah. Did we really confuse the much older Black man who drove a Cadillac who was the night manager, YOU BETCHA. Did we confuse the middle aged Black woman that owned that KFC? FUCK.NO. We stayed away from her cause she was the boss and we were stupid, not idiots.

    On this particular day, WWNIDR seemed a little giggly when he stocked the front case with cole slaw. I was too busy to notice much. I didn’t notice that the tub of coleslaw felt off when I put it on this guy’s tray. I did, however, get to see as he went to dump the tub on his plate and for a whole tub of coleslaw juice vomit on to his plate and all over him. I saw it and rapidly excused myself to hide in the back as coleslaw guy started screaming. The cooks ended up dragging WWNIDR up to the front to get yelled at by the Night Manager and Coleslaw guy. Surprised he didn’t get his ass beat.

    Turns out if you didn’t mix the tub every so often while filling the tubs, all the slaw juice would fall to the bottom and you’d end up with a bunch of dry coleslaw and more than enough slaw juice to fill a couple tubs. Turns out he filled up a tub with only slaw juice then sprinkled enough veg on top to make it look normal enough. If we had been slow we’d have noticed the weight was off. We didn’t so Coleslaw guy got to wear it.

    4
  58. Kathy says:

    @gVOR10:

    No one really trusts Boeing any more. The Air Force awarded the contract to convert 747s fo use as “Doomsday” plane to Sierra Nevada Corp.

    The nazi in chief might speed things along, certainly. Only he’ll need to blow up a dozen or so 747s before he’s done testing.

    1
  59. al Ameda says:

    @Beth:
    The Coleslaw Incident. Just … Epic.
    Any person who worked these kind of jobs as a young person completely understands this.

    3
  60. DK says:

    @Beth: Good lord.

    1
  61. Gustopher says:

    @Beth:

    I did, however, get to see as he went to dump the tub on his plate and for a whole tub of coleslaw juice vomit on to his plate and all over him.

    I am confused about the relative sizes of tubs and plates.

    1
  62. Grumpy Realist says:

    @Beth: mega-applause for your storytelling.

  63. Beth says:

    @Gustopher:

    Lets ask Google. Hey dipshit, how big is a large KFC coleslaw. Diiiiiiiiiiiiiiipshit says:

    A large KFC coleslaw is 100 ounces and serves 20–25 people.
    Explanation
    KFC’s large coleslaw is one of their Famous Homestyle Sides, which also includes mashed potatoes and gravy, macaroni and cheese, green beans, and corn. The large size costs $24.99 and serves 20–25 people. The regular size costs $14.99 and serves 10–15 people.
    Generative AI is experimental.

    Thanks Dipshit, I mean google.

    A little bit of actual work on my part tells me that a large KFC coleslaw is 450 grams or about 15 ounces. I think an average paper plate is like 9 inches. I think he was in a booth, but I’m not certain. I’m guessing he dumped about 14.7 ounces of slaw juice on that plate, and himself, and the floor.

    @DK:

    James! That was his name. He was always pretty nice to me. He was one of those older classy Black guys. Came to work put together. One of those guys where you’re like, you’re lying about being an actual pimp, but not too much, and you might know people. He was always kinda frazzled having to deal with the cooks on one hand and idiot White teenagers on the other. Haven’t really thought about him in years and dragging those memories out makes me think he felt bad for me.

  64. Connor says:

    @charontwo:

    Alternatively, perhaps he realizes that at current trajectory of spending, an in light of roughly 27% of US debt rolling over at prevailing rates – far above those at original issue – the country is in financial extremis with respect to debt service. That would be a more adult explanation than yours.

    1
  65. Kurtz says:

    Former NFL Punter arrested for protest.

    If memory serves, @Kingdaddy has written about Republicans in Huntington Beach. Same as they ever were.

    Former NFL punter Chris Kluwe was arrested over a protest at a city council meeting in Huntington Beach, California on Tuesday.

    Kluwe was protesting Huntington Beach’s decision to display a plaque at its public library that uses the words, “Magical,” “Alluring,” “Galvanizing,” and “Adventurous” next to each other to spell out MAGA. All seven members of Huntington Beach’s City Council are Republicans.

    Video from the city council meeting shows Kluwe criticizing the MAGA movement during the public discussion portion of the meeting, calling it “a Nazi movement” and then saying he would engage in civil disobedience. After Kluwe went to the front of the meeting where the city council sits, police handcuffed him and carried him out.

    Nice contrast to current K Butker.

    Kluwe is awesome.

    2
  66. Kurtz says:

    @Connor:

    You sound like a preacher that predicted the exact date of the Second Coming, but then announces a new date, then a new date, then a new date.

    You never answer that point.

    Nor do you answer the more important argument:

    The sorts of cuts occurring now will do pretty much nothing to fix that.

    Or that the GOP budget proposals will do nothing to fix debt service. Indeed, they are likely to make them worse. Which is a consistent pattern of behavior by your preferred party.

    Im still waiting for an answer to my reply to your 20% rate before the tax schemes start:

    It’s one thing to argue for a lower tax rate but another to argue that we cannot apply the law to rich people because they have the means to cheat.

    Get in the game, dude.

    5
  67. Kathy says:

    I began season 4 of The Boys, and found it infuriatingly close to present times. It now feels like a cautionary tale about what’s already happened. So, I’ll probably opt for something else, like the latest season of Harley Quinn.

    Not that I have that much time for entertainment these days. Hell Week got back with a vengeance, and it may be about to get even worse. We’re approaching the time some managers will get annoyed at me because their big project doesn’t get published, as if I could control any of that.

    On other things, I’m thinking of an instant pot beef and mushrooms thing. I want to get a very thick sauce, and maybe serve over pasta. Or maybe with oven roasted potatoes.

  68. Beth says:

    @Kathy:

    It’s cute so far. My partner and I really like that show. Lol, my partner bought us Ivy and Harley Funko Pops. She put the Harley one in her office and I took the Ivy one. Only real difference is my partner doesn’t like plants.

    I just like how the show argues that you can save the world through the powers of crazy and love.

  69. Gustopher says:

    @Beth: I was thinking a giant 5 gallon bucket as the “tub” — something from which the order-sized containers would be filled.

    And then struggling to understand why someone would order the 5 gallon holding bucket — although that would clearly earn him the moniker “coleslaw man,” rather than “the customer” — let alone dump it onto a plate.

    Now the story makes sense. It’s funny, but now I feel a sense of loss no longer having the Coleslaw Man ordering 5 gallon buckets of coleslaw.

    (There was an incident at one of my past jobs’ cafeteria of a man gathering all the plates of flan, and dumping them into a tub so he could bring flan home to his family. People were not done eating, he just took 50 desserts before others could get to them. We called him the Flan Man)

    Turns out if you didn’t mix the tub every so often while filling the tubs,

    Aha! Multiple sizes of tubs in your story! I’m not completely crazy!

    1
  70. just nutha says:

    @Kurtz: For my ignint cracker view of the issue, I’ll admit that I share Connor’s concern for the problem. And I wish that another round of tax cuts for top earners was the answer. Sadly, 40 years of watching this solution play out has convinced me that it’s not gonna work this time either.

    Wholesale gutting of the government doesn’t strike me as promising either, though. I guess we’ll find out. 🙁

    2
  71. charontwo says:

    Clif notes version:

    $4T. tax cutting says that putative deficit concerns are disconnected from any sort of intelligent thinking.

    1