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A blog about political change, among other things

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Happy Mother’s Day!

The New Neo Posted on May 14, 2023 by neoMay 14, 2023

[NOTE: This is a slightly-edited repeat of my traditional Mother’s Day post. It was written while my mother was still alive.]

Okay, who are these three dark beauties?

A hint: one of them is one of the very first pictures you’ve ever seen on this blog of neo, sans apple. Not that you’d recognize me, of course. Even my own mother might not recognize me from this photo.

My own mother, you say? Of course she would. Ah, but she’s here too, looking a bit different than she does today—Mother’s Day—at ninety-eight years of age. Just a bit; maybe her own mother wouldn’t recognize her, either.

Her own mother? She’s the one who’s all dressed up, with longer hair than the rest of us.

The photo of my grandmother was taken in the 1880’s; the one of my mother in the teens of the twentieth century; and the one of me, of course, in the 1950s.

Heredity, ain’t it great? My mother and grandmother are both sitting for formal portraits at a professional photographer’s studio, but by the time I came around amateur snapshots were easy to take with a smallish Brownie camera. My mother is sitting on the knee of her own grandfather, my grandmother’s father, a dapper gentleman who was always very well-turned out. I’m next to my older brother, who’s reading a book to me but is cropped out of this photo. My grandmother sits alone in all her finery.

We all not only resemble each other greatly in our features and coloring, but in our solemnity. My mother’s and grandmother’s seriousness is probably explained by the strange and formal setting; mine is due to my concentration on the book, which was Peter Pan (my brother was only pretending to read it, since he couldn’t read yet, but I didn’t know that at the time). My mother’s resemblance to me is enhanced by our similar hairdos (or lack thereof), although hers was short because it hadn’t really grown in yet, and mine was short because she purposely kept it that way (easier to deal with).

My grandmother not only has the pretty ruffled dress and the long flowing locks, but if you look really closely you can see a tiny earring dangling from her earlobe. When I was young, she showed me her baby earrings; several miniature, delicate pairs. It astounded me that they’d actually pierced a baby’s ears (and that my grandmother had let the holes close up later on, and couldn’t wear pierced earrings any more), whereas I had to fight for the right to have mine done in my early teens.

I’m not sure what my mother’s wearing; some sort of baby smock. But I know what I have on: my brother’s hand-me-down pajamas, and I was none too happy about it, of that you can be sure.

So, a very happy Mother’s Day to you all! What would mothers be without babies…and mothers…and babies….and mothers….?

Posted in Me, myself, and I | 6 Replies

Songs of love lost

The New Neo Posted on May 13, 2023 by neoMay 13, 2023

Love is the biggest topic in pop songs. Love gained, love lost, love betrayed, love regained, love yearned for, love rejected. But did you ever notice that there’s a dearth of popular songs about the death of a loved person? Comparatively speaking, anyway (I’m leaving out opera, which I imagine deals with the subject more often.)

The closest I could come to remembering such a pop song was “Wish You Were Here” by the Bee Gees, dedicated to their brother Andy after he died. But the lyrics mention “dealing with a heart of stone” and otherwise imply the possibility of a living person still out there. Then there are the teeny-bopper songs of my youth like “Teen Angel,” that describe the death of a boyfriend or girlfriend who’s very very young, rather than the far more universal situation in which the loved person dies later in life, when fully grown or even elderly.

Because I was drawing a blank, I looked it up – and found this list. Although not all of them actually are about a loved one’s death, most are – but I’d never heard of the majority of them before.

I’m not sure what it means. Maybe it just means that most people prefer to listen to pop songs about love lost in ways other than death. Or that pop music appeals mostly to the young.

Posted in Me, myself, and I, Music, Pop culture | 54 Replies

Interview with a gender clinic whistleblower

The New Neo Posted on May 13, 2023 by neoMay 13, 2023

I’ve certainly read a lot and heard a lot about the destructive results that occur all too often with the fast-tracked medical treatment of minor children who identify as trans in clinics that practice “gender-affirming” care. Even so, this was a disturbing interview with a whistleblower who used to work in one of those clinics. The whole thing is actually worth watching, but it’s extremely long and so I’ve cued up two short excerpts that I found especially unsettling.

I am utterly against medical treatment for these children, and I believe this is a form of child abuse. I plan to write more on the subject, but this will do it for today.

Posted in Health, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex | Tagged transgender treatment | 48 Replies

What will happen to Daniel Penny? And what should have happened to Jordan Neely?

The New Neo Posted on May 13, 2023 by neoMay 13, 2023

In case you somehow missed the story, Penny is the man who has been arrested and charged with second degree manslaughter for subduing a raving Jordan Neely on the New York subway, and whose chokehold (that word is continually used but rarely defined and explained) appears to have caused Neely’s death. Penny is white and Neely was black. If it had been otherwise, this case would never have received the attention it’s gotten.

There is so much unknown about this case that it’s hard to speak intelligently on the subject – not that that stops most people from airing very strong opinions on the guilt and innocence of the parties. We have conflicting testimony about what Neely was saying and doing prior to Penny’s actions. We don’t know much about so-called chokeholds and what they’re intended to do versus their risks. Apparently, Neely didn’t die on the scene; he died in the hospital later on. We don’t know if Neely had ingested drugs, and if so, what type and how much.

We do know that Neely had a long rap sheet that included an unprovoked assault in which he injured an elderly woman by punching her in the face, and an attempt to kidnap a 7-year-old child, and he also had punched an elderly man. One might question why these acts – he was convicted of the punching – didn’t generate enough jail time to keep him in custody. Here’s the apparent answer:

Neely was ultimately charged with assaulting Baltazar [the elderly man] and the case was eventually adjudicated, but the result was sealed, the NY Daily News reported.

Two years after the assault on Baltazar, Neely was once again arrested for punching a 67-year-old female in the face as she exited the New York City Subway system. Neely pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 15 months in an alternative-to-incarceration program that he could complete in order to get the charges reduced and face no jail time.

But, at the time of his death, Neely had a warrant out for his arrest when he skipped a court date to check up on Neely’s progress in the program.

That’s quite a system.

Of course, it’s not easy to know just what to do with people such as Neely who actually do seem to be suffering from mental illness and commit criminal acts of the sort he favored. We used to lock them up in mental hospitals (or prisons) and sometimes throw away the key. Those days are long gone, and re-instituting them long-term would be quite the civil liberties problem. It would also be extremely expensive. In other words, it’s not going to be happening.

I’ve seen scads of articles saying that the mental health system failed Neely. But that ignores the fact that many many homeless people are suffering from mental health and substance abuse problems that are resistant to treatment, and that many also will not cooperate with treatment. It’s not like mental health professionals have some panacea that’s being cruelly withheld. And even cities that have thrown tons of money at the problem – such as, just to take one example, San Francisco – find it is incredibly difficult to make any more than a tiny dent in it.

Meanwhile, people who ride the subways are at the mercy of those who might be both crazy and violent and willing to perpetrate violence. Whatever Neely was doing that day, it is very clear that he fit all those categories in the past and potentially at the time Penny subdued him. Both Penny and others on that subway car probably were picking up on many cues to that effect. Must they wait till they are attacked before they do something? How much warning is enough warning? How much force is appropriate force, and how perfect does a person have to be in applying that force?

I wish I could say that the trial will be a good opportunity to explore such issues objectively and come to the right conclusion, but I very very much doubt it. The incident already been sensationalized and twisted by the usual suspects.

NOTE: This New Yorker article has a pretty good discussion of the difficulties of dealing with the chronically mental ill, such as Neely.

Posted in Law, Race and racism, Violence | 88 Replies

A big bang, but not the Big Bang

The New Neo Posted on May 13, 2023 by neoMay 13, 2023

We pay a lot of attention to what’s happening on earth, and rightly so.

But this mysterious far-off explosion is certainly of interest:

According to a new study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society there is a new champion out there [for brightest explosion]: a cosmic explosion known as AT2021lwx. The explosion, located 8 billion light years from Earth, has been erupting for three years now, emitting two trillion times the light of our sun and 10 times the energy of the brightest supernova ever observed…

More telescopes still were brought online to study AT2021lwx, including NASA’s orbiting Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, the New Technology Telescope in Chile, and the Gran Telescopio Canarias in La Palma, Spain. With those instruments conducting observations of their own, and with other alternatives ruled out, Wiseman and his colleagues have come to the conclusion that the brilliant, steady light of AT2021lwx is caused by a massive cloud of gas many thousands of times the size of our sun that was orbiting a black hole and was somehow disrupted—the astronomers don’t yet know how—causing the gas to fall into the hole. The entire formation, they have estimated, is 100 times the size of our solar system and is currently emitting 100 times more energy than the sun will in its entire 10 billion year lifetime. How long it will continue to burn is unclear, but its light is still streaming our way.

This comes under the heading of one of my favorite Shakespeare quotes. After Horatio has said of a sighting of Hamlet’s father’s ghost, “O day and night, but this is wondrous strange,” Hamlet replies: There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.

Indeed.

Posted in Getting philosophical: life, love, the universe, Science | 7 Replies

Open thread 5/13/23

The New Neo Posted on May 13, 2023 by neoMay 13, 2023

Posted in Uncategorized | 16 Replies

Border crossings

The New Neo Posted on May 12, 2023 by neoMay 12, 2023

Today’s the day that marks the end of Title 42, and there are plenty of articles about what’s going on at the border as a result. So I’m going to link to some of them: this at Powerline, this at Legal Insurrection, and this at Ace’s.

From this Politico link at Ace’s:

Biden’s troop deployment to the border is different from Trump’s

From law enforcement duties to building barriers, the tasks will be different.

Hundreds of active-duty U.S. troops are descending on the Mexican border this week, but they’re not authorized to make arrests, use their weapons or do much more than administrative work.

That’s making the military deployment — timed for the end of pandemic-era immigration restrictions — a classic no-win political situation for the Biden administration, which is getting hit from at least one prominent Democrat for perpetuating Trump-era militarization of the border, and from Republicans who say the mission will be utterly ineffectual.

Poor poor Biden, getting it from both sides.

Republicans don’t say it will be ineffectual, they say it will be destructive to this country. And that this is done on purpose.

Just about everything else I could say now on the subject I’ve said before, so I’ll leave it to you to discuss it all in the comments.

Posted in Biden, Immigration, Latin America, Law | 20 Replies

I think perhaps we should stop referring to these places as schools

The New Neo Posted on May 12, 2023 by neoMay 12, 2023

What a brilliant idea – “equitable grading”:

Self-discipline is just another form of white supremacy, according to the Left, as is the idea that people must actually work for what they want. Thus, testing, grades, and any other form of academic rigor are being discarded as outdated symptoms of systemic racism.

Several school districts nationwide have embraced this move toward “equitable grading,” a system in which students are expected to learn classroom material without ever being rewarded for it or penalized if they fail to do so. Under this new model, homework is assigned but not emphasized, according to the Wall Street Journal, and tests come with multiple retake opportunities — that is, if they are given at all. And behavior, including attendance, is no longer a factor in a student’s final grade because it has “nothing to do with whether they can write a competent, argumentative essay,” according to Tanya Kuhnee, a teacher-support specialist who helped implement equitable grading in Albuquerque, New Mexico…

Equitable learning certainly has changed the way classrooms feel and operate, but not for the better. One student who experienced these grading changes for himself said they incentivized poor work habits and noted that even some of the highest-achieving students in his Las Vegas high school have stopped showing up to class unless there was an exam…

Proponents of equitable learning believe they are helping underprivileged students, but in reality, they are setting them up for failure.

Actually, it’s setting up many more students than that for failure, with only the most self-motivated continuing to push themselves. It probably lightens the load of teachers, too, because they have a lot fewer tests to design and to grade. But since the left is interested in dumbing down America as much as possible and making the vision of the movie “Idiocracy” a reality, it’s probably all features and no bugs as far as they’re concerned.

I was a good student, but I received the foundation of my education in public schools for elementary and high school that emphasized homework and lots of testing, as well as attendance. However, I didn’t like school and found it boring. The solution would have been to present students with more interesting material, but that was rare. There is no question in my mind that the homework I hated and found to be a chore was necessary in order to get me to pay attention and actually learn whatever it was they were teaching, even though I was probably more motivated than most.

But it was in college that attendance was no longer required, and I found myself taking full advantage of that, cutting the classes I found boring and attending those I found more interesting. My grades stayed good, but I still had the incentive of testing and graded papers. Without those, I don’t think I would have learned nearly as much – and again, I was a pretty self-motivated learner. Could my school experience have been better? Absolutely. But throwing out tests and grades would definitely not have made it so.

And I doubt it would make it better now for the vast vast majority of students. What a travesty.

Posted in Education, Me, myself, and I | 23 Replies

VDH predicts a Thermidor Reaction in America

The New Neo Posted on May 12, 2023 by neoMay 12, 2023

Some French Revolution history from Victor Davis Hanson:

Almost everyone who originally had opposed the absolute monarchy, and, like the Americans, wished for a constitutional replacement, was eventually executed by revolutionaries who were then executed by more radical revolutionaries. The longer and more radical the revolution ran, the meaner, dumber, and more deadly the revolutionaries who emerged from the woodwork.

Finally, what could not go on, did not go on, as French society unraveled. Then the so-called Thermidors put an end to the madness of the Robespierre brothers and their sidekick, the 26-year-old Saint-Just, and did to them what they had done to thousands.

Not just what they had done to thousands, but what they were planning to do to the Thermidors themselves. For example:

Many feared their own survival depended on Robespierre’s removal; during a meeting on 29 June, three members of the Committee of Public Safety called him a dictator in his face.

Robespierre responded by not attending sessions, allowing his opponents to build a coalition against him. In a speech made to the convention on 26 July, he claimed certain members were conspiring against the Republic, an almost certain death sentence if confirmed. When he refused to give names, the session broke up in confusion. That evening he repeated these claims at the Jacobins club, where it was greeted with demands for execution of the ‘traitors’. Fearing the consequences if they did not act first, his opponents attacked Robespierre and his allies in the Convention next day. When Robespierre attempted to speak, his voice failed, one deputy crying “The blood of Danton chokes him!”…

He was executed on 28 July with 19 colleagues, including Saint-Just and Georges Couthon, followed by 83 members of the Commune.

Back to Hanson’s essay:

We are swept up in similarly scary revolutionary times, after the perfect storm of the 2020 rioting, the COVID destructive lockdowns, and a radical socialist takeover of the old Democratic Party…

We have not descended to the guillotine yet, but we are getting there with online cancel culture, doxxing, deplatforming, boycotts, mandatory diversity statements, indoctrination training, ostracism for an incorrect word, and violence redefined as activism.

Black Lives Matter ended when its supposedly Marxist architects all vanished into comfortable bourgeoise estates and cushy retirements—along with the millions of dollars they shook down from guilt-ridden corporations.

#MeToo sputtered out once the mantra of “believe women” turned its attention to candidate Joe Biden and Tara Reade. It turned out that she most certainly must not be believed when she swore the Delaware Democrat had sexually assaulted her.

VDH is a smart man and a good writer, but I’m not seeing what he seems to be seeing. BLM as an organization may have somewhat fizzled, but not the slogans and ideas it espouses. MeToo is alive and well and living in prosecutions of Republicans, as we’ve seen with the Jean Carroll trial. Tara Reade is a non-event for most Democrats, but that doesn’t mean that had she accused someone on the right she wouldn’t have been their darling.

Hanson goes on to describe how many elements of society have collapsed – many cities, respect for government agencies like the FBI and the military, the quality of education, and more. He thinks the backlash is already starting:

New polls showed scant public support for open borders, for multiple sexual identities, and for biological men competing in women’s sports. Reparations from an insolvent government to black Americans—on the principle that those whose ancestors might have been enslaved eight generations ago were owed money from those whose ancestors might have owned slaves eight generations ago—is widely rejected by the general population.

When corporations like Anheuser-Busch or Disney tried to ingratiate themselves to the woke Jacobins, they lost billions in revenue—just as the woke Pentagon has lost thousands of recruits.

Woke networks like CNN have smaller audiences than some one-person podcasts.

All of that is true. But will it matter? I don’t have the answer, but I fear it might not, for the simple reason that the left doesn’t care about public opinion at this point because they think they can keep power without it and crush those who disagree with them. Of course, so did the French revolutionaries.

It seems to me that for a Thermidor reaction to happen here, the rank-and-file Democrat members of Congress – not the high-profile radicals like AOC, but the lesser-known Democrats in Congress who pass themselves off as moderate and yet vote for every single radical proposal anyway – must start consistently refusing to do so. Till something of that sort happens, even if the populace isn’t happy with what’s going on, I believe the left will stay in power because the right has become so demonized that a lot of people will continue to vote for Democrats even when they implement policies they don’t like. When New York City or San Francisco start electing Republican mayors, then I might start believing something is really changing. Or when supposedly moderate Democrats in Congress start refusing to follow the dictates of their leaders, then I might start believing it as well.

Posted in History, Liberals and conservatives; left and right, Violence | 26 Replies

Open thread 5/12/23

The New Neo Posted on May 12, 2023 by neoMay 12, 2023

Posted in Uncategorized | 15 Replies

The FBI stonewalls Congress

The New Neo Posted on May 11, 2023 by neoMay 11, 2023

The FBI asks how many divisions does Congress have?:

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer and Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley on Wednesday fumed as the FBI failed to meet a subpoena deadline to provide congressional investigators with a form that allegedly details a bribery scheme between then-Vice President Joe Biden and a foreign national…

The FBI, however, did not honor the subpoena by the deadline. Instead, acting Assistant Director of the bureau’s Office of Congressional Affairs Christopher Dunham wrote to Comer on Wednesday, informing him that the bureau had to be mindful of “executive branch confidentiality interests and law enforcement responsibilities.”

In the letter, which the New York Post obtained, Dunham informed Comer that “The FBI appreciates this opportunity to inform you of our confidentiality interests so that we can ‘seek optimal accommodation through a realistic evaluation of’ each other’s needs and ‘avoid the polarization of disputes.'”

“We are committed to working together through this process,” he assured the Kentucky Republican.

Oh, indeed. Indeed. Blahbidy blahbidy blah.

Both Comer and Grassley deemed the response unsatisfactory.

“It’s clear from the FBI’s response that the unclassified record the Oversight Committee subpoenaed exists, but they are refusing to provide it to the Committee,” Comer insisted. “We’ve asked the FBI to not only provide this record, but to also inform us what it did to investigate these allegations.”

“The FBI has failed to do both.”

Whereas, if this had been an allegation about a Republican, it would have been leaked to the MSM and speedily published.

More:

Grassley said in a statement. “So the question remains, what did the FBI do to investigate very serious allegations from an apparent trusted FBI source implicating then-Vice President Biden?”

Covered them with a pillow, till they stopped moving?

Posted in Biden | Tagged FBI | 31 Replies

The eye of the beholder: Trump appears in Town Hall on CNN last night

The New Neo Posted on May 11, 2023 by neoMay 11, 2023

I didn’t watch it. I assume Trump was Trump, with the usual pluses and minuses.

Here’s Roger Kimball on the evening’s festivities:

On and on it went. Collins playing Whac-A-Mole, Trump declining to be whapped. There were no moments like Hamlet’s duel with Laertes when Gertrude could exclaim, “A hit! “A palpable hit!” CNN considerately invited only Republicans and independents join in the event. Considered as a point of fair play, that was as it should be. Niccolò Machiavelli would have deprecated the decision. The audience was clearly sympathetic to Trump, its questions uniformly respectful.

Once again, the media industrial complex underestimated the man they love to hate. They feel nothing but disdain and contempt for Donald Trump, and they assume — falsely — that the voters will, too, if only they get to see the man in action.

The tweeter who said that the event guaranteed a landslide victory for Trump in 2024 overstated the case. It by no means guarantees that he will be the Republican candidate, let alone that he would win the general election. But as a measure of political virility, it revealed that, as of May 10, 2023, Donald Trump is by far the most vital and potent candidate on either side of the aisle.

That could change, of course…I suspect that the only thing that is certain in this race so far is what last night’s event meant for CNN. It was, as a column in the Hill put it, “a disaster.”

In response to Kimball’s statement that the people at CNN “feel nothing but disdain and contempt for Donald Trump, and they assume — falsely — that the voters will, too, if only they get to see the man in action,” I think it goes much much further. They also feel secure in their own brilliance and tactical finesse, and they believe that they will be able to trap him and make him look bad. And to a great many voters in America, that is what happens and what happened last night on CNN. Disdain and contempt emerges or does not emerge depending on the eye of the beholder as well as the frame through which he or she looks.

Does the left think Trump acquitted himself well? Not to hear them tell it. Of course, that could be bravado on their part, but they also have enormous faith in their own ability to convince the public of whatever they tell them. And if they label Trump’s appearance a disaster for him, most MSM readers – who, after all, didn’t watch it – will conclude that it was exactly that. And even if they watch it, they do so through the filter of years of Trump-contempt.

For example, the Daily News – which seems to be unwilling to stop sending me links, despite my attempts to unsubscribe – has this headline: “Donald Trump’s ‘disastrous’ CNN town hall elicits strong reactions”:

Donald Trump’s combative CNN town hall elicited strong reactions from viewers, celebrities and political insiders, many of whom were disgusted by the former president reasserting false claims the 2020 election was stolen and hurling insults at abuse accuser E. Jean Carroll…

“The predictably disastrous @cnn town hall was indeed disastrous,” tweeted Mark Lukasiewicz, the dean of Hofstra University’s communications school. “Proving again: Live lying works. A friendly MAGA crowd consistently laughs, claps at Trump’s punch lines — including re sex assault and Jan 6 — and the moderator cannot begin to keep up with the AR-15 pace of lies.”…

Film director Rob Reiner wrote Trump is “a Liar, a Criminal, and is mentally ill.”

“It was disgraceful on every level,” said Joe Scarborough, who co-hosts “Morning Joe” on MSNBC. “I wouldn’t say it’s dangerous for democracy because we passed that a long time ago, but it showed the corrosive effects of Trump-ism over eight years. I’ve got to say, the most shocking part was anaudience who cheered on a president who tried to overturn American democracy. An audience that mocked and ridiculed a woman who a jury of her peers, Donald Trump’s peers, found had been sexually assaulted.”

More in that vein at Time.

Posted in Press, Trump | 24 Replies

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