Saturday, December 31, 2022

News bits: How false news can spread, etc.

Happy New Year!
Partying hard, especially the one on the far right


Misinformation spreads: On a phone call yesterday, my sibling mentioned an article by a car site called motorious. It commented in an article about mandatory kill switches to be sold in all new cars
According to an article written by former U.S. Representative Bob Barr, hidden away in the recently passed infrastructure bill, the very one I warned before would negatively impact drivers across the country if it were to pass, is a measure to install vehicle kill switches into every new car, truck, and SUV sold in this country.
The motorious article, which was also mentioned again here in a comment, pointed to the horrors of police and hackers being able to turn off a car’s engine for good or bad reasons. The story piqued my interest. I checked out the morotious article and it linked to an article that the fascist, propaganda source Daily Caller had posted (fact and bias rating here). As we all recall, in congress Bob Barr was a Christofascist jackass and shameless liar. Following up, I found that the highly reputable AP wrote this about the kill switch story:
CLAIM: President Joe Biden signed a bill that will give law enforcement access to a “kill switch” that will be attached to ALL new cars in 2026.

AP’S ASSESSMENT: False. While the bipartisan infrastructure bill Biden signed last year requires advanced drunk and impaired driving technology to become standard equipment in new cars, experts say that technology doesn’t amount to a “kill switch,” and nothing in the bill gives law enforcement access to those systems.   
.... in the months since the law passed, some social media users have misrepresented the provision online, falsely claiming it will give police access to data collected by the technology or allow the government to shut down cars remotely.

“Joe Biden signed a bill that would give law enforcement access to a ‘kill switch’ that will be attached to ALL new cars in 2026,” read several posts shared widely on Twitter and Facebook.

Experts who have for years been involved in creating and studying impaired driving prevention technology say that those claims don’t accurately reflect what these tools do, nor what the law says.
The point here is obvious. One has got to take sensational information like this with a grain of salt. Content on the internet is chock full of liars, grifters, fascists, Christian Taliban zealots and the like, all of whom have a self-serving agenda, usually money and/or power. 

Yeah, maybe hackers will figure out how to shut a car down some day. And maybe in time, law enforcement will weasel its way in and try to get control of every car on the road. But we're not there yet. The shamelessly mendacious Christofascist right is using this to foment irrational fear and to slander Biden and Democrats in power generally.


From the It’s not a conflict of interest files: The NYT writes: “A Charity Tied to the Supreme Court  Offers Donors Access to the Justices. The Supreme Court Historical Society has raised more than $23 million in the last two decades, much of it from lawyers, corporations and special interests.” 

It’s not a conflict of interest. It’s just free speech.


Fossilized climate change denier retires from US Senate: 
Farewell To The Senate’s Biggest Climate Denier. Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) leaves behind a legacy of climate disinformation, and a small army of pro-industry contrarians. 
Inhofe, 87, will retire in early January after nearly three decades in the Senate. He leaves behind a legacy of climate denial that might be laughable if it weren’t so embarrassing and dangerous. There are few members of Congress who have done more to sow public doubt about the mounting, deadly impacts of fossil fuel-driven planetary warming, or to block policies and regulations meant to confront the threat.
I recall Inhofe once saying that climate is God’s work, not something that humans can possibly ever affect. He was chairman of the Senate Environment Committee. The Republican Party, what can one say? Anti-inconvenient truth, anti-inconvenient science and anti-rationality, among some other bad things.

Simply 2023 Question


We experienced a turbulent year in 2022, and so we might feel inclined to say:


To put you all into the spirit for the new year, what exactly was SO awful about 2022? Let's see:

Russia Invades Ukraine
Robb Elementary School Shooting
Buffalo, New York Supermarket Shooting
Death of Pele
Queen of England Elizabeth II
Trucker Convoy Freedom Movement in Ottawa, Canada
6th Wave of Covid
Inflation 
The Republicans winning the House and Senate bigly. 

So, what was for YOU, yes YOU, the most egregious event of 2022? To bring some balance, what was for YOU the most hopeful event of 2022? Maybe how the Republicans swept the House and Senate?

Looking forward to 2023, are you hopeful it will be better, or pessimistic it will be worse, or about the same?

Oh Hell, I might as well say it: I am the optimist, it will be BETTER!! 











Friday, December 30, 2022

News bits: Oops, $240 million is missing from Trumplandia, etc.

The Independent reports
Don Jr admits he doesn’t know where $240m Trump fundraised to 
fight election results went in Jan 6 transcripts

Donald Trump Jr said that he did not know where the $240 million raised to fight his father’s 2020 presidential election loss went, according to transcripts released by the House select committee investigating the January 6 riot at the US Capitol.
Aw, c'mon Don Jr, you lil' joker. You and the rest of us know where it went. Don Sr grifted it from the flock and is using the proceeds to have fun with sex workers. . . . . Jeez, $240m will buy a lot of sex worker fun. 😍


Send cash, lots of cash!


The WaPo reports on Trump's released tax returns:
Trump — who broke with a decades-long tradition of presidential candidates and presidents by refusing to make his tax returns public — has for years falsely claimed that he could not release them while under “routine audit” by the IRS.

Last week, the Ways and Means Committee revealed that the IRS did not audit Trump’s returns during his first two years in office, despite a rule mandating such reviews, and never completed any audits while he served.
What a fibber. This is what the Republican Party fights tooth, claw and poison dagger to protect and shield from the public. Of course, if it was a prominent Democrat who did this, Republican howls of self-righteous moral outrage would break your eardrums.

Vox speculates on why massive fraud in COVID relief spending has not had much news impact:
.... pandemic fraud across three major relief programs could reach the $250 billion to $560 billion range (though no one really knows because the exact amount is difficult to estimate). The federal government approved about $5 trillion in total pandemic relief money ....

All of the above makes for a messy picture of political culpability. Republicans can’t frame this as a purely Democratic scandal when Trump signed the bill and was president while much of the theft happened. Democrats, for their part, helped craft the initial relief bill and extended it further under Biden. So that’s an incentive for both parties not to look too closely at what might have gone wrong.

Among Democrats, there’s likely a generalized fear that making too much about any fraud in government benefits will be used to discredit the use of government benefits to help people generally (harking back to the “welfare queen” attack from Ronald Reagan).

One would think, though, that it would be anti-spending Republicans who would typically make a big stink about an issue like this. And yet with the GOP increasingly fixated on the domestic culture war, the specifics of the pandemic relief fraud (money stolen by foreign hackers) don’t seem to fit too well with their current message.

This is evident in an amusing recent exchange on the pages of the Wall Street Journal. Rep. James Comer (R-KY), the incoming chair of the House Oversight Committee, wrote an op-ed on pandemic relief fraud, along with five other issues he plans to investigate. But his most specific concern was that some states and localities used pandemic relief funds for “electric buses and controversial ideologies.” In an earlier press release, his office claimed to find evidence that pandemic relief money funded “woke initiatives.”

American Enterprise Institute fellow Matt Weidinger responded to Comer’s op-ed with a letter to the Journal urging him to focus on the bigger fraud picture so it could be stopped from happening again. “Criminal gangs, including some based in Russia and China, used stolen identities to seize U.S. tax dollars on an industrial scale,” Weidinger wrote. This could be read as saying: Focus on the real issue, please, not just the culture war crap. We will see next year whether the GOP House majority listens.
No, the GOP House majority is not going to listen. It is fixated on culture war crap.

American politics at the federal level is a freaking trainwreck. Democrats are plausibly worried about the Welfare Queen myth, while Republicans continue to be trapped in their psychotic break from reality and competence called culture wars. 

However, criminals love the train wreck. They get to live long and prosper, as Spock might say.

Thursday, December 29, 2022

News bits: Deep cynicism and mendacity, etc.

Astonishing GOP cynicism & mendacity
The WaPo writes about how congressional Republicans are white washing domestic terrorism and murder by White supremacists, fascists and other radical right thugs and murderers:
Republican attempts to minimize far-right violence hampers government efforts to combat the threat, extremism analysts say
 
Drawing inspiration from a far-right shooter in New Zealand, the gunman who killed 10 Black shoppers at a Buffalo supermarket in the spring used racist, dehumanizing language in his writings, singling out Jews as the real problem to be “dealt with in time.”

Nevertheless, at a congressional hearing this month on the threat of violent white supremacy, two Republican lawmakers cherry-picked a word in the Buffalo killer’s screed — “socialist” — to cast him as a radical leftist. They did not note that the shooter was referring to National Socialism, the ideology of the German Nazi Party, as Democrats and witnesses on the panel pointedly clarified.

“Any sober look” at the Buffalo shooter’s hate-filled manifesto, Oren Segal of the Anti-Defamation League told the lawmakers, “would recognize that attack as clearly a white-supremacist attack.”

But “far right” also is an imperfect term, analysts say, and does not capture the complex ideologies, including some that overlap with the anarchist left, that have fueled recent attacks.

That fuzziness leaves room for bad-faith arguments and misinformation, miring an urgent threat in partisan point-scoring. Terrorism researchers said they had hoped that rising political violence culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol would jolt leaders into action. Instead, they say, efforts to address violent extremism have stalled over semantics and an eagerness to blame “the other side.”  
Also this month, as first reported by Roll Call, lawmakers who wrote the final defense authorization bill “deleted or diluted” all seven House-passed provisions related to extremism in the U.S. military or broader society.
I am sure that if Republicans in congress would act in good faith, without ill will, this problem with semantics would not be a problem. But since the GOP has turned Christofascist, compromise and good will are both off the table. All that’s left is endless bitching, bickering, lying, slandering and point scoring by cynical, mendacious Republicans.

To the extent congressional Democrats are engaging in the same or similar tactics is unclear to me. If they are, I assign most of the blame to Republicans. They are the ones most responsible for fomenting and forcing fascist, no-compromise culture wars on all of us.


Regarding the Supreme Court’s
unprincipled legal reasoning
I’ve repeatedly criticized the current Supreme Court for being unprincipled in its reasoning. Its reasoning looks to me more like a matter of knowing in advance what the decision will be, and then coming up with a legal rationale to support it. That is the opposite of how judges are supposed to decide cases. In theory, judges are supposed to first look at the facts and the law and then decide the case. The court’s recent track record indicates that the decide first, rationalize second mode of decision-making is dominant. Solid evidence of that is the inconsistency in legal reasoning.

The Christofascist Republican court has set itself up as the maker of law, not the decider of legality. That is the essence of anti-democratic authoritarianism. Above the Law writes about this authoritarian aspect of the politically corrupted Republican Supreme Court:

Supreme Court Shadow Docket Is Showing -- Once Again -- 
Its Contempt For Consistency When It Stands In The Way Of Their Political Goals
The emperor has no clothes — or to be more precise the Supreme Court has no consistency. The latest kick to the gut of the Court’s legitimacy came yesterday via the shadow docket — because of course. In Arizona et al. v. Alejandro Mayorkas et al., the Court held in a 5-4 decision that Title 42, a Trump era public health policy that allowed migrants to be expelled quickly from the country during the COVID-19 crisis, could not be lifted during the appeal of a lower court’s decision to end the policy.

The math’s not mathing. That is until you see the through line is current conservative political goals, not any sort of jurisprudential theory.

The Court has become what conservatives long-claimed to hate policymakers in robes. And even the majority’s nod toward separation of powers doesn’t hold much water. 

A growing fascism vs. more radical fascism
split in the Republican Party
A hyper-radicalized Christofascist faction in the Republican Party is trying to gain power over the mainstream radicalized Christofascists. It’s a fight in the GOP between far right authoritarianism against even farther right authoritarianism. The NYT writes:
Ronna McDaniel’s quest for a fourth term atop the Republican National Committee has triggered an ugly intraparty fight between the right and the farther right.

Ms. McDaniel, who was handpicked by Mr. Trump in late 2016 to run the party and whom he enlisted in a scheme to draft fake electors to perpetuate his presidency, could be considered a Trump proxy by Republicans eager to begin to eradicate what many consider to be the party’s pre-eminent problem: the former president’s influence over the G.O.P. 
But Ms. McDaniel is not facing moderation-minded challengers. Her rivals are from the Trumpist right. They include the pillow salesman Mike Lindell, who continues to spin out fanciful election conspiracies, and — more worrying for Ms. McDaniel — a Trump loyalist from California, Harmeet Dhillon, who is backed by some of Mr. Trump’s fiercest defenders, including the Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, a youthful group of pro-Trump rightists.

“It’s been a very vitriolic campaign,” Ms. McDaniel said in an interview, adding: “I’m all for scorched earth against Democrats. I don’t think it’s the right thing to do against other Republicans.”

The candidacy of Mr. Lindell, the MyPillow chief executive who exemplifies the conspiracy-driven fringe, has put still more right-wing pressure on Ms. McDaniel, who refuses to say Joseph R. Biden Jr. was fairly elected in 2020. (Mr. Lindell’s latest conspiracy theory is that Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, Mr. Trump’s biggest rival so far for the 2024 presidential nomination, unfairly won re-election in November.)
Hyper-fascist Harmeet Dhillon is trying to take 
over the GOP from fascist Ronna McDaniel 


A couple points points are worth mention:
  • The Republican Party is just fine with scorched earth, no-compromise politics and propaganda against Democrats, which constitutes rock solid evidence of the GOP’s Christofascist radical authoritarianism 
  • The NYT, and by proxy, the rest of the mainstream still do not understand the nature or seriousness of what has happened to the old Republican Party, i.e., old-fashioned pro-democracy conservatism has morphed into anti-democracy, government- and regulation-hating Christofascism — this is about a bitter intraparty dispute between a radical right faction and a hyper-radical right faction, with regular old-fashioned pro-democracy conservatism is nowhere to be seen
  • Mike Lindell does not spin out fanciful election conspiracies — he tells blatant lies and slanders people, which again indicates that mainstream media still do not understand the nature or seriousness of what is going on

A sharp contrast of how Canadians view news

 Hello all, and happy New Year (coming up). Hopefully the new year will bring more joy to all of our lives but I am not holding my breath.

Between the antics of the Republican Party, the ongoing war in Ukraine, sabre rattling by China, more and more climate disasters, it seems there will be more and more reasons to continue to feel anxieties over the future of America and the planet.

I hope the regulars here will excuse a few thoughts then by this American citizen who is now living in Canada.

My observations are strictly mine, just to be clear.

Turning on ANY American news network, or reading up on any American news online, we are usually treated to more angst about the fate of Democracy, the antics of Trump, the failures (or successes) of Biden, election conspiracy theories, and lots and lots of stories about the Border "Crisis", and Inflation.

I have noticed a different tone on Canadian media outlets. More about international news and events. More about climate. More about sporting events. More common interest stories.

Here are just some examples, this morning on CBC online:

https://www.cbc.ca/news

Or CTV online:

https://www.ctvnews.ca/

Mind you, Canadians don't have to deal with Trumpism, election denialism, though even Canadians have their fare share of Rightwing extremists and White Nationalists - but they seldom make the headlines.

Even one of most Rightwing publications in Canada is pretty tame compared to Fox and the like in the U.S.

https://nationalpost.com/

And Canadians have access to some of best analytical and well researched material with outlets like:

https://theconversation.com/ca

Why am I bringing this all up? Am I, now that I am living in Canada, putting my head into the sand? Have I by being less invested in American news, dismissing the real dangers of the world? OR am I finding that being exposed to Canadian news I am getting more balance in my life and seeing more of the world than what I got from American news?

Is the way American news outlets handle news, complete with a lot of hyperbole and a lot of partisan commentary, a better way of presenting the dangers Americans are facing? Or does the way they present the news only cause MORE angst, anxiety, and yup, division?

AND of course many of you will remind me, that the U.S. is in crisis, that the Ukraine war could turn nuclear, and that we have to be fearful of China, and that we need to FOCUS on those dangers. And you may be right, I am NOT saying we should be all singing Kumbaya and ignoring the real dangers.

BUT at the same time it is nice to be able to turn on the news and not be hit in the face 24/7 with the same stories over and over and over again. I have to admit it: it's a nice diversion. 

Should American outlets offer more than 24/7 anxiety ridden news? Whatcha all think?

Sharp criticism of the mainstream media

These comments by PD are a scathing indictment of the failures of our professional mainstream media. This is not about Faux News, QAnon or other radical right and fascist lies and crackpottery propaganda sources. This is about the professional mainstream media. The criticisms are based on facts in the public record. This speaks for itself. PD writes:

I'm afraid politicians and the media across the ideological spectrum lie routinely about really important matters. Right now our major policies come from the Biden Admin and Dem Party. 2 areas of concern for me are the official stories we get from politicians and media outlets like NYT on Covid and Ukraine. These are extremely important, and unlike Q-anon conspiracy theories, the lies we're told are believable because most people aren't going to spend a lot of time searching for evidence that contradicts them.

A NYT article, "Covid Masking: The Last Holdouts" quotes "expert" Trevor Bedford-- a virologist who works at a Cancer Institute in Seattle-- saying

[T]he risk of Covid is similar to that of the flu, with one death in
2,000 infections, about one tenth of what it was originally, with one death in 200 infections.

The actual data (fr Johns Hopkins) shows it is ~1 fatality per 138 infections. No corrections so far.

https://twitter.com/danalud...

The article is clearly written to discourage mask wearing, with sentences like:

While many [experts] recommend masking indoors, they also say individual risk calculations should take into account that the virus is almost certainly here to stay and people need to ask: Do I want to mask, perhaps for decades?

and

On social media, many of the Covid risk-averse have reported entreaties to attend holiday gatherings they fear would expose them to unacceptable health risks. Many declined to speak on the record, for fear of reprisal or ridicule from employers or social groups. Others say the shift in attitudes has sometimes made them question themselves...[One mask wearer said] "Now it's like I'm one of the crazy people."

[And] Sometimes family members and friends can get a little exasperated by the hyper concern. Rafael Oro, 64, a business analyst in Union, N.J., said he has chafed at his wife’s continuing caution. While he is ready to return to prepandemic routines, “we have yet to see a play,” he noted.

The thing is, many epidemiologists are far more inclined to criticize the Biden Admin and CDC for all but giving up on accurate and consistent safety messaging. And though the media doesn't cover it, a new spate of CDC PSAs warn that anyone over 50 or with chronic illnesses should see a doctor immediately if they feel any symptoms as it can be "deadly" in those demographic groups.

UKRAINE:

On Ukraine, there have been so many lies I don't know where to begin. Just this week the head of the private American Mozart Group (which is on the front lines training the Ukrainians got a bit tipsy in an interview and let slip descriptions of Ukrainian atrocities, corruption, false media narratives in the Western papers et al. For example,

It's a very dirty war and Ukrainians are committing plenty of violations including killing Russian prisoners. As soon as we see videos of Ukrainians killing POW's we say 'Dudes, we're going to a different unit. We're very professional. I mean, everybody knows you shouldn't kill dudes that have already surrendered. And there was plenty of that. There's all kinds of atrocities...We need to tell them,'you don't do shit like this, and if you do you're just like the Russians.'

Col. Andrew Milburn on the gov't there:

I happen to have a Ukrainian flag in my bag, but it's not like I'm all 'Ukraine is SO awesome.' Because I understand there are all kinds of fucked up people running Ukraine. It's not about Ukraine. It's about global norms. It's about Putin. It's about dudes in the 21st century running around like Putin doing what they want.'

And this from a guy who is helping Ukraine, though he also says the loss of Ukrainian life is not sustainable, and the "Ukraine is winning" media coverage is "horseshit." It's a war of attrition, he says, and it is the Ukrainians that are bleeding as well as the Russians.

Newsweek ran a sanitized version of some of these comments from Andrew Milburn here: https://www.newsweek.com/us... I watched the entire 2 1/4 hr. interview on youtube here (which is where I got the quotes I used): https://www.youtube.com/wat... Few if any other outlets have reported the story and allegations. Milburn, in a comment to Newsweek said the statements need to be understood in context of a "balanced discussion of the Ukrainian war effort." Whatever his intentions, the statements he made as one of the few Americans on the front lines-- someone working with Zelensky-- are totally incriminating, and yet passed over by the jingoistic reporting about good Ukrainians who practice democracy and value the rule of law. And this is just reaching from this weeks news. I could go on and on, as economist and diplomat Jeffrey Sachs has done on both these issues (as chair of The Lancet Committee on Covid, and as someone who knows-- and worked with-- many of the key players in post-Soviet Ukraine, Poland, Russia and other East European nations). The big policies of our time are being made by Democrats, and they are often very troubling and misrepresented by the media. This is worth pointing out, and not just the outrageous and obvious lies of election deniers, Q-addicts, Christian Nationalists, and sleazy Trump loyalists.

A junk science problem in law enforcement, criminal justice and American society

From The Death of Expertise
by Tom Nichols

A ProPublica article by investigative journalist Brett Murphy discusses some bizarre junk science that the journalist calls “911 call analysis.” This supposedly science based “technology” sometimes subverts justice and the criminal justice system. Sometimes it gets innocent people wrongly convicted of crimes where actual reliable evidence would not be sufficient to establish criminal liability to a jury. The article points to a shocking kind corruption in the American criminal justice system. 

It also exemplifies a much more serious problem in American society. Namely, far too many adult Americans distrust science and experts. Crackpots, grifters, demagogues and other talented liars have become far more trusted than one would think possible in an educated, modern society.

Murphy stumbled across this story by accident, initially not believing it was a real thing. He was wrong. That said, 911 call analysis probably does not apply to rich, powerful or elite people or corporations because they have the attorney firepower to pry this bullshit from the claws of corrupted prosecutors. Poor people probably usually do not have the resources to defend themselves from this horror. Not sure how this impacts the middle class.

ProPublica writes:
Tracy Harpster, a deputy police chief from suburban Dayton, Ohio, was hunting for praise. He had a business to promote: a miracle method to determine when 911 callers are actually guilty of the crimes they are reporting. “I know what a guilty father, mother or boyfriend sounds like,” he once said.

Harpster tells police and prosecutors around the country that they can do the same. Such linguistic detection is possible, he claims, if you know how to analyze callers’ speech patterns — their tone of voice, their pauses, their word choice, even their grammar. Stripped of its context, a misplaced word as innocuous as “hi” or “please” or “somebody” can reveal a murderer on the phone.

So far, researchers who have tried to corroborate Harpster’s claims have failed. The experts most familiar with his work warn that it shouldn’t be used to lock people up.

Prosecutors know it’s junk science too. But that hasn’t stopped some from promoting his methods and even deploying 911 call analysis in court to win convictions.

“Of course this line of research is not ‘recognized’ as a science in our state,” Askey wrote, explaining that she had sidestepped hearings that would have been required to assess the method’s legitimacy. She said she disguised 911 call analysis in court by “getting creative … without calling it ‘science.’”

“I was confident that if a jury could hear this information and this research,” she added, “they would be as convinced as I was of the defendant's guilt.”

What Askey didn’t say in her endorsement was this: She had once tried using Harpster’s methods against Russ Faria, a man wrongfully convicted of killing his wife. At trial, Askey played a recording of Faria’s frantic 911 call for the jury and put a dispatch supervisor on the stand to testify that it sounded staged. Lawyers objected but the judge let the testimony in. Faria was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

After he successfully appealed, Askey prosecuted him again — and again called the supervisor to testify about all the reasons she thought Faria was guilty based on his word choice and demeanor during the 911 call. It was Harpster’s “analytical class,” the supervisor said, that taught her “to evaluate a call to see what the outcome would be.”

This judge wouldn’t allow her to continue and cut the testimony short. Faria was acquitted. He’d spent three and a half years in prison for a murder he didn’t commit.

None of this bothered Harpster, who needed fresh kudos to repackage as marketing material and for a chapter in an upcoming book. “We don’t have to say it was overturned,” he told Askey when soliciting the endorsement. “Hook me up. … Make it sing!”


Once again, deceit and customer ignorance are 
the best friends of a grifter 

I first stumbled on 911 call analysis while reporting on a police department in northern Louisiana. At the time, it didn’t sound plausible even as a one-off gambit, let alone something pervasive that law enforcement nationwide had embraced as legitimate.

I was wrong. People who call 911 don’t know it, but detectives and prosecutors are listening in, ready to assign guilt based on the words they hear. For the past decade, Harpster has traveled the country quietly sowing his methods into the justice system case by case, city by city, charging up to $3,500 for his eight-hour class, which is typically paid for with tax dollars. Hundreds in law enforcement have bought into the obscure program and I had a rare opportunity to track, in real time, how the chief architect was selling it.  
The program has little online presence. Searches for 911 call analysis in national court dockets come up virtually empty too. A public defender in Virginia said, “I have never heard of any of that claptrap in my jurisdiction.” Dozens of other defense attorneys had similar reactions. One thought the premise sounded as arbitrary as medieval trials by fire, when those suspected of crimes were judged by how well they could walk over burning coals or hold hot irons.

Could it be true that Harpster, a man with no scientific background and next to no previous homicide investigation experience, had successfully sold the modern equivalent [of a medieval trial by fire] to law enforcement across the U.S. almost without notice?  
First, I put together a list of agencies that had recently hosted him. In the months that followed, I sent more than 80 open records requests and interviewed some 120 people. Thousands of emails, police reports and other documents led to a web of thousands more in new states. When agencies refused to turn over public records, ProPublica’s lawyers threatened litigation and in one case sued 
After he left the FBI Academy that winter, Harpster enrolled at the University of Cincinnati to pursue a graduate degree in criminal justice. For his master’s thesis, he collected 100 recordings of 911 calls — half of the callers had been found guilty of something and the other half hadn’t. Harpster believed he could analyze these calls for clues.

Based on patterns he heard in the tapes, Harpster said he was able to identify certain indicators that correlated with guilt and others with innocence. For instance, “Huh?” in response to a dispatcher’s question is an indicator of guilt in Harpster’s system. So is an isolated “please.” He identified 20 such indicators and then counted how often they appeared in his sample of guilty calls.

Using that same sample of recordings, Harpster, Adams and an FBI behavioral scientist named John Jarvis set out to publish a study in 2008. But even before their work was published in a peer-reviewed journal as an “exploratory analysis” — a common qualifier meant to invite more research — police departments around the country learned about it.

That’s because the FBI sent a version of the study directly to them in a bulletin, which was not labeled exploratory. It included contact information for Harpster and Adams. The publication, which the bureau says typically has a readership of 200,000 but is not supposed to be an endorsement, had immediate impact. “It was required reading by our detective and communications personnel,” a police chief in Illinois told Harpster.


 The article is long and goes into many details about this bizarre stupidity and the shocking gullibility of police and prosecutors. What the FBI was thinking, if anything, is anyone’s guess. This is the kind of crap that happens when people are ignorant and/or distrustful about science and prone to mental corruption. The corruption here is the intense bias that law enforcement and prosecutors have to lock people up. They latch onto anything that gets the conviction.

Apparently, in law enforcement, there are less incentive for getting justice right, than for just locking them up, guilty or not. At least that is how this information makes it look. Both police and prosecutors are guilty of this outrageous travesty. Even TV is biased the same way. Shows like Law & Order puts the cops and prosecutors on a pedestal, while ignoring defense attorneys or making them look sleazy and/or corrupt.

This mental rot in law enforcement mirrors the bigger problem in American society. Specifically, far too many Americans reject and/or attack sound science and the messengers when the science or message (fact and attendant truth) is inconvenient

Shucks, one can’t trust law enforcement or the FBI to be honest, competent or rational. What a mess.

From The Death of Expertise
by Tom Nichols

Actually, for politics too many people hold convenient truths to be
true and patriotic, while inconvenient ones are evil
Democratic Party, liberal and/or socialist lies

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Climate change wars: An update

In America’s endless climate change wars, the federal government has been mostly stymied in efforts to deal with the issue. A big part of this dismal reality is radical right, brass knuckles capitalism dogma backed by hundreds of millions of dollars to feed an anti-climate change propaganda Leviathan. That propaganda beast has mostly succeeded in keeping levels of pollution high and regulation low to non-existent. Along with the carbon energy and chemical sectors, the Republican Party is the main denier of climate change, climate science and inconvenient climate facts, truths and reasoning.

In what appears to be a bit of solidly good news, the NYT writes about an interesting capitalist movement that is stirring among some huge corporations. Some corporate giants appear to be actually genuinely concerned about reducing carbon pollution and climate change. The NYT writes:
Clean Energy Quest Pits Google Against Utilities

Google says its goals for carbon-free power are impeded by state-regulated utilities, particularly in the Southeast, that lack a competitive market.
It was the sort of dry panel discussion that occurs at hundreds of industry conferences every year — until a Google representative decided it was time to unleash.

“This is personal for me,” Jamey Goldin, an energy regulation lawyer at Google, told those attending a May conference in Atlanta on renewable energy in the Southeast. He said he had grown up on a ridge overlooking Plant Bowen, a coal-fired power plant northwest of Atlanta owned by Georgia Power, the dominant electricity utility in the state, and then directed his comments at a lobbyist for the utility’s parent company, also on the panel: “Y’all got a lot of coal running up there, a lot of smoke going up in the air.”

Overturning the system that puts nearly all power generation in the Southeast in the hands of utilities like Georgia Power would “get a lot more renewable energy online and a lot of that dirty power offline,” Mr. Goldin added.

But the outburst was more than personal. It was part of a far-reaching campaign by Google to power its operations with increasing amounts of electricity from wind, solar and other generating sources that do not emit carbon.

Google, Meta, Microsoft and Apple, among others, have made eliminating their carbon emissions a prominent corporate goal — and have set not-too-distant deadlines to get there. Google wants to buy enough carbon-free electricity to power all its data centers and campuses around the world without interruption by the end of this decade.

The corporate quest to rapidly secure vast new amounts of renewable energy faces big challenges, however — not least in the Southeast, one of the country’s fastest-growing regions. And Google’s battle in the region, where it has a major concentration of data centers, raises a question that applies to the energy transition everywhere: Is what’s good for a few companies good for all?

At the heart of their campaign, Google and its tech giant allies want to dismantle a decades-old regulatory system in the Southeast that allows a handful of utilities to generate and sell the region’s electricity — and replace it with a market in which many companies can compete to do so.
What gives one pause about whether this really is good news or not is the context in which this story in playing out. Although Google may actually want a more competitive energy market in the Southeast, it’s unclear what that would mean for consumers. It could be worse than what is there now.

Consider Texas. In the name of infallible capitalist free markets running wild and butt naked, i.e., unregulated, that rabid hater of government and regulation decided to deregulate its electricity sector. What did those wild, butt naked electricity markets deliver compared to consumers who opted to stay with regulated electricity? ‘Deregulated consumers’ got (i) higher costs, (ii) a crappy, poorly maintained grid, (iii) less reliable electricity, (iv) crushing brass knuckles capitalist price spikes at peak demand times, and as an added bonus, (v) dozens of people frozen to death after a big winter storm. Yes, deregulated electricity cost consumers more in Texas than regulated electricity in Texas. That is what an unregulated ‘competitive’ capitalist market in Texas delivered. 

Those darned tyrannical socialist-communist regulations are an unspeakable horror (because they tends to be pro-consumer and that usually gets in the way of profits).

So if Google gets what it wants, consumers might get shafted. But maybe less carbon pollution would result. Given capitalist absence of social conscience, hate of regulation and the profit-above-all moral imperative, consumers could very well get shafted in the brave new world. That assumes there will be a brave new world, which is an open question. The pro-pollution forces with their propaganda Leviathan are going to fight this tooth, claw, dirty tricks, lies and poison daggers.

News bits: Republican Party support of sleaze for power, etc.

Republican Party moral rot on display
We all remember the outrageous lies that Republican congressman-elect George Santos relied on to deceive New Jersey voters into voting him into congress. The NYT writes about GOP leadership complicity in making Santos’ lies a smashing success with no repercussions from the morally rotted, fascist Republican Party:
G.O.P. Leadership Remains Silent Over 
George Santos’s Falsehoods

The muted response from party leaders suggested that so far they were prepared to mete out little, if any, punishment to the congressman-elect

The muted response from party leaders suggested that so far they were prepared to mete out little, if any, punishment to an incoming lawmaker who, while deceiving voters, flipped an open seat formerly held by a Democrat and helped Republicans secure their razor-thin House majority.

House Republicans, led by Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, have consistently closed ranks around members of their party facing scrutiny for a litany of misdeeds, including candidates who rallied at the Capitol on Jan. 6 and sitting lawmakers who appeared at a white nationalist conference. In Mr. Santos’s case, they likely have even less political incentive to take action. .... If Republican leaders demanded Mr. Santos resign — and he did so — it would prompt a special election in a swing seat, a potential blow to Republicans’ already precarious majority.
Questions: Is it unreasonable to believe that the next term of the House will be illegitimate because of the profound mendacity that Republican politicians and the GOP routinely engage in and/or defend? Should criminality, lies and deceit be completely irrelevant to elections and power, which is how the Republican Party mostly treats them?


Supreme Court takes over immigration policy:
Democrats may benefit a little 
The Supreme Court has stepped in and taken power over immigration policy from the legislative and executive branches. The WaPo writes about the court imposing Title 42 border policy without congressional or presidential input:
Supreme Court leaves in place Title 42 border policy for now

The Trump-era policy allows quick expulsion of migrants from U.S. borders without the chance to seek asylum

The Supreme Court on Tuesday blocked the Biden administration’s plans to end a pandemic-era policy allowing the quick expulsion of migrants from U.S. borders without the opportunity to seek asylum, as officials warned of a crisis along the southern border.

A federal judge had ruled that the Trump-era policy, known as Title 42, should expire last week, but the court’s action extends a pause Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. imposed to give the high court more time to weigh the issue.

In Tuesday’s order, five conservative justices sided with Republican officials in 19 states, including Texas and Arizona, who sought to maintain Title 42, which has been used to expel migrants more than 2 million times since it was implemented in March 2020.

In effect, the Supreme Court’s action keeps the status quo in place by blocking the district judge’s order until the court can consider the dispute in late February. But the court said it will consider only whether the objecting states have the legal standing to intervene.

While the majority did not provide reasoning, which is common in emergency requests, dissenting Justice Neil M. Gorsuch said the order would “effectively require the federal government to continue enforcing the Title 42 orders indefinitely.”
This action is in accord with an argument that a few legal scholars are raising that the Christofascist Republican Supreme Court is draining power away from both the legislative branch and the executive branch. In essence, the court is making itself into a unitary power without oversight or accountability. 

In this situation, Republicans keeping Title 42 in place could temporarily help the Democrats in public opinion in view of how divisive immigration policy is. Democratic Party policy on immigration arguably is incoherent and in chaos. That makes immigration policy a powerful weapon for highly effective Republican demagoguery. It is an issue that drains a lot of political capital and power from Democrats. That is why when Democrats try to work immigration compromises with the GOP, the GOP keeps refusing. Dealing with immigration policy in good faith would take a major propaganda weapon away from the GOP. It cannot afford to lose that issue for its vast demagoguery machine.


The rule of law is mostly toothless and democracy 
is grave at risk because of it: An example
Arizona judge declines to sanction Kari Lake 
for lawsuit challenging election

“There is no doubt that each side believes firmly in its position with great conviction,” he wrote. “The fact that Plaintiff failed to meet the burden of clear and convincing evidence required for each element of [Arizona statute] does not equate to a finding that her claims were, or were not, groundless and presented in bad faith.”

While he declined to order sanctions, Thompson did order Lake to pay Hobbs about $33,000 to cover some legal costs in the case. Maricopa county and Hobbs had requested about $695,000 in costs from her.

Lake, who lost the race by about 17,000 votes, was one of the most prominent spreaders of election misinformation in the 2022 campaign.

Once again, the issue of intent is front and center. Once again intent shields a miscreant. The issue of the near-impossibility of providing enough evidence to establish legal liability is crystal clear. The issue of non-provability of culpable intent constitutes what I believe is one of the greatest weaknesses in American democracy. Bad intent by elites, rich people and big corporations just cannot be proven in most contested situations. That is probably the case ~99.99% of the time, i.e., 9,999 times out of 10,000. All smart traitors and white collar criminals know this. They exploit it professionally and ruthlessly. 

The most important thing is to maintain
plausible deniability

In her lawsuit, Lake did not have evidence of any election or vote fraud. Literally no evidence. That is why the judge had to throw out her case challenging her 2022 election result. 

But, based on how this judge saw it, about the only thing that might (or might not) have led the judge to impose sanctions is if Lake admitted under oath that she knew she had no grounds for a lawsuit but filed one anyway. For a seasoned traitor like Lake, there is less than a snowball’s chance in hell of that happening. Fascist traitors like Lake know how to stay out of hot water with dumb judges who willingly go along with the American farce called the rule of law.

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Shocking news: A Republican liar admits to lying, & some non-shocking news.

From the Incredible Things Files:
George Santos caves in to revelations of truth
Ending a weeklong silence, Representative-elect George Santos admitted on Monday to a sizable list of falsehoods about his professional background, educational history and property ownership. But he said he was determined to take the oath of office on Jan. 3 and join the House majority.

Mr. Santos, a New York Republican who was elected in November to represent parts of northern Long Island and northeast Queens, confirmed some of the key findings of a New York Times investigation into his background, but sought to minimize the misrepresentations.

“My sins here are embellishing my résumé,” Mr. Santos told The New York Post in one of several interviews he gave on Monday.

Mr. Santos admitted to lying about graduating from college and making misleading claims that he worked for Citigroup or Goldman Sachs. He once said he had a family-owned real estate portfolio of 13 properties; on Monday, he admitted he was not a landlord. 
Mr. Santos, the first openly gay Republican to win a House seat as a non-incumbent, also acknowledged owing thousands in unpaid rent and a yearslong marriage he had never disclosed. 
“I dated women in the past. I married a woman. It’s personal stuff,” he said to The Post, adding that he was “OK with my sexuality. People change.”  
Mr. Santos also firmly denied committing a crime anywhere in the world, even though The Times had uncovered Brazilian court records showing that Mr. Santos had been charged with fraud as a young man after he was caught writing checks with a stolen checkbook.

“I am not a criminal here — not here or in Brazil or any jurisdiction in the world,” he told The Post. “Absolutely not. That didn’t happen.”  
“I never claimed to be Jewish,” Mr. Santos told The Post. “I am Catholic. Because I learned my maternal family had a Jewish background I said I was ‘Jew-ish.’”
So, it is OK to take the oath of office because all that poor, persecuted Santos did was embellishing his résumé and just doing personal stuff. You know, personal stuff sort of like what Bill Clinton did while on office and got impeached for. And, he is Jew-ish, not Jewish.

For some context on the morality of what merely embellishing a résumé and other lies amount to:

The social incentives to deceit are at present very powerful; the controls often weak. Many individuals feel caught up in practices they cannot change. It would be wishful thinking, therefore, to expect individuals to bring about major changes in the collective practices of deceit by themselves. Public and private institutions, with their enormous power to affect personal choice, must help alter the existing pressures and incentives. ..... Trust and integrity are precious resources, easily squandered, hard to regain. They can thrive only on a foundation of respect for veracity.


“[Johnson repeatedly told the American people] ‘the first responsibility, the only real issue in this campaign, the only thing you ought to be concerned about at all, is: Who can best keep the peace?’ The stratagem succeeded; the election was won; the war escalated. .... President Johnson thus denied the electorate of any chance to give or refuse consent to the escalation of the war in Vietnam. Believing they had voted for the candidate of peace, American citizens were, within months, deeply embroiled in one of the cruelest wars in their history. Deception of this kind strikes at the very essence of democratic government.”



Q: Is it reasonable to argue that when a politician deceives people and they act, e.g., vote, on the basis of that deceit that the politician has taken away the power of people to make decisions on the basis of facts, truths and/or sound reasoning?

Jeez, that was a juicy one for sure.


Some welcome common sense about guns
Recent mass shootings have spurred renewed calls from President Biden for a national assault weapons ban. Sensibly so. But for even the most ardent gun control advocates, it’s hard not to ask whether, in a nation with an estimated 400 million firearms, restrictions on new gun purchases accomplish too little without something more.

Amid the rising tide of firearms, reducing gun deaths and injuries requires new solutions. In San Jose, Calif., where I am mayor, we’ve embarked on two approaches untried in any other city or state: We’re imposing an annual fee on gun-owning residents and investing the revenues in violence prevention efforts. And on Jan. 1, the city will begin requiring gun owners to carry liability insurance to compensate victims harmed by the negligent or reckless use of a firearm.

In San Jose, the nation’s 10th-largest city, more than 200 people are killed or injured by gunfire every year. Not all of that harm results from the actions of criminals. Over a recent six-year period, 42 percent of San Jose’s gun deaths and injuries resulted from unintentional shootings or shootings whose circumstances were unknown, while suicide attempts accounted for another 15 percent. Suicide exacts an even more lethal toll nationally, accounting for 54 percent of gun fatalities. So much of that suffering is preventable.

Many studies have shown that the mere presence of a gun in a home makes a host of perilous circumstances much more lethal. A domestic violence victim faces five times the risk of being killed if the abuser has access to a gun, for example, and the odds of suicide in a home with access to a firearm are more than three times that in other homes.  
.... beginning next year, San Jose will require gun owners to pay an annual fee — the amount is still to be determined — which a nonprofit foundation will invest in evidence-based violence prevention programs directed at gun-owning families. This policy won’t magically halt mass shootings or suicides, but it will provide a better chance to get help to troubled adults and teenagers before they pick up their guns.  
Of course, in the realm of gun regulation, no good deed goes unlitigated. Three groups sued San Jose after the ordinance imposing the fee and insurance requirement passed. A Federal District Court declined their pleas for an injunction to stop the ordinance from taking effect, finding no unconstitutional burden on Second Amendment rights when “there are no means by which a San Jose gun owner may be deprived of his or her firearm.”
Finally, someone has caught on to the idea of making gun owners pay for at least some of the social and economic damage their guns inflict. This is decades overdue. But better late than never.


The scumbag and his tax cheating
A DC Report (left bias, high fact accuracy) by tax expert David Cay Johnston has checked out his tax returns:
Trump’s Brazen Tax Cheating Revealed

Trump Took Tax Losses He Knew Were Fraudulent

Donald Trump knowingly committed dozens of brazen tax frauds during the six years when he ran for office and was President, my analysis of the Congressional report on his tax returns and other documents shows. This explains why he fought all the way to the Supreme Court in a failed effort to keep his tax information secret.

One technique he used at least 26 times between 2015 and 2020 was as simple as it was flagrant. Trump filed sole proprietor reports, known as Schedule C, that showed huge business expenses despite having zero revenue. That created losses which Trump used to offset his income from work and investments, thus lowering his income taxes. Additional Schedule Cs had expenses exactly equal to revenues while only a few showed profits.

What Trump did again and again and again—taking expenses for businesses with no revenue—is so simple that jurors should have no trouble understanding the issues were Trump to be indicted by a federal or New York state grand jury.  
Trump knew this was unlawful because he lost two trials over his 1984 income taxes in which he did the exact same thing, a story I broke in June 2016. Both judges, in scathing opinions, ruled that Trump committed civil tax fraud.

That Trump persisted in using the same fraudulent technique in six years of recent tax returns is powerful evidence of mens rea or criminal intent. This device is not Trump’s most lucrative tax cheating technique, but it is the easiest for jurors to understand should Trump be indicted on tax charges.  
It may shock you to learn that there are legal ways to turn the burden of income taxes into a source of profit. Still, every sophisticated tax accountant and lawyer knows how business owners, especially real estate operators like Trump, can do this legally. As a leading Manhattan tax lawyer told me years ago: “If you’re big in real estate and pay any income tax, you should sue your tax lawyer for malpractice.”

Workers and pensioners are excluded from the rules that let rich business people and landlords convert the burden of income taxes into the joy of financial gains.

Is this a real possibility?
Nah, couldnt be, could it?
Nah, not possible!

Regarding originalism and the Supreme Court

An example of originalism: Abortion
This was a year that was split into before and after—the dividing line being when the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade. Following the shocking leak of the draft opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, on May 2nd, we fully entered the era of conservative dominance, with aggressive rulings on abortion, guns, and religion. Doubts about the Court’s legitimacy reached a fever pitch, and its unpopularity hit alarming lows. Soul-searching about the Court and the rule of law has rarely been as cynical or as fundamental. Law professors asked one another, “What do we say to students now?,” with many questioning the distinction between law and politics, or even the Court’s final authority to interpret the Constitution—which the Court first claimed for itself about two hundred years ago. 
The Justices appeared to understand that they are presiding over a historic decline in public trust, as several of them have made public remarks insisting on the importance of the Court’s retaining its legitimacy. “Everybody in this country is free to disagree with our decisions,” Justice Samuel Alito, who wrote the Dobbs majority opinion, said. But he warned that someone “crosses an important line when they say that the Court is acting in a way that is illegitimate.”  
When the Court returned for its new term in the fall, the Justices dove into another set of blockbuster cases, on affirmative action, voting rights, and religious liberty. But cracks have emerged in the commitment to originalism that conservatives wielded last term to tie the meaning of the Constitution to “history and traditions” from periods when women couldn’t vote and segregation was the law. Liberal Justices made us wonder whether we’re all supposed to be originalists now—or strategically pretend to be. Take, for example, this term’s debates about the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. In a case asking whether Alabama created enough majority-Black electoral districts to comply with the Voting Rights Act, and whether the use of race in districting violates the Fourteenth Amendment, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson refused to cede originalism to conservatives, instead describing it as “our normal assessment of the Constitution.” 
Professing to have “drilled down” and looked at “the history and traditions of the Constitution, at what the Framers thought about,” Jackson, in one of her first hearings as a Justice, lectured counsel extensively on how the original meaning of equal protection was not race-neutral, since “the Framers themselves adopted the equal-protection clause . . . in a race-conscious way.” (Jackson explained that “the entire point of the amendment was to secure rights of the freed former slaves”—which is clearly correct but likely to be ignored by conservative originalists.)

Thought 1: Two thoughts come to mind here. One is that it feels like Sam Alito is making a direct threat against anyone who asserts that the court is acting in ways that are illegitimate. That is fascism, plain and simple. And for the record, the Supreme Court is acting in ways that are illegitimate. Come get me Sammy boy, you blowhard fascist! 

Thought 2: The other though is more serious, at least for now, i.e., until the hyper-radical Alito comes and hunts me down and starts blazing away with his AR-15. I think that Justice Brown Jackson and the Dems on the court make a deadly serious tactical and legal mistake by trying to fight for control of narratives about originalism, and how it applies to modern court cases. I’ve argued here multiple times that originalism is a modern day radical right mirage. There is no such thing as originalism. 

Why? Because until the ends of their lives, the people who drafted the Constitution and Bill of Rights were locked in bitter disputes about the nature and scope of government and how power was to be distributed. From what I have seen, credible scholars keep saying there can be no original intent because there was bitter, never-resolved fundamental disagreements. The core documents meant different things to different drafters and ratifiers. 

By conceding the existence of non-existent originalism, Brown Jackson and the Dems legitimize something that cannot rationally be legitimate. Originalism can be the means to overthrow democracy and kill government. That is what it was devised by radical right, government and civil liberties-hating legal scholars to do. Just look at the Dobbs decision that killed the federal right to an abortion. Most radical right commentators appear to hail Dobbs as a major victory for originalism, for example:
An Originalist Victory

The Supreme Court’s Dobbs ruling is a tremendous success for the constitutional theory around which conservatives rallied for nearly half a century.

Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are no more. Like Plessy v. Ferguson before them, Roe and Casey were constitutionally and morally indefensible from the day they were decided, yet they endured for generations, becoming the foundation of a mass political movement that did all it could to prevent their overruling.
Dobbs was built on a radical right judge-made “history and traditions” test. That test allowed radical right judges (mostly Alito) to cherry pick through history to arrive at the rationale they used to get rid of Roe and the federal abortion right. By arguing about originalism, the Dems play into the hands of the Christofascist judges. IMHO, that is a very big mistake.



A criticism of originalism and textualism
Textualism says that when interpreting the Constitution, judges should confine themselves to the words of the Constitution. Originalism says that if the words are at all unclear, then judges need to consult historical sources to determine their meaning at the time of ratification, and the correct application of these words to new cases should clearly follow.

But Justice Scalia failed to realize that textualism is actually self-undermining. Nowhere does the Constitution explicitly state that textualism, no less originalism or any other method, is the correct theory of constitutional interpretation. Justice Scalia also failed to realize — or at least admit — that textualism and originalism rarely determine a unique outcome for constitutional questions.

The meanings of many words and phrases in the Constitution are not at all obvious. Examples include “right,” “unreasonable,” “probable cause,” “due process,” “excessive,” “cruel and unusual” and “equal protection.” Even if we could find clear definitions of these terms in a dictionary, current or historical, applying these definitions to cases that the founders did not anticipate only expands the range of ambiguity (and therefore interpretive possibilities).

The founders would no doubt sympathize. Because they used flexible, open-ended language like “cruel and unusual” without explaining exactly what they meant, it seems clear that they were deliberately inviting future generations to interpret and reinterpret these words — the very opposite of what textualists and originalists propose.

The founders were not dummies; they knew that society would evolve in unforeseeable ways — morally, socially, politically, technologically — and that this inexorable evolution might well bring about unforeseeable applications of the same words. For example, instead of using the imprecise phrase “cruel and unusual” to lock in any particular punishment (like the death penalty), it stands to reason that they meant it to lock out whatever punishments future generations deemed unconscionable. So true originalism — genuinely following the founders’ intent — requires us moderns to interpret constitutional language in light of our own, not their, moral and linguistic norms.
The ambiguity in the Constitution reflects the intent of the drafters to allow for moral, social, political and technological change to factor into how court cases. Nothing in the constitution says that constitutional interpretation requires originalism or textualism. 



An 2009 criticism of originalism
Law professor Mitchell Berman (U. Penn Law School) wrote this in a short criticism (the full 96 page review article is here):

Originalism is Bunk 

Contemporary originalists disagree about many things: which feature of the Constitution’s original character demands fidelity (framers’ intent, ratifiers’ understanding, or public meaning); why such fidelity is required; and whether this interpretive obligation binds judges alone or citizens, legislators, and executive officials too. But on one dimension of potential variability—the dimension of strength—originalists are mostly united: They believe that those who follow some aspect of a provision’s original character must give that original aspect priority over all other considerations (with a possible exception for continued adherence to non-originalist judicial precedents [note that deference to precedent has been blown to smithereens by the modern Christofascist Supreme Court]). That is, when the original meaning (or intent, etc.) is adequately discernible, the interpreter must follow it. This is the thesis that self-professed originalists maintain and that their critics (the non-originalists) deny.

Non-originalists have challenged this thesis on varied wholesale grounds, which include: that the target of the originalist search is undiscoverable or nonexistent [Germaine’s main argument]; that originalism is self-refuting because the framers intended that the Constitution not be interpreted in an originalist vein; and that originalism yields bad outcomes.

.... arguments are [in originalism’s defense] of two broad types—hard and soft. Originalism is “hard” when grounded on reasons that purport to render it (in some sense) inescapably true; it is “soft” when predicated on contingent and contestable weighings of its costs and benefits relative to other interpretive approaches. That is, hard arguments seek to show that originalism reflects some sort of conceptual truth or follows logically from premises the interlocutor already can be expected to accept; soft arguments aim to persuade others to revise their judgments of value or their empirical or predictive assessments. The most common hard arguments contend that originalism is entailed either by intentionalism or by binding constitutionalism. Soft arguments claim that originalist interpretation best serves diverse values like democracy and the rule of law. I seek to show that the hard arguments for originalism are false and that the soft arguments are implausible.

Q: Is it unreasonable to argue, and I do argue it, that originalism is just one of a number of smoke screens that brass knuckles capitalist Christofascist federal judges to impose their radical Republican Party dogmas on American society?