Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass.

Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Book Review: Expert Political Judgment



I do not pretend to start with precise questions. I do not think you can start with anything precise. You have to achieve such precision as you can, as you go along. — Bertrand Russell, philosopher commenting on the incremental nature of progress in human knowledge and understanding

“People for the most part dislike ambiguity . . . . people find it hard to resist filling in the missing data points with ideologically scripted event sequences. . . . People for the most part also dislike dissonance . . . . [but] policies that one is predisposed to detest sometimes have positive effects . . . . regimes in rogue states may have more popular support than we care to admit -- dominant options that beat all the alternatives are rare.”

“The core function of political belief systems is not prediction; it is to promote the comforting illusion of predictability.”

“Human performance suffers because we are, deep down, deterministic thinkers with an aversion to probabilistic strategies that accept the inevitability of error. We insist on looking for order in random sequences.”

“. . . . we have yet to confront the most daunting of all the barriers to implementation [of an objective system to evaluate expert performance]: the reluctance of professionals to participate. If one has carved out a comfortable living under the old regime of close-to-zero accountability for one’s pronouncements, one would have to be exceptionally honest or masochistic to jeopardize so cozy an arrangement by voluntarily exposing one’s predications to the rude shock of falsification.”

“Human nature being what it is, and the political system creating the perversely self-justifying incentives that it does, I would expect, in short order, faux rating systems to arise that shill for the representatives of points of view who feel shortchanged by even the most transparent evaluation systems that bend over backward to be fair. The signal-to-noise ratio will never be great in a cacophonously pluralistic society such as ours.”
-- Philip E. Tetlock, Expert Political Judgment, 2005



Context: For the most part, this channel is devoted to advocacy for a new, science-based political ideology and set of morals that recognize and accept human cognitive and social biology as sources of (i) disconnects from reality (facts), and reason (logic), and (ii) unwarranted inefficiency, unwarranted intolerance, unwarranted distrust, unwarranted conflict and etc. To this observer's knowledge, this book is the single best source of data for proof of the power of political ideology to distort fact and logic. Measuring expert competence (or more accurately, incompetence) is this book's sole focus.

Book review: Social psychologist Philip Tetlock's 2005 book, Expert Political Judgment: How Good Is It? How Can We Know?, summarizes about 20 years of his research into the question of whether it is even possible to reliably measure how good expert opinions are, and if so, how good are they. For his research, Tetlock focused mostly on measuring the accuracy of thousands of expert predictions about global events to see if that could afford a way to measure competence of expert opinion.

After a massive research effort, two answers came back: (1) Yes, their opinions can be measured for accuracy, and (2) all experts are dreadful. Tetlock's research shows that a key reason experts rise to the level of expert is because (i) they are fluid in simplifying problems and solutions and (ii) their presentations sound authoritative. But for the most part, they're wrong about 80-90% of the time. In other words, expert opinions are about the same as opinions of average people. In fact, there's barely any statistically detectable difference between most experts and random guessing. That's how good our experts, pundits, politicians and other assorted blowhards really are, i.e., they're worse than worthless. That assessment of more bad than good includes the damage, waste, social discord and loss of moral authority that flows from experts being wrong most of the time. One cannot be fair about this if one ignores mistakes.

Arrrgh!! The computers are coming!: Another mind-blowing observation came from Tetlock's use of several algorithms to see how well computers do compared to human experts. The data was sobering. One simple algorithm performed the same as human experts. No big deal. But, more sophisticated models, autoregressive distributed lag, performed about 2.5-fold better than the very best humans. That is a massive difference in competence. Tetlock commented: “whereas the best human forecasters were hard-pressed to predict more than 20 percent of the total variability in outcomes…, the generalized autoregressive distributed lag models explained on average 47 percent of the variance.” One can imagine that with time, algorithms will be improved to do better.

Tetlock doesn't advocate replacing humans with computers. He is suggesting that when a validated algorithm is available, experts would be well-advised to use it and take what it says into account. That seems perfectly reasonable.

Foxes and Hedgehogs: Tetlock identifies two basic mindsets and their cognitive approach to analyzing issues and making predictions, liberals and conservatives. The liberal mindset, the Foxes, to a small but real degree, does better than the conservative mindset, the Hedgehogs. Hedgehog thinking can be accurate depending on the issue at hand. But over a range of issues, its focus on key values or concepts limit its capacity to do well in the long run. By contrast the Fox mindset is more fluid and less ideologically constrained. Regarding political ideology, Tetlock comments: “The core function of political belief systems is not prediction; it is to promote the comforting illusion of predictablity.”

Regarding motivated reasoning or cognitive dissonance: “People for the most part dislike dissonance, a generalization that particularly applies to the Hedgehogs . . . . They prefer to organize the world into evaluative gestalts that couple good causes to good effects and bad to bad. Unfortunately, the world can be a morally messy place . . . . regimes in rogue states may have more popular support than we care to admit -- Dominant options that beat the alternatives on all possible dimensions -- are rare.”

Does some of that sound at least vaguely familiar? It ought to.



Why do bad experts persist?: Tetlock's data shows that bad experts persist for a range of reasons:
1. No one keeps track of their performance over time and they're never held accountable for mistakes. No one measures and grades experts (except Tetlock).
2. They are expert at explaining away their mistakes, sometimes incoherently, e.g., (i) I was almost right, (ii) I was wrong, but for the right reasons, (iii) that intervening event was unforseeable, it's not my fault, (iv) etc.
3. They appeal to people's emotions and biases that make them appear right, even when there is plenty of evidence that they are wrong.
4. The unconscious hindsight bias leads most experts to believe they did not make their past mistakes, i.e., they deny they guessed wrong and instead firmly believe their prediction was correct.
5. Experts are expert at couching their predictions in language that makes measuring accuracy impossible, e.g., (i) they don't specify by what time their predictions will come to pass, (ii) they use soft language that really doesn't amount to a firm prediction, ‘it is likely that X will happen’ without specifying the odds or what ‘likely’ means.
6. Etc.

Tetlock's book is not easy to read. It could be part of a college course in social psychology or political science. The data is often expressed in terms of statistics. Nonetheless, there is more than enough general language for the lay reader with a high school education to fully understand the book's main point about the discomfortingly rare expert competence in politics.

When it comes to politics, Tetlock isn't naïve: “Human nature being what it is, and the political system creating the perversely self-justifying incentives that it does, I expect, in short order, faux rating systems to arise that shill for the representatives of points of view who feel shortchanged by even the most transparent evaluation systems that bend over backward to be fair. The signal-to-noise ratio will never be great in a cacophonously pluralistic society like ours.”

Remember, that was 2005. This is 2018. The weak signal is fading in the increasing roar of blithering noise in the form of lies, deceit, character assassination, unwarranted fear mongering and other forms of nonsense.

Question: Was Tetlock's 2005 prediction that faux rating systems would arise in ‘short order’ to hype the reputation of inept experts mostly correct, or, has it sufficed for dissatisfied people to simply deny the existing ratings systems are credible?

Note: In 2017, Tetlock published a second edition. The first chapter is here.



B&B orig: 2/12/18; DP 8/7/19

 

After the 'red wave' flop, we need new male political experts who are always wrong. I'm in.

Opinion by Rex Huppke, USA TODAY 

Consider the following:

As the dust settles, it’s clear the key takeaway from the midterm elections is this: America’s cable news networks need to clear out their stable of male pundits who are consistently wrong about everything and bring in some fresh male voices who will also be consistently wrong about everything.

As someone who checks both boxes – male and regularly wrong – I humbly submit my application to fill this important role.

If you weren’t paying attention to the men on television who get paid large sums of money to be incorrect, you might have missed their incessant, supremely confident and wildly wrong predictions of a Republican “red wave” in the midterms. 

►On Oct. 27, Fox News host Jesse Watters told Geraldo Rivera the GOP would win the Senate and the House. Watters was so confident he bet Rivera $1,000. (Democrats kept the Senate and if the GOP does win the House, it will be by a narrow margin.)

►On Nov. 4, Fox News contributor Newt Gingrich predicted that Herschel Walker would win the Georgia senate race without a runoff (he didn’t), that Mehmet Oz would win the Pennsylvania Senate race (he didn’t) and that Blake Masters would win the Arizona Senate race (he didn’t). Gingrich also guessed Republicans would wind up with a 44-seat advantage in the House, which we already know won’t come close to happening.

►Sean Hannity responded to the predictions by saying: “You’ve never been wrong. You’re almost always right.” 

There are bad male prognosticators on TV, then there's CNN's Chris Cillizza

The day before the election, Fox News host Pete Hegseth said: “This midterm election is the end of Joe Biden's political career. When the red wave comes, and it is coming, Joe Biden’s political utility is over.” 

Over on CNN, the most regularly wrong person of all time, Chris Cillizza, wrote columns with these headlines in the run-up to Nov. 8.

Monday, November 14, 2022

Thoughts about gerrymandering

America’s low information society
One could have assumed that most Republicans in red states would be fine with gerrymandering voting districts to disenfranchise or neuter as many non-republican voters as possible. That assumption would be based on assuming that by now Republican voters know that if they do not gerrymander good and hard, their political power will decline. After all, Republican elites have been open about their hostility toward free and fair elections for decades. There is no secret here, as this description of a 1980 speech by Republican Party elite Paul Weyrich makes clear:
Paul Weyrich, ‘father’ of the right-wing movement and co-founder of the Heritage Foundation, Moral Majority and various other groups tells his flock that he doesn't want people to vote. He complains that fellow Christians have "Goo-Goo Syndrome": Good Government. Classic clip from 1980. This guy still gives weekly strategy sessions to Republicans nowadays [2007]. The entire dialog from the clip: 
“Now many of our Christians have what I call the goo-goo syndrome — good government. They want everybody to vote. I don't want everybody to vote. Elections are not won by a majority of people, they never have been from the beginning of our country and they are not now. As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down.”
So, it came as a surprise to me that poll data from Feb. 2022 indicates that majorities of people dislike gerrymandering. That includes Republicans. One source commented on the poll data:
Two-thirds of Americans told pollsters for The Economist and YouGov that states drawing legislative districts to favor one party is a “major problem” with just 23 percent saying it’s a “minor problem.” But 50 percent said they do not know whether districts are drawn by the legislature or an independent commission in their own state.

Even though half of Americans do not know how their districts are drawn, a majority still is opinionated about the process.  
Nearly half of respondents (48 percent) said they strongly oppose gerrymandering while another 12 percent said they are somewhat opposed. Only 10 percent said they strongly or somewhat support gerrymandering.

non-partisan voting districts


Bringing a knife to a gun fight
If Republicans retake the House, which is still unsettled, one can argue that it will be because two large Blue states, CA and NY, got rid of partisan gerrymandering. Both CA and NY now draw non-partisan voting districts for the House of Representatives. Both CA and NY are set to lose 3-4 competitive House seats that could have been gerrymandered into seats safe for Democrats. 

The House could fall to the fascist Republican Party, where those pro-democracy non-partisan seats in CA and NY were necessary for that to happen. If that turns out to be true, was the move to pro-democracy non-partisan voting districts a good thing or a mistake? If mistake, is it one that could eventually lead to the fall of democracy, the rule of law and civil liberties to vengeful Christian nationalist theocrats and corrupt brass knuckles capitalists?

Saturday, November 12, 2022

News bits: Trump in court, Musk in confusion, and an Armageddon update

Trump abuses the legal system in all possible ways
Trump Doesn’t Want Special Master to Hear Privately from National 
Archives,  Expresses ‘Deep Concerns’ About Leadership’s ‘Political Bias’

Former President Donald Trump’s attorneys asked the special master presiding over his Mar-a-Lago document review not to hear privately from the National Archives, an agency that he’s long vilified for supposed political bias.

After the FBI searched his Mar-a-Lago home pursuant to a court authorized warrant, Trump went on the attack against the National Archives and Records Administration, which is typically seen as a bureaucracy of librarians, not a hotbed of partisanship. Trump sought to upend that image in a statement from his political action committee, Save America, which released a statement branding it “Radical Left-controlled.”

Trump’s attorney James Trusty continued that messaging in a Sept. 20th hearing in which he called NARA “highly politicized.” Trusty also repeated a claim, rated “Half True” by Politifact, that the National Archives placed warning labels on the U.S. Constitution and other founding documents. (NARA’s content warnings are on every page of the website, Politifact noted.)
This is how Trump has always litigated. He objects to everything one can possibly object to and also often to things that cannot be objected to. He endlessly delays, lies, slanders and often makes accusations based on (i) no facts, (ii) facts that contradict his lies, and/or (iii) facts he takes out of context and twists into lies, e.g., NARA’s content warnings. 

That shows how openly the leader of his corrupt, supportive and enabling fascist Republican Party shows his absolute contempt for the rule of law. When the law threatens or inconveniences him he treats it like scum. Of course, he loves the rule of law when it is turned against his enemies. His attitude toward the law is authoritarian, fascist actually, not democratic. If he had full-blown tyrant power, he would turn the rule of law into the rule of the despot. That is what Russia and China are today. That is what Trump clearly and undeniably wants to make America into if he gets the chance.


From the pulling head partially out of butt files
Elon Musk. What can a person say? For all of his brilliance, he sometimes thinks and acts with a level of understanding akin to a sack of bird seed. Or, maybe a pet rock. 

Anyway, he set up a real steal deal on his Twitter toy. People could get their account verified for a mere $7.99/ month. Immediately hoards of people rushed in to set up fake ‘verified’ accounts. That land rush included fake accounts claiming to be actual real people who already had real, verified Twitter accounts. One of the verified fake accounts was to a Mr. Mickey Mouse. As long as the $7.99 flew into Musk’s coffers, it was all good. ARS Technica writes:
Twitter quietly drops $8 paid verification; “tricking people not OK,” Musk says

Twitter usage is up, Musk says, as fake accounts wreak havoc.

When a wave of imposter accounts began using the verified checkmarks from Twitter's Blue paid subscription service to post misleading tweets while pretending to be some of the world’s biggest brands, it created so much chaos that Elon Musk seemingly had no choice but to revoke the paid checkmarks entirely.

“Basically, tricking people is not OK,” Musk tweeted, as some users began reporting that the option to pay $7.99 for a Twitter Blue subscription had disappeared, while others who had been verified previously found that their “Official” blue checkmarks had been reinstated.  
However, while Twitter has possibly never been funnier, Musk knows that not every user relying on Twitter Blue to sow confusion through brand impersonation has been posting “epically funny” jokes. One of the most disturbing fake posts yesterday was an account impersonating the pharmaceutical brand Eli Lilly, falsely telling people with diabetes that insulin is now free.
Fake claims of free insulin from a fake Twitter account claiming to be Eli Lilly just does not seem to be epically funny. I’m sure that if Musk had charged $8.00/month instead of just $7.99, all of this kerfuffle could have been avoided. 

Is tricking people really not OK? Heck, marketers, politicians, business titans, business pipsqueaks, professional public relations (propaganda) firms, the clergy and etc., do it all the time. 


From the Armageddon files: Serious deck 
chair rearranging is underway on humanity’s trip back to the Stone Age 
I really like this interesting topic. In my opinion it gets far too little attention. Safety tip: Always keep existential threats in mind. The WaPo writes:
How worried should we be, really, about killer rocks from space? He [Lindley Johnson, NASA’s planetary defense officer] said a major asteroid impact is rare but potentially catastrophic. He cited the Tunguska event of 1908, when either an asteroid or comet exploded over a remote region of Siberia and flattened 800 square miles of forest. It was, he said, “probably a once-every-200-years or so event, on average. But it’s entirely random. These can impact any time.”

Johnson explained that there are many asteroids lurking out there, still unidentified, that are bigger than the Tunguska object, and they “would devastate a multistate area — a natural disaster of a scale we’ve never had to deal with. That includes all the earthquakes and hurricanes that have ever happened in the past. It could be an existential threat to national well-being — an economic disaster as well as an environmental disaster.” He paused a beat and said, calmly, “So it’s not something you want to happen.”

We are not being paranoid when we recognize that human civilization has become increasingly complex and simultaneously armed with techniques for self-destruction. There are bad omens everywhere, and not just the melting glaciers and dying polar bears. We’re all still unnerved by the pandemic. Meanwhile, there’s this ancient threat called war. Vladimir Putin and his advisers keep rattling the nuclear saber. A nuclear holocaust is the classic apocalyptic scenario that never went away.

Not every doomsday scenario is a full-blown extinction event. There are extremely suboptimal futures in which our species straggles onward in a brutish, Hobbesian nightmare — back to the Stone Age. People who think about “existential risk” are focused on the collapse of civilization as we know it. One of their recurring themes is that there has never been a moment as pivotal as this one. “We see a species precariously close to self-destruction, with a future of immense promise hanging in the balance,” declares Oxford University philosopher Toby Ord in his book “The Precipice: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity.” He gives us a 1 in 6 chance of “existential catastrophe” in the next 100 years 
Ord is part of a new intellectual movement called “longtermism.” Proponents of the long view say we have moral obligations to the welfare of the trillions of people who might potentially follow us here on Earth, and on worlds across the universe. Highest among those obligations, of course, is to avoid destroying ourselves and our planet before those future people are born.  
This anti-doomsday sales job becomes even harder when we acknowledge that the climate crisis, pandemic viruses and the threat of nuclear war are only a few items on the long list of things that informed people should be fretting about. Optimism may prove delusional — a fatal flaw, in fact. But how you come down on existential risks may pivot on whether you think human ingenuity will outpace human folly. Do you believe, fundamentally, in the human race?
Hm, 16.7% chance of Armageddon within the next 100 years. Some will see that and say, see, told ’ya, there’s nothing to worry about. Some will yawn and go for a cup of coffee. A few of us will go: AHHHH!! Somebody do something!! Stop farting around with the deck chairs and get real!

I admit it, I'm a longtermer. I didn’t know it was a thing or had a name. But by golly, I’m probably near the cutting edge of whatever this longtermer thing is. Well OK, maybe in the general vicinity of the cutting edge.

Qs: Do we have any obligation, moral or otherwise, to the welfare of billions of people who might potentially follow us?

Do we have any obligation to avoid destroying (i) ourselves, (ii) modern civilization[1], and/or (iii) other species of plants and animals before future people are born?


Footnote: 
1. If modern civilization collapses, my estimate is that ~95% of all people alive would perish from exposure and/or lack of food or clean water within about 5 months. I am not aware of any survival estimate by an expert.

Friday, November 11, 2022

News bits 'n snibbles

Trump’s lawyers sanctioned for frivolous lawsuit
In what is a shocking and rare event, a federal judge lashed out at Trump’s legal team for filing a lawsuit based on pure bullshit. The judge imposed Rule 11 sanctions on the attorneys. I do not recall a single time in my decades of doing law where any federal judge finally got pushed to exasperation and imposed Rule 11. This probably happened once or twice, but I’m just not aware of anyone who could act so bad as to piss off a federal judge and get sanctioned for it. This is astounding. Stunning. Jaw dropping.



The lawsuit was filed by Trump against Hillary Clinton and a boatload of other people for QAnon-level accusations of conspiracy, collusion and interference with his 2016 presidential campaign. Talk about sore winners. Trump will just never stop being deranged, enraged or a crackpot & liar.
A federal judge on Thursday excoriated and sanctioned several members of Donald Trump’s legal team, saying the former president’s massive lawsuit against his former rival, Hillary Clinton, and dozens of other adversaries amounted to an intentional abuse of the legal system.

“These were political grievances masquerading as legal claims,” said U.S. District Court Judge Donald Middlebrooks, a Florida-based jurist who dismissed Trump’s lawsuit in September. “This cannot be attributed to incompetent lawyering. It was a deliberate use of the judicial system to pursue a political agenda.”

Middlebrooks ordered the attorneys to pay $50,000 to the court and more than $16,000 in legal fees to Charles Dolan, one of the defendants, who initiated the sanctions proceedings against Trump’s attorneys. The attorneys ordered to pay the sanctions costs include one of the most prominent members of Trump’s current coterie of lawyers, Alina Habba, as well as his lead local counsel in the Clinton suit, Peter Ticktin, and two others: Michael Madaio and Jamie Sasson.

Middlebrooks is an appointee of former President Bill Clinton, something that Trump’s lawyers pointed out in asking the judge to recuse himself from the suit against Clinton’s wife. The judge declined that invitation, saying he had no connection to Hillary Clinton. Middlebrooks also accused Trump’s lawyers of filing the suit in a remote clerk’s office in an unsuccessful bid to have it assigned to a Trump appointee, Judge Aileen Cannon. 

In the Thursday order, Middlebrooks contended that Trump’s attorneys knowingly misrepresented facts in the far-ranging lawsuit, which accused a diverse range of defendants of intentionally sabotaging Trump’s presidential bid by raising false claims of Russian influence over his 2016 presidential campaign. He also accused them of using the lawsuit as a ploy to raise political contributions, calling it “performative litigation for purposes of fundraising and political statements.”  
Middlebrooks threw out the initial version of Trump’s suit and declared a revised version to be “in its entirety, frivolous.” He said the case was inherently implausible.

“Not just initiated by a shotgun pleading, this was a shotgun lawsuit,” the judge opined. “Thirty-one individuals and organizations were summoned to court, forced to hire lawyers to defend against frivolous claims. The only common thread against them was Mr. Trump’s animus.”
A shotgun lawsuit of performative litigation for fundraising and political bloviation? Good grief! Nobody can make this stuff up, this legal nightmare has to be real.


Page 14 of Middlebrook’s 19 page cannon blast included these interesting comments:
Every claim [that Trump alleged] was frivolous, most barred by settled, well-established existing law. These were political grievances masquerading as legal claims. This cannot be attributed to incompetent lawyering. It was a deliberate use of the judicial system to pursue a political agenda.

But the courts are not intended for performative litigation for purposes of fundraising and political statements. See Saltany v. Reagan, 886 F.2d. 438 (D.C. Cir. 1989). It is harmful to the rule of law, portrays judges as partisans, and diverts resources that should be directed to real harms and legitimate legal claims. The judiciary should not countenance this behavior and it should be deterred by significant sanctions.
That’s one really pissed off judge. One bemused attorney observing the train wreck commented: “This looks like a classic Rule 11 situation. It’ll be in textbooks for years to come.”


About that always playful Catholic church
In other, lighter and fluffier news, here comes the church. God save us all, please.

One of the things that stands out is how the Catholic church (CC) behaves when under attack or in the face of embarrassment. It isn’t just aggressive. It is vicious. It acts no differently than mafia bosses facing prosecution. I concluded years ago that the CC is an organize crime operation. Attorneys involved in lawsuits against the CC adopted the same tactics and laws that federal prosecutors used to go after mafia families. The CC has actually been sued under US laws specifically passed to prosecute organized crime groups and families. 

This fun snibble is about sleazy Vatican shenanigans in Rome, but this is a fun one for sure. The NYT writes:
A Vatican Auditor Says He Dug Up Too Much Dirt, and Was Buried

Libero Milone is suing the Vatican for wrongful dismissal after he said he found cardinals siphoning off funds. The Vatican has hit him with a criminal investigation of its own.

On June 19, 2017, the Vatican gendarmes entered the offices of the church’s chief auditor. They confiscated his phone and iPad, threw his papers on the floor and ordered the fire brigade to smash open a locked metal filing cabinet, from which they extracted a document that they said proved he was abusing resources to spy on top Vatican cardinals.

“Now you have to confess,” they demanded, according to the auditor, Libero Milone. Faced, he said, with being thrown in a Vatican jail, Mr. Milone signed resignation papers.

In the ensuing five years, the Vatican has done much to clean up its financial act. Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, one of the prelates whom Mr. Milone was accused of spying on, and who Mr. Milone believes masterminded his ouster, has himself been removed from his powerful position by Pope Francis and is on trial in the Vatican for embezzlement and abuse of office and defrauding the church in connection with a disastrous London real estate deal.
Those darned Popes and Cardinals are a feisty but festive bunch for sure. The politics going on in Vatican City reminds me of . . . .   



From the Hey, whats going on here! files: 
Christian nationalists must be feeling persecuted
because God is smiting the wrong people
The NYT writes about the election of non-heterosexual politicians in Oregon, Colorado and Massachusetts:
Tina Kotek, a progressive Democrat who faced a pair of well-funded challengers, was elected to lead Oregon, according to The Associated Press.

Ms. Kotek’s victory, declared on Thursday, will make her and Maura Healey, the barrier-breaking attorney general who won the Massachusetts governor’s race this week, [some of] the first openly lesbian governors in American history.

Voters previously elected a gay man as governor (Jared Polis of Colorado, who was re-elected on Tuesday) and a bisexual woman (Kate Brown of Oregon, elected in 2015), both of whom are also Democrats.
As we all know by now, Christian nationalists (CNs) hate non-heterosexual people and non-heterosexuality. They openly demand the freedom to legally discriminate against and oppress members of the LGBQTN community. That is core dogma, ordained, sanctioned and blessed by the heterosexual, White Anglo-Saxon male CN God himself. CNs consider the mere existence and acceptance of non-heterosexuals in American government, society or commerce to constitute vicious secularist persecution of, and an enormous burden on, their innocent beliefs and practices.

From the CN point of view, God is smiting the wrong people. Hey, whats going on here!

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Ohio Man Charged with Murder after Allegedly Shooting Neighbor He Believed Was a Democrat

 


An Ohio man is charged with murder after allegedly gunning down a neighbor because he believed he was a Democrat.

Austin Combs, 26, is accused of shooting and killing Anthony Lee King, 43, on Nov. 5. The Butler County Sheriff’s Office announced the charges that same day.

“Okeana man shot and killed at his home by a neighbor,” the BSCO posted on its Facebook page. “Sheriff Richard K. Jones reports on November 5, 2022, Austin Combs age 26 yrs. old of Okeana, Ohio was charged with the Murder of his neighbor. This stems from an earlier call that Deputies responded to at 2795 Chapel Road located in Okeana, Ohio, for a report of a victim with a gunshot wound. Once Deputies arrived on the scene it was confirmed that the victim was found deceased. This investigation is ongoing and more charges could be added at a later date.”

The shooting occurred at around 11:45 a.m. on Saturday morning, according to the Journal-News, a Butler County local news website.

According to media reports, family members called 911 after hearing shots and finding King bleeding and unresponsive in the backyard. Local ABC affiliate WCPO shared portions of the call.

“My neighbor just shot my dad,” a voice, reportedly belonging to King’s son, is heard saying, according to the WCPO report.

“Did you guys have problems with your neighbor?” the 911 dispatcher asks.

“Yes,” the son replies. “He’s come over multiple times making statements[.]”

The dispatcher is also heard telling a woman, purportedly King’s wife, to lock herself inside their home.

“Is there anyone else in the household with you?” the dispatcher asks.

“No, just us two,” the woman replies.

“Stay inside the house,” the dispatcher told her. “Keep the doors locked. I know that’s hard for you to accept right now but I need to make sure you two are safe.”

King’s wife reportedly said she had just finished mowing the lawn when the shooting happened.

“I was letting my dog out and I heard shots,” she told 911, according to WCPO. “I said to my son, ‘What the heck was that?’ I looked at the backyard and that man was walking away from my husband.”

King’s wife said that the shooter had previously indicated that he disagreed with King’s perceived politics.

“He’s come over like four times, confronting my husband because he thought he was a Democrat,” the woman said.

“Why, why?” she later says, as a dog is heard barking in the background. “Please, I don’t understand.”

The shooting occurred just days before the nationwide midterm elections that were held Tuesday. The alleged attack echoes the violence carried out in late October, when Paul Pelosi, husband of Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, was attacked and beaten with a hammer in the couple’s San Francisco home. The accused assailant was reportedly targeting Nancy Pelosi, the third-highest ranking elected politician in the country, and planned to break her kneecaps so that she would have be wheeled into Congress.

Combs is being held in the Butler County jail on $950,000 bond. The Journal-News reported that he has a court appearance scheduled for Thursday.

https://lawandcrime.com/crime/ohio-man-charged-with-murder-after-allegedly-shooting-neighbor-he-believed-was-a-democrat/

How many more stories like this are we going to be reading about in the coming days and weeks?