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.

Monday, April 15, 2024

Nuclear treaty talks?; Ambiguity in an important law

A NYT article not paywalled (paywalled link) discusses an offer by China to start talks about a treaty among nuclear nations to formally adopt a no first strike policy for nuclear weapons:
Since China’s first nuclear weapons test, in 1964, the country has pledged loudly to never go first in a nuclear conflict — no matter what. That stance, coupled with a stated strategy of “minimum” deterrence, didn’t demand the level of American fear, loathing and attention that the Russian threat did.

The Pentagon says Beijing is on track to double the number of its nuclear warheads by the decade’s end, to 1,000 from 500 — a development that senior U.S. officials have publicly called “unprecedented” and “breathtaking.” China has drastically expanded its nuclear testing facility and continued work on three new missile fields in the country’s north, where more than 300 intercontinental ballistic missile silos have recently been constructed.

In truth, no one knows what China is planning. President Xi Jinping’s government, as with much of its domestic policy, releases vanishingly little information about its nuclear intentions, strategies or goals, and it has been equally unwilling to engage on arms control.

That is, until now.

In February, in a rare offer for nuclear diplomacy, China openly invited the United States and other nuclear powers to negotiate a treaty in which all sides would pledge never to use nuclear weapons first against one another. “The policy is highly stable, consistent and predictable,” said Sun Xiaobo, director general of the Chinese foreign ministry’s Department of Arms Control, in Geneva on Feb. 26. “It is, in itself, an important contribution to the international disarmament process.”

The invitation came as a surprise. While Beijing has long claimed moral superiority over other nuclear powers on this issue — China and India are the only nuclear-armed nations to declare a no-first-use policy — opening the possibility for talks in such a public way is something China hasn’t done in years.   
[President Biden] supported a no-first-use policy as vice president amid deliberations inside the Obama administration, and as a presidential candidate on the campaign trail he said the “sole purpose” of the U.S. nuclear arsenal should be aimed at deterring or retaliating against an adversary’s nuclear attack. But when it came time for his own administration to adopt a declaratory nuclear policy, he decided not to break with America’s longstanding nuclear dogma and retained the first-use option.
In my opinion, the US must at least accept the invitation to talk and start to talk. Talking about an existential threat with parties capable of starting nuclear war is far better than staring at each other through distrusting eyes.
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Here is the text of a part of 18 USC §1512(c) that the USSC has accepted to hear a dispute about:

(c) Whoever corruptly—

(1) alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object, or attempts to do so, with the intent to impair the object’s integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding; or

(2) otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so,

shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.

The fight is over the meaning of the word otherwise. The USSC will decide what otherwise means and how or if it connects (1) with (2). 

The stakes are very high. First, depending many the traitors convicted in Trump's 1/6 coup attempt could wind up having their convictions overturned. Second, a basis on which Trump himself can be prosecuted might vanish. Two two four felony charges Trump faces are based on this obstruction statute in relation to him trying to overturn the 2020 election. He could move to have those two charges dismissed if the Supreme Court rules for the 1/6 traitors in this case and get a great opportunity to exploit his self-proclaimed victimhood.

At issue is a law that makes it a felony if someone “corruptly … obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so.” This law — known as 18 U.S.C. 1512(c) — was enacted as part of the accounting reform law passed in 2002, in the wake of the Enron and Arthur Andersen scandals. Federal prosecutors have used it to charge 330 people who were involved in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, including Fischer — and former President Donald Trump.

Fischer argues in his appeal that the provision was not intended to be used in this way. Instead, he claims, a full reading of the law’s text shows that it was only meant to apply to the corrupt obstruction or impediment of documents in an official proceeding.

Fourteen district court judges have upheld charges for obstructing an official proceeding in Jan. 6 insurrection-related cases, on the understanding that “otherwise” means “in a different manner.” This would mean that the language of the first subsection related to the destruction of documents holds no bearing on the second subsection.

But in an appeal to dismiss the same charge when it was brought against Jan. 6 defendant Garret Miller, Judge Carl J. Nichols of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia reached a different conclusion.

In his March 2022 decision, Nichols wrote that the word “otherwise” imposes a limit on the second subsection and “requires that the defendant have taken some action with respect to a document, record, or other object in order to corruptly obstruct, impede or influence an official proceeding.”

Since Miller did not attempt to obstruct an official proceeding related to a document, Nichols wrote, that charge against him was dismissed.

Nichols referred to his decision in Miller’s case to similarly dismiss the charge against Fischer.  
On appeal, a majority from a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit disagreed. That ruling determined that the word “otherwise” should instead be defined by the “the commonplace, dictionary meaning” as “in a different manner” and, therefore, the “obstruction” prohibited by law does not refer solely to document-related crimes.
If the six radical authoritarian Republicans in the USSC want to protect Trump, this case is about as good as it can get. Two felony charges vanish and the sanctimonious liar-traitor Trump gets to play the martyred victim card with a vengeance. 

And this is happening in 2024. That is is a major part of why Merrick Garland looked to me to be too feeble and timid to do his job by May of 2021. All of this should have been resolved by at least a year ago. Now it is too late. Justice delayed could easily turn out to be justice denied and democracy killed. That is how high the stakes are for the entire, crumbling structure of the American rule of law. Biden failed us by (i) putting an incompetent in charge of the DoJ, and (ii) not firing him when it was obvious that Garland was not up to the job. Now it is just too late. We horribly messed our own bed and we get to sleep in it.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Sabine Hossenfelder criticizes academia and irrational constraining dogma

This ~14 minute video by Sabine Hossenfelder (PhD, physics), My dream died, and now I'm here (why academia sucks), sharply criticizes the academic Ivory Tower for timidity, at least in physics. She argues that academic science operates more like a business than an intellectually open human enterprise. She makes some good points, including a sharp accusation of misogyny.


GOP authoritarian moral rot; Wine improves with age; Talking to the flock; Israel vs Iran

Looking back, it’s clear that one of the more fateful moments in the evolution of today’s Republican Party came when Kevin McCarthy made his abject pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago three weeks after January 6, 2021. This was, in essence, Donald Trump’s public absolution, with then-GOP leader McCarthy affirming that the Republican Party would make the construction of a monumental historical lie about the insurrection central to its identity for the foreseeable future.*

The infernal plan was to recast what was the largest outbreak of stateside political violence in memory as a just cause—while transforming the insurrectionists into victims and martyrs. By doing so, McCarthy would keep Trump and his movement safely in the Republican Party fold, ensuring the GOP electoral victories that could not be conceived of without their participation.

All of which set the stage for Mike Johnson’s groveling meeting with Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Friday. Billed as an event about “election integrity,” their press conference confirmed that the GOP remains as committed as ever to their disturbing post-insurrection path.

It was a deeply weird affair. With Trump hovering watchfully over Johnson, the House Speaker said that in campaigning, he’s discovered that people across the country just happen to be thoroughly obsessed with precisely the same thing that preoccupies Trump. “Everywhere we go, one of the first questions that people ask about is this issue of election integrity,” Johnson said.  
Johnson and Trump also announced that the House will pursue a new bill requiring proof of citizenship to vote. Johnson even rattled off a convoluted theory in which non-citizens are threatening our elections by the “design” of President Biden—a soft version of the “great replacement theory” that has become mainstreamed at the highest levels of Republican and MAGA establishment power.
Trump's authoritarianism and moral rot have taken full control of the Republican Party. Corruption, lies and crackpot anti-democracy conspiracies are the norm. Elections will be subverted into shams if Trump and his GOP get their way.
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11% more adult Americans now believe that DJT is a "safe" choice!? Unbelievable but true. Terrifying. The stunning power of relentless dark free speech is on display here, yet again.
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The WaPo reports about rock solid rank and file loyalty to DJT:
Jerry Dean McLain first bet on former president Donald Trump’s Truth Social two years ago, buying into the Trump company’s planned merger partner, Digital World Acquisition, at $90 a share. Over time, as the price changed, he kept buying, amassing hundreds of shares for $25,000 — pretty much his “whole nest egg,” he said.

That nest egg has lost about half its value in the past two weeks as Trump Media & Technology Group’s share price dropped from $66 after its public debut last month to $32 on Friday. But McLain, 71, who owns a tree-removal service outside Oklahoma City, said he’s not worried. If anything, he wants to buy more.

“I know good and well it’s in Trump’s hands, and he’s got plans,” he said. “I have no doubt it’s going to explode sometime.”

For shareholders like McLain, investing in Truth Social is less a business calculation than a statement of faith in the former president and the business traded under his initials, DJT.

Even the company’s plunging stock price — and the chance their investments could get mostly wiped out — doesn’t seem to have shaken that faith. The company has lost $3.5 billion in value since its public debut last month.

As a business, Trump Media has largely underwhelmed: The company lost $58 million last year on $4 million in revenue, less than the average Chick-fil-A franchise, even as it paid out millions in executive salaries, bonuses and stock 
And in two years, Truth Social has attracted a tiny fraction of the traffic other platforms see, according to estimates from the analytics firm Similarweb — one of the only ways to measure its performance, given that the company says it “does not currently, and may never, collect, monitor or report certain key operating metrics used by companies in similar industries.”
If this isn't personality cult reasoning and behavior, it has to be at least one heck of a tribe.

Note that Mr. McLain is 71 and has a nest egg of abought $25,000. His retirement is not going to be much fun, assuming he can retire at all. A lot of Americans, maybe ~50%, are in similar financial straits.
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The Hill and everyone else is reporting: US helps Israel repel Iran’s missile and drone attack --The U.S. helped its ally Israel repel a significant missile and drone assault by Iran, assisting with intercepting hundreds of Iranian drones and missiles. President Biden and Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke following “Iran’s brazen attack” that targeted Israel on Saturday. The president said he reaffirmed U.S. support for Israel and condemned Iran’s missile and drone attacks during the call. .... Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said that Israel is facing a “vicious” attack and the U.S. “must stand with its ally.

What about Israel's brazen, vicious attack of Iran's consulate in Damascus? Right, we defend that. Is the US going to get sucked into another one of the endless supply of wars in the rage & hate-driven Middle east?


Hm, today is not a good news day. Sigh. It's a toxic news day. ☠️ 






Friday, April 12, 2024

Biden is dragging America into war with Iran on behalf of Israel

by Trita Parsi

Exec. VP at Quincy Institute

Biden is about to drag America into war with Iran on behalf of Israel. The disastrous way he has handled matters since Israel bombed the Iranian consulate in Damascus shows that any shift in Biden's policy on Israel was all talk, no walk
 
This is Biden's latest cave to Netanyahu. 
 
According to the US, it was not given an adequate heads-up for Israel's carefully calculated bombing of the Iranian consulate in Damascus. Not only was it a flagrant violation of the Vienna Convention, but it also risked - perhaps intentionally - ending the fragile truce between the US, Iran, and Iran-aligned militias in Iraq and Syria. By that, Israel directly and knowingly jeopardized American security and put US troops at risk. Indeed, Sec. Def Austin complained to Israel about this. 
 
A normal and appropriate response from the President of the United States would have been to strongly rebuke Israel for jeopardizing American security (this was not an act of self-defense by any stretch of the imagination), condemn the attack due to its violation of a key tenet of international law, and use that even-handedness to also press Iran to show further restraint. 
 
But this is not how Biden operates, even when Israel undermines US interests and security. Even though Biden knows that Netanyahu has an interest in prolonging and enlarging the war - which Biden has declared contradicts US interests. 
 
Instead, Biden refused to condemn Israel's escalation and flagrant violation of international law (another major reveal of how meaningless Biden's Rules Based Order talk is) and effectively blocked the UN Security Council from condemning it as well. 
 
But perhaps most shockingly, Biden then goes on to give Israel another bearhug and another standing greenlight by repeatedly stating that US support for Israel is "iron-clad."  
 
So, instead of rebuking Israel for jeopardizing the safety of American troops in the Middle East, Biden rewarded Israel. 
 
And by that, he deprives Israel of any incentives to avoid pushing the Middle East toward a disastrous regional war that also [if not averted] will engulf the US. 
 
Biden's "bearhug" on October 8 helped remove any Israeli inhibitions about how it would conduct the war. Now, Biden has once again helped remove any such inhibitions about Israel starting a regional war that America doesn't want and doesn't need. 
 
Netanyahu is lucky to have such a deferential American president. America is unlucky to have such a weak president.
 
Parsi's homepage:

Ask your doctor (or psychologist) if this post is right for you…

This original post (OP) is strictly for my fellow wonderers here.  Others need not apply, or even read it.  Just move along.  We'll take it from here. 😊

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Thanks to scientific instrumentation, we are aware of many conditions outside our visual spectrum.  Centuries ago, before such instruments were developed, we humans believed that, visually, what we saw is what there was; nothing else.  Seeing was believing, case closed.  Claiming otherwise would have been considered absurd (delusional, witchcraft, looney-bin stuff).

At that time, we did not know that, for example, butterflies and other insects could see things we could not.  We did not know that gamma rays and microwaves and other phenomena were all around us.  

With the advent of future instrumentation, it turned out that our insistence of “what we see is what we get” was wrong; shockingly wrong.  We found out that another “slice of reality” existed right there alongside ours, at the same time, in parallel time, though we did not have direct access to it without such instrumentation.  Yes, it was "there, but not there," as it were.

Here’s another example of currently inaccessible phenomena.  We know that, on the chalkboard, there has to be more than the four dimensions (length, width, depth, and time) that we experience directly.  My understanding is that scientists in the know postulate that there are some 10 or 11 other dimensions that we currently do not have any access to whatsoever; and no instrumentation yet exists to give us such access.  It’s all theoretical except for the perfect chalkboard math.  And who can deny math?  When all is said and done, I'd say math is about the only perfect, solid, “can’t get around it” type phenomenon there is left.   

Where am I going with this?  Bottom line, even with today’s technological inventions and advancements, I still have to wonder just how “lacking” our knowledge is of what’s going on around us.  We have already surprisingly and unexpectedly found out so much, since those clueless days of ancient times.

Now, finally, for the questions:

1. Do you think that someday even more advanced technology will be developed to detect other phenomena that is currently outside our so-called modern-day instrumentation?  Or do you believe that we’ve gone as far as we can, instrumentation-wise? 

2. Regardless of having the needed instrumentation, do you believe there is something else (more) out there, other than what we currently know about?  If no, and if past centuries don't serve as prologue, what makes you so cocksure there’s nothing more?

3. If yes, there is something else (more), what could that something possibly be? (e.g., gods, spirits, afterlife, soul separation from the body, other parallel realities, multiple side-by-side versions of oneself, nonsensical oxymorons such as those square circles, solid liquids, other.)

Let your mind wander as it wonders.  Let’s brainstorm together.

(by PrimalSoup)

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Exxon move to expand power to pollute; DJT lies gain traction

Exxon Declares War On Its Dissenters

The fossil fuel giant is suing investors to intimidate them from ever trying to influence corporate decisions.

ExxonMobil has launched an extraordinary lawsuit against two investment firms for the alleged offense of filing climate-focused shareholder proposals. The fossil fuel giant’s underlying goal: killing a federal regulatory effort that would make it easier for all U.S. shareholders to voice environmental and social concerns about the companies they own.

Critics say the company is also trying to intimidate shareholders from ever proposing such resolutions again in the future — under threat of being tied up in expensive litigation and incurring punitive financial penalties.

If successful, the Exxon lawsuit could set a legal precedent wrestling control away from regulators and cracking down on activist investors working to enact more climate-friendly policies.
And if DJT gets re-elected, we can rest assured that ExxonMobil will be free to pollute, cause the sea level to rise 50 feet, and make species go extinct as it wishes. 

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The WaPo reports about DJT's progress in converting lies into truths among his supporters:

Trump has made significant inroads in convincing Republicans that his lies are the truth. That applies to election integrity especially — the basis of Trump’s “big lie.”

Even more significant, Americans appear to have diverged on the meaning of honesty itself. Among Republicans, fewer now say that Trump regularly makes misleading statements. Slightly more view him as more honest than they did in 2018, despite an extraordinarily large amount of evidence that Trump often does not tell the truth. During Trump’s presidency, The Fact Checker documented more than 30,000 misleading or outright false claims, and since he began his second campaign for the White House against Joe Biden, he’s introduced new falsehoods to his catalogue: Inflation is “almost 50 percent” under President Biden; “nearly 1 million jobs held by native-born Americans” have been lost to immigrants. In a single December interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity, Trump made 24 false or misleading claims in five minutes — one every 12.5 seconds.

Six years ago, just about 1 in 4 Republicans (26 percent) agreed that millions of fraudulent votes were cast in the 2016 election. Now, 38 percent of Republicans — and 47 percent of strong Trump supporters — believe that is the case. Among all Americans, belief in this false claim hardly changed because Democrats moved sharply in the opposite direction from Republicans. Trump often made this claim to justify his loss of the popular vote to Hillary Clinton in 2016, when the electoral college propelled him to the Oval Office.


Trump has convinced 70 percent of Republicans — and 81 percent of his strong supporters — that Biden won the 2020 election because of voter fraud, though not a single allegation has been proven. Slightly more than one-third of Americans overall believe this.
 


Voters who support DJT tend to be very low information voters and significantly deceived by years of DJT's lies. The power of those people to vote based on truth has been taken from them by deceit. Unfortunately, votes based on lies count just as much as votes based on truth.