An analysis by Jim Meigs.
Category Archives: History
55 Years
It’s not too late to do a ceremony to commemorate the first landing on another world. Download here.
Bob Newhart
RIP. He was a very funny guy, with a deadpan delivery that couldn’t be beat. A great straight man as well. And not just visually. He was famous for his hilarious phone calls, in which you only heard his side. We had one of his albums when I was a kid in the 60s. It was called “The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart.” Here’s an example:
It’s funny, but I recently saw a rerun of the 80s show, and I’ve had the theme song (which was by Henry Mancini!) getting stuck in my head periodically since. The last episode might have been one of the most brilliant endings of any television series, if you were a fan of the show in the seventies. It was part of one of the best Saturday-night prime-time comedy lineups in television history, with All in the Family, and Mary Tyler Moore. Oh, and Mash.
Whither California
Is there any hope?
Anthony Fauci
Jim Meigs reviews his book:
Anthony Fauci, whose early career did so much to improve human health, leaves behind a tainted legacy. He and his colleagues abused their authority, overreached on lockdowns and vaccine policies, and dissembled about dangerous research that his agency funded. The populist backlash to these excesses is still building. The public’s growing distrust of medical experts—and new skepticism toward all vaccines—is a public-health timebomb.
It is tempting to attribute Fauci’s late-career lapses to some personal moral deficiency. I think that’s the wrong tack. Fauci’s ethical shortcomings weren’t personal so much as institutional; he had been given enormous authority while being almost completely insulated from political oversight. Even the president could not easily fire him. And his centralized control over massive research budgets meant that few scientists were willing to challenge his claims or policies.
Over the decades, Fauci came to see himself as infallible. He represented “science.” Instead of welcoming contrary views, as he did during the AIDS years, the older, more thin-skinned (and more institutionally entrenched) Fauci resented criticism and tried to silence dissent. If not for the persistent pushback from a few bold scientists, journalists, and lawmakers, he might have succeeded in shutting down crucial debates entirely. No federal official should have so much power, with so little accountability, for so long.
Few people have the probity to withstand the temptations of that kind of power.
Private Property
…and the birth of a free society. A long but interesting history. It’s useful to note that this will be important in opening up space.
The GOP Platform
…and space.
I Wish That This Was Implausible
Nobody wants to hear this because of the implications, but oh well: Joe Biden’s security regime deliberately and with malice aforethought created the conditions that led to an assassin shooting Donald Trump in the head. It is by the grace of God that he lived and our nation is…
— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) July 16, 2024
At the very least, it’s beyond incompetence, to the point at which it at least appears to be malicious.
[Wednesday-morning update]
It is now an article at The Federalist.
We need something like a Warren Commission to investigate this. Not sure who today’s equivalent of Earl Warren would be, though.
[Late-morning update]
There are basically four competing narratives or theories about what led to the assassination attempt against Donald Trump:
— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) July 17, 2024
1) Through a combination of incompetence and innocent mistakes and garden-variety bureaucratic ineptitude, a gunman was able to penetrate security and take…
I’m kind of where he is, given the current state of knowledge. Somewhere between 2 and 3.
The Biden Titanic
A status report on the godawful mess the Democrats have made for themselves, and the rest of us, from VDH.
[Update a few minutes later]
And in contrast, this is why Trump probably won the election on Saturday.
Thoughts On Ballistics
…and our decrepit institutions:
We don’t know much this Monday AM. Some of what we think we know will in time prove incorrect. We will find out more details in the days and weeks to come – but what is clear is this; we have too many people in this nation who are OK with political violence – including that which digs a bloody trench from Eugene Simpson Stadium Park to the Butler Farms Show Grounds.
We also know that we have – again – evidence that we have the wrong people with the wrong ideas running institutions they are unqualified to lead and that our nation cannot afford such a lack of effective stewardship of our inheritance.
The number of unserious people in critical jobs, and no one being accountable for failures of epic proportions, is – to repeat myself for emphasis – a national disgrace and crisis.
It’s been deteriorating for a long time, under both Democrats and Republicans, but it’s reached new lows in recent years.
[Update a while later]
No matter how much training or experience she has (and these people didn’t seem particularly competent), it’s stupid to think that a 5’3″ woman can shield a 6’3″ man.
[Late-morning update]
Secret Service Beefs Up Trump’s Security With Squad Of Blind Midgets https://t.co/cytTtyGysZ pic.twitter.com/mianE1cW0X
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) July 15, 2024