Monday, June 24, 2024

Something Other

If your version of Christianity wants to put the Ten Commandments in schools but take free lunch out of them, you are worshipping something other than Jesus.

- Zach W. Lambert

This week's featured post is "The Limits of Originalism".

This week everybody was talking about the upcoming debate

So Biden and Trump are scheduled to debate Thursday night on CNN. I am resisting the temptation to do something I often criticize the cable-news talking heads for: speculate. We shouldn't waste our time trying to predict how the debate will go, because in a few days it will happen and we can see.

I will say this: I think the existence of a debate works in Biden's favor. The biggest reason I am optimistic about Biden's chances in general is that the Trump campaign is based on lies: that Biden is senile, the economy is bad, crime is soaring, immigrants are responsible for that soaring crime, we were all better off four years ago, and so on. (CNN found 30 lies in Trump's speech in Wisconsin Tuesday.) Anything that can get voters focused on reality -- like what the candidates are actually like when you watch them live -- works in Biden's favor.


Having had time to mull over his insane sharks-and-batteries story, Trump tells it again, notes that he was criticized for it, and concludes: "It's actually not crazy. It's sort of a smart story, right?"


Biden continues to creep upward in the polls, and currently has a small lead in the 538 polling average. The average includes a Fox News poll from Wednesday, which has Biden up 50-48.

I have been skeptical of the polls that showed Biden behind, and I remain skeptical as he seems to pull ahead (by far less than the margin of error). The trend probably means something, but not the margins.

Aaron Rupar writes sarcastically:

With even Fox News now acknowledging that Biden is pulling ahead, who's writing the big think piece about how Trump should gracefully bow out at the RNC for a younger, fresher candidate?


But of course, you would know nothing about Biden's momentum from the NYT, which publishes only bad news about Biden's candidacy. Friday's story on the campaign was about how Trump is catching up in fund-raising.

Oddly, there seems to be no actual news development that occasioned this article. The FEC has not released any new totals, but the NYT is basing its article on claims made by the campaigns, trusting the Trump campaign to tell it honest numbers. The article also accepts the Trump campaign's claim that they are catching up due to small online contributions, and doesn't mention the $50 million check Trump's super-PAC got from billionaire Timothy Mellon.

The New Yorker does focus on such big-ticket donations, and makes this comment:

Trump’s fund-raising efforts have included brazen solicitation of donations from individuals and business interests that have big stakes in regulatory decisions. Last month, the Washington Post reported on an April meeting that Trump had at his Mar-a-Lago estate with senior executives from the energy industry. According to the Post story, Trump said that if he was reĆ«lected he would reverse Biden Administration policies that have restricted oil and gas drilling in the Arctic and frozen export permits for liquefied natural gas. In pressing the energy executives to donate to his campaign, he told them that “(g)iving $1 billion would be a ‘deal’ . . . because of the taxation and regulation they would avoid.”

Chris Hayes calls attention to additional examples of influence-peddling: Trump wanted to ban TikTok until a major TikTok investor gave his campaign a lot of money. Trump wanted to regulate crypto-currencies, but now he doesn't and is getting millions from crypto interests. He'll even back away from his anti-immigrant position to suit potential donors looking to recruit immigrant talent: He's promising automatic green cards to immigrants who graduate from college.


Little in this campaign is more laughable than the repeated videos of Trump waving to no one, as if a huge crowd were there to greet him.

and the Supreme Court

The featured post covers the Rahimi decision. On the surface it doesn't sound like a big deal, because the Court does the right thing by an 8-1 margin. But five of the six conservative justices recognize that the Bruen decision has caused a mess, and they have to figure out how to fix it within the bounds of their originalist dogma.

Still no word on when we might hear an opinion on Trump's absurd claim of absolute immunity from prosecution. Whether the Court grants his request or not, they've already delayed his January 6 trial by more than six months, which was what he wanted.

and Louisiana

So Louisiana has decided to waste a bunch of court time and lawyer fees so that it can be told to remove the Ten Commandments from its classrooms. This is part of a post-Dobbs push in the red states that amounts to: "Since precedent doesn't matter any more, let's try stuff that is obviously unconstitutional and see if this Court will OK it."

Supporters of the law, in defending the measure, have leaned on the 2022 US Supreme Court decision in Kennedy v. Bremerton School District, which gave a high school football coach his job back after he was disciplined over a controversy involving prayer on the field. The Supreme Court ruled that the coach’s prayers amounted to private speech, protected by the First Amendment, and could not be restricted by the school district.

The decision lowered the bar between church and state in an opinion that legal experts predicted would allow more religious expression in public spaces. At the time, the court clarified that a government entity does not necessarily violate the establishment clause by permitting religious expression in public.

But of course, here the state isn't "permitting" religious expression, it's mandating religious expression. Not even this Supreme Court will go for that. And the case they're leaning on was a travesty to begin with.

Anyway, it's just so typical: politicians making a show of their Christianity by doing some symbolic thing that costs them nothing and helps no one. "These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me." - Isaiah 29:13.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz contrasts public schools feeding hungry children (as Minnesota does) versus forcing state-sponsored religion on them.

I'm a two-decade school teacher. We know that full bellies make better learners. But look, you're seeing the contrast in this when you get a Democratic governor versus a Republican governor. We don't have the Ten Commandments posted in our classrooms, but we have free breakfast and lunch. Those are policies the Biden-Harris administration is talking about taking national. It makes a huge difference.

and Willie Mays and Reggie Jackson

Thursday, a major league baseball game was played in a town without a major league team: Birmingham, Alabama. The point of the game was to honor the Negro Leagues, and it also turned into a spontaneous tribute to the great Willie Mays, who had died two days before.

Prior to the game, the usual Fox Sports announcer crew interviewed another Black Hall of Fame player, Reggie Jackson. Reggie comes from the generation after Mays (entering the major leagues in the middle of the 1967 season, 16 years after Mays' rookie year and 20 years after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier), and so is not usually thought of as a pioneer. But he had a lot to say about the racism he faced while playing for the minor league Birmingham A's in 1967.

His story is worth the three minutes it will take you to listen to it, because it underlines a point that is often glossed over in upbeat accounts of our civil rights progress, particularly in this age when any honest testimony about American racism is denounced as "critical race theory": Racism isn't something you beat once and then are done with. Twenty years after Jackie Robinson, racism against Black baseball players was still virulent.

Joe and Sharon Rudi, I slept on their couch three-four nights a week for about a month and a half. Finally they were threatened that they would burn our apartment complex down unless I got out. ...

Had it not been for my White friends ... I would have never made it. I was too physically violent. I was ready to physically fight somebody. I'da got killed here, because I woulda beat someone's ass, and you'da saw me in an oak tree somewhere.

and you also might be interested in

This week it was hot in the Northeast, but that was nothing compared with Mecca, which hit 125 degrees (51.8 C). Saudi sources estimate that at least 1300 people died during this year's Hajj.


Pastor Robert Morris, founder of the Gateway Church in Southlake, Texas (ranked in 2023 as the 9th largest church in the US) resigned Tuesday after the "extramarital relationship" from early in his career that he had previously confessed to turned out to be the multi-year abuse of a 12-year-old girl.

Morris, a former member of President Donald Trump’s spiritual advisory committee, had long told a story to his congregation and church leaders about a “moral failure” involving sexual sin when he was a young minister in his 20s.

Last week, Cindy Clemishire, now 54, revealed in a post on the church watchdog site The Wartburg Watch that she was 12 when Morris first sexually abused her in 1982. The alleged abuse continued for more than four years, Clemishire told NBC News on Monday.

If the mention of Southlake rings a bell, it might be because two weeks ago I told you about Mike Hixenbaugh's book They Came for the Schools, which describes the campaign to remove "critical race theory" and so-called LGBTQ "groomers" from the Southlake schools. I didn't talk about Morris and Gateway's role in that campaign, but in a 2023 podcast, Hixenbaugh described how Morris and Gateway campaigned for conservative candidates to take over the school board. To protect the children, of course.


Hardly any Democrat communicates better than Pete Buttigieg. Here, he explains why conservatives' lack of answers on questions like gas prices, prescription drug prices, inflation in general, infrastructure, child care, and taxes (Rick Scott wants to raise taxes on the poor), leads them to their current rhetoric.

So what do they do? They find somebody vulnerable and pick on them -- which at the moment is largely the trans community. And they find something to talk about that can go between the laughable -- is Donald Duck going to make your kid gay? -- to the incredibly dark, which is the suggestion that the very presence of someone who is gender-nonconforming or trans or gay or lesbian or otherwise different -- the very existence of someone like that is an "adult subject". That if my kids in, let's say, the first grade classroom were to mention in passing that over the weekend they had a great time going with their dads to the zoo, that they would have somehow, by saying that, uttered something age inappropriate. And get us really fired up about that fight.

and let's close with something fictitious

The environmentalist website Grist did something creative: sponsored a "climate fiction" contest. Contestants were challenged to "imagine 2200" and "offer vivid, hope-filled, diverse visions of climate progress". From over a thousand entries, the judges chose three winners and nine finalists. You can read the stories here.

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