Skip to content
  • T minus four days and counting

    September 26, 2023
    US politics

    Liz Wolfe:

    With a government shutdown looking ever more likely, the Senate is now debating whether Ukraine aid ought to be included in whatever stopgap bill they pass to fund the government.

    At midnight on Saturday, the fiscal year ends. Congress has not passed the bills it needs to in order to fund the government for another year, which means a group of Democratic senators are eyeing a temporary measure—called a continuing resolution—to keep the government up and running while negotiations continue. But a significant sticking point in the existing spending feud is $25 billion in new funding for the Ukraine defense effort, which several vocal House Republicans oppose.

    Excluding “contentious provisions” like that line item would allow it to be a “clean” measure that might enjoy broader support among Republicans in the House, which also have to pass it to keep the government open,” reports The New York Times. Some senators reportedly personally assured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy last week during his visit that American aid to Ukraine would not cease, but others fear that will sink the bill when there’s no time to waste.

    Besides, “even if the Senate is able to assemble and pass a temporary spending measure in the next few days, it is uncertain whether [House Speaker Kevin] McCarthy would even bring the legislation to a vote,” adds The New York Times. “Doing so would be likely to provoke a formal challenge to his hold on the speakership, presenting him with a choice between keeping the government open or igniting a fight for his job.”

    So what? What’s wrong with a government shutdown? This whole fight is about more than just McCarthy keeping his job; people ostensibly depend on the federal government to provide services that matter to them, or so the argument goes.

    Of course, a shutdown doesn’t actually mean the federal government fully grinds to a halt (be still, my heart); instead, services deemed nonessential are suspended (like Food and Drug Administration inspections; administration of Medicare and Social Security programs but not actually cutting the checks) while services considered essential (air traffic control, border protection, law enforcement, maintaining the power grid, that dreaded IRS with its new infusion of cash from that time Congress singlehandedly stopped inflation with a well-named bill, and a long list of other things) carry on. Federal employees get temporarily furloughed, with backpay paid later.

    In short: Not all that much actually happens, and an astonishing number of government programs are considered essential. In some cases, the calls as to what’s “essential” vs. “nonessential” are bizarre: WIC gets shut down but SNAP continues issuing benefits, for example.

    There are some knock-on effects to such disruptions. During the 2013 shutdown, for example, people were turned away en masse from national parks which resulted in lost revenue and a funding crunch later on. During the 2018–2019 shutdown, a lot of TSA agents and a few air traffic controllers refused to show up for work, which created major travel issues and shut down all of New York’s LaGuardia airport for a time. Generally speaking, though, government shutdowns don’t affect people’s day-to-day lives as much as some in the media claim and, since so much of the government stays running and so many government employees end up still getting their paychecks, they’re a bit of a misnomer.

    In fact, I have some candidates for agencies we could shutter (forever): the TSA, with its 80-95 percent failure rate at detecting explosives and weapons, would be a great candidate. (Just saved the government $10 billion annually.) Maybe the Environmental Protection Agency, which keeps trying to regulate carbon emissions and power plants to little effect, and which stands in the way of controlled burns. (Just saved another $10 billion, you’re welcome).

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on T minus four days and counting
  • How to deflate OPEC

    September 26, 2023
    US politics, Wheels

    The Daily Caller:

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis will release his energy policy agenda Wednesday to “achieve $2 gas” and reduce energy costs if president, according to a copy of the plan obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation.

    DeSantis’ six-part “Freedom To Fuel” plan will be the fourth policy rollout of his presidential campaign, followed by his agenda for immigration, the military and the economy. The governor plans to “Restore American Energy Dominance,” “Save the American Automobile,” “Elevate Evidence Over Ideology,” “Reform Environmental Permitting and End Green Lawfare,” “Jump-Start Critical Mineral and Federal Land Development” and “Build the Most Efficient, Affordable, and Reliable Energy Grid in the World,” according to the proposal.

    “As President, I will be laser-focused on reducing gas prices and energy costs,” DeSantis said in a statement. “We will unleash American energy dominance as a way to stop inflation and achieve $2 gas in 2025. We need a pro-America energy policy that puts Midland over Moscow, the Marcellus over the Mullahs, and the Bakken over Beijing. We will reverse American decline by reversing Biden’s America last energy agenda, eliminating reliance on hostile nations for energy, and putting the economic interests of Americans before the radical left’s ideological agenda.”

    Biden frowns on producing our own oil and gas here but will go to Saudi Arabia and fist bump to try to get it from them? This stops when I’m president.

    We’re going to open up all energy production and we will be energy dominant again in this country.

    We need to lower gas prices… pic.twitter.com/zmXMFOxinV

    — Ron DeSantis (@RonDeSantis) September 20, 2023

    DeSantis will pledge to “crush inflation” through oil and gas production by advancing pipelines and other infrastructure, according to the proposal. The governor plans on strengthening American energy exports, refilling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and bolster the nuclear energy industry.

    The governor’s agenda would also repeal several of President Joe Biden’s climate provisions, like the Clean Power Plan, “waters of the United States” rule, electric vehicle (EV) mandates, targeting of gas stoves and other appliances and any other rules that enable energy dependence on China, according to the proposal.

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on How to deflate OPEC
  • Imbecile!

    September 26, 2023
    International relations

    Back when Miller Lite beer commercials were funny two Canadian hockey stars starred in this bilingual commercial:

    That came to mind because of what Matt Taibbi reports:

    A year and a half ago, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau denounced a Jewish member of parliament named Melissa Lantsman for standing with “people who wave swastikas.” Lantsman had criticized Trudeau for fanning “the flames of an unjustified national emergency” in response to the “Freedom Convoy” trucker protests. The “swastikas” Trudeau referenced were, as even Snopes conceded, virtually all “pictured on signs as a way of mocking and protesting government restrictions,” comme ça:

    By saying Lantsman stood with “people who wave swastikas,” in other words, Trudeau really meant she was standing with “people who called me a Nazi.” He declined to apologize, which of course is his prerogative.

    This week, both Trudeau and House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota are under fire after Rota invited, and Trudeau applauded, a 98-year-old former soldier from the 14th Waffen-SS Grenadier Division named Yaroslav Hunka to attend an address by Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. Rota praised Hunka as a “Canadian hero” from his time fighting the Soviets in World War II when, not that it matters, they were allies to the United States and Canada. Leaving the elderly Hunka out of this for the moment, these politicians could easily have turned up the man’s blogs about joining Hitler’s army, making the applause scene at least approach the max on the cringe scale:

    Amid the subsequent outcry, Trudeau squeaked out a handful of sentences that collectively gave off least a faint aroma of apology, though he personally didn’t apologize for anything, and invoked “mistakes were made” phrasing:

    It’s extremely upsetting that this happened. The Speaker has acknowledged his mistake and has apologized… This is something that is deeply embarrassing to the Parliament of Canada and by extension to all Canadians… I think particularly of Jewish MPs and all members of the Jewish community, celebrating, um, commemorating Yom Kippur today.

    If he’d stopped there, it would have been a merely gross performance. He didn’t, jumping straight from “Yom Kippur today” to:

    I think it’s going to be really important that all of us push back against Russian propaganda, Russian disinformation, and continue our steadfast and unequivocal support for Ukraine, as we did last week with announcing further measures to stand with Ukraine in Russia’s illegal war against it.

    To recap: Trudeau in a clear act of official disinformation smeared thousands of Canadian protesters as Nazis last year with context-twisting descriptions of a few decidedly un-representative photos. Now, after the Speaker of the House of Commons invited an ex-Nazi to parliament in a planned political act that had to be somewhat representative of the thinking of Trudeau’s Liberal government, the Prime Minister is complaining about “Russian disinformation,” as if that were to blame for this optics Hindenburg. As the CBC put it:

    Trudeau warned that this event may fuel Russian propaganda. Russian President Vladimir Putin has claimed the Ukraine conflict is about rooting out Nazis.

    Dude, Vladimir Putin didn’t invite a Nazi to parliament, your government did. Do Davosketeers like Trudeau have anything inside, like shame or their own thoughts, or are they just manicured readers of talking points? Sheesh. It’s almost funny, how repugnant these people are.

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Imbecile!
  • Presty the DJ for Sept. 26

    September 26, 2023
    Music

    The number one song today in 1960:

    The number one song today in 1964:

    Today in 1965, Roger Daltrey was fired from The Who after he punched out drummer Keith Moon. Fortunately for Daltrey and the Who, he was unfired the next day. (Daltrey and Pete Townshend reportedly have had more fistfights than Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier.)

    (more…)

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Presty the DJ for Sept. 26
  • A politico-economic oxymoron

    September 25, 2023
    US politics

    Robert Tracinski:

    Every time there is an idealistic vogue toward big government, it’s followed by an inevitable drift back in the other direction—after the big-government solutions fail.

    The latest example is a movement, so far small, of “progressives” who realize they haven’t been able to achieve their stated goals because these goals require increases in the labor force and particularly in the economy’s capacity for construction and manufacturing. They require making things and building things—and existing progressive policies are getting in the way.

    So, to be really progressive, we have to do something counterintuitive: reform big-government regulations and (gasp!) possibly even reduce them. This viewpoint has come to be known as “supply-side progressivism.”

    The cause of smaller government has few friends today, so I welcome any converts, no matter how grudging or belated. But is supply-side progressivism doomed? More specifically, is the “progressivism” part incompatible with the “supply side” part?

    This is a problem the would-be supply-side progressives are already aware of.

    The term “supply-side progressive” was coined by Ezra Klein, who laments that “progressives are often uninterested in the creation of the goods and services they want everyone to have.” A lot of us have been saying this for years, but it’s a startling admission coming from the inside. The result, Klein continues, is “cost disease socialism,” which he summarizes succinctly: “If you subsidize the cost of something that there isn’t enough of, you’ll raise prices or force rationing. You can see the poisoned fruit of those mistakes in higher education and housing.”

    Klein has also discovered the problem of overregulation, particularly in construction and housing. In a follow-up New York Times article, he describes the problem:

    “There are so many people who want to have some say over a project,” [construction analyst Ed Zarenski] said. “You have to meet so many parking spaces, per unit. It needs to be this far back from the sight lines. You have to use this much reclaimed water. You didn’t have 30 people sitting in a hearing room for the approval of a permit 40 years ago.” . . .

    This, [economist Chad] Syverson said, was closest to his view on the construction slowdown, though he didn’t know how to test it against the data. “There are a million veto points,” he said. “There are a lot of mouths at the trough that need to be fed to get anything started or done. So many people can gum up the works.”

    Klein’s best effort to get at the central issue, though, is his critique of “everything-bagel liberalism”:

    You might assume that when faced with a problem of overriding public importance, government would use its awesome might to sweep away the obstacles that stand in its way. But too often, it does the opposite. It adds goals—many of them laudable—and in doing so, adds obstacles, expenses and delays. If it can get it all done, then it has done much more. But sometimes it tries to accomplish so much within a single project or policy that it ends up failing to accomplish anything at all.

    In other words, every project has to become an everything bagel. It can’t achieve just one progressive goal; it has to achieve everything, everywhere, all at once. Klein’s first example is California’s attempt to subsidize “affordable housing,” a bagel which has been overloaded with regulations such as a mandate to use small, minority-owned contractors—a requirement that adds expenses and delays to housing construction. His second example is the Biden administration’s attempt to subsidize microchip manufacturing in the U.S., onto which the administration has piled mandates for worker child care and other demands.

    The progressives’ mania for achieving every goal through government regulation and mandates prevents them from achieving anything.

    The progressive movement did not begin as a call for increased wealth and construction. It began as a backlash against an economy that was already producing rapid growth, abundant innovation, new construction and economic progress. The first great progressive president, Woodrow Wilson, described the movement that brought him to the presidency as a “sober second thought” to the “heedless” pursuit of “material greatness.”

    More recently, the British historian Eric Hobsbawm, writing in The Guardian, described “the basis of progressive policy” as “not maximizing economic growth and personal incomes” but rather “redistributing private accumulation” and reining in the “bourgeois anarchism” of markets. He repeatedly dismissed the idea that “what a country needs is under all circumstances maximum economic growth.”

    So, to some extent, an anti-supply-side, “degrowth” attitude was part of the basic impetus of progressivism from the very start. And that problem is still smack-dab in the middle of supply-side progressivism. Klein’s proposals, for example, are mostly about how to make it easier to do a small subset of politically privileged projects. To be worth lightening the burden of regulations, your project has to have a “green” angle or benefit the homeless. We couldn’t possibly scrape anything off the everything bagel when it comes to the kind of normal economic activity that is the actual bread and butter of economic progress.

    If we followed the supply-side progressives’ prescriptions, we might become great at building housing for the homeless, but we could still have a thousand restrictions on housing for the middle class. We could complete a wealth of “green energy” projects but still have rolling blackouts because we shut down conventional power plants. We would clear the way for projects that involve properly progressive goals of redistribution, but we would not clear the way for projects that are desirable just because the average person wants to be happy and prosper. Would that really be progress?

    Moreover, most of Klein’s proposals concern what regulators and the government can do and give relatively little consideration to what entrepreneurs and developers require. But the U.S. is not China; our economy is not dominated by state-owned enterprises. (And given the ongoing crack-up in China, we should be grateful for that.) The private sector drives most of our actual economic activity.

    Yet Klein isn’t really prepared to address this fact. You can see this ambivalence when he begins by deriding free-market economists (the old supply-siders of the 1980s) as peddlers of pseudo-science and haughtily dismissing Ayn Rand and her interest in the nation’s “John Galts”—a reference to the heroes of her novels, who are mostly scientists, inventors and industrialists. But if we’re in favor of material and technological progress, shouldn’t these people, the fountainheads of innovation and growth, be among our primary concerns? Shouldn’t we regard what they do as more important than what bureaucrats and politicians do?

    As for Ayn Rand, whose whole body of work was about the needs and motivations of the creators, aren’t those needs something we should take seriously if we want a lot of “supply-side” growth to fuel our ambitions for progress?

    But the whole point of supply-side progressivism is that Klein—and others who are carving out a similar ideological niche, such as Noah Smith—have to begin by loudly disavowing free markets and individualism and private enterprise in order to shore up their progressive credentials. Their progressivism undermines their supply-side aspirations.

    This cringingly apologetic approach is what distinguishes the supply-side progressives from previous apostates from the big-government creed. My sense is that decades ago, people who now identify as supply-side progressives would have just moved to the right. They would have followed the path of people like Norman Podhoretz and Irving Kristol, who started as big-government liberals—or, as in Kristol’s case, socialists—and then gradually migrated to become “neoconservatives.”

    But it seems that such a migration is harder to pull off today, perhaps because the rise of Trumpism has made the right seem toxic, and certainly because of the extreme tribalism of our current politics. The old neoconservatives and other refugees from left-wing orthodoxy may have made a lot of enemies among the left-wing intelligentsia, but their views were more welcome in the broad mainstream of American media and academia. Today, when those fields have become more ideologically uniform—in the case of the media, fragmented into opposing islands, each ideologically uniform within itself—such a transition may seem less inviting. So they have to come up with an approach that maintains a socially respectable veneer of progressivism.

    Yet the cost for the would-be supply-side progressives is that they are limited by a set of thoughts they can’t mention. They need to be freer, less defensive, less apologetic. Few of us want to be against progress, of course—but there is no need to be restricted to one particular dogma that claims a highly implausible monopoly on progress.

    These thinkers are beginning to confront what other generations before them have confronted: the limitations of the state’s coercive power, the destructive fantasies of top-down planning and the creative power of decentralized private initiative. They need to stop feeling the need to tie themselves to the label of “progressivism” and be willing to follow this evidence as far as it leads them.

     

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on A politico-economic oxymoron
  • Bang for their bucks

    September 25, 2023
    International relations, US politics

    Erick Erickson:

    Sixty-one cents of every dollar we give to Ukraine comes back to the United States as weapons system purchases.

    Ninety cents of every dollar we give Ukraine is in the form of a loan that the European Union guarantees. So, if Ukraine does not pay us back, Europe will.

    Europe is spending two dollars for every one dollar we are spending.

    The total amount we have spent amounts to slightly less than five percent of the American Defense Department Budget.

    Here is some of what the Ukrainians are buying from us, or buying from Europeans who are then upgrading their weapons systems from us.

    • 10,000 Javelin anti-armor systems
    • 1 Patriot air defense battery and munitions
    • 80,000 other anti-armor systems and munitions
    • 12 NASAM systems
    • 2,000 Stinger anti-aircraft systems
    • Avenger air defense systems
    • 7,000 TOW missiles
    • HAWK air defense systems and munitions
    • 35,000 grenade launchers and small arms, with ammunition
    • Laser-guided rocket systems
    • AIM-7 missiles
    • 100,000 sets of body armor and helmets
    • RIM-7 missiles
    • Night-vision devices, surveillance systems, thermal imagery systems, optics, and laser rangefinders
    • AIM-9M missiles
    • Antiaircraft guns and ammunition
    • C-4 and other explosives
    • Explosive-ordnance-disposal equipment
    • VAMPIRE anti-drone systems and munitions
    • Anti-drone gun trucks and ammunition
    • M18A1 Claymore mines
    • Anti-drone laser-guided rocket systems
    • Anti-tank mines
    • Other anti-drone equipment
    • Mine-clearing equipment
    • Obstacle-emplacement equipment
    • Medical supplies
    • Air-to-ground missiles
    • Field equipment, cold-weather gear, generators, and spare parts
    • High-speed anti-radiation missiles (HARMs)
    • Precision aerial munitions
    • Chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear protective equipment
    • 6,000 Zuni aircraft rockets (could function as air defense)
    • 18 armored bridging systems
    • 20,000 Hydra-70 aircraft rockets
    • Rocket launchers and ammunition
    • 25mm ammunition

    The most remarkable part of our willingness to be the arsenal of democracy is that while Ukraine returns sixty-one cents of every dollar to American military suppliers in the form of purchases, Ukraine also pays back the American government the same sixty-one cents we loaned them for the purchases. It is a remarkably good deal for the United States that undermines the Russians, keeps American citizens from having to fight the Russians, helps Ukraine secure its freedom, and creates jobs for Americans from Alabama to California.

    I agree with Republican concerns that we need increased audits and an Inspector General, given the history of corruption in Ukraine. But I think the cause of helping Ukraine fight the Russians is worthwhile.

    What is actually even more remarkable is that a radio show host in Georgia should not have to be the one to explain this. The President of the United States should.

    It is the most damning indictment of Joe Biden that he has failed to make this case. You can disagree. I’m not trying to persuade you. I’m just giving you the facts. It is just really remarkable that Joe Biden cannot sit down from the Oval Office and make the case for supporting this cause.

    His unwillingness has allowed others to suggest we cannot secure our border and help Ukraine or to make the case that we are spending too much.

    I support funding Ukraine. I think it is the right thing to do. But I totally get others who are more and more skeptical when the President himself cannot make the case.

     

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Bang for their bucks
  • Bad Biden news

    September 25, 2023
    US politics

    The Washington Post:

    Former president Trump in the 2024 race has a nearly ten-point advantage over President Biden, whom most Democrats want to replace as their party’s nominee, according to a new major poll released Sunday.

    In a 2024 matchup, 51 percent of respondents said they would vote for Trump while 42 percent said they would vote for Biden, a new Washington Post/ABC News survey indicates. On the question of probability to vote for either candidate, 36 percent of respondents said they would definitely vote for the former president while 32 percent said they would vote for the current.

    Trump led Biden by 20 points among voters under age 35.NR Logo

    The poll, conducted by telephone September 15-20, 2023 among a random national sample of 1,006 adults, shows 37 percent approval for Biden and 48 percent approval for Trump’s past presidential performance, the highest level recorded for him in the poll since March 2020.

    On the economy and immigration, Biden received overwhelming disapproval of 64 percent and 62 percent, respectively. Across issues including the state of the economy, the unemployment rate, gas or energy prices, and the incomes of average Americans, most respondents said the times are not good.

    Asking respondents who identified as Democratic-leaning whether they would like to see Biden nominated for another term, the poll found that 62 percent wants the party to nominate someone else besides Biden. Republican-leaning respondents said they would support Trump rather than his opponent Ron DeSantis for the GOP nomination by 54 percent to the governor’s 15 percent.

    Among voters under age 35, Trump leads Biden in the new Post-ABC poll by 20 points. Some other recent public polls show Biden winning this group by between six and 18 points. In 2020, Biden won voters under age 35 by double digits. Among non-White voters, the poll finds Biden leads by nine points. In four other public polls, Biden’s lead among non-White voters ranges from 12 points to 24 points.

    A recent national Wall Street Journal poll from earlier in September showed Trump beating DeSantis 59–13, with the former president’s mounting list of indictments and legal troubles not proving to be deterrents. Over 60 percent of Republican primary voters in the poll said each indictment was politically motivated and without merit. About 78 percent said Trump’s actions to interfere with the certification of the 2020 election for Biden were legitimate efforts to ensure an accurate vote. The WSJ poll also projected a Trump-Biden tie of 46–46 in November 2024.

    The results of Sunday’s Washington Post/ABC News poll showed a less forgiving attitude to Trump’s indictments on federal and state charges that he conspired to illegal overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and that he illegally retained classified documents after leaving office. Among respondents, 53 percent said Trump was appropriately held accountable, while 40 percent said he was unfairly victimized by his political opponents.

     

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Bad Biden news
  • Let real journalists be journalists

    September 25, 2023
    media, US politics

    Matt Welch:

    On Sunday, NBC’s Meet the Press, which has been interviewing notable politicians for the past 75 years, brought in for questioning the runaway favorite for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination: Donald Trump.

    Media critics were—predictably by now—livid. Not just at new MTP host Kristin Welker’s inability to corral Washington’s most slippery fish, but at the very notion that a politician-interviewing show should even interview this particular politician, after all that he has done.

    “It’s arguable that, at this juncture, there is really no need to interview Trump,” posited CNN media writer Oliver Darcy. “Just a colossal mistake to showcase this sociopath,” tweeted American Enterprise Institute emeritus scholar and Atlantic contributing editor Norman Ornstein. “Downright dangerous journalism to legitimize this guy—in the name of having a ‘talked about’ premiere,” charged former New York Times media reporter Bill Carter. “Is it possible,” an exasperated former Chicago Tribune editor Mark Jacob wondered, “that journalists who platform lying fascists don’t know they’re undermining democracy?”

    It may seem counterintuitive that protecting democracy requires refusing to talk with a primary-frontrunning former president who more than 74 million Americans voted for in 2020. But not if you think that Trump is uniquely awful and dangerous, that his fact-tethered interlocutors are helpless against his firehose of lies, and that there are no meaningfully compensatory benefits to be gleaned from the traditional journalistic practice of interrogating a candidate for high office.

    “Interviewing Trump does not work,” declared NYU journalism professor Jay Rosen. “No accountability moment ever comes.” Welker’s effort “proved once again that interviewing the 45th president is an impossible task,” averred Vanity Fair‘s Molly Jong-Fast. The Bulwark‘s Jonathan Last made the bold comportmental assertion that the “media’s job—and particularly broadcast media—is to think deeply about how to avoid helping Trump with its coverage….It would be nice if the folks in broadcast media could lend us—and democracy—a hand. Or, at the very least, stop giving aid and comfort to the authoritarian just because you want to pull a ratings number.”

    Such sentiments were rarely heard in the mainstream media 25 years ago. Back then one might sporadically encounter a Committee of Concerned Journalists member clucking about the need to hold firm on traditional, nonpartisan journalistic values of verification, particularly in the face of such debasing new ideologically tainted Web phenomena as The Drudge Report. It was mostly on the political margins—the Nation left, the Free Republic right—where you’d find critics chipping away at the unconscious or unacknowledged biases in the aspirationally neutral and still-potent MSM. Progressives would complain that the right had learned to successfully “work the refs“; conservatives would charge that newsrooms nursed a secret agenda to tip elections toward Democrats.

    Now the agenda is no longer secret, and the ref-working is coming from inside the house.

    “Be truthful, not neutral,” is the catchphrase longtime CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour has been drawing industry-wide praise for this season, including back in May when she deployed it to criticize her own network for holding a live town hall interview with the former and would-be future president.

    “We know Trump and his tendencies. Everyone does. He just seizes the stage and dominates. No matter how much flack the moderator tries to aim at the incoming, it doesn’t often work,” Amanpour told an audience of Columbia Journalism School grads, adding: “Maybe we should revert back to the newspaper editors and TV chiefs of the 1950s, who in the end refused to allow McCarthyism onto their pages, unless his foul lies, his witch hunts, and his rants reached the basic evidence level required in a court of law.”

    This is a wild, if instructive, misreading of history. It wasn’t journalistic non-platforming that trimmed back the Red Scare excesses of Sen. Joe McCarthy; it was something closer to the opposite. Live gavel-to-gavel television broadcasts of the 1954 Army-McCarthy hearings, evidence-free “rants” and all, gave Americans a visceral view of an increasingly deranged populist steamrolling individual due process. His reputation never recovered.

    When CBS titan Edward R. Murrow famously denounced Tailgunner Joe just prior to those hearings, he did so mostly by using McCarthy’s own previously broadcast words (edited for maximally villainous effect, to be sure). Then he invited the senator back for a follow-up show to respond.

    The contemporary journalistic fad of trying to deplatform problematic political figures—whether it’s Sen. Tom Cotton (R–Ark.) from The New York Times, Trump-whisperer Steve Bannon from a New Yorker festival, 2020 “election deniers” from CNN, conservative writer Kevin Williamson from The Atlantic, and so on—is based on a mixture of elitism and defeatism. Elitism in the sense that these outlets are treated as elevated, nearly sacrosanct spaces—platforms!—to be guarded zealously against conservative contamination, and also that the type of political media consumers who stubbornly continue to support Trump are impervious to fact-based persuasion and therefore better written off.

    “The public is well familiar with Trump and already knows that he is a man estranged with the truth,” Oliver Darcy argued. “As Trump once infamously bragged, he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and still maintain support from his loyal base of fans. Trump’s supporters are choosing to stand behind him because of his blustering personality and style. They lock arms with him because they believe he is boldly standing up for them and taking the fight to the elites. Not because of his position on Taiwan.” (Emphases in original.)

    This is where the defeatism comes in. Since Trump voters are unreachable, and since Trump himself is basically undefeated in one-on-one interviews, why bother? Particularly if (in the recent words of Guardian media critic Margaret Sullivan) “his re-election would bring extreme anti-democratic results.”

    Accepting for the moment the provocative premise that preventing Trump’s re-election is a core journalistic value, refusing to interview the guy is like taking away the rope with which he is always ready to hang himself. Given that he is unlikely to testify at his four upcoming criminal trials, interviews are a critical venue for hearing Trump’s legally germane rationalizations for engaging in facially illegal conduct.

    At the industry-derided CNN town hall, for example, Trump claimed that “I had the absolute right to do whatever I want with” the presidential records that he retained after leaving office, in statutory violation of the Presidential Records Act. And during a recent sit-down with Megyn Kelly, when presented with the fact that he had no right to defy a subpoena for those documents, Trump dissembled that “I just don’t know the timing.” As Jacob Sullum pointed out, “Trump is suggesting he did not have to comply with a subpoena he claimed to be obeying. This does not seem like a winning legal strategy.”

    So there are potential benefits to interviewing Trump when viewed through the narrow lens of impacting his ability to regain the White House. But even as someone who wrote an essay under the headline “The Case Against Trump: Donald Trump Is an Enemy of Freedom,” I would suggest that subjecting political journalism to the instrumental test of how it impacts electoral outcomes will likely be effective neither politically nor journalistically.

    Voters and news consumers are smart enough to know they are being sneered at and will discount content from the sneerers accordingly. They may also have a better-trained nose for the media’s ideological blind spots, such as when The Daily Beast‘s Corbin Bolies this week suggested that President Joe Biden—yes, this Joe Biden—”would have been a better interview subject for her first episode as Meet the Press moderator, as they at least would have been able to start from the same set of facts.”

    The “pro-democracy” beat thus far does not have a great track record of truthiness. Eleven months ago, the “truthful, not neutral” crowd was warning us, despite a glaring paucity of evidence, that a GOP win in the midterms would result in the deliberate tanking of the international economy so that Republicans could force through cuts to Social Security and Medicare. Margaret Sullivan’s 2022 memoir/manifesto was inaccurately maligning Republicans by the second paragraph. Applied “moral clarity” seems more about policing adjectives in news organizations’ tweets and headlines, and yelling “false equivalence!” every time someone mentions that Biden’s aging is a political problem.

    Interviewing Donald Trump is a difficult assignment, no doubt. And some of us who are opposed to journalistic deplatforming otherwise share in some of the deplatformers’ unhappiness with Trump’s influence on the Republican Party and the American body politic. But both journalism and basic civic participation require a certain perseverance, and perhaps a certain faith that the effort can and will be worth it in the end. Are you a political journalist who does not like Donald Trump? Maybe do some convincing and truthful journalism capable of reaching people who don’t share your political priors. Trying to rope off a former U.S. president from the institution of media will likely make the institution weaker, and the politician stronger.

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Let real journalists be journalists
  • Presty the DJ for Sept. 25

    September 25, 2023
    Music

    The number one song today in 1965 was this pleasant-sounding, upbeat ditty:

    That was on the same day that ABC-TV premiered a cartoon, “The Beatles”:

    The number one British song today in 1968:

    (more…)

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Presty the DJ for Sept. 25
  • Government Shutdown 101

    September 24, 2023
    Uncategorized

    Yuval Levin:

    The budget-process contortions in both houses of Congress just now can be a little hard to parse. A lot of them have taken the form of battles over procedure, which can get mind-numbing pretty quickly. At various times, the House has been intensely focused on rules votes and the Senate has been mired in arguments about suspending the prohibition on non-germane amendments on appropriations bills. These procedural squabbles matter, but they are ultimately proxy fights. The real battle is a dispute about how to exercise leverage in the modern Congress. It’s now happening mostly among Republicans, and it divides Republicans more starkly than Democrats in Congress, but it’s a disagreement that has been evident in both parties when they’ve had to make governing decisions in recent years.

    The best way to grasp that dispute might be to break down what we’re seeing into three distinct dynamics.

    The first important dynamic to understand about Congress in an age of narrow majorities is that the chamber that is harder for its majority party to manage sets the tone for the institution. In the last Congress, that was the Senate. Democrats had a narrow majority there, as they did in the House, but because of the filibuster, and of the nature of the Democratic caucus, the Senate was much harder to wrangle. Speaker Pelosi’s Democratic House majority didn’t want to do anything until the Senate acted, since whatever they did would likely be for naught. And so the House became a rubber stamp on bills that had passed the Senate, and the substantive work of Congress mostly happened in the upper chamber.

    In this Congress, it is the Republican House that has the greatest trouble getting anything done, and therefore it’s the House that sets the tone. The Senate has certainly tried to assert itself some, but the demands of getting things through the House have dictated a lot.

    That is really key to what is happening in the Senate this week. Senators from both parties had agreed last week (by an 85–12 vote) to get the budget process moving with a so-called “minibus,” which would combine three appropriations bills into one. The idea was to force the hand of the House a bit on spending levels. But precisely for that reason, a number of Republican senators, led by Wisconsin’s Ron Johnson, refused to provide the unanimous consent required to bundle those bills. Senate Democrats tried to suspend the relevant rule (which prevents that bundling because it restricts the kinds of amendments that can be made to appropriations bills), but didn’t have the Republican support they needed to do that.

    Johnson’s opposition to bundling those bills is rooted in part in a desire to appropriate through individual bills, which would give Republicans more chances to propose amendments. But it is also very much a function of his and some other Republican senators’ desire to avoid jamming the House — on spending levels, on Ukraine funding, and on the sort of bill they end up voting on. Those senators are particularly sensitive to the needs of the House Freedom Caucus members. They don’t want to be seen to undercut those members, since the HFC is at the center of the drama that the party’s populist activists are focused on right now — a drama that has everything to do with how leverage works in Congress.

    The Senate will surely try to assert itself again — whether on this bill, on Ukraine, or in general. And in a divided Congress, one house isn’t going to be a rubber stamp for the other. But it’s clear that much more can get through the Senate than the House, and that gives the House some added power and initiative. Eventually, whether in this process or in the year-end appropriations process that will likely follow, there is probably going to be some negotiation between the White House and House Republicans, and the Senate will basically need to accept what emerges. We’re very far from that now, and it may take a government shutdown and further drama to get from here to there, but that seems the likely destination.

    The second dynamic to keep in mind is that everyone believes they are trying to help Congress work like it’s supposed to, but they disagree about how it’s supposed to work. This is hard for each side to believe about the other right now. The House Freedom Caucus members and their Senate allies seem to their opponents like self-destructive nihilists who don’t care about Congress, or the country. The leaders (and most members) of both parties strike those HFC conservatives as establishment hacks who just want to defend the status quo, enrich their cronies and patrons, and avoid rocking the boat.

    The HFC members and their friendly senators (like Ron Johnson) are making a kind of process argument — insisting that the appropriations process should involve a dozen separate bills, each of which can be amended and debated, rather than a massive and indecipherable “omnibus” behemoth (or a few smaller but still massive “minibus” behemoths) patched together in the leadership offices and foisted on most members. Their opponents in and out of leadership are making a process argument too — insisting that legislation has to be negotiated in a divided Congress and that giving up the only leverage you have by declaring you’ll never agree to anything only helps the other party and guarantees a worse outcome.

    Both groups have a point, but their different points suggest very different understandings of what is supposed to happen in Congress. Because they view their opposition as an establishment blob that just wants to make comfortable deals, some of the HFC members have come to view the legislative process itself as a form of corruption. They say they want a more open legislative process, but they fault fellow members for negotiating with Democrats at all, or for looking for deals on spending levels, which is actually what an open process would involve. They implicitly disagree with their colleagues about whether it is necessary to negotiate with the other party in order to achieve anything. Their view is that their party’s job is to avoid such negotiation, and that preventing it is how they ought to use the leverage they have as members of Congress — that this is what they owe their voters.

    This is not the view of all the Freedom Caucus members, as this week has made particularly clear, but it is the view of enough of them to paralyze the party right now. It is a view with deep roots in a particular kind of Republican approach to Congress, which evolved over the four decades in which Democrats controlled the House, from 1954 to 1994. Republicans were congressionalists at the beginning of that era, but by the end of it they had transformed into presidentialists and they had come to view Congress as a den of corrupt miscreants. That attitude didn’t really change even when Republicans took control of Congress in 1994. The Contract with America was mostly an indictment of congressional corruption, and the Gingrich-era Republicans never really shook off the sense that there was something sinister about Congress working as a legislature — a venue for bargaining and accommodation.

    In more recent years, this critique has melded uneasily with a criticism of overbearing leadership in both houses, which is actually a very different kind of argument. Some HFC members, like Representative Chip Roy, are advancing the latter case — a case that leadership is too strong and everyone else in Congress is too weak, which is a serious case and seems largely right to me. They want members to be able to legislate, rather than just answer to party leaders. Some of their supporters in the Senate make this case too — like J. D. Vance, who has shown himself to be a substantive and legislation-minded senator so far, willing to work with anyone from either party where there is some chance to advance his priorities. But other HFC members, like Representative Matt Gaetz, use similar-sounding process arguments as a way to denounce legislative work as such. They don’t actually want weaker leaders and stronger members, they want leaders who will enforce a more purist party line and members who will refuse to negotiate with Democrats.

    So for instance, Representative Dan Bishop of North Carolina voted against the rule required to advance the Defense Appropriations bill in the House on Tuesday, and after doing so he put out a statement saying: “I took down the rule — as I vowed I would — because the Conference continues not to have moved 12 appropriations bills at the spending level agreed to in January.” But the rule he took down was a necessary step to moving one of those appropriations bills. Bishop presented his opposition to the process involved in appropriations as rooted in an insistence that this process happen, but at its core it is a recoil from the core work of legislation.

    The same is true regarding the attitude of some of these members toward a cross-partisan spending deal. They treat the prospect of getting Democratic votes for a continuing resolution as a betrayal, but they are not themselves willing to vote for a measure that could actually get enacted, and so they leave their fellow Republicans with no choice but to fulfill their prophecy of betrayal. Consider what Representative Ken Buck told Punchbowl News on Tuesday about whether Speaker McCarthy was in danger of a motion to vacate the chair and remove him from the speakership:

    “The thing that would force the motion to vacate is if Kevin has to rely on Democrat votes to pass a CR,” Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.) said. “I don’t think it has legs until Kevin relies on Democrats.”

    Buck, however, admitted “I don’t see how we can pass the bill [a CR] without Democrat votes.”

    In other words, Buck thinks the speaker should be thrown out unless he manages to do something Buck thinks is impossible.

    This can easily seem irrational, but it’s more like an expression of a different understanding of the role of Congress and its members than the one that most members (and the Constitution) have. I think it’s mistaken, but it’s not incoherent. Buck, Bishop, Gaetz, and others implicitly take their job to be both expressing and acting on the view of their core constituents that the party establishment has to be resisted. That resistance is an end in itself, even if it does not achieve any substantive legislative goals. In fact, fighting and losing is a kind of confirmation of the underlying dynamic they are playing out. So for these members, it is more important to avoid being part of the Washington game — the game of making deals with people you and your voters think are destroying the country — than it is to advance any substantive agenda. Being betrayed confirms that they are right to be intransigent.

    These members aren’t a majority of House Republicans, or anything close to that. They’re not even all the Freedom Caucus members, as I’ve noted. In fact, the tensions between these two kinds of Freedom Caucus members have risen to the surface a bit in this process, as when those (like Roy) who want more legislating to happen negotiated some continuing-resolution language with a group of moderate Republicans only to see it rejected by other HFC members. But because the Republicans’ majority is extremely narrow, there are enough members who don’t want the House to legislate that the House Republican conference as a whole is stuck trying to bridge these two different ways of thinking about how to be a member of Congress.

    Kevin McCarthy has actually shown himself to be pretty adept at playing this game so far. He has grasped that it needs to be played in stages, because the recalcitrant HFC members want to look strong and then to look weak, and it’s possible for the leadership to give them that sequence of outcomes. But it’s a very hard game to sustain in the face of the substantive pressure to govern.

    Our system of government is designed to compel partisans to work with each other. That’s one of its great strengths. But that does mean that it is a poor fit for a conception of politics in which bargaining with people you disagree with is understood to be a betrayal and a failure.

    In a sense, the question at issue is: What do you get when you win a seat in Congress? The answer the Constitution suggests is that you get a seat at the table, and what happens at that table is negotiating, bargaining, and accommodation toward government action in response to public problems. You get to represent your voters in that process, and to negotiate on their behalf so that their interests are accounted for in the final outcome. That’s how representative democracy makes it possible for differences to be accommodated and addressed in our frequently divided society. Lots of people (especially on the left, but also on the right) have always been frustrated with that answer, and called for a system in which winning an election gives the majority party a mandate to act on its own. But our system doesn’t work that way; it prioritizes coalition building over policy efficiency, and rightly so.

    But in our time, some populist members of both parties have implied that what you win when you win an election to Congress is a voice, and that the best and highest use of this voice involves voicing a critique of elite power, and where possible acting on that critique to obstruct and disrupt the uses of that power.

    Obviously these views coexist to some degree, even within the self-understanding of individual members of Congress. But they are quite distinct views of what the institution is for, and the gap between them is at times a very practical problem for Congress, particularly when voter expectations are shaped by the more populist view.

    This points to the third dynamic we can see in action this month on Capitol Hill: Electoral incentives are badly and in some respects increasingly misaligned with legislative incentives. The nature of the modern primary system means that many members of Congress are most concerned about voters who do not want them to give ground or compromise. This effectively means they find it politically dangerous to do the job the institution exists to do. This misalignment is obviously very bad for our system of government. And responding to it constructively would require us to really think about what we value about that system.

    Simply put, the design of the Congress makes a significant amount of cross-partisan bargaining necessary, but the nature of the primary system (as it interacts with our polarized political culture) now makes such cross-partisan bargaining increasingly unlikely. The question for would-be reformers is which of these institutions needs to change. Should we look to change Congress so that cross-partisan bargaining is less necessary, or to change some of the incentives confronting politicians in our party system so that cross-partisan bargaining is more likely? Should our institutions lean in to the worst vices of our polarized politics, or counteract them?

    Most progressives since Woodrow Wilson have argued for a Congress that requires less cross-partisan bargaining. They have sought stronger party leadership and discipline and the elimination of supermajority requirements and assorted mechanisms of restraint. Conservatives have generally disagreed, and the argument that Freedom Caucus Republicans make against the power of party leaders and in favor of something like regular order suggests on its face that they disagree too. But these very Republicans are most responsive to electoral pressure for more disciplined partisan purity and less bargaining with the other party.

    Those pressures should not be mistaken for the unvarnished voice of the people. Electorates are structured by electoral institutions — the sorts of questions asked of voters often shape the kinds of answers they provide. And the contemporary party-primary system frames an electorate that too often is distinctly unfriendly to the demands of legislative work. That primary system is not sacrosanct. It is not as important — or as established or legitimate—as the constitutional system. And it is increasingly clear that enabling members of Congress to do their jobs is going to require some reforms of party primaries, and therefore of the incentives members confront.

    But that is long-term work. In the meantime, Congress has once again to contend with the reality that a small but meaningful minority of its members have a vision of their jobs that abjures core legislative work as illegitimate. Speaker McCarthy has to manage his way through that challenge in stages. And it sure looks like one of those stages is going to have to be a government shutdown.

    Share this on …

    • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
    • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
    • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
    • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
    • Print (Opens in new window) Print
    Like Loading…
    No comments on Government Shutdown 101
Previous Page
1 … 104 105 106 107 108 … 1,044
Next Page

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

Steve Prestegard.com: The Presteblog

The thoughts of a journalist/libertarian–conservative/Christian husband, father, Eagle Scout and aficionado of obscure rock music. Thoughts herein are only the author’s and not necessarily the opinions of his family, friends, neighbors, church members or past, present or future employers.

  • Steve
    • About, or, Who is this man?
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Adventures in ruralu0026nbsp;inkBack in June 2009, I was driving somewhere through a rural area. And for some reason, I had a flashback to two experiences in my career about that time of year many years ago. In 1988, eight days after graduating from the University of Wisconsin, I started work at the Grant County Herald Independent in Lancaster as a — well, the — reporter. Four years after that, on my 27th birthday, I purchased, with a business partner, the Tri-County Press in Cuba City, my first business venture. Both were experiences about which Wisconsin author Michael Perry might write. I thought about all this after reading a novel, The Deadline, written by a former newspaper editor and publisher. (Now who would write a novel about a weekly newspaper?) As a former newspaper owner, I picked at some of it — why finance a newspaper purchase through the bank if the seller is willing to finance it? Because the mean bank lender is a plot point! — and it is much more interesting than reality, but it is very well written, with a nicely twisting plot, and quite entertaining, again more so than reality. There is something about that first job out of college that makes you remember it perhaps more…
    • Adventures in radioI’ve been in the full-time work world half my life. For that same amount of time I’ve been broadcasting sports as a side interest, something I had wanted to since I started listening to games on radio and watching on TV, and then actually attending games. If you ask someone who’s worked in radio for some time about the late ’70s TV series “WKRP in Cincinnati,” most of them will tell you that, if anything, the series understated how wacky working in radio can be. Perhaps the funniest episode in the history of TV is the “WKRP” episode, based on a true story, about the fictional radio station’s Thanksgiving promotion — throwing live turkeys out of a helicopter under the mistaken belief that, in the words of WKRP owner Arthur Carlson, “As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.” [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ST01bZJPuE0] I’ve never been involved in anything like that. I have announced games from the roofs of press boxes (once on a nice day, and once in 50-mph winds), from a Mississippi River bluff (more on that later), and from the front row of the second balcony of the University of Wisconsin Fieldhouse (great view, but not a place to go if…
    • “Good morning/afternoon/evening, ________ fans …”
    • My biggest storyEarlier this week, while looking for something else, I came upon some of my own work. (I’m going to write a blog someday called “Things I Found While Looking for Something Else.” This is not that blog.) The Grant County Sheriff’s Department, in the county where I used to live, has a tribute page to the two officers in county history who died in the line of duty. One is William Loud, a deputy marshal in Cassville, shot to death by two bank robbers in 1912. The other is Tom Reuter, a Grant County deputy sheriff who was shot to death at the end of his 4 p.m.-to-midnight shift March 18, 1990. Gregory Coulthard, then a 19-year-old farmhand, was convicted of first-degree intentional homicide and is serving a life sentence, with his first eligibility for parole on March 18, 2015, just 3½ years from now. I’ve written a lot over the years. I think this, from my first two years in the full-time journalism world, will go down as the story I remember the most. For journalists, big stories contain a paradox, which was pointed out in CBS-TV’s interview of Andy Rooney on his last “60 Minutes” Sunday. Morley Safer said something along the line…
  • Food and drink
    • The Roesch/Prestegard familyu0026nbsp;cookbookFrom the family cookbook(s) All the families I’m associated with love to eat, so it’s a good thing we enjoy cooking. The first out-of-my-house food memory I have is of my grandmother’s cooking for Christmas or other family occasions. According to my mother, my grandmother had a baked beans recipe that she would make for my mother. Unfortunately, the recipe seems to have  disappeared. Also unfortunately, my early days as a picky, though voluminous, eater meant I missed a lot of those recipes made from such wholesome ingredients as lard and meat fat. I particularly remember a couple of meals that involve my family. The day of Super Bowl XXXI, my parents, my brother, my aunt and uncle and a group of their friends got together to share lots of food and cheer on the Packers to their first NFL title in 29 years. (After which Jannan and I drove to Lambeau Field in the snow,  but that’s another story.) Then, on Dec. 31, 1999, my parents, my brother, my aunt and uncle and Jannan and I (along with Michael in utero) had a one-course-per-hour meal to appropriately end years beginning with the number 1. Unfortunately I can’t remember what we…
    • SkålI was the editor of Marketplace Magazine for 10 years. If I had to point to one thing that demonstrates improved quality of life since I came to Northeast Wisconsin in 1994, it would be … … the growth of breweries and  wineries in Northeast Wisconsin. The former of those two facts makes sense, given our heritage as a brewing state. The latter is less self-evident, since no one thinks of Wisconsin as having a good grape-growing climate. Some snobs claim that apple or cherry wines aren’t really wines at all. But one of the great facets of free enterprise is the opportunity to make your own choice of what food and drink to drink. (At least for now, though some wish to restrict our food and drink choices.) Wisconsin’s historically predominant ethnic group (and our family’s) is German. Our German ancestors did unfortunately bring large government and high taxes with them, but they also brought beer. Europeans brought wine with them, since they came from countries with poor-quality drinking water. Within 50 years of a wave of mid-19th-century German immigration, brewing had become the fifth largest industry in the U.S., according to Maureen Ogle, author of Ambitious Brew: The Story of American Beer. Beer and wine have…
  • Wheels
    • America’s sports carMy birthday in June dawned without a Chevrolet Corvette in front of my house. (The Corvette at the top of the page was featured at the 2007 Greater Milwaukee Auto Show. The copilot is my oldest son, Michael.) Which isn’t surprising. I have three young children, and I have a house with a one-car garage. (Then again, this would be more practical, though a blatant pluck-your-eyes-out violation of the Corvette ethos. Of course, so was this.) The reality is that I’m likely to be able to own a Corvette only if I get a visit from the Corvette Fairy, whose office is next door to the Easter Bunny. (I hope this isn’t foreshadowing: When I interviewed Dave Richter of Valley Corvette for a car enthusiast story in the late great Marketplace Magazine, he said that the most popular Corvette in most fans’ minds was a Corvette built during their days in high school. This would be a problem for me in that I graduated from high school in 1983, when no Corvette was built.) The Corvette is one of those cars whose existence may be difficult to understand within General Motors Corp. The Corvette is what is known as a “halo car,” a car that drives people into showrooms, even if…
    • Barges on fouru0026nbsp;wheelsI originally wrote this in September 2008.  At the Fox Cities Business Expo Tuesday, a Smart car was displayed at the United Way Fox Cities booth. I reported that I once owned a car into which trunk, I believe, the Smart could be placed, with the trunk lid shut. This is said car — a 1975 Chevrolet Caprice coupe (ours was dark red), whose doors are, I believe, longer than the entire Smart. The Caprice, built down Interstate 90 from us Madisonians in Janesville (a neighbor of ours who worked at the plant probably helped put it together) was the flagship of Chevy’s full-size fleet (which included the stripper Bel Air and middle-of-the-road Impala), featuring popular-for-the-time vinyl roofs, better sound insulation, an upgraded cloth interior, rear fender skirts and fancy Caprice badges. The Caprice was 18 feet 1 inch long and weighed 4,300 pounds. For comparison: The midsize Chevrolet of the ear was the Malibu, which was the same approximate size as the Caprice after its 1977 downsizing. The compact Chevrolet of the era was the Nova, which was 200 inches long — four inches longer than a current Cadillac STS. Wikipedia’s entry on the Caprice has this amusing sentence: “As fuel economy became a bigger priority among Americans…
    • Behind the wheel
    • Collecting only dust or rust
    • Coooooooooooupe!
    • Corvettes on the screen
    • The garage of misfit cars
    • 100 years (and one day) of our Chevrolets
    • They built Excitement, sort of, once in a while
    • A wagon by any otheru0026nbsp;nameFirst written in 2008. You will see more don’t-call-them-station-wagons as you drive today. Readers around my age have probably had some experience with a vehicle increasingly rare on the road — the station wagon. If you were a Boy Scout or Girl Scout, or were a member of some kind of youth athletic team, or had a large dog, or had relatives approximately your age, or had friends who needed to be transported somewhere, or had parents who occasionally had to haul (either in the back or in a trailer) more than what could be fit inside a car trunk, you (or, actually, your parents) were the target demographic for the station wagon. “Station wagons came to be like covered wagons — so much family activity happened in those cars,” said Tim Cleary, president of the American Station Wagon Owners Association, in Country Living magazine. Wagons “were used for everything from daily runs to the grocery store to long summer driving trips, and while many men and women might have wanted a fancier or sportier car, a station wagon was something they knew they needed for the family.” The “station wagon” originally was a vehicle with a covered seating area to take people between train stations…
    • Wheels on theu0026nbsp;screenBetween my former and current blogs, I wrote a lot about automobiles and TV and movies. Think of this post as killing two birds (Thunderbirds? Firebirds? Skylarks?) with one stone. Most movies and TV series view cars the same way most people view cars — as A-to-B transportation. (That’s not counting the movies or series where the car is the plot, like the haunted “Christine” or “Knight Rider” or the “Back to the Future” movies.) The philosophy here, of course, is that cars are not merely A-to-B transportation. Which disqualifies most police shows from what you’re about to read, even though I’ve watched more police video than anything else, because police cars are plain Jane vehicles. The highlight in a sense is in the beginning: The car chase in my favorite movie, “Bullitt,” featuring Steve McQueen’s 1968 Ford Mustang against the bad guys’ 1968 Dodge Charger: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMc2RdFuOxIu0026amp;fmt=18] One year before that (but I didn’t see this until we got Telemundo on cable a couple of years ago) was a movie called “Operación 67,” featuring (I kid you not) a masked professional wrestler, his unmasked sidekick, and some sort of secret agent plot. (Since I don’t know Spanish and it’s not…
    • While riding in my Cadillac …
  • Entertainments
    • Brass rocksThose who read my former blog last year at this time, or have read this blog over the past months, know that I am a big fan of the rock group Chicago. (Back when they were a rock group and not a singer of sappy ballads, that is.) Since rock music began from elements of country music, jazz and the blues, brass rock would seem a natural subgenre of rock music. A lot of ’50s musical acts had saxophone players, and some played with full orchestras … [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9CPS-WuUKUE] … but it wasn’t until the more-or-less simultaneous appearances of Chicago and Blood Sweat u0026amp; Tears on the musical scene (both groups formed in 1967, both had their first charting singles in 1969, and they had the same producer) that the usual guitar/bass/keyboard/drum grouping was augmented by one or more trumpets, a sax player and a trombone player. While Chicago is my favorite group (but you knew that already), the first brass rock song I remember hearing was BSu0026amp;T’s “Spinning Wheel” — not in its original form, but on “Sesame Street,” accompanied by, yes, a giant spinning wheel. [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qi9sLkyhhlE] [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxWSOuNsN20] [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9U34uPjz-g] I remember liking Chicago’s “Just You ‘n Me” when it was released as a single, and…
    • Drive and Eat au0026nbsp;RockThe first UW home football game of each season also is the opener for the University of Wisconsin Marching Band, the world’s finest college marching band. (How the UW Band has not gotten the Sudler Trophy, which is to honor the country’s premier college marching bands, is beyond my comprehension.) I know this because I am an alumnus of the UW Band. I played five years (in the last rank of the band, Rank 25, motto: “Where Men Are Tall and Run-On Is Short”), marching in 39 football games at Camp Randall Stadium, the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis, Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Memorial Stadium at the University of Illinois (worst artificial turf I had ever seen), the University of Nevada–Las Vegas’ Sam Boyd Silver Bowl, the former Dyche Stadium at Northwestern University, five high school fields and, in my one bowl game, Legion Field in Birmingham, Ala., site of the 1984 Hall of Fame Bowl. The UW Band was, without question, the most memorable experience of my college days, and one of the most meaningful experiences of my lifetime. It was the most physical experience of my lifetime, to be sure. Fifteen minutes into my first Registration…
    • Keep on rockin’ in the freeu0026nbsp;worldOne of my first ambitions in communications was to be a radio disc jockey, and to possibly reach the level of the greats I used to listen to from WLS radio in Chicago, which used to be one of the great 50,000-watt AM rock stations of the country, back when they still existed. (Those who are aficionados of that time in music and radio history enjoyed a trip to that wayback machine when WLS a Memorial Day Big 89 Rewind, excerpts of which can be found on their Web site.) My vision was to be WLS’ afternoon DJ, playing the best in rock music between 2 and 6, which meant I wouldn’t have to get up before the crack of dawn to do the morning show, yet have my nights free to do whatever glamorous things big-city DJs did. Then I learned about the realities of radio — low pay, long hours, zero job security — and though I have dabbled in radio sports, I’ve pretty much cured myself of the idea of working in radio, even if, to quote WAPL’s Len Nelson, “You come to work every day just like everybody else does, but we’re playing rock ’n’ roll songs, we’re cuttin’ up.…
    • Monday on the flight line, not Saturday in the park
    • Music to drive by
    • The rock ofu0026nbsp;WisconsinWikipedia begins its item “Music of Wisconsin” thusly: Wisconsin was settled largely by European immigrants in the late 19th century. This immigration led to the popularization of galops, schottisches, waltzes, and, especially, polkas. [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yl7wCczgNUc] So when I first sought to write a blog piece about rock musicians from Wisconsin, that seemed like a forlorn venture. Turned out it wasn’t, because when I first wrote about rock musicians from Wisconsin, so many of them that I hadn’t mentioned came up in the first few days that I had to write a second blog entry fixing the omissions of the first. This list is about rock music, so it will not include, for instance, Milwaukee native and Ripon College graduate Al Jarreau, who in addition to having recorded a boatload of music for the jazz and adult contemporary/easy listening fan, also recorded the theme music for the ’80s TV series “Moonlighting.” Nor will it include Milwaukee native Eric Benet, who was for a while known more for his former wife, Halle Berry, than for his music, which includes four number one singles on the Ru0026amp;B charts, “Spend My Life with You” with Tamia, “Hurricane,” “Pretty Baby” and “You’re the Only One.” Nor will it include Wisconsin’s sizable contributions to big…
    • Steve TV: All Steve, All the Time
    • “Super Steve, Man of Action!”
    • Too much TV
    • The worst music of allu0026nbsp;timeThe rock group Jefferson Airplane titled its first greatest-hits compilation “The Worst of Jefferson Airplane.” Rolling Stone magazine was not being ironic when it polled its readers to decide the 10 worst songs of the 1990s. I’m not sure I agree with all of Rolling Stone’s list, but that shouldn’t be surprising; such lists are meant for debate, after all. To determine the “worst,” songs appropriate for the “Vinyl from Hell” segment that used to be on a Madison FM rock station, requires some criteria, which does not include mere overexposure (for instance, “Macarena,” the video of which I find amusing since it looks like two bankers are singing it). Before we go on: Blog posts like this one require multimedia, so if you find a song you hate on this blog, I apologize. These are also songs that I almost never listen to because my sound system has a zero-tolerance policy — if I’m listening to the radio or a CD and I hear a song I don’t like, it’s, to quote Bad Company, gone gone gone. My blonde wife won’t be happy to read that one of her favorite ’90s songs, 4 Non Blondes’ “What’s Up,” starts the list. (However,…
    • “You have the right to remain silent …”
  • Madison
    • Blasts from the Madison media past
    • Blasts from my Madison past
    • Blasts from our Madison past
    • What’s the matter with Madison?
    • Wisconsin – Madison = ?
  • Sports
    • Athletic aesthetics, or “cardinal” vs. “Big Red”
    • Choose your own announcer
    • La Follette state 1982 (u0022It was 30 years ago todayu0022)
    • The North Dakota–Wisconsin Hockey Fight of 1982
    • Packers vs. Brewers
  • Hall of Fame
    • The case(s) against teacher unions
    • The Class of 1983
    • A hairy subject, or face the face
    • It’s worse than you think
    • It’s worse than you think, 2010–11 edition
    • My favorite interview subject of all time
    • Oh look! Rural people!
    • Prestegard for president!
    • Unions vs. the facts, or Hiding in plain sight
    • When rhetoric goes too far
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Steve Prestegard.com: The Presteblog
    • Join 197 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Steve Prestegard.com: The Presteblog
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d