2:00PM Water Cooler 2/7/2025

By Lambert Strether.

Readers, my head cold seems to be on the downslope, oh joy. Anyohw, I started on-time today, then thought I would have my feeds one last look… –lambert

Bird Song of the Day

Brown Thrasher, Bindloss Campground, Hanna, Alberta, Canada. With some faraway geese.

* * *

In Case You Might Miss…

  1. Possible Democrat strategies against DOGE.
  2. The notion of “racial capitalism” decried..
  3. Hole punches.

* * *

Politics

“So many of the social reactions that strike us as psychological are in fact a rational management of symbolic capital.” –Pierre Bourdieu, Classification Struggles

* * *

Trump Administration

“Hegseth commits to Pentagon passing clean audit within 4 years” [The Hill]. • Big if true. It would take DOGE to do it. How’s that going?

DOGE

“Where’s the Real Power Nexus? How Does the Opposition Get To It?” [Josh Marshall, Talking Points Memo]. “I’ve made this point a few times in passing in other posts. But as events develop I wanted to explain it succinctly and with emphasis. Democrats are out of power and have very few actual levers to impact what’s happening. Yelling is important. Driving opposition in what is ultimately a battle for public opinion is important. Contesting everything through the courts is important. But there is only one hard lever of power currently available: that’s the help the White House needs from Democrats on a budget and the debt ceiling. This morning explainer from Punchbowl makes clear why that help is essential. It’s not just helpful. It’s essential. The GOP majorities are simply too small, especially in the House. The GOP is simply too fractious. This is the one area where it isn’t a matter of yelling as loud as you can when no one actually has to listen, or working through a decidedly hostile judiciary. Trump needs this. It’s not a matter of working out a deal with Mike Johnson. Trump needs this help and there’s only one place to get it. It’s a not a discussion with John Thune or Mike Johnson. Only with Trump. I had been somewhat pessimistic about what I was seeing from congressional Democrats on this front. But starting yesterday they began to change their tune and started saying explicitly that the budget and debt ceiling were a key lever for them in handling the situation. That’s real progress. But I think the terms need to be sharpened a lot. The standard should be no help on the budget or the debt ceiling until the lawbreaking stops.” • Well, here I am quoting Josh Marshall with approval. It’s a funny old world.

“Taking DOGE to Court Is a Doomed Strategy” [Ken Klipperstein]. “The war against DOGE is shaping up to be the same as the frenzied and ultimately unsuccessful takedown of Donald Trump that we saw in Russiagate and the January 6 investigations. The parallels are eerie, with Democrats alleging an illegitimate government takeover by DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) headed by Elon Musk. Even more bizarre is their adoption, literally verbatim, of MAGA rhetoric like ‘Stop the Steal.’ After weeks of confusion the party strategy finally emerged this week, expressed in accusations that DOGE was not in compliance with records laws and procedures. There’s plenty to criticize about Trump’s chaotic DOGE-led war on government, but the hunt for some kind of broken rule that will invalidate the whole thing hasn’t worked in the past and won’t now. For one, a senior U.S. intelligence official tells us that neither the FBI nor the intelligence community are investigating Musk and company for any unlawfulness. Trump has apparently granted DOGE officials security clearances, including top secret.” And: “Instead of making a plainspoken case to the public about how DOGE could negatively affect their daily lives, Democratic leaders conducted astroturfed ‘demonstrations’ in front of USAID, Treasury and other government shrines this week. They adopted the conspiratorial tone of the MAGA opposition to the Democrats that they have been so contemptuous of in the past. ;’An unelected shadow government is conducting a hostile takeover of the federal government,’ Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said of DOGE in a press release on Monday. The statement might as well have been written by Alex Jones on January 6, 2021. It was jarring coming from the Democratic Party’s highest ranking official, a bespectacled 74 year old with reliably vanilla politics.” And: “It all reminds me of the Mueller investigation, when political journalists who had never covered national security suddenly peppered their articles with acronyms like ‘SIGINT.’ There’s lots to criticize about DOGE. I certainly have, publishing as many of its boneheaded memos as I can find. But instead of focusing on the substance — what it is actually doing, its gaping exemption for the national security state, and so on — Democrats instead are focused on obscure matters of process. “Did DOGE submit Form 18-7.4?” is a question almost nobody outside of Washington cares about. Nor should they.” • All true, though stops somewhat short of the Courts (i.e., the Federalist Society’s court (hat tip, these same process Democrats)).

“A Constitutional Crisis?” [New York Times]. “The president can’t shut down agencies that Congress has funded, yet that’s what Trump did, with Elon Musk’s help, to the U.S. Agency for International Development. The president can’t fire inspectors general without giving lawmakers 30 days’ notice, but Trump dismissed 17 of them anyway. Congress passed a law forcing TikTok to sell or close, and the courts upheld it, but Trump declined to enforce it. ‘The president is openly violating the law and Constitution on a daily basis,’ said Brendan Nyhan, a political scientist at Dartmouth College.” The Constitutional remedy is impeachment, but the Democrats used that one up already with trivial and butchered efforts. Ah well, nevertheless.

“Congressional Democrats denied entry to EPA headquarters” [Axios]. “A group of House and Senate Democrats said they were denied access to the Environmental Protection Agency’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. It is the third time this week that Democratic lawmakers were blocked from an agency that has been targeted by President Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.” • Lesson of Occupy: Take and hold ground (although I don’t know the legalities here, the Executive Branch denying entry to the Legislative Branch seems a little sketchy). Of course, the lawmakers liked footsoldiers. Putting aside the possibility of pink pussy hats from the Northern Virginia suburbs, I have long though that DC residents — aside from the Northwest, of course — might have been usefully organized into cadres of sans culottes. One wonders if “shrinking government” will have direct material impact on non-Northwest portions of Washington, DC.

A union stirs:

* * *

“DOGE follows longtime Musk pattern — and turns attention to Social Security Administration” [Semafor]. “The Social Security Administration is an upcoming focus of the Department of Government Efficiency, a source with knowledge of its work told Semafor, and one person involved in DOGE is currently preparing to work with the agency that provides benefits to the elderly and disabled…. Those involved and familiar with DOGE, however, say they’re not confused about their mission: They’re empowered to slash government spending and remodel agencies to fall in line with the president’s agenda. What’s more, they appear undisturbed by the drama they’ve caused….. Notably, the views among DOGE supporters differ when it comes to where to draw the line: The first of the three people with knowledge of its work told Semafor the ‘entire federal government’ is up for grabs. The second person suggested the line would be drawn at areas affecting national security and initiatives providing direct benefits. Ernst said ‘it’s quite possible’ every part of the government will face scrutiny at some point. While Musk has mentioned a goal of cutting $1 trillion from the federal government, the group isn’t operating with many specific targets or end goals. ‘It’s going to depend on what we find,’ the second person said. ‘There’s going to be reworks across the government, every agency.’ Moving quickly with a sledgehammer mentality is seen within DOGE as the only way to enact successful change, as all three sources familiar with the group put it.” And: “‘What President Trump and Elon Musk and this entire administration is trying to do is make our bloated bureaucracy in Washington run like a profitable business,’ White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Fox News this week.” • Which is nuts, because government is not and should not be run like a business — and if it should turn out to be, every profitable deparment will immediately shart enshittifying itself to compete with the departments. Interestingly, DOGE ends, supposedly, by the midterms, so both — or all — sides are equally aware of the election calendar.

“Here at DOGE, We’ve Streamlined Every Aspect of America’s Collapse” [McSweeney’s Internet Tendency]. “I promise, America will soon be the Cybertruck of countries—uglier than you could have imagined, built for rich chuds, borderline inoperable, and on fire.”

* * *

“Afternoon of Day Seven of the Trump-Musk Treasury Payments Crisis of 2025: Treasury Secretary Bessent’s Lawlessness & Sorry Readers- Read and Write Code Still Seems in Play” [Nathan Tankus, Notes on the Crises]. “The wording of the court order for Marko Elez to have ‘read only’ access is ambiguous. Specifically it says: Mr. Marko Elez, a Special Government Employee in the Department of the Treasury, as needed for the performance of his duties, provided that such access to payment records will be ‘read only’ [emphasis added]. Records are data which means that a cynical government lawyer may approve ‘read and write’ access for code on the grounds that Marko Elez is only barred from modifying or adding new data to payment records directly rather than indirectly through editing source code. The plaintiffs position would of course, correctly, claim that ‘read and write code access’ is a violation of this order as written. Nevertheless, the possibility is extremely concerning. And remember— ‘read only code and data’ access is still ‘catastrophic.’ All this comes as CNN and other outlets confirm that some of the worst case scenarios I was worried about are true.” And Elez is supposed to be gonzo, but “A source familiar with the situation says: ‘My inclination on any type of question like this is that [Elez] has more access, not less and whatever access he doesn’t have, he’s trying to get.'”

“America This Week, Feb 7, 2025: “The Big Store: Politico, USAID, and Managed Reality” (podcast) [Walter Kirn, Matt Taibbi, Racket News]. • Not sure why Kirn and Taibbi think that DOGE’s write access to OPM’s personnel and the Fiscal Office’s payment data isn’t a story, but they clearly think it’s not (or else they would cover it). On the bright side, no cheerleading for Bhattacharya’s horrid new venture!

* * *

“The Government’s Computing Experts Say They Are Terrified” [The Atlantic]. “Elon Musk’s unceasing attempts to access the data and information systems of the federal government range so widely, and are so unprecedented and unpredictable, that government computing experts believe the effort has spun out of control. This week, we spoke with four federal-government IT professionals—all experienced contractors and civil servants who have built, modified, or maintained the kind of technological infrastructure that Musk’s inexperienced employees at his newly created Department of Government Efficiency are attempting to access. In our conversations, each expert was unequivocal: They are terrified and struggling to articulate the scale of the crisis…. The four experts laid out the implications of giving untrained individuals access to the technological infrastructure that controls the country. Their message is unambiguous: These are not systems you tamper with lightly. Musk and his crew could act deliberately to extract sensitive data, alter fundamental aspects of how these systems operate, or provide further access to unvetted actors. Or they may act with carelessness or incompetence, breaking the systems altogether. Given the scope of what these systems do, key government services might stop working properly, citizens could be harmed, and the damage might be difficult or impossible to undo. As one administrator for a federal agency with deep knowledge about the government’s IT operations told us, ‘I don’t think the public quite understands the level of danger.’ Each of our four sources, three of whom requested anonymity out of fear of reprisal, made three points very clear: These systems are immense, they are complex, and they are critical.” • Thsi is a very good IT account:

You can argue that this image represents “the level of danger”; worse, if anything, due to “youthful folly” by DOGE’s programmers, who started, after all, on Inauguration Day. However, you could also argue, as we did yesterday, that DOGE in fact had insider access well before the Inaugural, which could be equally dangerous, just in a different way.

* * *

“USAID and Security State Clan Wars” (excerpt) [Yasha Levine, Weaponized Immigrant]. ” USAID was not created for philanthropy. It was created to extend American power through softer non-military means: pacification through propaganda, off-the-books violence, and bribery abroad. I guess some call this bribery ‘assistance’… The agency was set up in 1961 under President Kennedy in order to administer aid programs that fostered economic and social development in foreign countries. It sounded nice on paper. In reality, the agency became a powerful force in America’s global pacification efforts, interfacing directly with ARPA and covert CIA programs. USAID quickly developed a reputation for brutality and bloodlust: it trained death squads, schooled foreign police departments in effective torture techniques, set up opium running operations to finance covert rebel activity in Laos…The agency also became a laboratory for capitalist-friendly neoliberal economic reforms that were supposed to supplant local left-wing demands for wealth redistribution without actually doing anything to change the underlying power structures of society. (In one more recent example Chrystia Freeland’s uncle (yes, from the notorious Nazi collaborator family) worked for USAID to privatize farm land in Ukraine…and then parlyed this experience to start his own agribusiness investment firm in Ukraine.” • I’m not seeing a lot of foreign governments weeping over USAID’s demise, possibly because they feel less likely to be overthrown?

Democrats en déshabillé

Khole:

That said, this kind of indiscipline is pervasive among Democrats. Remember when they butchered keeping an NLRB seat in Democrats hands, through the same sort of stupidity (from Ro Khanna, ironically enough).

Syndemics

“I am in earnest — I will not equivocate — I will not excuse — I will not retreat a single inch — AND I WILL BE HEARD.” –William Lloyd Garrison

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Covid Resources, United States (National): Transmission (CDC); Wastewater (CDC, Biobot; includes many counties; Wastewater Scan, includes drilldown by zip); Variants (CDC; Walgreens); “Iowa COVID-19 Tracker” (in IA, but national data). “Infection Control, Emergency Management, Safety, and General Thoughts” (especially on hospitalization by city).

Lambert here: Readers, thanks for the collective effort. To update any entry, do feel free to contact me at the address given with the plants. Please put “COVID” in the subject line. Thank you!

Resources, United States (Local): AK (dashboard); AL (dashboard); AR (dashboard); AZ (dashboard); CA (dashboard; Marin, dashboard; Stanford, wastewater; Oakland, wastewater); CO (dashboard; wastewater); CT (dashboard); DE (dashboard); FL (wastewater); GA (wastewater); HI (dashboard); IA (wastewater reports); ID (dashboard, Boise; dashboard, wastewater, Central Idaho; wastewater, Coeur d’Alene; dashboard, Spokane County); IL (wastewater); IN (dashboard); KS (dashboard; wastewater, Lawrence); KY (dashboard, Louisville); LA (dashboard); MA (wastewater); MD (dashboard); ME (dashboard); MI (wastewater; wastewater); MN (dashboard); MO (wastewater); MS (dashboard); MT (dashboard); NC (dashboard); ND (dashboard; wastewater); NE (dashboard); NH (wastewater); NJ (dashboard); NM (dashboard); NV (dashboard; wastewater, Southern NV); NY (dashboard); OH (dashboard); OK (dashboard); OR (dashboard); PA (dashboard); RI (dashboard); SC (dashboard); SD (dashboard); TN (dashboard); TX (dashboard); UT (wastewater); VA (wastewater); VT (dashboard); WA (dashboard; dashboard); WI (wastewater); WV (wastewater); WY (wastewater).

Resources, Canada (National): Wastewater (Government of Canada).

Resources, Canada (Provincial): ON (wastewater); QC (les eaux usées); BC (wastewater); BC, Vancouver (wastewater).

Hat tips to helpful readers: Alexis, anon (2), Art_DogCT, B24S, CanCyn, ChiGal, Chuck L, Festoonic, FM, FreeMarketApologist (4), Gumbo, hop2it, JB, JEHR, JF, JL Joe, John, JM (10), JustAnotherVolunteer, JW, KatieBird, KF, KidDoc, LL, Michael King, KF, LaRuse, mrsyk, MT, MT_Wild, otisyves, Petal (6), RK (2), RL, RM, Rod, square coats (11), tennesseewaltzer, thump, Tom B., Utah, Bob White (3).

Stay safe out there!

Transmission: Bird Flu

“The US Is Not Ready for Bird Flu in Humans” [Scientific American]. The deck: “Bird flu is infecting more people than we think. We need to stop it now before a new pandemic begins.” And: “Right after President Donald Trump took office, amid the flurry of executive orders and agency upheavals, the administration told the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention not to release any reports or communications until one of Trump’s people could take a look at them. Among the many reports not released that week was a study on how many veterinarians had gotten bird flu…. This virus is versatile. This virus is mutating. And it is surely infecting more people than we think. Sure, the risk of a human epidemic is still considered low. (Sound familiar?).” • I am so, so sick of pervasive Red State/Blue state posturing in Scientific American. There’s more than enough blame to go around.

* * *

TABLE 1: Daily Covid Charts

Wastewater
This week[1] CDC January 27 Last week[2] CDC (until next week):

Variants [3] CDC January 18 Emergency Room Visits[4] CDC January 25

Hospitalization
New York[5] New York State, data February 6: National [6] CDC January 31:

Positivity
National[7] Walgreens February 3: Ohio[8] Cleveland Clinic February 1:

Travelers Data
Positivity[9] CDC January 20: Variants[10] CDC January 20

Deaths
Weekly Deaths vs. % Positivity [11] CDC January 25: Weekly Deaths vs. ED Visits [12] CDC January 25:

LEGEND

1) for charts new today; all others are not updated.

2) For a full-size/full-resolution image, Command-click (MacOS) or right-click (Windows) on the chart thumbnail and “open image in new tab.”

NOTES

[1] (CDC) Down, nothing new at major hubs.

[2] (CDC) Last week’s wastewater map.

[3] (CDC Variants) XEC takes over. That WHO label, “Ommicron,” has done a great job normalizing successive waves of infection.

[4] (ED) A little uptick.

[5] (Hospitalization: NY) Definitely jumped, but no exponential growth either, Odd.

[6] (Hospitalization: CDC). Leveling out.

[7] (Walgreens) Leveling out.

[8] (Cleveland) Continued upward trend since, well, Thanksgiving.

[9] (Travelers: Positivity) Leveling out.

[10] (Travelers: Variants). Positivity is new, but variants have not yet been released.

[11] Deaths low, positivity leveling out.

[12] Deaths low, ED leveling out.

Stats Watch

Employment Situation: “United States Unemployment Rate” [Trading Economics]. “The US unemployment rate dipped by 0.1 percentage point to 4.0% in January 2025, marking its lowest level since May and coming in just below market expectations of 4.1%. The number of unemployed individuals declined by 37,000 to 6.85 million, while employment edged up by 2,234 to 163.9 million. Additionally, the labor force participation rate rose to 62.6%, and the employment-population ratio increased to 60.1%.”

* * *

Today’s Fear & Greed Index: 42 Fear (previous close: 41 Fear) [CNN]. One week ago: 40 (Fear). (0 is Extreme Fear; 100 is Extreme Greed). Last updated Feb 7 at 1:51:37 PM ET.

Gallery

Hole punch (1):

Hole punch (2):

This is Colossal: “The story of these photographs begins in 1935, when Roy E Stryker, the head of the Information Division of the Farm Security Administration (FSA), undertook a photographic project that commissioned famous American photographers such as Russell Lee, Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans to photograph farmers and farmland during the Great Depression. The FSA aimed to encourage poverty-stricken Americans to partake in self-sustaining programs where they could gain farm loans to buy seeds, equipment, livestock, and partake in homestead schemes which provided both education and healthcare. The project was to demonstrate the results of financial assistance that the FSA offered, in addition to outsourcing images of America life during this time. Each photographer was given specific directives, for example, ‘farmer dumping milk at home,’ ‘worried farmer,’ or ‘federal government shot.’…. Stryker deployed a specific editing process where himself and his assistants would choose photographs they believed were true to the brief; the other images were rendered unsuitable and punctuated with a hole puncher. These ruthlessly ‘killed’ photographs were left unpublishable. Today the found works appear to have black discs floating upon them, a visual mark of rejection which accidentally focus the viewer’s attention.

Class Warfare

“The Wrong Durée: The Politics of Cedric J. Robinson’s Racial Capitalism” [nonsite.org]. I knew this was a Nonsite story from the headline alone, because who else? (The headline is a horrid but fully justified pun on Braudel’s “Longue durée.”) I’m leaving this here mostly as a marker, though I’m sure it’s a thorough and elegant stomping, Adolph Reed-style. But if you want to grab a cup of coffee, have at it! However, for the political context: “[Roibinson’s’ notion of racial capitalism has been widely embraced by academics and intellectuals, including Robin Kelley, Michael Dawson, Ibram X. Kendi, Michelle Alexander, Jodi Melamed, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, and Angela Davis, among others. Moreover, the spirit of racial capitalism has suffused mainstream discourse from the New York Times’s celebrated but empirically flawed 1619 Project, which proffered a race-centric creation story of the United States, to the liberal pop cultural fixation on racial wealth disparities born out of the postwar homeownership regime, best represented in the writings of Ta-Nehisi Coates and academics like Richard Rothstein, among many others. Robinson’s notion of racial capitalism was even evoked in health disparities discussions of the American Medical Association during the early stages of the novel coronavirus pandemic.” And: “In the face of racial capitalism’s newfound popularity, sociologist Loïc Wacquant has lamented that we might expect ‘a crisply enunciated informing a set of clear claims about the nature of race, the logics of capitalism,’ but ‘one searches in vain for this clarification.'” • Ha ha, ouch [wince]. This is relevant today because all these people are shortly going to lose funding in the assault on NGOs (especially, I would think, the 1619 Project). Any effort to rescue them should, in my view, be resisted.

“You Can’t Post Your Way Out of Fascism” [404 Media]. “Many of my journalist colleagues have attempted to beat back the tide under banners like “fighting disinformation” and “accountability.” While these efforts are admirable, the past few years have changed my own internal calculus. Thinkers like Jean-Paul Sartre and Hannah Arendt warned us that the point of this deluge is not to persuade, but to overwhelm and paralyze our capacity to act. More recently, researchers have found that the viral outrage disseminated on social media in response to these ridiculous claims actually reduces the effectiveness of collective action. The result is a media environment that keeps us in a state of debilitating fear and anger, endlessly reacting to our oppressors instead of organizing against them…. So what is the alternative? If we log off, what exactly are we supposed to do instead? How are we supposed to get information without constantly raising our antennae into the noxious cumulonimbus cloud of social media?… Trusted information networks have existed since long before the internet and mass media. These networks are in every town and city, and at their core are real relationships between neighbors—not their online, parasocial simulacra.” • IOW, mutual aid. I would argue, however, that the blogosphere, by it structure, prevented much of social media’s enshittification — one reason Big Tech decapitated it.

News of the Wired

“The Power of Naming” [Language Log]. ” information theory is the mother of all factoids. Why would one call it that? Because there is no such thing, only the following phantom utterance that is ubiquitous: ‘Shannon’s information theory.’… The name stuck, suggesting in the minds of innocents something so deep and epochal that it might even shed light on Mozart. Shannon 1948 is the big example of how of data and information have been confounded for 3/4 of a century…. Here is a rough‑and‑ready demonstration of how different they actually are: “Go.” ←That’s just data, but place it in a context, and a layer of information now “rides on it” (or floats above it, on a different plane) such that this is conveyed: “Go to the store now before it closes”; or this: “Fly now to Hiroshima and drop the bomb.” True, in shop‑talk and hallway conversations, a database developer or data‑comm engineer might toss the terms data and information around as if one believed them to be interchangeable….. As for an actual Theory of Information, we must wait for a superintelligent computer to produce it since that task is far beyond human ability. And once coughed up, it will be so lengthy as to require several lifetimes to read it, and in any case, largely incomprehensible to us.”

* * *

Contact information for plants: Readers, feel free to contact me at lambert [UNDERSCORE] strether [DOT] corrente [AT] yahoo [DOT] com, to (a) find out how to send me a check if you are allergic to PayPal and (b) to find out how to send me images of plants. Vegetables are fine! Fungi, lichen, and coral are deemed to be honorary plants! If you want your handle to appear as a credit, please place it at the start of your mail in parentheses: (thus). Otherwise, I will anonymize by using your initials. See the previous Water Cooler (with plant) here. From CS:

CS writes: “Some fungi and flowers from NW MT to top up your supply of plantidotes, We have hundreds of these photos, but are lousy photographers, hopefully some will be OK for your purposes.” Oh, I don’t know. I like this composition. However, there may be things about fungus photography that I don’t know. Readers?

* * *

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About Lambert Strether

Readers, I have had a correspondent characterize my views as realistic cynical. Let me briefly explain them. I believe in universal programs that provide concrete material benefits, especially to the working class. Medicare for All is the prime example, but tuition-free college and a Post Office Bank also fall under this heading. So do a Jobs Guarantee and a Debt Jubilee. Clearly, neither liberal Democrats nor conservative Republicans can deliver on such programs, because the two are different flavors of neoliberalism (“Because markets”). I don’t much care about the “ism” that delivers the benefits, although whichever one does have to put common humanity first, as opposed to markets. Could be a second FDR saving capitalism, democratic socialism leashing and collaring it, or communism razing it. I don’t much care, as long as the benefits are delivered. To me, the key issue — and this is why Medicare for All is always first with me — is the tens of thousands of excess “deaths from despair,” as described by the Case-Deaton study, and other recent studies. That enormous body count makes Medicare for All, at the very least, a moral and strategic imperative. And that level of suffering and organic damage makes the concerns of identity politics — even the worthy fight to help the refugees Bush, Obama, and Clinton’s wars created — bright shiny objects by comparison. Hence my frustration with the news flow — currently in my view the swirling intersection of two, separate Shock Doctrine campaigns, one by the Administration, and the other by out-of-power liberals and their allies in the State and in the press — a news flow that constantly forces me to focus on matters that I regard as of secondary importance to the excess deaths. What kind of political economy is it that halts or even reverses the increases in life expectancy that civilized societies have achieved? I am also very hopeful that the continuing destruction of both party establishments will open the space for voices supporting programs similar to those I have listed; let’s call such voices “the left.” Volatility creates opportunity, especially if the Democrat establishment, which puts markets first and opposes all such programs, isn’t allowed to get back into the saddle. Eyes on the prize! I love the tactical level, and secretly love even the horse race, since I’ve been blogging about it daily for fourteen years, but everything I write has this perspective at the back of it.

77 comments

  1. ambrit

    Apologies in advance, but a question for the Commentariat.
    Has anyone else been experiencing noticeable delays in their mail delivery lately? Not just “on the street where you live,” but also from out of town. Not necessarily Amazon packages, but all packages in general.
    Thank you for your indulgence.

    Reply
    1. flora

      Yes. This past month or so the main nearby big city regional mail routing station seems to be having lots of delays. Based on my package tracking information, the mail arrives at routing station in a timely manner, and then gets caught in some kind routing in/out loop, where it doesn’t actually leave the station for the next destination for 2 or three days. This started with the big snow storm last month and usps weather days. That was understandable. Are they still catching up from that event?

      Hard to understand why the delays are still happening. One recently mailed package was caught in that nonsense loop for over a week. Very strange. Broken sorting machines? Too few usps employees. Glitch in the software? Still catching up from the big January storm? Who knows?

      Reply
      1. flora

        adding: if this is still wide spread, not just my area’s regional routing station, then I’ll start to wonder if this is an unannounced ‘stress test’ of the system to find out how much the Postal Board of Governors can get away with reducing services before people start making noise.

        This isn’t a foily comment. One way we determine whether or not to keep live and online things like old server systems or central programs is by quietly switching them off and seeing how soon and how many people complain. That’s a good gauge for measuring how important and useful still are the deliberately switched off things: things like old dial-up fax machines, servers running near obsolete programs, etc.

        Reply
      1. flora

        And also today, quite often. Everything old is new again. The mailcoach stop in my town is always busy. The horses worn and thirsty. / ;)

        Reply
      2. ambrit

        Is that where the term “pony up” comes from?
        Per your example, that was “Express” mail. The regular mail went by “Sail Mail” around the Horn.
        Either way, your observation bears the Stamp of Approval. (I would have said ‘Seal of Approval,’ but who wants to run afoul of those radical terrorists from PETA?)

        Reply
      3. griffen

        Mailing paper payments any more via the USPS feels like playing the lottery…or rather using that formerly popular gadget toy…the omnipotent Magic 8 ball! Mailing that on the 25th, a Saturday in January…guessing 1+ weeks for the distance haul to Las “Lockbox” Vegas….

        Will it arrive in time? Ask again later.
        Did it finally clear…it’s the one thing that mattered and so yes that once a year fee is done until 2026..

        Reply
    2. Lee

      From them that pays my pension:

      Year End Tax Forms

      If you received a payment/distribution, your tax form(s) will be postmarked no later than January 31. Please allow 10 to 14 business days for postal delivery.

      From Wikipedia:

      During its 18 months of operation beginning in 1860, the Pony Express reduced the time for messages to travel between the east and west US coast to about 10 days.

      Make of this what you will.

      Reply
    3. amfortas the hippie

      yes. for months.
      so much so that i reluctantly went with direct deposit for my tiny lil pension check(i prefer paper).
      i asked one of the post office chicks(whom ive known for 30 years) what was up.
      she said that everything from or to here…even mail that stays in town…goes through a sorting facility in abilene.
      and the USPS privatised it years ago(ie: before dejoy)…and whatever company that is is so, so shitty to work for that they have major problems keeping staffed.
      hence the glacial delivery of mail.
      so enshittification, so gop types can point to USPS and say, “see?! gubmint dont work!”.

      Reply
      1. flora

        uh oh….

        Under B, in January 2024

        Postal Service announces 30 more consolidations
        https://www.savethepostoffice.com/postal-service-announces-30-more-consolidations/

        and under T, December, 2024 post-election

        Trump revisits plan to privatize USPS, a first-term goal that didn’t go far

        https://federalnewsnetwork.com/agency-oversight/2024/12/trump-revisits-plan-to-privatize-usps-a-first-term-plan-that-didnt-go-far/

        So, consolidate and privatize. Dems consolidate, GOP privatizes. It really is a uni-party.

        Reply
    4. Chet G

      I’ve noticed this beginning in November. A letter from PA to FL previously took 3 days; at present, it takes 7. From PA to CA previously took 5 to 7 days; at present 10 to 14. Mind, my “previously” covers the past year or two. A few years ago, a letter from PA to FL took 2 days and to CA, 3 days.

      Reply
    5. Stephanie

      I have co-workers who are required to send manufacturing samples to clients via priority mail; these packages have been taking 7 – 10 days to reach the clients.

      Reply
    6. Matt L

      The USPS is a joke! 8 days for a letter to go 40 miles. Lost packages and packages that spend a never ending time floating from distribution center to distribution center. I couldn’t think of a better agency for DOGE to cut down to size. There is zero excuse for the bad service.

      Reply
      1. lyman alpha blob

        Cutting it down to size is why the service is so bad.

        There has been a bipartisan Congressional effort to hamstring the post office in order to justify routing business to for profit private delivery services, and it has been going on for decades – prefunding pensions for 75 years, cutting branches, etc. Trump appointed a privatizer as postmaster general in his first term which is when things really started to get bad, and of course Biden didn’t even make an effort to replace the guy.

        Just one more thing that we used to be able to do as a society, and now can’t, because capitalism.

        Reply
        1. Matt L

          It’s an obsolete service with most things arriving via digital sources. I get mail maybe twice a week at most and there aren’t any more catalogs or ads to support the cost of the service.

          Cut mail delivery to every other day and cut 1/3 of the employees. They are useless to begin with and seem to lose more mail than they deliver,

          There is ZERO reason to have a mail service that big anymore.

          Reply
          1. flora

            If it’s privatized you can bet the rural areas will be left out due to being unprofitable. There is every reason to have a mail service this big. It has a Congressional requirement to deliver to every Postal Address. Private companies have no requirement to take on unprofitable routes. Places like flyover and rural and small towns. They are still part of the country. The Post Office is literally a lifeline for many households.

            Reply
          2. Lefty Godot

            Nothing of any significance I get comes from digital sources. Everything comes via US mail. And I hope to keep it that way. The internet is inherently insecure now, will get worse, and really should have been shut down and sent back to the engineers for redesign at least a decade ago. I hate the idea of corporations being allowed to force people to use the internet for anything, just so they can fatten their profits while exposing my data to every bad actor out there. The internet is spam, scams, and surveillance. Nothing vital should depend on it.

            Reply
          3. lyman alpha blob

            “Useless” employees?!? Besides the services postal workers provide, the post office is one of the essentials for building and maintaining a community, for fostering a civil society. The longtime mail carrier where I grew up was known by everyone, sang in the church choir on her day off. On a practical level, the post office allows the government to inject money into communities via wages, and post office jobs are among the better blue collar jobs out there. They’re the fertilizer that allows communities to grow.

            I’d like to live in a civil society rather than some libertarian, everyone for themselves, survival of the biggest * , dystopian free for all.

            Solidarity, brother.

            Reply
      2. flora

        The Congres -both parties – and pres admins – both parties have been trying to break the USPS for a very long time, starting with the unreachable financial hobble of requiring the USPS to prefund employees health care benefits for 50 years, until 2056, prepaying now for the healthcare benefits of future employees not yet hired, something no other pension fund has ever required. This immediately put the USPS in a financial hole and became the whip for Congress and both parties and the Board of Governors to use to demand more and more cuts, higher cost, worst service, until such time as the public would welcome privatization as a solution. (It won’t be. See what happened in England – which eventually sold it entire mail system to a European billionaire.) But, oh look, a fattening healthcare prepaid pot of money that could be used as an enormous slush fund in privatized hands, imo. (See the first PE takeovers and sell-offs in the 1980s.)

        Fixing this requires revoking the 2006 Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, or PAEA. USPS has long maintained that PAEA’s pension pre-funding requirements “contributes significantly to postal losses.”

        https://www.truthorfiction.com/is-usps-losing-money-because-of-a-2006-pension-law/

        However, both parties act in a way to push the USPS to greater insolvency and toward privatization. And there is that big pot of prepaid health insurance premium fund.

        Standing between a politician and a big pot of money, (if I may be so crude), is like standing between a charging bull and a cow in season.

        https://www.truthorfiction.com/is-usps-losing-money-because-of-a-2006-pension-law/

        Reply
    7. IMOR

      Yes. Part of it is the loop flora describes (and I started getting hit by that in late summer, antedating storm impacts). Part of it IS that between my location and the couple nodes our mail goes through, winter weather HAS been badly timed/severe. And, yes: paychecks from across the country, packages fr Amzn’s Vegas center, et al.

      Reply
    8. Jen

      Package from a company I order from regularly used to get here in 3 days. Last time it took 10. The staff at my local post office are looking stressed out.

      Reply
    9. Mark Gisleson

      UPS just canceled their contract with Amazon saying USPS can have ALL of Amazon’s business from now on.

      USPS is already woefully understaffed and seems to be imploding. A friend watched her delivery get shipped same day and then sit at a sorting center for three days before being delivered. I don’t think they can handle the volume of mail they’re processing. I’ve had property tax checks not delivered and everyone I know has a similar story.

      Reply
    10. lyman alpha blob

      Yes, it’s been happening for a while now and getting worse.

      I deal with payments, and have noticed checks being delayed for a few years now.. Sometimes we don’t receive them for 6-8 weeks after the date written on the check. Just dealt with one of our best customers who normally pays us by check within a week of being invoiced. I contacted them when I saw an invoice that was several weeks old, they confirmed the check had been mailed over a month before but never cleared the bank, so they put a stop payment on it and sent a new one. After all that, the first check that was no longer any good showed up the next day, and the new check a couple days after that. Thanks post office!

      My folks live in a rural area, and their mail delivery has been spotty for a while now after a long time driver retired after several decades. Then lately I have noticed at our own house that some days no mail is delivered to anyone on the street. This is in a suburban area where the postman comes onto the porch and drops off in a mail slot, and is supposed to pick up outgoing mail at the same time. Over the last two or three months, I’ve noticed our outgoing mail is not being picked up on a daily basis.

      A few months ago a friend mentioned they had voted early and I asked whether they dropped of the ballot or mailed it in. He said he had talked to his daughter who worked at the post office and she told him that service was so bad he’d better drop it off in person or it might not get there on time, which he did.

      Definite widespread crapification going on.

      Reply
    11. gk

      “Christmas” cards from the US to Italy (one from a friend, one from my State Senator who I can’t vote for) have taken about 2 months. In the past we would have blamed the Italians, but not any more.

      Reply
  2. ambrit

    Sorry to have forgot, but those are very pretty Art Nouveau fungi.
    The composition and depth of field are added benefits for the visual arts aficionados.

    Reply
  3. Cocomaan

    I’m completely with the idea of logging out of the socials.

    One area that could have a bit of a resurgence in information sharing is radio and print. Lots of printing presses gathering dust in warehouses.

    Reply
    1. chris

      And just deleting them. Many of the apps have become oddly greedy lately. I had to delete Ticketmaster from my mobile devices because it was constantly trying to get permission to open any and every link. It didn’t matter what permissions I had given it. It didn’t matter what setting I maintained in the app. Any link that came up would result in a request to open it using the Ticketmaster app. I tried the remedies suggested on the web for the problem and none of them worked. So I just deleted the dumb thing until I need it again.

      Reply
    2. Randall Flagg

      And to your suggestions of the old printing presses Go really old school for the ways information used to be distributed with those printed matters.

      Church
      Legion and VFW halls.
      Union Halls
      The Grange.
      Bowling leagues
      Golf leagues.
      PTA
      Any one of the dozens of organizations I’ve missed.

      All the stuff people did before we all got electronic devices in our hands.

      Reply
    1. IM Doc

      I live in Blue America. One of my patients is a Tesla salesman. He made on offhand remark to me the other day that sales have never been higher. Owning a Tesla is bad enough – all of the other options on the table from other companies are simply not tenable for all kinds of various reasons. For awhile, I saw all kinds of Rivian vehicles around – that is really drying up. Apparently they are true 150K disasters.

      If the PMC among us want to virtue signal over that issue, it is right now Tesla or nothing.

      I have also learned the hard way that reddit is not really a source of reliable information. Sometimes they are onto something – most of the time it is not.

      Reply
      1. ForFawkesSakes

        Reddit is dead Internet theory come to life. It’s mostly bots lying on behalf of Team Blue, Ukraine, or that middle eastern battleship that most not be named. It makes me so annoyed that the reddit links keep getting spammed here. There is not a lot of overlap in the Venn diagram of NC readers and Reddit front page enthusiasts.

        Reply
      2. Duke of Prunes

        Re Reddit: Obscure hobbyist subreddits are still fairly decent. I’ve come to assume that anything with any popularity is 90% bots and astro-turfing (and astro-turfing bots).

        Reply
  4. Wukchumni

    I have long though that DC residents — aside from the Northwest, of course — might have been usefully organized into cadres of sans incomes. One wonders if “shrinking government” will have direct material impact on non-Northwest portions of Washington, DC.
    ~~~~~~~~~

    Changed a word…

    Reply
    1. ambrit

      The clog is on the other foot now? Or are we waiting for the other clog to drop?
      It gives a whole new meaning to the term “foot soldier.”

      Reply
    2. chris

      I don’t know. The city and many in it are still reeling from the effects of WFH as well as the request to return to the office. Traffic is awful now despite fewer people commuting. The Metro is materially worse than pre-2020 too.

      The people who are suffering the most were suffering before the pandemic shutdown. They continue to suffer even as their ranks swell. There’s still a number of consultancies looking for connected people to hire. As government is shredded they will be valuable employees because they know how things used to work. I expect we’ll see some downward mobility from those who code and professional bureaucrats. But most will be just fine materially.

      I expect their anger will be assuaged by the coming bonus season.

      Reply
  5. ambrit

    Re. the John Marshall quote; it is entirely conceivable that the more “radical” parts of the Trump coalition would be perfectly comfortable with a collapse of governmental function. “Rugged Individualists” need a good SHTF regime in which to shine. No matter the fact that very few of them have ever experienced true hardship. The real “survivalists” I have met tend to be quiet and do their work in the shadows.
    Stay safe! Hope for the best and prepare for the worst.

    Reply
    1. Wukchumni

      Yes, imagine if we were hit with real inflation-not this mamby pamby 30% the Feds do declare is more akin to their 3% target, but the real deal as written by Maxwell Johnston over on the links page.

      Most every American would be a pauper, Presto!

      And if you aren’t a “suvivalist’ are you a deadalist?

      Reply
    2. amfortas the hippie

      aye!
      lol.
      those morons will crumple like a wet paper bag.
      i, however, with my poverty and useless eater status reliably updated, will muddle through, as always.
      i do wish the derned tax return would arrive…for to shore up a few things(new seed order to fluff out the seed vault with new dna, labor to get the Big Greenhouse covered finally, etc.).
      and itll suck to suddenly go without tobacco, coffee and beer(!!!!)…but im otherwise sanguine.
      in my experience with randian libertardians, they are all talk…and generally seem to literally live in their parents’ basement or garage.
      caint hunt, or skin a sheep or maintain a garden…on and on.
      i’ll use any that wander out here as feed for the chickens.

      hence an adage:”those who yell the loudest about the uselessness of others, are more than likely themselves quite useless”.

      Reply
  6. IM Doc

    You asked about Democratic strategies????

    Please look at this link for an opinion piece by the Queen Bee of DC Dems in the Washington Post this week……

    Notice the byline – Trump’s second term is all about curtailing government’s power and reach.

    I spit my coffee out when I read that yesterday AM.

    My question is – —- My Facebook feeds from my DNC and PMC friends are full of all kinds of memes and comments about “Orange Twitler”, fascist, Nazi, etc. They spent most of the Harris campaign calling any and all opponents Nazis, Trump has been Hitler since he walked down the golden staircase.

    How can one be a fascist/Hitler/Nazi – at the same time they are “all about curtailing government’s power and reach.” ??? This is the very definition of being mutually exclusive concepts.

    I would think the first “Democratic strategy” should be to hire people to write their opinion pieces and narratives who are not midwits. Writers who seem to have a clear idea of political science and history. This writer, Ruth Marcus, either has no idea what she is talking about or possibly is having cognitive dissonance from the narrative about Trump over the past 8 years. It leads informed readers to the conclusion that the Dem-leaning opinion writers are just pulling at straws and making shit up as they go along. My other favorite is screaming about young kids at the helm – from the same people who were ramming Greta Thunberg and the Parkland Five ( David Hogg et al) down our throats for the past decade. How many months did Rachel Maddow feature the Parkland Five on her show after the shooting preaching to us about gun control? It is truly laughable to see the sudden turnaround. I am led to the conclusion that one of the signs of a collapsing society is when “It is OK for our side to do it – but you are a demon from hell for doing the same thing” approach to literally everything takes hold.

    In medicine we call this schizophrenia. And it is not a good look. If we want to talk about strategies – maybe we should start there. I really miss Molly Ivins and Mark Shields.

    Reply
    1. Carolinian

      We have always been at war with East Asia. Propaganda relies on the memory hole.

      Lambert upstairs talks about what a broken record the Dems are. A new party pleez……

      Reply
    2. flora

      Or, to be harsh, there’s the reason the WaPo is/was known as “Pravda on the Potomac.” The WaPo’s op-ed page is a good indicator of what the intel community wants the public to believe. Does Marcus herself believe any ot this. Who knows? She just writes it as her editors require, imo. / ;)

      from 2003, by William Greider.

      Washington Post Warriors

      A generation ago, when I worked at the Washington Post, the right-wing fringe occasionally referred to us as “Pravda on the Potomac.” We reporters were amused but also rankled.

      https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/washington-post-warriors/

      Reply
        1. Carolinian

          An extravagant claim.* Besides I seem to recall you insisting it was Izvestia on the Potomac ignoring the alliterative necessity.

          *Wasn’t it Billmon? Or maybe Michael Smith.

          Reply
          1. lambert strether

            Certainly adjacent and early, as I said.And you’re wrong on alliteration. Can you really imagine me arguing against alliteration?

            Reply
            1. Carolinian

              Well that was a loooong time ago. I do think Billmon used to use it as a catch phrase. By NC standards Billmon was a short timer.

              Reply
  7. Carolinian

    The latest (yesterday) from Trumpistan. Jared must really want that beach….makes a weird reference to Schumer.

    https://news.antiwar.com/2025/02/06/trump-says-israel-will-hand-gaza-to-us-at-the-conclusion-of-fighting/

    Should say since I’ve been promoting Alastair Crooke’s latest column that he tells Judge Nap that it’s almost impossible to know what Trump statements (if any) are serious and which aren’t. Crooke’s belief is that a restart of the slaughter will be in defiance of Trump’s aspirational good guy image. Guess we’ll see.

    What we do know is that Trump (and Biiden before him) can put a stop to the slaughter instantly if he chooses to do so.

    Reply
      1. ChrisFromGA

        I think Johnson’s take is pretty good. Israel hasn’t won anything in Gaza. They’ve killed a lot of Palestinians, yes. But as far as taking and holding ground, they’ve failed.

        So if Trump is now changing his story (as he is want to do) such that it will be the responsibility of the IDF to clear out Gaza of those pesky Injuns (oops, I meant Palestinians) the problem becomes evident. What couldn’t be done in over a year of fighting will be done … when?

        I can’t help but sense that this whole thing is just magical thinking, or a rocket scientist making plans while not taking into account some important physical force, like gravity.

        The mere fact that we’re talking about it instead of focusing on D.O.G.E. or Project Ukraine might have something to do with it, as well.

        Reply
        1. Erstwhile

          ‘They’ve killed a lot of Palestinians, yes.’ No. We’ve killed a lot of Palestinians, yes. Remember, we’re partnering with the Jewish zionists. Give Americans the credit they’ve earned, and please, write our name in blood 🩸.

          Reply
  8. Roger Blakely

    Los Angeles County SARS-CoV-2 wastewater numbers

    http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/media/Coronavirus/data/index.htm

    SARS-CoV-2 wastewater concentration as a percentage of the Winter 2023-2024 peak concentration value

    1/4/25 24%
    1/11/25 24%
    1/18/25 25%
    1/25/25 20%

    This is the first year since the start of the pandemic where SARS-CoV-2 wastewater concentration did not fall sharply immediately after the holidays. The decline has been delayed by three weeks. The good news is that we are only at one- quarter of the level that we were at last year.

    Reply
  9. CA

    A personnel annoyance is that neither Ro Khanna nor Josh Marshall fought for policies I found important during the Biden years, and evidently not during the Obama years, why should I even pay attention to them now? Where were these guys when mere expressions of sentiment for the Palestinian people were being suppressed on campus about the country?

    I notice the names Marshall and Khanna and I want to turn away, though I read on because I am asked to.

    Reply
      1. CA

        ‘They fall into the category of “writers” who one studies so as to discern what not to believe.’

        Nice; and the reason IM Doc misses a Molly Ivins, a Texan who described herself as being “politically to the left of Lenin.” A reader always knew who Ivins was.

        Reply
  10. Jason Boxman

    With such a dearth of data, we’ve still got the NC “Respiratory Virus Summary Dashboard”. Can’t copy and paste, because stupid, but typing this out

    Last week 19.6% ER visits had respiratory symptoms, increase from 19.2% before. Flu is rising and rising since Jan.

    They do still do COVID wastewater. Trending up now, but nowhere near the summer peak.

    Wonder how much of this might be H5N1?

    Reply
  11. Wukchumni

    Donald Trump has once again proposed a national sculpture garden that would honor well-known figures of American history, reviving a similar plan he announced during his first presidential term, but which was never built. It’s unclear where the park will be located, how the statues would be commissioned, or who will be commemorated with a statue. In an executive order signed last week, however, Trump said the park should be completed “as expeditiously as possible.”

    “I have signed an executive order to resume the process of creating a new National Park full of statues of the greatest Americans who ever lived,” Trump said this week at a gathering of religious leaders in Washington.

    Called the “National Garden of American Heroes,” the sculpture garden would be part of a July 2026 celebration of the 250th anniversary of the nation’s founding. It would feature 250 sculptures, one for each year of US history. Trump, according to the executive order, will serve as chair of the project.

    https://www.nationalparkstraveler.org/2025/02/trump-announces-plan-build-national-park-american-heroes
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    A late stage empire note:

    Make ’em all out of cement in lieu of metal, hero or no hero-they all scrap for the same amount.

    A good many of the roadside history markers in Cali made out of metal have disappeared as of late, as in they are history.

    Reply
  12. Wukchumni

    D.O.G.E. Day Afternoon plot

    Based upon a play: ‘The Boys In The Bank’ with a hostage situation and 1 man holding the country at large, and in order to pay for X reassignment urgency, youthful adults nobody has ever heard of are put in charge of the operation.

    Reply
  13. Sub-Boreal

    Chrystia Freeland’s “notorious Nazi collaborator family” is mentioned by-the-by in the excerpt from Yasha Levine’s posting about USAID. Elsewhere, the role of her grandfather as a collaborator during the WWII occupation of Ukraine has been documented in great detail.

    Meanwhile, Freeland is one of the two leading candidates to succeed Trudeau as leader of the Canadian federal Liberal party, and in the campaign so far she’s been leaning heavily on her experience in negotiating with Trump 1.0.

    But for some reason she hasn’t made the even stronger argument that her family history gives her a ready-made rapport with the true power behind Trump 2.0. After all, Elon Musk also had a Nazi-sympathizer grandfather:

    Musk’s maternal grandfather, Joshua Haldeman, moved from Canada to South Africa in 1950 because he liked the newly elected apartheid government.

    In the 1930s, Haldeman was the Canadian leader of a fringe political movement originating in the US, Technocracy Incorporated, that advocated abolishing democracy in favor of government by elite technicians but which took on overtones of fascism with its uniforms and salutes.

    The Canadian government banned Technocracy Incorporated during the second world war as a threat to the country’s security in part for its opposition to fighting Hitler. Haldeman was charged with publishing documents opposing the war and sent to prison for two months.

    After the war, Haldeman led a separate political party that among other things promoted the antisemitic forgery the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. When that went nowhere, he moved to South Africa because he said he liked the core National party philosophy of Christian nationalism that Vorster likened to Nazism.

    Soulmates!

    Reply
  14. Jason Boxman

    CONFESSIONS OF A GHOST

    Ten people explain why, instead of saying it’s over, they decided to just disappear.

    I’ve never ghosted a relationship. (what’s that?) But it’s the default for online dating. In apps, before meeting, after, whatever. Anytime it’s not going anywhere, auto-ghost is how it ends.

    Reply
    1. Matthew

      About ten years ago, on finishing my doctorate, I started to work with community organizations in my college town–to create a farmers market, connect it with local gardens and farms, food processing, to scale up local food production in a push to something like local food sovereignty. We repeatedly had the young people we worked with disappear on us. Not show when they said they would show, not feel compelled to explain (let alone apologize) sometimes just be gone for good.

      We can deploy this concept of ghosting to describe affective relationships, but it’s part of a bigger lost sense of accountability, reciprocity, commitment to one’s fellows. And scary. A lot of the time, when you challenge people, they get angry–no one calls anyone out, anymore–and insist that family or (various kinds of) emergency compelled their failures. But feeling unhappy for one’s failures, letting people know. . .

      Left organizations used to engage in this practice of self-criticism after every initiative–what did we do right, wrong? Often, you failed; people were demoted or stood down. A kind of Baptist Jimmie Swaggart ethos has taken hold quite broadly where, when accused (really of anything) the person chastized a) starts screaming in angry retaliation, b) denies, and c) if caught red-handed issues an utterly pro-forma mea culpa and heads back to the fray. Nobody feels any shame. I’m tempted to point back to the kind of world that Lasch saw coming, where we all develop superficial notions of ourselves as victims, maybe get these ratified by some professional interest, shrink, whatever, and thus feel justified in poor behavior. I’ve heard a lot of my daughter’s sweet but neurotic friends say things like, “Well, I’m just that way! I’m f*cked up!” (“I’m gonna give vent!”) In fact, we’ve got an entire country full of people with a bottomless, unassuageable resentment that’s the driver of most everything, on both sides of a styrofoam, often quite phony political divide. (Where the content itself has disappeared!) You can sell lots of stuff with it. It comes pretty close to being a perfect, closed system, perpetual in its motion because powered by an anxiety no longer governed, let alone repressed.

      Reply
  15. Lee

    Science is plopping:

    Investigating Fraud At The Heart Of Alzheimer’s Research (17 min. audio) Science Friday

    Every year, billions of dollars are funneled into Alzheimer’s research. And yet, so far, there’s no treatment that’s been able to reverse the disease, or even meaningfully slow the cognitive decline of patients.

    Part of the reason is that the disease is complex, and brain disorders are notoriously difficult to understand.

    But in a new book, an investigative science reporter makes the case that there’s another reason progress toward Alzheimer’s treatments has stalled: scientific fraud.

    Host Flora Lichtman talks with Charles Piller, investigative journalist at Science and author of the book Doctored: Fraud, Arrogance, and Tragedy in the Quest to Cure Alzheimer’s.

    Reply
  16. Matthew

    “Congressional Democrats denied entry to EPA headquarters”

    This is the rubber meeting the road; elected officials and American citizens being locked out of the corridors of their own government. Now we begin to speak openly of a coup, IMO.

    Reply
  17. lyman alpha blob

    RE: “Not sure why Kirn and Taibbi think that DOGE’s write access to OPM’s personnel and the Fiscal Office’s payment data isn’t a story, but they clearly think it’s not (or else they would cover it).”

    I haven’t listened to this week’s podcast yet but I do subscribe so l have listened to all the others and read every one of Taibbi’s articles on substack, and have followed him since before he started at Rolling Stone. I very much enjoyed all the financial articles he did for RS, but that wasn’t his focus before RS and hasn’t been as big of a focus since. He really seems to be more interested in free speech and freedom of the press issues these days, and as much as I loved his financial reporting, I can’t really blame him, especially after Biden sicced the IRS on him at his own house(!). I also get the feeling there might be other similar things he isn’t talking about publicly. Because of his current focus, I think he might be more interested in what information comes out when DOGE turns over certain, but definitely not all, government rocks.

    And then there’s his relationship with Musk. While Taibbi did show great integrity in not explicitly disclosing his sources for the Twitter files, it’s pretty certain Musk was the source. Then Musk turned on Taibbi due to some supposed competition between substack and twitter that Musk didn’t like. I don’t remember Taibbi going into great detail about the rift and what exactly happened there, but that might be one of the reasons why he isn’t focusing on something that in the past at least would have been in his wheelhouse – Musk is a loose cannon with a potential grudge against Taibbi with government power now at his disposal .

    Reply
  18. RA

    A superficial comment on DOGE.
    Back when it first became a thing I wondered about pronouncing the acronym DOGE. Some acronyms don’t get a pronounceable word, like IRS, but many do, like NASA.
    The consensus, now, seems to be to say it like “dodge” but with a long O.

    Before that I had done my own thinking and liked a two syllable DOG-E, pronounced “doggy” but with a long O. This reminded me of the old cowboy folk song
    “Git Along, Little Dogies”
    So I tried my hand at new lyrics. One shortcoming in my version is that I used the term DOG-E’s interchangeably for either the hunter or the prey. Oh well, here it is…

    ======================
    “Git It On, Vicious DOG-E’s”

    As l walked out one morning in DC,
    I spied a musk minion on a mission to hone;
    His heart held a throw-back to ideals in spending,
    As he approached while singin’ this song,

    [chorus] —>
    Whoopie Ti Yi Yo,
    Git it on viscious DOG-E’s.
    It’s peon’s misfortune and none of our own.

    Whoopie Ti Yi Yo,
    Git it on viscious DOG-E’s.
    For you know that austerity will be your new norm.
    <—

    Early in the spring we will find many DOG-E's,
    Name 'em and mark 'em and list all their fails;
    Drive out their excess, cut off their funding,
    Then throw the bad DOG-E's out or in jail.

    [chorus]

    Some pols go on spending our money for pleasure,
    That our funds can support it, is awfully wrong;
    For our coffers we know are long over-drawn on,
    So we'll go undo all of their spending that's wrong.

    [chorus]

    When the Right comes to town, we will hold them accountable,
    These bad DOG-E's who's spending must slow;
    Round up the offenders, and end their agendas.
    These rounded-up DOG-E's must cease the cash flow.

    [chorus]

    Oh, you all ate the pork from the democrat excess,
    "lt's pork, more pork," l heard them cry.
    Git it on, git it on, to the rounded up DOG-E's,
    There's no pork to be had, 'cept for a wars by and by.

    [chorus]

    ==================================
    Original:
    GIT ALONG, LITTLE DOGIES
    Lyric link:
    https://mudcat.org/@displaysong.cfm?SongID=2264
    From American Ballads and Folk Songs, Lomax

    For any who want to hear the original, there are many versions on youtube that you can find with a search on the title.

    Reply
  19. Tom Stone

    Over the last 30 days I have kept track of the bad driving I have seen, I drove somewhere on 28 of those days however, with the
    exception of driving from Santa Rosa to Sebastopol once a week ( 32 miles roundtrip) these have been short jaunts of 5 miles or less.
    On 17 of those 28 days I witnessed dangerous driving.
    2 cars coming to a full stop and then running a red light.
    1 car making a right turn on a red light across three lanes of traffic.
    1 sprinter van blowing through a thoroughly red light.
    Two cars driving the wrong way on a clearly marked one way street.
    Two cars driving 100 meters or more on the wrong side of the street.
    Add a few stop lights run and people driving at an excessive rate of speed in the rain and you get the picture
    , risky behavior.
    When I look at how Trump and Musk are behaving I get the same feeling, impetuos and extremely risky behavior with no consideration of the potentially devastating consequences.
    I strongly suspect that Covid has a role in this, “Important People” don’t have to mask, they are IMPORTANT PEOPLE, not Plebes.
    And many if not most have had Covid multiple times.
    The stupidest timeline certainly appears to be getting stupider…

    Reply
  20. Gulag

    “Taking DOGE to Court is a Doomed Strategy,”

    This strategy creates a perverse joy in me because I believe progressive liberalism has become a totalitarian ideology and such purely legalistic thinking will only accelerate its disintegration.

    It just may be that those individuals and groups still interested in a working class politics should consider a future in which they build a house on the left side of MAGA square, where there Is currently plenty of excitement, energy and a real contestation of ideas.

    Reply
  21. hk

    Wrt Khanna, I don’t think he “missed” the vote. He just didn’t (show up to) vote. Musk is right on this account: in fact, Khanna is not just being a d**k, but a lyinv weasely one.

    Reply

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