It was back in early 2015 and early 2016 that I wrote about the responsibilities of suffrage – that voting is not just a right, it is a privilege, it must be a responsibility too, you should earn it. You need to be literate – able to read – and politically literate too – able to pass the same Citizenship Test that an immigrant must pass to become a (voting) citizen. I expanded on that idea by suggesting that persons who know lots and lots about our history, our laws and institutions, and our founding documents ought to have their vote count as two or three average (ignorant) American citizen’s single votes. Honestly, do you really believe that you should have an equal say in choosing our leaders as an American History professor, or someone who knows as much as he does about our history, etc.? Yes, I surely believe in “one person, one vote.” But, perhaps we should give some extra credit to those who devote their lives to being exemplary American citizens. I stand by both notions today.
Monday, August 17, 2020
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
UFO’s
This article (here is his TED talk if you prefer videos to reading) prompted me to think about UFO’s. And it’s a small leap from thinking to writing.
I have been fascinated by the idea of superior alien intelligences since as long as I can remember, most probably for the same psychological reasons as everyone else who has ever been obsessed by them. I recall the name of Donald Keyhoe as an author whose books I consumed; his writings go way back to 1950.
I have been fascinated by the idea of superior alien intelligences since as long as I can remember, most probably for the same psychological reasons as everyone else who has ever been obsessed by them. I recall the name of Donald Keyhoe as an author whose books I consumed; his writings go way back to 1950.
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
The Democratic Party
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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez |
There are three – at least three – Democratic Parties. One is the party of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC), Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and – yeah – Andrew Yang. The second is the party of Joe Biden and all those who call themselves moderate or centrist or center-left. The third is the party of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR). But let’s not forget – Trump’s favorite president, the first Democratic president – Andrew Jackson.
Monday, July 13, 2020
Campaign Finance Reform
- Everyone (well, political junkies!) knows that incumbency is the single most important factor in determining who will win most elections. The people prefer the devil they know to the devil they don’t. Mostly because most people don’t spend a lot of time following political news, but at least they know the name of their incumbent. In addition, Americans routinely trust Congress overall somewhere beneath bank robbers, while at the same time praising their own Congress person. How can this be? Americans are not typically rational creatures with a command of relevant facts, that’s how.
Friday, July 10, 2020
Antifa
On July 4th, at a celebration of our nation’s birthday under the shadow of Mount Rushmore, the president of the United States threatened to register Antifa as a terrorist organization. Of course, he will do no such thing. The first reason is that this president makes promises (“throws red meat”) to his base to get them all excited, but he rarely follows through; and they seem to have short memories. The second reason is: Antifa is not an “organization” at all, so it can hardly be made an object of law.
Thursday, June 18, 2020
An Open Letter to my BLM friends
First, I need to state unequivocally that I am a friend to the Black Lives Matter movement and an enemy to all its enemies. I am a white man and of an age to have grown up during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960’s. At the time, I was a committed Republican (party of Abraham Lincoln, of Teddy Roosevelt and of individual rights). I boast of this because while the landmark Civil Rights bills of 1964 and 1965 (see below) were the children of LBJ – a Democratic president from Texas – Republicans in Congress stood for them more solidly than Democrats (half of the Democrats of that time were Dixiecrats – white racists from the South – while Republicans were still the party of Lincoln. The ground shifted immediately thereafter, and nearly all Dixiecrats dragged their nasty racist behinds over to the welcoming Republican party). And I changed my party affiliation at the same time and for the same reasons. I am 100% on your side.
Ham & Jeff
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Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale |
George Washington was elected unanimously, by presidential electors, and before partisan parties sprung into being (everyone back then feared factions, or parties). Soon enough, his most trusted advisors – Thomas Jefferson his Secretary of State and Alexander Hamilton his Secretary of the Treasury – came to (personal, political and philosophical) blows. Those who followed Hamilton called themselves “Federalists” (the original name for those who fought for ratification of the U.S. Constitution without the need for a Bill of Rights; those who fought against ratification without a Bill of Rights were called “Anti-Federalists”). The party that grew up around Jefferson called themselves (Democratic-)Republicans (the Federalist vs. Anti-Federalist argument was over by then). Their core disputes were over the size and reach of the new federal government, the power of the presidency, and who we should ally ourselves most strongly with, France (our revolutionary ally) or Great Britain (our revolutionary foe).
Saturday, June 13, 2020
Either-Or

No matter which side of any of these pairs you favor – as the true side, the right side, the moral side – you are wrong to favor one to the exclusion of the other. For example. Many if not most liberals believe that most or all conservatives are either evil or stupid, or both. Guess what: conservatives believe the same about liberals. Is it possible for one half of the nation to be always right while the other half is always wrong? Hardly likely. Liberals and conservatives alike have their geniuses and their fools. Another example. A man is a man, for sure. But if he denies his feminine side, he leads a fractured life. C.G. Jung called the denied side of us all the Shadow side. He wanted us not to deny our Shadow side, but to integrate it into our lives. If the Shadow side is ignored or tamped down, it will sure as hell create havoc in our lives. Another example: Men live their lives according to either Faith or Reason, and it makes a huge difference which side they choose. One is not always a better guide than the other, but most people are quite certain that it is.
Monday, June 8, 2020
Our Two-Party System
Our Two-Party system – which is nowhere enshrined in the U.S. Constitution – is an artifact of individual states choosing to decide elections by what is called “Winner-Take-All” voting rules. Here is an illustrative example of what Winner-Take-All looks like. Say, five candidates compete for an elective office. The one who wins the most votes wins the job. This sounds alright, doesn’t it? Even if the best vote getter only won 24% of the vote? Let’s suppose that one of the candidates was a liberal and all the others were of conservative stripe. The liberal won 24% of the vote and the four conservatives divided up the remaining 76% of the vote, 19% each. Doesn’t sound alright anymore, does it? 76% of the voters (conservative voters) will be represented by a legally elected liberal.
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