I like to think I'm reasonably liberal and reasonably current with most trends, except for popular culture. But I did a double-take when I saw the photo with this post of Estonia's leader.
So young and so blonde.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
I like to think I'm reasonably liberal and reasonably current with most trends, except for popular culture. But I did a double-take when I saw the photo with this post of Estonia's leader.
So young and so blonde.
For its part, the U.S. government continued to prosecute draft evaders after the Vietnam War ended. A total of 209,517 men were formally accused of violating draft laws, while government officials estimate another 360,000 were never formally accused.
That sounds so specific it must be based on some official document; unfortunately they don't provide any sources.
It's a reminder to me of how fragile is the base of "facts" for our received version of history.
Reading Martin Indyk's "Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger: the Art of Middle East Diplomacy. Just got through the Yom Yippur War, the one where the US went to Defcon 3 while Nixon was melting down with the Saturday Night massacre. The one where Brezhnev was apparently addicted to drugs and drink.
A year or two ago I read a new book on the coming of WWI tracing the network of misunderstandings and wrong assumptions which led to the war. That's what came to mind as I read--the Soviets, the Egyptians, the Israelis, the Syrians--all were flawed players in the game.
I doubt there's much chance of improving the rationality of our leaders--they're human after all.
(After finishing the book, which covers Kissinger's successful negotiations to calm the area, and take advantage of opportunities to stablize the situation, laying the groundwork for Carter's Camp David establishment of peace between Israel and Egypt.)
I came away with an appreciation of Kissinger's abilities and even more appreciation of Indyk's approach: he's clear on the aims and tactics of the various players and their misjudgments. Anwar Sadat comes off well as a statesman, amazingly for someone who was pro-Hitler during WWII. The other leaders seem capable--no villains, just quirky people.
It's unfair that Republican appointees have dominated the Supreme Court for the last 50 years or so. Elsewhere I've blamed LBJ for this.
Currently liberals argue that the court is too conservative. That's true. But it's also true that the court has not always been a moderating influence, keeping America on a middle way. Back in the days of the Warren court it was fairly consistently more liberal than the country. IIRC there weren't majorities in the country supporting decisions like Brown, Carr, MIranda.
It's also worth remembering that people on the right were talking about "Impeach Warren". So far the liberals today aren't talking about impeachment.
One of the things Republicans seem to be doing in several states is changing the law so that somebody can override the count of votes. In a way they're fighting the last war: in the firm belief that Trump lost because of illegal/fraudulent votes, they're trying to make legal what Trump asked the officials in AZ, PA, GA, and WI to do.
This effort has a lot of Democrats very concerned. It might be justified. But I'm in a Pollyanna mood today, so let me outline why it might not be:
I'm not really picking on Prof. Lepore, not much anyhow. She writes really well. But as I've said before I do enjoy finding errors. This time it's page 109 of her book "If Then: How the Simultanics Corproation Invented the Future". She's writing about the dance among Arthur Schlesinger, Jr (another Harvard professor who wrote well), Adlai Stevenson, and JFKennedy in 1960. Stevenson is vacillating as usual over whether to run for president, and JFK is trying to keep him out, with Schlesinger in the middle.
In two separate paragraphs she describes meetings between Stevenson and JFK, one on May 21, one in "late May" which was arranged by Schlesinger. I have to believe it was one meeting, but the way it's written it sounds like two. I suspect she tried to describe the meeting in separate drafts which didn't get cleanly merged.
I've not finished the book, but am enjoying it, as I remember the maneuvering then, much more fascinating than today's politics.
The bottom line of a study trying to assess whether the MFP and CFAP payments resulted in more votes for Trump in 2020:
We find the MFP and CFAP programs generated 677,512 votes for Republican candidate Trump in the 2020 Presidential Election with an estimated cost-per-vote-gained of $66,124
I say it's the bottom line, but the next sentence says the added votes didn't swing any states; rural voters were already pro-Trump.
Over my lifetime many things have changed: