Saturday, December 26, 2020

Instant Replay?

Monday, December 21, 2020 
I was so bored on Saturday and afraid I would fall asleep reading that I did something rare, watched some college football, switching between Northwestern vs.Ohio State and Clemson vs. Notre Dame.  However, I grew increasingly indignant.  As Clemson kept scoring, the television camera panned the sidelines to show the team celebrating.  No one, coaches, players, staff, appeared to be wearing a mask, unlike the cautions taken at the Northwestern/Ohio State game (forgetting for a moment whether there should be any game at all). 

I tried calling Clemson, a South Carolina university, to complain, but only got voicemail in the financial aid office.  Since the game was being played under the auspices of the Atlantic Coast Conference, I identified the ACC commissioner, John Swofford, and, while the game was still going on, sent him an e-mail criticizing this breach of public health.  His reply came quickly, but confused me: "The game hasn't started yet."

An hour and a half later, after doing some checking, I sent this message to Mr. Swofford: "Sorry.  Completely fooled by a replay of 12/29/18 game.  I'll save my righteous indignation for another occasion.  Thank you for your understanding."  Clemson and Notre Dame, both ranked very high in the standings, were set to play late in the afternoon and some aggressive program scheduler decided to run a game from two years ago as a vorspeis
. . .

The real estate section offered an interesting look at this wacky year.  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/17/realestate/fewer-home-listings-higher-prices.html

"In 45 of the 50 metro areas, the number of listings [of homes for sale] fell by at least 25 percent year over year."  This resulted in noticeable increases in asking prices, which, nevertheless, hasn't lured other sellers into the market a bit of a twist on classic supply and demand theory.  
. . .

Ginia Bellafante, a consistently provocative columnist in the New York Times, proposes that "Ivy League Schools Randomly Select Students (At Least for a Little While)."  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/18/nyregion/ivy-league-admissions-lottery.html

Central to her position is the shunting aside, at least temporarily, of "the exceptionally credentialed[.]  What if elite colleges chose students whose resilience had so far eluded them?"  Is there equity in allowing a student to go forward via a lottery in the absence of any record of accomplishment or with a modest record, at best?  What are the reliable indicators of potential, after all?  

She makes an argument for standardized testing that is contrary to the normal progressive position and seemingly at odds with her ultra-democratic stance.  "Given the difficulties of administering standardized tests during the current crisis, 500 colleges and universities have waived the SAT as a requirement for admission.  While that might seem like a welcome curative for so much anxiety, in the absence of test scores (as well as so many extracurricular activities that have fallen by the wayside since the onset of the coronavirus) a capable student from a little-known school in the South Bronx may be more challenging to evaluate."  This is consistent with the original purpose of the SAT, first known as the College Boards, early in the 20th Century -- give the disadvantaged, urban kid (read Jewish nerd) a chance to distinguish himself (herself was still far in the future) in the admissions process. 

Generations of students, predominantly, but not exclusively Black, have been ill-served by our public education systems.  Would a lottery be limited to those students alone?  What portion of the Ivy League student body would be selected by lottery?  What conditions, if any, would qualify a student for the lottery?  In sum, I think that a lottery is unworkable and a bad idea, but it's a great idea to stimulate debate. 

Here's my modest proposal.  Leave the operation of the Ivies alone, at least for the time being.  Instead, have them use some of their enormous endowments to sponsor secondary schools in their communities, weaving their exceptional faculty and student talent into the high school setting.  Combining the ivory tower with the real world should benefit both sides considerably.
. . .

My brother sent me this snippet from the frontiers of gastronomy.  "McDonald’s is selling a sandwich made of Spam topped with crushed Oreo cookies Monday in China in an attention-grabbing move that has raised eyebrows."

It was not my eyebrows that were raised reading this, but rather my gorge.
. . .

In attempting to establish guidelines for coronavirus vaccination, "a much broader group of Americans [has been] defined as essential workers — about 90 million people with jobs designated by a division of the Department of Homeland Security as critical to keeping society functioning."  https://nyti.ms/3aoxAf0 

I did some math.  Our current population is 330 million.  24% are under 18, 79.2 million; 16.5% are over 65, 54.45 million.  That amounts to 133.65, leaving 196.35 million minus the essential 90 million; 106.35 million Americans just taking up space.

On the other hand, "[a]ccording to a very old Jewish mystical tradition, at all times in history there are 36 righteous men who wander the earth unknown to everyone else, including one another.  These are the Lamed-Vavnik, or the Tzadikim Nistarim. These men, who wander the earth unknown, are absolutely critical to the existence of the human race, because as long as they continue to exist, the anger of almighty God is held back from the earth for their sake."  https://www.redlandsdailyfacts.com/general-news/20120519/the-legend-of-the-36-righteous-men

Admittedly, holding back the anger of almighty God is a bigger challenge than driving a bus, but we should consider where and how we fit.

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Andrew Coe, author of "Chop Suey: A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States," passed a difficult test this afternoon.  He spoke on "Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese Food," sponsored by YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, and offered a sensible overview of the subject.  He solidified his credentials by making explicit reference to Wu Han, not the alleged ground zero of Covid-19, the Chinese restaurant upstairs on Pitkin Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn, where I first entered Heaven on Earth and Wo Hop, 17 Mott Street, the quintessential Chinatown Chinese restaurant, where I have spent the best hours of my life in the absence of my young bride.


His presentation was relatively brief.  You can replay it here, if you've never had lunch with me in Chinatown:   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MG0lcfFJhLI

. . .


Staying in the food and beverage aisle, consider the link between Rabbi Dov Behr Manischewitz (1856?-1914) and Billy Eckstine (1914-1993).  https://slate.com/business/2020/12/manischewitz-wine-taste-judaism-black-americans.html

. . .


Two weeks ago, I kvelled over the title of a new biography of James Beard, chef and cookbook author, "The Man Who Ate Too Much."  In noodling around, I discovered that I used the same title on my blog dated April 27, 2013.  Is there a copyright lawyer in the house?


Wednesday, December 23, 2020

It's no secret that Members of the Tribe frequently respond to reported events by asking "Is it good for the Jews?"  Consider this: "President Trump will appoint Andrew Giuliani[, Rudy's son,] to the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, the White House announced [last] Wednesday . . . Giuliani, will serve a five-year-term on the 55-person board, which meets twice a year."  https://www.washingtonian.com/2020/12/16/trump-has-nominated-andrew-giuliani-to-the-united-states-holocaust-memorial-council/
 
Compensation per diem at an annualized rate of $170,800 plus expenses.  5 U.S. Code § 5315.  For more information, "Meet Andrew Giuliani – Donald Trump’s golf pro in residence."  https://www.irishtimes.com/sport/golf/meet-andrew-giuliani-donald-trump-s-golf-pro-in-residence-1.4128341?mode=amp

. . .


I can't speak for African Americans, but if they asked "Is it good for African Americans?", I believe that the answer would be No far too often throughout American history.  I think that this is a perspective that we white Americans generally fail to recognize.  An obituary of a former governor of Mississippi said that, until 1982 "Mississippi was the only state without public kindergarten, and it was the only state without funding for compulsory public education, a vestige of its extreme reaction to the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision striking down school segregation."  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/22/us/william-winter-dead.html


The median age of the U.S. population is 38.3, meaning that 1982 was within the lifetime of half of us.  It ain't ancient history.  While there were ugly acts of racial violence before, during and after 1982, this example of institutional racism took its toll on so many lives for decades.


Thursday, December 24, 2020

I am a faithful reader of The New Yorker.  This week's edition, cover date December 28, 2020, is labelled "The Cartoon Issue."  The cover itself is a brilliant lampoon of the outgoing presidency and Calvin Trillin, my hero, writes "Some Notes on Funniness" that are, of course, funny.


But, 18 pages (18 pages!) are given to a graphic vignette that is not only humorless, but pointless, in my rarely humble opinion.  The next-to-last panel has a character saying what we should be hearing from the editor: "I'm really sorry if you feel that I made the wrong decision, but I have my methods, and I was doing what I thought was right."  Maybe that's the joke.

. . .


The American Dialect Society determined that one of the words of the year was the Yiddish-based oysgezoomt, meaning fatigued or bored by Zoom.  https://www.americandialect.org/wp-content/uploads/2020-Word-of-the-Year-PRESS-RELEASE.pdf


Appropriately, I am thoroughly oysgetrumpt.

Saturday, December 19, 2020

ABCs

Monday, December 14, 2020 
Enough politics.  Let's change the subject to something lighter.  Heroin addiction.  "Panic in Needle Park," made in 1971, is streaming on  http://www.tcm.com/watchtcm/

It was Al Pacino's first leading movie role; he had made one minor film appearance previously.  He plays a heroin addict, who introduces his girlfriend to drugs as their lives spiral downward.  While I love watching Pacino act, whether he is taking big bites out of the scenery or just nibbling on some minor decorations, it is where the movie is set and filmed in part that fascinates me.  

In the 1960s and 1970s, "Needle Park" was identified as the combination of Sherman Square, a very small triangle at West 70th Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue, and Verdi Square, a block-long, roughly rectangular space above West 72nd Street, also between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue.  The name came from the frequent presence of drug addicts gathering there, a situation that also afflicted Bryant Park, the very large space immediately behind the main branch of the New York Public Library, and Union Square, bordering 14th Street downtown. 

In all three locations, heightened policing and redesign of the areas intended for rest and recreation eventually returned these spaces to the civilian population for peaceful purposes.

The changes were also facilitated by the gentrification of much of Manhattan.  Glossy high-rises replaced commercial properties and old housing stock that could not keep up with the pressure for residences befitting the influx of highly paid, white collar workers employed in the exploding financial, technology and consulting sectors.  Which brings us back to Needle Park, sitting about 500 feet from Palazzo di Gotthelf.  Poised between and around us are apartment buildings, tall and taller, commanding high purchase or rental prices.   

The neighborhood improvements were not all benign.  As the removal of brush, litter and miscreants from Needle Park attracted real estate investors it also hastened the departure of nearby small businesses and modest rental units.  Can we find a reasonable balance, local businesses owned and operated by local residents?
. . .

If I were to address politics today, I would look at the issue of college student loan forgiveness.  "Student Loan Cancellation Sets Up Clash Between Biden and the Left." https://nyti.ms/374qTws

It seems like an easy policy to promote.  However, Jerry P***** points out that it would disproportionately benefit white, middle class families, further marginalizing many Blacks and the white non-college population.  If you would like to know more, I'll give you Jerry's phone number, since I'm skipping politics this week.
. . .

One place where I escape politics is in a crossword puzzle.  This essay helps explain the palliative effect of unpuzzling.  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/25/crosswords/crosswords-essay-thiesen.html
. . .

I want to share the prodigious efforts of Linda Rich, gathering items of Jewish interest available to the public. 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zDMMnnQvPJy4TlMoBG3wvkQeSna72k2r/view

This edition covers the next 6 weeks, listing events (lectures, exhibits, seminars, conferences) of cultural, historical, theological and ritual interest to Jews and those who love us, even reluctantly.
. . .

The first local use of the Covid-19 vaccine took place this morning.  If you recall, the second person in Great Britain to be vaccinated was named William Shakespeare.  It hasn't been disclosed, but I hope that we offered early protection to a Mickey Spillane. 

Tuesday, December 15, 2020
"If It’s Fiction, Can It Be an Invasion of Privacy?" https://nyti.ms/2VT3mZf

The case at hand is set in France and has very specific details.  Here in the USA, each state has its own legal standards of privacy, but, as a general topic, I think that it raises good questions.  In libel and slander actions, truth is a rock-solid defense.  Could you argue that it can't be invasion of privacy because it isn't true?   
. . .

If it were not for "Saturday Night Live," I would never have heard of Chance the Rapper or Megan Thee Stallion.  Following their example, however, I will be known henceforth as Grandpa Verily Alan. 

Wednesday, December 15, 2020
The following story makes me a bit squirmy.  "Black Student Expelled After Mother Complains About 'Fences'"   https://nyti.ms/3nmKA8D

The mother of a 14-year old Black student at an elite private secondary school, with a mostly white student body, objected to the reading in class of "Fences," August Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play dealing with a working class Black family, set in the 1950s.  According to the newspaper report, "her main concern was that the themes were too mature for the group and would foster stereotypes about Black families."  As a former teacher and a somewhat freethinker, I am reluctant to bar controversial matters from the classroom, assuming the teacher has a modicum of good sense in picking and teaching the material. 

I recognize, of course, that 14-year olds may not necessarily be able to deal with some adult or complex issues.  In this instance, the mother does not seem to be questioning her son's ability to handle the subject matter, but, rather, what the reaction of his presumably privileged white classmates would be.  That seems to be an inherent risk given the composition of the student body, an evident fact to any parent choosing the school.  I don't think that conflicts of this sort could be avoided under the circumstances nor should they automatically be.  By recognizing them, the class is offered a classic "teachable moment."

The mother may have intended to avoid placing more challenges to the development of her adolescent son, an inherently risky business.  Her conduct that precipitated his expulsion is unrecorded.  Finally, how would we regard a similar complaint from a white parent?  Attentive parenting?  Hysteria?  Bigotry?
. . .

As you know, I have turned my back on "Best of" year end lists.  However, this is a different order of magnitude.  "What Are the Greatest 2,020 Songs Ever?  Philadelphia Is Deciding"   https://nyti.ms/3nj8928

A radio station in Philadelphia has mounted this quest and, unlike the typical "Best of" list, it is the product of the laity; no experts allowed.  I've made no attempt to parse the list, but I spotted one item at #1093 that always moved me, Edith Piaf's "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien."   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3Kvu6Kgp88

My affection for the song is not even spoiled by its recent use in a GEICO commercial.  I must note, however, that it would be a very different experience hearing the song from a hulking brute than from a petite woman who has been battered by fate.
. . .

Oh, my goodness!  "Fifty Years of Tax Cuts for Rich Didn’t Trickle Down, Study Says."  For the details, see http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/107919/1/Hope_economic_consequences_of_major_tax_cuts_published.pdf

Thursday, December 16, 2020
"Happy Birthday, dear Ludwig,
Happy Birthday to you."

Beethoven is 250 years old today.  If you choose to celebrate with milk and cookies rather than or in addition to cake and ice cream, Oreos might be on your menu.  Which brings me to the surprising news that since celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2012 "Oreo has introduced 65 flavors, including, in the last three years alone, Hot Chicken Wing Oreos, Wasabi Oreos, Crispy Tiramisù Oreos and Carrot Cake Oreos."  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/16/style/oreo-flavors.html

For better or worse, Hot Chicken Wing Oreos and Wasabi Oreos are available in China only.  That may justify a trade war, right there.
. . .

In a certain perverse way, this comment about opposition to Covid-19 vaccination pleased me.  "Falsehoods about Bill Gates, the Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist who supports vaccines, have also increased, with rumors that he is responsible for the coronavirus and that he stands to profit from a vaccine."  Gates is a goy, about as goyish as they come.  That takes the heat off George Soros, symbol of international Jewry, at least for a while.
 
Friday, December 18, 2020
Okay, so heroin addiction wasn't such a big departure from politics.  Give me another chance to sail into calmer seas -- the integration of New York City public schools.  Mayor Bill de Blasio has released a plan eliminating "all admissions screen for middle schools for at least one year . . . About 200 middle schools, or 40 percent of all middle schools, use metrics like grades, attendance and test scores to determine which students should be admitted."  The result has been schools that are whiter than the general school population.  "Now those schools will use a random lottery to admit students."  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/18/nyregion/nyc-schools-admissions-segregation.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage
 
Additionally, geographic preferences for some high school admissions will end.  Oddly or maybe not so oddly, these preferences applied to some "of the whitest and wealthiest of the city’s 32 local school districts."  No plans were announced to change the single test admissions requirement for the city's top 3 high schools, Stuyvesant, Bronx Science and Brooklyn Tech, which are insulated by state law.  
 
The mayor deserves some credit for using the near shutdown of public education due to the pandemic to rethink and retool some policies.  And, for a change, he has avoided targeting the 3 top high schools for symbolic purposes.  I can't predict the value of the temporary reforms aimed at middle schools, which contain about 250,000 students.  It seems to be a big challenge with a limited horizon.  I hope that they also seek to change to content of classes, not just the complexion.  
 
Reform efforts should not be limited to the school building.  Having the kids at home has exposed more parents than ever before to the challenges of education.  Keep them engaged, get them more engaged. The efforts of a good student and the talents of a good teacher are substantially enhanced by support from home.

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Best of the Worst of the Best

Monday, December 7, 2020

Lists of best of anything and everything appear at this time of year.  I started to record these compilations two weeks ago with the year's best books according to the New York Times and the New York Public Library, but I soon realized that it was a fruitless or maybe too fruitful pursuit.  For every best television show list from Time Out New York, expect one from The New Yorker.  Do you want the best movies from The Guardian or the Wall Street Journal

There will be best new restaurants, classical recordings, cookie recipes, stand-up comedy performances and so on.  Even though it would be easier for me to track all this right now, spending almost all my time inside Palazzo di Gotthelf, I am unwilling to be limited to a role as a scrivener.  I would like to think outside the box, although confined to it.

On the other hand, I can't resist, recognizing far and away the best book title of 2020, a biography of chef and cookbook author James Beard, "The Man Who Ate Too Much."  Whether you read it or not, you want the cover of that book to be on display in your household.

. . .

Some people definitely think outside the box.  "Just 27 congressional Republicans acknowledge Biden’s win, Washington Post survey finds."  https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/survey-who-won-election-republicans-congress/2020/12/04/1a1011f6-3650-11eb-8d38-6aea1adb3839_story.html

Part of me admires the stance of the Republicans; annoy the Democrats, keep them off balance.  It's politics, after all.  But, it doesn't stop there, unfortunately.  "White supremacist extremists will remain the deadliest domestic terror threat to the United States, according to the Department of Homeland Security's first annual homeland threat assessment," released October 2020.  https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/06/politics/white-supremacists-anarchists-dhs-homeland-threat-assessment/index.html

Smug Republican legislators may enjoy teasing the opposition, but, on the ground, repeated charges of rigging, cheating and fraud may be pushing buttons that will prove hard to unpush.  Do I have a Republican friend who will claim to feel at ease amidst heavily-armed, agitated Michigan militia members?

As we approach Inauguration Day, the president continues to stir the paranoia pot vigorously.  Last week, he sent 135 Twitter messages complaining about the election, while addressing the pandemic in just 4 messages, not quite living up to his job description.   https://nyti.ms/36LYxXy

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Today is the long-awaited opening of Pastrami Queen, 138 West 72nd Street.  The excitement increased last week, when a sign appeared in the window promising they would "Roll Back Prices to Our Earlier Days," a frankfurter with sauerkraut and mustard for $.99 and, most dramatically, pastrami on rye for $4.95 (normally $20 at their East Side location).  That was good enough to get Stony Brook Steve and me to walk over at noon. 

As we went along West 72nd Street, I counted 75 people waiting in line, in 35° temperature.  We kept walking, of course, but here's a report from a more patient (??) friend.

I biked to the joint and got in line at the east end of the Citibank at 11:45.  I reached the Queen’s door at 1:45 (yup, 2 hours) and placed my order—one pastrami promotion sandwich for Nancy, and a ½ lb of corned beef for Nancy’s father.  I then waited indoors in the back, between rows of empty booths, until my name was called and I got the chow at 2:15.

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Echoing what I wrote about on Monday, “As Trump Rails Against Loss, His Supporters Become More Threatening.”  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/08/us/politics/trump-election-challenges.html  The article describes behavior that "even some Republicans say has become dangerous."  How about some Law and Order?

. . .

I prefer corned beef to pastrami, but Pastrami Queen's inaugural promotional offer of a pastrami sandwich for $4.95 exerted a powerful magnetic force.  In light of yesterday's crowd scene, I came up with a different strategy today.  I set out at 5:45 P.M., figuring that a hefty sandwich would make a good dinner and few others would be foolish enough to come out on a cold night.  Well, I was partly right.  When I got to Pastrami Queen, only 7 people were waiting ahead of me.  The only problem was the store's manager announcing that they had just run out of food and they were closing down for the day.  I confirmed that they would be restocked and open tomorrow -- at regular prices. 

. . .

Dealing with New York City's one million plus public school children during this pandemic is a problem that might defeat King Solomon.  "New York’s issues with remote instruction begin with a lack of basic infrastructure for students learning from home.  Many low-income students, including some living in homeless shelters, cannot even log on for classes because they still do not have devices or Wi-Fi.  Educators also said they were scrambling to make lessons more engaging for students without much helpful guidance from the city.  So while individual teachers and schools have honed creative strategies to improve online instruction, there is no clear citywide plan to do the same, leaving a patchwork system of learning across the city’s 1,800 schools."  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/08/nyregion/ny-schools-reopening-inequality.html

It should follow that low-income (euphemism for minority) families would be eager to have their children in the classroom where equipment and planning would best serve them.  Wrong.  "There are nearly 12,000 more white children returning to public school buildings than Black students — even though there are many more Black students than white children in the system overall.  Latino students are returning at a rate roughly proportional to their overall representation in the school system."  Discuss and then explain to me, because I still don't understand the situation.

Thursday, December 9, 2020

Can you remember way back to 2012, when Mitt Romney was challenging Barack Obama?  He claimed that "[t]here are 47 percent of the people who will vote for the president no matter what.  All right, there are 47 percent who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it."  This was quickly characterized as "makers vs. takers."  See, for instance https://www.deseret.com/2012/9/19/20506887/makers-takers-and-mitt-romney-s-47-percent-comment and https://www.economist.com/special-report/2012/10/11/makers-and-takers 

In Mitt's case, enough makers joined the takers to limit his access to the White House to the guest entrance.  Eight years later, the makers moved even further from the Republican presidential candidate.  "Biden won 17% of the nation’s counties, but those counties account for 71% of U.S. gross domestic product."

https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-the-2020-election-deepened-americas-white-collar-blue-collar-split-11606219208

While I don't expect that the makers will soon host a dinner in honor of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, this time, they found a line that even a big tax cut couldn't get them to cross.

. . .

Last night's sojourn to Pastrami Queen was not a total failure.  Before leaving the house, I took aim at the curse of wearing a mask outdoors, blinding me with fog on my glasses.  One mask or two, cloth mask or paper mask, I can't proceed more than a few yards without having an opaque barrier before my eyes.  I stop and wipe off my glasses a few times and then wind up holding them at arm's length while straining to discern what I am approaching or what is approaching me on the sidewalk.

At the suggestion of America's Favorite Epidemiologist, I taped the top of my mask to my face, using masking tape, what else?  It worked.  I saw every step of the way to not getting a bargain sandwich and back.  Today, I bought surgical tape to do the job right; removing the masking tape, in fact, resembled a surgical procedure.  On my walk to Barnes & Noble, 2289 Broadway, and back, with stops at Zabar's and Fairway, over 5,000 steps according to my (you'll pardon the expression) fitness tracker, everything was crystal clear.  I didn't step into a pothole, stumble over a small animal, or bump into any object fixed or moveable.  Now, I am ready for cold weather.

Friday, December 11, 2020

I promised to skip end of year lists at the end of this year, but there are some unique items that deserve recognition on their own.  On the other hand, breaking a three decade tradition, the British editors of the Literary Review have suspended an annual contest to award the worst sex writing in the English language.  They announced that 2020 was bad enough.   https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/08/books/bad-sex-fiction-award-canceled.html

. . .

The Republicans are a gift that keeps on giving.  Now, they have redefined States' Rights, a beloved principle on the right, for their temporary convenience.  State of Texas v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, State of Georgia, State of Michigan and State of Wisconsin proposes that the State of Texas has the right to interfere in other states' elections.  For the sake of brevity, it may be referred to as Texas vs. Democracy.

. . .

"Senator Mike Lee, Republican of Utah, blocked the creation of Smithsonian museums honoring women and Latinos, warning they would worsen societal divides."  https://nyti.ms/3qP1FtI 

You are right, Senator Lee.  If we don't tell them how they have been treated, they won't bother us.

. . .

Late news flashes

  •    Democracy Wins
  •    Indoor Dining Banned In NYC


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