A reality based independent journal of observation & analysis, serving the Flathead Valley & Montana since 2006. © James Conner.

Archives Index, 2020, September

 

30 September 2020 — 0804 mdt

That Godawful debate last night

Donald J. Trump, narcissistic sociopath and President of the United States, and trailing Joe Biden in the polls, went into last night’s debate with one goal: to dominate Joe Biden and Chris Wallace in a mano a mano barroom brawl. It was a goal born not of rational calculation but of a powerful primal compulsion to always be the alpha male in the room. He constantly interrupted and belittled Biden, intending to throw the former Vice President off his stride and disrupt his train of thought.

…read the rest

 

27 September 2020 — 1542 mdt

Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett

Nominating a supreme court justice just six weeks before an election is constitutionally permissible, but it is not always an exercise in placing the nation’s needs above partisan interests. Indeed, the constitution permits a president who loses his bid for re-election to nominate a justice after the election, during the lame duck session of Congress. Again, that would not always be an exercise in placing the nation’s needs above partisan interests.

It is also, as the Garland Merrick debacle proved, constitutionally permissible for the Senate not to take up or vote on a nominee. The constitution only requires the Advice and Consent of the Senate before the nominee can take a seat on the court. The constitution sets no timetable for confirming a nominee.

…read the rest

 

27 September 2020 — 1241 mdt

Music for a September Sunday

Pays D’en Haut performing, a woman in T-strap shoes dancing. The lead singer plays an impressive resonator guitar.

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23 September 2020 — 1056 mdt

Montana's data reporting system is mediocre

Covid-19 is surging out of control in Montana

 Updated  1805 mdt. From March through early June, Montana’s response to the SARS-cov-2 coronavirus was among the nation’s most effective. Now, as the plot below displays, Montana’s new case rate per million persons is rising and is higher than the mean national case rate.

Equally concerning: (1) the Covid Tracking Project, the nation’s best aggregator of Covid-19 test results, gives Montana only a “C” for coronavirus reporting, and (2) the Kaiser Health News, edited by former emergency room physician Elizabeth Rosenthal, reports that Montana does not break out PCR Covid tests from antigen Covid tests.

per_mil_23-sep      Double size      PDF for printing

…read the rest

 

22 September 2020 — 0950 mdt

The issue was decided on 8 Nov. 2016

Romney kills Democratic hopes of blocking confirmation
of Trump’s nomination to replace Ginsburg on SCOTUS

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) announced this morning that he supports voting on President Trump’s nomination to replace Justice Ruth Ginsburg, who died last week, on the U.S. Supreme Court. Unless two more Republican senators join Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) in agreeing that the man elected President on 3 November should choose Ginsburg’s replacement, a possibility more remote than a snow cone’s not melting in a blast furnace, a jurist from the theocratic right will join the court.

Romney’s announcement confirms what the cognoscenti have always known: Democrats are powerless to block the confirmation of a justice nominated by Trump. The issue was settled on 8 November 2016 when Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton, and the voters put a Republican majority in the senate. Whether a justice could be confirmed in a lame duck session following the defeat of an incumbent president running for re-election was settled when the constitution was confirmed.

…read the rest

 

18 September 2020 — 2312 mdt

A torch not passed becomes a torch dropped

A great jurist loses a great gamble —
those she cared about will pay the price

Ginsburg_ruth_2016__200

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, in poor health for two decades, survived many cancers, falls, and surgeries. Today, at 87, she died of pancreatic cancer.

A champion of civil liberties and rights, of women and minorities, of the people owed equal rights but accorded unequal treatment before the bar of justice, she was adored, sometimes to the point of de facto deification, by those for whom she she cared, and by the advocates who plead their cases before Ginsburg and her colleagues.

Now her death during Trump’s presidency jeopardizes all she lived to protect, for her passing provides theocratic Republicans with one last opportunity to nominate, and get confirmed, a justice who will overturn Roe. v. Wade; a justice who will champion special justice for the one percent at the top instead of equal justice for all.

…read the rest

 

12 September 2020 — 2025 mdt

Montana’s Democrats should allocate all of their
resources to Mike Cooney’s bid for governor

cooney_left_150

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Lt. Gov. Mike Cooney has closed the range on his Republican opponent, U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte, to just one point (46 % C, 47 % G) according to a poll conducted by the Global Strategy Group for the Democratic Governors Association during the third week of August.

Six-hundred likely voters were interviewed by telephone. A one-page summary of the topline results is available, but the crosstabs are not. FiveThirtyEight classifies this as a partisan poll, but the methodology appears to be sound.

An Emerson College poll conducted in late July reported Cooney was trailing by 8.4 points.

governor_12_september      Double size      PDF for printing

…read the rest

 

11 – 16 September 2020 — 0829 mdt

Flathead Memo’s editor and janitor
injured in freak fall in Missoula

conner_jrc_mug_200_15_sept
Update, 16 September. This photograph was taken shortly before sunset yesterday. My binocular vision has returned, the pain has subsided, and I’m getting stronger and steadier. Except for my right wrist, which is broken. The coming days, as one might expect, will be consumed with medical appointments, but I think I’ll be able to do some blogging.

11 September. I’m standing down from blogging for an indefinite period. Wednesday, while in Missoula for a surgical consultation, I tripped on a sidewalk a block east of St. Patrick’s Hospital. No broken bones, but plenty of painful contusions and heavy bleeding. And, as you can see from this morning’s selfie, narrowed vision. At the moment, I'm having a rough time, but I'll recover and return to blogging.

A lot of good people, family, friends, neighbors, are helping me get through this, and I thank them. — James Conner

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9 September 2020 — 0534 mdt

The nation’s Covid-19 new cases curve
has bent downward; Montana’s has flattened,
and its effective reproduction rate is ≈ 1

The Covid-19 plots below deliver news for Montana that’s mostly good. Montana’s new cases per million persons rate now matches the national average, but the national curve now bends downward while Montana’s has only flattened. The flattening started in late July, suggesting that Gov. Bullock’s mask-up mandate is having a positive effect.

…read the rest

 

6 September 2020 — 1731 mdt

Wear your damn mask, cover your damn nose

Let’s confront store employees who flout mask-up rules,
and let’s file formal complaints with our boards of health

At Walmart this morning, the checker wore his mask below his nose in defiance of our governor’s mask-up directive. I confronted him. Yesterday, at Super 1, my bagger also wore his mask below his nose. I confronted him, too.

Super 1, and not just in downtown Kalispell, is becoming notorious for letting its employees violate the letter as well as the spirit of Gov. Bullock’s directive. I’ve received reports from trusted sources that this scoffmask behavior has occurred all summer, which means the stores’ managers know about it and either don’t care or actually condone it.

…read the rest

 

5 September 2020 — 1835 mdt

Commissioners Mitchell & Mr. Covid naysayed

Flathead Commissioners Holmquist & Mitchell
vote for an all mail ballot election

Pam Holmquist and Phil Mitchell came lately to Jesus on a mail ballot election, but to Jesus they did come. Thursday morning they saw the light, joining the Church of Covid-19 Prevention in time to rescue poll workers, poll watchers, and voters, from the risk of catching the SARS Cov-2 virus while conducting an at the polls election during a pandemic.

I thank them. Everyone should thank them. Their reversal required not just a willingness to learn: it required considerable courage. Although they did the right thing, some of their fellow Republicans never will forgive them.

What brought about this change of heart? I think large segments of the medical community lobbied for an all mail ballot. Covid-19 cases are on the upswing in the Flathead. My sources report that Kalispell Regional Hospital’s Covid surge capacity is almost maxed out.

…read the rest

 

4 September 2020 — 0525 mdt

Here are the metrics and Flesch-Kincaid readability scores for
the Biden, Harris, Trump, and Pence, acceptance speeches

Joe Biden’s rather brief acceptance speech may have been the most plainly and simply worded acceptance speech in American history — and that, reports Politico’s John Harris, was by design. More on that in a moment.

Donald Trump’s traditional get the crowd roaring acceptance speech was almost twice as long, and much more complexly worded — and that, too, was by design.

The readability scores and metrics of the speeches reveal how much the Democratic and Republican acceptance speeches differ:

…read the rest

 

1 September 2020 — 1339mdt

Plus, the irrefutable case for a mail ballot

My 50 years of voting in person at the polls
on election day officially ended yesterday

JRC_Voting_300w
School board election, 2014

Beginning in 1968, when the voting age was still 21, I have always cast my ballot at my local polling place on election day. Doing so never was inconvenient, let alone burdensome. I was there gladly, joyfully discharging an obligation, and exercising a right, of citizenship. The presence of my friends, neighbors, and fellow citizens, reminded me that my vote affected others, causing me, I believe, to cast a more altruistic vote than I might have sitting alone at my kitchen table surrounded by bills straining my budget.

Unofficially, my 50-year run ended in December, 2018, when I was hospitalized for kidney failure. I knew then that in my weakened condition I had to avoid crowds during the influenza season. I resolved to switch to an absentee ballot. But I could not bring myself to apply for an absentee ballot until Sunday evening, when I emailed a PDF of my signed application to Flathead County’s elections department. Yesterday at 1413 MDT, I received an email confirmation that I am now on the permanent absentee ballot list (thank you, Monica, for confirming so quickly).

…read the rest