6 August 2018

IF IT PLEASES THE COURT POWER STRUCTURE…

1700 by Jeff Hess

Previously, Oliver examined elected judges and public defenders.

And no, our District Attorney County Prosecutor is not a white dog…

5 August 2018

ALL EYES ARE ON AN OHIO ELECTION, AGAIN…

2000 by Jeff Hess

[Update on 7 August at 0713: Trump crashes Columbus rally for Troy Balderson.]

On Tuesday, Ohio voters in the 12th Congressional District go to the polls in a special election that pits Republican Troy Balderson against Democrat Danny O’Connor and the stakes are higher (and closer) than we’re used to. So high, in fact, that we have enough dirty (Russian?) tricks to warm even Richard Milhous Nixon’s cold shriveled heart.

John Fund, reporting in Columbus, Ohio, Is America’s Test Market for National Review, writes:

Everyone who’s looking for midterm clues is watching Tuesday’s special election for Congress in Ohio’s twelfth congressional district, which includes part of Columbus. President Trump inserted himself into the race by holding a rally for GOP candidate Troy Balderson on Saturday, so the election will also be viewed as a referendum on him. The latest independent poll by Monmouth University shows Balderson with a razor-thin lead, 44 to 43 percent, over Democrat Dennis O’Connor.

It’s appropriate that Columbus is holding such a bellwether race. The area has long been known as a favorite for companies testing products. Its demographics are almost identical to those of the rest of the country. “It was a microcosm of the U.S., in that what happens here will probably happen elsewhere,” Shashi Matta, at Ohio State’s Fisher College of Business, told Columbus Monthly in 2015.

Small wonder then that Tuesday’s special election there is getting so much attention.

Small wonder indeed. Ohioans know that you can pretty much point a camera at random at a Republican rally and catch an embarrassment. Jeremy Pelzer did so and grabbed this great photo. David Boddiger, reporting in These Trump Fans Might Want to Reevaluate Their Wardrobe has more details.

5 August 2018

MY JOB IS TO WRITE FOR PEOPLE TO ENJOY…

1800 by Jeff Hess

5 August 2018

ONLY PEOPLE, NOT CORPORATIONS, CAN CREATE…

1700 by Jeff Hess

Ten years ago I had the pleasure and honor of meeting a fiddler, the inventor of the halogen light bulb, Elmer Fridrich. People like Elmer, cast in the mold of Thomas Alva Edison, are few and far between today. Do you know who invented the LED (before his death, Elmer thought he had the invention to top the LED but never completed his work), the Plasma TV, the iPod? Me neither. We are diminished by our ignorance.

Ralph Nader agrees.

In elementary school they taught us the names of inventors. Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, Robert Fulton the steamboat, Alexander Graham Bell the telephone, and Thomas Alva Edison the electric light bulb. Nowadays we rarely know the names of the inventors of modern technology—think biotechnology, nanotechnology, pharmaceutical technology, safety technology. Not every breakthrough is invented by a single person, but there are still clusters of people inventing new things each year.

Over twenty years ago, my associates searched for inventors of the air bag so we could celebrate their achievements. It’s not as if the names of such inventors are not known—their names often appear in technical publications or in the U.S. Patent Office’s archives. But inventors are not featured in the popular media or in our school courses. Corporations and their brands are credited for the work of their staff.

Some may think the era of the lone inventor is over and only collectives of inventors produce most of the significant breakthroughs. But you wouldn’t Continue Reading »

4 August 2018

BRENDA SUPPORTS MY CONSUMER BUYCOTTS TOO…!

1800 by Jeff Hess

180804 brenda the civil disobedience penguin culture wars consumer boycotts andrew marlton first dog on the moon

4 August 2018

HATING YOUR OPPRESSORS ISN’T RACISM…

1700 by Jeff Hess

So, I’m a white guy. I’m the breathing embodiment of centuries of really bad actions by the white guys who went before me. I also, as I have said before, get that, through no merit of my own, my status as a white guy living in the United States, puts me in a global one percent. I didn’t do any of the bad stuff, but by virtue of my privilege, I’ve always felt an obligation to do what I can to make the world better by not being one of the white guys who did, or continue to do, all that bad stuff. Some people agree with me and some people don’t. I get that.

Here’s my starting point: racism/xenophobia/fear of the other is a top-down phenomenon and in the world today that means, almost exclusively, that white people (really mostly white guys) can’t be the target of racism/xenophobia/fear of the other. I know that when a white guy gets slammed for begin a white guy, he can think that’s oppression. He’s wrong. That’s karma.

So when white guys get their panties in a bunch over Sarah Jeong joining the editorial board of The New York Times, I wasn’t impressed. Libby Watson, reporting in The New York Times Really Fucked This One Up for Splinter, writes:

Yesterday, the New York Times announced that it had hired Sarah Jeong, who is by all accounts an extremely talented tech reporter, as a new member of its editorial board. Today, Jim Hoft, once accurately called the “dumbest man on the internet” by Media Matters, published a collection of Jeong’s tweets which he deemed “racist filth.”

The tweets were not racist; they were jokes about white people, which is a different thing that is not racism. Among Jeong’s supposed offenses: saying “white men are bullshit,” that she couldn’t enjoy Breaking Bad because the premise is just “white people being miserable,” and that “it must be so boring to be white.”

Watson, as the headline suggests, thinks the Times ought to have just ignored the story. I think she’s wrong and that the Times did what was right. She wrote:

The New York Times really fucked this one up. Instead of ignoring this ridiculous complaint and letting it die—which it would have, because who the fuck cares what The Gateway Pundit is doing—they have validated it. (At least they didn’t fire her, you might say, but even responding to this garbage sets a terrible precedent and legitimizes a completely illegitimate, bad faith campaign to discredit Jeong and the Times itself.)

Now, according to the Times, it is fair to say that being rude about white people serves “to feed the vitriol that we too often see on social media,” and that her tweets represent a “type of rhetoric” at all and not just… jokes, nothingnesses, completely mundane and honestly quite boring observations that have no wider importance or meaning. Do we think Sarah Jeong actually enjoys chasing down and bullying old white men for fun? Do we think she earnestly wants to “cancel” white people? No, because that doesn’t mean anything—“cancel” doesn’t mean “do genocide to.”

Well, it is fair to say that being rude about white people serves “to feed the vitriol that we too often see on social media,”. Being rude is not always bad. It’s not always helpful, either, but that’s discourse.

What Watson gets right, however, is why Joeng’s tweets, are not racist. She writes:

Making jokes about white people isn’t the same as making racist jokes about black people, or Asian people, or Jews, or gay people, or any other historically oppressed minority. This is a very simple principle, but one that many aggrieved whites find difficult to accept. You can’t say, “Well, imagine if you replaced ‘white’ with ‘black’ in those tweets,” because those two things are not equally replaceable. As much as you might find it desperately oppressive to not be able to use the n-word when you sing along to rap songs, there has never been a government-endorsed legal or societal campaign of oppression against whites. White people can be oppressed by other means, such as through gender or economics, but whites in the U.S. have never been systematically oppressed on the basis of their race alone.

In fact, white people in the United States have had it comparatively super good in large part because of their oppression of other races; when you, a white person, express or act upon your prejudice towards oppressed groups, you are taking part in that oppression. You contribute to the project of belittling, keeping down, otherizing, and exploiting historically oppressed minorities. When a member of an oppressed community complains about white people, that is different, because it is the whites who are doing the oppression. It is just different, which things often are.

None of that changes if white guys become, in fact, a minority because, we’ve always been a minority and there the real power to oppress and marginalized has always been held by a minority of the minority, that tiny portion of the population, that 0.01 perenct that holds more wealth and power than the rest of us. That’s the dirty little reality. I have more in common with the 99.99 percent than I do with our national/global billionaire class.

There have always been, and continue to be—think Donnie Azoff—white guys convinced that they too can be part of the 0.01, but Horatio Alger was a myth. The Johnson’s of Rock Ridge, however, had the right idea.

David French disagrees and takes aim at liberals like me. French, writing in Yes, Anti-White Racism Exists for National Review, makes his case:

Earlier today, the New York Times announced that it had hired Sarah Jeong to join its editorial board, and — like clockwork — controversial old tweets promptly surfaced. In them, Jeong expressed some rather interesting views of “[dumba** f***ing] white people,” musing about how much joy she gets “out of being cruel to old white men” and how “white men are [bullsh**].” [Oh come on David, we’re adults here. reading dumbass fucking or bullshit isn’t going makes us faint. JH] For good measure she also compared white people to “groveling goblins” and questioned why they’re “genetically predisposed to burn faster in the sun.” In a statement, Jeong expressed her regret and explained that she was engaging in “counter-trolling” designed to mimic the language of racists who harassed her online.

The Times is standing by its hire. Good. It’s time to end termination-by-Twitter and debate bad ideas head-on. (As for whether the Times and other elite outlets will display the same fortitude when a conservative is the target of online outrage, I’ll believe it when I see it.)

But it’s one thing to argue that Jeong should be given a chance to prove herself at the Times, and another entirely to justify the content of the tweets themselves. Yet that’s what part of left-wing Twitter did.

The argument isn’t just that the tweets were satire. Rather, numerous liberals took on the very notion that anti-white racism exists, or matters at all. [Emphasis mine, JH]

And then there’s this from yet another white guy. Just in case you can’t bear to read the whole piece, Damon Young, writing in The 10 Worst Sentences From Andrew Sullivan’s ‘When Racism Is Fit to Print,’ Ranked From ‘STFU Andy’ to ‘Does He Have a Concussion?’ for The Root, pulls out the high lowlights beginning with:

10.“The neo-Marxist analysis of society, in which we are all mere appendages of various groups of oppressors and oppressed, and in which the oppressed definitionally cannot be at fault, is now the governing philosophy of almost all liberal media.”

Andrew, Andrew and Andrew. That has always been the governing philosophy of liberal media. Of course, finding liberal media is much harder than just pointing to anyone who thinks our president is less than presidential.

3 August 2018

WHO YOU GONNA CALL…?

2200 by Jeff Hess

3 August 2018

WANT A REAL HOAX…? THINK VOTER FRAUD…

2100 by Jeff Hess

President Donald John Trump doesn’t care about Democracy, The United States of America, the Presidency, his family, his friends or anyone except himself. Every single action he takes is focused on one goal and one goal only: protecting his brand. That is why he so ferociously attacks anyone who questions a reality—think the crowd size at his inauguration—that throws shade on the greatness of Trump.

When it was revealed that Trump one the electoral college in a more or less mediocre way—not the biggest since Reagan—but lost the popular vote, the President lashed out at a shadow electorate of fraudulent voters and empaneled a commission to prove the voter fraud. Like the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, period, both in person and around the globe, that lie has gone down in flames:

Andrew Gumbel, writing in Documents disprove White House voter fraud claims, says ex-member of Trump commission for The Guardian, reports:

A review of documents has shown White House claims to have unearthed “substantial evidence” of voter fraud were false, according to a junior member of Donald Trump’s short-lived commission on election integrity.

Matt Dunlap, the top elections official in Maine, said he had examined 1,800 commission documents that were denied to him while he served and that he had since obtained through a court order. He found nothing in them to substantiate the claims made by the commission’s vice-chair, Kris Kobach, and the White House when the commission was disbanded in January.

“The sections on evidence of voter fraud are glaringly empty,” Dunlap reported in an official letter to Kobach and the vice-president, Mike Pence, the commission chair. “After months of litigation that should not have been necessary, I can report that the statements by Vice Chair Kobach and the White House were, in fact, false.

I’m sure there are statements made by the president and his staff that are demonstrably true, but how could you tell?

3 August 2018

THE PEOPLE, THE PRESS AND THE PRESIDENT…

2000 by Jeff Hess

I make a point of sharing with my students how I see the difference between stupidity and ignorance. To be stupid is to be incapable of learning. To be ignorant is to have not yet learned. (In between those two, of course, is willful ignorance, but that’s another disucssion.) None of us will live long enough to learn all that we want to learn, let along all that can be learned, but we can, as I do, wake each morning celebrating the reality that we can lay our heads down at the end of the day a little less ignorant.

This video—from 1 May 2017—is a prime example for me. Before I watched WALTER MOSLEY SPEAKS ON BLACK AMERICA… I did not know of either CUNY75 or BRIC TV (Brooklyn Information and Culture).

After watching, I wonder what this panel would say today, more than 15 months later.

3 August 2018

HOW DO WE FIGHT TERMS AND CONDITIONS…?

1900 by Jeff Hess

So the other day I logged into my online banking account to see if a check I’d deposited had cleared. Before I could login, however, I had to tell my bank that I had read and understood all 24,507 words on 49 pages of New York Community Bank’s terms and conditions. Now I’m a fast reader, but I’m sure that reading, and understanding, 49 pages of legalese would take me more than two hours. No one has time for that. What was I to do? I needed to get to work so I scrolled to the bottom, clicked I accept, and checked my account.

Sir Robert Salt understood. This bullshit has to stop. What can be done?

Back in 2014, in Will you read this article about terms and conditions? You really should do for The Guardian, Robert Glancy wrote:

We live in a time of terms and conditions. Never before have we signed or agreed so many. But one thing hasn’t changed: we still rarely read them.

According to a Fairer Finance survey, small print for some companies now runs to more than 30,000 words (the length of a short novel) and, unsurprisingly, 73 percent of people admit to not reading all the fine print. Of those who do, only 17 percent say they understand it.

For a few years I was one of the 27 percent ploughing through the turgid fine print. Researching a book about a lawyer, I became obsessed with contracts. Then one day, after reading reams of legal gobbledygook, I experienced something similar to the moment when Neo sees the cascading Matrix code: I saw that below our day-to-day lives runs a confluence of tiny rules shaping our reality. This underworld only bursts to the surface when things go wrong. Like when you crash your scooter in Bali and realise that your travel insurance doesn’t cover scooter accidents. Or in my case, when I misread (ignored) the fine print of my New Zealand residency and was almost deported.

What lurks among the 24,507 words I agreed to yesterday so I could check my bank balance? I’m actually going to read the behemoth and track how long it takes me to a.) read every word or b.) slit my wrist.

Wish me luck, I’m going in…

Terms and Conditions

Please read and accept our Terms & Conditions.

Make sure to scroll down to the end of the document to accept the Terms and Conditions and submit your acknowledgement.

New York Community Bank Online and Mobile Banking Agreement & Disclosure Statement

If you wish to print this Agreement, please click on the link provided here.

This New York Community Bank Online and Mobile Banking Agreement (“Agreement”) sets forth the terms and conditions that govern your use of the online banking products and services for accounts held at New York Community Bank (“NYCB”), including its divisions and Affiliates, that are accessed through the Internet, including mybankingdirect.com (“NYCB Online,” for a particular service of Continue Reading »

3 August 2018

WALTER MOSLEY SPEAKS ON BLACK AMERICA

1800 by Jeff Hess

I’m ashamed to read that this video posted 144 days ago and I’m only watching it today.

3 August 2018

BREATHING WHILE BLACK IN AMERICA, PART VII…

1700 by Jeff Hess

And the hits just keep rolling in…

Swanky South Beach Hotel That Allegedly Called Haitian Employees ‘Slaves’ to Pay $2.5 Million Settlement

White Woman Snatches Protest Sign From Black Woman, Cries to Police When She Gets Punched in the Face [Updated]

‘All I Did Was Be Black’: Smith College Employee Calls Cops on Black Student Just Trying to Eat Her Damn Food

#BrooklynBecky: Cops Called on Suspicious-Looking ‘Black’ Woman Waiting for Uber in the Rain

Massachusetts college apologizes after police called on black student eating lunch

‘I’m Grateful Because He’s OK’: New Mom Who Went Into Early Labor After Allegedly Being Kicked by Off-Duty Cop Speaks Out

#ServingYourNeighborhoodWhileBlack: Calif. Safeway Calls Cops on Black Woman Donating to the Homeless, Accuses Her of Shoplifting

Cue the World’s Smallest Violin: White Driver Who Followed Black Man, Called Him Slurs, Now Whines About Life Being Ruined

Minneapolis Police Officers Will Not Face Criminal Charges After Gunning Down Fleeing Black Man [Updated]

Mississippi Cop Caught on Video Using Stun Gun on Handcuffed Shoplifting Suspect

Ving Rhames Recalls Being Held at Gunpoint by Police at His Home After A Neighbor Called in a Break-In by a ‘Large Black Man’

Previously…

2 August 2018

DO YOU SUPPOSE SODA CRACKERS HELP…?

1900 by Jeff Hess

180802 mr. fish dwayne booth political cartoonists mourning sickness

2 August 2018

PRESIDENT OBAMA ENDORSES 16 OHIO DEMOCRATS…

1800 by Jeff Hess

President Barack Hussein Obama has endorsed 81 candidates in the 6 November mid-term elections. Of those, nearly one-in-five are on the ballot in Ohio. Candidates in our state also received more endorsements than any other state.

The message there is, of course, that Ohio really, really matters. While Stephen Crockett, reporting in Barack Obama Reminds America What a Real President Looks Like, Endorses 81 Candidates for The Root, does not explain why some Democrats are not on the list—like Senator Sherrod Campbell Brown or the Democrat running in my house district (Ohio-16) Susan Moran Palmer—there are multiple possible reason that may have nothing to do with fitness or positions.

Of those endorsed, Crockett writes:

On Wednesday, Obama announced that he was endorsing 81 Democratic candidates in the November midterm elections to right America’s ship because that’s what a real president does even when he’s out of office. According to USA Today, Obama said that he’s “eager” to help straighten out them imbalance of Congressional seats and get this thing back on track. And while he didn’t call out the president by name, he did note that he’s tired of his bitch ass willing to lend his support to those who will actually Make America Great Like When Obama Was in Office.

“I’m confident that, together, they’ll strengthen this country we love by restoring opportunity that’s broadly shared, repairing our alliances and standing in the world, and upholding our fundamental commitment to justice, fairness, responsibility, and the rule of law,” Obama said in a statement viewed by USA Today.

“But first, they need our votes—and I’m eager to make the case for why Democratic candidates deserve our votes this fall.”

Here’s President Obmas’s list:

Richard Cordray (Governor)
Betty Sutton (Lt. Governor)
Steve Dettelbach (Attorney General)
Kathleen Clyde (Secretary of State)
Zack Space (Auditor)
Aftab Pureval (U.S. House, OH-1)
Jill Schiller (U.S. House, OH-2)
Phil Robinson (State House, District 6)
Stephanie Howse (State House, District 11)
Mary Lightbody (State House, District 19)
Beth Liston (State House, District 21)
Allison Russo (State House, District 24)
Erica Crawley (State House, District 26)
Tavia Galonski (State House, District 35)
Casey Weinstein (State House, District 37)
Taylor Sappington (State House, District 94)

Five of the 16 are for statewide office. Of the remaining 10, two are running for Congress in southwestern Ohio and eight are Ohio State House candidates. Four—6, 11, 35 and 37—are in Northeastern Ohio. Three more—19, 21 and 24 are in central and east central Ohio and the remaining district—94—is in southeastern Ohio.

2 August 2018

STEPHANIE RUHL’S FACE AT 3:20 IS SPOT ON…

1700 by Jeff Hess

All of Seth Myers’ Closer Look is good, of course, but the one look on Stephanie Ruhle’s face at timemark 3:20 is more than worth the price of admission.

1 August 2018

THE F-BOMBS ARE FALLING IN OHIO’S ELECTIONS…

1900 by Jeff Hess

I confess that I was disappointed that the congressional race in Ohio’s 16th House District where Republican Anthony Gonzalez is running against Democrat Susan Moran Palmer to replace James Bupkis Renacci who clearly picked the wrong race in the wrong year to level in politics and is poised to go down in flames in the senate race against Democrat Sherrod Brown.

That Republican Representative William Leslie Johnson, who represents Ohio’s 6th district which includes my hometown of Marietta, was mentioned as one of several Republicans who one Republican strategist said ought to run like your hair’s on fucking fire. Democrats have enthusiasm out the fucking wazoo right now.

That quote comes from Henry Gomez, who, reporting in Ohio Republicans Fear A Blue Wave If Democrats Win Next Week’s Special Election for BuzzFeed News, writes:

Next week, if Republicans lose Ohio’s 12th Congressional District, a seat they’ve held since the early years of the Reagan administration, their nationwide prospects of maintaining control of the House will dim.

But a loss in that special election also would signal acute trouble for several Republican incumbents in Ohio, where the party has dominated the political landscape for much of the last 30 years.

How high are the stakes? State Sen. Troy Balderson, the party’s nominee in the Ohio 12th, has enthusiastic endorsements from both President Donald Trump and Gov. John Kasich — political enemies who have few mutual allies. Vice President Mike Pence campaigned in the district this week, and Trump is expected to visit this weekend. National Republican groups are spending millions of dollars on the race. Meanwhile, Democrat Danny O’Connor, an elected county officeholder from the vote-rich Columbus area, has positioned himself as a moderate.

In interviews with more than a half-dozen Republican operatives, most of whom are cautiously optimistic that Balderson will win, three fears emerged: that a low-turnout election at the height of summer vacation season could tip the contest to O’Connor; that several other Ohio House districts drawn overwhelmingly in their favor could become more competitive; and that the Democrats’ momentum could carry into an open governor’s race that in recent weeks has trended in Democrats’ direction.

Palmer’s chances aside, Democrats cannot afford to complacent in the remaining 90 days before the mid-term election in November. Millions of dollars in dark money are pouring into the state and frankly, not even Brown can feel safe when that kind of cash can just appear from nowhere overnight.

1 August 2018

ROLDO THE MUCKRAKER IN PLAIN DEALING

1800 by Jeff Hess

180801 plain dealing roldo bartimole dave davis joan mazzolini

Dave Davis and Joan Mazzolini titled their chapter on Roldo Bartimole: A muckraker comes to Cleveland and founds Point of Viǝw. [I flipped the ǝ, the way it appeared on the POV flag, JH].

Roldo—the journalist Ralph Nader called: arguably Cleveland’s greatest investigative reporter of the past half century—is one of the 25 stories told in the ebook, Plain Dealing: Cleveland Journalists Tell Their Stories released today by Davis and Mazzolini.

I read the chapter—pages 138-166—on Roldo first, of course and he’s also mentioned on pages xiv, 49, 174, 194, 334 (the picture that won’t die), 339, 362 and 366. I’ll hit the rest later this evening.

1 August 2018

LIBRARIES ARE OUR TRUE PALACES OF LEARNING…

1700 by Jeff Hess

189891 biblioteca do convento de mafra portugal massimo listri taschen libraries

I’ve always been a sucker for these kinds of books—I ordered another of Listri’s books this morning—because one library, the Carnegie Library in my hometown of Marietta, Ohio, played such an outsized role in my life.

31 July 2018

WHEN YOU’RE DEEP IN A HOLE, STOP DIGGING…!

1800 by Jeff Hess

I don’t read sports’ pages. I even have the whole section on hide. Sometimes, however, I get a flash as the loading page gets ahead of settings and I catch a glimpse. That happened this afternoon and I got a flash of the headline: An open letter to the NFL’s owners by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. I’m glad I didn’t miss this one.

Abdul-Jabbar writes:

Dear NFL owners:

Whew! What a tumultuous year for your league. Slipping attendance and ratings. Continuing concussion controversy. Lawsuits from cheerleaders who refuse to shut up and smile. Domestic violence accusations against players. The Papa John’s founder mouthing off about something or other. Players taking a national anthem knee (NAK, for short). President Trump’s “problematic” rambling. Commissioner Roger Goodell under siege from, well, everybody. Bet it makes you fellas long for the good old days when all you had to worry about was Janet Jackson’s nip slip. Where’s faithful Hodor when you need someone to hold the door against relentless attackers?

Then you made it worse.

What follows are 943 sublime words that I couldn’t even begin to expand upon.

Go.

Read.

Then tell the NFL owners to go fuck themselves.

31 July 2018

SACHA BARON COHEN IS A COMEDIC GENIUS…

1700 by Jeff Hess

Mano Singham has, rightly in my opinion, identified the key weakness on the right that allows Sacha Baron Cohen to exploit politicians who, if they had a shred of common sense, would never let Cohen in the door: their obsequious relationship with Israel.

In How reflexive support for Israel aided Sacha Baron Cohen, Singham writes:

Cohen got [Republican Georgia state legislator Jason] Spencer to behave this way by posing as an Israeli counter-terrorism expert. In fact, as Allison Drager writes, Cohen has repeatedly duped Republicans to say bigoted and hateful things by exploiting their reflexive support for anything that Israel does.

A facet that fascinates me in all this is that, unlike the tactics of James O’Keefe who relied on editing to twist the story, Cohen appears to just let the recording run and allow Republicans to be hoisted on their petards.

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