Tuesday, January 4, 2022
Monday, January 3, 2022
Sunday, January 2, 2022
Alex Berenson still thinks The Atlantic was wrong about Georgia's Experiment in Human Sacrifice
You can still read Alex Berenson, at Substack, as I do. He continues to be an important source for stories our media continues to ignore (censor) because they don't fit the narrative. But sometimes the takes can be odd.
Alex today still thinks the Georgia story way back when was a bad covid take, and that Germany's troubles presently somehow invalidate The Atlantic's positive opinion on the record of Europe's biggest country outside of Russia.
Neither point is defensible.
The US State of Georgia today ranks 10th worst in the US for deaths per million of its population, at 2961/m. Mississippi is our very worst, at 3511/m. In between there, there are red and blue states, including New Jersey and New York.
But Germany today is at 1361/m. Worst place in the world Peru by contrast is at 6336/m.
Germany's done pretty damn well considering it has a population of 83 million compared with Georgia's paltry <10 million.
The situation in Georgia to date, in fact, is 118% worse than in Germany. And if Georgia were a country, it would be ranked in the top 15 worst performers in the world today for deaths per million.
I think Alex is letting animus cloud his judgment. Animus certainly for The Atlantic, but perhaps also for Germany.
Gee, why would that be?
Georgia's done a very poor job. Not as poor as New Jersey and New York, and not poor enough by comparison with them to be singled out the way they were. "Stupid hicks" elitism, right? On that we agree. But Germany's done remarkably well, and we should care enough to understand why.
But Alex is too busy to go into that right now. The drive-by-shooting of the "little homily on the brilliance of Germany’s Covid response" will have to do for now.
COVID-19 in the USA by the numbers: About as infectious as the flu, but 10-13 times more deadly in the first two years of the pandemic
Alpha and Delta have produced 22% more cases in 2021 in the USA but 20% fewer deaths
Axios finally updated its Variant Tracker: So far "Delta" still dominates in the US, with Omicron most prevalent in Louisiana at just shy of 27%
Check it out here.
Saturday, January 1, 2022
Thursday, December 30, 2021
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Sociologist writing for TIME Magazine caricatures First Baptist Church, Dallas, Texas, but doesn't interview a single actual member of the church
Attending the event in person allowed me to appreciate how central Trump remains to white evangelicalism. ...
Standing in line 2.5 hours before the event, I chatted with a group of five elderly women who all came together. All were committed churchgoers in the Dallas area, but none were members at First Baptist. ...
There was Bill, a repairman who had taken public transportation to get to First Baptist. He was not a member either, but had always been a huge fan of Trump and was eager to see him in person. ...
And there was Carlos. Like Bill, Carlos was visiting First Baptist from elsewhere in the city along with a friend. ...
Trump’s appeal Sunday morning extends far beyond the First Baptist faithful. Evangelical visitors from around the city had come to cheer for their President. They were convinced he’d been treated unfairly. And they pined to see him back in office. ...
For the vast majority of white evangelicals in the U.S., like those visiting First Baptist Dallas on Sunday, Trump is still their warrior. ... over two-thirds of white evangelicals felt the 2020 election had been stolen from Trump.
More.
This guy should get out more and document the adulation directed at Democrats visiting America's black churches and insinuate in a column about how 92% of the nation's blacks voted for Joe Biden in 2020 because they're duped by religion or something.
Monday, December 27, 2021
Biden promised to shut down the virus, now says there's no federal solution
Which is even more odd since he has mandated vaccines for the employees of large companies.
The guy is obviously too old upstairs for the job.
"There is no federal solution. This gets solved at the state level,"
Biden responded, before mentioning another Republican governor.
Saturday, December 25, 2021
John Tamny remains as confused as a thinker and as obtuse as a writer as he has ever been
John Tamny has made some progress, however.
He now admits that some of his views are "fringe".
Which is amusing, since we've known that since Russell Kirk demonstrated long ago how the libertarians have always been "chirping sectarians".
A case in point of the continuing confusion:
Tamny expresses fawning admiration for George Will's latest collection of his columns, which opens asserting the priority of the study of history.
But Tamny later avers without the slightest awareness of self-contradiction that "The talented people, the unequal people, have a tendency to run from the present and past."
Nostalgia is "dangerous".
Do make up your mind for once, John.
The seemingly interminable review is here.