Morning Links | 30 Apr 20

Good morning and Happy Coronahog Day! Feels like déjà vu all over again, doesn’t it? Seven weeks of waking up to the same shelter-in-place orders every morning. The only thing that changes are fresh examples of irrational and (most likely) unconstitutional government overreach.

Mom: “OK, so why are you here?”
Officer: “Because your daughter is going to play at other people’s home and you’re allowing it to happen.”

[…]

Officer: “Stop having your kid go by other people’s home.”

That is a disturbing exchange for many reasons, not least of which is the patronizing attitude of the male officer, haranguing the mom about whether she understands that “we’re in a stay-at-home order right now.”

No “Officer Friendly” smiles, no laughs about how ridiculous the times are we find ourselves in, no modest chagrin over having to politely ask the mom to keep the child home. Nope. She gets scolded by a power-happy hall monitor for not having a signed pass.

More disturbing is the disequilibrium it causes in us. We’re watching a police action over an event so universal—a child playing at a friend’s house—that we feel like we’re having an out-of-body experience. It just feels so wrong.

Most unsettling is the implied question lurking under the surface: who snitched on the families?

To be fair to the officers, they’re just carrying out orders. But that’s what’s causing my cognitive vertigo.

Back on March 12, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers issued Executive Order #72 that declared that a “public health emergency” existed in Wisconsin. On March 25, his office issued a ‘safer-at-home’ order that specifically said, “all public and private gatherings of any number of people that are not part of a single household or living unit are prohibited.” That meant, as Evers tweeted, “no sleepovers, no play dates, and no dinner parties with friends and neighbors.”

His executive order and both ‘safer at home’ orders (they’ve extended the lock down until May 26 through a second order) appealed to specific provisions of Wisconsin law. I read them all and, while I’m no legal expert, it isn’t apparent to me on which statute Evers bases his authority to ban “private” gatherings among neighbors.

Under Section 252.02(3) of the Wisconsin Statutes, cited in the safer at home orders, the Department of Health Services “may close schools and forbid public gatherings in schools, churches, and other places to control outbreaks and epidemics” (emphasis mine). Note that it says nothing about private gatherings.

The only other provision that might plausibly be interpreted as authority to impose restrictions on private gatherings is in Section 323.12(4)(b), which says that the governor may “Issue such orders as he or she deems necessary for the security of persons and property.” Does that include forbidding private citizens from visiting their neighbors?

While there is a place for emergency rule, this series of orders in Wisconsin—and similar orders in many other states—seem to violate our essential constitutional rights to associate, assemble, worship and travel. At what point do state restrictions on individual liberty become unconstitutional?

I’m all for cooperating with federal, state and local authorities when asked to do my part in a crisis, but even efforts to keep the public safe during a declared crisis have to be constitutional.

Morning Links | 29 Apr 20

Morning kids! It’s Hump Day, week 297 of the Wu Flu Panic of 2020.

Today’s Morning Links feature looks a little different. As I wrote in my post about leaving and rejoining Facebook a couple of weeks ago, “I’m tinkering with features and experimenting with new ways of designing and sharing content.” You can expect that things will change and morph around here for a while.

Instead of collecting links and presenting them through a series of pages, I’m going to try and integrate them with a morning vox mihi, a brief commentary about one or two subjects I’m currently preoccupied with. Let’s try one today and see how it goes.

Yesterday I wrote that I’m personally getting a bit restless about the continuing lock down as evidence mounts that the elites to whom we turn our lonely, socially-distanced eyes have no idea what the deuce they’re doing when it comes to the Chinese Lung Pox.

Also yesterday, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the United States passed 1 million with more than 58,000 deaths. That’s significant.

When this thing became serious and there was a general consensus among our national leaders that we all needed to work together to “flatten the curve” and “slow the spread” of the virus, we were willing to do what was thought to be good for the country and for our fellow man.

We were willing to put up with what we were told was a major but temporary disruption to our lives—and to the booming economy we were enjoying—if it meant that we could avoid 2.2 million American deaths.

It’s now clear that we didn’t know enough about the virus to make a truly informed decision commensurate with the actual impact the virus would have. And while that’s okay—we don’t expect that anyone can be an instant expert on a novel virus—it’s time to acknowledge that no matter how we got here, the curve is flattened and it’s time to get back to work with common sense precautions.

We’ve learned that the virus was in the US earlier than thought. We’ve learned that it’s older adults and people whose health is already compromised who are at highest risk. We’ve learned that the disease may not be as deadly as we thought (or maybe it’s worse). We’ve learned that a vaccine may be available sooner than expected.

We never saw the massive overcrowding at hospitals we were told to expect (projections in New York at the end of March were 140,000 beds and 40,000 ventilators needed). In New York City, the 1,000-bed hospital ship, USNS Comfort, is returning from Manhattan to its base in Norfolk, Virginia, having treated just 182 patients.

Two California doctors have tested more than 5,000 patients and have found that the flu and the Coronavirus have similar death rates. In other words, while there have been a significant number of deaths involving COVID-19, the hyper-panic of millions of deaths haven’t materialized.

And yet we have governors in Illinois and California and Michigan planning to extend the lock down. Why? For what purpose? At some point these measures are no longer about “safety” but about extending their top-down control that encroaches on our freedoms.

In Michigan, they reached that point a few weeks ago when Gov. Whitmer (D) declared that “residents cannot leave their homes except for essential services such as food or medical supplies, or engage in outdoor physical activity” and banned travel to second homes and vacation properties. She’s being sued for depriving citizens of their constitutional rights to associate with others under the First Amendment and to due process.

It was Benjamin Franklin who said, “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.” In a free society that can feel the ropes being tightened about its wrists, you can expect a reaction. So far, ours has been feeble.

As Heather MacDonald observed, “Every day the lockdown continues, its implicit message that we are all going to die if we engage in normal life is reinforced.”

It’s time to open the country and get back to work.

Morning Links | 28 Apr 20

(Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)

Good morning! It’s day 4,337 of the Yangtze Peril lock down and I admit that I’m starting to get a little tired of this. Generally speaking, I lean towards introvert and work from home full time, so being in “lock down” is just reinforcing my natural state. However, even I’m getting antsy about the duration of so-called social distancing restrictions and think it’s high time we reopen the country.

If there’s a riot for freedom, count me in.

Your links today include a restraining order issued against Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker over the extension of the state’s stay-at-home order; the “delusional beliefs” we’re indulging during the crisis; the Border Patrol at the beach in California; shocking information surfacing in the Michael Flynn case; and someone seeking to make a trophy out of one of the stars of “Duck Dynasty.”

Morning Links | 27 Apr 20

It’s a new week and still we linger under the Asian Contagion as some states begin to lift restrictions and others keep them in place, making us all wonder, Who’s Zoomin’ Who?

The answer, it turns out, is about 300 million of us who are Zoomin’ each other on a platform that, in 2019, only had about 10 million users. USA Today reports on the security improvements Zoom has made as online conferencing has boomed over the last couple of months. Plus, while the pandemic has brought about some national cooperation in trying to defeat the virus, it can’t heal the cultural and political division we currently live with; one of the greatest flash points of that division is our immigration laws; in international news, North Korea’s portly tyrant, Kim Jong Un, remains the subject of speculation about his whereabouts, sparking a wave of panic-buying among the citizenry; and finally, a bit of controversy about who was better: The Rolling Stones or The Beatles—just as the Stones achieve a new milestone.

Morning Links | 25 Apr 20

It’s Saturday and we’ve completed week six of the Beijing Blight lock down. The further along we go, the further along this nonsense recedes into the distance. Today’s links include a knife shop owner who refuses to comply with the Colorado governor’s orders to keep business closed; a threat against ‘400 American targets’ from Iran; a fossilized South American frog a long way from home; a life-and-death lesson on reading the fine print from the Netherlands; and the career of Steve Kerr, one of the supporting players from the Chicago Bulls’ dynasty in the 1990s.

Morning Links | 24 Apr 20

Friday! The weeks of lock down are flying by like a bat out of … China! But not to worry, the government has drawn a bead on the Kung Pow Sicken and is ready to let you go back to work—in June (at least in Illinois, where I live). That way they can be sure the Coronavirus is dead and have it vote Democrat in November!

More seriously, Osama bin Laden wanted to assassinate president Obama because Joe Biden was ‘totally unprepared’ for the presidency; job losses reach 26.4 million due to the lock down; a possible reason why Trump hasn’t done more about fixing illegal immigration; and Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer is under fire for awarding—then terminating—a coronavirus-related contract for collecting sensitive health data to her former campaign consultants.

In the meme time, I’ve got some hilarious images to lift your spirits in our Friday Follies at the final link.

Morning Links | 23 Apr 20

Good Morning! Riding the downside of week six of the Bat Gumbo Apocalypse, there’s plenty to keep us busy while we wait for the padlocks to rust. CoVID-19 appears to have landed stateside a few weeks earlier than assumed; police departments across the nation are refusing to enforce draconian lockdown measures imposed by their governors; NYC Mayor de Blasio is shocked—shocked, I tell you!—that criminals released because of Covid-19 are committing crimes; the contours of the worst conspiracy in American history continue to fill in; and you know you’re a wealthy society when your most pressing issue is banning plastic straws.

MORNING LINKS | 22 Apr 20

Happy Hump Day! It’s week six of the Peking Lung Pox and there are some encouraging signs that some of the country might emerge soon from the lock down. Wu Hu!

Your links today include an article from Harvard Magazine examining the so-called “risks for children—and society—in homeschooling.” If the cover illustration is any indication—and it is—you won’t be surprised to learn that the answer is government regulation. In other news, Trump suspends immigration to the U.S. for 60 days; Nancy Pelosi steps on a rake full of ice cream; China may be preparing for total war; and Kevin D. Williamson gives his perspective on recent judicial appointments in Washington State.

Holocaust Remembrance Day

Today is Yom HaShoah or “The Holocaust Remembrance Day,” a day for the Jewish community to mourn the loss of those slaughtered in the Holocaust during World War II. While I’m not Jewish, in recent years I’ve taken to posting an image or an article to commemorate the grim affair.

My primary motivation is the biblical account of the Hebrew people, which teaches in the Old Testament that “Abram the Hebrew” (Gen. 14:13) was the father of the Israelites (through Isaac and Jacob [or “Israel,” see Gen. 32:28]), the ancestors of the Jewish people we read about in the New Testament and whose descendants are still with us today.

The Jewish people hold a special place in God’s heart. They were, after all, his “chosen people,” about whom it is written, “For you are a people holy to the Lord your God. The Lord your God has chosen you out of all the peoples on the face of the earth to be his people, his treasured possession” (Deut. 7:6).

I believe, even after the new covenant that came with the advent of Christ, that the Jewish people’s chosenness remains in effect, for the Apostle Paul writes in Romans 11:

“As far as the gospel is concerned, [the people of Israel] are enemies for your sake; but as far as election is concerned, they are loved on account of the patriarchs, for God’s gifts and his call are irrevocable” (vv. 28-29).

Therefore, as the only ethnic group in history selected by God, the Jewish people are due special consideration. “Touch not God’s anointed”—the phrase sometimes used by Christian ministers to humorously shield themselves from congregational criticism—is actually a reference to the Israelites, i.e. the Jewish people (1 Chronicles 16:15-22).

The Jewish people are also my spiritual ancestors. The Christian faith was founded by a Jewish Messiah. Jesus was a Jew, the Christian church following his resurrection was made up of Jews, those who first preached the gospel to Gentiles were Jews, and the truth is that Gentiles, i.e. anyone not a Jew, are being grafted into Israel, not the other way around (see Eph. 2:11-13).

I’m also motivated to stand with the Jewish people for the simple reason that they have been subject to abuse across the centuries, sometimes perpetrated by purported members of my own faith, much to our shame.

None in recent memory was worse than the Holocaust. We owe it to those who died and to succeeding generations of humanity not to forget what was done.

Holocaust survivors are slowly dying off, leaving less than half-a-million with first-hand memories of the atrocities. Holocaust denial is an insidious and contemporary effort to deny the Nazi regime’s systematic mass murder.

In his blog post today, Jeremy Kalmanofsky writes that even ultra-Orthodox Yeshiva students in New York City are not learning about the Holocaust.

“Graduates of many Hasidic schools tell YAFFED they received no formal Holocaust education, either. In their exclusive focus on Jewish sacred texts, these schools do nothing to convey to students the importance and significance of the destruction of European Jewry.”

As George Santayana (1863-1952) said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” But, as we all know, memories fade with time, as the Israelites in Egypt found out: “Now there arose a new king over Egypt, who did not know Joseph” (Exodus 1:8).

To keep a memory alive takes effort. The International Holocaust Remembrance Day (every January 27) and The Holocaust Remembrance Day are opportunities to contribute to keeping this particular memory alive.

I consider keeping the Holocaust from being memory-holed a duty. May we never forget and may it never happen again.

Morning Links | 21 Apr 20

It’s Tuesday morning and day two of week six of the Commie Bat Virus lock down. The shut down of the economy is rapidly approaching recession territory across the globe, starting with the historic sell off of oil on Monday as prices dropped below $0 a barrel for the first time ever.

There’s a lot of great news out there, but this development is so significant that I’m giving you a set of four links to the story. America is the world’s largest oil producer / exporter, but we’re not immune to circumstances beyond our control. It didn’t help that Russia and Saudi Arabia flooded the markets with cheap oil just as the Coronavirus hit. It could lead a sensible person to wonder about the timing of all this.

If you want to just skip the doom and gloom (and who could blame you?), the last link in this morning’s link jam is a story about Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh who recently cited Roe v. Wade in an opinion about overturning precedent.