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Philip II, Spanish Armada, Elizabeth I

Following in an ancient tradition that includes Pope Sixtus V, backer of the Spanish Armada of 1588, the Pope has picked a fight with a nationalist leader of the Anglosphere over borders and national autonomy. From the New York Times:

Pope Francis Suggests Donald Trump Is ‘Not Christian’
By JIM YARDLEY FEB. 18, 2016

ABOARD THE PAPAL AIRLINER — Inserting himself into the Republican presidential race, Pope Francis on Wednesday suggested that Donald J. Trump “is not Christian” because of the harshness of his campaign promises to deport more immigrants and force Mexico to pay for a wall along the border.

“A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian,” Francis said when a reporter asked him about Mr. Trump on the papal airliner as he returned to Rome after his six-day visit to Mexico.

Previous Anglosphere nationalists declared to be not a Christian by popes include Henry VIII and Elizabeth I.

 

George Soros writes in MarketWatch:

Opinion: George Soros: The EU ought to borrow money to pay for ‘surge funding’ for refugees

Published: Feb 18, 2016 9:52 a.m. ET

By GEORGE SOROS

MUNICH (Project Syndicate) — Important progress was made at the donors’ conference for Syrian refugees convened in London on Feb. 4. But much more remains to be done.

The international community is still vastly underestimating what is needed to support refugees, both inside and outside the borders of the European Union. To deal with the refugee crisis, while putting the EU’s largely unused AAA borrowing capacity to better use, requires a paradigm shift.

Rather than scraping together insufficient funds year after year, it is time to engage in “surge funding.” Spending a large amount of money up front would be far more effective than spending the same amount over several years. Front-loading the spending would allow us to address the most dangerous consequences of the crisis — including anti-immigrant sentiment in receiving countries and despondency and marginalization among refugees — more effectively. Making large initial investments would help tip the economic, political, and social dynamics away from xenophobia and disaffection, and toward constructive outcomes that benefit refugees and the recipient countries alike.

Soros has also been saying that refugees are part of Putin’s plot to destroy Europe. So, is Soro’s migrant surge proposal part of Putin’s diabolical plot? This stuff is getting too Master Strategisty for me to follow.

 

Screenshot 2016-02-17 16.53.39

Female Presidential Candidate Who Was United States Senator, Secretary Of State Told To Be More Inspiring

NEW YORK—Citing her lackluster support among young voters, campaign consultants to Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential frontrunner who has served as both a U.S. senator and secretary of state, reportedly instructed the candidate this week to be more inspiring. “Right now, voters are looking for a candidate who stands for real societal change, someone who can stir something inside them,” said media advisor Jim Margolis, urging the woman—who overcame entrenched societal biases to build a successful legal career, became the first female senator elected in the state of New York, oversaw the Department of State during a period of widespread international tumult, and, if elected, would be the first female president in American history—to appear more uplifting to voters. “Many young people have completely lost faith in the political process, and they want to believe that true progress is actually possible. They want someone who embodies progressive ideals.” Margolis added that Clinton was too much a part of the establishment she spent decades breaking down barriers to enter.

Now owned by Clinton donor Haim Saban’s Univision, The Onion’s upcoming headlines will include:

Stop Your Insensitive Giggling: Hillary Really Is Cool

There’s Nothing Funny Whatsoever about Bill Clinton’s Wife Running for President to Smash Patriarchy

Hillary Has Sensible Ideas about the Economy and the Middle East and You Should Consider Voting for Her

Everybody Else Is Going to Vote for Hillary, So Why Don’t You?

 

In the NYT, an NPR host writes:

Donald Trump’s Secret? Channelling Andrew Jackson
By STEVE INSKEEP FEB. 17, 2016 COMMENT

SINCE Donald J. Trump shot to the top of Republican polls last fall, pundits have tried to make sense of his popularity. He has been described as a modern-day product of reality-TV narcissism, or the second coming of European fascism. But as he cruises into the South Carolina primary after beating his rivals by double digits in New Hampshire, it’s clear that neither idea quite explains his strength.

Mr. Trump’s rhetoric resonates with a particular American political tradition. Voters may not know the details of that tradition, but they feel it viscerally when a politician taps into it. Mr. Trump has done just that by emulating a classic model of American democratic leadership.

A clue as to just which leadership model can be found on a map. While Trump fans are spread across the country, they are heavily concentrated in and near the Appalachian states — from Mississippi and Alabama all the way to western Pennsylvania and New York. The northwest corner of South Carolina is one of the most pro-Trump parts of the country. …

Is this true? I don’t have much sense of the geographical concentration of Trump supporters. Ethnically, Trump is German on his father’s side and Scottish Highlander (not Scots-Irish) on his mother’s side.

John McCain did well in Scots-Irish districts in 2008, but he was not seen as much of a threat by the Establishment because he is an Invade-the-World-Invite-the-World activist.

What could the voters of such a region possibly see in a loud and self-interested New York real estate tycoon? In some respects, he is a type of leader Appalachia has seen before. Students of history will recognize that Mr. Trump is a Jackson man.

Consciously or not, Mr. Trump’s campaign echoes the style of Andrew Jackson, and the states where Mr. Trump is strongest are the ones that most consistently favored Jackson during his three runs for the White House.

What Mr. Trump borrows from Jackson is not an issue, but a way of thinking about the world. Mr. Trump promises to fix his supporters’ problems, no matter who else is hurt. He’s a wealthy celebrity always ready for a fight, a superpatriot who says he will make America great again. He vows to attack government corruption and defend the common man. All this could be said of Jackson. …

Needless to say, Jackson and his Democratic Party enforced a certain idea of America — an America for white people. Jackson was personally cordial to people of other races, but their rights did not concern him. When white Southerners grew tired of Indian nations in their midst, Jackson forced them into internal exile in the West. He could have defended this policy using a Trump phrase: “We either have a country or we don’t.”

Mr. Trump’s proposal for a “total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the United States until the government “can figure out what is going on” has a brutal simplicity that echoes Jackson. So does his promise to force Mexico to pay for a border wall. The people Mr. Trump favors are to be protected from all harm. Nobody else matters. …

Could Mr. Trump ride the Jackson vote to ultimate victory? Not unless he adds to it. Jackson’s old coalition no longer dominates the electorate. Nonwhite voters are growing in numbers, and many white voters have told pollsters they would be embarrassed by Mr. Trump as president. Mr. Trump would have to reckon with one of Andrew Jackson’s cherished principles: In America, the majority rules. Assembling a majority today is not the same as it used to be.

Steve Inskeep is a host of NPR’s “Morning Edition” and the author of “Jacksonland: President Andrew Jackson, Cherokee Chief John Ross, and a Great American Land Grab.”

Like I said in Taki’s recently in “Alexander Hamilton, Honorary Nonwhite” and “The Ultimate Minority Right,” there have been four stages of evolution of political ideology in the West over the last 400-500 years:

(1) hereditary right

(2) majority rule

(3) minority right

(4) the inalienable right of minorities to become the majority (while maintaining all the privileges of a modern minority)

 

ALEXANDRIA, VA: Hoping to head off awkward small talk with concerned Republican luminaries at Saturday’s funeral of long-time colleague Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas passed up dessert Wednesday, vowing to “hit the gym” at least twice before the weekend. “Oh, man, if I don’t lose five pounds right now,” Thomas grimaced, “Mitch McConnell will keep bringing up Jeb’s paleo diet, and Cruz will slip me the email of that personal trainer who only works with members of the Federalist Society.” The 67-year-old Justice asked his wife Virginia for the third time this week, “Are you sure it’s not socially acceptable to wear my black robes to a funeral?”

 

Donald Trump is a member of the World Wrestling Entertainment Hall of Fame for various forays, including bodyslamming WWE owner Vince McMahon at WrestleMania 23 in 2007. Whether this is appropriately Presidential is something for the voters to decide.

What I haven’t seen pointed out is that Trump’s seemingly novel methods are actually following in the footsteps of some of the paths blazed out by Justin Trudeau, who was elected Prime Minister of Canada last fall.

Trudeau’s path to power included celebrity, bad language, Twitter traffic, and the single most important event in his rise, a bruising 3-round triumph in a widely-publicized charity boxing match over a Conservative politician in 2012.

The video above shows the third round in which the taller Trudeau (in red), then 40, pummeled Conservative Senator Patrick Brazeau (in blue), the former national chief of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples. (Brazeau has since been suspended from Canada’s Senate for various domestic violence and drug-related charges and is now the day manager at an Ottawa strip club.) Note Trudeau’s insolent stroll back to the neutral corner while the ref tries to assess how much neurological damage he’s done to his opponent.

From the NYT Magazine in 2015:

The younger Trudeau’s road to victory as prime minister truly began on a Saturday night in 2012 in a boxing ring in Ottawa. At the time, the Liberal Party was leaderless and lost, after a devastating defeat in the election of 2011 reduced its seats in Parliament to only 34, roughly one-tenth of the total at the time. … Aiming to change the political dynamic, Trudeau literally picked a fight. In what looked like a publicity stunt, he challenged a 37-year-old Conservative senator named Patrick Brazeau, known as Brass Knuckles, to three rounds of boxing to raise money for cancer research.

Everyone expected Trudeau to receive a royal beating, including his wife. Brazeau had a black belt in karate and a military background, and he grew up on hardscrabble First Nations reservations; his bar brawler’s physique, tattoos and trash-talking bravado made him the three-to-one favorite by fight night.

… The bout was stopped in the third round, saving Brazeau the indignity of hitting the canvas.

The commentator recognized the importance of the victory. ‘‘I can hear it already,’’ he sighed. ‘‘Trudeau for leader.’’

The Trudeau-Trump analogies haven’t been widely picked up on for reasons of:

- ideology (Trudeau is a Liberal);

- looks (Trudeau is a pretty boy who inherited the looks of his mom Margaret, one of the most famous model-groupies of the 1970s, rather than his dad, the saturnine prime minister Pierre);

- and American stereotypes of Canadians as mild. (In reality, Canadians love punching each other in the head: “I went to a fight the other night and a hockey game broke out” — Rodney Dangerfield).

 

From my new column in Taki’s Magazine:

The Replication Crisis and the Repetition Crisis
by Steve Sailer
February 17, 2016

With data becoming ever more abundant, this should be the golden age of the social sciences. And yet they seem to be suffering two mirror-image nervous breakdowns—the Replication Crisis and the Repetition Crisis.

… One cause of the Replication Crisis has been that analysts grant themselves excessive post hoc liberties to crunch the numbers however many ways it takes to find something—anything—that is “statistically significant” (which isn’t the same as actually significant) and thus qualifies as a paper for publish-or-perish purposes. Hence, social scientists seem to be coming up with a surplus of implausible junk science findings on trivial topics, such as “priming” (the contemporary version of subliminal advertising), which then routinely fail to replicate.

In contrast, in what I’ll dub the Repetition Crisis (a.k.a. the Explanation Crisis), academics hamstring the interest and usefulness of their findings by ruling out ahead of time any explanatory factors other than the same tiny number of politically correct concepts that were exhausted decades ago.

The social sciences in 2016: Too little replication of exciting new findings, too much repetition of tired old rationalizations.

Read the whole thing there.

 

Speaking of the Repetition Crisis, from MedicalResearch.com:

Should Human Genetics Focus on Ancestry Rather Than Race?
Posted on February 15, 2016

Michael Yudell, PhD, MPH Chair & Associate Professor Drexel University School of Public Health

Medical Research: What is the background for this study?

Dr. Yudell: We came together as a group of scholars from the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities to address what we believe is a long-standing challenge: how to improve the study of human genetic diversity without recapitulating the controversial and problematic concept of race.

“Problematic” …

We believe that the cross-disciplinary focus of our work—an examination of the historical, biological, and sociological aspects of the race concept—can shed new light on the long-standing debate about the use of the race concept in genetics research. We believe modern genetics remains stuck in a paradox: that on the one hand race is a tool to elucidate human genetic diversity, and on the other hand race is believed three main concerns to be a poorly defined marker of that diversity and an imprecise proxy for the relationship between ancestry and genetics. …

Can the race concept in genetics elucidate the relationship between humans and their evolutionary history, between humans and their health? In the wake of the human genome project the answer seemed to be a pretty resounding “no.” In 2004, for example, Francis Collins, then head of the National Human Genome Research Institute and now Director of the National Institutes of Health called race a “flawed” and “weak” concept and argued that science needed to move beyond race. Yet, as our paper highlights, the use of race persist in genetics, despite voices like Collins, like Craig Venter—leaders in the field of genomics-who have called on the field to move beyond it. They, of course, were not the first to do, but we hope they are among the last. …

A lot of genome data has been collected since then.

Medical Research: What are the main concerns about using race as a factor in medical research?

Dr. Yudell: We have three main concerns about using race as a factor in biomedical research.

1) First, phylogenetic and population genetic methods do not support the classification of humans into discrete races;

2) Racial assumptions are not good biological guideposts. This is true for two reasons: first, races are genetically heterogeneous and they lack clear-cut genetic boundaries. And, two, because of this, using race as a proxy to make clinical predictions is about probability. Of course medicine can be about best guesses. But are we serving patients well if medical decisions are made because a patient identifies him or herself as part of a certain racial group OR is identified by a healthcare practitioner as belonging to a specific race? What if, for example, the probability is that if you are white you are 90% likely to have a beneficial or at least non-harmful reaction to a particular drug? That sounds pretty good. But what if you are that 1 in 10 that is likely to have a harmful reaction. That doesn’t sound so good, and that is the problem with most race-based predictions. They are best guesses for an individual. We are much better off looking directly at an individual’s genes; and

3) We do not believe that a variable that is so mired in both historical and contemporary controversy has a place in modern genetics. Race has both scientific and social meanings that are impossible to tease apart, and we worry that using such a concept in modern genetics does not serve the field well. An example of this is the concern many had in the wake of Nicolas Wade’s book A Troublesome Inheritance, which made wrongheaded claims about the genetic basis of social differences between races. Wade’s book forced a large group of leading geneticists to publicly refute the idea that genetics (and their work) supported such ideas.

Medical Research: What should clinicians and patients take away from your report?

Dr. Yudell: It is time to find a better way to study human genetic diversity. The use of racial assumptions are problematic at best and harmful at worst as we seek to improve our understanding of the relationship between our genes and our health with the goal of determining the best course of medical treatments. Sickle-cell anemia’s identification as a Black or African disease is a good example of this. Sickle-cell is not, of course, an African-American or African disease, but a disease that runs in higher frequencies in a number of populations globally, including in African-American and African populations. But these are not racial differences. Sickle-cell is a disease that is an evolutionary adaptation to exposure to the disease malaria. You find the sickle cell trait in higher frequencies in regions of Africa because populations there, as they did in other parts of the world, adapted to resist malaria. Sickle-cell appears in other regions of the globe, in other human populations, including populations in the Mediterranean basin, on the Arabian Peninsula, and on the Indian subcontinent where these populations also adapted to resist malaria. So sickle-cell disease is not an African disease and thinking of it in this way can wrongfully associate a particular disease with a particular race and may lead us to ignore sickle-cell symptoms in patients who are not believed to be at risk for it.

Sure, but, as Damon Runyon said, that’s the way to bet, or to structure your checklist priorities when confronted with a mysteriously sick child. Here are the CDC’s bullet points on Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) and Sickle Cell Trait (SCT):

SCD affects 90,000 to 100,000 Americans.
SCD occurs among about 1 out of every 500 Black or African-American births.
SCD occurs among about 1 out of every 36,000 Hispanic-American births.
SCT occurs among about 1 in 12 Blacks or African Americans.

The CDC doesn’t bother giving a fraction for SCD for non-Hispanic white births because it’s so rare. It could happen, but it’s very rare.

Medical Research: What recommendations do you have for future research as a result of this study?

Dr. Yudell: We make two proposals in our paper. The first: we call upon journals who publish in areas of research related to human genetics to encourage the use of alternative variables to study human genetic diversity and to rationalize their use. Journals should require scientists publishing in their pages to clearly define how they are using such variables in order to allow scientists to understand and interpret data across studies and would help avoid confusing, inconsistent, and contradictory usage of such terms. This has been tried before, but only in piecemeal fashion. We also recognize that the use of terms changes nothing if the underlying racial thinking remains the same. But we believe that language matters and that the scientific language of race has a considerable influence on how the public understands human diversity.

We prefer concepts like ancestry instead of race in human studies and it is important to distinguish the two. Ancestry is a process-based concept that helps us understand the admixing events that lead to one’s existence. Ancestry is also a statement about an individual’s relationship to other individuals in their genealogical history, thus is a very personal understanding of one’s genomic heritage. Race, on the other hand, is a pattern-based concept that has led scientists and laypersons alike to draw conclusions about hierarchical organization of humans, connecting an individual to a larger preconceived geographically circumscribed or socially constructed group.

Or maybe people should be told that race is actually about ancestry? Visual clues are used to guess ancestry. Physical anthropologists got very good by the second half of the 20th Century at using phenotype to guess genotype, which is why the genome analyses of the 21st Century have done so little to rewrite our understanding of the racial distributions of humanity.

Second, we are calling upon the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to convene an interdisciplinary panel of experts to help the field improve the study of human genetic diversity. As an honest broker in science policy, the Academies can play a constructive role in bringing together natural scientists, social scientists, and scholars from the humanities to find ways to study human genetic diversity that does not recapitulate the confusion and potential harm that comes with using the race concept.

Sorry, but racial categories used in American medical research follow racial categories used by the U.S. government. They are not some ancient pre-scientific infliction of White Privilege, they are categories currently under the control of the Obama Administration.

The Race, History, Evolution Notes blog points out this earlier contribution by Yudell:

A SHORT HISTORY OF THE RACE CONCEPT
By Michael Yudell

At the dawn of the 21st century, the idea of race – the belief that the peoples of the world can be organized into biologically distinctive groups, each with their own physical, social, and intellectual characteristics – is understood by most natural and social scientists to be an unsound concept. … By the 1970s, many prominent biologists, including Richard Lewontin and Stephen Jay Gould, came to see the race concept as a deeply flawed way to organize human genetic diversity that is inseparable from the social prejudices about human difference that spawned the concept in the 18th century and have accompanied its meaning since.1 Historians and social scientists believe that race is socially constructed, meaning that the biological meaning of race has been constrained by the social context in which racial research has taken place.

On the other hand, because studying genetic differences can improve our understanding of human evolution, disease, and development, the relationship between genetics and human diversity remains an ongoing area of scientific inquiry. The challenge has been to develop a new scientific terminology and methodology that finds meaning in the study of human difference without recapitulating outmoded and racist notions often associated with the concept of race itself. Some scientists have developed novel ways to measure difference between various human populations, including using ancestry, ethnicity, and population as replacements or surrogates for race.

… Most scholars now accept the viewpoint that in the ancient world “no concept truly equivalent to that of ‘race’ can be detected in the thought of the Greeks, Romans, and early Christians.”5

That’s not true. Vince Sarich and Frank Miele wrote in 2004:

“The art of the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Greece, Rome, India, and China, and the Islamic civilization from AD 700 to 1400 shows that these societies classified the various peoples they encountered into broad racial groups. They sorted them based upon the same set of characteristics—skin color, hair form, and head shape—allegedly constructed by Europeans when they invented ‘race’ to justify colonialism and white supremacy.”

Yudell goes on:

Rooting human variation in blood or in kinship was a relatively new way to categorize humans. The idea gained strength towards the end of the Middle Ages as anti-Jewish feelings, which were rooted in an antagonism towards Jewish religious beliefs, began to evolve into anti-Semitism. These blood kinship beliefs rationalized anti-Jewish hatred instead as the hatred of a people. For example, Marranos, Spanish Jews who had been baptized, were considered a threat to Christendom by virtue of their ancestry because they could not prove purity of blood to the Inquisition.

Uhhhhhmmmm … The notion that “Rooting human variation in blood or in kinship was a relatively new way to categorize humans … rooted in … anti-Semitism” is a pretty self-evidently self-defeating assertion, since the word “anti-Semitism” itself is rooted in the Book of Genesis’s descriptions of the three sons of Noah, including Shem, progenitor of the Semites:

Chapter 10

1 Now these are the generations of the sons of Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth: and unto them were sons born after the flood. …

31 These are the sons of Shem, after their families, after their tongues, in their lands, after their nations.

32 These are the families of the sons of Noah, after their generations, in their nations: and by these were the nations divided in the earth after the flood.

The Old Testament is obsessed with this kind of stuff.

Yudell goes on:

At the core of this work, known as the American School of Anthropology, was the theory of polygeny, the belief that a hierarchy of human races had separate creations. Samuel Morton’s experiments on cranial capacity and intelligence sought to demonstrate this theory. Morton collected hundreds of skulls from around the globe, measured their volume, and concluded that the Caucasian and Mongolian races had the highest cranial capacity and thus the highest levels of intelligence, while Africans had the lowest cranial capacity and thus the lowest levels of intelligence.

More than a century after Morton’s death, the evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould, using Morton’s same experimental material and methods, could not replicate the earlier findings. Gould concluded that Morton’s subjective ideas about race difference influenced his methods and conclusions, leading to the omission of contradictory data and to the conscious or unconscious stuffing or under-filling of certain skulls to match his pre-ordained conclusions.6 Indeed, the case of Samuel Morton illustrates how social conceptions of human difference shape the science of race.

Gould didn’t try to replicate Morton’s findings. He just asserted that Morton had been biased. Recently, actual scientists did replicate Morton’s findings, and thus failed to replicate Gould’s famous fantasy.

… At a June 2000 Rose Garden ceremony, President Bill Clinton, flanked by genome sequencers Francis Collins and Craig Venter, announced the completion of a draft sequence of the human genome. Collins, head of the National Human Genome Research Institute, and Venter, then President of Celera Genomics, offered their genomic data to the world – enhancing our understanding of human biology and holding the promise of to helping public health and medical professionals prevent, treat, and cure disease. On that day Venter and Collins emphasized that their work confirmed that human genetic diversity cannot be captured by the concept of race and demonstrated that all humans have genome sequences that are 99.9% identical. At the White House celebration Venter said “the concept of race has no genetic or scientific basis.”9 A year later, Collins wrote: “those who wish to draw precise racial boundaries around certain groups will not be able to use science as a legitimate justification.”10 Yet, since the White House announcement, there has been an increase in claims that race is a biologically meaningful classification.

That’s my understanding, too: today’s half-witted Race Does Not Exist conventional wisdom stems from the speeches by Clinton and the others in the Rose Garden in 2000.

Of course, since then, there has been a flood of genome data, which has largely upheld the pre-existing views of race attained by physical anthropologists before the new technology arrived, although offering new details and new complexities.

The upsurge of claims that race is a useful taxonomic concept for humans seems to be driven by several factors. First, genomic technology has enhanced our ability to examine the 0.1% of nucleic acids in the human genome that, on average, vary between individuals. Some scientists are relying on the race concept to make sense of the genetic variation in this small sliver of our genomes. Second, the history of the biological race concept suggests that race is deeply embedded in scientific thought and that racialized thinking shaped genetics in the 20th century.

In other words, Bill Clinton doesn’t know anything about genetics and we should charitably ignore his 2000 Rose Garden speech instead of enshrining Clinton as the Wizard of Genes.

 

I’ve been writing for a long time about how the Cult of Diversity is one of the best things ever to happen to billionaires (besides having billions, of course). Now, Hillary has taken up my argument and is using it in her speeches, just from the billionaires’ point of view. From the New York Times on 2/13/16:

“If we broke up the big banks tomorrow,” Mrs. Clinton asked the audience of black, white and Hispanic union members, “would that end racism? Would that end sexism? Would that end discrimination against the L.G.B.T. community?,” she said, using an abbreviation for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender. “Would that make people feel more welcoming to immigrants overnight?”

At each question, the crowd called back with a resounding no.

 

From an op-ed in the NYT:

Why Angela Merkel Could Lead the U.N.
By MARK SEDDON FEB. 16, 2016

… Yet some United Nations insiders speak of a woman far more established on the world stage: Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany. There was speculation in the German media last year about her possible candidacy, though it subsided and since then she has had her work cut out as Germany welcomed a huge influx of refugees.

With elections in Germany due next year, the newsmagazine Der Spiegel quoted colleagues of Mrs. Merkel’s saying that she does not wish for a fourth term. With Europe’s immigration crisis inciting resistance to her continued open-door policy, there is talk of a “graceful exit” for the chancellor.

No candidate could magically restore the United Nations’ prestige, but there is a compelling logic in favor of a Merkel candidacy. She is both female and, as someone who grew up in the former German Democratic Republic, Eastern European. More important, she has an intuitive understanding of Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, who was based in Dresden as a K.G.B. officer when the Berlin Wall came down. While Russia’s annexation of Crimea sorely tested Mrs. Merkel’s patience, she continued to have regular telephone conversations with Mr. Putin. She could bring a unique ability to mediate between Russia and America.

Germany’s remarkable response under her leadership to Europe’s refugee crisis has also underlined Mrs. Merkel’s humanitarian credentials. At the height of last year’s wave of migration, the contrast between Mrs. Merkel’s willingness to accept desperate asylum seekers in their hundreds of thousands contrasted with the parsimonious response of Britain’s prime minister, David Cameron, as well as with a growing xenophobia among some Eastern European leaders. …

Mark Seddon was a communications aide to the United Nations secretary general from 2014 to 2016.

Why am I not surprised?

 

Screenshot 2016-02-16 17.49.07

Nevada is often cited as a state where Republicans doomed themselves by their failure to fully embrace amnesty for Hispanic undocumented workers. After all, George W. Bush won Nevada 51-48 in 2004, but Mitt Romney lost it 46-52 in 2012. This proves that the Rising Tide of Hispanics votes solely on Immigration Reform and punishes Republicans for their racism, which can only be redeemed by giving undocumented workers immigration reform. (This is more or less the official position of both parties’ leaderships.)

A revisionist history of Nevada’s political evolution in the 21st Century, in contrast, would cite the impact of Bush’s Housing Bubble of 2003-2006 and the Housing Bust of 2008, in which Nevada played a key role as one of the four Sand States of the Big Short. Thus John McCain lost Nevada in 2008 43-55 despite having been co-sponsor with Ted Kennedy of the 2006 amnesty bill. Why? Because Bush inflating the housing market helped him at the polls in 2004 but backfired terribly on his party in 2008 (and 2012).

Las Vegas’s default crisis of 2008 continues to reverberate in 2016 in odd ways. For example, from Yahoo News:

Foreclosure crisis snarls Clinton, Sanders’ efforts to reach Nevada voters

Reuters
By Luciana Lopez
February 14, 2016

(Reuters) – Democratic presidential hopefuls Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton are flooding Nevada with volunteers ahead of this week’s key nominating contest but they face a problem – the addresses, phone numbers and other personal data they need to reach many voters are out of date.

Nevada, which is more than a quarter Latino, was one of the states worst affected by the 2008 financial meltdown, with hundreds of thousands of families unable to pay their mortgages and forced to move in a crisis that by some estimates hit minorities twice as hard as whites.

With the foreclosed homes often switching hands multiple times – from homeowner to bank to investor and back to another homeowner in just a few years – keeping up with voters who at some point lived in those homes is difficult.

The Nevada Democratic caucus on Feb. 20 has emerged as an unusually important test of Sanders’ and Clinton’s political strength. Clinton is under pressure to keep her wide lead among Latinos, while Sanders must erode it to show he has a path to the nomination that does not rely mainly on the young white voters who make up the core of his support base.

“This ongoing (foreclosure) crisis makes reaching potential voters more difficult,” Sanders’ campaign said in a statement emailed to Reuters. The Clinton campaign said the voter lists supplied by the Democratic Party needed “significantly” more work to update, forcing them to spend valuable canvassing time building up their own private data.

Las Vegas, Nevada’s biggest city, has seen some of the country’s highest foreclosure rates since 2008, hitting No. 1 among more than 200 U.S. metro areas from 2009 to 2011, according to RealtyTrac, a provider of real estate data and analytics. Even now, the city and its surrounding area rank No. 17.

Data that might have been corrected in the 2012 general election has, in many cases, already fallen out of date again because the Nevada housing market has continued to see wave after wave of foreclosures, the campaigns said. …

Latinos make up almost 32 percent of Las Vegas. …

There hasn’t been enough polling in Nevada recently to show who is ahead among Latinos. But nationally Clinton has the advantage: Among Latinos who describe themselves as Democrats, 54 percent support Clinton and 37 percent back Sanders, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling from Oct. 1 to Feb. 12.

But who can remember back all the way to 2008?

 

Tom Goldstein, the editor of SCOTUSblog, gives his analysis of Obama’s potential Supreme Court nominees, which turns out to be almost wholly from an identity politics angle:

How the politics of the next nomination will play out

The best candidate politically would probably be Hispanic. Hispanic voters both (a) are more politically independent than black voters and therefore more in play in the election, and (b) historically vote in low numbers. In that sense, the ideal nominee from the administration’s perspective in these circumstances is already on the Supreme Court: Sonia Sotomayor, the Court’s first Latina.

The media, and Sotomayor herself, are convinced that she represents the Latinx tidal wave, but I’m not sure that Mexican-Americans are all that impressed by a Puerto Rican. Obama might go for a Mexican, although there aren’t many with Supreme Court-level intellectual intensity.

On the other hand, I think the President personally will be very tempted to appoint a black Justice to the Court, rather than a second Hispanic. His historical legacy rests materially on advancing black participation and success in American politics. The role Thurgood Marshall previously played in that effort is inescapable. The President likely sees value in providing a counterpoint to the Court’s only black Justice, the very conservative Clarence Thomas.

For those reasons, I think the President will pick a black nominee. I’ve long said that the most likely candidate for the next Democratic appointment was California Attorney General Kamala Harris. She is fifty-one. A female nominee has significant advantages as well. That is particularly true for the candidacy of the likely Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton. For reasons I’ve discussed elsewhere, I think her nomination is difficult to oppose ideologically, given her history as a prosecutor.

From Wikipedia:

Harris was born in Oakland, California. She is the daughter of an Indian mother, Dr. Shyamala Gopalan Harris—a breast cancer specialist who emigrated from Chennai, India, to the United States in 1960[13]—and a Jamaican American father, Stanford University economics professor Donald Harris.[14]

Harris looks like she inherited her hair from India rather than having to buy it from India.

She has one younger sister, Maya, who is now married to Tony West, a former Associate Attorney General of the United States.[15] … Harris attended Howard University in Washington, D.C.,[20] where she was initiated into Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority …

Here’s the transcript of an NPR interview in which a Kappa Alpha Kappa spokeswoman denies that Kappa Alpha Kappa ever applied the “paper bag test” to rushes, but then says, sounding like Julian Bond on SNL in the 1970s:”What I will say, if there was a bias, it was on intelligence.”

SCOTUSblog goes on:

If Harris wanted the job, I think it would be hers. But I don’t think she does. Harris is the prohibitive favorite to win Barbara Boxer’s Senate seat in the 2016 election. After that, she is well positioned potentially to be president herself. If nominated, she would have to abandon her Senate candidacy and likely all of her political prospects. So I think she would decline.

But Attorney General Loretta Lynch, who is fifty-six, is a very serious possibility. She is known and admired within the administration. … Her history as a career prosecutor makes it very difficult to paint her as excessively liberal.

Perhaps Lynch’s age would give the administration some hesitancy. They would prefer to have a nominee who is closer to fifty. But because the nomination would principally serve a political purpose anyway, I don’t think that would be a serious obstacle.

The fact that Lynch was vetted so recently for attorney general also makes it practical for the president to nominate her in relatively short order. There is some imperative to move quickly, because each passing week strengthens the intuitive appeal of the Republican argument that it is too close to the election to confirm the nominee. Conversely, a nomination that is announced quickly allows Democrats to press the bumper sticker point that Republicans would leave the Supreme Court unable to resolve many close cases for essentially “a year.”

I think the administration would relish the prospect of Republicans either refusing to give Lynch a vote or seeming to treat her unfairly in the confirmation process. Either eventuality would motivate both black and women voters.

In contrast to a lot of the black exotics who have flourished in the Obama Administration (such as Eric Holder and, most notably, the President), Lynch seems like a pretty normal African-American, born in Durham, North Carolina, the daughter of a Baptist minister and a school librarian.

It’s not clear to me if it matters to African Americans or not whether the black nominee would be a representative of the typical African-American community at its best like Loretta Lynch or an exotic like Kamala Harris. My guess is that it matters in black v. black contests (e.g., Bobby Rush beats Barack Obama) but not in something that can be pitched as black v. white (e.g., Obama v. Romney). When it comes to national politics, blacks tend to be racialist and true believers in the one drop rule. (I have the hunch that a lot of black women who look more like Lynch think they look like Harris.)

Other black women have been mentioned as possible candidates. For example, California Supreme Court Justice Leondra Kruger is well known as a former lawyer in the Obama administration, but at thirty-nine probably too young. I also discussed Danielle Gray above. She is widely admired, but lacks the stature of the attorney general.

Two other potential white female nominees are likely to get close looks. Judge Jane Kelly is a young Obama appointee to the Eighth Circuit who was unanimously confirmed by the Senate. Homeland Security Advisor Lisa Monaco is even younger at forty-seven.

In a previous version of this post I pointed to Paul Watford, an Obama appointee to the Ninth Circuit, as the most likely nominee. Watford is in his late forties. He is well respected and reasonably well known in Democratic legal circles. I still think he is a serious candidate, but the fact that Lynch is a woman gives her nomination a very significant advantage. The same goes for two well-respected appellate judges who are black, the Second Circuit’s Ray Lohier and the D.C. Circuit’s Robert Wilkins.

Watford looks like the African-American J.K. Simmons.

This is totally off the topic of the Supreme Court, but my vague impression is that individuals who look like Watford usually have one white parent rather than be from a long line of paper bag test-passing Creole of colors. (I haven’t been able to find out anything about his parents.)

You get a lot of distinctive looks in a first generation cross, but then over the generations mixed black-white people settle into a “type.” Anthropologist Henry Harpending talks about that with Uighurs, a Central Asian group on the border of the white and East Asian worlds, who indeed look like a cross between the two races, but who also look like the distinctive Uighur type they’ve been for a long time.

But it’s hard to put this into words and it’s not the kind of thing that’s encouraged to talk about these days. So, Watford’s parentage is a test of my understanding of type theory, with sample size n=1.

The favorite candidate in Democratic legal circles is generally Judge Sri Srinivasan of the D.C. Circuit, followed by Patricia Millett of the same Court. Both are recent Obama appointees. Srinivasan is a Indian American. Millett is a woman. Both would fit the ideological profile that the administration would want. But neither provides the same political benefit.

 

Something that hasn’t been widely recognized is how Germany’s willingness to accept vast numbers of military age youths from Syria is facilitating the various leaderships in Syria to push toward their maximalist ethnic-cleansing goals.

Syria’s long-term problem is that it is highly diverse, with different groups that hate each other (often for good reasons).

Fighting in such situations can go on for a long time, but usually military ambitions run into diminishing returns: e.g., If our tribal enemies hold three watersheds, we can push them out of their most peripheral one fairly easily, their next-most marginal one with more difficulty, but they’ll die in the last ditch to defend their ultimate redoubt because they have nowhere else to go. And that’s a discouraging prospect for militaries on the offensive.

I’m reminded of when I was snorkeling in Hawaii in 1981 and I decided it would be fun to harass a clown fish by chasing him around the reef. I had read in Konrad Lorenz’s book On Aggression that distinctively colored tropical fish tend to be territorial. (Lorenz’s theory was that bright colors on tropical fish are like gang colors on inner city youths — they warn rival of the same species to stay off the turf. There still doesn’t seem to be a scientific consensus on this question.)

Sure enough, the poor clown fish retreated nervously over and over until he reached, presumably, the inner sanctum of his territory. There he felt most at home, knowing every nook and cranny of the reef. (Note: I’m only guessing that’s what the fish was thinking.) He turned and faced me to make his stand. When I kept coming, he bravely lunged at me, teeth bared. I fled, and resolved to be less obnoxious toward the local aquatic residents in the future.

So, eventually, all the groups in Syria would need to sit down and negotiate something that all Syrians can more or less live with.

Unless …

If Dr. Merkel is promising military-age youths a lifetime of welfare in Germany, then massive ethnic cleansing of enemies becomes a more plausible goal for whichever of Syria’s various combatants have the upper hand at the moment (e.g., Assad/Putin and ISIS at present). Their implicit message to fighting age youth on the other side is: Why fight us when you can sponge off Merkel?

 

Recently, George Soros asserted that Vladimir Putin was attempting to undermine the European Union with Muslim refugees:

Soros: Putin Trying to Destroy EU with Muslim Migrants, So EU Must Invite in More Muslim Migrants (Or Something)

Now that meme seems to be spreading through the ranks of Respectable Codgers. From The Independent:

Vladimir Putin ‘making refugee crisis worse to undermine Europe’

… The intensified air campaign follows accusations from Senator John McCain, chairman of the US Senate armed services committee, that Russian President Vladimir Putin was intentionally stoking the refugee crisis in order to undermine the European project. …

Speaking on the final day of the annual Munich security conference Mr McCain accused Moscow of using its aerial campaign in Syria to add to the flow of people feeling the Middle East.

“He [Mr Putin] wants to exacerbate the refugee crisis and use it as a weapon to divide the transatlantic alliance and undermine the European project,” he said, “His appetite is growing with the eating”.

Similarly, NYT columnist Roger Cohen writes:

Will Merkel Pay for Doing the Right Thing?

… In Russia, [Dr. Merkel] needs President Vladimir Putin’s cooperation, but a core element of his strategy is the undermining of a united Europe; the refugee flow from Syria achieves just that.

It would seem that if the Putin is really trying to destroy Europe with his Muslim migrant infiltrators, then Soros, McCain, and Cohen should be demanding that Merkel fight back against Putin’s dastardly plot by … not letting so many Muslims in.

As you’ll recall, the migrant crisis went into overdrive on August 25, 2015 when the German government sent out a tweet saying, in effect, that they wouldn’t obey E.U. rules on migrants anymore. So the German could now send out another tweet saying something to the effect of, “We’re going back to obeying our pledge to the rest of the E.U., so … never mind.”

But rather than have Germany go to all that trouble of thwarting Putin’s plan by expending 140 characters, Soros, McCain, and Cohen seem to want the U.S. to risk World War III with Russia.

I guess I just don’t understand the foolproof logic of Invite the World / Invade the World.

 

The Republicans have two long-term Supreme Court problems:

1. They’ve only won 2 of the last 6 Presidential elections (1992-2012) so the Justices nominated during their previous era of winning 5 of 6 (1968-1988) are now 79 (Anthony Kennedy) and 67 and hefty (Clarence Thomas).

2. GOP-nominated Justices tend to drift left (“garner Strange New Respect”) unless particularly ideological.

One reason for #2 is that’s what people in Washington DC do. Barack Obama defeated Mitt Romney 91-7 in Washington DC in 2012. It’s perfectly natural for people in Washington DC to support the side more associated with Tax and Spend because the local economy is based on Tax and Spend. Unless you are as strong-minded as Scalia, it’s hard not to be come to share your neighbors’ points of view to some degree.

And yet, the Supreme Court is supposed to relatively isolated from the politics and power — that’s the point of things like lifetime terms. But, being across the street from the Capitol sucks the Supreme Court inevitably into the mindset of Washington.

A few of my commenters have suggested moving the Supreme Court out of Washington.

It would be reasonable to put it in a city with a decent-sized airport so lawyers could fly in conveniently, but otherwise there doesn’t seem to be any strong reason for keeping it in Washington other than inertia.

Other countries have judicial capitals separate from legislative or executive capitals, such as South Africa (Bloemfontein), Germany (Karlsruhe), and Bolivia (Sucre). Russia recently moved a major court from Moscow to St. Petersburg.

But where?

An objective starting point would be to look at the mean center of population of the United States, which has been further west than Washington DC since the 1810 Census. As of 2010, it was in southern Missouri. So, St. Louis, Kansas City, Bentonville, or Tulsa would be reasonable choices.

How about Ferguson? That seems to have been the most important spot in American for about a year, and it’s right next to the St. Louis airport, so Ferguson sounds like a plan.

 

Justices Scalia and Ginsburg on vacation in India

Associate Justices of the Supreme Court make a healthy $214,000 annually, but their lifestyles tend to be even nicer.

Salzburg Festival

For example, the late chief justice William Rehnquist made sure to adjourn the court each summer in time to take up his duties teaching at the American Studies Seminar in Salzburg, Austria, a lovely little city that was Mozart’s hometown and which also happens to host the world top (i.e., expensive) opera festival each summer.

Similarly, from McClatchy DC in 2013:

Justice Elena Kagan joined Justice Anthony Kennedy in Salzburg, Austria, in July to teach a three-week class on “Fundamental Rights in Europe and the United States.” The course, sponsored by the University of the Pacific’s McGeorge School of Law, gave Kagan, a 53-year-old Democratic appointee, and Kennedy, a 77-year-old Republican appointee, an off-Capitol Hill chance to bond.

“Their collaboration was extremely effective, and from what I could see they really enjoyed working together in this way,” John Cary Sims, a McGeorge law professor who served as on-site director of the Salzburg program, said in an email interview. “One afternoon, they stood together and smiled, smiled, smiled while each student had a picture taken with them.”

Kagan and Kennedy are “both extremely gifted teachers,” Sims noted. At the same time, he observed that the possibility that summer bonding could lead to easier judicial collaboration, while a “sensible hypothesis,” is also “not one that outsiders are likely to be able to evaluate.”

… Kagan told a University of Kentucky audience in mid-September that she has been bonding with conservative Justice Antonin Scalia over hunting. The two ideological opposites began by shooting clay pigeons together and have since graduated to game, including pheasant and antelope.

“I’ve enjoyed it,” Kagan said. “I enjoy spending time with him. He’s a great guy.”

Enjoyment, though, doesn’t necessarily translate to agreement. … Kagan and Ginsburg, by contrast, disagreed in only 4 percent of the cases.

Ginsburg, too, stressed during the summer how she has been able to find common ground with her ideological opposites, like Scalia. Both are opera buffs.

She told a New York state audience in July that a recent law school graduate is currently writing a comic opera, titled “Scalia/Ginsburg,” built around the theme that two people with notably different views can, nonetheless, respect and genuinely like each other.

“Collegiality of that sort is what makes it possible for the court to do the ever-challenging work the Constitution and Congress assign to us,” Ginsburg told the New York audience.

By the way:

A liberal Democratic appointee who has served since 1993, Ginsburg is presumed to be timing her eventual retirement so her replacement will be selected by President Barack Obama. She has suggested that she might want to surpass the nearly 23-year tenure of the court’s first Jewish justice, Louis Brandeis. That would peg her retirement to mid-2016.

About a decade ago, a friend of mine who is a big time senior lawyer in an Anglosphere country invited me to attend a series of symposiums and social events he was hosting for two visiting U.S. Supreme Court justices at his world famous golf club. I couldn’t afford to go so far, but when we had lunch at the L.A. County Museum of Art in 2013, he reported that Justice Breyer was a prince of a guest.

He had much more interesting gossip to report about the other Justice.

 

The original rosters announced for both the East and West teams in today’s NBA All Star Game were all black: 24 out of 24. In fact, all were American-born blacks.

An injury last week to Jimmy Butler of the East led to Spaniard Pau Gasol being substituted in. (A subsequent injury to Chris Bosh led to Al Horford, a black born in the Dominican Republic, being added.)

No American-born whites are on either NBA All Star team.

Several All-Stars, however, are mulattos. In fact, it’s becoming pretty common for All-Stars, such as Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson of this year’s superlative Golden State Warriors (and Joakim Noah and Tony Parker in years past), to be sons of black professional athletes and hot white moms. Dads Dell Curry played 16 seasons in the NBA and Mychal Thompson played 12.

Update: Readers inform me that Steph Curry’s mom isn’t white.

This year’s #AllStarsSoBlack game is a bit of a statistical fluke. Last year’s rosters included four whites (three Europeans — the Gasol Brothers and Dirk Nowitzki — and Kyle Korver, who grew up in Pella, Iowa). The 2014 game had two white players, Nowitzki and Oregon-raised Kevin Love. But the 2013 game had only one or two whites (David Lee and, perhaps, Brook Lopez).

Is this the result of systemic racism?

Probably a little bit. The fact that most good white basketball players these days either come from overseas or from extremely white parts of North America is curious. For example, here’s where two-time NBA MVP Steve Nash played high school ball:

Screenshot 2016-02-14 01.58.58

You might think, a priori, that growing up competing against the best black talent would be good for tall white guys.

But instead it seems to drive them into tennis or water polo or whatever.

But, mostly, #AllStarsSoBlack just seems to be the usual combination of nature and nurture leading to racial imbalance among top performers.

 

1. Harvard Law School professor Larry Tribe, whom Obama helped write his anti-Scalia paper “The Curvature of Constitutional Space: What Lawyers Can Learn from Modern Physics” by contributing his deep knowledge of cutting-edge physics he learned from some very heavy discussions at Punahou while smoking Maui Wowie.

2. A Breyer II: a highly competent white guy who gets confirmed fast and quietly

3. Michelle

4. Obama resigns and President Biden nominates him

5. A full-out War on Women combatant to gin up another feminist freakout like the one in October 1991 over allegations of sexual harassment against Clarence Thomas that launched the Clintons (of all people) into the White House during the 1992 Year of the Woman.

6. Hillary (Biden steps in as the anti-Bernie candidate)

7. Kimiko Matsuda-Lawrence (expected tenure on the Supreme Court: until 2086)

8. Elizabeth Warren

9. Vaughn Walker

10. A moderate, easy to confirm nonwhite: Akhil Reed Amar, Stephen Carter, Richard Thompson Ford

11. Eric Holder for controversy or Loretta Lynch for noncontroversy

12. Genius T. Coates

13. Amal Clooney

 

Since the early 1990s I’ve been writing op-eds backing the Good Government reform idea that Supreme Court nominees shouldn’t get lifetime appointments, but instead a single 18-year term. Since there are 9 Justices, that would mean a nomination fight would come up every two years. Win four years in the White House, you get to nominate two Justices. Win six years in the Senate, you get to vote on three nominations.

This would somewhat lower the pressure on each nomination, which presently can last more than twice 18 years (especially with longer lifespans). It would greatly reduce the frequency of mentally decrepit Justices like Thurgood Marshall trying to hang on until a change in Presidents.

The average Supreme Court justice would likely serve from something like age 52 to 70. To get around the Bill Clinton-style problem of post-bribery where, say, Goldman Sachs would pay $250,000 per retired Justices’ speeches, Justices could be banned from all income-generating activity for life. In return, give them a million dollar per year pension for life.

There are two methodological problems:

- What do you do when a Justice dies or resigns before completing his 18 year term?

- The bigger one is how to transition to the new system, which would probably require current Justices to be forced into retirement to allow new Justices to be appointed. I think an NBA draft-style weighted lottery where Justices are ranked in order of years served and then given a proportional chance to be selected might help. Another lubricant would be to delay the implementation of the system until, say, 2021, putting it well into the future so the plans are less personal.

 
Steve Sailer
About Steve Sailer

Steve Sailer is a journalist, movie critic for Taki's Magazine, VDARE.com columnist, and founder of the Human Biodiversity discussion group for top scientists and public intellectuals.


Past
Classics
The “war hero” candidate buried information about POWs left behind in Vietnam.
Talk TV sensationalists and axe-grinding ideologues have fallen for a myth of immigrant lawlessness.
Hundreds of POWs may have been left to die in Vietnam, abandoned by their government—and our media.
The unspoken statistical reality of urban crime over the last quarter century.
Confederate Flag Day, State Capitol, Raleigh, N.C. -- March 3, 2007
Are elite university admissions based on meritocracy and diversity as claimed?