If there are two things that we must never let those who voted for Trump and his supporters forget, it’s the twin atrocities of the January 6 attack on the Capitol and his unconscionable handling of the coronavirus pandemic. They may be able to make excuses and downplay his other actions, but these two actions…
Ditch the Filibuster?
I have always sided with conservative scholars when it comes to proposing changes in the Constitution or long held political traditions. Why change something that has served us so well for a long time. Frequent calls to eliminate the electoral college still seem risky to me. The Framers had good reasons for embracing it. Recent…
Sunday Reading
I found this to be an interesting take on things, something worthy of our Sunday reading time. Forwarded by my friend George Shafer from Almonte, Ontario, it was published in yesterday’s Globe and Mail. David M. Shribman, the author, is an American journalist and Pulitzer Prize winning writer and teaches at McGill University in Montreal….
Political Fatigue Syndrome
I resumed writing these pages in earnest initially as a response to the 2016 election. Like many Americans I couldn’t believe that Trump won. My concern was quickly borne out as his administration took form and coalesced into a political nightmare for the country. His subsequent denial and behavior toward the coronavirus pandemic further convinced…
Don’t Join the Democrats!
There are many folks who for any number of reasons could never be Democrats. Some understandably don’t agree with the party’s support of a larger role for the national government in regulating the economy, taking responsibility for health care, support for environmental and climate actions and a host of other issues. Others simply dislike anything…
No Politics, Just Good Eating
I sometimes think that we should just forget about politics and get on living our lives. Yet, the darn truth is that politics really drives how we can live our lives. Yesterday, I had lunch at a local food truck that was a wonderful respite from the sordid nature of contemporary politics. It made me…
The Wrong Recall
The recent recall election for the governor of California raises an interesting question. What if there had been the possibility of a recall vote on the former president near the end of his term? The idea of recalling public officials goes back to the Progressive movement* of the first couple decades of the twentieth century…
Just the Facts
Letters From An American* By Heather Cox Richardson September 14, 2021 This morning, the team of Democratic senators working on a voting rights measure that could meet the demands of conservative Democratic West Virginia senator Joe Manchin released their bill. The 592-page document is described as a bill “to expand Americans’ access to the ballot…
Conservatives Unmasked
A friend who is an attorney in Cocoa, Florida, sent this article as a commentary on yesterday’s blog entitled “Seven Days Away.” I hope you find it interesting as an insight about conservative/Republican doublespeak. This article is from the Century Foundation, a progressive and independent think tank founded in 1919. Conor P. Williams is a…