Intimidate the parents?

When you can’t defend your position, silence the opposition with threats

The federal government is weaponizing the Patriot Act against public school parents. Not all parents, just the ones who are conservative and raise their voices at school board meetings against “progressive” – read that way left of center – studies that are seen as introducing problematic topics to young people.

Topics like Critical Race Theory, which holds that America’s founding was racist since 1619, how the United States has always been racist, is still racist, and how racism can only be overcome with extreme reverse racism. If you are white, the students are taught, you should be ashamed of your skin color and denounce your own kind.  A lot of parents are upset because they do not believe the U.S. is racist and they don’t want their children taught to hate themselves.

There are other controversial topics: transgender policies, graphic sexual content, and the ongoing debate over whether students should attend classes without wearing masks (if they should attend in-person classes at all.)

Last week the National School Boards Association sent a plea to Attorney General Merrick Garland, demanding that he employ the Patriot Act against unruly parents who are, they contend, domestic terrorists. Garland, who once hoped to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court, seems happy to go along. He issued a sweeping memorandum calling for the FBI to coordinate with federal, state, local, territorial and tribal authorities in each [school] district to develop strategies against the threats.

Aren’t you glad Garland was denied a vote on elevation to the Court?

I reported on school board meetings for years. Most were boring as hell, but occasionally there were raised voices. One thing I know to be true, school boards are not fond of hearing from the people who send their children to be educated, or their tax dollars to pay for it. Most school board members across the country are good people who ran because they thought they could do some good. Generally, they serve for a term or two, get tired of the late night phone calls, and retire.

I doubt if the National School Boards Association truly represents the concerns of most school board members, judging by this portion of its letter to Garland:

“As these acts of malice, violence, and threats against public school officials have increased, the classification of these heinous actions could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes,” the letter read. “Additionally, NSBA requests that such review examine appropriate enforceable actions against these crimes and acts of violence under the Gun-Free School Zones Act, the PATRIOT Act in regards to domestic terrorism, the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, the Violent Interference with Federally Protected Rights statute, the Conspiracy Against Rights statute, an Executive Order to enforce all applicable federal laws for the protection of students and public school district personnel, and any related measure.”

Boy, howdy! That’s a mouthful of potential statutes to lob at perturbed parents.

It’s also wrong. Unconstitutional at best and certain to worsen the dialogue between elected officials and their constituents. How long will it be before city councils and county commissions ask for federal protection? Will we see the deployment of national guard against regular citizens who are exercising their First Amendment rights?

You have to wonder whether there is any action that is out of bounds for this current administration.

The US Patriot Act was enacted so that the federal government could combine intelligence and go after foreign threats more effectively. When “home-grown” terrorism reared its ugly head (in connection with foreign threats) the Patriot Act was beefed up to deal with it.

No one can pretend that the parents who are upset with Critical Race Theory are enemies of America. Hell, they are trying to preserve a traditional love and understanding of America. But they are banging heads against the prevailing zeitgeist in Washington, D.C.

As far as I can tell, there have been no acts of violence against any school board member. Threats? Oh, possibly. Lots of things are said in the heat of the moment when people are denied their right to address their elected officials. We used to realize that tempers cool, and that these are our neighbors.

The Constitution gave the federal government ZERO authority to run our public or private schools. And yet we have the federal Department of Education which parcels out billions of dollars to effectively tell local educators (and school boards) what is and isn’t important.

The Constitution did grant citizens the rights of free speech and assembly, to petition and seek the redress of grievances. Merrick Garland and, by extension, President Joe Biden, don’t mind throwing a little chill into the hearts of ordinary citizens. This is the kind of “we know better than you” garbage that the elites and the left embrace. They should be ashamed, but they are not.

Once upon a time, and not that long ago, new concepts had to prove themselves in the marketplace of ideas. If you had a controversial subject you wanted to teach, you had to back it up with facts, in an open setting.

The left can’t defend what they are pushing, because it is detrimental to the comity of our politics and the stability of our country.  So, they now resort to the threat of force and the denial of basic rights to those whom they disagree.

Missing trucks, missing tourists

Pier 300 Channel
Courtesy of the Port Authority of Los Angeles

When I travel, if there is time, I avoid the interstates. America is so much more interesting on the smaller highways, the ones once described as “Blue Highways” by author William Least Heat Moon. Interstates are too often crowded by long-haul trucks and their 53-foot trailers (some doubles as well), so much so that one must concentrate on navigating around the traffic, the scenery if such there is, is missed.

This last trip was notable in that on both types of roadways there was a decided lack of big rig traffic. Some, to be sure, but not what I expected. At first I thought it was only my perception, or a slow day, but after 10 days of travel it became apparent that truck traffic was down. This led to research upon my return.

Another thing: I did not pick up on this at first, but after several days of eye-balling license plates it struck me that there were no Canadian vehicles.  In September, in the Mountain West, there are always Canadians.  And then I remembered that our government is blocking non-essential travel from the Great White North. To stop the spread of Covid, of course. Those hosers are well-known as super spreaders, eh?

There were plenty of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois and Michigan tagged vehicles. California, Florida and Texas, naturally. We all visit the West to see the same great sites and scenery, but for different reasons. Northerners have completed their summer duties and want to catch a few more golden rays of sun before the cold arrives. Southerners head north because we are anxious for a taste of cooler weather, escaping the summer temps and humidity that linger on no matter what the calendar says.

Americans are more or less free to move about the country with few restrictions (don’t get me started on the ridiculous rules at national park buildings), but Canadians are not welcome.  Yet, on our southern border, we permit thousands of undocumented “migrants” to cross the border with little more than cursory medical evaluations (if that), then spend taxpayer funds to bus and fly these people to points unknown throughout the country where they likely will not show up for immigration court hearings. The logic escapes me, as it does most people.

Our “uninvited” guests will require social services of various kinds. Their children will need medical care and schooling. The adults will need stopgap food assistance, maybe even rent money. Yet the Canadians who cannot vacation here were ready to bring their cash, credit and debit cards and buy meals and merchandise.  How much of an economic loss this poses I cannot begin to fathom, but it is considerable.  Again, the logic is undetectable.

The lack of truck traffic is even more worrisome in that it is indicative of weakness in the supply chain. Just this week new warnings were issued from a coalition of truck drivers, airline workers and seafarers – not only for the U.S. but for other developed nations – that the transportation industry needs to be freed from Covid-related restrictions or we could face a “system collapse.” Two years of supply chain pressure are causing “buckles.” A large number of older, experienced truckers took retirement in order to ride out the pandemic shutdown. Replacements were (and are) not immediately available. Two years ago, going into the pandemic, there already existed a shortage of 60,000 drivers, according to the American Trucking Association. The number is expected to grow to 100,000 by 2023.

While trains do a lot of long-hauling, trucks are necessary for virtually all of the shorter-range deliveries. The cost of hauling goods will go up, and some commodities will be delivered to the highest bidder, because that’s how market economics works. (This too works against small business, as the big corporate giants either have their own trucking or they have the ability to outbid the competition). The cost of almost everything is rising, as anyone knows who shops. Which brings to mind the ignorant ramblings of the lead White House press secretary on Monday, who claims that businesses won’t raise prices of their taxes are increased:

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Monday defended House Democrats’ tax plan in the face of criticism that the legislation would see taxes and consumer prices rise for many Americans. Psaki insisted President Joe Biden is committed to keeping taxes the same for anyone making less than $400,000 a year, and she called it “absurd” that companies would raise consumer prices in response to higher taxes.

“There are some … who argue that, in the past, companies have passed on these costs to consumers,” Psaki said. “We feel that that’s unfair and absurd, and the American people would not stand for that.”

Not sure (and don’t really care, or I’d look it up) where Jen Psaki received her education, but she should know that even socialists have to eventually bow to supply and demand, the inexorable market laws that cannot be regulated or legislated, and ignored at peril.

Meanwhile, if you were watching carefully and quickly, there were photos of scores of container ships parked off the eleven main ports of California, awaiting unloading. Some have been there for weeks. Over 500 containers yet to be off-loaded at Los Angeles alone. Contributing factors include shortages of dock workers, shortages of trucks to load, container ships that are several times larger than before and take extra time to unload, thus clogging the ports. It’s already a cluster and getting worse.

What are we to think? More importantly, what are we to do?

What won’t help is panic purchasing or hoarding. Better advice is figure out you’re your potential needs might be and begin small purchases of those things, having at least a month or so in reserve of those things that will keep you alive.  Any period of shortage will be met with panic buying, and that will only extend the period of shortage. (Remember the toilet paper crunch of 2020!)

Worse, however, is that this administration will likely leap into action to begin rationing or price controls, or both. In its hubris and conceit, believing that its planners actually understand markets, will screw up the marketplace. They probably will not hesitate to impose draconian restrictions on interstate commerce.

This is potentially nasty business. I would like to think that the American people are smart enough to reject command-and-control economics.  The reality is that I am less certain enough people remember that central planning has never worked very well.  Lord help us all if central planning is done on the basis of economic or racial or gender equity.

The real solution is freedom. Let the markets work and restore themselves. There will be a period of imbalance, but it will be resolved. Nothing screws up markets more than government interference. Americans should not stand for it. It is not enough to shout “F— Joe Biden” at NASCAR races and football games, as amusing (and as American) as that is. It is time for quiet, discerning talk among people of all political stripes to discover those principles and values we have in common, making plans to help one another over the hard times.

And voting overwhelmingly in 2022 to toss out the political support for the left.

Help Wanted … Everywhere

I recently spent nearly two weeks traveling through portions of the western U.S., some of it prime tourist country (Mount Rushmore, Crazy Horse) and some of it a little less traveled (Thermopolis and Riverton, Wyoming). For grins, we took a side trip to Wall Drug to shop, to eat and to gauge the mood of the traveling public. All totaled, we visited nine states.

I wanted to get a feel for the economy, the perception of the reality behind the numbers. What I found was disturbing.

There were “Help Wanted” and “Now Hiring” signs everywhere, no exceptions. There were businesses shuttered because of the lack of workers. Hotels apologized for the lack of room service, laundry and fresh towels. “We appreciate your patience,” I was told more than once. “What little staff we have is running itself ragged just to keep up with the basics.”

At one restaurant in Hill City, South Dakota – a place that gets rave reviews for its food – an obviously weary assistant manager seated guests, brought drink orders, delivered the eventual platters of food, handled refills and extra requests, was the cashier when it came time to collect, and then bussed the tables, clearing the old dishes and making the tables ready for the next customers.  He might even have helped cook the food. I couldn’t say for sure.

Service was slow, and some patrons were not understanding. When I had a chance, I complimented him on his hustle and his patient demeanor. How long, I asked, is your shift?

“I came on just before our breakfast this morning. My relief called in sick, so I will be here until midnight.” He shrugged his shoulders. “I wish I could say this is rare, but it’s happening a lot. We’re all worn out. We need more help but no one really wants to work.” I tipped the young man well but I doubt very many of the other diners did, judging by their grumbling.

His was a common refrain. A successful bar-b-que joint in Florida closed its doors, at least temporarily because “no one really wants to work.” Job openings are at an all-time high, wage offerings are up, but the desire to take those jobs isn’t there. In my home town, a seemingly successful automotive and truck tire store went under because they couldn’t find the workers needed to deliver prompt service. Husband AND wife are now working jobs and paying off debt. And not happy.

This is America?

It isn’t easy to kill a market economy, but it can be done. You do it by creating barriers to employment. You impose lockdowns (“for two weeks, to slow the spread”) that go on for months. You pay millions of workers extra unemployment money (out of compassion, of course) to wait it out. You send out stimulus checks to everybody, even people who are “essential workers” and you promise more to come.

Some people, those of a certain maturity, decide to retire, to live on pensions or social security. It’s hard to blame them. Other people get comfortable with not working, instead waiting for the next handout. Some people were living on the margins anyway, and their new reality is not that different from the old reality, except that they more fervently believe that the government will step in to save them; indeed, that it has a moral obligation to do so.

Expecting government of any kind to exercise moral judgment is an iffy proposition. Human nature being what it is, you can count on government to do only a couple of things well: wield power and levy taxes. Everything else, no matter how well meant, is usually inefficient.

In a year and a half, we have seen one of the most vibrant economies on record stripped of its robust character. I am not referring to the former president, although the phrase certainly fits. We have replaced one administration with another that is using many of the old collectivist techniques that have failed everywhere they have been tried. It should be no surprise that people who do not trust or understand market economies will insist on policies that work against them.

The overarching excuse is that we have a pandemic that threatens lives. This, despite the fact, that the overall numbers compiled by the Centers for Disease Control do not make the case for it.  Recent headlines screamed that 1 out of every 500 people who contract Covid-19 die (it’s actually 1 out of 528). That sounds horrible, right?  But do the math. I know, it’s kind of scienc-y, but as bumper stickers across this fair land declare, “Science is real!”  The percentage of death is .002 percent. Which means that if you contract Covid you have a 99.8 percent chance of survival. I’m in the supposed “high risk” group, but I’ll take those odds. Read that again: 99.8 percent chance of survival. Of beating the 21st Century version of the Black Plague. Which it obviously isn’t.

And yet we have turned our economic house upside down. Small businesses, not just restaurants but all sorts of enterprises, have closed by the thousands. Small business, in case you did not know, hires more people than the big corporate entities.  And now the government is pushing a mandate that would bar employment for workers of any business that hires over 100 people. Explain why 100 is the magic number? If this is a good idea, then why not 50? Or 10? Or 5?  Federal Covid policy changes every week, sometimes every day.

Should I be barred from working because I won’t get “the shot” of a vaccine that, scientifically speaking, isn’t a vaccine but an experimental therapeutic that tricks the body into thinking it has the coronavirus?

How much power do once-free Americans continue to transfer to politicians who take their orders from unelected bureaucrats and administrators?

The people at the top do not seem to care. You should.

Now for a brief sermon. If you believe that human beings are created by God with certain unalienable rights – life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness – then you understand that we have both conscience and free will.  Our Creator wants us to learn to use both responsibly, and He will not deprive us of them.  Unfortunately, there are plenty of mere human beings who are only too happy to inform me that my conscience doesn’t count, and my free will (along with my rights) is conditional and can be modified or eliminated if “the experts” declare it necessary (“for the common good”, of course). Perhaps this is why the federal government, and some state governments, work so hard to diminish and muzzle Christians.  God-talk about the dignity of the human individual, including the right to meaningful work, goes against a “one-size-fits-all” philosophy that sees us as a collective of interest groups that must be controlled.

On a closing note, I have been silent for too long. Busy in life, but quiet. That must change. For me and for everyone who believes that freedom is worth preserving. We have to use our rights of free speech and press to avoid being rolled over by those who seek power over us. It is important that we know what is going on. It’s vital that each day we do the right, moral things so that we can provide hope to the hopeless, and help to those who are confused.

A World for Sale

Forbes repeats a warning from NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, that Chinese companies are swooping in to other countries to purchase undervalued assets brought low by the Covid-19 shutdown.

‘Watch out for Chinese companies swooping in with buckets of cash to buy strategic stakes, or majority control in U.S. and European companies as asset prices fall due to the pandemic.

There are other similar reports from around the globe. Yet the Chinese push to acquire foreign assets is nothing new. As Americans learned over the last month, Smithfield Farms (“Proudly Made in the USA”) is wholly owned by a Chinese corporation, and has been for seven years.

Is that a bad thing? It depends on your point of view. If you are comfortable with foreign ownership of the nation’s largest packing plant, then you are a very trusting individual – or a vegetarian.  The fact that Smithfield Farms experienced one of the worst Covid-19 outbreaks in its South Dakota plant and was forced to close didn’t expand my comfort zone. Many were concerned that the shutdown of this and other meat-packing plants would create shortages in the supply chain. And there were.

After a three-week shutdown, the plant is reopening.  Did we dodge a bullet?

I am uncomfortable with China being our source for a vast majority of our medicinal drugs. There have been and still are shortages in some pharmacy supply chains as a result of the pandemic. You don’t hear much about it because the Chinese government is given a de facto Most Favored Nation status by mainstream media outlets.  It was big news in March, but people lost interest amid the panic of the pandemic.

Should we be concerned that a nation that considers itself our geopolitical enemy has control of our supply of medicines?

It is an embarrassing commentary on today’s post-modern United States that we prefer not to manufacture things. Oh, we want the jobs, just not the factories. The trade off is that our economy is not secure, our supply lines extended and controlled by others.

Our over-reliance on foreign manufacturing is a national security conversation that we should be having … out in the open. It should not be restricted to bureaucrats and think tank “experts.”  A free America requires an informed citizenry. I believe we are still smart enough to make good decisions, and brave enough to see things through when the consequences of tough decisions arrive. And there will be consequences.

As for meat processing, we need to examine federal regulations that have pushed smaller operations to close or be acquired by large operations. Bigger is not necessarily better, and diversity in ownership is common sense economics. It is heartening that many smaller operations, even local butchers, are stepping up to fill the gap caused by a 40 percent reduction in big meat packing production.

Stepping up is what Americans have historically done during times of crisis and war. It is not a stretch to declare that the pandemic has revealed several major shortcomings in the way our country does business. National security-sized gaps.

But our modern attention span is as limited as our willingness to assume risk.  When the pandemic panic is over, will we remember or will we go back to sleep until the next crisis or war reveals them anew?  Will we awaken only to find that it is now too late to do something about it?

It’s Almost May Day

It’s the last day of April and there is no clear exit plan to reverse the shutdown of the economy. But it’s beautiful outside. Aren’t the skies so very clear without all those contrails mucking it up?

I’m working on another article, much longer than this one, but finding it difficult to be succinct. Trying to analyze the Covid-19 mess is difficult, something like searching for a Unified Field Theory that would bring order out of chaos. It is so much easier to be a liberal or lefty. All you have to say is “Orange Hair Man bad.” Nothing more need be said.

But if you are a principled believer in liberty, the Constitution and the rule of law, and you like for things to make sense, it is much more difficult. You seek reasons for the things that take place, motives behind the opportunistic actions of politicians, journalists and corporate heavy-weights, a good number who seem determined to fundamentally transform our country. Without asking our permission. Often while proclaiming themselves to be the defenders of democracy.

So today, instead of the omnibus article on the backburner, I wish merely to comment on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s statement of three days ago in which she recommended a “universal basic income” to address the Covid-19 economic crisis. Via CNBC:

“Others have suggested a minimum income, a guaranteed income for people. Is that worthy of attention now? Perhaps so. Because there are many more people than just in small business and hired by small business … that may need some assistance as well.”

Who doesn’t need assistance? However, turning the populace into a people waiting for their next government handout isn’t about compassion. It’s about slavery. More on that later. There is no free lunch. Recipients of Madame Pelosi’s so-called philanthropy will be expected to vote their stomachs, and they will. They will do whatever is necessary to keep the checks coming.

And freedom will die quickly. A country that was built on personal initiative and the desire for accomplishment will change. Entrepreneurs and inventors, farmers and factory workers, will be taxed – directly and/or indirectly – to support a growing population of free-loading drones.  If they don’t give up, they will be dragged under by the weight of government edicts and skewed market realities.

For what Pelosi proposes is pure socialism. It’s been tried in many places. It has succeeded in none.

What conservatives and libertarians must realize is that Donald J. Trump will not be president forever. Even if he is re-elected, that’s just four years, and with the way the economy is performing, re-election is not a lock. The Left plays the long game. They are good at waiting, and in the meantime taunting us with promises of insane economics and restrictive government shackles.

Have we forgotten how to raise our voices in constitutionally protected protest? We’re going to need to in order to keep the light of liberty burning.