Archive for May, 2023

Our Dim, Cretinous Overlords

Wednesday, May 17th, 2023

To: Senator Smith
From: Mitch Berg, Unaborted Human
Re: From the Deep Thoughts of Tina Smith Files

Senator,

I have long since learned that your ignorance is a barrel with no bottom. Nothing surprises me.

This? Not even close:

No.

My God. No.

The SCOTUS is not “beholden to the people”. That’s the House. The Senate was intended to be beholden to the States (one of our nation’s greatest mistakes was changing that).

The SCOTUS responds only to the Constitution. When it doesn’t, awful things happen.

The thought that you are in the “deliberative” chamber is frankly an abomination.

That is all.

Your Private Catholic University Dollars At Work

Wednesday, May 17th, 2023

University of Saint Thomas, as a matter of policy, apparently doesn’t tell young women if their assigned dorm roommate is is a bio-male who identifies as female:

This, according to [UST Housing Director Zoe] Chang, is done as discreetly as possible in order to avoid upsetting parents. The video, OMG said in an email, documents the “mountain of rule changes and preferential treatment provided to trans students when it comes to their housing accommodations.”

The video:

If progressive policies are so unambiguously good, why do they have to lie about all of them?

All That Is Needed Is That You Keep Sending Money

Tuesday, May 16th, 2023

A friend of the blog emails regarding an email he got from Minnesota Public Radio regarding their recently-finished pledge drive:

Wait a minute. I thought that government subsidies was only a small portion of their funding.

So which it is?

Here was the email:

MPR’s Spring Member Drive ended last week, and we made great progress. But there is still a long way to go to meet our budget goals by June 30. I know the budget isn’t the most exciting thing to talk about, but the fact is that it powers everything we do – the programming you love, and the hosts, journalists and staff who create and share it. 

To give you a status update, here what’s happening:

👉 Economic uncertainty continues to negatively impact our revenues

👉 Vocal attacks on public media continue, even resulting in calls to defund public media on the national stage

These headwinds materially affect MPR. We’re working hard to keep on track. It’s important that we do so that we can move forward in a position of stability and strength. 
 

Look, MPR – public radio apologists keep saying NPR gets a tiny share of its funding from government. But if NPR says they’ll collapse without government funding, how are they not state media?

Music History

Tuesday, May 16th, 2023

I’m always amazed at the artists who had the foresight, while creating timeless musical classics, to have a camera rolling in the studio.

This is one such example:

It’s like gospel music in the church of fast-casual food.

A Couple Bucks In The Proverbial Tip Jar

Monday, May 15th, 2023

Sure, it’s entirely plausible that an entire “white supremacist” group without a single inbred-looking morbidly overweight guy among ’em might march through DC without a mob of “counterprotesters” howling for their blood. It’s a crazy world, anything can happen.

What makes this whole thing seem just a tad lessplausible is…:

(more…)

Leave No Man Behind

Monday, May 15th, 2023

Last week, I did one of my periodic cites of Jeff Snyder’s epochal “A Nation of Cowards“.

It was partly in reference to the Penny case.

Daniel Penny was the good samaritan who put a sleeper (not choke) hold on a mentally-ill man who was actively threatening people in the NYC subway. He was assisted by a black man and a latino fellow – all good samaritans, all men doing the right thing, all examples of what masculinity is supposed to be in the face of danger.

But Penny is being charged by Manhattan DA Lavrentii Beria. Oops – I mean Alvin Bragg.

He’s got a legal defense fund:

https://twitter.com/RonDeSantisFL/status/1657212176178855939

Penny (amd the other men) were the opposite of the “cowards” Snyder assailed. Naturally Beria..er, Bragg can’t tolerate that.

This has the potential to wedge NYC the way the Bernard Goetz case did.

In a just world, anyway.

Politics In Minneapolis

Monday, May 15th, 2023

On Saturday, I had a chat with Shawn Holster about the new, vastly streamlined Minneapolis GOP. It’s a reform that makes sense – going from four Senate district and 13 ward committees to a single city organization. No more wondering what side of what arbitrary dividing line you live on, no more wondering if you went to the right meeting, no more wasted effort among a dozen sub-units, more focus on what matters- it’s freaking brilliant, and Saint Paul should do the same.

It starts at the :33 mark:

In the meantime, as I was talking with Shawn, this was the MInneapolis Ward 10 convention:

Ken Martin – who runs the party of Bill “Guillotine Republicans!” Davis, of Matt “He Who Flexes on Reporters who are 30 years older than him” Roznowski, of Leigh “Thrilla On the House Floor” Finke, whose party has presided over probably half a dozen cycles of Minneapolis district conventions breaking down into riots…

…is making vigorous noises about violbla beingbla bla unacceptibiblablabla.

Honor Among Thieves

Monday, May 15th, 2023

A couple of punks shoplifting a store…

https://twitter.com/robmcnealy/status/1656842256605667329?s=46&t=NQICV0vfnJ7ol-tsbeTj-A

… beat down an armed robber.

Note the cool skateboard diversion.

I Heard It On The NARN

Saturday, May 13th, 2023

Learn more about the new, improved, streamlined Minneapolis GOP here.

If you’re not in the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus – what do you want, an invitation? OK – I invite you to get involved. Do it!

And here’s the music list:

The Same Thing Over And Over Again

Friday, May 12th, 2023

“Juvenile Offender” alleged to have murdered a Saint Paul man while burgling the man’s wife’s car is already a frequent flyer:

FOX 9 has confirmed through multiple sources that the 17-year-old suspect in custody on suspicion of Michael Brasel’s murder is the same young man captured on a video that went viral last year inside a Saint Paul Harding High School bathroom…the teen, who we are not naming at this point, was charged and eventually pled guilty to aggravated robbery in that case. He was discharged from probation and supervision four months ago, in January.

Former St. Paul Police chief Todd Axtell makes an appearance in the story, showing us again why he was literally the only public figure in either of the Twin Cities not to disgrace himself completely during the 2020 riots.

Remember – if the murder victim had instead shot the teen (while meeting all the other criteria for self-defense naturally), the Ramsey County Attorney’s office would have take a much greater interest in punishment.

That’s intentional.

And just watch – John Choi will not ask for the sentence enhancement for using a gun in a violent crime. Mark my words.

Shots Fired

Friday, May 12th, 2023

In the wake of his move to Twitter, some bad news for Tucker Carlson.

He’s been banned from…

…uh…

“Tribel”.

Because apparently nobody’s banning people on Mastodon.

Or Air America, apparently.

Unexpectedly

Thursday, May 11th, 2023

With great fanfare, Minneapolis and Saint Paul raised their minimum wages to $15 an hour. 

And now, the Minneapolis Federal Reserve says the policy has done…well, exactly what every conservative said it would do:  

 Pay is up 1% among those with jobs – but 2% fewer are employed as a direct result of the policies, and that’s just scratching the surface (emphasis added):

Many economists have reached similar conclusions about minimum wage increases in the past. Still, the size of the impacts the researchers measured — by comparing Minneapolis and St. Paul to data culled from other Minnesota cities from 2017 through 2021 — were eye-popping, especially in low-wage industries.

Take Minneapolis’ retail sector, for example: The minimum wage increase led to 28% fewer retail jobs than researchers would’ve expected from a similar city during the same five-year period. By this comparison, Minneapolis also saw a 20% drop in hours worked and a 13% dip in aggregate worker earnings.

Across St. Paul’s restaurant industry, the city’s 2018 minimum wage hike was responsible for drying up nearly one-third of available jobs, the study found. In “limited-service” (fast food) restaurants, both hours and earnings fell by more than half after the increase took effect.

“Good, they’re mostly terrible jobs anyway” say the white progressives from the non-profit/government/industrial complex. They re literally spinning this as good news – or excuses for more programs.

It’s possible that Big Left isn’t pushing these minimum wages as a way to gut opportunity for entry level workers. But if it were, I’m at a loss for what they’d do differently.

Question For Emery And Other DFLers/Democrat Commenters

Thursday, May 11th, 2023

At what point in your mother’s pregnancy with you was it no longer OK to abort you?

Put another way – when did your life acquire moral weight? When did your choice – and existence – become something warranting defending?

Not some generic “woman”; your mother.

Not some abstract “fetus”; you.

Please leave an answer in the comments.

And if your answer is any variation of “It was entirely my mother’s choice, up until the moment I emerged” – in other words, that your very justification for existence didn’t develop moral weight until another human said it did, feel free to follow up with a logically consistent reason that murder is wrong. Either that, or consider me to have branded you a moral coward, and see yourself out.

Only Democrats/Lefties/pro-choicers in the comments, please.

Atlas Shrugs

Wednesday, May 10th, 2023

Money – in the form of productive people – is moving from Blue to Red America:

Data show that several populous blue states—California, New York, and Illinois among them—have been losing population and companies for years. In 2021 Forbes wrote about “leftugees” fleeing blue states for red ones. A few years before that, a headline in The Hill touched on “the great exodus out of America’s blue cities.”

New IRS data, however, show the speed with which blue states are losing taxpayers—and their adjusted gross income (AGI)—is increasing. A recent Wall Street Journal analysis found that more than 100,000 people left Illinois in 2021, taking with them some $11 billion in AGI, nearly double its 2019 total. For New York it was $24.5 billion, an increase of more than 150 percent from 2019. California, meanwhile, saw its AGI loss ($29 billion) more than triple since 2019.

And Minnesota is far from immune – and, indeed, may be doing worse:

As Figure 1 shows, until 2001 Minnesota received more residents from other states each year than it lost to them. Since then, in all except two years, 2017 and 2018, our state has seen more residents leave than have chosen to come here from elsewhere in the United States. The loss of residents seen in 2021 and 2022 is not a new phenomenon, but the pace of exit is quickening: Minnesotans are fleeing the state in larger numbers.

Figure 1: Annual net domestic migration in Minnesota

Source: Census Bureau

Where did people move to and from? Figure 2 shows domestic net migration for 2022 for all the fifty states and District of Columbia. We see that the most popular destinations by far were Texas and Florida. On net, these states gained an impressive 549,816 residents in one year. The big losers were New York and California. Together, these two states lost a staggering 642,787 residents between 2021 and 2022.

It’s entirely possible that when co-governors Klink and Flanagan refer to “One Minnesota”, they mean “after all the productive, dissenting voters leave”.

Our Idiot Overlords, Part XVI

Wednesday, May 10th, 2023

Michael Cohen – the leftist dweeb, not the Trump lawyer – on “gun violence”:

https://twitter.com/speechboy71/status/1655375424497631235

That’s right, Michael. And if you can’t trust the Serbian government, which has committed oodles of genocide in the past 30 years, and has frequent flier miles at the Hague Human Rights Court, to trust the civil liberties of a disarmed populace, who can you trust?

A Nation Of Cowards

Tuesday, May 9th, 2023

In the 1960s into the 1980s, New York City hit rock bottom – so far.

It was a time when leftism had ravaged the city – rent control had eliminated the supply of affordable housing, leaving block after block of vacant, burned out buildings in a city where finding an apartment was the stuff of upper-middle-class horror story.

And the crime?

It got to the point where New Yorkers were advised to carry a “decoy” wallet – with a little bit of money in it (because muggers would sometimes attack or kill people who didn’t have some money to give up. New York had well over 2,000 homicides a year – among the most dangerous cities in the country.

And here we are today: as criminals re-take the streets, the violent mentally ill are all over the subway, and our idiot elite is saying we have it coming.

https://twitter.com/stillgray/status/1655023433544265729
Not actually the Green Line at 5AM in the Midway. Or…is it?

Go ahead – condemn the bystanders for grabbing cameras instead of hauling off on the crazy who’s abusing the woman on the bench. We’ve seen what happens when the wrong criminal, addict of crazy gets harmed. New York has a long history of holding good guys to a level of account that no bad guy will ever see.

Giuliani cleaned all that up. It’d doubtful there are enough sane voters left in Gotham to do that again, of course.

It’s not just New York, of course. This happened in Dinkytown Minneapolis on Friday night/Saturday morning:

https://twitter.com/CrimeWatchMpls/status/1654737923625963520

Another episode – same night, some of the same “people”:

https://twitter.com/CrimeWatchMpls/status/1655024838006784002

One of the victims contacted CrimeWatch:

A few people asked why “bystanders” didn’t help out. It’s simple – they travel in a pack, and pick out people walking alone:

https://twitter.com/CrimeWatchMpls/status/1655053027273854984

Perhaps the good guys need a lot more bystanders to flood the zone?

By the way – this was the media’s coverage:

https://twitter.com/kare11/status/1655052336945942531

No word if the authorities are still looking for a man with an umbrella.


I bring it up because of the parallels with the 1970s.

It was 30 years ago that New Statesman published Jeffrey Snyder’s epochal monograph, “A Nation of Cowards”, which made the case that it was time for citizens to step up and defend the order that society depends on.

It was one of several prime movers in pushing “gun culture” out of the shadows and into the mainstream, of course – but more signally, it made the case that relying on the police to protect order was not only futile, but a little craven; what makes your life invaluable, but a cop’s worth only whatever we pay them to do the job?

Once, and always, worth a read.

f

Do Try To Keep Up

Tuesday, May 9th, 2023

To: Senator Klobuchar
From: Mitch Berg, Obstreperous Peasant
Re: Hire A Better Social Media Intern

Senator,

I’m not sure if you left your social media feed with your remedial intern last week, or if you – a former prosecutor – actually wrote this:

So let’s get this straight – you want to write a bill to “stop dangerous conversions”…

…that have been illegal on the federal level for nearly 90 years?

Meanwhile In Saint Anthony Park

Monday, May 8th, 2023

Saint Anthony Park is Saint Paul’s neighborhood for “old money” without all the ostentation of Summit Avenue or Crocus Hill.

Its leafy streets and gently-cared-for Victorians full of university profs and senior administrative types and other moderately successful architecture geeks is the kind of place that makes city life look good.

It’s also a neighborhood full of people who haven’t been robbed, burgled and gone over enough to get hypervigilant just yet.

Fearless prediction: if they find a perp, he’ll be out of jail on his own recognizance for several felonies, and was moving up-market by going to SAP.

Condolences to Mr. Brasel’s family.

This Is Blue America

Monday, May 8th, 2023

Language NSFW, and you might wanna watch the volume, too:

Some are more eloquent. Some use their indoor voices. Some use words.

But one way or another, this is the archtype for all modern leftist oratory.

I Heard It On The NARN

Saturday, May 6th, 2023

Interested in contributing to Pre-Born, to help bring ultrasound to women considering abortion? Call 833-850-BABY (2229). You also go to AM11280thepatriot.com.

Here’s today’s song line-up:

Profile In Cowardice

Friday, May 5th, 2023

The Feds are on the case in Minneapolis, going after the gangland bosses who, we’re told, are driving the crime.

Getting mobsters off the street is a good start.

But this is also a very bad sign.

This is Minneapolis, Hennepin iCounty and the State’s job. Having the Feds do it just means that Jacob Frey won’t have to answer, personally, to the “Progressive” goon squad that bedevils him; that Mary Moriarty doesn’t have to explain to the “progressives” who own her why she’s rounding up gangsters; why Governor Klink doesn’t have to take flak from the “progressives” that have wires hooked to his giblets.

It’s cowardice, and political expediency.

Communicating With The MN DFL: Part X

Friday, May 5th, 2023

Dems: Public broadcasting is NOT state media! 1% of their funding comes from government!

Normies: Then defunding won’t hurt anythi…

Dems: NOOO! You’ll KILL ELMO! Why do you hate Click and Clack the Tappet Brothers?

Deadsville

Friday, May 5th, 2023

Minneapolis ranks 59th out of 63 cities, in terms of loss of foot traffic since 2019:

Researchers essentially treated smartphones and other mobile devices as a proxy for their owners. If a device pings a nearby cell tower, it’s a good bet that’s where the device’s owner is.

The Downtown Council says it’s all a matter of remote work, and perceptions:

Downtown Council CEO Steve Cramer told Axios. The largest downtown employer pre-pandemic, Target, has no in-person requirements. The perception of public safety is another factor, Cramer said.”Our downtown … is lot more safe than many of the downtowns that get measured on these indexes, but then you have to factor in perception, and we’ve been battling that.

He’s not wrong. Downtown isn’t especially dangerous. Near North and the middle South Side are where most of the actual danger is.

But your odds of having a problem if you’re a schmuck trying to go to a concert or a game or meet friends for happy hour are about double what they were in 2016. And while that is also a matter of perception, it’s not wrong, either.

Irrelevant

Thursday, May 4th, 2023

Members of the House of Representatives routinely vote for each other.

The Minnesota House’s hours-long floor sessions are often mundane and monotonous, the chamber regularly half full at best. But when members get to voting on an amendment or a bill, the chamber suddenly looks as bustling as a bee hive.

Members press the green and red voting buttons at their desks to cast a “yes” or “no” vote. But some of them aren’t just recording their own vote. Many stretch, lean over and press the voting buttons for their seatmates, who are gone.

Then, a handful get out of their seats to make sure all the empty seats around them have a vote cast.

Where are the missing members? And why are they surrendering their vote to their seatmates?

Which is technically a violation of the rules, but hey, rules are for peasants.

The reps involved have their, er, reasons:

House members say voting for one another is a longstanding practice and no cause for alarm — though it’s technically against the rules.

House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, doesn’t believe the practice compromises the legitimacy of the vote.

Walter Hudson goes into the reason behind the reason:

https://twitter.com/WalterHudson/status/1654115857713319937

This – the serious work being argued out behind closed doors by the Governor, Speaker and Senate Majority leader, has been a problem since at least the early years of the Dayton regime, if not longer.

The Pandemic made it worse; the state was in effect run by a junta, and the Legislature was of no more use than the Supreme Soviet.

That’s something for a future, good government to fix, if we ever get one.

From The “Being A DFLer Requires Suspending Logic And Reason, If You Ever Had Any” Files

Thursday, May 4th, 2023

Just a quick reminder as to the level of intellectual acuity the DFL is bringing to this session.

https://twitter.com/MNHRCWarRoom/status/1651647164861280256
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