Categories
Update

Elon’s Latest Offer

If your social media feed is burgeoning with radical pinkoist complaints about the madness and malignity of billionaires, maybe it’s worth offsetting with the news of the latest gesture from the billionairist billionaire of them all, Elon Musk:

Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, the world’s richest ‌person, said on Saturday he would cover the paychecks of Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers ‌during their second unpaid work stoppage in six ⁠months amid a protracted federal funding lapse.

The budget impasse over funding for the TSA’s parent agency, the Department of Homeland ​Security, is in its fifth week. Screeners and other TSA personnel are days away ⁠from missing a second full paycheck, but are being pressured to show up as screening times at some airports stretch on for hours.

“I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively ‌affecting the ⁠lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country,” Musk said in a post on ‌his social media platform X.

Elon Musk Offers to Pay TSA Salaries Amid Budget Battle, Airport Lineups,” Reuters via The Epoch Times (March 21, 2026).

Paul Jacob has been covering the Elon Musk story on this site for years now, and we can be fairly certain that if Paul were called upon to give a statement about this story, he would lament that the generous offer does not include provisions to treat Musk’s payments as severance pay, upon the closing of the TSA:

The current congressional impasse for budgeting the agency is such a good occasion for its closure!

Categories
Thought

Charles Sumner

There is true grandeur in an example of justice, in making the rights of all the same as our own, and beating down the prejudice, like Satan, under our feet.

Senator Charles Sumner, Memoir and Letters of Charles Sumner, Volume 4, p. 500.
Categories
Today

Templar Order Dissolved

On March 22, 1312, in the papal bull Vox in excelso, Pope Clement V dissolved the Order of the Knights Templar, after five years of suppression, torture and executions that began with the events of Friday the 13th, October 1307.

March 22nd marks some sad days for Americans, too:

1622 — Algonquians killed 347 English settlers around Jamestown, Virginia, a third of the colony’s population, during the Second Anglo-Powhatan War.

1631 — The Massachusetts Bay Colony outlawed the possession of cards, dice, and gaming tables.

1638 — Anne Hutchinson was expelled from Massachusetts Bay Colony for religious dissent.

1765 — The British Parliament passed the Stamp Act, which levied taxes directly on its American colonies.

On a brigher note, on March 22, 1621, the Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony, led by governor John Carver, signed a peace treaty with Massasoit, sachem of the Wampanoags; Squanto served as an interpreter between the two sides.

Categories
Update

Senate Violence!

A dramatic moment in the Senate confirmation hearing for Senator Markwayne Mullin’s appointment to head the Department of Homeland Security:

This is a significant update to several ongoing stories, including Paul Jacob’s coverage of Rand Paul and the illegal immigration problem.

The senator from Kentucky charges the nominee with a “sheer lack of self-awareness” when it comes to his own behavior and lack of emotional control . . . while expressing the confidence to lead a department charged with the use force within the borders.

Was the wildest part was when Mullin was challenged for implying he approved the caning of Sen Charles Sumner on the Senate floor on May 22, 1856?

Arguably, this is the clip of the week.

Categories
Today

The NEP

On March 21, 1921, the Bolshevik Party — responding to the disaster that war communism had wrought — implemented the New Economic Policy. And controversy about this seems never to end.

Among the reforms was a re-introduction of money into the economy, going so far as to produce gold-backed “chervonets.”

Categories
Thought

Ovid

Medio tutissimus ibis.

You will be safest in the middle.

Ovid, Metamorphoses, Book II, 137.
Categories
ideological culture obituary political economy

The Bomb That Fizzled

Paul Ehrlich was a biologist whose 1968 The Population Bomb went off when I was just a lad. He died last week at the ripe old age of 93. Professor Ehrlich warned of the dangers of overpopulation, proclaiming that in “the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.”

It didn’t happen.

Instead, for the first time in history, the percentage of the human population living in misery and dire poverty declined steadily.

But that did not mean his work was shelved as a bad theory, falsified by evidence.

Everywhere, when I was growing up, I witnessed a rising tide of anti-natalism, the doctrine that young adults shouldn’t have babies, or — if they did — should have only a few. Mankind was a cancer on the planet, we were told, and too many believed it.

Which affected breeding patterns.

And policy.

The current population reality is the opposite of what the Ehrlichs said it would be. All over the world, except for places in Africa, legacy populations are declining. In the United States, our population would be declining were it not for immigration. Elsewhere, the replication rate is plummeting — and it’s not just the West, but in China and Taiwan; both Koreas, as different as they are; and in Japan.

Without growing populations, our modern (if jury-rigged) social safety net pension systems are jeopardized, as is the possibility of finding caregivers to aging-and-dying populations.

We cannot blame it all on Ehrlich of course. There are many factors at work. But is it possible to be more wrong than he was? 

What should the young do now, to mark Ehrlich’s passing?

You could do worse than make some more babies.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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Categories
Thought

Jacques Ellul

Naturally, the educated man does not believe in propa­ganda. He shrugs and is convinced that propaganda has no effect on him. This is, in fact, one of his great weaknesses, and propa­gandists are well aware that in order to reach someone, one must first convince him that propaganda is ineffectual and not very clever. Because he is convinced of his own superiority, the intellectual is much more vulnerable than anybody else to this maneu­ver, even though basically a high intelligence, a broad culture, a constant exercise of the critical faculties, and full and objective information are still the best weapons against propaganda.

Jacques Ellul, Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes (1962).
Categories
Today

Uncle Tom’s Cabin

On March 20, 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly was published. By the end of the nineteenth century it had become the country’s second best-selling book, after the Bible.

Categories
defense & war First Amendment rights

Iran and the Rubicon

Last weekend, Cenk Uygur, of the alternative news commentary show The Young Turks, focused on the Iran war, including one of its stranger developments, rumors that the Trump Administration is planning to arrest a different news commentator, Tucker Carlson. 

And try Mr. Carlson for treason.

“If @TuckerCarlson is actually arrested, the government will have crossed the Rubicon,” Mr. Uygur posted to X. “Whatever ridiculous charges they bring up, everyone will know real reason was that he opposed the war and Israel. He’ll be considered [the] first American political prisoner within our own country.”

A factual corrective to this was provided Sunday, on this site, at least about the historical background of imprisoning journalists critical of a U.S.-involved war: Woodrow Wilson did that. He “crossed the Rubicon” over a hundred years ago. And he wasn’t the first president to do so.

But is there any real push to try Tucker Carlson for treason?

Robbie Soave, writing on Tuesday, surmised that, considering Carlson’s connections with the administration, the commentator is not likely paranoid or making things up.

And you can certainly find arguments pushing a treason case, and worse — for example, Israeli journalist and historian Yair Kleinbaum wrote in JFeed that “Carlson, Fuentes and Owens Must Be Jailed Inside a WWII-Style Internment Camp.”

At least, apparently, “while America is locked in a struggle against the dark forces of Shia Islam.” (Note that one consequence of the Iraq War was to attack Sunni Islam and install Shia Islam in Mesopotamia.) “Once the war is won and the threat is neutralized, we can release them,” Kleinbaum concludes.

Let’s hope this treason talk is all rumor. Arresting Tucker Carlson won’t improve the popularity of the Iran War.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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