Categories
Common Sense

Sucker-Punching the People

Sneaky. Low-down. Poltroons.

Click on over to Townhall for this weekend’s highlights reel on how politicians do it, how they sucker-punch the people.

Then come back here for the raw footage:

Arkansas

El Dorado News-Times: Arkansas Supreme Court disqualifies term limits proposal

KARK: Mike Huckabee Talks Capitol Corruption, Term Limits

Arkansas Times: Ethics rules? Legislators hate them

Governing: Fed Up by Corruption, Arkansas Voters Could Revisit Term Limits

Townhall (Paul Jacob): The Deceivers

Common Sense with Paul Jacob: The Natural State of Politicians

Memphis

Common Sense with Paul Jacob: Memphis Politicians Cheating Voters

Daily Memphian: Not No, But Hell No

Commerical Appeal: Why not write city ballot questions in plain English?

IVN: Jennifer Lawrence Warns Memphis Voters, “You’re About to be Blindsided by Your Own Government”

Common Sense with Paul Jacob: Graceless Memphis Politicians

Nashville

Common Sense with Paul Jacob: Nashville’s Trojan Horse

Common Sense (video): Note on Nashville (at Global Forum)


Paul Jacob’s weekly columns debut most Sundays on Townhall.com, and are archived on ThisIsCommonSense.com on Tuesdays.

Categories
Today

Harding Spoke Out

On October 21, 1921, President Warren G. Harding delivered the first speech by a sitting U.S. President against lynching in the deep South.

Categories
Thought

Simon Newcomb

“Scientific method consists in applying to those subjects which lie without the range of our immediate experience those same common-sense methods of reasoning which successful men of the world apply in judging of matters which concern their own interests.”


Simon Newcomb, Principles of Political Economy, 1886, chapter III, “Of Scientific Method”

Categories
video

Memphis Politicians Cheating Voters

Jennifer Lawrence urges voters to “Vote No on All 3 Memphis Charter Questions”:

See also:

And Memphis is better represented here than by a bunch of cheating politicians:

King Curtis & The Kingpins: Memphis Soul Stew

Categories
Thought

Herbert Spencer

Sympathy which, a generation ago, was taking the shape of justice, is relapsing into the shape of generosity; and the generosity is exercised by inflicting injustice. Daily legislation betrays little anxiety that each shall have that which belongs to him, but great anxiety that he shall have that which belongs to somebody else. For while no energy is expended in so reforming our judicial administration that everyone may obtain and enjoy all he has earned, great energy is shown in providing for him and others benefits which they have not earned. Along with that miserable laissez-faire which calmly looks on while men ruin themselves in trying to enforce by law their equitable claims, there goes activity in supplying them, at other men’s cost, with gratis novel-reading!

Herbert Spencer, Principles of Ethics, Vol. 2, Part IV: “Justice” (1891), Chapter 5, “The Idea of Justice.”
Categories
Today

American boundaries

On October 20, 1803, the United States Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.

Exactly 15 years later, the Convention of 1818 signed between the United States and the United Kingdom which, among other things, settled the Canada-United States border on the 49th parallel for most of its length.

Categories
Thought

Yves Guyot

We must not confound liberty with anarchy. Liberty is the reciprocal respect for personal rights, according to certain fixed rules known by the name of law. Anarchy is the privilege of some and the spoliation of others, according to the caprices and arbitrary will of the cunning and the violent, and the feebleness and lack of energy of the timorous.

Categories
Accountability ideological culture media and media people Popular

Fakes & Facts

“There was truth and there was untruth,” George Orwell wrote in his classic novel, 1984, “and if you clung to the truth even against the whole world, you were not mad.”

In the Age of Trump and Fake News, way past 1984, I’m hanging on for dear sanity.

Earlier this week, I commented on the brouhaha between the president and Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). Today, I have a bone to pick with Snopes, the faux-fact-checking site, which found this statement to be TRUE: “President Donald Trump offered to donate $1 million to a charity of Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s choice if she would take a DNA test to demonstrate that she had Native American ancestry.”

Not “Mostly True” with some explanation, but just “True.” Problem is, that statement is false.

Mr. Trump did not make that offer; he promised people at a Montana rally that he would make such an offer in the future, if he found himself “in the middle of the debate, when she proclaims that she is of Indian [sic] heritage.”

Splitting hairs? Where is the split? Here is President Trump’s full statement.

Snopes was hardly alone in misreporting Trump. The Hill titled its story, “Trump denies offering $1 million for Warren DNA test, even though he did.” The Washington Post parroted The Hill’s “fact-checked headline.” Other major outlets from CNN to the Miami Herald declared, falsely, that Trump had made the offer.

Look, I don’t blame Warren for goading Trump to pay up. That’s the political game.

But the media, especially fact-checkers, should be diligent about what precisely the president has said — not playing that game.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

 


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Categories
Thought

Samuel Butler

Happily common sense, though she is by nature the gentlest creature living, when she feels the knife at her throat, is apt to develop unexpected powers of resistance, and to send doctrinaires flying, even when they have bound her down and think they have her at their mercy.

Samuel Butler, Erewhon (1872), chapter 26.
Categories
Today

Cornwallis Surrenders

On October 19, 1781, representatives of British commander Lord Cornwallis handed over Cornwallis’s sword and formally surrendered to George Washington and the comte de Rochambeau, at Yorktown, Virginia. The Revolutionary War (or War for Independence, or Colonial Rebellion, or whatever you wish to call it) was over.

In 1918 on this date, conservative writer Russell Kirk was born.