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67 million in the US don’t speak English at home

The New Neo Posted on September 19, 2018 at 1:48 pm by neoSeptember 19, 2018 at 1:48 pm

This statistic rates a big headline at Drudge today:

Nearly half of the residents in the nation’s five biggest cities do not speak English at home, choosing instead their native language, according to the latest Census Bureau data that details the impact of a decade of soft immigration policies.

Overall, a record 67 million do not speak English at home, said the bureau. That is nearly double in 27 years.

In its just-released analysis of the Census data, the Center for Immigration Studies said, “As a share of the population, 21.8 percent of U.S. residents speak a foreign language at home — roughly double the 11 percent in 1980.”

The Center added, “In America’s five largest cities, 48 percent of residents now speak a language other than English at home. In New York City and Houston it is 49 percent; in Los Angeles it is 59 percent; in Chicago it is 36 percent; and in Phoenix it is 38 percent.”

It certainly is a graphic demonstration of the increase in immigration, both legal and illegal.

But to me it’s a somewhat meaningless statistic. The far more meaningful one is not reported: what percentage of people in the US not only speak a language other than English at home, but also are not fluent in English and are not engaged in trying to be?

As far as I know, most immigrants used to speak another language at home, even a century ago. That’s why it’s called a “mother tongue.” But they, and especially their children, were forced to learn English if they wanted to function in this country, because their devotion to their original language was not indulged. They did not have access to bilingual education. They did not have translators in 50 languages at the ready. They did not have phone messages in Spanish as an alternative tongue.

I’m not saying we should go back all the way to those days. But I’ve never—even in my liberal Democrat days—been in favor of caving to the bilingualists. I definitely think people need to be nudged out of their dependence on their languages of origin. It’s tough, but it’s necessary.

Posted in Immigration, Language and grammar | 8 Replies

Neither “believe the women” nor “believe the victims” is a valid form of decision-making

The New Neo Posted on September 19, 2018 at 1:33 pm by neoSeptember 19, 2018 at 1:33 pm

I’ve written about this subject before, and I’ll probably write about it again.

But apparently it requires repeating:

Anyone who says that members of a certain group always tell the truth is lying.

There is no such group on earth. I don’t care if it’s a group of Catholic nuns or Buddhist monks. There are liars in every group, at least potentially.

That doesn’t mean, of course, that I’d take the word of an ex-con in the same way I’d take the word of some upstanding citizen of the community. But it means that in any given circumstances—and in particular if that circumstance is a court of law—a person is only as good as the evidence behind him or her.

The difficulty lies when there is no evidence other than a person’s word. Sometimes with sexual harassment or assault claims there is some independent corroborative evidence: an emailed photo, for example. That’s the petard with which Weiner was hoisted. But harassers and abusers aren’t always so dumb as to leave evidence, and then we are left with a hesaid/shesaid scenario. In that case we look at demeanor, before and after behavior, and all sorts of other information that could help us come to a decision.

But never should we rely on something like “being a woman” or “being a man” to tell us whether a person is a truth-teller in each particular circumstance. Nor does membership in a certain race or religion or any other demographic group, including being a child. Even children lie about abuse, sometimes at the behest of a scheming parent and sometimes on their own. It happens, although how often it happens is a matter of some dispute.

In a court of law, charges must be specific to a particular act or set of acts by this particular defendant. Time and place are all not just important, but ultra-important, not only to determine the veracity of the accuser and the accuracy of his/her memory, but to allow the defendant a chance to construct a defense.

That’s what was so powerful about many of Kafka’s works, so much so that it earned him an adjective derived from his name: Kafkaesque. Here are some excerpts from the beginning chapter of his book The Trial:

Someone must have been telling lies about Josef K., he knew he had done nothing wrong but, one morning, he was arrested. Every day at eight in the morning he was brought his breakfast by Mrs. Grubach’s cook – Mrs. Grubach was his landlady – but today she didn’t come. That had never happened before. K. waited a little while, looked from his pillow at the old woman who lived opposite and who was watching him with an inquisitiveness quite unusual for her, and finally, both hungry and disconcerted, rang the bell. There was immediately a knock at the door and a man entered. He had never seen the man in this house before. He was slim but firmly built, his clothes were black and close-fitting, with many folds and pockets, buckles and buttons and a belt, all of which gave the impression of being very practical but without making it very clear what they were actually for. “Who are you?” asked K., sitting half upright in his bed. The man, however, ignored the question as if his arrival simply had to be accepted, and merely replied, “You rang?” “Anna should have brought me my breakfast,” said K. He tried to work out who the man actually was, first in silence, just through observation and by thinking about it, but the man didn’t stay still to be looked at for very long. Instead he went over to the door, opened it slightly, and said to someone who was clearly standing immediately behind it, “He wants Anna to bring him his breakfast.” There was a little laughter in the neighbouring room, it was not clear from the sound of it whether there were several people laughing…

“I want to see Mrs. Grubach … ,” said K., making a movement as if tearing himself away from the two men – even though they were standing well away from him – and wanted to go. “No,” said the man at the window, who threw his book down on a coffee table and stood up. “You can’t go away when you’re under arrest.” “That’s how it seems,” said K. “And why am I under arrest?” he then asked. “That’s something we’re not allowed to tell you. Go into your room and wait there. Proceedings are underway and you’ll learn about everything all in good time.”…

It was much more important to him to get a clear understanding of his position, but he could not think clearly while these people were here, the second policeman’s belly – and they could only be policemen – looked friendly enough, sticking out towards him, but when K. looked up and saw his dry, boney face it did not seem to fit with the body. His strong nose twisted to one side as if ignoring K. and sharing an understanding with the other policeman. What sort of people were these? What were they talking about? What office did they belong to? K. was living in a free country, after all, everywhere was at peace, all laws were decent and were upheld, who was it who dared accost him in his own home?

Of course, the court of public opinion is not the same as a courtroom, and does not have the same exact standards. But it should have standards nonetheless—and specificity, corroboration, and the ability to verify charges matter. So do character witnesses.

What should not matter and should never matter is the class to which a person belongs: man or woman, black or white, rich or poor. Each individual is an individual and must be evaluated on the strength of the details of his or her story, both accuser and the accused. We should be humble about it, too, and acknowledge the inherent difficulties in making a decision.

And, as with the author of this harrowing story of rape, we should take a middle way:

I cannot tell you if a person’s account of his or her assault is valid or not. I cannot tell you to believe all survivors. But I can tell you that there is a difference between sharing your story and naming a person in an accusation. The longer a person waits to do so, the more scrutiny and skepticism is warranted…

I do not believe we have immunity to accuse without consequence, and…I advocate due process and the concept of “innocent until proven guilty” more now than ever. Don’t blame a person for not reporting sooner, but don’t damn the accused to compensate for it.

Do I believe Ford? If I had to vote, I would say I strongly believe her story is untrue. I believe that she may believe she’s telling the truth, however. And I believe that it is at least possible that she is telling the truth, although highly unlikely.

I believe that her story has been used by ruthless politicians who will stop at nothing to destroy the opposition. At the moment it looks as though they have been foiled, but that could change at any minute.

And that’s where we’re at now.

Posted in Law, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex | 2 Replies

The first act was different: Clarence Thomas and Anita Hill

The New Neo Posted on September 19, 2018 at 12:48 pm by neoSeptember 19, 2018 at 12:48 pm

If Kavanaugh and Ford is the second act, Thomas and Hill was the first.

Please don’t quibble with me. I know that Bork preceded that. But I’m talking about sexual allegations mounted against a SCOTUS nominee after the initial hearings, precipitating a call for more hearings, in which the public would be invited to decide about the truth or falsehood of a “he-said/she-said” set of allegations and vociferous denials.

So, what were the differences? Well, one big difference has been intervening events. After Thomas and Hill we had the impeachment of Bill Clinton, the escalation and success of various sexual allegations against many politicians (Herman Cain, just to take one example, and Roy Moore, to take another), and the well-publicized #MeToo movement.

Another big difference is that there was a much-watched hearing in which Anita Hill did testify; we don’t know yet if Ford’s refusal to testify will stand, but at the moment it seems to be that way. Another difference is that while Hill’s allegations were old—as much as ten years old—they were nowhere near as old and potentially unverifiable as Ford’s (approximately thirty-six years old). Another difference is that both Hill and Thomas were fully adult rather than teenagers at the time the events were said to have transpired, and therefore they reflected their adult behavior and personalities.

But another difference I did not initially remember, but one that I discovered when I looked the Thomas hearings up recently in light of current events, is that Clarence Thomas was confirmed despite the fact that the Democrats controlled the Senate 57 to 43 at the time:

The final floor vote was not strictly along party lines: 41 Republicans and 11 Democrats (Dixon (D-IL), Exon (D-NE), DeConcini (D-AZ), Robb (D-VA), Hollings (D-SC), Fowler (D-GA), Nunn (D-GA), Breaux (D-LA), Johnston (D-LA), Boren (D-OK), and Shelby (D-AL) now (R-AL)) voted to confirm while 46 Democrats and 2 Republicans (Jeffords (R-VT) later (I-VT) and Packwood (R-OR)) voted to reject the nomination; John Glenn was particularly vituperative in his rejection. Ironically Packwood himself would later be engulfed by sexual harassment allegations which ended his Senate career.

Can anyone imagine that happening today?

I think it’s a sign of the obvious change in the political climate in the 27 years since those hearings occurred that I, for one, cannot even imagine such a thing happening today. There are not eleven Democrats who would vote for Kavanaugh (or Thomas, for that matter) if the Democrats held the majority in the Senate and had the power to deny either man the right to be a member of the Supreme Court.

Granted, since the Republicans control (barely) the Senate right now, some Democrats in reddish states might yet vote to confirm Kavanaugh, since they know they can’t stop him by voting “no,” and if they feel that a “no” vote would be political suicide. Live to fight another day and all that. But I cannot believe that, if the Democrats had a chance to stop him, eleven (or any number close to that) would hesitate to do so.

The times they have a-changed, and not for the better.

Posted in Historical figures, History, Liberals and conservatives, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex, Politics | 5 Replies

In a move that should surprise no one, Christine Blasey Ford now says that she won’t testify until the FBI completes an investigation

The New Neo Posted on September 18, 2018 at 9:54 pm by neoSeptember 18, 2018 at 9:54 pm

Ford’s position conforms quite nicely with the Democratic strategy of “we need to postpone the vote on Kavanaugh till something happens—like maybe a new Senate is elected that is Democratic, or enough Republican senators bow to the pressure and refuse to confirm him.” It’s all quite neat, and the delaying tactic is exactly what so many people on the right predicted when Feinstein dropped this bombshell at the very last minute. Many people called it a Hail Mary pass, but I think another sports metaphor is really in order: trying to run out the clock.

Here’s what Ford is saying:

The woman accusing Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault says the FBI should investigate the incident before senators hold a hearing on the allegations.

In a letter addressed to Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa, and obtained by CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360,” Christine Blasey Ford’s attorneys argue that “a full investigation by law enforcement officials will ensure that the crucial facts and witnesses in this matter are assessed in a non-partisan manner, and that the Committee is fully informed before conducting any hearing or making any decisions.”…

“She will talk with the committee,” Banks said. “She is not prepared to talk with them at a hearing on Monday. This just came out 48 hours ago.”

“Asking her to come forward in four or five days and sit before the Judiciary Committee on national TV is not a fair process. If they care about doing the right thing here and treating this seriously as they have said, then they will do the right thing and they will properly investigate this, and she will work with them in that investigation and also to share her story with the committee,” Banks said Tuesday night.

Excuse me while I snicker bitterly.

It just “came out” 48 hours ago because Ford’s letter to Feinstein—that was sent and received last July—was only revealed by Feinstein a couple of days ago, at the proverbial eleventh hour. Ford wasn’t blindsinded, Kavanaugh was. Ford knew about this all along. She just hoped her identity wouldn’t be revealed, but she should have been prepared for that. And then she hoped her story itself would do the trick, but she should have been prepared for the fact that it wouldn’t.

Ford should have been prepared since at least last July, when she publicized her story to the powers that be in the person of Senator Feinstein.

Oh, and another little detail—the FBI has already declined to investigate this 36-year-old allegation that is so nonspecific that it’s not amenable to investigation, so old it’s also unresolvable, and not a federal issue anyway.

What I think Ford was not prepared for was the Republicans calling her bluff by allowing her the courtesy of testifying before the Senate. Maybe that’s what surprised her so much; maybe she’d never considered that possibility.

Of course, this might just be her initial gambit in response to the invite. She may change her mind and testify, if the Senate doesn’t cave to her wishes, which I don’t think it will. But even Flake doesn’t appear to be entertaining that thought:

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Arizona, sits on the Judiciary Committee and had previously said the committee should hold off on voting until they hear from the accuser. However, Flake said Tuesday that if Ford fails to appear at the hearing scheduled for Monday, he would support his party’s push to move forward on a vote on Kavanaugh.

“I think we’ll have to move to the markup,” he told CNN.

Flake said he’s hopeful Ford will accept the committee’s invitation and speak at the hearing. “I hope she does. I think she needs to be heard,” he said.

Posted in Law, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex, Politics | 46 Replies

Trump declassifies FISA documents and text messages

The New Neo Posted on September 18, 2018 at 1:54 pm by neoSeptember 18, 2018 at 1:54 pm

This news has been long-predicted and long-awaited:

President Trump on Monday ordered the declassification of several key documents related to the FBI investigation of Russian actions during the 2016 presidential election, including 21 pages of an application for a renewed surveillance warrant against former campaign aide Carter Page, and text messages from disgraced FBI figures Peter Strzok and Lisa Page.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said Trump had ordered the documents released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) and the Justice Department “[a]t the request of a number of committees of Congress, and for reasons of transparency.”

The documents to be declassified also include all FBI reports on interviews with Justice Department official Bruce Ohr and all FBI reports of interviews prepared in connection with all other applications to surveil Carter Page.

Trump also ordered the Justice Department to release text messages from a number of the key players in the Russia investigation “without redaction” — including Ohr, Strzok, Lisa Page, former FBI Director James Comey and former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe…

The 21 pages only make up a small part of the 412 pages of FISA applications and warrants related to Page released by the FBI earlier this year in heavily redacted format.

The usual Democrats have the usual objections. They love it when they are in control of the unofficial leaks, but having the GOP in control of official releases is a no-no.

The trouble with all of this, however, is its complexity. How many people are willing to follow it in any detail? Most people still rely on the MSM to filter it and report on it, and that is a very biased source. Of course, it’s difficult to find an unbiased source (except yours truly, of course).

Posted in Trump | 26 Replies

This is the sort of thing that drives me nuts

The New Neo Posted on September 18, 2018 at 1:34 pm by neoSeptember 18, 2018 at 1:34 pm

On many blogs on the right I see commenters saying things like, “If Corker and/or Flake cave on Kavanaugh, that’s it for me. I’m voting third party and the GOP will be dead to me forever.”

That makes zero sense. But I’ve heard that sort of thing for years from the right.

Why do I say it makes zero sense? Because Flake and Corker are two people, not the entire GOP. The remedy is not to surrender power to the Democrats, which is exactly what the Democrats (and the MSM) want you to do, and exactly what will happen if you follow that path. The remedy is to elect more, and more conservative, Republicans.

That seems so obvious I would think it doesn’t need saying. But apparently it needs saying. I’ve been saying it for many years.

The only reason that Corker and Flake have such power is that the Senate is almost evenly divided between the two parties. That magnifies the influence of a single vote yea or nay. Corker and Flake love that power. But if, for example, there were 55 GOP senators to 45 Democratic ones, or an even greater disparity, their votes and their RINOism wouldn’t matter. They wouldn’t be able to hold the entire party hostage.

Now, you might say that McConnell should be able to control them in the way the Democrats are controlled by their leaders. But the GOP doesn’t do the party line thing as well as Democrats, and that is for temperamental and philosophical reasons. However, that would be moot if there were more Republicans in the Senate, with more room for a few dissenters.

You might also say that if there were more Republicans in the Senate, more would be going the way of Flake and Corker. I don’t think so; that’s not historically the way it’s been, although unfortunately there haven’t been all that many times in recent history that the GOP has had a really strong majority in the Senate.

But one thing I do know is that allowing Democrats to win—by either not voting, or by voting third party—is not the answer. In my opinion, it’s a dangerous indulgence in juvenile anger, a form of tantrum, and I fear it will happen in the 2018 elections and jettison all of Trump’s conservative nominees.

Posted in Election 2018, Liberals and conservatives, Politics | 29 Replies

Memory and witnesses/victims

The New Neo Posted on September 18, 2018 at 1:18 pm by neoSeptember 18, 2018 at 1:18 pm

There are a lot of problems with the Kavanaugh accuser’s story, including the fact that she may be deliberately lying for political reasons.

But even if she’s not purposely lying, there are many problems connected with the phenomenon of memory itself, particularly after all these years.

In other words, even if she truly believes it happened just the way she says it did:

It may not have happened at all.
It may not have happened in that particular way.
It may have happened, but the perpetrator was someone else.

Juries set great store by eyewitness testimony of all kinds, and in particular by that of victims. But victims—bona fide victims—can be very wrong, and in sex crimes there have been many imprisoned men convicted by witness/victim testimony who have later been exonerated by DNA testing. It is very troubling indeed.

Research tells us about it [emphasis mine]:

The uncritical acceptance of eyewitness accounts may stem from a popular misconception of how memory works. Many people believe that human memory works like a video recorder: the mind records events and then, on cue, plays back an exact replica of them. On the contrary, psychologists have found that memories are reconstructed rather than played back each time we recall them. The act of remembering, says eminent memory researcher and psychologist Elizabeth F. Loftus of the University of California, Irvine, is “more akin to putting puzzle pieces together than retrieving a video recording.” Even questioning by a lawyer can alter the witness’s testimony because fragments of the memory may unknowingly be combined with information provided by the questioner, leading to inaccurate recall.

Many researchers have created false memories in normal individuals; what is more, many of these subjects are certain that the memories are real. In one well-known study, Loftus and her colleague Jacqueline Pickrell gave subjects written accounts of four events, three of which they had actually experienced. The fourth story was fiction; it centered on the subject being lost in a mall or another public place when he or she was between four and six years old. A relative provided realistic details for the false story, such as a description of the mall at which the subject’s parents shopped. After reading each story, subjects were asked to write down what else they remembered about the incident or to indicate that they did not remember it at all. Remarkably about one third of the subjects reported partially or fully remembering the false event. In two follow-up interviews, 25 percent still claimed that they remembered the untrue story, a figure consistent with the findings of similar studies.

More here [emphasis mine]:

The process of interpretation occurs at the very formation of memory—thus introducing distortion from the beginning. Furthermore, witnesses can distort their own memories without the help of examiners, police officers or lawyers. Rarely do we tell a story or recount events without a purpose. Every act of telling and retelling is tailored to a particular listener; we would not expect someone to listen to every detail of our morning commute, so we edit out extraneous material. The act of telling a story adds another layer of distortion, which in turn affects the underlying memory of the event. This is why a fish story, which grows with each retelling, can eventually lead the teller to believe it.

I will add here that many of us “tell” stories of our memories over and over to ourselves, and that affects the story as well.

Continued [emphasis mine]:

Once witnesses state facts in a particular way or identify a particular person as the perpetrator, they are unwilling or even unable—due to the reconstruction of their memory—to reconsider their initial understanding. When a witness identifies a person in a line-up, he is likely to identify that same person in later line-ups, even when the person identified is not the perpetrator. Although juries and decision-makers place great reliance on eyewitness identification, they are often unaware of the danger of false memories…

Bias creeps into memory without our knowledge, without our awareness. While confidence and accuracy are generally correlated, when misleading information is given, witness confidence is often higher for the incorrect information than for the correct information. This leads many to question the competence of the average person to determine credibility issues. Juries are the fact-finders, and credibility issues are to be determined by juries. The issue then arises whether juries are equipped to make these determinations.

At least in a court of law there are various protections built in to help the defendant. The Kavanaugh accuser’s story—as it stands now, without important details, and of such antiquity—could not stand in a court of law even if a statute of limitations weren’t operating and it could be brought to trial. But even if, between now and some hypothetical trial, the accuser managed to flesh out more of those details (in the law biz it’s called having your memory “refreshed”), she would be harshly criticized by a defense attorney for having suddenly “remembered” the details she couldn’t come up with years ago or even a few months ago. That would be highly suspect.

However, in testimony before Congress, there are no such protections for the accused, and people tend to see what they want to see. The standard of proof and the burden of proof is very different than the legal standards, and are more likely to favor the accuser. That’s one of many reasons why this particular situation is so pernicious.

As for false memories that emerge in therapy:

Some memory errors are so “large” that they almost belong in a class of their own: false memories. Back in the early 1990s a pattern emerged whereby people would go into therapy for depression and other everyday problems, but over the course of the therapy develop memories for violent and horrible victimhood (Loftus & Ketcham, 1994). These patients’ therapists claimed that the patients were recovering genuine memories of real childhood abuse, buried deep in their minds for years or even decades. But some experimental psychologists believed that the memories were instead likely to be false—created in therapy. These researchers then set out to see whether it would indeed be possible for wholly false memories to be created by procedures similar to those used in these patients’ therapy.

In early false memory studies, undergraduate subjects’ family members were recruited to provide events from the students’ lives. The student subjects were told that the researchers had talked to their family members and learned about four different events from their childhoods. The researchers asked if the now undergraduate students remembered each of these four events—introduced via short hints. The subjects were asked to write about each of the four events in a booklet and then were interviewed two separate times. The trick was that one of the events came from the researchers rather than the family (and the family had actually assured the researchers that this event had not happened to the subject). In the first such study, this researcher-introduced event was a story about being lost in a shopping mall and rescued by an older adult. In this study, after just being asked whether they remembered these events occurring on three separate occasions, a quarter of subjects came to believe that they had indeed been lost in the mall (Loftus & Pickrell, 1995). In subsequent studies, similar procedures were used to get subjects to believe that they nearly drowned and had been rescued by a lifeguard, or that they had spilled punch on the bride’s parents at a family wedding, or that they had been attacked by a vicious animal as a child, among other events (Heaps & Nash, 1999; Hyman, Husband, & Billings, 1995; Porter, Yuille, & Lehman, 1999).

More recent false memory studies have used a variety of different manipulations to produce false memories in substantial minorities and even occasional majorities of manipulated subjects…

Some people resist false memories, but a “substantial minority” are vulnerable to them. It’s a very troublesome phenomenon. And a substantial number of that substantial number emerge in the context of therapy. In order to judge the likelihood of a memory of trauma being a false memory, one would have to know many details of the therapeutic sessions to see how much leading was done by the therapist, how the story emerged, and in what initial detail. It is literally impossible to judge the veracity of any story that comes out in a therapeutic session unless there’s a lot of independent corroboration.

The Kavanaugh accuser’s story came out in marital therapy. We know nothing about the dynamics of the revelation and no details whatsoever, except that the therapist’s notes did not include any names of the alleged perpetrators, and differed from the accuser’s current story as to the numbers.

This is telling, and suggests at the very least a mutable, changeable memory.

Is a Congressional hearing any way to discuss these very important and very troubling issues? I can’t imagine that it would be. For one thing, questioning the veracity of the memory opens the questioners up to the charge of “disbelieving and re-traumatizing the victim.” But alleged victims lie—sometimes without even knowing it.

And lie detector tests don’t do a particle of good. They are notoriously unreliable. And furthermore, if a person believes a false memory is true, that person would be likely to pass a lie detector test with flying colors.

Posted in Law, Politics, Science, Therapy | 32 Replies

I want to ask you…

The New Neo Posted on September 17, 2018 at 2:41 pm by neoSeptember 17, 2018 at 2:41 pm

…the following question:

Why should I, or anyone else, care what the 53-year-old Brett Kavanaugh did in high school, short of a criminal act?

And even certain criminal acts would be okay—for example, Obama’s doing coke—if the person has reformed in adulthood.

Let me make it clear that I do not think Kavanaugh is actually guilty of what Christine Blasey Ford has alleged. But if he is, I don’t much care. And I would say that no matter what his political persuasion, left or right. It wasn’t rape. It wasn’t even attempted rape. It’s the sort of thing that happened quite a bit when I was a girl (especially when people were drinking, which teenagers often do), and although it’s not a good thing or an admirable thing, there’s no reason it should matter any more if there is no pattern of such behavior in adulthood.

I think our current puritanism is absurd. Teenage indiscretions are just that. People grow up—at least, most people do. It’s the American public that’s becoming more and more juvenile.

But as I said before, the anti-Kavanaugh forces will not stop here. If Ford’s accusations don’t work, they’ll come up with others. And if old accusations don’t work, they’ll find someone who has worked with Kavanaugh more recently who can tell some sort of story a la Anita Hill.

Speaking of Hill, now may be the time to say that back then—1991—I was a liberal Democrat. I watched some of the hearings concerning her accusations against Clarence Thomas, and whether or not she was telling the truth (I didn’t know), and despite my liberal political persuasion, I wondered exactly why we should care if Clarence Thomas (or any other justice) had told a bad joke about a pubic hair on a Coke.

[NOTE: Just to let you know that I feel this way no matter what political persuasion the supposed perpetrators belongs to, please see what I had to say about Al Franken.]

Posted in Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex | 108 Replies

“Credible”accusations

The New Neo Posted on September 17, 2018 at 1:01 pm by neoSeptember 17, 2018 at 1:01 pm

I think it’s time to revisit this post of mine.

Here’s another relevant post, about the vagaries of memory.

Posted in Uncategorized | 16 Replies

Now it seems that the Kavanaugh accuser will be testifying

The New Neo Posted on September 17, 2018 at 12:58 pm by neoSeptember 17, 2018 at 12:58 pm

This seems to be the strategy:

President Donald Trump’s senior advisor Kellyanne Conway told Fox & Friends that the president supports Ford testifying in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Conway also said that the accusation should not disrupt Kavanaugh’s nomination and the confirmation schedule.

WAJ adds: This appears to be the emerging strategy, let she said/he said play out quickly in public, then declare that it is disputed and the decades of Kavanaugh’s excellent public service weigh in his favor. That said, expect deep digging into the accuser’s past.

Prior to the Roy Moore accusations, as well as the #MeToo movement, accusers usually seem to have thought they had to come up with relatively recent offenses. For example, Anita Hill’s allegations were “only” ten years old, and involved interactions between two adults at work. Although it was basically a “he-said/she-said” story, at least there was a specified time frame in which the two had worked together, and other people in the office who might or might not have witnessed something, as well as the evidence of Hill’s subsequent work history (she followed Thomas to a new job despite his supposedly offensive behavior, which cut into her credibility).

Clarence Thomas was confirmed anyway, and became one of the most reliably conservative justices on the Court. Interestingly enough, in contrast to the way things are today, 11 Democrats voted “yes” on Thomas, even after the Hill hearings. The final vote was 52 to 48, so without those Democrats he never could have been confirmed. You may remember the Hill testimony as “a high-tech lynching,” but at least there was still a modicum of bipartisanship back then. Those days are gone.

In particular, the enormous success of the Roy Moore allegations in destroying Moore’s candidacy made it clear that it was now possible to mount more vague accusations that were much further back in time and therefore even more impossible to check, and that this could be particularly effective. But at least they were about Moore’s alleged behavior as an adult, although with young women or in one case an underage teen.

Now, with the Kavanaugh accuser, the Democrats have gone even further down the road of ancient and vague. If this works to derail his nomination, it will be possible for anyone who ever knew a person, or even lived in the same area, to successfully mount an unanswerable, unprovable, but destructive accusation.

This is very very dangerous. But the Democrats only see the advantages, which to them are great. SCOTUS has been trending liberal since the FDR administration, and a conservative Court would be a disaster for them, because the courts are one of the primary ways the liberal agenda is advanced.

So, why are Republicans suggesting that hearings should be held? One reason, I suppose, is that the Hill hearings ended up in Thomas’ confirmation. Maybe they think history will repeat itself in that regard. But my best guess is that they are in a bind. Once such accusations are made, they open the GOP up to the charge of “you don’t care about women; you’re a bunch of rapist-protectors” if they deny her the right to speak. And if they give her the sort of attention that comes with a public hearing, they run the huge risk of legitimizing her claims and making it easy to see her as a brave hero.

So perhaps it is best to let the testimony happen, but to do it relatively briefly. It is a risky approach, but it’s all risky at this point.

[NOTE: As for the charges themselves, I see many people saying things like “well, there’s only a single accuser,” or “she didn’t even tell a friend for all those years.” The problem with relying too much on the fact that there’s a single accuser or that she didn’t tell girlfriends is that it is fairly easy to dig up a girlfriend who will suddenly say she told her, or a new accuser. People on the left are motivated to do almost anything to stop Kavanaugh. Lying in order to prevent what they think is a great evil (conservative control of SCOTUS) is considered justified, in many people’s minds, for what they think is the greater good.]

Posted in Law, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex, Politics | 28 Replies

So, the anonymous Kavanaugh accuser reveals herself

The New Neo Posted on September 16, 2018 at 7:05 pm by neoSeptember 16, 2018 at 7:05 pm

[Scroll down to see UPDATE below.]

Slowly, with exquisitely perfect timing, the news reveals itself, in order to give strength to the cries to delay the vote on Kavanaugh. The entire idea is to delay it long enough to get the thing to build—perhaps with more suddenly-surfaced accusers who were in the general right place at the general right time and have the right political leanings, with fuzzy stories that skip certain important details so they cannot be fact-checked or disproved.

There is nothing surprising about any of this; it’s the scorched earth policy I wrote about yesterday, and it will not end because it has worked in the past. I don’t know if it will work this time, but it is part of a dangerous and pernicious trend that’s been going on for a long time but is getting worse.

The more the Senate GOP caves to this, the more it will happen.

I may write about this tomorrow, as well; it’s Sunday, and I like to take Sunday off. But the breaking of the accuser’s identity and story moved me to write a brief post just to say a couple of things.

The first is to reiterate that there are reasons—very very good reasons—for the rules of evidence in our legal system, and for statutes of limitations. The longer the time between a supposed offense and the accusation, the more impossible it is for the accuser (or the accused) to remember correctly, and the more other memories and motivations can intervene. And that’s assuming good faith on the part of the accuser, because memory is very mutable even when someone is making a bona fide effort to remember correctly. There’s no reason to assume good faith here, of course, but even with it, a memory this old has no probative value. And a memory that surfaces in a therapist’s office is especially suspect.

The vagueness of the details—the accuser doesn’t know when or where this supposedly happened, except it was in high school at some get-together—makes it even more suspect. It also makes it impossible—literally impossible—for the accused to refute.

And that’s the beauty and the value of it, to the left.

Long-time readers here know I’ve been skeptical of all such accusations. I don’t care who makes them and I don’t care whether they are made towards people I agree with politically or people I disagree with politically.

If this sort of thing can hurt Kavanaugh, or anyone else, then no man is safe. There is always someone who can come out of the woodwork and say that something like this happened. Always. And it cannot be refuted.

And to my fellow women who disagree, or don’t care, think again. Some day it may be your son, your husband, your friend who is accused. And you know what else? Some day it may be women who are accused. Don’t think you’re safe, either.

[ADDENDUM: See also this as well as this.]

UPDATE 10:34 PM:

Jeff Flake is saying the following:

Flake (R-Ariz.) said he needs to hear more about the allegations raised publicly by Christine Blasey Ford on Sunday in a Washington Post article, and said other Republicans share his view. Flake is one of 11 Republicans on the narrowly divided panel and without his support, the committee cannot advance his nomination. However, GOP leaders could try to bring Kavanaugh‘s nomination directly to the Senate floor.

“If they push forward without any attempt with hearing what she’s had to say, I’m not comfortable voting yes,” Flake said. “We need to hear from her. And I don’t think I’m alone in this.”

Asked if the committee vote should be delayed to hear out Ford, Corker replied: “I think that would be best for all involved, including the nominee. If she does want to be heard, she should do so promptly”…

Flake declined to address whether Kavanaugh should withdraw his nomination: “I’m not responding to that question at all.” The retiring Arizona Republican has long been a thorn in the side of President Donald Trump, refusing to support his campaign in 2016 and often critiquing his policies and rhetoric. In return, Trump has repeatedly mocked Flake.

It’s not clear if this is will end up being a tempest in a teapot and the vote will ultimately go forward, or even whether Kavanaugh’s accuser wants to testify and would do so if given the opportunity, or how quickly that could be arranged.

But it’s pretty clear to me that she had hoped to derail Kavanaugh and at the same time remain anonymous. So the first step was taken, Feinstein dropped the news, and it didn’t have the desired effect. It wasn’t taken seriously enough by the Republicans, and it was the Republicans whose cooperation was necessary if the goal of delay and maybe even jettisoning the whole process was going to be reached.

Therefore it was decided that the accuser had to go public. That’s where we’re at now.

If Flake et al decide to stop Kavanaugh’s confirmation, mission accomplished by the left. If not, the ante will have to be upped. New accusers will come forward—or rather, they will be brought forward.

Posted in Law, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex | 85 Replies

The world’s most positive voice teacher

The New Neo Posted on September 15, 2018 at 2:47 pm by neoSeptember 15, 2018 at 2:47 pm

I love this guy. Love, love, love.

I once took about eight voice lessons before I quit in despair, and maybe if he’d been my voice teacher I would have improved rather than gotten worse over the course of my study.

Talk about accentuating the positive! This guy doesn’t seem phony about it at all, either. And his message isn’t just empty “everyone should get a medal” feel-good praise. It’s that just about anyone can learn to sing with the right instruction, and that insults don’t help.

Here’s my favorite segment of the video:

My ex-husband was a terrible singer for much of his life, and had been told as much as a small boy. He was often off-key, for example, and he knew it. He only would sing when totally fooling around, and not in his real voice. But a few years ago I caught him singing for real, just a few notes, and I noticed something I’d never noticed before: his singing voice had quite a beautiful tone and timbre. Really really pleasant, strong and resonant.

I was stunned. It occurred to me that the only thing he needed was a little training to help him stay on key—and apparently, practicing singing would have helped with that, because one of the reasons he ordinarily didn’t sing was that he could hear that he wasn’t on key and he would stop before he got far at all. It turns out that that meant he wasn’t the least bit tone-deaf, and all he needed was to keep singing with a helpful teacher.

In fact, as I reflected on it, my ex had always been a fabulous whistler, and completely on key when he whistled. So it made sense that he’d be able to learn to sing on key once he practiced enough with his real voice. But despite my encouragement, he backed off from trying to learn.

Anyway, I’d love to meet some teacher like the guy in the video and give it a go myself.

Posted in Me, myself, and I, Music | 20 Replies

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