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The New Neo

A blog about political change, among other things

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[Please SCROLL DOWN FOR NEW POSTS: this one has been bumped up] The Gerard Vanderleun book website is open and the book is ready for purchase

The New Neo Posted on November 1, 2024 by neoNovember 4, 2024

Well, here goes – it’s book launch time for Gerard Vanderleun’s book of essays! The title is The Name In the Stone.

Please go to the book website VanderleunBooks, take a look around, and order a book or books. It’s published in a very handsome-looking paperback edition, if I do say so myself, and there are a couple of hardcovers available as well [NOTE: The hardcovers, which were a very limited edition, are already sold out, but I’m going to order another print run of hardcovers, and so you can order them now although there will be an estimated delay of about ten days in mailing the hardcovers out to customers]. Here’s a link to the description of the book.

You can communicate with me about the book either at my usual email address of jaybean33@yahoo.com or at the booksite’s email address, which is info@vanderleunbooks.com . I plan to add a page of reader testimonials at the website, and you can send a review that way if you’d like.

Posted in Blogging and bloggers | Tagged Gerard Vanderleun | 47 Replies

A president (or his administation) can do a lot of damage in the time between an election loss and an inauguration: Biden carries anti-Israel book

The New Neo Posted on December 2, 2024 by neoDecember 2, 2024

A new president needs transition time to get his or her administration together prior to the transfer of power. But how much transition time is too much? I’m of the opinion that the current 2+ months is too much. Of course, a lot of damage can be done in less than two months, as well.

So, what are we to make of this?

Biden was spotted by the press leaving Nantucket Bookworks holding a copy of “The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017” by Columbia University professor emeritus Rashid Khalidi, the New York Post reported.

“I do not speak to the Post (or the Times for that matter), so this is not for publication, but my reaction is that this is four years too late,” Khalidi told the Post of Biden holding his book.

You may recall the name “Khalidi.” As I wrote back in 2016, while discussing Obama’s parting shots at Israel when he was in lame-duck-land much as Biden is now:

Did you hear a faint bell ringing in the background when you read the name “Rashid Khalidi”? You should have, because Khalidi was the subject of the famous but never-revealed 2003 video of Obama at a function honoring him, a video that the LA Times had possession of but refused to release.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen a single story about Biden carrying a book or reading a book, and it’s an odd time to start now. But it’s definitely a leaf from Obama’s book.

Posted in Biden, Israel/Palestine | 20 Replies

Musical interlude

The New Neo Posted on December 2, 2024 by neoDecember 2, 2024

When I was a kid and the internet didn’t exist, I used to spend a lot of time listening to records. That’s why, to this day, my brain still has access to the entire scores of many Broadway musicals and Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. The mind of a child is a spongelike thing, and when I say entire scores I mean every single word.

And so, with the news of Biden’s pardon of son Hunter, this song started to enter earworm territory for me. Yes, I know it’s a different kind of pardon, but here it is anyway for your listening pleasure:

Posted in Music | 9 Replies

Of course Joe pardons Hunter

The New Neo Posted on December 2, 2024 by neoDecember 2, 2024

And yet some people are surprised. Or are they pretending to be surprised? It’s the old fools/knaves puzzle.

There are so many fascinating aspects to this action of Biden’s, even though the thing itself was almost inevitable. If Joe Biden had merely pardoned Hunter, saying that it was because he’s his son, it wouldn’t be nearly so interesting although it would be a continuation of Joe’s enabling of Hunter. However, Joe used the ridiculous excuse that the pardon was issued because Hunter’s convictions represented selective prosecution – “ridiculous” because (1) actually authorities bent over backwards for quite some time to negotiate a sweetheart plea deal for Hunter instead, and it was only whistleblowers and the judge who made that impossible (2) the Biden administration has been selectively prosecuting its political opponents for years; and (3) Hunter actually is guilty of actual crimes (unlike the manufactured ones with which Trump was charged).

From Biden’s statement:

No reasonable person who looks at the facts of Hunter’s cases can reach any other conclusion than Hunter was singled out only because he is my son – and that is wrong. There has been an effort to break Hunter – who has been five and a half years sober, even in the face of unrelenting attacks and selective prosecution. In trying to break Hunter, they’ve tried to break me – and there’s no reason to believe it will stop here. Enough is enough.

Whether or not Joe actually wrote that is somewhat irrelevant at this point. I don’t think he’s so far gone, however, that he doesn’t understand it and approve it.

And the J6 defendants and Trump and Steve Bannon and General Flynn? No selective prosecution there, no sirree.

What makes this case extra-special is the fact that Joe spent a lot of time in the last year or so promising not to pardon Hunter. It was always pretty clear that Biden would be likely to pardon him if necessary; as I wrote here when speaking of the sentencing date:

Sentencing is scheduled for December 16. That seems to me to be well-timed. It takes the case out of the campaign season, and yet it places sentencing early enough that his father can pardon him if needed.

And that has played out with Joe pardoning Hunter before sentence can be pronounced.

Here’s a great clip that highlights the way the left is spinning this:

Of course – as Scott Jennings indicates – a “selective prosecution” argument can’t justify a blanket pardon. And the biggest issue is that Biden promised over and over not to do this. The woman in that clip shrugs it off by saying Biden changed his mind and didn’t actually lie, which is a difference that doesn’t make a difference. When a person promises something over and over – such as to be faithful to a spouse – and then cheats, was the original vow not a lie because he/she meant it at the time and just had a change of mind?

You also might want to stroll down memory lane:

SUPERCUT!

Corporate media: Obviously Biden would never pardon Hunter pic.twitter.com/gJRhASCAUs

— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) December 2, 2024

In addition, this obviously sets Trump up for pardoning most or all of the J6 defendants. Not that his critics will approve, of course.

Posted in Biden, Law | Tagged Hunter Biden | 31 Replies

Open thread 12/2/2024

The New Neo Posted on December 2, 2024 by neoDecember 2, 2024

Posted in Uncategorized | 45 Replies

Trump means business: Kash Patel is his pick for FBI director

The New Neo Posted on November 30, 2024 by neoNovember 30, 2024

A lot of people at the FBI must be feeling a certain amount of anxiety and/or rage tonight.

The news:

President-elect Trump’s nomination of Kash Patel as FBI director evoked strong reactions from supporters and critics Saturday night.

Patel’s nomination hints at massive changes the agency will likely undergo during the second Trump administration. As a staunch supporter of Trump, Patel is a fierce critic of government corruption and the so-called “deep state” and has blasted the bureau in the past.

Patel is also very very smart. The right is very happy about this choice and the left is very unhappy.

More:

Trump has not historically been a fan of the FBI, which raided his Florida estate in 2022 and years earlier investigated false claims he was a Russian asset. Most observers expect Trump will demand an agency overhaul by his director.

Indeed. A much-needed overhaul.

MSNBC’s Morning Joe previously called Patel the “personification of MAGA rage about the Justice Department and the FBI.”

Completely justified rage, I might add.

Patel will need to be approved by the Senate. That’s a reminder of how very important it was for the GOP to gain majority control of that legislative branch. Of course, it will also be vital that there not be too many GOP “mavericks” in that august body, ready to oppose the nominations.

Posted in Law, Trump | Tagged FBI | 87 Replies

The Hamas terrorists release a video of one of the Americans held hostage (plus, news on Syria)

The New Neo Posted on November 30, 2024 by neoNovember 30, 2024

This is news:

On Saturday, the sick group released a proof-of-life video of American hostage Idan Alexander, who they’ve held in captivity for over 400 days after they captured him during the massacre of Oct. 7, 2023.

Alexander pushed for President-elect Donald Trump to negotiate his release—something Trump has indicated is his priority even before he re-enters the Oval Office—but presumably, Alexander was told what to say by his captors …

I think the most important thing about this video is that the reference to Trump indicates it was made recently and that therefore the hostage is still alive, or was until a little while ago. In the video he refers not only to the Trump election but also states that he’s been held captive for more than 420 days, and also references the murder of Hersh Goldberg-Poulin. Of course, two different videos might have been made a while ago – one for a possible Harris victory and one for a possible Trump victory. But the reference to Hersh Goldberg-Poulin’s killing means the video was almost certainly made no earlier than late August of 2024.

Quite ominously, however, a video of Goldberg-Poulin was released about four months before he was killed.

NOTE: By the way, a coup seems to be underway in Syria. Nothing good, though; reports are it’s a Taliban-like group seeking to take over.

This Guardian article call the insurgents a “jihadist” group. However:

As well as Russia, Assad has been backed in the civil war by Iran and allied militant groups, including Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

I’m pretty sure there are no good guys here.

Posted in Israel/Palestine, Middle East, Terrorism and terrorists, Violence, War and Peace | 13 Replies

Well, I’ll be! Trump is getting a little bit of a honeymoon, for a change

The New Neo Posted on November 30, 2024 by neoNovember 30, 2024

He certainly didn’t get one last time.

But see this:

Overall, Republicans today are more excited about what Trump will do as president now than they were in 2016 when he was first elected.

Democrats say they feel more scared about what Trump might do than they did in 2016, and a large majority of Democrats think as president he will threaten their rights and freedoms. But at the same time, there seems to be a sense of exhaustion, as fewer than half of Democrats feel motivated to oppose Trump right now.

There are a lot of poll results at the link, with simple charts.

And here’s a relevant clip from CNN:

There are three main reasons for this, the first two being the most important:

(1) People have endured the Biden years and the prospect of Harris, and are soundly rejecting them.

(2) People experienced Trump’s first term and it was pretty good, especially in retrospect.

(3) The opposition is somewhat tired – for the moment, anyway.

I think there are quite a few people like me who in 2016 were happy Hillary Clinton lost but were apprehensive about Trump, the unknown and potential loose cannon. Now he has a track record that is reassuring – although of course anything can happen.

Posted in Biden, Election 2016, Election 2024, Trump | 11 Replies

What is the legal definition of a religion?

The New Neo Posted on November 30, 2024 by neoNovember 30, 2024

[NOTE: I noticed a recent discussion on the blog about what constitutes a religion. And so I thought it might be apropos to revisit a post from 2017 on that very topic.
Here it is.]

The question of how a religion is defined has come up many times on this blog in relation to Islam and terrorism. One question sometimes asked is why can’t any group simply declare itself to be a religion and have this be legally so, no matter what the group espouses. In other words, what are the limits of the term “religion”? Are there any criteria for a belief system and its practices to be considered a bona fide religion in the legal sense, with the protection of rights that go along with that designation?

There are many reasons why there is a legal interest in defining religion, because religions get many benefits under our legal system. But the law has traditionally had quite a bit of difficulty defining the term:

Complex interests may depend on the classification of a specific belief system or practice: tax exemptions; religious practices in prison or in the military (e.g., assembly for worship services; possession and sacramental use of various religious physical objects; access to religious literature; wearing of religious garments and jewelry; availability of food required by religious tenets); specific rights of workers, etc. The application of some constitutional and federal legal rules compels courts to delineate the boundaries of the concept of religion.

Legal theorists have made serious attempts to provide an adequate definition of what religion is for First Amendment purposes, and the Supreme Court’s and other federal courts’ efforts have been manifested in a string of cases in the context of the First Amendment as well as in statutory interpretation. These efforts should not be seen as entirely fruitless, but they have not provided a generally accepted legal definition of religion.

In other words, it ain’t easy.

It’s not easy to slog through that linked article, either. But the reader who does get through it should achieve some appreciation of how difficult a task it is to create a legal definition of religion. For example:

If one makes religion a subjective phenomenon determined purely by the individual, one comes into conflict with the social experience that religion generally requires social mediating structures on account of its communal aspects. Through these social structures, religion becomes valuable for the individual and the society integrates the individual’s concerns into social activities and a whole communal experience. The natural need for this integration calls for some social, objective standards of religion beyond the individual’s assertions.

The functional definition practically diminishes the boundaries between religious and nonreligious beliefs in a traditional sense. There remains no valid test for the content of a claimed religious belief and any belief may be seen as religious if it performs the required psychic function in the individual’s life. The merging of the religious and nonreligious spheres, in Sanderson’s view, is in itself unconstitutional (Sanderson 1007). Under a functional definition, no identifiable class could be delineated as the recipient of the protection although the Constitution distinguishes a class under the word “religion” from other classes and provides special protection for that class.

So let’s turn to everybody’s favorite institution, the IRS (especially timely right now). The IRS uses these criteria to define churches (and thus, “religion”) for tax purposes, requiring the presence of some but not all of the following:

Distinct legal existence
Recognized creed and form of worship
Definite and distinct ecclesiastical government
Formal code of doctrine and discipline
Distinct religious history
Membership not associated with any other church or denomination
Organization of ordained ministers
Ordained ministers selected after completing prescribed courses of study
Literature of its own
Established places of worship
Regular congregations
Regular religious services
Sunday schools for the religious instruction of the young
Schools for the preparation of its members

The IRS generally uses a combination of these characteristics, together with other facts and circumstances, to determine whether an organization is considered a church for federal tax purposes

Not all religions meet all the criteria. For example, Quakers don’t have “ordained” ministers who have “completed prescribed courses of study.” They do have pastors, though, who have been “recorded“:

The peculiarly Quaker way of thinking about ministers comes more clearly into focus when one compares the Friends practice of ‘recording’ with the more common practice of ‘ordination.’ In many Christian denominations, one must first be ordained in order to become a minister. To be ordained, the potential minister must first meet a certain set of requirements. Usually, for example, there is a certain level of education one must attain. Some churches also exclude certain categories of people (e.g. women, divorced people, married people) from even entering the process.

As Friends, we reject the idea that some outward trait or experience could qualify someone to be a minister (remember what Fox said about Oxford and Cambridge!). Instead, we believe that anyone may be called to pastoral ministry. Rather than setting human-engineered prerequisites, Quakers have chosen simply to observe those who work as ministers. When it becomes clear that a person is indeed doing pastoral ministry, then we make an official record of what God seems to be doing. That person is “recorded” as a minister among Friends.

And yet I have little doubt that Quakers legally are considered members of a bona fide and protected religion, and their meeting houses are considered as churches in the eyes of the law.

There is something almost intuitive about the definition of a religion, and the societal and legal acceptance of that designation. It is not completely arbitrary. It is not based on just any set of beliefs. Custom and history are part of it. And although there is probably no one element that must always be present for a belief system to be defined as a religion, there are some behaviors that would result in members of a bona fide religion being excluded from protection and even prosecuted for acts that they say are in accord with their religion, but which have been designated by the legal system as criminal.

The classic example is suttee (or sati), a custom among Hindus in India that required a widow to commit suicide by throwing herself on her husband’s funeral pyre. Although initially accepted by the British occupiers, in time they came to criminalize it. Note, though, that the British didn’t declare Hinduism to not be a religion as a result; they demanded that the particular practice of suttee cease. Something similar has occurred in this country regarding Islam and female genital mutilation, a practice which is a federal crime in the US and is criminal under statutes in many states as well.

However, neither suttee nor FMG were or are basic tenets of their respective religions. Their presences in those religions may throw doubt among some people as to the definitions of Hinduism or Islam as religions or churches, but not among most people and not in the legal sense.

[NOTE II: You also might want to take a look at this post of mine from 2016.]

Posted in Law, Religion | 43 Replies

Open thread 11/30/2024

The New Neo Posted on November 30, 2024 by neoNovember 30, 2024

Posted in Uncategorized | 28 Replies

Are they serious about these Democrat candidates for 2028?

The New Neo Posted on November 29, 2024 by neoNovember 29, 2024

I increasingly find that the vast majority of political analyses I come across are just plain stupid, and transparently so. And yes, that’s been the case since I began blogging twenty (!) years ago. But still, it’s gotten significantly worse.

It’s not just that news has become almost entirely propaganda, although that’s true. It’s that the propaganda is unconvincing on the face of it, ignoring the obvious. I once read that Soviet propaganda was like that – not meant to convince, but rather meant to tease and insult because the public knew it wasn’t true but it was an assertion of power: “See? We lie to you all the time and there’s nothing you can do about it.”

As I think I’ve said before, analyses of Kamala Harris’ loss skip her all-too-obvious failings for the most part. And why? Is it just that her identity groups – female, person of color – make her untouchable on a personal level?

Which brings us to this article at The Hill, listing possible Democrat presidential candidates in 2028. Who leads the way? Why, Kamala Harris, that’s who:

… Harris showed that she could run an impressive campaign even in the short time she was in the race, according those pining for another run.

The vice president’s political instincts have also grown, and she now has the understanding and experience of someone who has run a $1 billion campaign.

Well, it sure impressed me – with how inarticulate and inauthentic she is. And that one billion – well, totally squandered in payments to stars and Oprah’s company and people like Sharpton, and who knows what else. Granted, the article does mention that, but much later on, and in a tangential way:

Harris also led a billion-dollar campaign that lost. And her campaign was far from perfect.

It’s not just that she lost; it’s that the money was totally mishandled and used for grift, and there seems to be no accountability. Is that so hard to say? Apparently it would ruffle too many feathers.

Other suggested candidates listed in order of appearance: Newsom, Whitmer, Shapiro, Buttigeg, Pritzker, and AOC. Quite a crew. And as part of the discussion of Whitmer, there’s no mention of her behavior during the COVID lockdowns, which I believe makes her exceedingly vulnerable, and a “Democratic strategist” named Christy Setzer says the following re Whitmer:

I think Harris ran a much better race than anyone could’ve asked for, [but] the obvious takeaway is going to be that we shouldn’t run a woman of color or a woman at all. Sucks, but I don’t see people having a different analysis.

With strategists like that, who needs … Then again, maybe Setzer is well aware that a person could have asked for a better race than the abominable and almost ludicrous one run by Kamala Harris, but it’s just not cricket to say so. And maybe Setzer is also well aware that it wasn’t the fact that Harris was a woman that caused her loss.

Oh, and the article manages to analyze Josh Shapiro’s chances in 2028 without even mentioning that the current Democrat Party would never run a Jewish person who supports Israel.

Nevertheless, people get paid to write this garbage.

[NOTE: And here it is – the tag “Election 2028.”]

Posted in Politics, Press | Tagged Election 2028 | 45 Replies

Caroline Glick on the Lebanon “ceasefire”

The New Neo Posted on November 29, 2024 by neoNovember 29, 2024

As usual, Glick is quite informative here:

Posted in Israel/Palestine, Middle East, Terrorism and terrorists, War and Peace | Tagged Hezbollah | 11 Replies

Open thread 11/29/2024

The New Neo Posted on November 29, 2024 by neoNovember 29, 2024

Posted in Uncategorized | 20 Replies

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