Slate: Trump’s Lawyers Made Some Very Odd Strategic Choices in the Supreme Court Ballot Case – Trump or his lawyers must have calculated that a technical argument would be more appealing to the conservative majority. (by Rick Hasen, via Election Law Blog)
Lawfare Media: What Justice Scalia Thought About Whether Presidents Are “Officers of the United States” – In a 2014 concurrence and a short letter elaborating on it, Scalia indicated that the president was an “officer of the United States.”
Seth Godin nails it again, identifying powers that we all have but might not be aware of:
The power to speak up, to participate, to invent, to lead, to encourage, to vote, to connect, to organize, to march, to write, to say ‘no’ or to say ‘yes’.
https://seths.blog/2024/01/unaware/
Mike Hall talks about Newsboat, a command line RSS reader, and highlights a neat feature – the ability to ignore certain URL patterns. Reminds me some of the Checkbox News concept, but in reverse. Nice!
The Big Lie continues in 2024
Kaitlan Collins presses Rep. Norman on 2021 text message calling for martial law
CNN’s Kaitlan Collins asked Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) about a 2021 text message he sent to Donald Trump’s former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, pleading for the former president to declare martial law. Norman also references other alleged incidents of voter fraud, which Kaitlan Collins refutes.
Source: CNN
Additional links:
X: Kaitlan Collins post on this video
The New Republic: Republican Rep. Has No Regrets About That “Marshall Law” Text – Years later, Ralph Norman still stands by his infamous text to Mark Meadows after the 2020 election.
South Carolina Public Radio: Leaked 2021 text from SC Rep. Ralph Norman calls for martial law; Congressman says message came from ‘frustration’
Voting Booth: Election Defenders’ Top 2024 Worry: Online Rumors, Deceptions, Lies Swaying Masses
The Fulcrum: Scholars unmask Trump election lawyers’ use of falsified evidence – Study finds a cottage industry of bogus claims and statistics – the post links to a working paper (Dropbox link to PDF) analyzing 38 claims of election fraud “…Regardless of the reason why, every claim we analyze fails to provide evidence of illegality or fraud.” (page 3) (via Election Law Blog)
My experience with the early Macintosh
With recent blog posts on people’s early experience with the early Macintosh, I thought I would add my story as well. When the Mac was rolled out in 1984, I was still in college. I did not have the money to buy one even at student discounts, but several people in my dorm did, and I was JEALOUS! I first used a Mac in 1985 to type the one typed paper I ever typed in college (I always used a typing service or hand-printed papers). It was in a grad student’s office, and my brother and I stayed up all night typing and editing the paper using MacWrite (a final report on a research project), then took it to Kinko’s in the morning to make bound copies and turned it in at noon – whew! I was able to get a Mac for business use (mostly using it for word processing and logging into mainframes), and finally got my own personal Mac in the early 90’s (a Performa, I think).
I used to get into discussions/arguments with my dad about Macs, he was a PC guy. He would point to the expense, and I would point out that Porsches were expensive, but nothing was stopping people from buying one. Eventually, I converted to PCs/Windows laptops at home (funny how lack of funds due to raising children brings clarity to life…), but I enjoyed Macs while I had them.
Arizona Republic editorial: Title: “Stay in this race, Nikki Haley, and make Donald Trump set himself on fire” – offers a speech that Nikki Haley could give to really enrage Trump, best quote is this one after the suggested speech: “That should do it. That should ignite the afterburners in Trump’s ears and eye sockets.”