You must be logged in to post a comment.
BY: ParkHill
IN: Monday Open Thread
BY: ParkHill
IN: Monday Open Thread
BY: ParkHill
IN: Thanksgiving Weekend Open Thread
BY: JohnNorthofDenver
IN: Monday Open Thread
BY: kwtree
IN: Monday Open Thread
BY: 2Jung2Die
IN: Monday Open Thread
BY: kwtree
IN: Thanksgiving Weekend Open Thread
BY: JohnNorthofDenver
IN: Thanksgiving Weekend Open Thread
BY: ParkHill
IN: Thanksgiving Weekend Open Thread
BY: Duke Cox
IN: Thanksgiving Weekend Open Thread
Subscribe to our monthly newsletter to stay in the loop with regular updates!
I was elected to lead, not to read:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s99ZeamF7J0
The real Alice of Arlo Guthrie’s “Alice’s Restaurant” died last week. Sad.😞
I see Polsters aren’t rushing to express all of the things for which we are grateful. It is hard to find thoughts of gratitude now. I am convinced the Trump Reich, which will be the fourth one, will decimate the government as we know it, split the nation and bring us to the brink of civil war.
This is not just entertainment.
This is real.
There is brain science that says expressing gratitude is good for you. Most Polsters can be grateful for relationships, friendships, even with pets. Food shelter, sufficiency, if not abundance. Natural beauty of our state.
But no, the current American political state is not something that we feel grateful for.
I'm grateful trump got less than 50% of the popular vote. Small thing, but gives me the right to argue that his so-called mandate is really just his "bro time" with Elon.
I’m sure feeling grateful this year. Karen survived a heart attack and the open heart that followed. The bills are going to clobber our finances for quite a while, but she’s here, and that’s all I need.
Virtual hugs to you, cook! Sorry, can't help with finances though…
Thanks, 2Jung. We'll figure it out. We always do. I'll just be a lean Christmas, but she's all the gift I need.
Great news, skinny! Delighted to hear Karen is home. No better place to be.
Thanks, Duke. She's better enough that I've got her starting on her long-neglected project list. She and a friend are going to build a rack behind my stove to hang my cherished cast-iron skillets this weekend.
Best wishes for both of you. Being a caretaker isn't easy, either
Right now, it's a pleasure to be a caretaker, Kwtree, considering what the alternative might have been. You know, that's why they make you make those promises, "Better and worse, sickness and health", etc.
Good to hear Karen survived and will be with you. A wonderful outcome — modern medicine does good, and then we just have to figure out how to deal with the costs. May you and Karen have many more Thanksgivings to celebrate.
Thanks, JiD.
Happy Thanksgiving all!
Deleted.
Should I buy an extra TV to stockpile for the trade war?
I've been asking myself, should I buy a car? I decided to not do that this year, and instead see how far I can get with my 2013 car that has over 236,000 miles on it. Maybe I buy a newer car, and store it??!!
I knew someone whose husband was terminally ill, so he bought two identical cars for her. One was to be driven, and the other was to serve as a hangar queen.
My suggestion @The realist would be to buy an EV this year while the $7500 and state EV incentives are in effect. Furthermore even if you don't want an EV my suggestion would be to buy a car this year. Cars are comprised thousands of components and no car is entirely produced in the United States. That pretty much guarantees higher prices of cars. Also supply chain issues.
Drill down further and certain segments have particular exposure to the tariff issue. Minivans by Honda and Toyota are assembled in the United States, while the Chrysler Pacifica is built in Canada. Currently the Chrysler Pacifica is the only car sold under the Chrysler brand. Less competition, higher prices, less innovation, more money going to foreign corporate interest.
Regardless of what car you are looking for you'll likely pay less this year. Regardless of what TV, smartphone, kitchen appliance…
I'd imagine if many millions of people bought everything they reasonably need, except non-perishables, before Jan. 20 2025, there would be some measurable negative impact on economic stats for the start of the new administration. The new adminstration would just blame the old administration for the bad numbers, of course, and a third of America would believe that messaging, but it would look good for a while on MSNBC unless Musk buys it.
That's not my intention. Simply seeking to operate in a rational economic fashion. Ex. Canadian Maple syrup will be 25% more expensive, so it's likely that other maple syrup will increase its price relative to the tariff. So even if you are not buying Canadian maple syrup you'll pay more.
It would be possible to buy a 4 year supply of a syrup. It's up to you if that will save you money. Personally I would think higher ticket items not made in the USA would be a more likely source of return. It will be impossible to avoid the runaway effects entirely.
What if the Harris Campaign did everything perfectly?
??????
Ummmm??, it would have attained Nirvana?
“No, You are not on Indigenous Land”, Noah Smith.
“Pieces of territory belong to institutions, not people.” This is a provocative title, but a surprisingly not-so-provocative article, once you think about it.
“What is Ethnonationalism?”
…
Written by someone who never took property law. Yes, this land was stolen, all property is documented theft. Informal property rights are non-codified or documented, but recognized among local residents to varying degrees. We just ignored their natural rights and later courts compensated based on evidenced takings. Similarly the Crown Estates belong to the "King" because we choose to accept that.
I think Noah's point is that yes, the land has been stolen numerous times over before white men showed up, stole it once again, and then set that ownership in law.
The whole issue of "ancestral lands" and acknowledgements is a muddled mess. Colorado is supposedly the ancestral lands of the Ute, Arapaho, Cheyenne, per the acknowledgements. Yet, those tribes were on the lands of the ancestral Pueblans and Fremont peoples. SW Colorado is well known for its archeological treasures. NW Colorado is much less known, but does have scatter sites where arrowheads were made and many petroglyph locations.
I recommend the novel, ""Hanta Yo", by Ruth Bebee Hill. Mostly a look at native life and culture before Europeans invaded.
Right. Noah Smith makes two pretty big points:
Legal ownership of the land is INSTITUTIONAL.
What is the moral right of ethno-nationalism to "own" land?
1) To say ownership is institutional is only to recognize dominion of the state. The state through courts has stated land was stolen and retroactively compensated while other claims remain unsubstantiated. Further courts at the time highlighted the criminal action of the state.
2. The courts have held there is no blood quantum to squaw tribe heritage as tribal members included war captives, the enslaved, intermarrying. The author is applying an ethno-state bent to the discussion presumably about his guilt for supporting Israel? IDK but Charles Curtis the 31st Vice President of these United States and member of the Kaw nation is spinning in his grave.
Do you "own" your children? Do you own the changing trees and mountain grandeur?
"Belonging" is about who gives back to and takes care of the land. Most indigenous peoples of whatever tribe have that concept in their teachings. So did our tribal European ancestors, pre-feudalism.
By that standard, native tribes, organic farmers, regenerating cattle grazers, those who practice soil conservation instead of just using it up, are "owners" of the land. That is , in the immortal words of Rogers and Hammerstein, "we know we belong to the land."
I recommend reading Thom Hartmann on the Commons for an understanding of ownership and belonging.
in the meantime, let us shed a tear for the suffering of white men like Noah Smith, who must be subjected to “an endless stream of ethnonationalism from fellow progressives in the land of their birth.” It is so clearly more poignant than the death and suffering of Cherokee on the Trail of Tears, those massacred at Sand Creek, and more.
What are Property Rights, Anyway?
Reading History can make you cynical. And raises a lot of awkward questions.
Justifications for Land Ownership or Possession – Sometimes moral, sometimes ideological, sometimes just raw power:
(1) First Claim
(2) Good Nurturing/Stewardship
(3) I'm starving
(4) I'm the King/Duke/Warlord/TribalChief
(5) Violence/Dominance/Revenge
(6) Ethno/Religious (Manifest Destiny, "Our ancestors from 2000 years ago lived here")
(7) Nationalism – wrapped with Ethnology, Religious,
(8) Ideology. (I guess it's always SOME kind of ideology)
(9) Legal Institutions.
First, I agree with KWTree that nurturing and living at one with nature are extremely good moral reasons for existing on our planet, and the land and environment certainly DESERVE that kind of stewardship. Noah Smith clearly agrees with her that the Europeans conquered the natives using violence and aggression.
JohnNorthofDenver thinks Noah Smith has some kind of "guilt for supporting Israeil"? Umm, I think Noah is saying exactly the opposite. ReligiousEthnoNationalism is pretty much Israel's entire justification for dominating the land there in Palestine, combined with power. And the people who lived there before, (i.e. the most recent before people, not the before-befores), are also using a Religious/Ethno/Nationalist justification.
Which "before-people" have the actual right to claim the land? And why them, not the other?
Noah Smith sees the only way out of those darker and immoral reasons, is that ownership must belong to institutional organizations, i.e. laws, and political or economic institutions.
I just read an extremely fascinating history of Venice. (Who invented banking & double-entry book-keeping?) Notably, it is a long story of violent interactions between Venice, Genoa, Constantinople, the spice trade markets of Caffa & Alexandria the Venetian Empire, the Crusades, the Ottomans, Hungarians, the Austro-Hungarians, etc.
It is not at all a story of legal and moral justifications for "owning" the land or the trade cities.
I don't believe that the ur-history of humans is as idyllic as we like to imagine.
Small hunter-gatherer bands striking out into the unknown when their population outstrips the food & resources of their valley. The next valley over is ripe with game and food, perhaps because it's empty, or maybe the neanderthal band isn't as efficient at killing off the big game, or because a previous band has a herd of goats and planted a bunch of crops, or whatever.