Thursday, February 12, 2026
China’s Birth Dearth
An Indonesian author, writing in the Hong Kong based Asia Times, does a substantial overview of the impacts, both present and future, of China’s extremely low birth rate. A key observation: government efforts to stimulate births where tried have been shown to have quite limited impact. The conclusion:
Demography does not determine destiny, but it sets powerful constraints on what is possible. China remains a formidable state with vast resources and institutional capacity. But it is now a superpower entering old age, confronting demographic limits that policy alone cannot reverse.
COTTonLINE wonders: An autocratic state theoretically could constrain the availability of birth control drugs and devices. Would China’s citizenry rebel, or respond by further cuts in births?
I’m guessing policy wonks in Beijing are also wondering about that precise question. Hat tip to RealClearWorld for the link.
Another Trans Shooter
The person who shot and killed nine persons in a small British Columbia town has been identified as a born-male transgender 'woman' named Jesse Van Rootselaar. He murdered his mom and stepbrother before going to the high school and killing seven more, wounding others.
Transgender individuals are a tiny fraction of the populace, yet they've done much more than their share of mass killings. I consider that very suggestive of trans being a mental illness making sufferers susceptible to acting out in violent ways.
Later … See similar arguments made here in the New York Post and here at Power Line.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Good News
Power Line's new guy Bill Glahn posts the following quote from the Bureau of Labor Statistics unemployment report.
In January, federal government employment continued to decline (-34,000) as some federal employees who accepted a deferred resignation offer in 2025 came off federal payrolls. Since reaching a peak in October 2024, federal government employment is down by 327,000, or 10.9 percent.
10.9% is roughly one ninth of the federal workforce, that's not trivial. Glahn goes on to note this.
Payroll jobs were up for January (+130,000), overall, even as government employment (all levels) fell (-42,000 last month).
All the while the national unemployment rate is declining. This is good news the GOP needs, looking toward November's midterm election.
Later .... This posted by Instapundit, making the same point graphically:
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Poor States' Shining Example
For the New York Times, Nicholas Krisrtof does a long and well-reported article on why the public school children in three Southern states - Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama - are top performers in nationwide tests of child learning. Wonder of wonders, the column is not behind the NYT paywall.
The extent to which these schools are literally chasing down truants and twisting parents' arms to get kids into classrooms is amazing. If you know this part of the nation, children in public schools are predominantly non-white, mostly black. Imagine if you will not permitting students to pass out of third grade unless they can read with some proficiency - these three states are insisting, and the kids are reading and passing.
Kristof makes too little of an important contributing factor. He writes:
It was easier to undertake these reforms in states like Mississippi that lacked strong teacher unions.
No kidding, he writes only that one sentence about perhaps the major factor blocking schools in other states from emulating the success of these three "southern stars."
These three have overcome what President Bush called "the soft bigotry of low expectations" and replaced it with this, from a superintendent in Marion County.
We no longer accept that our kids can’t compete with anybody in the world.
Kristof points out that nothing about the kids' home environment has been changed.
For many years, skeptics have offered dispiriting arguments about the prospects for educational gains: The way to improve literacy is to fix the family, fix addiction, fix the parents, for as long as the child’s environment is broken, there’s not much else that can be done.
The gains in these states suggest that that critique is wrong. Mississippi and Alabama haven’t fixed child poverty, trauma and deeply troubled communities — but they have figured out how to get kids to read by the end of third grade.
And their math scores improved a lot too.
Monday, February 9, 2026
NSFW
Over at the News Ammo site I find a link to a translation of the Bad Bunny lyrics from the Super Bowl halftime show. If accurate, they are on a par with some of the raunchiest rap lyrics for sexual explicitness and exhortation of drug use.
I'll bet his abuela doesn't approve, probably not his madre either. Unless you work in a brothel or a biker bar, don't read the translated lyrics aloud at work.
An Echo of the Past
Some things don’t change very much, or perhaps more accurately, tend to recur. Today comes an article about a continuing US Army presence reestablished in the Philippines. There is a lot of history between the two nations.
My father’s older brother - a West Point graduate (class of 1908) and career Army officer - was stationed there over a hundred years ago. I am uncertain whether this was before or after he served in France in World War I, probably before. At the time the Philippines was a US colony.
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Saturday, February 7, 2026
Government Corruption in CA
Dan Walters is the "grand old man" of California political journalists, with a "state beat" career dating back to 1975. Now in his early 80s', he is still at work. We've cited him several times.
Today he brings us a discussion of the long history of corruption in California state and local government. It is not a record of which to be proud.
And ongoing investigations bid fair to unearth a whole lot more in the near future.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Rents Decline
XX vs XY Is a Real Thing
Recent research has demonstrated the the brains of male and female fetuses develop differently, meaning not all observed mental differences are socially transmitted. A key quote:
By linking scans taken before and after birth, the team reports that measurable differences in how male and female brains grow can already be seen by mid-pregnancy.
No kidding. Humans evolved to have complementary abilities in men and women as there was (and probably still is) species survival value in those differences. Hat tip to Instapundit for the link.
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Demographic Doom Loop
Rick Moran writes at PJ Media about how "demographics is destiny." Hat tip to Mark Tapscott, posting at Instapundit, for the link.
The blue states are in a demographic doom loop. They need to create high taxes to pay for the numerous goodies they give to residents, but that leads to an exodus of wealth and people. To make up for the losses, blue states import and encourage illegal aliens to settle there. But illegals are a huge drain on the state treasury, leading to the need to raise taxes, and the loop closes on itself.
There you see the downside of the Curley Effect.
Trump 48?
We're hearing about new findings in the vote miscount investigation in Fulton County, Georgia. It is at least possible it will eventually be found that Trump should have won in 2020.
I see a highly unlikely, but nevertheless intriguing path to a Trump third term. Let's say is is shown beyond a reasonable doubt that Trump had the votes to win in 2020 but truly "wuz robbed," as they say.
Isn't there an argument that equity demands we owe him a third term, since he won three times? Imagine a lawsuit with the finding that Trump is awarded another term for 2028-2032, meaning no election is required in 2028.
I float this as a trial balloon. Listen for progressive heads exploding across our fruited plain.
Yogi’s Blond Cousins
There has been much written about global warming endangering Ursus maritimus, aka polar bears. As the sea ice retreats their ability to hunt basking seals - their main food diminishes.
On the other hand, recent findings from Svalbard suggest at least some the local big white carnivores are fatter than ever. This is triggering speculation about how this can happen. Hat tip to RealClearScience for the link.
It is also well known that Ursus maritimus and Ursus arctos (brown or grizzly bears) are closely related. They can and do interbreed and the offspring are, I believe, fertile.
Brown bears are well known omnivores, I’ve watched them sit in a patch of flowers happily eating the blossoms, but they’ll also kill and eat moose, reindeer, hibernating ground rodents, and spawning salmon.
If brown bears are omnivores, might not polar bears diversify their diet to include birds, eggs, and land animals too? I think they might, and some evidence suggests they do. I believe they’ve been known to raid the garbage dump at Churchill, Manitoba.
Alas, there are no panserbjørne, hat tip to Philip Pullman for their charming portrait.
Affordability and Illegal Immigration
Affordability means prices low enough you can pay them without pain. Economics teaches us prices are set by the interaction of supply and demand. When demand is high relative to supply, prices rise. When demand is less than supply, prices fall. That is Econ 101.
Recently we have stopped taking in illegal aliens (who increase demand) and began deporting them, voluntarily or otherwise (lowering demand). As this article points out, rents have declined as vacancies are slower to fill. Some 2.5 million mouths are no longer demanding food here, easing pressure on grocery prices.
The deportations have reduced the supply of labor, relative to demand. So wages have risen, especially in trucking and construction, fields which have employed many illegal aliens. Many of those now departed were receiving welfare, reducing pressures on government to increase spending.
For American citizens, the more illegal aliens we can squeeze out of our society, the more affordable life will be for those who remain. As noted below, who loses are the Democratic machine politicians in our big cities, slumlords, plus construction and trucking firms. Who wins? Everyone else. But don’t expect the losers to give up without a fight, as in Minnesota.
Reason to Celebrate
We’ve commented often about the migratory population shifts happening within the US, mostly from Democrat-dominated states to Republican-dominated states. This morning brings an excellent City Journal article which fairly bristles with statistics making that exact point. Hat tip to RealClearPolicy for the link.
It is even true that birth rates - number of children per adult woman - are higher in red states. This migration implements the Curley effect on a national scale, entrenching Democrats ever more strongly in the states now losing population.
Some are calling this process the Great Sort, as we Americans sort ourselves out ideologically into polities following quite different paths. And with the sort causing blue states to lose congressional seats, and an inflow of census-counted illegal aliens helping to stem that loss, we have an explanation for the otherwise counterintuitive Biden open-borders policy.
If demographics is destiny, we conservatives have reason to celebrate.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Malpractice
I do a lot of scanning and reading as prep for this blog, and I enjoy doing it. One thing I don't enjoy is when article titles turn out to be non-descriptive of the article they label.
A recent misleading example from the RealClear group of websites is the following. First the article title: "Warning: Winter Surgeries and the Frail Patient." I took that to mean they'd found out it was dangerous to schedule surgery for frail patients during winter, meaning winter posed additional risks.
So I read the article and found out winter posed no risks. Winter was only mentioned because people are more likely to schedule elective surgeries (hip or knee replacements, etc.) then, possibly because they will be shut in anyway because of cold weather.
That is only one example, I often see titles claiming an answer to the question of "why" some phenomenon does or does not occur, only to find the article describes the phenomenon, demonstrates it is common, and leaves it at that. I'd estimate I see one of those every couple of weeks.
It is a form of bait and switch, and it leaves me feeling like Charley Brown when Lucy whisks the football away. It is hard to know who to blame, sometimes the editor will rename a column and sometimes it's the author's fault.
Whoever is responsible, I'd sure love it to stop.
The Key: Who Decides
I have repeatedly made the argument that V. Putin fears he cannot survive the Ukraine war without a victory. I’ll admit I haven’t made the same claim about V. Zelensky, but perhaps I should have.
Writing at The American Conservative, Ted Snider argues that Zelensky believes being defeated on the battlefield is preferable to losing at the peace table. Honestly, I think he makes a pretty good case for that conclusion.
The gist of Snider’s argument is that Zelensky can blame defeat on the US and Europe, both of which have been less-than-wholehearted in their support of Ukraine’s fight. Whereas, he cannot blame them if he agrees to a peace that gives Russia all of their present ill-gotten gains, getting in return only a cessation of hostilities.
If Snider is correct, as I suspect he is, then neither Putin nor Zelensky can afford to make peace. The meat grinder war will continue, not because that is best for either nation, but because that is best for both leaders.
It is possible the people of both nations would prefer a simple cessation of hostilities in place and an end to the dying and maiming. However, they are not the ones deciding.