Monday, July 6, 2026

It’s Who They Were

Charlton Heston, thirty years ago speaking on behalf of a Republican candidate, saying this.

We have to get back to the values and perceptions of those wise old dead white guys who invented this country.

His response to the woke hassling he got for saying it is priceless.

Let’s see now, they were wise, they were old, they’re dead, they were white guys, and they invented this country. Which word in that sentence don’t you understand?

That certainly describes Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Adams, Hamilton, and Madison, the architects of our republic. Scott Johnson of Power Line posts the quotes.

A possible quibble: Jefferson wasn't especially old when he wrote the Declaration of Independence.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Sunday Snark

⬆That's Andrew (pretending to be Sarah) McBride.

Images courtesy of David Strom's Sunday Smiles.

The Harm of Illegal Immigration

The Dallas branch of the Federal Reserve Bank reports the effects of illegal immigration upon income and housing costs.

From early 2021 to early 2024, the U.S. experienced an unprecedented boom in unauthorized immigration, followed by a rapid slowdown beginning in mid-2024. We provide the first systematic empirical assessment of the labor- and housing-market effects of this episode.

We find that unauthorized immigrant worker flows (UIWF) increased local employment approximately one-for-one, without significant declines in local wages. These inflows also raised local house prices and rents without expanding housing supply, consistent with a housing demand shock in the face of short-run inelastic supply. Lastly, we find that UIWF reduced labor income per capita, consistent with downward wage composition of the local workforce, and strongly reduced government transfers.

The above is from the Fed's Abstract. The following is from the New York Post's synthesis of the Fed report.

The economists estimate unauthorized immigrant worker flows accounted for about 30% of employment growth, roughly 30% of home-price growth, and about 20% of rent growth in the average metropolitan area between March 2021 and March 2024.

They stress these estimates apply to the average metro area studied and do not suggest immigration was the sole driver of rising housing costs nationwide.

Joe Bided was demonstrably clueless and senile. We still suffer the consequences - higher prices, especially for housing. 

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Quarter Millennium Snark

Or Nevada.

Obvious CG, notice arm thru coffee table.

Images courtesy of Power Line's The Week in Pictures
and its Comments section.



Images courtesy of Sarah Hoyt's
Starting the Fireworks Early.

Happy 250th Birthday

It has arrived, the day we've chosen to celebrate our beloved nation's birthday has rolled around for the 250th time. Happy Birthday, United States of America. Hurrah, long may your banners wave!

The first quarter millennium has been eventful, in the extreme. A bit less excitement in the next similar interval would be a restful change. That said, it may be too much to ask for a hegemon.

The other DrC and I have been to many countries and seen more than a few very nice ones. New Zealand and Switzerland come immediately to mind. 

Still, I'll repeat what I wrote recently. Our retirement checks would follow us anywhere on the planet, but this nation is where we feel at home. It is to the USA we owe whatever modest success we've achieved in this life, and we're grateful and appreciative.

Friday, July 3, 2026

Echoing the Sentiment




In honor of tomorrow's 250th birthday of the USA, I'm posting this 1984 photo of Tony Siraci, the grandson of Italian immigrants, kissing the forehead of Lady Liberty in New York City's harbor. My source, the NY Post.

I second that emotion. Hat tip to Smokey Robinson for the word-play.

Explaining Today's U.K.

Posted to Instapundit by Stephen Green, originally by Alice Smith, a quote too good not to share with you. Smith writes:

The UK is what happens when career public sector middle-managers get into power.

They have perfected "don't rock the boat, uber alles" to a high art. 

Who Are the DSA?

The fantastically named Batya Ungar-Sargon makes the following claims on X. If true, they give a clear picture of the Democratic Socialists of America movement - what it is and isn't.

80% of DSA members have a college degree.
60% work professional jobs.
Just 4% are blue-collar.
85% are white.

This isn't a working-class movement but an elite one, for whom "Free Palestine" and "Abolish ICE" operate as a smokescreen for class privilege—just like climate and trans activism and identity politics once did.

Hat tip to Instapundit for the link and his implied endorsement.

Yummy

CNBC reports demand for beef remains high, in the face of much higher prices. Especially the demand for premium cuts like ribeye steaks. 

This is good news for those of us who live where beef is raised, and good news for beef eaters more generally. The DrsC's favorite meal this summer is ribeye off the gas grill, and an ear of sweet corn hot out of the microwave, both fine eating and a snap to prepare.

Friday Meme Fest

⬆Explains Thune's reluctance, IYKYK.

Images courtesy of Politico's
The Nation's Cartoonists on the Week in Politics.


Images courtesy of RealClearPolitics'
Cartoons of the Week.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

2001, A Space Odyssey ... Revisited

When the DrsC were courting, too many decades ago, the film 2001, A Space Odyssey was released. We saw it in the theater then and liked it. Recently Turner Classic Movies reran it, we recorded it, and watched for a second time tonight.

Wow, talk about films that have aged poorly, 2001 takes the cake. The actually good special effects of the space ships and EVA, which won an Oscar in that pre-CGA era, are now ho-hum. Everybody does them, nobody notices.

So what's left is the story and the acting. The story could almost be written on a 3x5 card. The acting is workmanlike, gets the job done but nothing more. 

The 'apes' resembled nothing more than undergraduates in chimp suits, playing grab-ass. Leaving the viewer with no idea what happened to the astronaut(s) who survived the encounter with HAL, that is storytelling malpractice. The psychedelic finish is beyond passé.

Finally, the entire film is an hour too long, I got bored waiting for something to happen. Very little of substance actually does happen, and that verrry slooowly.

Our recommendation, give this Thanksgiving gobbler a pass. It no longer works. 

Tonight reminds me of an L. P. Hartley quote, "The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there." Our tastes have really changed ... a lot.

Answering the Question

Writing for The National Interest, long time Middle East reporter Hussain Abdul-Hussain notes that Saudi Arabia has been appeasing Iran in the face of Iranian attacks on Saudi targets. He argues it would be in the Saudis' interests to get closer to Israel than to Iran. 

Abdul-Hussain's article is entitled "Why is Saudi Arabia Appeasing Iran?" It isn't clear if that is his title or if it was retitled by the publication's editor, which sometimes happens. I raise the issue because the article never answers the question posed by its title. 

I propose to take an outsider's stab at answering it for him. I see three reasons why the Saudis might cut Iran some slack. 

The first reason is location. Iran and Saudi Arabia sit roughly 100 miles apart across the Persian Gulf (aka Arabian Gulf). They live in the same neighborhood.

The second reason is size. Both are big countries with Saudi Arabia somewhat larger. However, the current population estimate for Iran is 93 million, for Saudi Arabia is only 35 million.

Factors of location and relative population size figure into any potential military confrontation, including this one. The last factor is unique to the region. 

The third is the hadjj. Islam places an obligation on all believers - who are able - to visit the holy sites in Mecca and Medina. Thus there will inevitably be many thousands of Iranians visiting those Saudi cities every year.

If you live next door to someone whose religion you mostly share, and that faith requires you to host many thousands of their visitors every year, you might not want to take a hostile stance toward that country. Doing so would vastly complicate Saudi security concerns.

For example, closing the Saudi borders to Iranians would be much more than an inconvenience. It might be viewed as interfering with Iranians' sacred duties. Saudis have to ask themselves "are we being the hosts Allah wants for his holy cities?" This stewardship factors into many Saudi considerations, foreign and domestic.

Why Dem. Socialists?

I have a theory about what is powering the anti-incumbent Democratic Socialist movement within the Democratic Party. I believe much of the blame rests on President Trump.

Not that he in any way favors what is happening. Rather the drive is powered by rank and file Democrats’ frustration with the inability of their incumbents to make much headway against Trump. 

Trump and his Congressional majority act. Incumbent Democrats can only complain and file lawsuits against these acts, most of which suits Trump wins at the SCOTUS level, if not before.

To rank and file Ds, this feels like the system is broken. Against which impotence they are rebelling by voting for radical candidates. The less-radical incumbents have failed and the self-serving DSA candidates tell them the problem is a lack of radicalism. 

The real issue is that Democrats haven’t found a leader with anything approaching the FDR-like combination of talent, energy, and hutzpah which Trump brings to politics. Democrats blame the system for their policy failures. They find the message of those who would effectively tear it down offers hope in an otherwise bleak political season.

Afterthought:  In the 1930s-40s, Republicans hated FDR every bit as much as Democrats today hate DJT. Eleanor Roosevelt was as unpopular as Michelle Obama. 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Good News

A new report from the Brookings Institution, as quoted by Fox News.

There was a significant drop-off in entries to the United States in 2025 relative to 2024 and an increase in enforcement activity leading to removals and voluntary departures.

We estimate that net migration was between –10,000 and –295,000 in 2025, the first time in at least half a century it has been negative. In our assessment, net migration is likely to be very low or negative in 2026 as well.

This map from the White House website.


President Trump, take a well-earned victory lap.

A Quote to Keep and Ponder

A. J. Christopher writing at PJ Media about Europeans' positive response to the America you and I know and love.

Everything our visitors love about America is everything the left hates about America.

Christopher makes an interesting point. Europeans who plan to see the US decide which cities they want to see. They do this because sightseeing in Europe mostly is its cities - cathedrals, palaces, museums, and monuments. They wrongly assume the US is similar.

The US isn't just (or even mostly) our cities. The US is our suburbs, our rural areas, our National Parks, and our wide-open, go anywhere you choose countryside. I find we don't do "city" especially well. We do suburb, exurb, and countryside better than most. Our cities are "low trust" areas, most of the rest is "high trust" and friendly. 

The DrsC have traveled all over the US and spent very little of that time in cities, except for professional meetings while still working. We'd advise European (and other) visitors to see the countryside and the state and national parks, our cities (except NOLA) are nothing special. Enjoy.

Blocking Birthright Citizenship

The Supreme Court today upheld birthright citizenship, unfortunately. A blogger with the X handle Northern Barbarian posts suggested Trumpian policy responses.

Apparently more border controls will be needed to thwart anchor baby tourism.

Pregnancy tests for all foreign women of birthing age seeking to enter the United States. OK.

Targeted deportations of foreign women of birthing age within US borders who lack resident alien status. OK.

Imagine the howls when these or other like steps are announced. Hat tip to Ed Driscoll posting at Instapundit for the link. 

Milestone

By one way of looking at it, today ends the first half of 2026, as the first six months end tonight at midnight. By another way of looking at it, noon on Thursday is the year's midpoint, as that's when we reach 182.5 days into a 365 day year.

However you slice it, the year is about half gone, shall we hope the next half is an improvement? I wouldn't place big bets on that proposition. 

Murphy's law suggests humanity's propensity for own-foot-shooting has not diminished. However wounded by our own misdeeds, we will stumble onward in search of better days. 

As the other DrC is fond of concluding, we're all in this mess together. And quoting economist J. M. Keynes, "In the long run, we're all dead" by which I believe he means "lets focus on the next few years."

Looking South

Sarah Anderson may be COTTonLINE's new favorite analyst of Latin America - everything south of the Rio Grande. I am not put off by her lack of an Hispanic name. 

Anderson follows the region closely, knows the players, and is realistic about the impact of criminal gangs and corruption. She is positive about Trump's "Donroe Doctrine" approach to the hemisphere.

Today her column for PJ Media quibbles a bit with some sweeping generalizations other commenters have made about recent elections in the region. I'm liking her approach.

Monday, June 29, 2026

Le Tour d'Horizon

The journal Foreign Affairs publishes a long analysis of the current state of the world. The level of detail will only appeal to aficionados with plenty of time. However, their introductory paragraph is almost poetic, and I share it with you.

At first glance, today’s strategic map seems familiar. A bloc of land-based powers, clustered around the center of Eurasia, is challenging a liberal, maritime order headed by an offshore superpower. China and Russia, reinforced by Iran and North Korea and ringed by autocracies from Belarus to Myanmar, now occupy the role that Napoleonic France, imperial Germany, and the Soviet Union each once held—continental empires seeking to dominate Eurasia and project power globally. The United States, like the United Kingdom before it, remains the only actor capable of anchoring a great arc of coastal and maritime countries across North America, Europe, and East Asia that hem in the Eurasian supercontinent. The rhythm of geopolitics repeats itself: an autocratic axis, emerging from the continental heartland, seeks to rupture rimland barriers that buffer the wider world.

Demonstrating once again that while history doesn't repeat itself exactly, patterns certainly recur.

Heads Up, CA

Fox News has a story about wealthy Californians moving next door to Nevada. As they characterize it, decamping from the Golden State to the Golden Nugget. 

Though not wealthy, the DrsC have been a part of that move. What we moved was our “winter quarters” as we’d already moved our legal “residence of record” to Wyoming 20+ years ago. 

Both NV and WY get along nicely without a state income tax. One of WY’s unofficial mottos is “Wyoming, the way America used to be.” And as far back as I can remember NV has been libertarian in practice, if not in label.

If the "haves" leave California, who will pay the taxes to support its superabundance of "have nots"? Don't expect the heartland to bail you out.

Listen up, Sacramento. Y'all are threatening to kill the golden goose with wealth taxes. Doing so isn't even in a progressive's best interest.