Sources and Methods

Good morning, readers,

I have been speechless for a while, but I thought I could at least share with you some of the things I pay attention to when I’m not reading or watching mainstream news. I just never watch news on TV anymore unless I know there’s a storm coming. But I’m not totally ignorant of what’s happening in the US and the rest of the world. So here are some of the sources I find useful to keep tabs on the various wars, elections, and other info.

Click on these links. Seriously! Watch and listen to a few. When I insert links into blog posts that I write, they rarely get any clicks. Perhaps when I feature them in this way, you’ll take notice.

Ukraine: The Latest
At the start of the invasion of Ukraine, David Knowles, a young journalist with The Telegraph, gathered fellow journalists to keep people informed about military news, political news, and personal stories about what’s happening in Ukraine. David died suddenly a few months ago, but his colleagues have kept the work going.

Battle Lines
Battle Lines is also a podcast from The Telegraph. I don’t love it as much as the one focused on Ukraine, but Battle Lines covers a lot more territory. It’s a source of news about Africa, which we don’t hear much about elsewhere, as well as the middle east and Ukraine.

Preston Stewart
Preston Stewart is an invaluable resource if you want to understand the wars in Ukraine, Israel, and now Syria. If he is out of his element, he provides links to excellent resources. He’s also a quick study, so he will be well informed tomorrow, if not today. Stewart has several worthy news sites to check out.

Passing Judgment
Are you tied of war news? Then tune in to Passing Judgement. Law professor Jessica Levinson offers clear, articulate information on current legal affairs, often with interviews of people with knowledge of particular cases or issues.

Call Me Back
Dan Senor offers daily updates on the situation in Israel. I find him to be a welcome counter to the mainstream media in the US and UK. Lots of interviews with key Israeli journalists and good information about Israeli politics.

Quillette Podcast
I trust Quillette on culture war issues. Jon Kay and Iona Italia interview people immersed in various culture wars in the Anglosphere.

So to Speak: The Free Speech Podcast
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression has taken over the job of protecting our First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and assembly. The ACLU abdicated this role in favor of defending Woke, so keep up to date on this critically important work via So to Speak.

Health Check
This is a BBC podcast that I’ve listened to for as long as podcasts have been a thing. Yes, it discusses issues within the context of the UK’s National Health Service, but the information about new approaches to many health conditions is useful, plus it features information about health concerns around the world.

Pacific Northwest Weather Watch
This is a new one for me, but I discovered it just before our recent wind storm. It was right on target.

Hope and Fears as I Cast My Ballot

I’ll be voting a split ticket today, some Rs, some Ds. Historically, I’ve voted straight tickets, but this year I just can’t. I’ll be voting for Harris/Walz on the national scene, but for Dave Reichert for governor of WA and probably for the Republican for attorney general. Reichert is the most normal, reasonable Republican to make it to the general election ballot in years, and I am anxious for a change in Olympia. 

My concerns at the state level are with a too-soft approach to crime and a too-woke approach to education. Not to worry, lefty friends, there is no chance that Reichert will win. I’ll continue to be a lonely centrist in a far left state come January.

The national election is too close to call as of today, October 22, 2024. I am anxious about it. My curious streak wants to see what would happen if Trump were to win. Would our fears be realized? Would the world as we know it vanish before our eyes? I’m not willing to risk it, so I’ll be voting for Harris, but I’m anxious about the future even if she wins. 

I have a wild set of hopes and fears if Harris takes the oath in January. Yes, I’d love to see a capable woman become president! And Harris is good enough for me. The long row of white men who have preceded her in the office have not necessarily been the best men in the country at their time. They’ve succeeded in winning for a variety of reasons. Most of them grew in competence while in office. (I can’t imagine that anyone is ready to assume the job of leader of the free world on Day 1.) Harris will be a fast learner, and her values and goals are fine with me…

…With a couple of concerns: Just how woke is she? Can she support the rights of trans adults while accepting the need to temper the demands of the most extreme trans activists with regard to children? Can she temper the enthusiasm of public schools to denigrate both our history and the legitimate accomplishments of western culture? Can she address concerns about the criminal justice system the way she did in her book, “Smart on Crime,” rather than follow the radicals who ruled in 2020? 

On the international scene, I have hopes that Harris will be more supportive of Ukraine than Biden has been, and by that I mean I hope she will support the goal of winning in Ukraine, not just fighting until everyone is exhausted.Trump would just give the Donbas and Crimea to Putin and wash his hands of it all. At least, if she wins, we won’t be pulling the rug out from under Ukraine immediately. 

As for Israel, I don’t have confidence in either Trump or Harris. No one knows what Trump would do. He has insisted that October 7 would not have happened if he’d been in office, Ukraine would not have been invaded, no bad things at all. BS, in my mind. I don’t think his craziness, which he now cultivates as an asset, will prevent all bad things. So what would he actually do for the Middle East? I’m confident that even he has no idea.

What about Harris? More restraints on Israel? Fewer restraints? Could she find moderate Muslim partners to rebuild Gaza? Two States for Two Peoples! Yada, yada, yada. Create a Palestinian state without a complete change of heart by Palestinian leaders willing to accept Israel vocally, in public, risking assassination by doing so – that would mean two states armed sufficiently to maintain order, but also armed for self defense. Personally, I think it will take at least a generation of calm, perhaps longer, before Israel would again consider two equal states. But a Palestinian “starter state?” We should at least talk about it.

People can change. I’ve seen it. My father’s family was just fine with Jim Crow. Separate drinking fountains? Fine with them. Separate schools, of course. Separate public accommodations, sure. And then? They let it go. They didn’t all accept the equality of black and white, but they let go of Jim Crow, and many black Americans have taken advantage of opportunities afforded to them. Remember, though, that we were not rushing to bomb shelters, within our homes, when rockets were fired at us by the victims of Jim Crow. No one had armed them hoping to obliterate us. Rather, we had a leader who spoke courageously of judging people by the content of their character, not the color of their skin.

Palestinians who might have had the potential to become voices for peaceful coexistence have been systematically “taken out” by Hamas and others. Will any surface from the rubble of Gaza? I trust Harris much more than Trump to find them if they are there and work with them. 

Hopes and fears. I have some hopes and many fears as I cast my ballot this year. How about you?

An Interesting Ballot This Year

Gallery

I just voted in the Washington State 2024 Primary election. Mail ballot, of course (which I love, and which some people don’t, for reasons I do not understand). For the first time ever, I approached the ballot as an independent, … Continue reading

But He’s a Jew!

Gallery

Are you in a tizzy wondering if Kamala Harris will make the right pick for her VP nomination? You’ve seen the short list: Gretchen Whitmer (no, because we’re just not ready for two women on the ballot), or Andy Beshear … Continue reading