The Daily Escape:
Mesquite Dunes, Death Valley NP, photo by Ed Kendall
(This week’s Sunday Cartoons will appear on Monday)
Wrongo understands that the Jan. 6 investigations are looking in depth at who was behind the attempted coup. But heâs very unhappy with the Democratsâ inability to keep the issue alive, fresh and in front of the American people.
Apparently, communication with the public is too difficult for Democrats.
There are two investigative efforts underway, one by the DOJ, and another by the House of Representatives. Here is the current state of play: DOJ has arrested close to 700 people (possibly more, once you consider cases that havenât yet been unsealed).
The House Select Committee has already met with about 300 witnesses. They have litigated and won a case against Trumpâs assertion of executive privilege. A federal appeals court rejected Trump’s request to block the Jan. 6 Select Committee from obtaining executive branch records. Trumpâs path now is to go to the Supreme Court before New Yearâs.
The truth will ultimately come out. The question is if anyone will care.
Itâs been obvious that Trumpâs Big Lie would be the organizing principle of the GOP ever since January 6. It was a delusion to think that the GOP would sober up and fly right, and itâs now clear that they are going to continue to drink the Trump-spiked Kool-Aid for the foreseeable future. Itâs highly unlikely that Trumpâs followers will allow any Republican candidates to hedge on the Big Lie or pretend to distance themselves from Dear Leader.
The Atlanticâs Barton Gellman wrote a major piece about how the GOP plans to steal the 2022 mid-terms and the 2024 general election. He makes a compelling case that Trump and his cronies are laying the groundwork for a coup in 2024 using the tactics they attempted leading up to and on Jan. 6.
The Congressional investigation is proceeding âtop downâ and unlike the DOJ, itâs without the constraint of needing near-certainty of a conviction before going public.
The DOJ is proceeding âbottom upâ albeit with vast investigative resources, and (hopefully) with a keen sense of what NOT to say prematurely lest it compromise their investigations. The DOJ investigation starts at the Capitol crime scene, building from the useful idiots and militia foot soldiers towards the inciters and commanders.
Congress OTOH, can focus directly on mid-to-upper-level conspirators, like Bannon and Meadows. In a way, both groups are building a bridge from opposite banks of the river. Maybe, someday the two spans will meet. We have to pray it works out that way.
Republicans are rewriting January 6th and are trying to flush it down the memory hole. Itâs certain to work on at least 40% of the country. The issue is whether they can convince another 10% of voters to think there might be nothing to it.
Enough of politics for this week. Itâs time for our Saturday Soother!
The weather in Connecticut is unseasonably warm and dry. On the fields of Wrong, itâs time to put up the temporary fencing that keeps the deer from nibbling on leaves and bark. That constitutes much of their winter diets.
Then take a few minutes to brew up a vente cup of True Grit Peaberry coffee ($14.00/12oz.) from Nguyen Coffee Supply, a Brooklyn, NY based roaster that is the first specialty Vietnamese coffee company in the US.
Now grab a seat by a window, settle back in your comfy chair. Watch and listen to George Gershwinâs âRhapsody in Blueâ, played by the Cellista Cello Ensemble from Korea. Here it is played by 12 cellos in an arrangement by Sung-Min Ahn:
The iconic opening riff is usually played on clarinet. But here, it sounds great on the cello.
This piece shows just how ridiculous is the left’s emphasis on who can use the fruits of culture. In the best of art, artists borrow from everywhere, so Americans in Europe in the 1800s imitating Japanese prints. Here we have a Korean ensemble playing a piece written by an American Jew that is evoking both Europe and some of Jazz (so African American). That is what art does.
Food does it too. So Americans eat pizza – now a real American food, even if food snobs are wary.