Here we have the latest more-or-less weekly collection of my various
musings and comments on things here, there, and everywhere, with context
added where I thought it necessary for folks to get what was going on.
A
note on style: If within a comment something is in brackets - [ ] - and
it is in regular type, that’s how it appeared in my original comment.
If it’s in italics, it’s something I’ve added here for additional
clarity for those who didn’t see the original.
Onward.
2026-03-05
[A
friend asked me via email where was the school that was bombed in Iran
at the opening of the war and for a suggestion for keeping up with
events. Unfortunately, I overlooked the mail for a couple of days.]
A little late for the purpose, I expect, but yeah, there was a school bombed in Minab,
a small city in southern Iran on the Straits of Hormuz. I had heard
about a second school, but now I don’t see any reference to it.
The
US and Israel both deny responsibility (although the Pentagon is
“investigating”), so I guess the place just spontaneously combusted - or
engaged in what the Department of Death would probably call a
“self-initiated rapid kinetic disassembly.”
It is possible the school wasn’t the target (there is a military site nearby) but al-Jazeera did an investigation
showing that either the school was hit deliberately or that the US
and/or Israel relied on intelligence that was 10 years out of date.
[To
save you having to check the link: Intelligence images showed that 10
years ago the building where the school was had been physically
separated from the rest of the base and facilities like a sports field
had been added. As a footnote, major US media have started reporting the same thing - over a week later.]
Neither
case changes the fact that it was hit and “oops, my bad, oh well,” is
not an acceptable response - particularly in light of the fact that
there have now been large-scale attacks on undeniably civilian targets
including hospitals, residential buildings and schools across Tehran and other locations with repeated accounts of “double-tapping,” that is, bombing a site, pausing long enough for assistance to arrive, then bombing the same place again.
(As
a sidebar, that’s a tactic for which the US has been known; for one
example, the fire bombing of Dresden in WW2 involved a wave of bombing
followed by a second one deliberately timed to catch fire-fighting
equipment out in the open.)
For a general source of info
beyond regular media (where I STRONGLY recommend non-US sources), two
that are good on keeping up with events in the vicinity are Drop Site News
and within that Jeremy Scahill because they have contacts within the
Iranian government (and also Hamas) for perspectives we generally never
see in US media. I’m usually very suspicious of partisan sources, but
I’ve seen enough cases of something reported on Drop Site being
confirmed - days later - in major media to give them a fair degree of
credibility.
==
2026-03-05
[Indiana AG Todd Rokita has been compiling a list
of his state’s trans people, apparently intending to copy Kansas in
invalidating their IDs and maybe charging them with the felony of
“falsified” documents.]
FWIW, “retroactively enforcing
this would pose a significant legal question” is an understatement as
it would appear to be a blatant example of an ex post facto law, trying
to make into a crime an action that was not illegal at the time it was
performed.
That may be why [Kansas AG Kris]
Kobach, who has never shown any shyness about pursuing his own personal
obsessions (including extremism in restrictive voter laws, being
anti-choice, and xenophobia, the latter of which being where I first
encountered him in 2004) didn’t try that route in Kansas.
==
2026-03-06
[This was about a video by Dave McKeegan about Bill Kaysing, considered the father of the “we never landed on the Moon” conspiracy theory. McKeegan is a professional photographer who uses that expertise to debunk photo and video “evidence” that the landing was faked.]
Something that struck me was in the clip about the interview that mentioned the [Werner]
von Braun memo supposedly saying a Moon landing was impossible. Part of
the answer got rather buried under the interviewer’s next question;
that part being that the memo reported von Braun as saying there was a 1
in 10,000 chance of getting to the Moon on the first try.
Considering
the idea of just shooting a rocket straight to the Moon and landing
there was at one time on the table, the existence of such a memo is
plausible. But since we didn’t do it that way, we first just went around
the Moon and later sent a multi-stage rocket to end with a module
orbiting the Moon with a lander that descended from that orbiting module
to make the actual landing, that memo, even if real, is wholly
irrelevant.
==
2026-03-06
[This is sort of out of sequence. In the previous issue of “So I said...” I posted my reaction to a video by the Friendly Atheist,
Hemant Mehta questioning the report about a US military commandeer
preaching “last days” theology to his troops. Subsequent to that
posting, I got a reply to my comment; I think my response is worthy of
including here. For the original, go here and scroll down to March 3.]
“Until it’s sourced, it’s just more smoke and that’s the last thing we need more of. Don’t you think?”
It’s
not unsourced. It’s from a reputable source with access to the original
material whose accounts have proven accurate in the past.
Should
we dismiss as “smoke” accusations of Trump abusing a child because we
don’t have the original source? In fact all we truly have is a paper
reading that someone whose name we don’t know said that someone whose
name we don’t know said it was so. But given the overall circumstances, I
have no trouble giving a great deal of credence to that report even
though a court could legitimately dismiss it as hearsay.
Same
here. Lack of perfect knowledge does not prevent reaching justifiable
conclusions. And my conclusion is that, given that Hegseth is a
Christian nationalist who has conducted Bible study classes while in
office and has opened the gates to proselytizing (plus the fact that
right-wing religion being pushed in the military has been an issue
before), yes, there was a commander preaching apocalypticism and yes,
there are others preaching some flavor of fundamentalist Christianity to
those under their command.
And I find Hemant’s doubts quite unpersuasive.
==
2026-03-08
[Still more on this. Jonathan Larsen, author of the piece Hemant questioned, replied to the critique. In comments there some suggested Hemant acted out of jealousy that he hadn’t broken the story himself.]
I
don’t think jealousy is part of it. Hemant tends to work in the areas
of court cases, public and organizational statements, and news accounts -
that is, areas where questions about sources generally don’t arise. So I
expect he’s not used to dealing with stories like this where you have
to some degree make the call as to the trustworthiness of sources.
Jonathan
touched on one of the reasons I found the story persuasive: MRFF has
been reliable in the past, so it may be a single source, but it’s one
that has demonstrated trustworthiness.
==
2026-03-08
Sam Ames (sames) recently posted an essay about forced outing of transgender students in schools.
He
referred to his “least favorite line” in a recent SCOTUS action
upholding at least for now an injunction against a California law
barring the practice. (To be clear, this doesn’t mean California now has
forced outing; it means that such outing can’t be banned statewide
pending further court action.)
That line was “But those [student privacy] policies cut out the primary protectors of children’s best interests: their parents.”
“Least favorite” is a worthy description because a world of hurt can be found in that supposedly self-evident homily.
I
started to say “because it assumes,” but that’s not strong enough. It
doesn’t just assume, it sets as a baseline declaration not only that
parents protect the best interests of their children but also that they
know what those interests are, that parents by definition “know what’s
best” for their kids.
And we do like to tell ourselves that. But
in fact, in practice, we don’t say that, not by definition. Rather, it’s
a “rebuttable assumption,” an assumed stating point that can be
overcome by evidence - where possible before any harm arises. That’s why
there are agencies like Child Protective Services, why there is such a
thing as foster care, why there are custody battles in divorce
proceedings, because we as a society recognize that parents don’t always
know what’s best for their children, that sometimes they are even
harmful to them.
Forced outing policies strip away a layer of
protection for children, turning “rebuttable assumption” into “final
decision” and opening LGBTQ+ (these days, mostly trans) children to risk
of harm without the chance for questions to be raised until it’s too
late and without providing them any benefit.
In fact, I
wrote somewhere else recently that I can recall from my youth seeing
PSAs saying that if there’s trouble at home, “tell someone,” with one
specific example being “a trusted teacher.” With forced outing, a
teacher becomes someone you must not trust, not
just because they might out you but because they would have no true
choice in the matter, not when silence risks their entire career.
Trans
children get no benefit from forced outing and supportive parents
effectively have no need for it. Rather, I would argue that the only
people who benefit from such a policy - other than the trans-hating
ideologues who just want to force all trans folks so far into the closet
they couldn’t even find the door much less open it - are the hostile
parents, those whose response to having a transgender child would range
from fury to forced conversion therapy to total rejection and ejection
from the home.
So to any parent who would say “Why didn’t the
school tell me my kid says they’re trans,” my reply is that’s the wrong
question. The right one is to ask yourself “Why couldn’t my kid tell me?
What message am I giving out such that they felt they needed to hide
this from me?” Or, both more philosophical and harsher, “Do I really
love my kid? Or do I just love the idea of what I imagine them to be?”
Forced outing answers neither of those questions. It just provides a means to avoid them.
==
2026-03-09
On
February 25, Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said an “historic”
agreement with the US was “within reach” ahead of renewed talks in
Geneva. On the 27th, Oman’s foreign minister said a “breakthrough” had
been reached in the negotiations.
On the 28th, the bombing began.
In
the ST:TOS episode “The Savage Curtain,” one character is a
reincarnated version of an Earth warlord named Colonel Phillip Green.
Kirk says he was known for attacking his enemies in the middle of peace
negotiations.
That description was used to establish Green as representative of historic evil.
Just a thought.
==
026-03-09
Wait - so Dep. UN Ambassador Tammy Bruce says “two times they voted for him,” that is, Trump? (About 7:15 at the linked video.)
So Bruce is saying The Orange Overlord lost the 2020 election? She better hope the The Boss doesn’t notice!
==
2026-03-11
[The 4th CCoA upheld a West Virginia law that denied Medicaid coverage for gender-affirming surgery, in so doing effectively extending the Skrmetti ruling allowing bans on transgender care from youth to adults.]
“It is not irrational for a legislature to forgo Medicaid coverage of arguably ineffective and dangerous procedures.”
The word “arguably” is doing a hell of a lot of work - in fact, all the work - in that sentence.
I
suppose we can expect the same panel at some point in the future to
rule that a state can ban the teaching of evolution because it is
“arguably” (according to creationists) incorrect and ban the use of
globes in schools because the planet is “arguably” (according to flat
Earthers) a flat disc while asserting, as it did here, the state “did
not have to take any third party at its word to find a good reason” for
the bans - that is, “We don’t need to hear from no stinkin’ experts.”
It
sometimes seems the 4th and 5th Circuits are in some private
competition as to which can make the stupidest argument to support the
cruelest outcome. This one will be hard to beat, but I’m sure the 5th
will take up the challenge.
Oh, btw, for all the terfs and “LGB
without the T” types out there who I’m sure are quite gleeful over this,
who will you turn to when some court rules that a state’s authority to
“encourage citizens to appreciate their sex” is interpreted to mean
their “natural” sex, so “becom[ing] disdainful of their sex” by
rejecting “normal reproduction” sex by being gay or lesbian can
legitimately be outlawed?
Reminder: Niemöller’s poem was not just about Nazi Germany.
==
2026-03-12
[Under a new rule,
the State Department will be able to revoke trans people’s visas over
“misrepresentation,” giving ICE grounds to suspect all non-native born
trans people of being in the US illegally. In response, someone asked
“Why is our government so obsessed with the genitals of strangers?”]
Because
they are trying to suppress the lurid, guilty fantasies the concept of
being transgender stirs in them, an outgrowth of our on-going,
Puritanical, gross immaturity about anything even remotely related to
sex or sexuality.