Pondering the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition

Pondering the Pundits: Sunday Preview Edition” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

On Sunday mornings we present a preview of the guests on the morning talk shows so you can choose which ones to watch or some do something more worth your time on a Sunday morning.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

The Sunday Talking Heads:

This Week with George Stephanopolis: The guests on Sunday’s “This Week” are: Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA); White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx; and Gov. Jay Inslee (D-WA).

Discussing the pandemic and its worldwide effects are: University of Chicago Professor of Economics Austan Goolsbee; former Trump Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Adviser Tom Bossert; and the Director of Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics Danielle Allen.

Analysis from former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (R) and former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel (D?).

Face the Nation: Host Margaret Brennan’s guests are: White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx; former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb MD; King of Jordan Abdullah bin Al Hussein; Gov. Charles Baker (R-MA); and US Chamber of Commerce president Susanne Clark.

Meet the Press with Chuck Todd: The guests on this week’s “MTP” are: Gov. Mike DeWine (R-OH); Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI).

The panel guests are:Former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson; NBC News White House correspondent Peter Alexander; and conservative commentator Danielle Pletka

State of the Union with Jake Tapper: Mr. Tapper’s guests are: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin; Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY); (R-OH); Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI); Gov. Ralph Northam (D-VA); and Gov. Larry Hogan (R-MD).

The Knife Show

First of all I’m not some kind of freaky Zombie slaying hyper survivalist, on the other hand sharp tools are frequently useful. I like Folders because the Sheath is built right in.

Now Lockback designs like your very first Cub Scout Knife are entirely acceptable provided you are completely sure about the direction in which you’re going to apply force because if you whack it on the Spine of the Blade (the not sharp part) you’ll very likely pop the Lock, close the Blade on your hand, and cut off several fingers.

Not that they can’t be fixed given immediate and sufficient attention, but now is not the best time and it’s a highly unpleasant experience regardless.

And it’s good enough for a Pen Knife you use for opening boxes or cleaning your nails.

When you grow up you get introduced to what are called ‘Liner’ or ‘Frame’ Locks. As near as I can tell ‘Frame’ applies to the same mechanism only some Knives have what are called ‘Scales’ which are slabs of other material applied to the gripping area of the basic Knife Frame for cosmetic and ergonomic reasons. For the Lock basically you cut a flat Stop in the Frame and bend it so it’s ‘springy’. When the Blade is deployed (Open), a good chunk of the Frame on one side has been poised against the resistance of the Blade (which is right against it in the Frame, preventing Failure #1 below) and once past the point where it is blocked, it springs open, slides across the base of the Blade, and prevents it from closing (Failure #2).

In Theory.

Now I’d like to talk about Opening.

There are basically 3 styles. The Pinch is what you’re used to from your Cub Scout Knife, you drape your Thumb and your Index Finger on either side of the Spine while holding the Frame in your other Hand and scrape the Blade Open.

Well, it would be very safe if it didn’t cut your fingers off when you tapped it on the back.

The second is what I call a ‘Flick’ Knife. Liner Lock with a Thumb Stud. Clear your fingers, free the Stud with your Thumb, ‘Flick’ your Wrist. One. Hand. Open.

I bought about a dozen of these as utility knives and carried them 2 at a time to give away to people who either admired or needed them. I thought they sucked because they would fall apart under heavy use (Scale inserts would pop out for one thing) and I like Fine edges (easy to sharpen) and these were half Serrated.

But they were safe.

Until recently I had no interest in anything except my Victorinox multi-tool (basically a Cub Scout Knife on Tool Steroids) but I found that I outgrew the kit and had to upgrade to a more serious multi-tool.

But they don’t generally come with good sharp tools and I decided I’d second source and improve. I’ve bought several as they’re not expensive and I didn’t really know what I wanted. Some were ‘Flick’ and others were what is called ‘Assisted Opening’

Some ‘Assisted Opening’ Knives work just like a ‘Flick’ Knife except easier. Others use a Spine Trigger and believe me you want your Belt Clip to position your Knife ‘Point Up’ (not that the other way is bad or more dangerous, just awkward). No one will advertise ‘Automatic’ Knives which fall under the Switch Blade provisions of many areas but some are more “Assisted” than others. I like them because they don’t put as much strain on my Arthritic joints.

What makes a Knife Safe

Before we finish I’d like to highlight what I think makes a Folding Knife safe.

  1. It doesn’t Open unless you want it to.
  2. It doesn’t Close until you tell it to.

Seems pretty simple, right? Well, if you go out on Amazon you’d be amazed at the number of stories about accidental Opening. I think these at least mildly exaggerated, never had it happen with my most aggressive Assisted Open even after I tuned it.

Oh, you should tune your Knives. There’s a Tension Dial that controls the resistance and you need to set it loose enough that you’re not using a Pinch Knife. Not the primary reason I needed my multi-tool (laptops), but it does come in handy.

On the other hand- Rule 1.

It doesn’t Open unless you want it to.

The way I test this is I grab the closed Knife on the Blade (not the Hilt/Sheath) near the Tip in a Pinch Grip and shake it. Up, Down, Side to Side.

If it moves at all it’s not a safe Knife.

It doesn’t Close until you tell it to.

In Lockback they are designed to fail. It’s the only way you can close them. They are not safe as a class and hearken to a day when a certain amount of casualties were widely accepted. My Cub Scout Knife is a memento and my Victorinox retired. They’re not safe.

This can be somewhat dangerous to test so you’re going to want to pay attention.

Find a solid surface that you don’t mind striking against (a block of wood). Open the Knife and make sure the Lock is deployed. For a Liner Lock that means that the Lock Spring is at least 33% of the width of the Blade and is fully in contact, meaning that no part of the Lock Spring is not engaged. Positioning on the Blade is less important if your Lock works at all.

Works at all.

Grab the tip (Point) of your Knife in a Pinch Grip, Blade Up. Tap the Handle/Hilt/Sheath on your solid surface about as hard as you think required. I am pretty rigorous.

If it fails all you do is smack your fingers with the handle which usually doesn’t require a trip to the Emergency Room. Don’t grab the Handle/Hilt/Sheath and tap the Spine because fingers.

They’re handy (hah, get it?).

I have in my possession a Flick Knife that is otherwise admirable. Liner Lock, visibly engaged. It fails this test and I no longer use it. Passes the First Test though.

For daily carry I choose Assisted Knives and I have found some that are nice out of the box and some that require tuning (one I had to put moleskin on because it was too slippery). Because I buy cheap the edges (the ones you’re supposed to touch) are sometimes a bit pronounced and I have to soften them with a file, also you have to hone them frequently which I don’t mind because I find it restful, like Crochet.

I like light and mine range from 2.5 to 7.5 oz with lengths from 2.5 to 3.6875 (duh, Blades, what else matters?). The largest is legal in most States (no accounting for California and banned in NYC). For comparison my Victorinox is 2.375 and 3.5 oz.

So, not that big actually. I’m not Paul Hogan (though I also own a Paul Hogan Knife) and I don’t carry to impress but for utility. Were I looking for harm I’d stab you from the back with a Pencil.

I don’t always go out with my tool kit but when I do, I do.

House

Macy’s Day Parade – Green Day

Who Needs Bagpipes?

The Worst Day Since Yesterday and The Likes Of You Again- Flogging Molly

110 Trombones Led The Big Parade.

Portals

Same octave, but I like valves.

The Breakfast Club (Snake Oil)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

The San Francisco earthquake; What becomes known as ‘Paul Revere’s ride’; A suicide bomb hits the U.S. embassy in Lebanon; Physicist Albert Einstein dies; Wayne Gretzky plays his last NHL game.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure.

Clarence Darrow/blockquote>

Continue reading

Daily (Last) Nightly

  
Human Sacrifice: A Fox News Special – The Daily Social Distancing Show


 
Hey, How’s Lewis Black Doing? – The Daily Social Distancing Show

 
Steve Martin Has A Song In His Heart, But Stephen Colbert Just Doesn’t Have The Time

 
Former DNC Chair Terry McAuliffe on the art of begging donors over Zoom

 
Trump Says America Is Past the Peak of the Coronavirus Pandemic

 
Seth Teases a Week of Classic Second Chance Theatre Sketches

 

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Paul Krugman: Starve the Beast, Feed the Depression

Anti-government ideology is crippling pandemic policy.

So Donald Trump’s name will, in a break with all previous practice, appear on the checks that will slightly mitigate the Donald Trump depression caused by the Donald Trump pandemic. Hey, we’re supposed to put his name on everything, right?

The operative word, however, is “slightly.” Those $1,200 checks, it turns out, are only a small fraction of the rescue package Congress passed a few weeks ago. And the CARES Act, in turn, fell far short of meeting the nation’s needs.

Given the scale of the economic carnage — 22 million jobs lost in four weeks — we need another huge relief program, both to limit financial hardship and to avoid economic damage that will persist even when the pandemic fades.

But we may not get the program we need, because anti-government ideologues, who briefly got quiet as the magnitude of the Covid-19 shock became apparent, are back to their usual tricks.

.

Eugene Robinson: Trump refuses to lead a country in crisis

For three years, we were lucky. We made it through most of President Trump’s term in office without facing a crisis that required great presidential leadership. Now, our luck has run out, and we are on our own.

It is difficult to overstate the scope of the challenge that covid-19 presents to the nation and the world — or the tragic inadequacy of Trump and his administration. Sometimes, an underestimated president improbably rises to meet the moment: Think of Harry S. Truman rebuilding a free and peaceful Europe after World War II, or George W. Bush rallying the nation with his bullhorn in the ruins of the World Trade Center. But Trump has become smaller, pettier, more self-absorbed. He failed.

There is much that the nation desperately needs right now: more financial help for the tens of millions of newly unemployed; more support for small businesses on the brink of failure; more consistent guidance on surviving the crisis day-to-day. But there is one need that surpasses all the rest, because meeting it could change everything and put us on the path to recovery: quick, reliable, universal testing that can tell us who has been infected with the novel coronavirus and who has not.

Trump could make that happen. Bizarrely, and tragically, he refuses to act.

Jamelle Bouie: Trump and His Allies Are Worried About More Than November

The temporary imposition of popular relief programs in response to the coronavirus makes Republicans nervous.

In the face of mass unemployment and a rapidly contracting economy, President Trump is desperate to end the pandemic lockdown and bring the country back on line. That’s why he spent the past week asserting his “total” authority to reopen the economy (“The president of the United States calls the shots”) and promising a rapid return to normal: “Our country has to get open, and it will get open, and it’ll get open safely and hopefully quickly — some areas quicker than others,” he said on Tuesday.

Republicans in Congress, likewise, are urging an end to the freeze. “It should have happened yesterday,” Representative Andy Biggs of Arizona, chairman of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus, told Politico. Representative Trey Hollingsworth of Indiana acknowledged the chance of “loss of life” from an early end to social distancing but asserted, nonetheless, that it was better than the alternative. “It is policymakers’ decision to put on our big boy and big girl pants and say it is the lesser of these two evils,” he said to a local radio station. Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana was even more blunt during an interview on Fox News on Wednesday. “We gotta reopen, and when we do, the coronavirus is going to spread faster, and we got to be ready for it.”

No doubt there is real concern for the economic and health consequences of an extended shutdown. But Republicans, and Trump in particular, are also thinking about November. If the president knows anything, it’s that his fate rises and falls with the state of the economy. And if he loses his campaign for re-election, then in this polarized environment of nationalized politics, he’s likely to take congressional Republicans down with him.

Catherine Rampell: This ‘dreamer’ is saving lives during this pandemic. She wants a chance at normal life.

Dr. P. has to be reminded to take breaks during her 12-hour emergency-room shifts — to drink water so she doesn’t get dehydrated; to go to the bathroom; even just to breathe for a few minutes alone, unencumbered by layers of sweaty, suffocating personal protective equipment.

It can be hard to remember to pause because there’s too much to do. Too many patients, everywhere, wheezing and gasping for air. Even before the ER was overwhelmed, she had been reluctant to step away. In mid-March, as patients were surging into emergency departments, she requested to cancel some scheduled time off.

“I asked to keep working, rather than just sit at home and do nothing,” she said. “It’s a helpless feeling sitting at home, knowing that things are getting worse at the hospital.”

But if the Supreme Court lets the Trump administration have its way, she might have to stop her lifesaving work, permanently.

Paul WAldman: Trump’s retreat from responsibility will fail

Everyone knows about President Trump’s bombast, his relentless self-promotion and his absurd hyperbole. He can’t eat a piece of cake without telling you it was the “most beautiful piece of chocolate cake that you’ve ever seen.”

But along with his thirst for affirmation is a need, just as powerful, to escape responsibility when things go wrong.

It’s something he’s very experienced at. You have a big, splashy event in front of the cameras announcing that you’ve built the most luxurious hotel or golf course or casino the world has ever seen, and then if it goes bankrupt, you skedaddle out of town, leaving other people holding the bag. So now Trump is preparing to put that experience to work with the coronavirus pandemic and the economic crash it created.

Though nothing with Trump is ever permanent, he seems to be in the midst of a transition, from claiming credit he doesn’t deserve to evading the blame that he does. [..]

It’s often said that presidents get more credit than they deserve when things go right and more blame than they deserve when things go wrong. Trump desperately wants the former without the latter. But with things going so terribly wrong and his own performance so obviously lacking, his old strategies aren’t going to work.

Cartnoon

Look, I watch a lot of, uh, Bushcrafty TV and there are only 3 guys who know their ass from a hole in the ground and one is Matt Graham and another is Cody Lundin and they both had to work with Joe Teti who is a Testosterone fueled asshole.

Les Stroud works alone, except when he doesn’t want to. It’s the challenge.

This only aired in Canada.

The Breakfast Club (What Day Is It)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

Cuban exiles invade Bay of Pigs; Three astronauts of Apollo 13 land safely in pacific ocean; Benjamin Franklin dies at age 84; JP Morgan born in Connecticut; Ford rolls out the Mustang convertible.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

He that is of the opinion money will do everything may well be suspected of doing everything for money.

Benjamin Franklin/blockquote>

Continue reading

Daily Nightly

 
Trump Attacks the WHO & Kellyanne Can’t Count to COVID-19 – The Daily Social Distancing Show


 
Good News: Free Beer for an Elderly Woman & Quarantine Olympics – The Daily Social Distancing Show

 
This Week in “Things That Shouldn’t Surprise Us”: COVID-19 Is Extremely Racist – Full Frontal on TBS

 
Sam’s Kids Dye Her Hair – Full Frontal on TBS

 
The Elizabeth Warren Emergency Reassurance Zoom – Full Frontal on TBS

 
Michael Lewis Explains Why We Should Have Seen The Pandemic Coming – Full Frontal on TBS

 
President Trump’s Name to Be Printed on Coronavirus Relief Checks

 
Trump Repeats Coronavirus Failures in Push to “Reopen” Economy: A Closer Look

 
While Trump Plays The Blame Game, Governors Will Set The Pace On Reopening The States

 
Matt Schlapp discusses pandemic lobbying with Hot Take

 

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Jennifer Senior: Trump’s Brain: A Guided Tour

Why did it take so long to do the right thing?

From the beginning, Donald J. Trump has taken a rather peculiar view of the new coronavirus: If he can’t see the damage it’s doing, it’s not doing any damage.

It was how Trump justified saying nothing to Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who blithely kept his state open through April 2. “They’re doing very well,” Trump said of Floridians on March 31. “Unless we see something obviously wrong, we’re going to let the governors do it.” It is how he justifies opening up the country when tests remain in short supply. “You don’t need testing,” he explained on April 10, “where you have a state with a small number of cases.” Tests were necessary only “if there’s a little hot corner someplace.”

Where he could see it, in other words. [..]

One could argue, to some degree, that Trump is simply doing what humans are hard-wired to do. “We believe our eyes before we believe what people tell us,” said Daniel Gilbert, the Harvard social psychologist and author of “Stumbling on Happiness,” when I phoned to ask him about the infuriating persistence of this habit. “The apparatus that sees the world is over 400 million years old. The prefrontal cortex — the part of the brain that comprehends projection models from the C.D.C. — is maybe 2.5 million years old. That’s brand-new, in evolutionary terms. It’s still in beta testing.”

Which is why fighting things we can’t see is so hard, like pandemics and climate change.

Karen Tumulty: We don’t have to find ourselves here again. But first we need the truth.

What went wrong? Could the disaster that the coronavirus pandemic has caused have been prevented? And how can we make sure that nothing like it ever cripples this country again?

Those are the questions to which Americans will eventually deserve a straight answer — the kind that can come only from a credible, independent commission whose mandate is finding out why the government was caught so unprepared.

No doubt President Trump, who is incapable of admitting a mistake and recoils at oversight, will fight the idea. He will howl about hoaxes and witch hunts.

But such fact-finding inquiries have taken place after other national traumas — Pearl Harbor, the John F. Kennedy assassination and, most recently, the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. And we owe no less to the tens of thousands who have lost a loved one, as well as the countless health-care providers and other essential workers who were called upon to battle a lethal enemy without proper protective equipment.

Whether our broken political system is capable of finding — much less handling — the truth is another question. Partisanship infects every conversation about the virus. Trump has also fostered a climate in which expertise and even simple facts are regarded with suspicion by his defenders.

Realistically, a commission cannot get underway until we have turned the corner on this epidemic. Nor does it seem feasible for one to start until after the November election is behind us.

George T. Conway III, Reed Galen, Steve Schmidt, John Weaver and Rick Wilson : We’ve never backed a Democrat for president. But Trump must be defeated.

This November, Americans will cast their most consequential votes since Abraham Lincoln’s reelection in 1864. We confront a constellation of crises: a public health emergency not seen in a century, an economic collapse set to rival the Great Depression, and a world where American leadership is absent and dangers rise in the vacuum.

Today, the United States is beset with a president who was unprepared for the burden of the presidency and who has made plain his deficits in leadership, management, intelligence and morality.

When we founded the Lincoln Project, we did so with a clear mission: to defeat President Trump in November. Publicly supporting a Democratic nominee for president is a first for all of us. We are in extraordinary times, and we have chosen to put country over party — and former vice president Joe Biden is the candidate who we believe will do the same.

Biden is now the presumptive Democratic nominee and he has our support. Biden has the experience, the attributes and the character to defeat Trump this fall. Unlike Trump, for whom the presidency is just one more opportunity to perfect his narcissism and self-aggrandizement, Biden sees public service as an opportunity to do right by the American people and a privilege to do so.

David Kay Johnston: No, Trump can’t order the country back to work

Someone, alert the conservatives! The man in the White House asserts unlimited presidential power.

A pair of Donald Trump tweets Monday show beyond all doubt that he has no idea what’s in our Constitution and fashions himself a Sun King on the make, a wannabe dictator.

Trump asserted wrongly last July that thanks to our Constitution “I have an Article II, where I have to the right to do whatever I want as president.”

He has said that again and again as this video compilation shows.

Of course, Article II of our Constitution strictly limits what any president can do, basically limiting him to carrying out the will of Congress, the Article I branch of our government. But Trump doesn’t understand that or he doesn’t care.

Now Trump, to be fair, does have some authority to close and open facilities but his role is very restricted. He can shut down national parks, for example. He could close the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which would be understandable considering the way he slithered out of the draft by claiming bone spurs he says he no longer recalls.

But opening up city halls, courthouses, shopping malls, downtown furniture stores and schools?

Trump didn’t shut any of those. Trump has zero authority to declare them open for business as usual. Governors, and in some cases mayors, hold those powers under outer constitutional system.

We’re fine. We’re all fine here, now, thank you. How are you?

I have a bad feeling about this. Neo Liberal Capitalism under stress.

What about 12 Parsecs are you not understanding?

Oh.

The Dystopian Reality Of All Those “Inspirational” Stories

Pretty sure I’ve covered that before.

Cartnoon

Cartnoon

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