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J-L Cauvin Does the Greatest Impersonation of Donald Trump That You’ve Ever Seen—and Heard!

Thanks to Twitter, I stumbled upon this wonderfully entertaining and amazingly spot-on impersonation of Donald Trump. The gentleman’s name is

J-L Cauvin. As you can see, he is an extraordinary talent.

https://twitter.com/JLCauvin/status/1242515702688485376

What makes Cauvin’s impersonation of Trump so compelling, I think, are three things, three rare gifts that he has:

First, like all great impressionists, Cauvin captures his subject’s voice and inflections to a tee. Indeed, the timbre and intonation of his voice all truly sound like Trump’s. It is remarkable. Cauvin obviously has a great ear.

Second, Cauvin perfectly captures Trump’s facial expressions, contortions, and mannerisms. It is, amazingly, like watching The Donald.

Third, Cauvin is a great writer. He not only looks and sounds like Trump; he speaks like Trump! Thus he perfectly captures Trump’s rhetorical tics and unique style of speaking.

Cauvin’s satirical spoof on Trump’s Easter message (above) is pure brilliance and a joy to behold. In fact, Cauvin is so good that I cannot help but wonder: why has he not received greater national attention?

For example, why has he not been on Saturday Night Live? Cauvin is much more entertaining than Alec Baldwin, who does a very weak and decidedly unentertaining Donald Trump.

The reason may be that Cauvin is too good. He is laugh-aloud entertaining, and his impersonation has the effect of humanizing Trump. And humanizing Trump is the very last thing our progressive denizens of pop culture want to do.

Trump, to them, is a monster, and he must be depicted as such.

It’s too bad because wit and humor can help soften and leaven the political polarization that plagues our country.

But even were that not the case, there is intrinsic wisdom and beauty in great art that is worth contemplating for its own sake. And great art should be considered as such irrespective of the subject whom it depicts.

All of which is to say: Donald Trump may a less-than-admirable human being; but J-L Cauvin’s depiction of Trump is, nonetheless, admirable and impressive—and well worth the moments of levity that it engenders.

Because of His Response to the Coronavirus, Trump’s Prospects for Reelection Are Better Than You Think

The big high-stakes political battle that’s now playing out in the media, and in some early presidential campaign commercials, is this:

Did President Trump act quickly and vigorously enough to confront the growing coronavirus pandemic and thereby save American lives, or was his response belated, tardy, and lacking—and, therefore, responsible for unnecessary and needless American deaths?

Trump’s reelection obviously hinges on how this question is adjudicated in the minds of the voting public.

Here at ResCon1 we have been highly critical of the president’s response to the coronavirus, arguing that his failure to act early and decisively has “endangered American lives and forced the United States to take even more draconian measures than otherwise would have been necessary.”

This is true, but arguably too harsh: because there are other salient considerations that must be weighed:

First, is it fair to fault Trump for his belated and tardy response, given that no one elseincluding the mainstream media and all of the Democratic presidential candidates—sounded the alarm either?

Yes, it is fair: because the president is the president. He’s supposed to be attentive to threats to the safety and well-being of the American people. He’s supposed to know more than the media and more than the rest of us.

U.S. taxpayers, moreover, spend tens of billions of dollars annually on intelligence personnel and intelligence capabilities precisely to give the president and other policymakers early warning of impending threats.

And in fact, as we’ve noted here at ResCon1, parts of the Trump administration were trying to inform the president early on (back in January) about the coronavirus. Yet Trump seriously downplayed the risk of a pandemic—in large part because he was too credulous of the assurances given to him by his “friend,” China’s dictator, Xi Jinping.

On the other hand, Trump administration actions re: the coronavirus are far better than Trump’s statements about the coronavirus. Indeed, while the latter are often contemptible the former are usually laudatory.

The media (ResCon1 included) tend to fixate on Trump’s statements, which are usually impulsive, scattershot, and misguided. But Trump administration actions are usually more focused and on target.

Thus Trump established a presidential task force Jan. 29 to tackle the coronavirus; and, two days later, he declared COVID-19 a public health emergency. On Feb. 23, he requested a $2.5- billion supplemental specifically to combat the virus.

Then of course, there is Trump’s so-called China travel ban, implemented Jan. 31.

The word “ban” is really a misnomer: because many categories of people traveling to and from China are excluded from its strictures. Consequently, as the New York Times reported April 4, nearly 40,000 Americans and authorized travelers have come into the United States from China since the “ban” was enacted.

Still, by limiting and restricting the entry of Chinese nationals, and by advising Americans against traveling to China, Trump was acknowledging that a serious public health problem had originated there, and he was buying us time to prepare for the fight ahead.

‘Racism’ and ‘Xenophobia’. It’s also important to note that while Trump was responding to COVID-19, Democratic politicians, liberal journalists, and the mainstream media were criticizing him for being unduly alarmist and “racist.”

As we noted here at ResCon1, for instance, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called the travel restrictions “just an excuse [for Trump] to further his ongoing war against immigrants.”

The 2020 Democratic Presidential nominee, Joe Xi, likewise, criticized the president’s “xenophobia” and “fear-mongering,” reports White House National Security Adviser Rober C. O’Brien in the Wall Street Journal. Biden “stressed that ‘diseases have no borders,’” O’Brien writes.

(But if diseases have no borders, then why, according to Pew Research, does 93 percent of the world’s population now live in countries or territories that limit or ban travel in part because of the coronavirus?)

O’Brien catalogues five other “fateful coronavirus decisions” that Trump made. These include:

  • stopping entry of foreign nationals from Europe;
  • initiating a national social distancing campaign to dramatically slow the spread of the virus;
  • pushing for innovative use of therapies (such as remdesivir) to fight the virus;
  • issuing CDC guidelines that recommend the personal use of cloth masks to stop the spread of the virus; and
  • initiating public-private partnerships to dramatically ramp-up production of ventilators and other personal protective equipment needed by patients and healthcare providers.

In short, even though Trump’s rhetoric has been lacking, and even though he was slow to recognize the true depths of the problem, he has, nonetheless, acted forcefully and vigorously to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.

What’s more, it is doubtful that Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, or any other Democratic presidential wannabe would have responded any earlier or more effectively, given what they said (and did not say) when the coronavirus first emerged as a public health concern here in the United States, and given their obsession with “racism,” “bigotry,” and “xenophobia.”

Indeed, this obsession likely would have prevented a Democratic president from acknowledging Chinese culpability early on and then confronting China. 

Ventilators. We also should note that one one crucial matter, the supply of ventilators, Trump has been proven right and his critics monstrously wrong.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, for instance, complained loudly and often that his state needed 30,000 ventilators; and that Trump and the federal government needed to step up and help.

Otherwise, he gravely warned, ventilators would have to be rationed, and patients who needed ventilators might not get them.

Well, as it turned out, New York did not need anywhere near 30,000 ventilators; and the Trump administration did a genuinely masterful job of managing the supply of ventilators to ensure that no patient nationwide who ever needed a ventilator was ever denied a ventilator.

National Review’s Rich Lowry reports this story in full, and it is well worth reading in its entirety. Suffice it to say: Trump has gotten a lot of bad and undeserving press over the ventilators when, in fact, he should be getting praise and plaudits.

Poor Spokesman. Of course, a big reason Trump doesn’t get the credit he sometimes deserves is because he is such a poor spokesman on his own behalf; yet, he feels compelled to hog the limelight.

Trump would be much better off if he said less and let his very able team—Vice President Pence, Drs. Fauci and Birx, CDC Director Robert Redfield, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin et al.—do more of the talking and explaining.

Also, Trump sometimes seems to be at war with his own administration; and this, too, contributes to an overall sense of policy incoherence and confusion.

If Trump were a more disciplined and organized administrator, he’d get better and more consistent policy results, realize greater media plaudits and recognition, and achieve higher poll ratings.

In short, while it is easy to criticize Trump, it is important to view him and his administration in a broader and more inclusive context, and to consider the plausible alternatives.

For starters, the Trump administration, thankfully, is much more than just Donald Trump. And even Donald Trump is more than just his Twitter feed and bombastic statements.

For these reasons, a fair-minded and holistic assessment must give our president (or at least his administration) higher marks than most think might be warranted.

However, the story of the Trump presidency is still unfolding; it will have many twists and turns; and the American people will decide its fate on election day, Nov. 3, 2020.

Stay tuned.

Feature photo credit: WisPolitics.com.

Joe Manchin’s Profile in Courage

The Senator from West Virginia deserves, but won’t get, honor and gratitude for stopping Bernie Biden’s $5-Trillion ‘Build Back Better’ monstrosity. 

In 1956, Democratic Senator John F. Kennedy and his gifted speechwriter, Ted Sorenson, authored a Pulitzer Prize winning biography called Profiles in Courage.

The book celebrated eight United States Senators who exhibited rare political courage by taking principled stands, at great political cost to themselves, to do right by and for the country.

Today, we can, we should, and we must add one more name to Kennedy’s honored and revered list: Senator Joe Manchin.

True, by refusing to succumb to left-wing demands that he rubber-stamp Bernie Biden’s $5-Trillion “Build Back Better” monstrosity, Sen. Manchin is hardly defying the will of his constituents. To the contrary: Biden is deeply unpopular in West Virginia, and polls show that the vast majority of West Virginians oppose his “Build Back Better” monstrosity.

Still, Manchin is a Democrat and the one Senator whose vote can make or break this disastrously transformative legislation. As such, he is under tremendous political pressure to buckle under “for Joe,” “for his president,” and to be a “team player.”

In fact, far left Democratic senators, congressmen, and party activists have already taken to Twitter to impugn Manchin’s integrity and to heap opprobrium on him for daring to dissent from “progressive” party orthodoxy.

In a better world and a politically healthier country, Manchin’s brave and principled stand would be honored and applauded for what it is: a profile in courage. But instead, because Manchin is siding with conservatives and opposing “progressives,” he is (predictably) being demonized and cast as the toad in the road.

The authors of Profiles in Courage knew better and so do we.

Feature photo credit: Then Senator John F. Kennedy (left) and Senator Joe Manchin now (right), courtesy of 1957timecapsule.wordpress.com via the Daily JFK and the Associated Press via the Honolulu Star-Advertiserrespectively.

No, Central Planning Did Not Help America to Win World War I, and It Won’t Help Us Win the War Against the Coronavirus

David Greenberg, a professor of history at Rutgers, has a piece in Politico today lauding the Progressive Era wartime economic planning of Woodrow Wilson.

Greenberg specifically credits the War Industries Board and a cluster of other federal agencies with marshaling the resources needed by the U.S. and its allies to win World War I.

More generally, he says the War Industries Board “helped vault the U.S. into its preeminent role in the world.”

If the War Industries Board failed to mobilize business as effectively as it might have, it did demonstrate clearly that only the government, and not the private sector, has both the authority and the size to direct and coordinate any industrial mobilization on a national scale.

Greenberg’s implication is clear:

President Trump needs to stop dragging his feet and use whatever federal powers might be necessary—including, but not limited to. invoking the Defense Production Act of 1950—to force General Motors and other big businesses to provide critically needed medical supplies to our hospitals and healthcare workers on the frontlines in the war against the coronavirus.

Greenberg is wrong. He is wrong about the history of the War Industries Board and central planning; he is wrong about the economics of the private sector versus central planning; and he is wrong about the public policy implications for today.

First the history and economics. America won World War I and became a preeminent world power in spite of President Woodrow Wilson’s “war socialism,” not because of it.

America, in fact, had been rapidly industrializing, and its economy growing, well before Wilson’s central planners began to gum up the works with their fascistic ideas of government control and coercion.

The Economic Historian Association’s Hugh Rockoff notes, for instance, that production of steel ingots and “total industrial production’—an index of steel, copper, rubber, petroleum, and so on”—was growing years before establishment (on July 28, 1917) of the War Industries Board. 

“It is evident,” Rockoff observes,

that the United States built up its capacity to turn out these basic raw materials during the years of U.S. neutrality when Britain and France were buying its supplies and the United States was beginning its own tentative build-up.

Moreover, despite their dangerously fascistic aspirations—and despite causing considerable economic mischief, damage, and dislocation by effectively discriminating against small-scale entrepreneurs who lacked political clout—the central planners at the War Industries Board were seriously hemmed in, and, as Greenberg himself admits, unable to implement their plans in full.

Their fascistic rhetoric far outpaced the reality of Wilson administration actions. 

In Greenberg’s view, this was precisely the problem. The War Industries Board “could cajole companies to act but had little ability to command them,” he writes.

In truth, though, the board’s limited power of command was our saving grace, and the very reason American industry was able to produce a vast amount of raw materials and munitions (aircraft especially) that proved decisive for the Allied war effort.

As historian Francis J. Munch succinctly put it in a 1973 review of Robert D. Cuff’s book, The War Industries Board: Business-Government Relations:

The WIB simply maintained the symbol and myth of an integrated system which in reality lay beyond its grasp. The agency was severely circumscribed by private interest groups, the military, and ideological assumptions of the mobilizers themselves…

The obstacles to wartime coordination and control (institutional factors and political conditions) were omnipresent…

In sum, the effectiveness of the WIB as a public symbol helped protect businessmen from traditional political pressure, while the ineffectiveness of the WIB as a bureaucratic power save them from undue intrusion by the state.

Greenberg also fails to mention that Wilson’s disastrous economic policies, rooted as they were in central planning and government control, led to “very high inflation… and a severe depression in his last year in office.

“[Indeed], industrial production,” writes economist Scott Sumner, “had fallen by 32.5% by March 1921,” when conservative Republican Warren G. Harding became president. Harding “cut income tax rates sharply” and the economy quickly recovered, surpassing its previous cyclical peak, Sumner notes.

As to the public policy implications for today, Greenberg insists that if Trump had used the Cold War-era Defense Production Act six weeks ago “to force General Motors to build the life-saving ventilators that are in short supply around the nation… those ventilators would probably be en route to hospitals today.”

No, that’s not true.

To be sure, Greenberg is right to fault Trump for being slow to recognize the magnitude of the danger presented by the coronavirus. Trump continually downplayed the problem when, in fact, he should have been rallying the nation to confront the problem.

That’s a fair and legit criticism, and one that we’ve made here at ResCon1.

And, truth be told, had Trump done so, it’s certainly the case that all Americans—private industry included—would have been more quick to recognize that we need many more masks, ventilators, respirators, and other crucial medical gear sooner rather than later.

But the question becomes means—or how, exactly, do we meet this unprecedented demand?

All of our historical experience, and everything that we know about economics, and the incontrovertible laws of supply and demand, tells us that far from the government needing to “command” or direct private-sector business decisions, we instead need to allow open and competitive markets to function and work.

Trump has been wildly inconsistent about whether he is or is not invoking the Defense Production Act to force General Motors to produce more ventilators.

One day he is throwing stones at GM and saying he will invoke the act; the next day he is saying that GM is being responsive and that invoking the act is unnecessary.

Regardless, one thing is crystal clear: private sector companies, including GM, are making heroic and herculean efforts to meet this unprecedented demand, and they are doing so irrespective of what Trump and the feds are or are not doing.

Why? Because they recognize that there is a severe need for this under-supplied medical gear, and they are rushing to meet that need, both to do good and to make money.

Price Signals. Greenberg echoes New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s complaint that states are in a bidding war for ventilators; and that, therefore, the federal government needs to intervene to hold down prices.

But again, this betrays a serious lack of understanding of how markets work—and specifically, a lack of understanding of the importance of price signals as the means by which private sector producers identity and meet market demand.

As Alex Tabarrok, a professor of economics at George Mason University, explains at Marginal Revolution:

A price is a signal wrapped up in an incentive, as Tyler [Cowen] and I write in Modern Principles.

Compare the price system with command and control. We need ventilators. The federal government could order ventilator firms to make more but they are already doing so.

The government could order other firms to get into the ventilator business but does the federal government have a good idea which firms have the right technology, or which firms have the right technology that could be repurposed to ventilator production at low cost, that is without causing shortages and disruption in other fields?

Can they do better than a decentralized process in which millions of entrepreneurs respond to price signals. No.

Government’s Role. To be sure, this doesn’t mean that there isn’t a role for government in ensuring the prioritization and distribution of ventilators among the 50 states and regions.

Which is precisely, it seems, what former Clinton administration official Joshua Gotbaum is getting at when he argues, in the Washington Post, that Trump should involve the Defense Production Act.

“The act,” he writes, “allows federal agencies to collaborate with business to get critical supplies during emergencies—by encouraging investment and speeding production—and direct them to where they’re most needed [emphasis added].”

Okay, but prioritization and distribution of goods manufactured and produced by private sector companies responding to market signals is very different from the sort of state-run war planning scheme pushed by Greenberg as he harkens back to Woodrow Wilson’s War Industries Board.

Again, as Tabarrok explains:

If all the trucks are fleeing from the front, we want the army to be able to requisition vehicles to move in the opposite direction.

Private and social incentives do not always align and when time and certainty are of the essence command and control may be superior (as Tyler and I discuss in Modern Principles in the chapter on externalities).

For the most part, however, that is not the situation we are in now. Private incentives are all pushing in the right direction of greater production.

Let the market respond. The federal government is not good at command and control, but it does have a role to play in redistribution for need.

Bad History. In short, when it comes to history, “it ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”

Greenberg purports to know something that just ain’t so—to wit: that Progressive Era wartime economic planning by Woodrow Wilson and the War Industries Board was a great success—or at least a template or model that future American presidents should learn from and adapt to present circumstances.

In truth, the government’s attempt to commandeer and command private industry was misguided to begin with; it caused considerable economic mischief, damage, and dislocation; and America succeeded in spite of it, not because of it.

And it is a mistake we should not repeat any time soon, at least not if we wish to defeat the coronavirus and save American lives.

Feature photo credit: Woodrow Wilson, arguably the worst president in American history, courtesy of History.com.

Trump Must Move On or the GOP Will Lose the Senate and the Country

Trump’s failure to acknowledge that he lost jeopardizes GOP chances in Georgia and risks handing control of the Senate over to Chuck Schumer and the Democrats.

President Trump lost his bid for reelection by being a weak and incompetent leader who failed to provide leadership when it mattered most, during the pandemic.

Now, by failing to show grace and magnanimity in defeat, he is in real danger of causing the Republican Party to lose two critical Senate seats in Georgia.

Catastrophe. As we have reported here at ResCon1, this would be a catastrophe for the United States.

That is because if the Democrats win these two Senate seats, they will control the Senate and thus have the ability to enact a host of radical legislative proposals that would effect an irreversible transformation of American politics and our very system of government.

Think D.C. statehood, the end of the filibuster, packing the courts, repeal of corporate tax reform, new tax hikes, “Medicare for All,” the “Green New Deal,” compulsory unionism, et al.

Indeed, the stakes could not be greater than they are right now in Georgia.

Yet, Trump seems not to care. Instead, his focus is on himself and his failed presidential bid.

Weak Leadership. Trump, of course, is too weak and insecure to admit that he lost. Consequently, he and his toadies are concocting ludicrous conspiracy theories to explain his defeat.

This wouldn’t matter except that Trump is consuming all of the political oxygen that otherwise would go to these two critical Georgia Senate races.

As Kimberley A. Strassel explains in the Wall Street Journal:

The biggest risk is that Republican base.

The GOP is optimistic it can win back suburban and older voters who feel conflicted about Mr. Trump but still want a check on progressives.

None of that will matter if GOP voters in rural and exurban areas stay home, angry or frustrated by the presidential election.

Adds the Washington Examiner

At this point, Trump’s efforts are more likely to damage the Republican Party, and more specifically, undermine its chances of winning the Jan. 5 runoff elections in Georgia for the two Senate seats that remain undecided.

GOP control of the Senate rests on those races; the party must win at least one of them to retain its majority. And that majority is all that stands in the way of a Congress dramatically more capable of passing damaging and extreme left-wing legislation after Jan. 20.

The president’s efforts to reverse the election result and stay in office for a second term are not going to succeed. Without a chance of succeeding, they have become distractions from the really important task of keeping the Senate in Republican hands.

In Georgia, Trump is setting Republican against Republican.

“The largest shadow hanging over Republicans,” reports McClatchy’s David Catanese, “is what the outgoing president will do.

Trump, who has been almost entirely consumed with his campaign’s far-fetched legal challenges to his own election defeat, briefly praised [David] Perdue and [Kelly] Loeffler in a Tuesday evening tweet.

But GOP officials don’t expect Trump to get more directly involved—if he chooses to at all—until the presidential election result is finalized and his court battles are exhausted.

[Former Georgia Senator Saxby Chambliss, a Republican], indicated that Trump likely wouldn’t be helpful to Perdue and Loeffler if he hasn’t conceded his own defeat.
Enough is Enough. President Trump’s failed reelection bid is now history. For the good of the Republican Party—and more importantly, the good of the country— Trump needs to acknowledge this and move on.
 
He needs to focus his efforts on the future, not the past.
 
Trump needs to help mobilize the Republican Party for this Battle of the Bulge moment to defeat the forces of progressivism, which are threatening to take the Senate and, in the ominous words of Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, thereby “change America.”
 
Trump’s legacy, such as it is, hangs in the balance. More importantly, the future of our country is at stake.
 
Feature photo credit: GOP Senate candidates Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, courtesy of 41NBC.com.

Imminence Is Irrelevant in Judging the Suleimani Strike

One of the most pointless policy debates ginned up of late by the anti-Trump media and Dems in Congress is whether an Iranian attack on U.S. interests was “imminent” prior to the U.S. military strike that took out Iranian General Qassem Suleimani. If such an attack was imminent, they say, then the U.S. military strike may have been justified; but if not, then the strike is probably illegal and Trump may have committed a war crime.

What this analysis ignores, of course, is that, regardless of whether such an attack was “imminent,” Iran has been waging war against the United States for the past 40 years, ever since its 1979 revolution and seizure of 52 American hostages.

Suleimani himself, moreover, had orchestrated the death of more than 600 Americans serving in Iraq for the past 16 years. Suleimani’s blood-stained record provided more than ample justification for targeting him while he was in Iraq plotting yet more terror attacks against American military personnel and civilian contractors.

Indeed, the U.S. military strike against Suleimani is best understood as a quick defensive measure taken when a moment of opportunity suddenly arose. Trump wisely seized upon this opportunity to free the world of a dangerous terrorist mastermind. A good deed and good riddance.

Social Distancing, Yes; Mask Wearing, No.

“The debate over whether Americans should wear face masks to control coronavirus transmission has been settled,” declares the New York Times‘ Knvul Sheikh. “Governments and businesses now require or at least recommend them in many public settings.”

Sheikh is right about the requirement or recommendation to wear masks in many public settings, but wrong about how the debate has been settled.

In truth, the masks do little or nothing to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, and actually cause real harm: by giving some people a false sense of security, thereby leading them to take fewer precautionary measures that actually do help stop or prevent the virus’s spread.

Social distancing, for instance, makes good public health sense. Yet, how many times have we seen people donned up in full mask-covering mode standing just inches away from a friend or colleague who is talking, gesticulating, or jointly texting on their phone?

I’ve seen this image many times. These people no doubt think they’re safe and doing the right thing because they are wearing a mask, but nothing could be further from the truth.

The mask, of course, does not protect the mask wearer. Instead, the mask theoretically protects other people from being the infected by the mask wearer if the mask wearer is an unknown or asymptomatic carrier of the  coronavirus.

(A known or symptomatic carrier of the coronavirus would presumably be self-quarantined and not out and about in a public setting.)

I say theoretically because the logic or rationale behind the requirement to wear a mask depends on dubious assumptions that don’t stand up to practical, everyday scrutiny.

Makeshift Cloth Masks. First, the studies and analyses that say masks can prevent the spread of the coronavirus involve surgical masks. But most people aren’t wearing surgical masks. Instead, they’re wearing makeshift cloth masks, which are inherently subpar and leaky.

“Fabric masks also allow air in around the sides, but lack non-woven, moisture-repelling layers. They impede only about two percent of airflow in,” said May Chu, a clinical professor in epidemiology at the Colorado School of Public Health in an interview with LIveScience.

N95 surgical masks, reports Live Science, “effectively prevent viral spread [by filtering] out 95 percent of particles .03 microns or larger.”

However, because N95 surgical masks are in short supply, even for the medical professionals who most need them, and because they are difficult to properly wear or fit, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) “does not recommend them for general use.”

As for airflow outward through a mask, whether surgical or nonsurgical, studies report marginal benefits at best.

“The evidence for the efficacy of surgical or homemade masks is limited, and masks aren’t the most important protection against the coronavirus,” LiveScience notes.

“To me, it’s not harmful to wear these masks, but it doesn’t look from this study, [April 3, 2020, in the journal Nature Medicine], like there is a whole lot of benefit,” said Rachel Jones, an associative professor of family and preventative medicine at the University of Utah… 

The recommendations that everyone wear masks are because “any kind of impediment is better than nothing,” Chu said. But fabric masks are not expected to be as protective as surgical masks, she said…

“There’s been enough research done to be able to confidently say that masks wouldn’t be able to stop the spread of infection, that they would only have a small effect on transmission,” added Ben Cowling, head of the Divison of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the Hong Kong University.

“We shouldn’t be relying on masks to help us get back to normal.”

“Another April study, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine,” writes Mark Siegel, a clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Health, “revealed that the force of sick patients’ coughs propelled droplets through both surgical masks as well as cloth masks.”

The CDC,” Siegel explains,

based its revised mask recommendation on studies that found asymptomatic spread was far more common than had been thought. But there have been no studies on masks’ effectiveness in preventing it [emphasis added].

Although the coronavirus is highly contagious, it is much less so than, say, measles, which can linger in the air for two hours after a cough. a sneeze or even speech.

By contrast, the Covid-19 virus has not been proved to be aerosolized. Coronaviruses often enter the body through the eyes, and frequent hand and face washing and social distancing is much more effective than masks at preventing that.

Moreover, as Sheikh acknowledges:

“Many people also wear masks incorrectly, letting them dangle off the tips of their noses, or concealing just their mouths.

People also tend to readjust face masks frequently, or remove them to communicate with others, which increases their risk of being exposed or infecting others, he said.

He is Dr. Eli Perencevich, an infectious disease physician at the University of Iowa and the Iowa City Veterans Affairs Health Care System. Dr. Perencevich recognizes the problems inherent with masks, which is why, as Sheikh reports, he advocates the use of face shields instead.

Face shields, unlike masks,

protect the entire face, including the eyes, and prevent people from touching their faces or inadvertently exposing themselves to the coronavirus.

Face shields may be easier to wear than masks, he said, comparing them with wearing glasses or a hat. They wrap around a small portion of a person’s forehead rather than covering more than half their face with material that can create the urge to itch.

Importantly, face shields are far more sanitary than masks, which are supposed to be disposed of or regularly washed, but often aren’t. Indeed, mucus and germs can and do accumulate on the mask, thus putting the wearer at risk of other viral infections.

“The nice thing about face shields,” by contrast, “is that they can be resterilized and cleaned by the user, so they’re reusable indefinitely until some component breaks or cracks,” Dr. Yu said. A simple alcohol wipe or rinse with soap and hot water is all it takes for the shields to be contaminant-free again.

Dr. Yu, Sheikh notes, is a dermatology resident affiliated with Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Siegel agrees: face shields make a lot more sense than masks. “When I worked on a coronavirus ward, I felt much safer because I also wore a plastic face shield, which blocks viral particles from even reaching the mask,” he writes.

Science Says. But my point here is not to argue for face shields instead of masks. My point is that people who (often self-righteously) insist we wear masks do so not because the science impels them to. They do so because it makes them feel good.

In truth, the science behind mask wearing is weak and lacking. The science behind social distancing, hand washing, and good hygienic practice, by contrast, is strong and compelling.

Which is why I avoid wearing a mask whenever I can while still practicing social distancing. The latter makes individual and public health sense; the former does not.

Feature photo credit: The Catholic Weekly.

The Facts and Figures that Tell the Story: Sunday, Dec. 27, 2020

Nashville Bombing, ‘Defund the Police,’ COVID, Lockdowns, Taxes, Trump, Tom Brady, and the ‘Rigged’ 2020 Election

Nashville Bombing Shows Why It’s Probably Not a Good Idea to ‘Defund the Police’

CBS News—Nashville, Tennessee, resident Noelle Rasmussen: “We were all in bed. We have a four-year-old and a one-year old.

“It was about 5:50 in the morning [Christmas day]. We heard loud banging at the door, over and over and over again. So we went, sleepy in our pajamas to the door, and there was a policeman and a police woman telling us to evacuate immediately…

“We were confused, and we had a lot of presents set out for our kids to go see. And we were like, asking if there was any way we could stay, and they said, no, that there was a public threat…

“So we woke up our kids and put on shoes and jackets and left, and got in our car and drove away… And as we were driving away, I kept turning around to look…

“And I was looking at our stretch of buildings downtown and I saw it explode. I saw a huge explosion, a big orange fireball up in the air about twice as tall as our building. And I just said to my husband, ‘Oh my gosh! I think our building just exploded…’

“I was so grateful we left… I’m so glad we have our kids.

“And, above anything else, I am so glad for those officers who walked into a building that they knew was a dangerous spot to be and woke us up and got us out. I am so grateful…”


Why You Should Have Bought Stocks When the Market Tanked in March—and Why You Should Do So When It Tanks Again

The SPY (along with the overall stock market) has bounced back in dramatic and unstoppable fashion since its March 2020 bottom (source: CNBC).

CNBC: “The S&P 500 heads into the final week of the year with about a 15% gain for 2020, but from the March low the index is up about 65%. The bull market turned nine months old this past week.

“According to CFRA’s Stovall, that nine-month gain is more than twice the average nine-month gain of 32.2% for all bull markets since World War II. In the remaining course of the bull markets, their average compounded growth was just 20.3%, showing a slowdown in the rate of gains…”


Lockdowns Don’t Stop COVID, But They Do Screw the Poor and Disadvantaged

Stephen Moore, Fox News: “Liberals love to talk about following the science, but all evidence of the last nine months points to the scientific conclusion that lockdowns do not work to reduce deaths.

“Contact-tracing studies show that about half of those infected with the coronavirus got it despite staying at home. Only 2% of the transmission comes from restaurants, and almost none come from outdoor dining, which is now idiotically prohibited in California.

“The states that have not locked down their economy have lower death rates than New York and New Jersey.

“The unemployment rate for service workers in these states has skyrocketed to as high as 10%. In contrast, the red states, such as Utah and Florida, that are still open for business have unemployment rates for service workers as low as 4%…”


Low-Tax States Are Booming and Taking People and Businesses from High-Tax States

Scott Sumner, EconLib.Org: “In recent months, a number of important firms have announced they are relocating from California to Texas…

“The movement of these industries is toward three states—[Texas, Tennessee, and Florida]—that have one thing in common—no state income tax. And these are the only three states with no income tax in the southeastern quadrant of the US—say Texas to Florida and south of the Ohio River…

“A person would have to be pretty blind to ignore the migration of firms from places like New York, New Jersey, and California, to lower tax places…

“Interestingly, Washington State has no income tax, which is unique for a northern state with a big city…

“For the first time ever (AFAIK), California saw its population fall last year, and yet it has a delightful climate (even with the recent forest fires.)  High tax Hawaii also lost population.

“So while people are gradually moving to warmer locations, state tax policies explain why certain states attract a disproportionate share of the migrants.

“Indeed, last year more that half of the U.S. population growth occurred in just two states—Texas and Florida.  I believe that’s the first time that has ever happened.  Add in Tennessee and Washington and you are at nearly two-thirds of the nation’s population growth…”


Courts Universally Reject Trump’s Allegations that the Election Was ‘Rigged’ and ‘Stolen’

Business Insider: “The Trump campaign, Republican allies, and Trump himself have mounted at least 40 legal challenges since Election Day.

“They’ve won zero.

“The lawsuits argue that states and counties have violated election laws, playing into Trump’s political strategy to discredit the results of the 2020 election that President-elect Joe Biden won.

“Republicans have filed the lawsuits in local, state, and federal courts in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, and Pennsylvania—all states that Biden won. They have also filed direct appeals to the Supreme Court, all of which have also failed…”


Tom Brady: 43 Years Old and Still the Greatest

ESPN: “Brady put together the best first half of his career, completing 22 of 27 passes for 348 yards. He is the only player over the past 40 seasons with at least 240 passing yards and four TDs before halftime, according to Elias Sports Bureau. (Brady also threw for 345 yards and five TDs in the first half against the Titans in 2009)…”

Feature photo credit: The six police officers who ran to danger to save lives Christmas Day. Source the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, courtesy of the New York Post.

Ukraine, France, and ‘Peace for Our Time’

Humiliating, not appeasing, Putin is the only way to restore peace and stability in Europe.

One of the big lessons of World War II is that a policy of appeasement toward dictators hellbent on conquest and subjugation is morally repugnant and strategically wrong. Appeasement only wets a dictator’s appetite for domination. Dictators must be confronted and defeated, not appeased.

The French in the 1930s were big appeasers of Hitler’s Germany; and all of Europe, especially European Jews, paid a horrific price as a result.

Had Hitler been confronted and defeated before amassing a fearsome military and before he annexed the Sudetenland and invaded Poland, World War II would have been averted.

One would think the French had learned this history and internalized its lessons. France, after all, was occupied by Nazi Germany and liberated only by the force of American and British arms.

French Appeasement. Yet, fresh from his visit last week with President Biden in Washington, French President Emanuel Macron renewed his longstanding call for appeasing Putin and giving the Russian dictator “security guarantees.”

According to The Telegraph, “this means,” said Macron,

that one of the essential points we must address, as President Putin has always said, is the fear that Nato comes right up to its doors and the deployment of weapons that could threaten Russia.

That topic will be part of the topics for peace, so we need to prepare what we are ready to do, how we protect our allies and member states, and how to give guarantees to Russia the day it returns to the negotiating table.

In July, Macron, likewise warned: “We must not humiliate Russia so that the day the fighting stops, we can build a way out through diplomatic channels.”

NATO Again. Excuse me, but this is dangerous and ill-informed nonsense. Macron has it exactly backwards. Russia, not the West, must provide “security guarantees”: to Ukraine and its East European neighbors. Russia is the clear and obvious aggressor. Russia, not Ukraine or NATO, started this war.

NATO never threatened Russia, and Putin knows it. The idea that NATO, or any one NATO country, has designs on Russian territory is ludicrous and laughable, and Putin knows that, too.

NATO is a defensive alliance designed to protect against longstanding Russian aggression and imperialism.

As former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has observed, Putin never raised a concern about NATO expansion with her or former President George W. Bush until very late in Bush’s second term. He belatedly raised the issue only as  convenient excuse or cover for his attempt to create by force a new Russian empire.

Humiliation, Not Appeasement. In truth, Russia must be humiliated. It must suffer a complete and devastating military defeat precisely to disabuse it of its historic and deep-seated imperialistic ambitions.

Otherwise, as with pre-World War II Germany, a barbaric and authoritarian Russia will regroup and rise again to threaten the peace and stability of Europe.

A defeated and chastened Russia, by contrast, creates the possibility of liberal change and reform. As Anne Applebaum explains:

The only solution that offers some hope of long-term stability in Europe is rapid defeat, or even, to borrow Macron’s phrase, humiliation.

In truth, the Russian president not only has to stop fighting the war; he has to conclude that the war was a terrible mistake, one that can never be repeated.

More to the point, the people around him—leaders of the army, the security services, the business community—have to conclude exactly the same thing. The Russian public must eventually come to agree too.

Win, Not Tie. Unfortunately, the Biden administration seems to be playing for a tie, not a Ukrainian win; and this is resulting in a long, drawn-out war, which allows appeasers like Macron to strut about the world stage foolishly warning against an “escalation” of the conflict.

Veteran foreign affairs analyst Robin Wright, for instance, urges the Biden administration to pressure Zelensky to negotiate with Putin. Otherwise, she warns, the war could reach “horrifying levels” and result in the utter destruction of Ukraine.

Wright is right to worry about a prolonged war, but wrong to push for appeasement.

Instead of playing for a tie, the Biden administration should be robustly arming Ukraine with America’s best weapons—drones, tanks, fighter aircraft, long-range artillery, air defenses, et al. precisely to bring this war to a swift and successful conclusion.

That’s the lesson of history; that’s the lesson of World War II; and that’s what French President Macron should be saying and acknowledging: NATO and America will ensure that Ukraine wins and Russia loses.

Feature photo credit: President Biden and French President Emanuel Macron yukking it up at the White House Dec 1, 2022, courtesy of USA Today.

How to Prevent a Nuclear War in Ukraine

Deterrence, strength, and resolve are critical now, not weakness and fear.

With the Russian military reeling from massive casualties, defeats, and a surprise Ukrainian counteroffensive, Vladimir Putin has resorted, once again, to nuclear saber-rattling. Putin himself warned today that he is “not bluffing” about his willingness to use nukes. A key Putin ally, meanwhile, threatened London with a nuclear strike.

Of course, such talk is utterly reckless and dangerous and ought to draw worldwide condemnation. But how should the West—and specifically the United States and NATO—respond? Well, we need to remember several key things:

  • First, Russian nuclear saber-rattling is nothing new. It was commonplace in the Cold War and, unfortunately, remains a staple of Russian foreign policy today. Yet, despite decades of this reckless talk, Russia never actually resorted to using nukes; and there is little reason to believe it would resort to using nukes in Ukraine today.
  • Second, during the Cold War, Russian nuclear saber-rattling did not paralyze American presidents, Democrat and Republican, and it should not paralyze President Biden now. Nor did Russian nuclear saber-rattling paralyze NATO during the Cold War, and it should not paralyze NATO now.

The West cannot be intimidated and forced to back down each and every time Russia threatens to use nukes. If the West had respond in this way during the Cold War, the West would have lost the Cold War.

  • Third, Russian nuclear saber rattling is a reflection of Russian weakness, not Russian strength. As Dr. Mike Martin of King’s College in London points out in The Telegraph this morning:

The Ukraine war has already hollowed out much of the Russian armed forces. This includes the sending of its training battalions into combat, and so the trainers of these mobilised reservists are, in many cases, already dead.

As for equipment, very few Russian soldiers even get body armour, and so much equipment has been destroyed by the Ukrainians that they are already having to press Soviet-era equipment into service.

Most of it belongs in a museum not on a modern battlefield.

Putin is sending these people to their deaths. The Ukrainian armed forces have killed tens of thousands of professional Russian soldiers with the best equipment that Russia could supply. What will they do with this mobilised reserve?

…Putin has shown us this morning that he is not strong, but that he is weak.

Exactly. Russia is losing the war and its military faces the very real prospect of collapse. Putin is resorting to nuclear saber-rattling out of desperation.

  • Fourth, if Russia uses tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine, this will not change the course of the war. It will not reverse Russia’s battlefield losses or its inability to conquer Ukraine.

Instead, all it will do is result in a more horrific loss of life and the very real danger of nuclear contamination blowing back on Russian military forces and the Russian populace. Putin surely knows this, or at least his military advisers surely know this.

  • Fifth, Putin alone cannot launch nuclear weapons. He would need the buy-in of an entire military, and possibly civilian, chain of command. And it is by no means obvious that all of these officials would be so stupid and so reckless as do the unthinkable.
  • Sixth, if Russia becomes the first and only country to use nuclear weapons since the Second World War nearly 80 years ago, it will seal its fate as a country thoroughly isolated and shunned for two or three generations at least.

Russia currently enjoys the good offices of China, Turkey, Israel, and India. All of these good offices end the minute Russia crosses the nuclear threshold and does the unthinkable. Putin knows this, and it is a big reason why he is highly unlikely to employ nukes in Ukraine.

  • Seventh, the West does not have to respond in kind, with a retaliatory nuclear strike, if Russia employs nuclear weapons in Ukraine. In fact, the West should not do so and almost certainly will not do so.

Why? Because that is completely unnecessary from a military standpoint. NATO has more than sufficient conventional military means to destroy the Russian military in Ukraine and should do so if Putin launches a nuclear weapon there.

Moreover, by responding in kind, NATO and the United States cede the moral and diplomatic high ground in Ukraine. Why do so when that is completely unnecessary?

Ceding the moral and diplomatic high ground risks driving away China, Turkey, Israel, and India, all of whom can then say, in effect, “A pox on both your houses.”

  • Eighth, the only time the West should launch a nuclear strike on Russia is if Putin launches a nuclear strike on a NATO country.

In other words, if Russia nukes Warsaw or London, then the West responds in kind with a retaliatory nuclear strike on Moscow. But if Russia nukes Ukraine, then NATO enters the war, destroys the Russian military there, and quickly ends the war with conventional weapons.

That at least is what should happen. Let us hope and pray that that is what President Biden, Prime Minister Truss, and other NATO leaders are communicating privately to Russian government officials.

  • Ninth, the way to prevent nuclear war is through the time-tested method of deterrence, which served us well during the Cold War. Weakness and fear are provocative and could well result in a miscalculation by Putin.

The Russians should be under no illusions. If they use nuclear weapons in Ukraine, NATO will enter the war, quickly decimate and destroy the Russian military there, and end the war. And if Russia ever dared to launch a nuclear strike on a NATO country, it would result in the utter destruction of Moscow.

That is how we can and will prevent the unthinkable from ever happening. Pray for peace, but prepare for war.

Feature photo credit: YouTube screenshot of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, courtesy of CNN.