Sunday, June 30, 2024

Easy Sunday: Philadelphia Inquirer editorial says it is Trump, not Biden, who should quit

Donald Trump should exit the race for the good of the country.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reverses the polarity of The New York Times' editorial.


The Philadelphia Inquirer editorial:

President Joe Biden’s debate performance was a disaster. His disjointed responses and dazed look sparked calls for him to drop out of the presidential race.

But lost in the hand wringing was Donald Trump’s usual bombastic litany of lies, hyperbole, bigotry, ignorance, and fear mongering. His performance demonstrated once again that he is a danger to democracy and unfit for office.

In fact, the debate about the debate is misplaced. The only person who should withdraw from the race is Trump.

Trump, 78, has been on the political stage for eight years marked by chaos, corruption, and incivility. Why go back to that?

To build himself up, Trump constantly tears the country down. There is no shining city on the hill. It’s just mourning in America.

Throughout the debate, Trump repeatedly said we are a “failing” country. He called the United States a “third world nation.” He said, “we’re living in hell” and “very close to World War III.”

“People are dying all over the place,” Trump said, later adding “we’re literally an uncivilized country now.”

Trump told more than 30 lies during the debate to go with the more than 30,000 mistruths told during his four years as president. He dodged the CNN moderators’ questions, took no responsibility for his actions, and blamed others, mainly Biden, for everything that is wrong in the world.

Trump’s response to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection he fueled was farcical. He said a “relatively small number of people” went to the Capitol and many were “ushered in by the police.”

After scheming to overturn the 2020 election, Trump refused to say if he would accept the results of the 2024 election. Unless, of course, he wins.

The debate served as a reminder of what another four years of Trump would look like. More lies, grievance, narcissism, and hate. Supporters say they like Trump because he says whatever he thinks. But he mainly spews raw sewage. . . .



For full text:  https://www.inquirer.com/opinion/editorials/first-presidential-debate-joe-biden-donald-trump-withdraw-20240629.




[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]



Saturday, June 29, 2024

Relax. Kamala Harris would be just fine.

President Kamala Harris would be a strong, credible president. And a strong, credible candidate. 

A transformation takes place when the person gets the job.

It is why inaugurations are important. 

It is why crowning the king is important. 



There is something small and weak about being number two. Few people respected Vice President Truman. Vice President Dan Quail was a butt of jokes. Prince Charles was a sad sack, looking diminished and pathetic as he waited and waited. 

Now he wears the crown and he is king. Now he is elevated.

I watched Kamala Harris in New Hampshire. She was a good candidate, lost in a crowd somewhere among Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Cory Booker, Pete Buttigieg and ten more. There could be only one winner and it was not Harris  She was positioned in an important spot, but not the one that had the Democratic energy in 2019.  Biden could not become the alternative to the Democratic left until all the semi-centrist candidates to the right of Sanders left the race. She was a former district attorney and former California attorney general, then was a California U.S. senator. Her law and order vibe was a bit out of fashion then. Now she is back in style.

Biden has kept Harris in her place, talking about two issues, the "women's issue" of abortion and the "Black issue" of racial prejudice. He also gave her the impossible border issue. It was impossible because Democrats are divided. Democrats on the progressive left opposed strong border enforcement, considering it cruel, at least until border-state governors began sending newly-arrived immigrants north to blue states. Now they understand the problem and the political cost of an unregulated border. This realization comes too late either to solve the border problem or to absolve Harris for having been made to look ineffectual by her own party.

But imagine this: Biden announces he is resigning at noon, July 4. He blames it on his heart.

TV cameras are set up in the Oval Office. Kamala Harris is administered the oath of office by the Chief Justice at noon, then sits down at the Resolute Desk and faces the cameras.

My fellow Americans, the Constitution of this great country provided for situations of this kind, the incapacity of a president. The constitutional order of our government continues. 

I have instructed my secretary of defense to alert our armed forces around the world to be on heightened alert. I expect no problems, but I want to assure our allies and any potential adversary that the continuity of government remains intact. I have instructed our secretary of state to provide the same assurances to foreign governments, and that is underway. I met with both the Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson yesterday to request a status report on pending legislation. I would welcome legislation that would resolve the problems of unregulated immigration at the southern border.

In the past three days I have spoken with Chinese President XI Jinping, Russian President Putin, and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. America's goal is a peaceful and prosperous world, with borders secure. I told them that our navy will continue to protect trade in the world's oceans. I intend to continue the policies of former president Biden as we begin re-evaluation of our future needs as circumstances require.

This is a new chapter in America, but I build upon the work of the former president. I have instructed the White House staff to prepare a list of potential vice presidents to be selected under the rules of the Constitution, the process that named Gerald Ford in 1974. 

Your government is at work. We have work to do. I will conclude today with the same way that President Biden concluded during his presidency: God bless America and God protect our troops.


Something like that. She could go on, but the best thing would be photos of her concluding her speech and shaking hands with John Roberts, Mike Johnson, and generals in uniform. She shouldn't look like she is seeking support. She should be accepting their recognition that she is now the boss. She should be nodding a thank-you.

The old Kamala Harris of this photo is no more. 


The smiling, hand-waving cheerleader wearing a colorful light blue pantsuit will not appear again in public. She is no longer the second banana. She will look, dress, and sound like the CEO. A former general might be able to show geniality at this moment. Not her, not yet. She came out of an auxiliary role, and she is female. She is no cheerleader now. She is the leader.

Her first job is to demonstrate order and legitimacy, and a speech like this does that. She must sound secure that she holds power through legitimate means. She has taken command of our military. She is serious and competent. And she is already at work. 



Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]




Friday, June 28, 2024

Biden's enablers.

We saw what we saw last night. 

We cannot un-see it.

No one can persuade us that we were seeing a man ready and able to lead a great country in perilous times.









Mouth open, face slack, looking down, eyes closed.

I wasn't there to see it, but I am confident that in the week of debate preparation his staff noticed that Biden would drop his head and stand with open mouth. Surely from time to time in practice sessions Biden dropped into looking like the man I saw and photographed last night. They must not have told him with enough straight-talk firmness and urgency that this was a disastrous look for even a moment, much less repeatedly. They must have been gentle and deferential. They didn't make Biden confront reality. 

They were enablers.

My strongest criticism of the GOP is not of Trump. The authors of the Constitution expected a popular demagogue would arise. The failure in our democracy was that ambitious Republicans did not discipline their own team for the good of their partisan faction and the country. Instead they enabled Trump, agreeing with him in public on things they know to be untrue and dangerous, that Trump won in 2020, that the courts are corrupt. Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Lindsey Graham, and J.D. Vance aren't stupid. They know better, but are going along. It is bad for the country but, temporarily at least, good for their careers.

Biden's enablers did not get through to Biden that his posture and vacant look would destroy the one thing he needed to accomplish in the debate, which was to assure the public that he was up to the job. His posture and bearing were things they could coach. This failure is part of the bigger pattern. Democratic Party leaders cosseted him, protecting him from competition within the party. That protected their jobs and ambitions, but at the cost of creating a fragile, dishonest illusion that Biden was the best candidate to present to the public in 2024. 

Yesterday I wrote:

The Democratic leader is Biden and today is a public test. If he is strong enough to stand up to Trump, he is strong enough to lead the USA. 

That is the only issue in tonight's debate. 

Biden failed the test, spectacularly. Senior Democrats who could do an intervention of the kind that senators made with Nixon in 1974, telling him it was time to resign or be convicted in an impeachment, will likely fail to do that duty. I expect them to circle the wagons, hoping to make the best of a difficult situation. It is the safer thing to do for their careers. Defend the team, even when it is indefensible.

But it is not a "difficult situation." It is a dangerous and doomed one. We saw what we saw. We heard what we heard. Biden has declined. There is no shame in that. The shame is that his closest advisors aren't telling him.



Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Strong Man government

How did the young man who became King David distinguish himself?

He killed Goliath.

Humans want their leaders to be strong.

The commentary preceding the presidential debate this evening is focused almost entirely on the body language we will see. We already know their policies, more or less. The primary question is whether Biden is strong and capable. The secondary question is whether Trump is too crazy to replace Biden, i.e. does Trump have enough self-awareness and self-control to behave appropriately.

The debate tonight is the purest example I could create of a central premise of this blog. Presidential leadership is only a little about policy positions. Policy is the scaffolding for presenting what is important: body language, tone, image. Who looks and sounds like a leader? It is a Hollywood casting decision. 

My Democratic readers are hoping for a strong, articulate, clear-headed Biden. My Republican readers expect to see confirmation that Biden is feeble, and hope that Trump avoids looking like the crazy bully that he appeared to be in the first debate with Biden four years ago. 

We describe our leaders in myths, fables, and stories. The Judeo-Christian-Muslim God is all powerful. Greek gods had powers, but constraints. Strong Achilles was the hero of the Greeks, but he was petulant and selfish, and not its political leader, only its warrior. Hector, hero of the Trojans, combined strength and virtue as the brave and respectful son of the king, the heir apparent. He had strength and virtue, but Achilles' strength overcame Hector's virtuous strength, which was a warning.

Schoolchildren in America learn that George Washington was strong enough to throw a silver dollar across the Potomac. We learned that young Abraham Lincoln was an accomplished rail splitter. 

In a parliamentary system Biden's legislative skills and accomplishments might matter. Democrats are frustrated that the voters don't seem to notice or care. In a presidential system, where voters are electing a commander in chief (the electors are simply a way of counting popular votes) voters want a symbol of themselves and the country they want. They elect an avatar. They want strength and virtue, but first of those is strength. Without strength, there is no opportunity to exercise virtue. Remember Hector.

Winners make the rules and decide what is just and lawful. Trump can never admit to being a loser. He cannot submit to laws and courts. Submission would be off-brand for him. Republican voters who have bonded to Trump accept that set of corollaries to stay loyal to Trump. Republican consider laws to be void and illegitimate when it comes to him. They may eventually regret this, but not yet.

Biden is a poor choice of foil against Trump. Former California District Attorney and Attorney General Kamala Harris might have been a good one but the vice ptesident's office, and perhaps Biden, kept her looking weak. She speaks out clearly only on the "woman's issue" of abortion and on "Black issue" of racial justice, but not on NATO, Ukraine, Israel, the southern border, trade, and external affairs. Democrats may regret that, too, but they are stuck with the leadership they created. The Democratic leader is Biden and today is a public test. If he is strong enough to stand up to Trump, he is strong enough to lead the USA. 

That is the only issue in tonight's debate. 



Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]



Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Americans are the refs, and we are being "worked." Step one.

"Tell them what you will say.
Say it.
Tell them what you said."
          Speech advice from Aristotle, Mark Twain, Yogi Berra, and my former Medford High School speech and debate teacher, DeVere Taylor

It also works for preparing people to interpret what they are about to see.

Newsmax

Donald Trump, Ronny Jackson, Fox News, and Republicans generally are telling us what we are going to see at the CNN debate between Biden and Trump. We will see a senile puppet.

They are working the refs.  If we think we see something else, we are watching an illusion. Don't believe your eyes. Biden is a puppet, an empty shell controlled by his staff and Barack Obama. They explain that Biden is busy this week memorizing lines to parrot, because he won't have a teleprompter to read. It is Biden's way of cheating, a way of rigging the debate. In any case, even if he hides his senility some way, what you are seeing is a doddering, drooling idiot. Watch for signs of it.

This week they say Biden is practicing how to stand for 90 minutes. Watch for his physical frailty.

We are also being told that if, by any chance, we think we see a sharp, credible Biden able to engage Trump, that we are seeing another form of cheating. Biden will be using performance enhancing drugs of some kind, something strong enough to last for the 90 minutes before he returns to form. Ronny Jackson, the former White House physician, sent a letter to Biden and his physician demanding that Biden be drug-tested both before and after the debate. The letter both presumes Biden previously took performance enhancing drugs and that the administration is dishonest about it.
It’s a terrible reality that I am having to send a letter demanding President Biden submit to a drug test prior to this week’s debate, however, Americans are being left in the dark by a dishonest administration regarding what types of performance enhancing drugs Biden is using for high stakes events like the State of the Union. As the former physician to three United States Presidents, and as a Member of Congress, I see it as my duty to do everything I can to hold this administration accountable, especially when it comes to a President’s fitness for office. 

Jackson's letter has been extensively coveed by Fox News. If Biden seems OK, then it's the drugs.

Moreover, the debate is rigged because CNN and its moderators are biased. House Speaker Mike Johnson said:

CNN is going to rig [the debate] as much as possible and make it as favorable as they possibly can for President Biden.

Trump said the debate will be three of them against one of him. Unfair! This pre-positions CNN to be perceived as prejudiced, especially if they fact-check Trump. If Trump makes outrageous claims, as is his habit, and Biden does not, then CNN moderators will frequently attempt to correct Trump but less so Biden. That will read as CNN being unbalanced, harder on Trump than on Biden. Audiences are being prepared to see this as a matter of CNN bias, not candidate behavior.

Forbes headline

The format of the debate may exacerbate the perception of bias because if Trump is still talking when two minutes are up and his microphone shuts off, it may appear they are unfairly censoring him even though it was simply the agreed-upon rule that microphones would be shut off after the speaker's time is up.

The debate will take place. People will see what they see, which is significantly affected by what they were told they would see.

Then the post-debate "spin." Allies of both candidates will tell us what we saw. The GOP has a simple, repeatable frame for understanding Biden. He is a senile puppet. If we didn't see that on our own, they will point to moments in the debate that are evidence for that conclusion. 

One. Two. Three. 




[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]



Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Trump Rally: Who wasn't there.

The "Make Oregon Great Again" Trump event.

Readers asked:

       -- Were local Republican candidates and officeholders there?

       -- Did anyone local make a fool of themselves?

No. At least I don't think so. 



I attended the Trump event for almost nine hours. 

Some of the most important things that happen in politics and in life generally are what does not happen. It is hard to notice what isn't there. Still, if I didn't see it while looking and watching, and if no newspapers or TV news people reported on it, then for political purposes, it did not happen. To rephrase an old question:

 "If a politician says something ridiculous and self-destructive while walking in a forest, and the media isn't there to hear and report it, did it really happen?"

The event started a few minutes before I got there. The agenda described the time I missed as time for singing the Star Spangled Banner and then some presentations by organizations. I missed those. I was digging holes and replanting grape vines killed by the hard spring frosts. I was there long before the period scheduled for local and congressional candidates.


I freely give political advice to local Republicans, urging them not to do self-destructive things, but they appear to ignore it.  A week ago I shared the thought that local Republicans would do better politically to stay clear of these craziest of MAGA Republicans. Their local GOP already made proclamations saying that the 2020 election was stolen and Biden was an illegitimate president. Attending and speaking at this event would have driven their reputations further into Trump conspiracy-land. That kind of thinking is semi-popular within local GOP circles and among people who decorate their pickup trucks. A Curt Ankerberg-style Republican might start winning primary elections now, but I am pretty sure it would be a way to lose a general election.

It would have been a natural place for GOP candidates to have a campaign table. There was ample opportunity to wander around and greet fellow Republicans. I did not see Jackson County officeholders or candidates doing that.

Dennis Linthicum was an exception. He had joined lawsuits that attempted to void the 2020 election, and he spoke for ten minutes. The speech was the time and audience for some red- meat talk about illegal aliens voting, about Democratic widows voting their husband's ballots, about how election audits failed us, about how Trump really won, the travesty and disgrace of mai-in ballots, the dirty county clerks, the stolen election, and the tragedy of a lost opportunity for Trump to re-make America into a Christian nation. The out-of-town speakers spoke like that and were applauded. But not Linthicum. He spoke in a mellow tone about his life and very generally about election integrity. He said that he and his wife had lived off the grid for 30 years. He sounded like a conservationist hippie, now grown middle age, but still a mellow rebel at heart.

I was ready with three recording devises and back-up battery packs to record local candidates saying those wild red-meat things to feed the Republican carnivores, and they weren't there. The song by the Zombies, written in 1964, that I used to hum to myself in high school, ran though my head.

"Well, let me tell you about the way she lookedThe way she'd act and the color of her hairHer voice was soft and coolHer eyes were clear and brightBut she's not there."

The local candidates weren't there. I think that was smart of them, although no one asked for my opinion. The recording devices stayed in my briefcase.



[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to:  https://petersage.substack.comSubscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]



Monday, June 24, 2024

Did I learn anything at the Trump rally?

     "There's no way Joe Biden got 81 million votes. It's impossible. They know they're cheating." 

[Audience cheers.]

       Dave Duquette, founder of Western Justice, one of several speakers who preceded Mike Lindell, the "Pillow Man."

The crowd disabused me of some misconceptions.

I thought a Trump rally might focus on Trump's policy positions. No.  I heard very little about Trump's positions on immigration; on his tilt toward Russia; his criticism of NATO, his support for Netanyahu; his support for more fossil fuel production. Over the course of nine hours I don't think I ever heard the word Russia or Ukraine. The rally was for Trump the person. He is the hero. He is the victim. 

I thought a Trump rally might be an expression of party loyalty. No. It is Trump loyalty. Except for two litmus test issues, guns and abortion, Trump shaped the current GOP. It was a crowd of long term Republicans, but they shed their former policy positions. Former leaders of the party are now enemies since they did not become Trump loyalists. George W. Bush, Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, Richard Cheney, Liz Cheney, and Bill Barr are all enemies now, even at a rally organized by Republicans. If you are not MAGA, you are a RINO. RINOs are turncoats.

I thought maybe they knew Trump's “stolen election” claim was a con, and a Trump audience liked watching him get away with with a flagrant lie. No. They believe the Big Lie. There is a school of thought that the stolen election claim is a way for Trump to show dominance. There is little credit in agreeing that the sky is blue and grass is green. You show dominance is telling an obvious and outrageous lie, and then sticking to the story and creating a new reality with your facts. He sticks to his story, exasperating Democrats. He shows he can tell the Big Lie right in front of everyone. It is shooting someone on Fifth Avenue, but bigger. In this understanding, Trump voters are cheerleaders and willing participants in the con.They are joining Trump in giving a big "you can't make me" to the powers that be from the media, the courts, the established order they perceive to have been created by liberals.  Trump never surrenders. Nor do they. 

The speakers and audience repeatedly affirmed they think the election was stolen from Trump, by Democrats, George Soros, the mainstream media, strings pulled by Barack Obama, and RINOs. Biden's presumed incompetence is key to the disbelief that he won legitimately. Biden campaigned from his basement to tiny crowds sitting in spaced circles. Trump spoke to tens of thousands at a time. Biden is pathetic. He could not have won.

Mike Lindell put numbers on this. He said that if Democrats had merely rigged a few states, then those states would show outlier numbers which would expose the vote switching. Democrats are evil, he said, and they are clever about it. They rigged all the states, he said. Forget the audits. Forget the recounts. Forget the pre-election polls. Tabulating machines switched votes on a massive scale. In authentic counting, nationwide Trump wins about 67% of the vote and Biden about 33%. That is the reality of the American electorate, he said. 

The audience cheered. This made sense to them. The fixed star of truth is that it was impossible for Biden to win. Impossible things don't happen. Therefore, there must be other explanations.

Multiple polls preceding the 2020 election showed that the election was close and Biden had a small lead. That is how the presidential election turned out. The two Georgia senate elections in December of 2020 brought a result entirely consistent with the presidential vote, a narrow win by Democrats. If Democrats had the power to change 20 million votes why didn't they also change a couple of representative and senate votes so they had majorities in both houses?

None of this matters. Those are my facts, not theirs. Biden could not possibly have won. That is their fact.

It was a well-attended meeting. I estimate 500 people in attendance. It was a large venue, and it was set up to accommodate four times that number. Democrats would take the wrong message by looking at the empty chairs. They should notice the occupied ones. There are a lot of believers.




[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]



Sunday, June 23, 2024

Easy Sunday: Photos from a Trump Rally

I spent nine hours on Saturday at a Trump rally in Southern Oregon. 

Mike Lindell, the "Pillow Guy," was the headliner. 

I got some insights into the Trump phenomenon. More about that later. Today, just photos from the event.





















[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to:  https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.] 





Saturday, June 22, 2024

U.S. Code. Yes, the Jan 6 rioters broke the law

Republican friends minimize what happened on January 6, 2021.
    --  It wasn't as bad as the media makes it out to be
     --  The images we have seen aren't typical. 
     --  They weren't Trump supporters. They were Democrats in disguise
     --  They were Trump supporters, but they were egged on by FBI agent-provocateurs.
     — The lawbreakers in Portland we’re not prosecuted by the local DA so the Capitol lawbreakers should not be prosecuted by the federal Department of Justice.
     -- The investigation was partisan.
     -- What they did wasn't illegal.

I followed the riot in real time on TV. I saw people break doors and windows and climb balconies to enter the Capitol against the efforts of police officers trying to stop them.





I don't need a lawyer to tell me it is wrong, dangerous, and illegal to break into a public building by smashing windows and pushing past barricades. I know better than to fight with police officers in a traffic stop or any other time. I consider it axiomatic that a person who uses a flagpole to poke a police officer or who sprays them with bear spray is fair game for being killed on the spot. I think they are lucky to be alive.

In the aftermath of the riot, people who can be proved to have done violent or destructive things are being identified and prosecuted. 


Some of the January 6 defendants are claiming they weren't really guilty of a crime.  They have brought a case to the Supreme Court.

The crimes they are charge with are part of laws written to prevent tampering with a witness or evidence, not for attempting a coup d' état. I assumed that it would be illegal to break into the Capitol, attack officers, and try to stop Congress from doing its work, but maybe the idea of doing it was so unthinkable that there isn't any law that applies to this event. I decided to read the law.

18 U.S. Code § 1512 - Tampering with a witness, victim, or an informant

(2)Whoever uses physical force or the threat of physical force against any person, or attempts to do so, with intent to—(A) influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of any person in an official proceeding; (B) cause or induce any person to—(i)withhold testimony, or withhold a record, document, or other object, from an official proceeding; (ii)alter, destroy, mutilate, or conceal an object with intent to impair the integrity or availability of the object for use in an official proceeding; (iii) evade legal process summoning that person to appear as a witness, or to produce a record, document, or other object, in an official proceeding; or (iv) be absent from an official proceeding to which that person has been summoned by legal process; or. . . .


It looks clear to me that the law is telling us that it is indeed illegal to use force or the threat of force to induce people to withhold electoral votes in an official proceeding of Congress. That's what the rioters did. They carried signs saying that was their intent. They were videotaped while doing it. Most pleaded guilty. The ones who went to trial were found guilty.

It looks to me like the government is enforcing the laws, which is what they should do.



Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to: https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]

Friday, June 21, 2024

95 degrees in the shade, and there is no shade

I am not a gentleman farmer.

I am a farmer. 

Yesterday: Digging holes for re-plants

Planting 

There is a joke I tell: A guy won $50 million in a lottery. A reporter asked him what he was going to do with his winnings. With great enthusiasm he answered, "I am going to farm until it's all gone."

I have been growing cantaloupes and watermelons nearly every year since I was about 11 years old. The farm is property my great-grandfather bought in 1883. There is no glamour in melons or melon-growing. There aren't any "melon snobs," in the way that there are wine connoisseurs. Wine connoisseurs talk about wine and find value in buying expensive wines of supposed superbly fine quality. Until I began growing grapes, I dismissed such people as "wine snobs" and likely poseurs --  people who pretended to know wines and the subtle flavor-notes of great vintages, grown on east-facing slopes with just-so terracing, trellising, irrigation, and soils. Now that I am growing grapes on my own unique soil -- ground up pumice rock -- I hope wine connoisseurs will find something special about the terroir. 

Until I began growing grapes, I told a semi-joke at the expense of purchasers of expensive wine. I said those connoisseurs paid top dollar to satisfy their exquisitely refined taste, but would also eat underripe, flavorless melons that I would cull, taste, and spit out in the field.

When I was a candidate for county commissioner in 1980, a prominent Republican, an orchardist, asked me a "gotcha" question: "How many Mexicans have you got?" He meant it in the way a plantation owner in the ante bellum south might have asked a social inferior how many slaves he owned.  

I answered, "I am the only Mexican." He knew what that meant. I did all the work. It made me a nobody.

I meet some definitions of gentleman farmer. I am a landowner and I have outside income, thank goodness, that allows me to own a farm that usually loses money. But my notion of "gentleman farmers" are people who arrange for others to do all their farm labor. They farm while staying comfortable and well dressed. That isn't me. I get dirty. I get hot and sweaty. I move pipes. I spray herbicide. I hoe weeds. I do stoop labor tying vines to the second wire on the trellis. On days like yesterday, when it was 92 degrees, and today when it will be 95, I will be out there early, before 7 a.m. I will quit at 1 p.m. There is no shade in a field of young grape plants. 

There is "gentleman farmer" status in the celebrity world from owning a vineyard. Trump owns one. Hollywood celebrities and hedge fund billionaires own them. They can put their name on a wine label.

There is another way to own a vineyard. The working-farmer way. That's me. There isn't any status or "romance" in it. It's hard work but there are compensations. It puts me into a time machine. It triggers good memories of my father, Robert Sage, a farm boy who grew up on that land, went to war, met and married my mother, returned to the farm, finished college, became a school principal, and spent summers working alongside his sons on the property his father and grandfather farmed. He would approve of how I am taking care of it.

Robert Sage, about 1928


Robert Sage, late 1960s




[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to:  https://petersage.substack.com  Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.] 




Thursday, June 20, 2024

Your vote for president should count. It probably won't.

Message to Oregon Republicans:
     Your vote for president won't matter. Trump has already conceded Oregon.

Message to Texas Democrats:
     Your vote for president won't matter. Democrats pretend Texas is "in play," but they know it isn't. They have conceded it.

America can do better.

This week's email brought yet another iteration of this map and the story that goes with it.  Red states. Blue states. A few contested states.

The map shows which states are the tipping point. If Biden carries Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan, he wins. If he doesn't, he loses. Whether he wins Oregon by 1% or 15% doesn't matter. Whether Trump wins West Virginia by 1% or 15% doesn't matter. And, realistically, given the partisan balances in various states, if Biden is tied in Pennsylvania then he will surely win Oregon and Trump will win West Virginia.

Every tiny margin of policy and message matters -- but in only three states. About 92% of Americans are essentially spectators. Voters in most of America will go through the motions of a presidential vote, with their state going to its predicted result, so their vote has no realistic effect on the tipping point for the election.

Republicans in southern Oregon complain about their irrelevance. The voters in the Portland metro area decide everything, they say. They move to undemocratic tactics, like leaving the state capitol during a session to prevent a quorum. They support election-denying candidates. They publish proclamations saying Joe Biden is an illegitimate president. They protest government; they don't share in governing. They fly flags that say F*** Biden.

It isn't an effort to persuade. The signs are a defiant expression of frustration and helplessness.

It isn't good for America's democracy. The problem is bigger than the Electoral College, but our election system is one more reason for Americans to conclude that the institutions of government are rigged against them. The election will be decided by distant voters in a few "battleground" states.

Americans might have a better sense of engagement with their government if they had a rational sense of buy-in. Presidential elections are a bit like a Mega-bucks lottery drawing in which people all across the country are urged to buy a ticket, but everyone knows that the winning ticket is going to be sold in Michigan, Pennsylvania, or Wisconsin, not in their town.

The current system causes a vote to get swallowed up in the statewide election of electors. In a popular election every vote, every drop in the bucket, adds toward the favored candidate's possible win.

America would be better off with more buy-in to the institutions of our democracy. Knowing your vote counts would be one small step in the right direction.




[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to:  https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. Don't pay. The blog is free and always will be.]