Everyone in the state is running for something!

As a service to our readers, here is a list of candidates for various elections affecting Northeast Tennessee.  No endorsement of any candidate by NET3D or its writers should be assumed or implied.  The information is drawn from the very useful website, Ballotpedia, which has a great deal of information on many of the candidates and the election in general: https://ballotpedia.org/Tennessee_elections,_2020 Tennessee House of Representatives primary election Incumbents are marked with an (i) after their name. Office  Democratic  Republican Other District 1 No candidates filed for the Democratic primary John Crawford (i) District 2 Arvil Love Jr. Bud Hulsey (i) District 3 … Continue reading Everyone in the state is running for something!

By All Means, Let’s Have a Conversation About the Police

Yes, let’s have a conversation about the police.  But I refuse to engage in a rigged conversation.  If we’re going to converse, it’s going to be respectful and 2-way.  I won’t be preached at by ignorant ideologues.  What I’m interested in – and what I think all honest people should be interested in – is data, hard facts.  I am not interested in “narratives” pushed by anyone, right or left.  We put aside our prejudices and presumptions, and we go where the facts lead. To hear the Left tell it, white Americans are inherently and incurably racist, and policing is … Continue reading By All Means, Let’s Have a Conversation About the Police

Books, Books, Lotsa Books

OK, Rebecca, challenge accepted.  Some of my favorite books: The Aubrey-Maturin series by Patrick O’Brian – High adventure on the high seas during the Napoleonic Wars with dashing British naval officer John “Lucky Jack” Aubrey and his friend and companion, Dr. Stephen Maturin.  There are 20-1/3 books in the series – O’Brian left an unfinished fragment at his death – that are widely considered the best nautical novels ever written.  We join Jack Aubrey as he takes his first command of a 13-gun merchant raider, and leave him a battle-scarred veteran in command of a squadron, sailing off to another … Continue reading Books, Books, Lotsa Books

Due Process and Nicey-Nice Niceties

Russell Kirk had an interesting take on the American Revolution.  In his view, it wasn’t a revolution at all, it was a war to restore the status quo of American self-government.  He makes a convincing case.  From the earliest days, immigrants were pretty much on their own and didn’t have much choice but to make their own decisions and run their own affairs.  By the early 18th century, self-government was so well-established that the colonists understood it to be their right rather than a privilege granted by an indulgent overlord.  Thus when, in the middle of the century, changed circumstances … Continue reading Due Process and Nicey-Nice Niceties

Random Thoughts, End of Lockdown Edition

Says John Fund of National Review: Two things often happen when a single political party dominates a state the way Democrats dominate California. First, an echo chamber of the dominant party convinces its leaders they can steamroll over any opposition. Second, that conviction leads to political overreach. He was speaking of Democrats’ ill-considered attempt to repeal the state’s Constitutional ban on affirmative action (a ban which is supported by a majority of Californians of every race, ethnicity and party, by the way, and most strongly supported by Asian-Americans).  But Tennessee’s Republicans, who have the same sort of super-majority as the … Continue reading Random Thoughts, End of Lockdown Edition

The Slander of Norman Borlaug

Agronomist Norman Borlaug is quite likely the greatest American you’ve never heard of.  No equivocation on that; no one in human history saved more lives than he did – conservatively, hundreds of millions, possibly more than a billion.  Which makes the slander of him in the recent PBS documentary, The Man Who Tried to Feed the World, all the more despicable.  How anyone could find what he did less than admirable is perplexing; a world view so warped that it would prefer famine and poverty over food security and growing prosperity borders on the insane. Norman Borlaug was born on … Continue reading The Slander of Norman Borlaug

Plans and Laughter

The coronavirus epidemic profoundly illustrates that we humans are poor at prediction.  As the proverb says, man makes plans, and God laughs. So you will understand that I am not particularly critical of the President – the current president or any of his recent predecessors – or their administrations for the fact that the nation was not well prepared for COVID 19.  It was an event that no one could have seen coming in spite of everyone knowing that it was inevitable. The same can be said of George W. Bush and the Katrina disaster in New Orleans.  If you … Continue reading Plans and Laughter

All In For Bernie! Goes Bust

Ah!  Bernie! We hardly knew ye!  We were all in for you, only to be thwarted by a party that suddenly came to its senses.  Politics is a cruel, cruel game. Not as cruel, perhaps, as in Putin’s Russia, where disagreeing with the boss gets you killed, often in highly creative ways; or in Xi’s China, where you simply “disappear” after having your organs harvested.  But cruel enough.  Yes, you’ve transformed the Democratic Party that you famously refused to join, but the rest of the U.S. is no closer to socialist utopia than it was during the grand and glorious … Continue reading All In For Bernie! Goes Bust

Partisanship and Politics

Makeup and hair dye are harmless vanities for most, and few people other than a handful of latter-day Puritans are opposed to them.  If it enhances a woman’s natural beauty, let’s have makeup and hair dye. Then there’s televangelist Tammy Faye Bakker, later Tammy Faye Messner.  I saw her and then-husband Jim Bakker once in Abingdon, browsing the vendor booths at a summertime festival.  I’d heard the stories and the jokes, and seen the pictures of her crying on TV with mascara streaming down her chubby cheeks, but it was still a surprise to see someone with makeup so thick … Continue reading Partisanship and Politics

Advantage!

Soccer – football to everyone outside the U.S. and Canada – is a wonderful sport.  My boys played, and I got into it as much as they did, playing a bit myself (terribly; no one ever accused me of being an athlete), coaching, refereeing, and helping run the local soccer club.  Due to the lack of scoring it bores a lot of people to death; kick the ball up the field, then down the field, then back up again.  Fall down and pretend to be mortally injured, jump back up again and run like crazy.  Constant swirling action, no apparent … Continue reading Advantage!