Thursday Poetry

Click on the title to learn more about the poem and the poet.

my yoga teacher kassandra Andrei Codrescu 1946 –

has only good news for my body
and for my mind, she warms them
and she becalms them unlike her
greek namesake who left her
listeners terrified and tense
ah the onomastic turnaround
took twenty centuries to turn
the older story on its head
which explains ex-lingua why
my modern body feels comfort
in the new diachronic goddess

Copyright © 2024 by Andrei Codrescu. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on December 18, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.

In Yesterday’s Democracy Docket

(I tried all day yesterday to post this, but didn’t get it done, so here it is this morning.)

Since 2020, Democracy Docket has extensively covered and tracked important litigation related to voting rights, elections and redistricting and now has a database of over 660 cases. As in previous years, we are providing a comprehensive year-end report on all the democracy-related cases filed and decided in 2023 that directly impacted voters.

Considering it was not a federal election year, 2023 was quite busy for democracy in the courts. While there were not as many new lawsuits filed this past year relative to 2022, there was a notable influx of consequential outcomes stemming from democracy-related cases that directly impacted voters. 

Between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2023, we tracked:

  • 73 new democracy-related lawsuits filed across 31 states.
  • 146 court orders that impacted voters across 34 states.
  • 83 victories for voters across 26 states.

The statistics in this report are based on the lawsuits in our case database as of Dec. 31, 2023. For the purposes of this report, we excluded the 57 active redistricting lawsuits and the small number of criminal cases we are tracking.

Despite not being a federal election year, 2023 nevertheless saw over 70 democracy-related lawsuits spanning dozens of states. By comparison, in 2021 — another off-cycle year — Democracy Docket tracked 57 new democracy-related lawsuits across 18 states.  

As expected, the number of new lawsuits filed in 2023 was lower than the 175 new democracy-related lawsuits filed in 2022 both before and after the midterm elections. In anticipation of the upcoming 2024 presidential election, we expect the number of new lawsuits to once again drastically increase this year.  

In 2023, we tracked more pro-voting than anti-voting lawsuits and saw a nearly even split amongst lawsuits filed in federal and state courts. Lawsuits that centered around election administration — especially relating to direct democracy and the ballot initiative process — were most prominent among democracy-related litigation filed this past year. We observed how Republicans are doubling down on their anti-voting efforts in court, with GOP litigants bringing 68% of anti-voting lawsuits in 2023. Meanwhile, lawsuits filed by nonpartisan organizations — such as the NAACP or League of Women Voters — accounted for the vast majority of pro-voting litigation.  

Below, we break down our comprehensive database of lawsuits that were filed in 2023 and provide analysis of the broader trends that characterized the past year’s litigation landscape.

Unlike in 2022, there were more pro-voting than anti-voting lawsuits filed in 2023.

Democracy Docket categorized the 73 new lawsuits filed in 2023 as either “pro-voting” or “anti-voting.” In total, we tracked 51 pro-voting lawsuits and 22 anti-voting lawsuits filed in 2023. 

While this past year’s breakdown is a departure from the trend we saw in 2022 — in which there were more anti-voting lawsuits (93) than pro-voting lawsuits (82) — it is more in line with what we saw in 2021, when there were 49 pro-voting lawsuits and 8 anti-voting lawsuits. 

Between 2022 and 2023, we noticed a distinct shift in who was behind new democracy-related litigation, with pro-voting parties bringing the bulk of all new lawsuits in 2023. While anti-voting parties brought 53% of the total lawsuits filed in 2022, they only brought 30% of new lawsuits filed in 2023. Inversely, pro-voting parties brought 47% of the total lawsuits filed in 2022, but nearly 70% of new lawsuits filed in 2023.

This is likely explained by the fact that most off-year election litigation focuses on pro-voting challenges to new voter suppression laws. In both 2021 and 2023, we saw waves of new anti-voting laws enacted by Republican-controlled legislatures. On the other hand, in even-numbered years, litigation tends to focus on how elections are administered and votes are counted — two areas where the anti-voting parties are particularly litigious. (snip-graphics and much More Info on the page)

Exactly.

Peace & Justice History for 12/17

December 18, 1865
Following its ratification by the requisite three-quarters of the states earlier in the month, the 13th Amendment was formally adopted into the U.S. Constitution, ensuring that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude… shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”

“Selling females by the pound”
December 18, 1999
Julia Butterfly Hill descended from her tiny platform 180 feet up in a giant redwood tree (sequoia sempervivens) named “Luna,” after perching there for 738 days to protect it from loggers. Luna survived a chainsaw attack in 2001 but still stands.
     
 
“The question is not ‘Can you make a difference?’  You already do make a difference.It’s just a matter of what kind of difference you want to make during your life on this planet.” – Julia Butterfly Hill
More about Julia Butterfly Hill and Luna 
Luna Today Earth Medicine

https://www.peacebuttons.info/E-News/peacehistorydecember.htm#december18

Something to Read (Book Suggestion)

I put the bit about the book I thought could be of interest beneath. I’ve already read the other Bennet sister book, but my queue is itch for me to add “Sorcery and Small Magics”. The other books are enticing, as well.

Sorcery and Small Magics

Sorcery and Small Magics by Maiga Doocy

Sorcery and Small Magics by Maiga Doocy is $2.99! I just recommend this one to someone in Smart Bitches After Dark. If you didn’t know, I’m offering up personalized recommendations to subscribers and this one is a slightly cozy, queer, fantasy historical with rivals who are now magically connected after a curse goes wrong.

Desperate to undo the curse binding them to each other, an impulsive sorcerer and his curmudgeonly rival venture deep into a magical forest in search of a counterspell—only to discover that magic might not be the only thing pulling them together.

Leovander Loveage is a master of small magics.

He can summon butterflies with a song, or turn someone’s hair pink by snapping his fingers. Such minor charms don’t earn him much admiration from other sorcerers (or his father), but anything more elaborate always blows up in his face. Which is why Leo vowed years ago to never again write powerful magic.

That is, until a mix-up involving a forbidden spell binds Leo to obey the commands of his longtime nemesis, Sebastian Grimm. Grimm is Leo’s complete opposite—respected, exceptionally talented, and an absolutely insufferable curmudgeon. The only thing they agree on is that getting caught using forbidden magic would mean the end of their careers. They need a counterspell, and fast. But Grimm casts spells, he doesn’t undo them, and Leo doesn’t mess with powerful magic.

Chasing rumors of a powerful sorcerer with a knack for undoing curses, Leo and Grimm enter the Unquiet Wood, a forest infested with murderous monsters and dangerous outlaws alike. To dissolve the curse, they’ll have to uncover the true depths of Leo’s magic, set aside their long-standing rivalry, and—much to their horror—work together.

Even as an odd spark of attraction flares between them. <snip>

Hitting the Debt Limit: 3 Things to Know

December 17, 2024 By Joel Friedman and Richard Kogan

On January 1, 2025, the federal government will reach the debt limit, the maximum amount it is allowed to borrow. Accordingly, Congress will need to act to raise or suspend the limit in the coming months to cover existing commitments. Raising or suspending the debt limit does not authorize new spending or tax cuts; it merely acknowledges past budgetary decisions — that is, current budget law — and so allows the federal government to meet its existing legal obligations. The government must suspend or raise the limit to prevent default, which would be deeply damaging and disruptive for people across the U.S., financial markets, and the economy.

The debt limit has been suspended since the enactment of the bipartisan 2023 Fiscal Responsibility Act, allowing the federal government to borrow as needed. But under that law, the suspension expires at the start of 2025, and the new limit will be set at the level of debt outstanding on that day.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the deficit is currently running a bit below $2 trillion per year, which is therefore a reasonable approximation of the amount the federal government will need to borrow in 2025 to pay its bills in full, even if policymakers enact no further deficit-increasing measures.

Here are three key things to know about the debt limit:

1. January 1st is not a hard deadline.

When the U.S. reaches the debt limit, Treasury cannot increase borrowing to finance spending. But it will be several more months before the federal government lacks the resources to meet its legal obligations. That hard deadline, sometimes called the “X-date,” will likely not occur until the spring or summer, but it is difficult to estimate precisely at this point.

What allows the Treasury to spend when it cannot borrow more? First, it will have a buffer of cash on hand, which stood at around $700 billion on December 12. Second, Treasury will continue to collect revenues. Even though total revenues are less than total spending over the year, in certain months revenues exceed spending, generating a surplus. (See Figure 1 on the page; won’t embed.) This is particularly the case in April, around the tax filing deadline.

Finally, the Treasury Department can use certain accounting maneuvers, known as “extraordinary measures,” that let it finance expenditures without additional borrowing that counts against the limit. Both Democratic and Republican administrations have used these measures in recent decades after reaching the debt limit, allowing them to meet the federal government’s obligations while waiting for Congress to act. But these accounting maneuvers are not open-ended. In past years, they have given the Treasury several months of cushion before reaching the X-date. In 2023, for instance, Treasury relied on them for 135 days before Congress suspended the debt limit.

2. Prioritizing payments isn’t the answer to the debt ceiling.

If Congress does not raise or suspend the debt limit by the time Treasury has exhausted its cash balances and extraordinary measures, it would be unable to increase borrowing. It could not meet all the government’s legal obligations; it could pay only as much as it collects in revenues — on a day-to-day basis. Given that revenue is insufficient to cover spending, payments would need to be delayed and spending eventually cut — all of which would be illegal, because that would violate existing spending law. Default would not only hurt people who depend on timely government payments, but it would also shake financial markets and damage the economy.[1]

A number of Republican members of Congress have introduced legislation over the past dozen years that would authorize Treasury to prioritize certain payments if the federal government reached the debt limit. But that is not a way around the debt limit. The many budget statutes authorizing government’s various spending programs provide no legal authority to prioritize one payment over another. As a result, the government’s current payment system is designed to pay bills in the order in which they come due. And it relies on quite old technology that cannot be easily or quickly updated.

Even if prioritizing were legalized, many experts believe it is a practical impossibility under current technology and systems, particularly given that Treasury makes hundreds of millions of separate payments each month. And even if it were possible to administer on a large scale, prioritization is little more than picking winners and losers. Proposing to prioritize certain payments is merely an attempt to lessen some of the harm to some of the people. But it would increase the harm even further to those not favored — harms that would grow every month, as delays cumulated — while still failing to provide protection from default’s widespread fallout.[2]

3. The debt limit is not a way to control deficits.

In the past, some lawmakers have refused to support raising or suspending the debt limit without accompanying deep spending cuts — including to programs that help people afford health care and groceries — as a way to link the debt limit to deficit reduction. But the debt limit is neither an effective nor appropriate mechanism to limit federal deficits and borrowing.

By the time the debt limit is reached, virtually all of the spending and tax policies that determine the federal government’s near-term borrowing needs have already been enacted. Therefore, raising or suspending the limit merely enables the government to pay the bills that it has already incurred through previous tax and spending policies that created deficits in the first place; it does not create more spending or larger deficits, as reports from the Congressional Research Service and the Government Accountability Office agree.[3]

Additionally, the Congressional Budget Office has written, “By itself, setting a limit on the debt cannot control deficits because the decisions that trigger borrowing are made through other legislative actions that occur largely before the debt ceiling is reached. By the time an increase is needed, it is too late to curtail federal spending or to avoid paying pending obligations without incurring negative consequences.”[4]

While policymakers should consider the risks associated with a federal debt that’s growing faster than the economy and is projected to continue doing so, they should not hold the debt limit hostage to their policy preferences, creating uncertainty and risking a government default. A more appropriate place to debate the long-term fiscal outlook would be when policymakers are considering the revenue and spending effects of specific legislation.

Moreover, a focus on tying the debt limit to spending cuts mistakenly implies that growing spending is the cause of our fiscal challenges. While total spending is projected to rise faster than revenue, this is almost exclusively due to rising interest costs. Program costs (which exclude interest) and revenue are growing at roughly the same rate. Rising interest costs are the result of the large underlying mismatch between revenues and program spending, which is due primarily to tax cuts enacted over the last 25 years that have resulted in revenues lagging behind the cost of public services, like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, that are broadly supported by the public. This mismatch has necessitated greater borrowing, and higher interest rates have increased the cost of that borrowing.[5] Rising interest costs associated with tax cuts should not be understood as “higher spending” but rather the additional cost of enacting those tax cuts.

The United States is the only major industrialized nation that sets a binding legal limit on the total debt of its central government — a limit that, in its current form, dates back to World War I.[6] Policymakers should consider eliminating the debt limit because it serves no useful purpose and only seems to provide opportunities for political mischief while putting the nation’s financial standing at risk. But, at the very least, they should suspend or raise the debt limit in a timely way and for an extended period so that the government does not default or risk illegally defaulting on its obligations, which would cause a host of serious problems.

https://www.cbpp.org/research/federal-budget/hitting-the-debt-limit-3-things-to-know

Sci-Fi Writer Arthur C. Clarke Predicted the Rise of Artificial Intelligence & the Existential Questions We Would Need to Answer (1978)

We now live in the midst of an artificial-intelligence boom, but it’s hardly the first of its kind. In fact, the field has been subject to a boom-and-bust cycle since at least the early nineteen-fifties.

Source: Sci-Fi Writer Arthur C. Clarke Predicted the Rise of Artificial Intelligence & the Existential Questions We Would Need to Answer (1978)

I wish I could Like this 1,000 Times

I have Bart Art on a thumb drive, but I share the regret that I don’t have the graphic Ten Bears writes of because it’s spot on.

And It’s a More Important Reason than that they’re better than UPS and FedEx …

Peace & Justice History for 12/17

The first entry may be a clue as to why Musk is supporting the Don; he could wish to turn the US into S. Africa. As hard as we worked when we were young until now, progress doesn’t seem to have stuck, here.

December 17, 1982
The U.N. passed a series of 4 resolutions attacking apartheid in South Africa: To organize an international conference of trade unions on sanctions against South Africa (approved 129 to 2); To encourage various international actions against South Africa (126 to 2); Support of sanctions and other measures against South Africa including international sporting events (139 to 1); Cessation of further foreign investments and loans for South Africa (138 to 1). The U.S. was the only country to have voted against all 4 resolutions (joined only by the United Kingdom on two).
December 17, 1990

Jean-Bertrand Aristide
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a radical Roman Catholic priest and opponent of the dictatorship of Jean-Claude Duvalier who had been deposed in 1986, was elected president in the first free election in Haiti’s history. He was overthrown in 1991 in a military coup led by Brigadier-General Raoul Cedra.

More about Jean-Bertrand Aristide
Jean-Bertrand Aristide Fast Facts
December 17, 2010
In Tunesia jobless graduate Mohmad Bouazizi starts selling vegetables. When police seize his cart, he sets fire to himself and later dies.
This event believed to be the ignition of Arab Spring
.
A UK Guardian interactive timeline 

https://www.peacebuttons.info/E-News/peacehistorydecember.htm#december17