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Balloon Juice

Come for the politics, stay for the snark.

They spent the last eight months firing professionals and replacing them with ideologues.

Republicans don’t lie to be believed, they lie to be repeated.

Many life forms that would benefit from greater intelligence, sadly, do not have it.

She burned that motherfucker down, and I am so here for it. Thank you, Caroline Kennedy.

The worst democrat is better than the best republican.

the 10% who apparently lack object permanence

if you can’t see it, then you are useless in the fight to stop it.

The fundamental promise of conservatism all over the world is a return to an idealized past that never existed.

Never entrust democracy to any process that requires republicans to act in good faith.

There are consequences to being an arrogant, sullen prick.

Republicans are the party of chaos and catastrophe.

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So it was an October Surprise A Day, like an Advent calendar but for crime.

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Marge, god is saying you’re stupid.

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These days, even the boring Republicans are nuts.

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Why is it so hard for them to condemn hate?

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You are here: Home / Politics / Domestic Politics / Take-Haver Has Terrible Take

Take-Haver Has Terrible Take

by Betty Cracker|  September 24, 202512:34 pm| 178 Comments

This post is in: Domestic Politics, Excellent Links, Foreign Affairs, Open Threads, Politics, Assholes, General Stupidity

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Is any working American writer better at exposing elite clowns than The New Yorker’s Isaac Chotiner? His exposure of Alan Dershowitz in the matter of Dershowitz’s alleged cancellation by the Chilmark Library on Martha’s Vineyard was a defining classic of the genre.

The thing that makes Chotiner such a great pantser is that he doesn’t sneak up on a subject and yank down their trousers. He asks questions with a straight face, and they expose their asses all by themselves.

Legal scholar Cass Sunstein is the latest victim. Here’s how Chotiner sets the stage for the interview:

Sunstein has written a new book, called “On Liberalism,” which is a defense of the idea of liberalism at a time when Sunstein believes it is under threat from both the right and the left. The book barely mentions Donald Trump or contemporary politics, however, and instead provides a defense of a general liberal belief system, which Sunstein breaks down into eighty-five features. Sunstein’s conception of liberalism is quite capacious; it includes New Deal liberals and so-called classical liberals, including Friedrich von Hayek and Robert Nozick, as well as politicians such as Ronald Reagan.

If that sounds absurd, that’s because it is, as Chotiner goes on to demonstrate. Here’s an excerpt, but go read the whole thing if you can.

Chotiner: Hayek talked about disliking “Near Eastern” students because they were “fundamentally dishonest.” He said that he had a “profound dislike for the typical Indian students at the London School of Economics, which I admit are all one type—Bengali moneylender sons.”

Sunstein: I didn’t know about that. Wow. Hayek was a very complicated figure. He wrote a lot. Some of it’s not so good. The Hayek that I admire is the Hayek who was an extremely persistent and repetitive and powerful critic of socialist planning on the ground that it couldn’t be made to work because the socialist planners won’t know enough, even if they’re competent and well motivated. And also the Hayek who would occasionally say that liberty has an economic foundation, but also a moral foundation. And, in a time like ours, Hayek as Mr. Liberty—that’s someone who we want to be in the same club with.

Chotiner: Hayek supported the 1973 coup in Chile. There are lots of things that don’t make him seem like such a democrat or liberal, correct?

Sunstein: The criticisms are either accurate or, in some sense, fair. So when I say Hayek is a great figure or a great part of the liberal tradition, I don’t mean to endorse everything he said.

Chotiner: You mentioned Murray Rothbard as another figure on your team. He was also controversial: he talked positively about David Duke’s 1992 Presidential campaign, and he said that he wanted to replace America’s government with some sort of anarcho-capitalism. Given where our politics are now, it doesn’t seem like a coincidence that so many of these figures were important for the conservative movement. How do you think about that?

Sunstein: Rothbard is not my favorite by any means.

It goes on like that, and can you believe it, Justices Alito and Thomas are also on Team Liberal! The interview ends on a question about Henry Kissinger, a monster whose friendship Sunstein treasured because Kissinger was nice to Sunstein about his (Sunstein’s) book launch.

Chotiner: But your wife [Samantha Power] is one of the great human-rights experts in the world. I asked you about [Kissinger] being anti-liberal, and your response was that he was very nice to you about your book.

Sunstein: About Star Wars.

Chotiner: It is certainly a touching story. But that’s not totally an answer to the question.

Sunstein: Yeah. Well, I don’t know. What he would think of this book I’d love to know.

Chotiner: But no second thoughts about being friends with him or anything?

Sunstein: I feel generally very grateful for friendship, and he was, when I knew him, a person of immense kindness. Those who think of him as someone who was something horrible or worse, I don’t know what to say about that.

I’ve never been fond of the expression “Don’t be so open minded that your brains fall out” because, in my experience, it’s usually said by the same sort of people who believe things like “God said ‘Adam and Eve’ not ‘Adam and Steve'” are devastatingly clever witticisms.

But by cracky, the former adage seems to actually apply here with Sunstein. Here’s a bonus axiom: If Chotiner calls, destroy your phone and go to ground.

Me if I ever see “Isaac Chotiner” pop up on my phone.

[image or embed]

— Betty Cracker of Florida (@bettycrackerfl.bsky.social) September 24, 2025 at 8:38 AM

I am grateful to be beneath his notice!

Open thread.

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    178Comments

    1. 1.

      Mathguy

      September 24, 2025 at 12:42 pm

      I’m beginning to think that Elizabeth Warren was a huge outlier of the HLS faculty and Sunstein is the mean. What person with a pulse would say that bullshit about Alito and Kissinger?

      Reply
    2. 2.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 12:43 pm

      The book barely mentions Donald Trump or contemporary politics, however, and instead provides a defense of a general liberal belief system, which Sunstein breaks down into eighty-five features.

      Liberalism could use a better defense, but 85 principles is peak liberal stereotype.

      Reply
    3. 3.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 12:44 pm

      It goes on like that, and can you believe it, Justices Alito and Thomas are also on Team Liberal

      The time to make them stroke out was when Biden was president.

      Reply
    4. 4.

      satby

      September 24, 2025 at 12:45 pm

      Whoa! Chotiner filleted Sunstein like a trout about to be grilled.

      “Legal scholars” everywhere just took a hit to their credibility by association.

      Reply
    5. 5.

      WTFGhost

      September 24, 2025 at 12:45 pm

      I’ve never been fond of the expression “Don’t be so open minded that your brains fall out” because, in my experience, it’s usually said by the same sort of people who believe things like “God said ‘Adam and Eve’ not ‘Adam and Steve’” are devastatingly clever witticisms.

      But by cracky, the former adage seems to actually apply here with Sunstein.

      That is the point of the expression

      The idea is, you hear a remote tribe uses poop in healing ceremonies,  and instead of saying “unusual, rare, but it works for them.”

      Your brains fall out when you say poop isn’t universally considered dirty and unhealthy.  I’ll guarantee you no one uses poop to heal wounds, even if it’s used “to heal”.

      Reply
    6. 6.

      schrodingers_cat

      September 24, 2025 at 12:46 pm

      Chuck Grassley wants to end OPT for international students. OPT allows students to work for a US employer after graduation for a limited time (1-3 years, depending on your major and your degree)

      Reply
    7. 7.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 12:47 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:

      Gotta distract the farmers somehow.

      Reply
    8. 8.

      schrodingers_cat

      September 24, 2025 at 12:48 pm

      @Baud: This was their plan all along. That they are going after illegal immigrants was just the smokescreen. MAGAs want a moratorium on all immigration.

      Reply
    9. 9.

      Librettist

      September 24, 2025 at 12:48 pm

      @Mathguy:

      You’ll never get invited to the right parties with that attitude.

      Reply
    10. 10.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 12:49 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:

      100%

      We were right all along, yet again.

      Reply
    11. 11.

      WTFGhost

      September 24, 2025 at 12:51 pm

      1. @Baud: ouch. Fair cop, though.
      Reply
    12. 12.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 12:53 pm

      Over at LG&M I saw that at the end of the interview Sunstein really shows his …. well, maybe not ass, but certainly butt-crack.  I don’t have the text (no New Yorker subscription), but it really was funny AF.  Poor Cass, so far from heaven, so close to a giant pile of his own poo.

      Reply
    13. 13.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 12:54 pm

      @Baud: I’m reminded of Hillel the Elder: “Whatever is hateful and distasteful to you, do not do to your fellow man. This is the entire Torah, the rest is commentary. Go learn.”

      Reply
    14. 14.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 12:56 pm

      @schrodingers_cat: Governments all around the world are just salivating at this, just -salivating-.  They’re all looking forward to getting their best-and-brightest back home after educations in the US, instead of losing that investment.

      Reply
    15. 15.

      schrodingers_cat

      September 24, 2025 at 12:56 pm

      @Baud: As an added bonus we also destroy our system of higher education and research. They want to destroy the economy so that they can reconfigure the society as they wish.

      The crusade against vaccines should also been seen in the same light.

      Reply
    16. 16.

      M31

      September 24, 2025 at 12:56 pm

      @Chetan Murthy:

      so far from heaven, so close to a giant pile of his own poo.

      nominated

      Reply
    17. 17.

      Betty Cracker

      September 24, 2025 at 12:57 pm

      @Chetan Murthy: Here’s the last few lines:

      Chotiner: Professor, thank you so much for doing this.

      Sunstein: Great, thanks. If we go light on the Kissinger part, I wouldn’t complain, because it could dwarf everything else.

      Further proof of Sunstein’s astounding obtuseness, really. He should hope everyone fixates on his friendship with Kissinger!

      Reply
    18. 18.

      Soprano2

      September 24, 2025 at 12:58 pm

      @schrodingers_cat: Of course that was the plan all along. You don’t think their fear of brown/black people is isolated to those who are undocumented, do you? /s/s/s/s/s/ They lie about everything, which is something the average person hasn’t caught on to yet because the press covers for them so much.

      Reply
    19. 19.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 12:58 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:

      They want a nation of serfs. Many natural serfs appear to want that too.

      Reply
    20. 20.

      M31

      September 24, 2025 at 12:59 pm

      @Betty Cracker: lol “please don’t put in the newspaper I was friends with Kissinger”

      Reply
    21. 21.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:01 pm

      @Betty Cracker: Thank you, Betty!  He’s amazing, isn’t he?

      My (cynical, ok, really cynical) take is that the reason he goes so easy on ol’ Henry K, is that he’s -jealous- of Henry’s influence and power.  And you can’t hate those whose seat you would wish to assume.

      Reply
    22. 22.

      Old School

      September 24, 2025 at 1:01 pm

      @Chetan Murthy:

       I don’t have the text (no New Yorker subscription), but it really was funny AF.

      I assume it was this part as it made me laugh.

      I feel generally very grateful for friendship, and he was, when I knew him, a person of immense kindness. Those who think of him as someone who was something horrible or worse, I don’t know what to say about that.

      But you could have an opinion on it. You have an opinion on all kinds of things, right?

      Well, on him and his role in government, that’s not something I’ve particularly studied, so I don’t know. I know some people who think he was a horrible historic figure. They would say, “Would you be friends with Genghis Khan? Would you be friends with Stalin?” And I wouldn’t be friends with Stalin, so I concede that.

      Well, the next time someone brings up a terrible anecdote about Cambodia or Vietnam, I will definitely drop the Star Wars story to show that people have two sides.

      Reply
    23. 23.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 1:02 pm

      In all seriousness, if one were to actually defend liberalism today, one can and should acknowledge that the historical progression of liberalism flowed through many problematic figures who would not satisfy the modern American conception of a good liberal.

      CS didn’t seem up to the task of making that argument.

      Reply
    24. 24.

      geg6

      September 24, 2025 at 1:04 pm

      I don’t understand why anyone agrees to an interview with the guy.  He eviscerates them every.  single. time.

       

      Reply
    25. 25.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:08 pm

      @geg6: That would be the case if these evildoers and hangers-on had any self-awareness, I guess?  But as they say [ok, ok, I know nothing about “human systems engineering”, so this is the take from a Martian] “nobody is the villain in their own life story”, so I have to believe that all these people believe they’re heroes, and thus that the Chotiner interview will go well.

      I will add that when Chotiner does interview somebody who’s genuinely decent, the result is a lovely conversation that nobody is ashamed of, and that informs the readers well.

      Reply
    26. 26.

      Belafon

      September 24, 2025 at 1:10 pm

      @Old School:

      I will definitely drop the Star Wars story to show that people have two sides.

       
      I’ve been trying to convince the dad of one of my son’s friends that Kirk isn’t someone to admire (he has been warming up to Kirk as he’s seen more of the Christian stuff Kirk said), and his response was to say that we wouldn’t want to be judged by all the stuff we have said.

      Reply
    27. 27.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 1:13 pm

      @Belafon:

      That was your opportunity to say some nasty things.

      Reply
    28. 28.

      FastEdD

      September 24, 2025 at 1:14 pm

      Hi, this is Ed. I was raptured yesterday and I’ve got a couple questions. Where can you get Premium Unleaded? If this is heaven I know driving has to be involved. Where can I get guitar strings? I saw a guy wandering around looking for 72 Virginians. I think he was confused. There sure are a lot of dogs up here.

      Reply
    29. 29.

      bluefoot

      September 24, 2025 at 1:14 pm

      @Chetan Murthy: A Swiss friend of mine who has lived here in the US for at least 15 years has been getting calls from Swiss universities asking if she’s interested in faculty positions.

      i was just looking at a job posting that has the option of the UK or Switzerland. I’m American and working in MA (and a brown woman) but I’m wondering if the company would allow me to relocate…

      Reply
    30. 30.

      Deputinize America

      September 24, 2025 at 1:15 pm

      @Mathguy:

      Sunstein is absolutely the mean of the Harvard faculty.

      Dipshit legal academics just like him who couldn’t practice their way out of a paper bag have uttered many a stentorian set of mutterings about the sacred nature of SCOTUS and its doctrines for the past 60 years, resulting in inflated bullshit that hid the notion that its all sanctimonious claptrap.

      Reply
    31. 31.

      jlowe

      September 24, 2025 at 1:16 pm

      Sunstein. Whatta maroon. All the media training I’ve ever read stresses that you should know who’s interviewing you before sitting down for the interview.

      Reply
    32. 32.

      Steve in the ATL

      September 24, 2025 at 1:16 pm

      @Chetan Murthy:

      (no New Yorker subscription)

      That may be the saddest thing I’ve heard today

      Reply
    33. 33.

      schrodingers_cat

      September 24, 2025 at 1:17 pm

      @Baud: Indeed, especially considering how many leading lights of liberalism were neck deep in the colonial enterprise. Their definitions of liberty only applied to white men

      John Stuart Mill was a lifelong employee of the East India Company, for example.

      Reply
    34. 34.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 1:17 pm

      The Tennessee Holler

      @TheTNHoller

      NASHVILLE – 2 guys in Red MAGA hats showed up on HBCU TSU’s campus uninvited, permitless, and set up a table with signs railing against DEI & undocumented immigrants. Students confronted them without violence. Police moved them. NAACP: “An intentional effort to antagonize”
      x.com/TheTNHoller/status/1970824478935699876

      Reply
    35. 35.

      dmsilev

      September 24, 2025 at 1:18 pm

      @geg6:  Arrogance, really.

      The other thing is that not all of his interviews are eviscerations. If you’re a genuine expert in something and honest about it and the limits of your expertise, he can ask insightful and interesting questions. It’s when you’re full of hot air and preaching nonsense that he gives you enough rope to hang yourself.

      People in category B usually think of themselves as being in category A.

      Reply
    36. 36.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 1:18 pm

      @rikyrah:

      Police moved them.

       
      The students or the red hats?

      Reply
    37. 37.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:18 pm

      @bluefoot: I’m brown, and retired.  If I weren’t, I’d -already- be overseas via my employer (or having found a new job).

      I feel compelled to say though: I don’t think I’d go to the UK.  They’re in their own right-wing MAGA-like spiral, and I don’t know that they’ve got what it takes to pull out.

      Reply
    38. 38.

      schrodingers_cat

      September 24, 2025 at 1:18 pm

      @Belafon: For minute I thought you were speaking of James T Kirk.

      Reply
    39. 39.

      Old Man Shadow

      September 24, 2025 at 1:19 pm

      They’re all a part of the American aristocracy.

      It’s a club where the wealthy can make horrific decisions that destroy dozens, hundreds, or thousands of lives and pretend they’re good people because it was all legal. People who have filled graveyards under cover of law. People who ruined lives, drained the vitality from people, and left husks behind crippled by exploitation, addiction, and poison. People who sentenced the poor to cancers, diseases, and the slow strangulation of poverty, and sit down and enjoy a nice dinner at the club with their peers.

      People who can still enjoy a hearty chuckle with their political opponents even as the chaos and misery spreads outside.

      The delusion is strong. And they will remain deluded about their own goodness and the harm they inflict on humanity until one of the victims strikes them back. Then they cry “terrorism!” and “Murder!” and the law trips over itself to protect them, while letting tens of thousands choke and vomit on the toxins they legally spew.

      Reply
    40. 40.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:19 pm

      @Steve in the ATL: Heh.  I’ll be signing up for Le Monde in a couple of days (gotta practice my French).

      Reply
    41. 41.

      Captain C

      September 24, 2025 at 1:20 pm

      Sunstein’s conception of liberalism is quite capacious; it includes…including Friedrich von Hayek and Robert Nozick, as well as politicians such as Ronald Reagan.

      I mean, at some point, words have to mean something other than “whatever I want or need them to at the time.”  On the other hand, you could probably cause a self-immolating rumble among a gaggle of libertarians by calling Hayek a liberal.

      Also, had I known Kissinger and called him a friend, I would hope I would be smart enough not to admit that in public, even under torture.

      Reply
    42. 42.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:21 pm

      @Old Man Shadow: Dickensian, your comment is.  [A Tale of Two Cities, wasn’t it?]

      Reply
    43. 43.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:22 pm

      @Captain C: Whenever somebody classes “classical liberal” and “liberal” in the same bin, I know they’re either an idiot or a gaslighter.

      Reply
    44. 44.

      comrade scotts agenda of rage

      September 24, 2025 at 1:22 pm

      This pretty much sums things up:

      I hosted Sunstein for an event during the W Admin. He praised John Yoo and his torture memo. Sunstein’s definition of liberalism is bleak libertarianism. He holds Harvard’s highest ranked professorship. You don’t have to look any further for how we got to MAGA.
      x.com/samhaselby/status/1970828438778114451

      Reply
    45. 45.

      Old School

      September 24, 2025 at 1:25 pm

      @Baud:

      The students or the red hats?

      The red hats.

      Today, a group of individuals unaffiliated with Tennessee State University appeared on campus without prior notice. In accordance with university police, any demonstration or protest requires advance approval and permitting.

      Campus police and staff responded promptly, and the individuals were escorted from university grounds without incident. At all times, TSU students conducted themselves in a professional and respectful manner.

      The safety and well-being of our students, faculty, and staff remain our highest priority. TSU will continues to uphold university policies and ensure that campus remains a safe, welcoming, and orderly environment for all members of our community.

      Reply
    46. 46.

      Captain C

      September 24, 2025 at 1:25 pm

      @Old School:

      Well, the next time someone brings up a terrible anecdote about Cambodia or Vietnam, I will definitely drop the Star Wars story to show that people have two sides.

      It’s too bad Anthony Bourdain isn’t alive and wasn’t hanging around for this interview.  He also has some opinions on Kissinger and Cambodia.

      “Once you’ve been to Cambodia, you’ll never stop wanting to beat Henry Kissinger to death with your bare hands. You will never again be able to open a newspaper and read about that treacherous, prevaricating, murderous scumbag sitting down for a nice chat with Charlie Rose or attending some black-tie affair for a new glossy magazine without choking. Witness what Henry did in Cambodia – the fruits of his genius for statesmanship – and you will never understand why he’s not sitting in the dock at The Hague next to Milošević.”

      Reply
    47. 47.

      NaijaGal

      September 24, 2025 at 1:26 pm

      @Old Man Shadow: Bingo.

      Reply
    48. 48.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 1:26 pm

      @Old School:

      Good. Thanks.

      Reply
    49. 49.

      matt

      September 24, 2025 at 1:26 pm

      The law is full of soft headed idiots like Sunstein and Turley. The whole profession is protected from competition by restrictive guard rails. Bar exams should be open exams. Pass the test, you can practice.

      Reply
    50. 50.

      Captain C

      September 24, 2025 at 1:27 pm

      @Belafon:

      his response was to say that we wouldn’t want to be judged by all the stuff we have said.

      Presumably nor our actions.  Just what’s in our hearts, which others will never know so they should assume the best, despite any and all evidence to the contrary.

      Reply
    51. 51.

      Booger

      September 24, 2025 at 1:27 pm

      @Old Man Shadow: That’s a great last graf.

      Reply
    52. 52.

      Captain C

      September 24, 2025 at 1:30 pm

      @Baud:  I would like to think it was Casino style, even though security at this college no doubt has more sense than that in this circumstance.

      Reply
    53. 53.

      Gin & Tonic

      September 24, 2025 at 1:30 pm

      @schrodingers_cat: ​Pretty sure that’s the class of visa my now-DIL was on when she and my son met. She’d gotten an MA degree in NYC and was working there, more or less in her field of study.

      Reply
    54. 54.

      Cliosfanboy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:30 pm

      @rikyrah: ame post but on BlueSky if you want to avoid the Nazi Bird site.

      bsky.app/profile/thetnholler.bsky.social/post/3lzlg4fja7c2o

      Reply
    55. 55.

      Gin & Tonic

      September 24, 2025 at 1:32 pm

      @Betty Cracker: ​
      Another alleged “smart guy” who’s never heard of the Streisand Effect.

      Reply
    56. 56.

      Deputinize America

      September 24, 2025 at 1:32 pm

      @Old Man Shadow:

      Enjoy this little scribble….

      When the demon chose Harold Crane as his next host, he thought he’d struck gold. Crane was the founder of Titan Capital, one of those hedge funds that announced itself with Greek myth branding while quietly pillaging retirement accounts. A man with the face of a lion and the heart of an abacus, Harold was famous for saying things like, “If you’re not monetizing suffering, you’re leaving money on the table.”

      Perfect raw material for possession.

      The demon seeped into Harold’s body during a board meeting, expecting to feel the usual thrill—human greed amplified, morality corroded, the sweet taste of corruption spreading like wine spilled on silk. But instead, he found…nothing to corrode. Harold’s soul was already an empty vault.

      The demon dug deeper. He saw the trail Harold had left: shuttered factories after “strategic restructurings,” hospitals stripped for parts by “efficiency consultants,” farmers bankrupted by commodity bets Harold didn’t even bother to remember making. The demon, who had personally overseen genocides and plagues, was horrified. This man has industrialized damnation.

      Harold had managed to create human misery at scale, outsourced, automated, and tax-advantaged. Compared to Harold, Hell looked quaint.

      The demon recoiled. Possession here was like trying to out-evil a flamethrower with a matchstick. And so, in disgust, the demon did the only thing he could to preserve his pride: he made Harold less evil.

      At first, the changes were subtle. Harold suddenly hesitated before liquidating a family-owned company. He felt a weird twitch of guilt while golfing on an island that had been conveniently emptied of its native inhabitants. Then came the breakdown: a nightmare in which Harold saw a balance sheet morph into a ledger of suicides and divorces.

      When he awoke, Harold announced to his stunned analysts that Titan Capital would no longer “extract value from human despair.” They laughed, assuming it was a joke. Then Harold sold their most profitable distressed-debt portfolio and donated the proceeds to rebuild the very town they had bankrupted.

      The markets panicked. CNBC called him erratic. His peers whispered that he’d found God, or worse, regulation. But Harold only smiled faintly, like a man learning how to use his own hands for something other than strangling.

      Meanwhile, the demon sulked inside him. He hadn’t come to Earth to run a goddamn soup kitchen. But every time he tried to whisper fresh malice—short the housing market, corner the grain supply, squeeze the dying—it felt stale, redundant. Harold had already written that playbook and run it into the ground. Evil, in Harold’s hands, had become boring.

      So the demon resigned himself to being Harold’s conscience.

      Begrudgingly.

      And thus the great irony: Wall Street, which had once cheered Harold as a genius, now despised him as a traitor. The world, which had once cursed his name, began erecting statues in his honor. All because a demon discovered there was nothing left to corrupt.
      Somewhere in Hell, the other demons howled with laughter. Imagine coming to Earth to sow destruction, only to leave your host a philanthropist.

      But then again, perhaps it made sense. After all, there’s only so much room for evil in one body. Harold Crane had already maxed out the account.

      Reply
    57. 57.

      Cliosfanboy

      September 24, 2025 at 1:33 pm

      @Captain C:

       

      Ace Rothstein: I want you vacate this guy off the premises, and I want you to exit him off his feet and use his head to open the fucking door.

      Reply
    58. 58.

      Captain C

      September 24, 2025 at 1:36 pm

      @Cliosfanboy: Come to think of it, that’s what Kissinger probably deserved everywhere he went.

      Reply
    59. 59.

      Jeffro

      September 24, 2025 at 1:38 pm

      eighty-five features in this ‘general liberal belief system’…why…it’s practically designed (by Sunstein) to find something, or several dozen somethings, to hate!

      Reply
    60. 60.

      Old Man Shadow

      September 24, 2025 at 1:39 pm

      @Deputinize America: I like it.

      “Hell is empty and all the devils are here.”

      Reply
    61. 61.

      Omnes Omnibus

      September 24, 2025 at 1:40 pm

      If you want to go back to the 1840s, Sunstein is correct about all of these schools of thought coming out of liberalism.  It’s also why some Euro types (and leftists) don’t understand US liberalism.

      OTOH, it’s fucking useless for discussing left of center politics in the US in 2025.

      Reply
    62. 62.

      Darkrose

      September 24, 2025 at 1:45 pm

      @geg6: The people he eviscerates invariably think they’re the smartest person in every room, and that they’ll be able to outwit the silly journalist. What they don’t realize is that Chotiner is just doing basic journalist and asking follow-up questions. This people are so used to a media that fawns over them and accepts their intellectual posturing as brilliance that they let Chotiner trap them with their own words.

      Reply
    63. 63.

      Citizen Alan

      September 24, 2025 at 1:46 pm

      @matt:  Perhaps, but the guard rails for aspiring lawyers are nothing compared to the guard rails for doctors. I think the primary reason for the existence of the AMA is to keep the number of people who can legally practice medicine artificially low so that doctor salaries will remain high compared to what a physician will make in a European country with universal healthcare. And just the other day, I was reading a fascinating article about the role the AMA played in the early criminalization of abortion in the mid-19th century, which I knew nothing about. They wanted to become the national gatekeepers for public health and saw midwifery as a rival paradigm. So they used a lot of bullshit anti-abortion arguments to get it criminalized nationwide and drive midwifery underground.

      Reply
    64. 64.

      Belafon

      September 24, 2025 at 1:46 pm

      @Baud: I gave him the list I had. The guy is trying his hardest not to do politics, though he has come around to saying he doesn’t like Trump.

      Reply
    65. 65.

      Belafon

      September 24, 2025 at 1:48 pm

      @rikyrah: “I agree. I’m completely against mediocre white guys getting placed in positions they’re not qualified for just for the sake of diversity.”

      Reply
    66. 66.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 1:53 pm

      @Baud:

      the red hats

      Reply
    67. 67.

      Omnes Omnibus

      September 24, 2025 at 1:55 pm

      @matt: A bar exam tells exactly fuck all about a person’s preparedness to practice law.

      Reply
    68. 68.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 1:57 pm

      Judge finds misconduct by Trump’s DOJ in Luigi Mangione case

      Reddit post inks to court order

      Reply
    69. 69.

      Steve in the ATL

      September 24, 2025 at 1:57 pm

      One of my friends took his class at HLS (Sunstein is a deity in the exciting world of administrative law) and reports that it was the worst class he has ever had and Sunstein the worst professor. When I told him about this interview, he dropped what he was doing and picked his phone to read it on the New Yorker app (which I assume is de rigeur for Balloon Juice aficionados). I look forward to our debrief!

      Reply
    70. 70.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 1:59 pm

      Chotiner is like the Eye of Sauron, but in a good way. Don’t stare into that palantir.

      Reply
    71. 71.

      hitchhiker

      September 24, 2025 at 1:59 pm

      TIL that Samantha Power is married to a schlub.

      Reply
    72. 72.

      glc

      September 24, 2025 at 2:01 pm

      Chotiner calling

      Reply
    73. 73.

      Mathguy

      September 24, 2025 at 2:04 pm

      @FastEdD: I shouldn’t have been eating when I read this-almost coughed up a lung laughing.

      Reply
    74. 74.

      Ishiyama

      September 24, 2025 at 2:07 pm

      So I was reading that half the students in law school these days (51 years after my first year) have no debts when they graduate, due to having family wealth. The other half are saddled with unsustainable obligations that take a lifetime to pay back.

      I remember the changes to the bankruptcy laws that allowed the infliction of debt-peonage on two generations of students. It was a bipartisan collaboration by the Democrats and the Republicans. Phooey.

      Reply
    75. 75.

      Josie

      September 24, 2025 at 2:07 pm

      @Omnes Omnibus: ​
       My son agrees with you. He also says that law school does not prepare you to practice law.

      Reply
    76. 76.

      Sister Machine Gun of Quiet Harmony

      September 24, 2025 at 2:09 pm

      @Baud:

      85 principles is peak liberal stereotype

      Hilarious and true.

      Reply
    77. 77.

      laura

      September 24, 2025 at 2:11 pm

      That Sunstein is an alumni of U of Chicago Law is all the information I need to know that he’s fucked in the head- though it’s mirrored in the Econ department too. Human misery for profit and hegemony is their brand. And there he was, just led down the garden path, and his whole, filthy, unwashed ass just hanging out for all to see.

      Reply
    78. 78.

      Marc

      September 24, 2025 at 2:11 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:  This was their plan all along. That they are going after illegal immigrants was just the smokescreen. MAGAs want a moratorium on all immigration.

      Of course, academic and corporate America have also been told they will be investigated for any pattern of selecting non-white people and women over white men, not that most of them need much of an incentive to return to ’50s style admissions/hiring demographics.

      This is not just about immigrants, white immigration will not be limited.

      Reply
    79. 79.

      Omnes Omnibus

      September 24, 2025 at 2:14 pm

      @laura: Richard Cordray is a U of C law grad.  Just saying.

      Reply
    80. 80.

      Steve in the ATL

      September 24, 2025 at 2:15 pm

      @Josie: law school teaches you how to think like a lawyer, which is rather important, and the basic concepts of the law.  It sure as hell doesn’t teach you about managing clients or case loads or litigating or taking depositions or drafting any legal document other than appellate briefs–which, in turns out, very few lawyers actually do in their practices–or interacting with judges/clients/opposing counsel/the other people in law firms/the real world, and a million other things.  Which is why some law schools have turned the otherwise useless third year into a clinic.

      Reply
    81. 81.

      Nettoyeur

      September 24, 2025 at 2:18 pm

      @Old Man Shadow: Tom and Daisy in the great Gatsby.

      Reply
    82. 82.

      Anonymous At Work

      September 24, 2025 at 2:20 pm

      I’ve read a great deal of Sunstein’s work as a legal scholar and proponent of Law & Psychology movement to counter the Law & Economics movement.  When he is writing his own research, he is pretty concrete.  When he is writing about his experiences as a world-traveler and seer of & into the depths of humanity, well, if that sounds like the beginning of a bad Thomas Freidman column, that’s the point.

      Reply
    83. 83.

      Anonymous At Work

      September 24, 2025 at 2:22 pm

      @laura: He was on the same floor and possibly next door to Professor Obama, so there is that.

      And Sunstein helped get Law & Psychology taken more seriously.  It analyzes legal situations based on how people actually think, as opposed to how Law & Economics based on how mathematical models prefer human act to keep the graphs clean.

      Reply
    84. 84.

      OGliberal

      September 24, 2025 at 2:22 pm

      @Chetan Murthy: I think the “white people gone crazy” phenomenon goes well beyond this country and the UK.  Half of Europe seems wrapped up in the immigrant hatred….and, yes, it’s mostly focused on those immigrants who tend to be non-white.

      Reply
    85. 85.

      Old School

      September 24, 2025 at 2:22 pm

      Reposted by DougJ:

      BREAKING: Florida cop treated for autism after exposure to tylenol during traffic stop

      — Dr. Doug (@raptorbreath.bsky.social) September 23, 2025 at 7:54 AM

      Reply
    86. 86.

      Omnes Omnibus

      September 24, 2025 at 2:23 pm

      @Steve in the ATL: Third year was the best year of law school.

      Reply
    87. 87.

      Chetan Murthy

      September 24, 2025 at 2:29 pm

      @OGliberal: A friend suggested that maybe Europe wasn’t so great, b/c of this.  My response is pretty much that yes, there’ll be racism everywhere (just as there is in the US).  What matters, is that there be rule of law.  There used-to-be  rule of law in the US.  Ah well.

      Reply
    88. 88.

      OGliberal

      September 24, 2025 at 2:29 pm

      @Old School: I’m a relatively recent new resident of Nashville but it – and Davidson County, in general – is very blue so I would be surprised if it was the other way around.  The MAGA folks were probably not from the city or even the county.  While I don’t have a lot of experience with/exposure to the Metro cops here, it looks like it was TSU police who did the removing and it would be shocking if the school employed wing nuts on their force.

      Reply
    89. 89.

      Gin & Tonic

      September 24, 2025 at 2:32 pm

      @Omnes Omnibus: ​Is that the year you finally have enough time to get laid?

      Reply
    90. 90.

      Omnes Omnibus

      September 24, 2025 at 2:33 pm

      @Gin & Tonic: I did better second year.  Thanks for asking.

      Reply
    91. 91.

      Marc

      September 24, 2025 at 2:33 pm

      @OGliberal:  I have to ask (and I know it applies to all people), but when exactly were the leadership of the US, UK, most of Europe, and Russia anything other than “white people gone crazy”?

      Reply
    92. 92.

      jonas

      September 24, 2025 at 2:34 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:  Chuck Grassley wants to end OPT for international students. OPT allows students to work for a US employer after graduation for a limited time (1-3 years, depending on your major and your degree)

      The major impact I’ve seen of this is that most foreign students feel like they have to major in a STEM field if they want to stay and work in the US after graduation, because the visa requires finding employment in computer science, engineering, medicine, etc.  I’ve talked to a number who love history or poetry or theater, but think their visas will be yanked if they want to study those subjects.

      The agenda here, of course, is not to open up more fields of study/work to foreign students, but simply discourage foreign students from applying to study in the US at all. They think this will open up more slots for native-born students or something, but of course what it will really do is send a bunch of institutions into financial crisis and reduce the financial aid universities can offer everyone else. So your local college will probably close, and the next nearest university won’t be able to fund your scholarship. Well done, idiots.

      Reply
    93. 93.

      Chief Oshkosh

      September 24, 2025 at 2:34 pm

      @Captain C: Still pains me that Bourdain committed suicide. I still can’t watch any of his old shows or re-read his books. Such a waste and I’m so sorry his demons got the upper hand one too many times.

      Reply
    94. 94.

      pajaro

      September 24, 2025 at 2:34 pm

      Here’s my Sunstein story:  In February 2020, he wrote an article in Bloomberg, on the subject of “probability neglect” which is his view that when significant risks can occur from a choice, people tend to neglect the low probability of an outcome when choosing.  His example was individuals avoiding attending congregate events  because of the slight risk of harm from a new respiratory virus that has started to appear.  I read the article at the time my 75-year old wife was making the decision whether she should cancel her trip to New York to attend a wedding to which she had been invited that was to be held in the first weekend in March.  She eventually decided not to go (our daughter actually cried, begging her not to go).  As it turned out, one or more people at the wedding unknowingly had covid.  At least one person attending ended up dying from exposure.  A dear friend (who was at the table where my wife would have been sitting) got covid, nearly died,  and ended up with an extended stay in the emergency room.

      In March, Sunstein wrote another article on risk and covid, pointing out how sensible it might be to take precautions, now that the danger was evident.  He never even referenced his prior article, which made light of the danger, at precisely the time it was most threatening, since the prevalence and lethality of the disease were most uncertain.

      He’s a true ivory tower guy, ignorant of the fact that the numbers he’s crunching in many of his studies involve living breathing human beings.

      Reply
    95. 95.

      Jackie

      September 24, 2025 at 2:37 pm

      The classless FFOTUS:

      The White House unveiled a “Presidential Walk of Fame” just outside the Oval Office featuring portraits of all U.S. presidents — except former President Joe Biden.

      For Biden, the White House instead used a framed photo of an autopen writing Biden’s signature.

      The WH is being run by kindergartners. The link itself is X – which I don’t belong to, so I can’t open.

      Reply
    96. 96.

      Baud

      September 24, 2025 at 2:38 pm

      @Jackie:

      And the press club laughed.

      Reply
    97. 97.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 2:40 pm

      @schrodingers_cat: they also seem to want a moratorium on good food.

      If magas get their culinary way, all steak will be bland, boiled or burned.  All curries will be prohibited.  Nothing spicier than ketchup will be consumed.  Pho is right outta here.  Only peppers of the bell variety will be allowed.  These people want a world so drab even our food must be as dull as their own existences.  I don’t even think brown mustards will be safe.   Sad

      Reply
    98. 98.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 2:43 pm

      @schrodingers_cat: one day it should dawn on this regime if they destroy every goose that lays golden eggs in America there will be nothing left for them to pilfer.

      Reply
    99. 99.

      bluefoot

      September 24, 2025 at 2:44 pm

      @Chetan Murthy: I agree about the UK. The US and the UK seem to be leapfrogging each other when it comes to insanity. They started w Brexit, we elected T, etc…

      I need to get serious about researching working overseas. I live in MA but that’s only delaying the inevitable, so to speak.

      Reply
    100. 100.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 2:45 pm

      Olga Nesterova
      @onestpress
      Character.

      Macron, President of France, was forced to walk NYC streets after cops blocked him for Trump’s motorcade, despite him literally calling Trump asking to cross the street.

      So he walked around. Went to a coffee shop, took pics with baristas and NYers. No tantrum.
      x.com/onestpress/status/1970874022545297464

      Reply
    101. 101.

      mali muso

      September 24, 2025 at 2:45 pm

      @jonas: To be clear, OPT as it is currently structured is available to all F-1 (international) students who complete a degree.  It allows them to obtain work experience within the field they studied for up to 1 year.  For those in STEM fields, there is an option to apply for an extension of a 24 months.  Rational governments try to make their countries attractive to the best and brightest by providing some kind of pathway from study to work (see Canada, etc.) but that’s never been the American way.  And now it sounds like we’ll just close the doors entirely.

      Reply
    102. 102.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 2:45 pm

      Yashar Ali 🐘
      @yashar
      The White House has placed a photo of an auto-pen signature instead of a portrait of former President Biden on the “Presidential Walk of Fame”
      x.com/yashar/status/1970905244357017730

      Reply
    103. 103.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 2:46 pm

      The “Debate Me Bro” Grift: How Trolls Weaponized The Marketplace Of Ideas

      …”The “debate me bro” playbook is simple and effective: demand that serious people engage with your conspiracy theories or extremist talking points. If they decline, cry “censorship!” and claim they’re “afraid of the truth.” If they accept, turn the interaction into a performance designed to generate viral clips and false legitimacy. It’s a heads-I-win-tails-you-lose proposition that has nothing to do with genuine intellectual discourse.

      The fundamental issue with “debate me bro” culture isn’t just that it’s obnoxious, it’s that it creates a false equivalence between good-faith expertise and bad-faith trolling. When you agree to debate someone pushing long-debunked conspiracy theories or openly hateful ideologies, you’re implicitly suggesting that their position deserves equal consideration alongside established facts and expert analysis.”…

      https://www.techdirt.com/2025/09/17/the-debate-me-bro-grift-how-trolls-weaponized-the-marketplace-of-ideas/

      Reply
    104. 104.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 2:46 pm

      @FastEdD: question

      Did you fly straight up or was there a downdraft?

      Reply
    105. 105.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 2:47 pm

      CNN Breaking News
      @cnnbrk
      Two ICE detainees were killed in a shooting at a Dallas facility, a Homeland Security official says. A third is in serious condition. Follow live updates:
      x.com/cnnbrk/status/1970896546339107009

      Reply
    106. 106.

      schrodingers_cat

      September 24, 2025 at 2:48 pm

      @Gin & Tonic: OPT is optional practical training. It lets you work in the US for a year or three after you graduate.

      Reply
    107. 107.

      Marc

      September 24, 2025 at 2:49 pm

      @HopefullyNotcassandra: I remember the bland food days (although my family was into spicy BBQ).  One day, a woman named Joyce Chen opened a small restaurant two blocks away from my childhood home.  The whole neighborhood was a very different place within two decades.

      Reply
    108. 108.

      OGliberal

      September 24, 2025 at 2:50 pm

      @Marc: Yeah…pretty much goes without saying.

      Reply
    109. 109.

      Gin & Tonic

      September 24, 2025 at 2:51 pm

      Interesting, if hyper-local, lawyer story. Rhode Island has a body called the Coastal Resources Management Council, whose responsibilities are pretty much what you’d expect from the name (public access to beaches is a very important thing here.) For the last couple of years there’s been a dispute between a country club (i.e. golf course) on the coast and the CRMC about actions the club has taken to try to protect part of their property from encroachment by the sea. The dispute reached some kind of a climax yesterday when a rock wall emplaced by the golf course was (again) deemed illegal and mandated to be removed.

      Turns out that the former chair of the CRMC, an attorney, who resigned in 2021, is currently representing the country club in its battle with the CRMC.

      Principles? You stupid child. Like Ray Liotta said, “fuck you, pay me.”

      Reply
    110. 110.

      Eunicecycle

      September 24, 2025 at 2:57 pm

      @Jackie: I hope the next President puts up a picture of shit instead of Trump’s portrait. I know that would also be classless, but JFC.

      Reply
    111. 111.

      iKropoclast

      September 24, 2025 at 2:58 pm

      @Eunicecycle: I hope the next President puts up a picture of shit instead of Trump’s portrait. I know that would also be classless, but JFC.

      Still classier and more appealing to the eye than an actual photo of Trump.

      Reply
    112. 112.

      gene108

      September 24, 2025 at 2:59 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:

      Chuck Grassley wants to end OPT for international students. OPT allows students to work for a US employer after graduation for a limited time (1-3 years, depending on your major and your degree)

      Will also hurt university enrollment. A double win for the white Christian nationalists.

      Reply
    113. 113.

      Sister Machine Gun of Quiet Harmony

      September 24, 2025 at 3:03 pm

      @Eunicecycle: They should just use the mugshot.

      Reply
    114. 114.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:05 pm

      @rikyrah: “Creation science” advocates were the pioneers of this– they’d often snooker scientists into having public debates with them in front of their preferred audiences, which never went well for the scientists (who were usually used to tough but good-faith debate among scientists, not bad-faith trolling from religious grifters). Eventually advocates like the NCSE’s Eugenie Scott had to warn them not to do it.

      Reply
    115. 115.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:06 pm

      @Marc: better food equals happier people.  The joys of fusion cooking are just being discovered too.

      Reply
    116. 116.

      geg6

      September 24, 2025 at 3:06 pm

      @dmsilev:

      You’re right.  But the arrogance and lack of self awareness of some of these people that he manages to uncover with such ease is, to me, astounding.  No one gets past him.  No one.

      Reply
    117. 117.

      Josie

      September 24, 2025 at 3:08 pm

      @Sister Machine Gun of Quiet Harmony: ​ I think the picture Trump used for himself is the mugshot. He thinks it makes him look tough, I guess.​

      Reply
    118. 118.

      FastEdD

      September 24, 2025 at 3:08 pm

      @HopefullyNotcassandra: I was driving with the sunroof open. Otherwise I’d go splat. No guitar strings either. Only harp.

      Reply
    119. 119.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:09 pm

      @Eunicecycle: I am hoping for a revival of Damnatio memoriae.  Think how grand it would be to not have to hear anything about this pathetic, pitiful president again.

      Reply
    120. 120.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:10 pm

      @FastEdD: that was smart.

      Thank you for the chortle, too

      Reply
    121. 121.

      geg6

      September 24, 2025 at 3:12 pm

      @Darkrose:

      Yes and it’s delicious.

      Reply
    122. 122.

      Gretchen

      September 24, 2025 at 3:13 pm

      Speaking of terrible takes, JD Vance claimed that the space program was so successful because we didn’t rely on immigrants. He’s unaware that we went Nazi-scientist shopping after the war to pump up our rocket expertise.

      Reply
    123. 123.

      They Call Me Noni

      September 24, 2025 at 3:14 pm

      @Cliosfanboy: I don’t understand what the heck they thought they were going to accomplish.  All they did is reinforce the fact that they’re ignorant.

      Reply
    124. 124.

      laura

      September 24, 2025 at 3:14 pm

      @Omnes Omnibus: attending Oxford for an economics degree probably prevented him from the U of C ick.

      Also, too, happy birthday to Ragnorak Lobster!

      Reply
    125. 125.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:17 pm

      @Gretchen: oh, Nazis don’t count, they’re JD Vance’s kind of guys.

      Reply
    126. 126.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:19 pm

      @Omnes Omnibus: Yes, and it’s where the descriptor “neolib” came from. (Like I said recently, neoliberalism is a legit term for a legit thing, but if someone uses it and implies that the only neoliberals around are Democrats, I smell a rat.)

      Reply
    127. 127.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 3:21 pm

      @schrodingers_cat:

      Chuck Grassley wants to end OPT for international students. OPT allows students to work for a US employer after graduation for a limited time (1-3 years, depending on your major and your degree)

       

      JUST RIDICULOUS

      Reply
    128. 128.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:21 pm

      @HopefullyNotcassandra: Did you see the guy who complained recently that sourdough was woke bread?

      Reply
    129. 129.

      They Call Me Noni

      September 24, 2025 at 3:22 pm

      @Jackie: They make time for the most petulant bullshit.

      Reply
    130. 130.

      Belafon

      September 24, 2025 at 3:22 pm

      @Gretchen: Now explain why you hate women, especially black women, JD.

      Reply
    131. 131.

      billcoop4

      September 24, 2025 at 3:22 pm

      @Steve in the ATL: Re: Third year

      @Omnes Omnibus:

      I recall enjoying 3rd year of law school (W&L ’86L — I seem to recall Steve is W&L, too, but I don’t remember if undergrad or law) because I was able to treat it mostly like graduate school with some actual intellectually interesting topics, include Professor “Lash” Larue’s course on Ancient Law (Greek, Roman, and Hebrew notions of law).

       

      Also too the Trial Practice Seminar taught by a Circuit Judge, which was also engaging and of some practical benefit.

       

      BC in NY

      Reply
    132. 132.

      iKropoclast

      September 24, 2025 at 3:23 pm

      @Matt McIrvin: Did you see the guy who complained recently that sourdough was woke bread?

      The bread that you start by preserving the remains of a potentially diverse set of prior breads? Sounds right.

      Reply
    133. 133.

      Marc

      September 24, 2025 at 3:27 pm

      @Gretchen: Speaking of terrible takes, JD Vance claimed that the space program was so successful because we didn’t rely on immigrants.

      German people were already white, therefore not considered immigrants.

      Reply
    134. 134.

      Belafon

      September 24, 2025 at 3:30 pm

      @Gretchen: Someone should also ask him about the Chinese immigrant that started our space program, who we drove out of the country back to China where he helped them start their space program.

      Reply
    135. 135.

      Marc

      September 24, 2025 at 3:32 pm

      @HopefullyNotcassandra:  Better food sometimes means happier white people, as our original multi-cultural neighborhood is almost completely gentrified (I do have one relative left there).

      Reply
    136. 136.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:32 pm

      @Gretchen: Also, the Apollo astronauts were trained in geology by an Egyptian-American scientist, Farouk El-Baz.

      Reply
    137. 137.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:32 pm

      @Gretchen: the vice president is also ignoring the fact that everybody, but native Americans, is the child of immigrants.  Funny how this obvious fact has been sifted out of the maga mind.

      Reply
    138. 138.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:34 pm

      @Marc: turning vibrancy into blandness is the founding skill of nurse ratchet types everywhere.

      Reply
    139. 139.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:35 pm

      @Belafon: Yes! Qian Xuesen, or as he was known here,  Hsue-shen Tsien.

      Reply
    140. 140.

      Marc

      September 24, 2025 at 3:37 pm

      @Belafon: Better yet, ask him about the white literal devil worshiper who worked with said Chinese immigrant to found both JPL and Aerojet General (big manufacturer of solid fuel rocket motors), then blew himself up in his home lab (or was he blown up?).

      Reply
    141. 141.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:38 pm

      @HopefullyNotcassandra: Some of those guys draw a distinction between “settlers” (good, because imagined as conquering heroes) and “immigrants” (bad).

      Reply
    142. 142.

      Another Scott

      September 24, 2025 at 3:39 pm

      @Gretchen: HappyToast (who lives in the UK) has a great picture on his Patreon thing today.

      Sgt Peppers Immigration
      Sep 24, 2025

      So Farage wanting to kick out people who are already home owners because they migrated here made me angry and made me think about which familiar faces and things we wouldn’t have if it weren’t for lovely, lovely immigration.

      All these people are either direct immigrants, the children of immigrants or got where they are/in front of our eyes/ears because of immigrants.

      Just about everyone “British” that you know fits in that category.

      Thanks.

      Best wishes,
      Scott.

      Reply
    143. 143.

      counterfactual

      September 24, 2025 at 3:43 pm

      @Gretchen: I just shouted, “What the FUCK!” Yes, the Operation Paperclip Nazis, but also Tsien, refugees from Europe, a bunch of Canadians after the Avro fighter program was terminated….

      Reply
    144. 144.

      Old School

      September 24, 2025 at 3:45 pm

      @Another Scott: To view Happy Toast’s Patreon, you need to subscribe, so here’s the BlueSky version.

      Reply
    145. 145.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:46 pm

      @FastEdD: wait… This IS the bad place!

      Reply
    146. 146.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:49 pm

      @Marc: Have you been to Devil’s Gate?  I think there were condors roosting there recently.

      Reply
    147. 147.

      Matt McIrvin

      September 24, 2025 at 3:50 pm

      @counterfactual: Before that, the Manhattan Project depended heavily on Jewish refugees from Europe and the children of same, and of course one of the big scientific names was an Italian-American.

      Reply
    148. 148.

      MisterMix reader

      September 24, 2025 at 3:51 pm

      Posted @ MisterMix blog

      Scott H • 3 days ago

      The H-1B program is akin to keeping the Federal min wage at $7.25/hr.

      H1-B is a terrible program whose only purpose is to take good paying jobs away from Americans while driving down wages for the rest. These foreign workers, as a rule, are no more qualified than the Americans they displace. What they are is inexpensive and compliant.

      We want them cheap and we want them scared.

      Of course, say any of this at That Other Blog™ and the leading crank there will say any opposition to the program is rooted in racism against Indians, blah, blah, blah.

      People have been writing about the scam that is H-1B for 20+ years now. This is one of the better pieces from a decade ago:

      cringely.com/2015/06/15/the-h-1b-visa-program-is-a-scam/

      Reply
    149. 149.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 3:52 pm

      @Matt McIrvin: You are right, of course.  Folks like our VP just seem driven to turn this country into the same corrupt pits of despair from which most of our ancestors emigrated.  It looks apparent these same folks want to export this corrupt misery to the world.  How very unoriginal of them.

      Reply
    150. 150.

      lowtechcyclist

      September 24, 2025 at 4:02 pm

      @Jeffro: ​

      eighty-five features in this ‘general liberal belief system’…why…it’s practically designed (by Sunstein) to find something, or several dozen somethings, to hate!

      Eighty-five, huh?

      Martin Luther says, “nice try.”

      Reply
    151. 151.

      Another Scott

      September 24, 2025 at 4:14 pm

      @Old School: 👍

      Thanks.

      Best wishes,
      Scott.

      Reply
    152. 152.

      Betty

      September 24, 2025 at 4:17 pm

      Cass Sunstein, one of those on my list of Obama blind spots. He had a lot of say in that administration but it waa kept low-key for the most part. Rahm is number one on the list, and Arne Duncan isn’t far behind. Happy to see him exposed pompous ass he is.

      Reply
    153. 153.

      lowtechcyclist

      September 24, 2025 at 4:18 pm

      @Gretchen: ​

      Speaking of terrible takes, JD Vance claimed that the space program was so successful because we didn’t rely on immigrants. He’s unaware that we went Nazi-scientist shopping after the war to pump up our rocket expertise.

      “‘Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down? That’s not my department’ says Wernher von Braun.”

      Reply
    154. 154.

      comrade scotts agenda of rage

      September 24, 2025 at 4:20 pm

      @Betty:

      Didn’t know that, should have known.

      Don’t forget other luminaries like Larry Fucking Summers, Timothy Fucking Geitner and Austan Fucking Goolsbie.

      Reply
    155. 155.

      Gretchen

      September 24, 2025 at 4:22 pm

      @HopefullyNotcassandra: The University of Illinois has so many Chinese students that there are about 2 dozen businesses near campus serving authentic food, groceries, bakeries and tea shops. The town is wondering what will happen if there are no more visas for Chinese students. The vibrant restaurant scene has been a recruiting tool to get Chinese students to go there. nytimes.com/2025/07/14/dining/chinese-food-urbana-champaign-student-visa.html?unlocked_article_code=…

      Reply
    156. 156.

      cain

      September 24, 2025 at 4:27 pm

      @rikyrah: ​
       
      I swear to god, if some asshole media person starts talking about how a democratic president should reach out to GOP and do kumbayaa or whatever, they should get the message of “we don’t play that way, anymore”

      Reply
    157. 157.

      Jackie

      September 24, 2025 at 4:30 pm

      @Sister Machine Gun of Quiet Harmony:

      @Eunicecycle: They should just use the mugshot.

      FFOTUS LOVES his mug shot. He considers it a badge of honor and thinks he looks tough.

      I’d use the infamous pic of him leaving the helicopter with a hangdog loser expression with his red tie unknotted and dangling – after his dismal Tulsa rally 2020. The rally that killed Herman Cain.

      Reply
    158. 158.

      rikyrah

      September 24, 2025 at 4:32 pm

      @Gretchen:

      Speaking of terrible takes, JD Vance claimed that the space program was so successful because we didn’t rely on immigrants. He’s unaware that we went Nazi-scientist shopping after the war to pump up our rocket expertise.

       

      Hidden Figures tells how much that is a lie….we got those running from Nazis and actual Nazis at NASA

      Reply
    159. 159.

      Betty

      September 24, 2025 at 4:42 pm

      @comrade scotts agenda of rage: I did forget Geithner, my bad. Sunstein is out now crying that he is getting hate mail because of the interview. Boo hoo!

      Reply
    160. 160.

      Jacel

      September 24, 2025 at 4:49 pm

      @Jackie: So was a portrait of Jefferson Davis included alongside other Presidents in Trump’s Walk Of Fame?

      Reply
    161. 161.

      Jackie

      September 24, 2025 at 4:52 pm

      @Jacel: I wouldn’t doubt it.

      Reply
    162. 162.

      JML

      September 24, 2025 at 5:31 pm

      @Betty: much as I love Obama, Barack is a bit of an ivory tower liberal himself, despite his background as a community organizer.

      Reply
    163. 163.

      glc

      September 24, 2025 at 6:12 pm

      @Anonymous At Work:

      a bad Thomas Friedman column

      Just tightening up the prose, don’t mind me.

      Reply
    164. 164.

      HopefullyNotcassandra

      September 24, 2025 at 6:19 pm

      @Gretchen:  I hope that scene survives! What is wrong with people that they demand the imposition of drab sameness on others?   These are the same folks who look at the wilderness and think “what this needs is miles of hot asphalt and concrete.”  It must be fear.

      Reply
    165. 165.

      Pyre Light

      September 24, 2025 at 8:15 pm

      85 effing points to define liberalism and he still couldn’t narrow it down to less than “not fascist or communist” apparently.

      Reply
    166. 166.

      Manyakitty

      September 24, 2025 at 8:43 pm

      @schrodingers_cat: this is exactly right.

      Reply
    167. 167.

      Kayla Rudbek

      September 24, 2025 at 10:58 pm

      @satby: the thing with legal scholarship is that the law school journals are edited and selected mostly by the students, not the faculty. It seems to me that there’s less peer review by experts than there is in the sciences (weirdly enough for such an adversarial profession as law).

      Reply
    168. 168.

      Kayla Rudbek

      September 24, 2025 at 11:07 pm

      @matt: I’m glad that I went to law school in the state of Wisconsin, as the two law schools there had to actually teach the law instead of relying on preparatory courses to get the graduates to pass a bar exam, and letting the professors get too theoretical. This was due to diploma privilege aka the three-year bar exam (automatic admission upon graduation, so our professors knew that they couldn’t rely on a bar exam to weed people out).

      Reply
    169. 169.

      Kayla Rudbek

      September 24, 2025 at 11:17 pm

      @Ishiyama: yeah, I’ve seen that a lot more people who want to write patents are going the patent agent route instead of the patent attorney route in recent years, I would assume because of the cost of law school.

      Granted, some people start out at a law firm or other employer as patent agents first and then get reimbursed for going to law school by their employer, but it’s a longer process to go part-time and generally the more prestigious schools don’t offer part-time programs as an option. Although considering what the Supine Six and now this clown Sunstein are like, I would be willing to bet that the top students at a less prestigious school would be better lawyers than a snooty Harvard or Yale Law graduate who’s convinced that the sun shines out of their ass…

      Reply
    170. 170.

      Kayla Rudbek

      September 24, 2025 at 11:18 pm

      @laura: I only know two people who I really like who went to University of Chicago, and I think they went there for undergrad…

      Reply
    171. 171.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:28 am

      @Baud: The good Lord only had 10…

      (apologies to Mr. Clemenceau)

      Reply
    172. 172.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:35 am

      @Old School: Now Kaganovich, what a cutup! I’d definitely be friends with him! Jewish too (tho an athiest).

      Reply
    173. 173.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:48 am

      @Jackie: It’s like the 6th grade meanest girl is making these decisions. It’s so so lame.

      Reply
    174. 174.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:49 am

      @rikyrah: There’s a classy dude. I hope we get one of those someday….

      Reply
    175. 175.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:50 am

      @rikyrah: This guy was so anti-ICE that he murdered the detainees for them…

      Reply
    176. 176.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:53 am

      @Jackie: That would be a better pic.

      Reply
    177. 177.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:54 am

      @Jacel: It’ll be there tomorrow!

      Reply
    178. 178.

      Paul in KY

      September 25, 2025 at 9:54 am

      @Kayla Rudbek: I liked Lip, but he flunked out.

      Reply

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