A Rule with Broad Application

Quote of the Day

Most scientists are button counting bottle washers.

Almost all science reporting is complete dreck. If journalists could understand science, they probably wouldn’t be journalists.

McChuck
March 14, 2025
Comment to More Data Supporting Our Universe is a Black Hole

This quote is great for several reasons. The first paragraph originates from a character in the Robert Heinlein book, Time Enough for Love: The Lives of Lazarus Long.

Most “scientists” are bottle washers and button sorters.

Related:

H. L. Mencken’s Law:
Those who can — do.
Those who can’t — teach.

Martin’s Extension:
Those who cannot teach — administrate.

Also:

It doesn’t take much effort to realize the application of the second paragraph has extremely broad application. Substitute almost any profession for “science” and observe how well it works.

I did this substitution as I worked downward through the list occupations. I found it worked quite well for nearly everything down to and including “whoring”, “financial fraud”, and “serial killing”.

The Party of Hate

Quote of the Day

For today’s Democrats, nothing matters more than hating Trump. That, my friends, is a crucial point in all of this. Hatred of Trump has become their go-to position on just about everything; it is what energizes them, motivates them and dictates what they say and do.

Instead of coming up with fresh ideas to show why they’re a reasonable, more rational alternative to Trump, what they’re doing is showing anyone paying attention why he won.

Democrats think Trump is the enemy. But the truth is, they are their own worst enemy.

Bernard Goldberg
March 12, 2025
Opinion: Democrats’ hatred of Trump makes them their own worst enemies

My view of the Democrat party is that they define themselves by what they hate. It may have started earlier, but at least since the U.S. Civil war they hated Republicans because they were going to take their slaves away. Then they hated people with dark colored skin because, “Those uppity blacks think they are just as good as white folk.” Then LBJ convinced the party the votes of the blacks be bought*.

As Democrats warmed up to and passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 Senator Dodd (D) introduced the precursors to the Gun Control Act of 1968. These were Senate Bill 1975 in 1963, “A Bill to Regulate the Interstate Shipment of Firearms”, and Senate Bill 1592 in 1965, “A Bill to Amend the Federal Firearms Act of 1938”.

Democrats, in general, have hated gun owners ever since they started pretending to be defenders of blacks.

I would like to believe that they have a limited amount of hate. If this were true, then as their hatred for Trump, Musk, and MAGAs increased the hatred of gun owners would decrease. But as the legislative record shows, the hatred has spread and increased in intensity rather than focused.

As I have said before, “Gun owners are the ni**ers of the 21st Century” and “the anti-gun bigots are the KKK of the 21st Century.” See also Bigotry is alive and well. And Quote of the day—Dinesh D’Souza.

Perhaps, all this hatred has finally caught up to them.


*

More Data Supporting Our Universe is a Black Hole

These two articles just came out today:

Unexpected JWST Observations Hint We Might Be Inside A Black Hole

A new study looking at observations by the JWST of the early universe has thrown up a new and intriguing mystery; the majority of galaxies appear to be rotating in the same direction. This finding, not predicted by our current understanding of the universe, may hint that we are inside a black hole, according to the study’s authors.

This is the more interesting one:

Is our universe trapped inside a black hole? This James Webb Space Telescope discovery might blow your mind

Without a doubt, since its launch, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has revolutionized our view of the early universe, but its new findings could put astronomers in a spin. In fact, it could tell us something profound about the birth of the universe by possibly hinting that everything we see around us is sealed within a black hole.

In a random universe, scientists would expect to find 50% of galaxies rotating one way, while the other 50% rotate the other way. This new research suggests there is a preferred direction for galactic rotation.

The observations of 263 galaxies that revealed this strangely coordinated cosmic dance was collected as part of the James Webb Space Telescope Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey, or “JADES.”

“It is still not clear what causes this to happen, but there are two primary possible explanations,” team leader Lior Shamir, associate professor of computer science at the Carl R. Ice College of Engineering, said in a statement. “One explanation is that the universe was born rotating. That explanation agrees with theories such as black hole cosmology, which postulates that the entire universe is the interior of a black hole.

Black hole cosmology, also known as “Schwarzschild cosmology,” suggests that our observable universe might be the interior of a black hole itself within a larger parent universe.

The idea was first introduced by theoretical physicist Raj Kumar Pathria and by mathematician I. J. Good. It presents the idea that the “Schwarzchild radius,” better known as the “event horizon,” (the boundary from within which nothing can escape a black hole, not even light) is also the horizon of the visible universe.

This has another implication; each and every black hole in our universe could be the doorway to another “baby universe.” These universes would be unobservable to us because they are also behind an event horizon, a one-way light-trapping point of no return from which light cannot escape, meaning information can never travel from the interior of a black hole to an external observer.

This is a theory that has been championed by Polish theoretical physicist Nikodem Poplawski of the University of New Haven.

“Accordingly, our own universe could be the interior of a black hole existing in another universe,” Poplawski continued. “The motion of matter through the black hole’s boundary, called an event horizon, can only happen in one direction, providing a past-future asymmetry at the horizon and, thus, everywhere in the baby universe.

“The arrow of time in such a universe would, therefore, be inherited, through torsion, from the parent universe.”

The “our universe is a black hole” hypothesis was first published in July 1972. With a deeper dive into the topic in December of the same year.

My first contributions to the topic were over 36 years later:

Emotion Driven Theatrics

Quote of the Day

Giffords’ pivot to actual theater matches their overall approach of using theatrics to push gun control laws that do little to hold criminals accountable for their crimes and instead only penalize law-abiding Americans seeking to exercise their rights to keep and bear arms and the lawful and highly-regulated industry that provides for the exercise of that Constitutional right.

It all makes more sense now.

The Giffords gun control group’s call from theater pitches is just that – theatrics. It won’t lead to safer neighborhoods. It won’t lead to more violent criminals being locked up for committing acts of violence. It won’t protect families, homes or businesses from those choosing to ignore existing laws and instead harm innocent lives.

The theme is similar to Everytown for Gun Safety’s recently launched high dollar ad campaign, which mocks the hard-working and law-abiding Americans who comprise the firearm industry. Everytown, of course personally funded by billionaire gun control stalwart Michael Bloomberg, spared no expense to create a glitzy caricature of the firearm industry, repeating tired and inaccurate tropes about who is buying firearms today and who safeguards the Second Amendment right to do so.

Needless to say, these ad campaigns and the theatre pitches haven’t yet and won’t put any meaningful dent in the occurrence of violent firearm crime or the criminals who commit heinous crimes.

Larry Keane
March 7, 2025
While Gun Control Plays Theatrics, Firearm Industry Pursues Real Solutions for Safer Communities • NSSF

Via JPFO.

The anti-gun side has emotion driven theatrics. We have data, philosophy, and SCOTUS.

The Rats are Leaving the Ship

Quote of the Day

ActBlue, the primary online fundraising platform for Democratic candidates, is experiencing significant internal upheaval as at least seven senior officials resigned late last month.

The departures coincide with an ongoing investigation by congressional Republicans, raising concerns about the organization’s future and its ability to continue as the party’s dominant fundraising tool.

Anthony Gonzalez
March 8, 2025
Democrat Fundraising Group ActBlue Faces Internal Chaos

This could be interesting.

I hope they enjoy their trials.

The Math Says All Paths are Explored

Via email from Mike Hines:

If you think light experiments with one and two slit experiments are mind bending. Try infinite slits with an infinite number of screens.

Then, it is pointed out that just means empty space.

You might think, yeah, sure, all that fancy math may correctly model some things we didn’t understand. But that doesn’t mean the model still works if you make a bunch of changes. And it for certain doesn’t tell us how things really work. It’s just a way of getting the right answer to a difficult problem. The math must have fallen apart when crazy stuff emerges from taking things to an extreme. Right?

No. Not in this case. Watch all the way to the end of this video.

Reality is tough to understand. Really, really tough. Tough beyond your wildest imagination. The simple experiment shown is a demonstration of just how little our feeble brains understand reality on a day-to-day basis.

On the practical side… Does this mean there is a way to tap into fiber optic communications with near zero chance of detection? And, of course, open air laser connections are wide open even when there is no interception of the beam. Encryption would be the only thing blocking a listener.

And since light is just a high frequency electromagnetic wave… What about getting a signal out of the main beam from a directional radio signal? Sure, the amplitude will be small, but is it a way to get a signal boost in addition to what you see from the side lobes? Or, is that what the side lobes really are?

Abolish Firearms Background Checks

Quote of the Day

The idea of undergoing and passing background checks as a prerequisite to exercising the Second Amendment should have never been a thought even in the darkest corners of the most communist minds of the most radical left-wing ideologues, not only because it violates the rights of American citizens but also because it puts undeserving Americans in legal jeopardy and in physical danger.

According to the Government Accountability Office, in 2017, the NICS background check system denied 112,090 people the right to purchase a firearm. Of those 112,090 denials, only 12,710 were investigated. We have to ask ourselves: If over 112,000 people were denied but only 12,710 investigations took place, wouldn’t that be clear evidence that the system is failing and falsely denying good people their right to keep and bear arms?

It gets worse.

That same year, and from that group of 112,090 denials, there were only 12 prosecutions for the crime of attempting to purchase a firearm. Now the anti-gun crowd says, “See, we stopped 12 mass shootings!”

There are problems with that argument.

Dan Wos
March 6, 2025
Should firearms background check system be abolished? | Buckeye Firearms Association

I agree background checks should be abolished. But from a political capital perspective this should be prioritized near the elimination of restrictions on machine guns. It isn’t going to get much traction in the near future.

AI Comment Spam

Yesterday and the day before there were comments to blog posts which were openly AI generated:

Suno API
1 approved
sunoapi.orgx
zegndaoxod@gmail.com
47.89.249.41

It’s crazy how even established mints can cause these kinds of issues. If a company goes out of business like OPM Metals, it seems like there’s little recourse for buyers. Definitely a reminder to be extra cautious about where you get your gold.


Humanize AI Text
2 approved
bexi.ai/features/humanizeai-textx
zegndaoxod@gmail.com
47.89.249.41

This post raises a crucial point about the balance between gun control and civil liberties. History shows us that once a government can disarm its population, the consequences can be far-reaching, often undermining freedoms we take for granted.


Humanize AI Text
2 approved
bexi.ai/features/humanizeai-textx
zegndaoxod@gmail.com
47.89.249.41

It’s wild how much trouble a simple mint change can cause, especially when there’s no clear record of what went wrong. I imagine it’s tough to figure out how to handle gold with so many variables. Are you looking into any backup methods for gold verification in the future?

I let them stay because they were a quality that matched or exceeded the human comments I allow. And, it was interesting to see what AI is doing now.

Early yesterday, there were several AI generated comments in the spam folder. Even though they were decent comments I went ahead and deleted them.

Late last night, more AI comments showed up in the spam folder:

AI Music Generator
0 approved
brev.aix
zengdamo2023@gmail.com
47.89.249.41

The way people in the U.S. view gun rights can be so different depending on their personal or family history. Saad’s perspective, coming from a place with a history of oppression, shows why the Second Amendment isn’t just about the right to own guns—it’s about protecting freedoms we might take for granted.

Photo to Coloring
0 approved
gencolor.ai/photo-to-coloringx
zengdamo2023@gmail.com
47.89.249.41

I love how this ties back to the idea that gun control isn’t just a policy issue—it’s a fundamental rights issue. The 2A violation argument is something too often glossed over in mainstream conversations.


AI Music Generator
0 approved
brev.aix
zengdamo2023@gmail.com
47.89.249.41

I think Gad Saad’s quote brings an interesting point about self-defense, but it also brings up the broader conversation about balancing personal rights with societal safety. In Canada, we often don’t see the same level of everyday gun ownership, so it’s eye-opening to hear from someone who sees it as a cornerstone of freedom.

Looking at them more closely we can see they all have the same email and IP addresses. The email address looks to be Chinese. The IP address is for the ISP “Alibaba US Technology Co., Ltd.” and is in Los Angeles area.

This is a little weird. The comments are just a little “off”. It is sort of like a high functioning autistic.

We live in interesting times.

The Gun Addict Song

Via Stephanie:

There is more than a little truth in this.

Citation Needed

To liven up the rather boring ordinary Markley’s Law Monday QOTD, I offer this:

Jazz fans and gun owners are apparently among the most sexually active Americans. #SexTrivia

Swingles @swingles
Posted on X, August 14, 2023

I have no idea what the basis for this is. And I’ve asked two different chat bots who also come up empty. Here is what Grok has to say:

Joe: Someone on X claims, “Jazz fans and gun owners are apparently among the most sexually active Americans.” Is there any truth to this?

Grok: There’s no direct, credible evidence from recent studies or data that specifically links jazz fans and gun owners to being “among the most sexually active Americans.” The claim seems to stem from a mix of speculation, anecdotal chatter, or possibly a misreading of unrelated research, but it doesn’t hold up under scrutiny based on available information.

Let’s break it down:

  1. Jazz Fans: No studies in the provided context or broader research landscape tie jazz fandom to sexual activity rates. Music preference might influence mood or social behavior—plenty of people associate jazz with romance or seduction—but there’s no data showing jazz fans as a group are notably more sexually active than others. It’s a stretch without evidence.
  2. Gun Owners: There’s been some research on gun ownership and sexual behavior, but it debunks rather than supports the claim. A 2021 study in the American Journal of Men’s Health analyzed data from 780 men and found no association between sexual dysfunction and gun ownership. This counters older psychoanalytic theories (e.g., guns as phallic symbols tied to virility), but it doesn’t suggest gun owners are more sexually active either—just that there’s no link to dysfunction. Sexual activity frequency wasn’t directly measured in this context, and no other recent, representative surveys connect gun ownership to higher sexual activity.
  3. Overlap or Generalization: The X claim might be riffing off stereotypes—jazz fans as passionate, gun owners as assertive—but stereotypes aren’t data. The 2015 Harvard/Northeastern survey on gun ownership (55 million U.S. owners, 3% owning half the guns) and Pew’s 2017 gun owner demographics (30% of adults) give us numbers but say nothing about sexual habits. Similarly, no national surveys like the General Social Survey tie music tastes and gun ownership to sex.

Without a specific, peer-reviewed study backing this exact claim—and none appears in recent literature or the search context—it’s likely just a provocative quip from X, not a fact. People throw out wild assertions online all the time, and this one smells like it’s more about attention than accuracy. If someone’s got a study from 2024 or early 2025 I haven’t seen, I’d be happy to reconsider, but as of now, it’s baseless.

What do you think—did the X poster cite anything, or was it just a hot take?

Joe: I suspect it was just someone trying to get attention by saying something controversial.

Grok: Yeah, that tracks. X is a breeding ground for attention-grabbers tossing out wild claims with no substance. “Jazz fans and gun owners are the horniest Americans” has that perfect mix of quirky and edgy to bait reactions—doesn’t need to be true, just loud. Probably worked, too, since we’re talking about it. Classic move. Anything else from X catching your eye lately?

Nothing to Contribute

Quote of the Day

There you go again, denying your urgent need to prop up your squashed penis with a weapon.

JAY carreon (@JAYcarreon6)
Posted on X, July 8, 2023

It’s not only another Markley’s Law Monday; it is another science denier (see also here)!

Obviously, he has nothing of value to contribute to the conversation. It should come as no surprise his account has been suspended.

Control the Narrative

Via Chuck Petras @Chuck_Petras

A Canadian’s View of The Second Amendment

Quote of the Day

When I was travelling through the South over the past month, I was told by several hosts that they all carry guns. They confirmed that they do not tolerate the nonsense that Jews face elsewhere. America: Never ever give up or water down your Second Amendment. It is the means by which you maintain your freedom from all enemies, domestic and foreign.

Gad Saad @GadSaad
Posted on X, March 7, 2025

Dr. Saad is the psychologist author of the bestselling book, The Parasitic Mind: How Infectious Ideas Are Killing Common Sense. I listened to it and liked it. I follow him on X and find his sarcasm quite entertaining. He taunts the Canadian censors with his criticism of woke ideologies.

His childhood history as a Jew in Beirut likely influences his views on the right to keep and bear arms.

Advice on Buying Gold

Short version, if you buy precious metals, have the metal tested for purity before you agree to the sale.

See below for the long version.

Continue reading

Careful What You Wish For

Quote of the Day

To all progressives who say “gun control” as an alternative to policing: THOSE ARE THE SAME THING. Police are the people who control the guns!!

Another name for gun control is “stop and frisk”!!

Noah Smith 🐇 @Noahpinion
Posted on X, March 6, 2025

No respect for the fourth or the second amendment. No awareness of the consequences of living in a society where those rights are not respected.

He should be careful what his wishes for.

How could it be any clearer?

Quote of the Day

Mexico can’t show the court how a lawfully-made and lawfully-sold gun that is illegally straw purchased, illegally smuggled across an international border, illegally possessed in Mexico and criminally misused by narco-terrorist drug cartels is the responsibility of U.S. gun makers.

Larry Keane
March 6, 2025
What SCOTUS Got Wrong About Firearms and the Gun Business During Arguments in Mexico’s Lawsuit Against US Gun Makers – Shooting News Weekly

I think what happened is that they believed their logic was irrefutable. It went like this, “Guns are bad. Companies that make and sell bad things are bad. These bad things hurt our people. Companies must make us feel good by giving us lots of money.”

How could it be any clearer?

The SCOTUS decision will reflect the soundness of their arguments.

Light can be Made into a Supersolid

Quote of the Day

We actually made light into a solid. That’s pretty awesome.

Dimitris Trypogeorgos
March 5, 2025
Light has been transformed into a ‘supersolid’ for the first time

I took physics in high school. I took two semesters of conventional physics and one semester of “modern” (quantum, relativity, etc.) physics in college. I learned about superfluids. But this is the first I have heard of supersolids.

It turns out they were not actually proven to exist until 2017. So, it is understandable that they were not taught in my classes many years before that.

And making light into anything other than its native photons or electromagnetic waves is beyond my comprehension. Just photons interacting with single/double slits and EM waves which have zero mass yet have momentum is wild enough.

Light into a solid? That just doesn’t compute.

Skynet Smiles

Quote of the Day

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has achieved a major milestone in maritime innovation by completing the development of a prototype unmanned surface vessel (USV) called the USX-1 Defiant.

This vessel, part of the No Manning Required Ship (NOMARS) program, is designed to operate autonomously on extended sea missions without onboard human presence.

A DARPA official confirmed with IE on March 4 that the prototype vessel has been completed and launched and will undergo at-sea trials soon.

The construction of the Defiant, measuring 180 feet and weighing 240 metric tons, was finalized in February 2025, according to DARPA.

The vessel will now undergo rigorous testing in dockside environments and on the open ocean, with plans for a multi-month demonstration in the spring of 2025.

Kapil Kajal
March 4, 2025
US launches first-ever 240-ton ship that needs zero crew to operate

See also, Air Force announces new unmanned fighter jets will be ‘ready to fly this summer’.

100-Year-Old Guns

Via Chuck Petras @Chuck_Petras and FN @FN_America:

My first STI 2011 seemed kind of wild. It was based on a 1911. It also used a lot of the same parts as an “ancient” 1911. That was in about 1996. Now that design is 114 years old.

I’m Surprised. They Have a Clue

Quote of the Day

Takeaways on Why Democrats Have a Cultural Disconnect with the Working Class

  1. Overemphasis on Identity Politics
    Many working-class voters feel Democrats prioritize niche identity-based groups with overbroad, unifying messages, making them feel excluded rather than included.
  2. The “Faculty Lounge” Problem
    Democrats are often viewed as judgmental, out-of-touch, and dismissive of those without elite education or progressive views. This makes the party seem disconnected from everyday people.
  3. Failure to Prioritize Economic Concerns
    While voters struggle with jobs, wages, and inflation, Democrats are seen as more focused on cultural and social issues than on economic progress and opportunity.
  4. Weak Messaging & Communication
    The party’s language is often vague, politically correct, or overly intellectual, making it hard for working class voters to connect with Democratic policies.
  5. Fear of Dissent Within the Party
    Democrats are perceived as intolerant of internal debate, where questioning progressive orthodoxy results in backlash rather than open discussion. Candidates and operatives need to feel more comfortable just
    saying NO to activist groups and unpalatable far-left ideas.
  6. Attachment to Unpopular Institutions
    Democrats are seen as defending elite institutions (academia, media, government bureaucracy) while being critical of institutions working-class people value (churches, small businesses, police).
  7. Allowing the Far Left to Define the Party
    Activist groups and progressive staffers push unpopular cultural positions, making it seem like Democrats are more extreme than they actually are. Operatives and campaigns must remember that activist groups exist to promote their single issue and raise money around it, not to make Democrats electable.
  8. Reactionary Rather Than Proactive
    Democrats often let Republicans set the terms of cultural debates (e.g., crime, immigration) instead of clearly defining their own positions in a way that resonates with voters.
  9. Overreliance on Buzzwords & Political Correctness
    Terms like “pregnant people” and “Latinx” alienate working-class voters who see them as out of touch with real-world terms and vocabulary.
  10. Lack of a Positive National Identity Message
    Democrats focus too much on America’s flaws (racism, sexism, inequality) without acknowledging the country’s progress and potential, making them seem pessimistic and unpatriotic.

Takeaways on Why Democrats Are Not Trusted by the Working Class on the Economy

  1. Vilification of Wealth
    Democrats are seen as hostile to success, indifferent to people’s desire to attain wealth, while reflexively attacking wealthy business leaders instead of promoting economic mobility and aspiration.
  2. Disconnected Messaging
    Democrats focus on broad economic indicators instead of acknowledging real struggles like high prices and stagnant wages, making voters feel dismissed and unheard.
  3. No Clear Economic Vision
    Democrats lack a cohesive, inspiring economic agenda and often present a laundry list of policies rather than a unifying vision.
  4. Over-Prioritization of Social Issues
    Economic policy is often framed through the lens of identity politics rather than broad-based prosperity, making working-class voters feel overlooked.
  5. Perceived Government Overreach
    Voters see Democrats as favoring excessive regulations, inefficient spending, and programs that don’t directly benefit them.
  6. Failure to Own Mistakes
    Democrats defend flawed policies and institutions instead of acknowledging failures and committing to reforms that would improve economic trust.
  7. Republicans as the “Aspirational” Party
    GOP messaging suggests they want voters to be rich, while Democrats are seen as focusing on redistribution rather than wealth creation.
  8. Climate Policy Viewed as Anti-Growth
    The emphasis on climate change is seen as harming job opportunities and economic growth, especially in working-class communities.
  9. The Break Room vs. the Board Room
    Democratic economic messages often come from elites, celebrities, and politicians rather than working class voices that voters can relate to.
  10. Failure to Address Economic Anxiety
    Voters believe Democrats care more about the very poor than the struggling middle class and fail to provide a clear path to economic security. Voters often believe they are wealthier than the people Democrats talk about.

Takeaways on How Democrats Can Reconnect Culturally with the
Working Class

  1. Move Away from Identity Politics
    Stop addressing voters as identity blocs and instead focus on shared American values.
    Use plain language and avoid jargon or abbreviations that can alienate voters. Acknowledge that people have multiple identities (e.g., Black and a veteran) rather than reducing them to one label.
  2. Emphasize Shared Values and Cultural Alignment
    Frame rights as about “freedom and justice,” not just identity-based concerns.
    Highlight similarities between marginalized groups and mainstream American values.
    Embrace patriotism, community, and traditional American imagery (e.g., farms, main streets).
  3. Rebalance the Party’s Cultural Messaging
    Reject fringe positions that alienate the median voter.
    Avoid overly moralistic or condescending messaging; speak plainly and directly.
    Allow candidates to express personal faith and values without fear of backlash.
  4. Reduce Far-Left Influence and Infrastructure
    Build a moderate Democratic infrastructure, including media, talent pipelines, and communications networks.
    Push back against far-left staffers and groups that exert a disproportionate influence on policy and messaging.
    Ban far-left candidate questionnaires and refuse to participate in forums that create ideological purity tests.
  5. . Engage with the Working Class in Their Spaces
    Get out of elite circles and into real communities (e.g., tailgates, gun shows, local restaurants, churches).
    Own the failures of Democratic governance in large cities and commit to improving local government.
    Show up in unfriendly media spaces and engage with voters outside traditional Democratic strongholds.
  6. Improve Democratic Communication & Media Strategy
    Conduct a comprehensive study on media consumption to better understand how to reach voters.
    Develop a stronger, more relatable Democratic media presence (podcasts, social media, sports broadcasting).
    Encourage candidates to be bold, engaging, and authentic in their messaging rather than overly polished.
  7. Embrace Moderation, Individualism, and Masculinity
    Reconnect with values like hard work, rugged individualism, and entrepreneurialism.
    Be more accepting of masculinity and male voters who feel alienated from the party.
    Shift focus from progressive “mission creep” to core Democratic issues that resonate broadly.
  8. Revise Democratic Fundraising Priorities
    Move away from the dominance of small-dollar donors whose preferences may not align with the broader electorate.
    Give candidates and campaigns more flexibility in how they spend funds without excessive donor constraints.

Takeaways on How Democrats Can Rebuild Economic Trust with
Working-Class Voters

  1. Acknowledge Struggles & Speak to Real Concerns
    Recognize that while the economy may be improving broadly, many families are still struggling.
    Avoid dismissing economic anxieties—speak directly to the concerns of working-class voters with tangible solutions. As progressives, we all discussed among our friends and family how expensive things were but politically only wanted to talk about how much better things are getting.
  2. Shift Messaging Away from ‘Handouts’
    Many working-class voters reject policies seen as giveaways (e.g., student loan forgiveness, universal basic income).
    Frame policies around opportunity, empowerment, and work rather than redistribution.
    Small language shifts matter—focus on “better wages” instead of “minimum wage.”
  3. Prioritize Simple, Tangible Policies
    Advocate for middle-class tax cuts, support public education, and propose spending cuts where needed.
    Ensure policies are easy to understand and feel relevant to daily life.
  4. Integrate & Engage with the Business Community
    Democrats need to stop demonizing wealth and corporations broadly.
    Engage with small businesses, business podcasts, podcasts like “Earn Your Leisure” that reach the aspiring class, and entrepreneurs to discuss economic policies.
  5. Be Pro-Aspiration & Pro-Capitalism in a Smart Way
    Recognize that working-class voters value upward mobility and economic success.
    Have a prosperity gospel aimed at the working class.
    Call out corporate abuses individually instead of attacking “corporations” as a whole.
  6. Reform Government & Address Inefficiencies
    Take government complaints seriously and commit to improving its efficiency.
    Push for systemic reforms rather than just defending the status quo.
  7. Center Every Conversation on the Economy
    Lead with economic messaging in speeches, ads, and policy proposals.
    Avoid leading with cultural issues—focus on jobs, wages, and cost-of-living concerns.
  8. Engage Rural & Non-College Voters
    Show up in rural communities and places where Democrats are unpopular.
    Listen to non-college voters without judgment, making their concerns central to policy conversations.
  9. Embrace Populism Thoughtfully
    Critique corporate excess and corruption but avoid an anti-capitalist stance.
    Be bold in challenging inefficient institutions while maintaining credibility as pragmatic reformers.
  10. Showcase Working-Class Voices & Candidates
    Recruit candidates who come from working-class backgrounds and have relatable life experiences.
    Use messengers that working-class voters trust—business leaders, skilled laborers, and community figures.

Third Way
February 2025
Comeback Retreat

Via Dems Unveil New Plan to Beat MAGA: More Gun Shows and Less AOC.

I’m surprised. They have a clue. I thought they were totally clueless and tone deaf.

Two things should now be crystal clear to everyone:

  1. They do not have economic or social principles.
  2. They do have a tribal identity and a desire for power.

Other things of note:

  • They still think of people in terms of class.
  • Their culture of deception is tacitly acknowledged and encouraged.
  • No mention of abortion policy.
  • No mention of gun policy.

Respond appropriately.