All right, so Sign of the Four. It appears that I will once again have to do an intro before getting into the meat of the story.
Essayist-Lawyer
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Sherlock Holmes: Sign of the Four, an Intro
Trump or Vance? Pick Your Poison
I know some people think there is something in the Epstein files that will end Trump's Presidency.
Color me skeptical. If inciting an insurrection that put Congress's lives in danger wasn't enough to persuade Republicans to impeach and convict, it is hard to imagine anything that could.
Still, I will concede that the chances of Trump being impeached and convicted have gone from impossible to highly implausible, so I suppose you never know.* And besides, Trump appears to be losing his mind, so there is always the possibility of him being sidelined for incapacity. So it is time to give some serious thought to a JD Vance Presidency.
So, what do I make of JD Vance? In picking a Vice President, Trump had a strong incentive to pick the worst possible candidate to make himself impeachment proof (and even 25h Amendment-proof). I go back and forth between whether Vance is an opportunist with no principles, or a dogmatic ideologue. Everyone I have asked says opportunist. I can only hope so, because at least an opportunist can change his mind when it is to his advantage. But at the same time, these two things may not be as different as they seem. Someone who is dogmatically rigid about one principle -- in Vance's case, xenophobia -- can be extremely unprincipled and opportunistic about everything else so long as they serve the one goal. So Vance may actually combine the worst of both traits. He seems just as authoritarian as Trump, but a whole lot smarter and more disciplined.
Nonetheless, I want to compare the two men point by point.
Personality. No matter how slimy Vance is, he simply is not pathological in the same way Trump is. Vance is immoral rather than amoral. While Trump has the ethical standards of a tapeworm -- not only none, but self-evidently absurd to even ask -- Vance at least knows what ethical standards are. Likewise, while I do not trust Vance to respect the rule of law, I expect him at least to understand the concept. Vance may have a grossly warped sense of the national interest, at least he knows how to distinguish the national interest from his personal interest. And I don't expect Vance to be as personally vindictive as Trump. Advantage: Vance.
Cult following. Vance does not have Trump's charisma. No one trusts him. He simply is not going to attract the sort of cult following that Trump does. There is a high probability that the MAGA movement will split under him. Advantage: Vance.
The Epstein files. Vance did not rise to national prominence until after Epstein's fall, so he cannot possibly be in the Epstein files. He will no doubt be happy to release the files, seeing every powerful figure of either party ruined as a result as a rival eliminated. Advantage: Vance. I think.
Corruption. Trump is running his entire administration as a giant bribe-fest. I don't expect Vance to operate in those terms. I expect Vance to operate according to principles -- specifically, principled xenophobia. Again, I think this is advantage Vance, but I wouldn't swear to it.
Weaponization of government. Trump's attempts to prosecute his political opponents have been notable failures. His attempts to coerce by withholding federal funds are moderately successful. Federal courts have frequently ruled against him, but the Administration has resisted and the Supreme Court has generally backed them up. The results of Trump's attempts to use the IRS, RICO, surveillance, or terrorism law to target his opponents remain inconclusive. I think that Trump's effectiveness has been somewhat stymied by his tendency to think solely in terms of personal friends and foes, rather than in terms of the Republican Party. I expect Vance to be a lot smarter at this -- to seek to establish a Republican one-party state and target opponents more with administrative and financial penalties that outright criminal investigation. Advantage: Trump, who is more malevolent, but too petty to really pull it off.
Corrupt pardons. I expect both men to order subordinates to commit crimes and then pardon them. I don't expect Vance to take outright bribes to give pardons. So advantage Vance.
Respect for election outcomes. Tough to tell. Trump has made himself clear. He considers any election that he loses to be fraudulent by definition. He is dropping very broad hints that he will treat the midterms as fraudulent of the Democrats win. He attempted to use force in the form of an angry mob last time and I fully expect him to be ready to resort to the Deep State this time. Vance duly said that he did not consider the 2020 election to be fair, and that Congress and the Vice President could overturn the results. He has remained non-committal about future elections. While he will no doubt do all he can to rig future elections, I think he will consider staging an outright coup to be to unsubtle, although I could be wrong. Advantage: Vance, who might accept defeat over Trump, who definitely won't.
Immigration. If Vance is not a dogmatic ideologue on this one, he is giving a good imitation of one. Trump occasionally wavers when he fears that his crackdown will cause economic damage. Vance shows no such hesitations and seems determined to proceed with the program of ethnic cleansing regardless of the costs. Thus do we see the advantage of an opportunist over an ideologue. Advantage: Trump.
Foreign policy. Trump's foreign policy is all about him. He wants a Nobel Peace Prize. He favors anyone who bribes or flatters him. This is easier for an authoritarian to do than a democratic leader, so the effect is one of favoring authoritarians, but more by accident than by design. Vance, by contrast, has a clear ideological goal -- the destruction of liberal democracy in favor of blood and soil nationalism. Thus Trump favors Russia over Ukraine partly because Putin is better at flattering him and has more resources to bribe him, partly because he wants the Nobel Peace Prize for ending the war and thinks the easiest way to achieve it is by coercing the weaker party into submission, and partly because he instinctively sides with strength. Vance, by contrast, favors Russia because he wants Putin to win and impose his vision on as much of Europe as possible. He also wants to coerce Europe into putting the most rightwing leaders into power as possible, who can be trusted to halt all immigration and undertake something like our regime of mass deportations. Advantage: Trump. I prefer the unprincipled opportunist over the dogmatic ideologue.
Economic policy. Honestly, I want this to be as bad as possible, on the theory that economic hardship is the best way to undermine Trump/Vance and we can survive economic hardship, since we have many times before. Trump's policy seems to be one of protectionism with the goals of (1) restoring a manufacturing economy, (2) circumventing Congress's power of the purse and having his own personal slush fund, and (3) extorting as many bribes as possible. A fourth goal is probably to be able to announce all sorts of trade deals, whether they materialize or not. The result is a flighty policy that ruins small business with uncertainty, but can be very advantageous for big business, since they can buy any favors they want. Vance is most likely to focus on goal (1), building a manufacturing economy. This is unlikely to succeed and will doubtless cause great hardship along the way, though it will be less corrupt than Trump's approach and also cause less uncertainty. Advantage: Vance, I think, but I could easily be wrong.
Healthcare. I would expect Vance to keep RFK, Jr. on, but reign him in. By all means, feel free to talk a MAHA game, but don't interfere with actual vaccines or other useful health developments. I would also expect Vance to understand much better than Trump when his policies were stripping people of their health insurance and to avoid such actions. Here, Vance is the less doctrinaire of the two. Damaging our healthcare system and stripping people of their insurance does nothing to promote his Fortress American plan and violates Rule Number One of Smart Authoritarians (don't do unpopular things unless they promote your power). So advantage Vance if you care about people's healthcare and Trump if you want things to get as bad as possible.
Energy policy. I expect Vance to be more rational here than Trump. Sure, he will no doubt denounce renewables as "woke," tout fossil fuels as manly, remove environmental regulations restricting fossil fuels, and boast about our oil and gas boom. But actually suppressing renewables will raise people's electric bills, so I expect him to drop Trump's vendetta against renewables and quietly allow them to grow. Yes, rising energy prices will hurt the incumbent party, but given that the survival of the Earth is at stake here, I would say advantage Vance.
Succession. Trump will undoubtedly seek to circumvent the 22nd Amendment and be President for life. On the other hand, he is 79 years old and getting less coherent all the time, so "life" will probably not be all that long. Vance is easily young enough to be in power for 30 years if he could get away with it, but I don't think he can. My guess is that instead he will attempt something like Mexico under the PRI -- a one-party state, with each Republican President serving two four-year terms and then stepping down for a chosen successor. Doubtless Vance will want to manipulate things from behind the scenes, but more likely he will fail and just establish a de facto one-party system that will become increasingly corrupt and sclerotic. This one is tough. Trump's dictatorship will inherently be shorter than Vance's one-party system, but also more arbitrary and lawless. And thoroughly undermining the rule of law in his own lifetime is apt to cause damage that will continue long after he is gone. So advantage Vance here, probably, but maybe not.
But there is one advantage inherent to impeachment, which some people offered as a reason to impeach GW Bush even if it meant getting Cheney as President. It smacks down the executive and establishes legislative supremacy. It gives JD Vance a warning that he, too, can be impeached if he steps too far out of line. And for that reason, I suppose, advantage impeachment regardless._________________________________________
Why Charlotte?
When Donald Trump first threatened to deploy the National Guard to Chicago and state and local authorities went to court to stop him, it occurred to me that delay was our ally, at least temporarily. If only deployment could be delayed for long enough, winter would set in and disrupt operations. It certainly occurred to me that Greg Bovino and his Border Patrol goons might redeploy to warmer climates as winter set in. And, indeed, we are getting confirmation that it is not a good idea to invade the Midwest in the winter. So I am not surprised that Bovino and his thugs have taken their show on the road.
But why Charlotte, of all places?
I assume that Charlotte was chosen over some comparable target because of the video showing a fatal stabbing on a train that was much circulated in rightwing circles and convinced Trump of the need for a crackdown. Actually, the video showed a natural born citizen killing an immigrant, but it showed a Black citizen killing a White immigrant, but I don't imagine that mattered much to Team Trump. The important thing was that it showed one of Them killing one of Us, and who cares about parsing fine distinctions among Them.*
But why Charlotte was chosen in particular is less important than the general reasons.
First, as discussed above, Bovino and his gang presumably wanted to go somewhere warmer during the winter.
They may also have concluded that Los Angeles and Chicago were too big to subdue and decided that a smaller city with a smaller foreign-born population would be a softer target.
Both suppositions appear confirmed by the choice of New Orleans as the next target. New Orleans is also southern, of course. And, though more famous than Charlotte, New Orleans actually has a smaller population.
But above all, I assume, the goal is to choose a city that is not particularly well-known and not an obvious target for that very reason. To make clear that no one, anywhere, is safe.**
*Donald Trump's mobilizing of the National Guard and immigration crackdown in Washington, D.C. was apparently inspired when a DOGE staffer was injured in a carjacking -- also committed by natural born citizens, but that didn't stop Trump from blaming immigrants for crime.
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Sherlock Holmes: A Study in Scarlet: The Mystery
So, on to the first Sherlock Holmes mystery -- A Study in Scarlet. Besides seeing the extent to which the story relies on clues available to the audience, I also want to see the broad cross section of London society who are Holmes' clients -- and other characters.
Where Are We Now?
I have given what I take to be the signs to look for to see if Donald Trump's power is truly on the wane, or merely suffering a setback -- has democracy won a skirmish, or the actual war?
In escalating order of importance, I would say we should be on the lookout and see whether:
- Media outlets bought by Trump allies are willing to criticize or oppose him;
- Republicans in Congress splinter and Trump cannot bring them into line;
- Attempts to target opposing organizations through taxes or RICO are thrown out, or never materialize;
- Universities, high power law firms, and other institutions targeted by Trump start consistently defying him;
- The Supreme Court makes a meaningful attempt to reign Trump in;
- Democrats win control of the House and Trump cannot stop them;
- Democrats win control of the Senate and Trump cannot stop them;
- Growing numbers of state and local jurisdictions reject cooperation with ICE, putting more strain on the organization;
- ICE starts losing personnel faster than it can recruit them and begins shrinking;
- Trump supporters stop making death threats and harassment against people who he criticizes;
- Big money interests start standing up to him.
- Media outlets bought by Trump allies are willing to criticize or oppose him. Well, Paramount bought out CBS and fired Stephen Colbert but kept South Park, and let it hit Trump hard. And new CBS editor Bari Weiss claims that she wants to create a serious center-right station and shut out the lunatics. I guess we will see. And certainly many people feared that Patrick Soon-Shiong, owner of the LA Times would turn it into a pro-Trump rag, but it has been absolutely unsparing in publicizing ICE outrages. The Washington Post has a mixed record. So I think it is best to say we are well short of a MAGA takeover of media, although it still could happen.
- Republicans in Congress splinter and Trump cannot bring them into line. There are certainly signs that this is happening.
- Attempts to target opposing organizations through taxes or RICO are thrown out, or never materialize. Way too early to tell.
- Universities, high power law firms, and other institutions targeted by Trump start consistently defying him. Also too early to tell.
- The Supreme Court makes a meaningful attempt to reign Trump in. The Supreme Court appears to intend to reign in Trump's tariffs and keep him from firing members of the Federal Reserve. These probably fit in the category of protecting Trump from himself, rather than reigning him in.
- Democrats win control of the House and Trump cannot stop them. The election is a year off. We will get a better picture of just how far Trump is willing to go to rig or overturn it by next June or so.
- Democrats win control of the Senate and Trump cannot stop them. Ditto.
- Growing numbers of state and local jurisdictions reject cooperation with ICE, putting more strain on the organization. Not so far, although the election for Mayor of Miami is looking -- interesting.
- ICE starts losing personnel faster than it can recruit them and begins shrinking. No sign of it.
- Trump supporters stop making death threats and harassment against people who he criticizes. Definitely not.
- Big money interests start standing up to him. Don't be ridiculous.
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Despair is Dangerous. So is Complacency
Something feels different. It feels as if Donald Trump's attempt to undermine US democracy are failing and his presidency is on the downslope. People who were deeply pessimistic before are looking up.
Of course, throughout August, September, and October, it felt as if we were reaching an irreversible tipping point toward dictatorship and nothing could stop it.
All of which just goes to show that feelings are not facts. When things look bad, it is good to remember that hope is no guarantee of success, but despair means giving up and guarantees defeat. But when things start to look up, it is a mistake to declare mission accomplished too early because that, too, means giving up the fight and letting Team Trump make a comeback.
Signs Trump's power is waning
Certainly there are signs that Trump's power may be waning.
Most obviously, the November elections went poorly for Republicans, and Trump has accepted the outcome as valid.
Donald Trump and Russ Vought encouraged the government shutdown, intending a power grab. They were not notably successful at it, and took a significant political blow that maybe, just maybe, may discourage them from seeking any future government shutdowns.
Congressional Republicans openly revolted over the Epstein files.
Trump has proposed a healthcare plan that would replace subsidies to buy insurance with direct payments. Maybe Republicans will all line up behind it when he cracks the whip, but somehow it seems unlikely.
Senate Republicans are refusing to end the filibuster or blue slips (allowing Senators a de facto veto on judicial appointments in their own states).
Indiana Republicans are refusing to redistrict.
Trump is starting to withdraw some tariffs to lower prices.
Elite universities are rejecting his favored funding-for-control proposals.
His proposed 50-year mortgage went over like a lead balloon.
He appears to be quietly backing away from plans to deploy the National Guard in Portland and Chicago.
Greg Bovino and his Border Patrol thugs, after vowing to stay in Chicago till their mass deportations were complete, are moving on, mission not accomplished.
The politically motivated prosecution of James Comey is facing dismissal by the judge and possible disciplinary sanctions.
And the Adam Schiff investigation is facing an actual DOJ investigation!
All of which clearly shows that (1) Trump has not consolidated complete power yet and (2) he has experienced a setback in the attempt. But let there be no mistake. His attempt is far from over, and he will be back.
But he has plenty of cards left
There is plenty of room for foot-dragging or selective release on the Epstein files, as well as the prospect of the whole thing becoming an all-out moral panic. And if documents addressing Trump ever do come, the whole thing will probably be anticlimactic. (See Russiagate).
His popularity will no doubt improve now that the shutdown is over. Withdrawing the tariffs may boost the economy and further improve his standing.
The Supreme Court may grant him unbridled discretion in deploying the National Guard.
ICE is receiving a massive increase in personnel, budget, surveillance capability, and thuggishness.
Federal money remains a powerful tool of coercion.
Trump allies are buying up ever-growing shares of media.
RICO and tax investigations of opposing organizations are just beginning.
But scariest of all is the upcoming midterm election. Attempts are already well underway to rig the midterms through gerrymanders, control of media companies, and various voter suppression laws. A large enough landslide can overcome these obstacles, but that leaves scarier options -- ICE raids on Democratic gatherings, or on voting places, pressure on Republican election officials to change results, seizing ballot boxes to "recount" and look for "fraud," and who knows what else.
How to know if we have won
So, what would I take as more than just a setback, but an actual sign that Trump has lost and democracy has won?
I list the following in roughly escalating order of significance.
If media outlets bought by Trump allies remain critical of him.
If Republicans in Congress splinter and Trump cannot bring them into line.
If attempts to target opposing organizations through taxes or RICO are thrown out, or never materialize.
If universities, high power law firms, and other institutions targeted by Trump start consistently defying him.
If the Supreme Court makes a meaningful attempt to reign Trump in.
If Democrats win control of the House and Trump cannot stop them.
If Democrats win control of the Senate and Trump cannot stop them.
If growing numbers of state and local jurisdictions reject cooperation with ICE, putting more strain on the organization.
If ICE starts losing personnel faster than it can recruit them and begins shrinking.
It Trump supporters stop making death threats and harassment against people who he criticizes.
And finally, we will know Trump has truly and decisively failed if big money interests start standing up to him.
So What Do I Recommend?
Well, keep Trump's border closing. He seems to have been highly successful, and like it or not, there is no going back.
I belong to the "Feed ICE into the woodchipper" school.
But feeding ICE into the wood chipper runs into one problem. It appears that the worst offenses are not being committed by ICE, but by Border Patrol, now acting far away from the border, but with the same rough and ready lawlessness they show toward recent border crossers. And if we want to control our borders, we really do need a border patrol. So what do we do about that?
Well, go ahead and disband ICE. They have shown themselves to be a bunch of lawless, racist thugs even if Border Patrol is not in the picture. At present, Border Patrol is given essentially unlimited power to do immigration searches within 100 miles of any border. This includes ocean borders. Their jurisdiction includes about 2/3 of the US population. And they are not barred from searches in the interior, only place under the same restrictions as any law enforcement.
Clearly, we need to limit the Border Patrol to activities connected with, you know, patrolling the border. Start with a clear law barring them from any activity outside the 100 mile zone. Strictly limit their activity along ocean barriers, and impose reasonable restriction along land borders, with a clear focus us on turning back crossings and fighting smuggling. I will admit to not knowing enough to offer anything more specific. And, yes, granted, there are serious problems with any laws under a fundamentally lawless administration, but we should be able to pare back personnel and infrastructure to what is actually needed to secure the border.











