Happy Groundhog Day!
Yes, this still really happens: In Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, famous groundhog Punxsutawney Phil comes out of his burrow or whatever it is and either sees or doesnât see his shadow, portending a short (in the former case) or long (in the latter) winter. As I type these words at 7:20 a.m., Iâm
livestreaming the exciting event on the website of Altoonaâs WTAJ-TV (I have no idea if that link will still work when youâre reading this). It looks just like the movie: Roughly 20 or so men in top hats and tails arrayed across the stage, and a massive crowd. Kind of heartwarming, in its way. I think I even spotted
Ned Ryerson in the crowd, peddling life insurance to some poor soul. Word came around 8 a.m.: six more weeks of winter. Kinda dog bites man.
Back to reality. Thereâs an
interesting report (paywalled) in todayâs
Financial Times about the growth and modernization of Russiaâs military over the past decade. After a disastrous bit of adventurism in Georgia in 2008, Russia spent a lot of money building up forces and weapons and offering better pay and even, believe it or not, eliminating bloat, which doesnât happen often in this world with respect to militaries. The army now has 900,000 soldiers (to Ukraineâs 261,000) and 544 attack helicopters to Ukraineâs 34.
Meanwhile,
The Washington Post reports that Vladimir Putinâs moves have served chiefly to unite the NATO alliance. I guess this is supposed to be reassuring, but it seems to imply that NATO is getting ready to rumble, which is pretty much the most nonreassuring thought in the world.Â
The New York Times popped
another big story Tuesday night on the insurrection frontâthat the January 6 committee is looking into Donald Trumpâs involvement in efforts to impound voting machines. Details are fuzzy, but the committee recently received a âdocument containing presidential findings concerning the security of the 2020 election after it occurred and ordering various actions.â Quick upshot: People around Trump are turning over documents, maybe a lot of documents.Â
Letâs shift to Capitol Hill: New Mexico Democratic Senator Ben Ray Luján
had a stroke Tuesday. We wish him the best, obviously, and a full recovery is expected. For now, this leaves Chuck Schumer with 49 Democrats. Goodbye modified Build Back Better. And maybeânot certainly, but maybeâgoodbye new Supreme Court justice. He is not on the Judiciary Committee, but unless the nominee wins support of at least one Republican, there can be no vote until Luján returns as the fiftieth vote. Something tells me that Mitch McConnell is explaining all this to Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins, and Mitt Romney.
On the Covid front: The
Times has a depressing report on how the death rate in the United States is far higher than in other similar nations. The reason is the Occamâs razor one: We have fewer people fully vaxxed. Thatâs largely because we have sinister figures like the presumably vaccinated (itâs company policy) Fox News hosts egging on people like Washington state trooper Robert LeMay, whom
the network promoted as an anti-vax hero and who just died of Covid. Some sharp-eyed future historian chronicling the collapse of civic virtue in this republic will certainly highlight this Fox-LeMay story, which awaits its
Gibbon.Â
Meanwhile, a few numbers. Just 64 percent of Americans are fully vaxxed, and 75 percent have submitted to one dose, which ranks us forty-seventh in the world, according to
this Times chart. So senseless and unnecessary.
At NewRepublic.com today, Kate Aronoff
reports on Republican and fossil fuelâbacked opposition to the nomination of Sarah Bloom Raskin to a high-ranking position at the Federal Reserve (yes, she is married to
this guy). Daniel Strauss
digs into the vitally importantâand potentially rancorousâDemocratic primary for the Pennsylvania Senate seat. And Tim Noah
explains why Republicans are loaded for bear to oppose another Biden nomineeâthis time, over the idea (God forbid) that more middle-class workers should earn overtime pay.
Finally, a housekeeping note: After this week, weâre not going to be producing this daily newsletter. You will still receive a daily email from TNR highlighting our stories for the day, but Iâm switching to writing a weekly newsletter that will go out every Friday, starting February 11. Tim Noah will write tomorrowâs newsletter, and Fridayâs is TBD. We thank you for reading, and I hope youâll check out my weekly newsletter once it starts.
Solidarity,
âMichael Tomasky, editor