California in 2023 Decriminalizes Jaywalking

I’ve written and presented extensively on racist origins and continued abuse of jaywalking laws.

It’s encouraging to see California start the process of removing what has always been an intentionally bad law.

Jaywalking was initially a crime lobbied for by the car industry, and is seen by some as a law that unfairly targets people based on race and economic status.

The Freedom to Walk Act for 2023 will prevent California police from targeting random walkers with bogus criminal charges and instead requires a simple test: “immediate danger of a collision.”

It sounds like just some common sense because that’s how bad the old racist jaywalking laws were.

Historian Points Out Putin Parroting Propaganda of Goebbels

Stephen Norris, Russian history professor at Miami University, offers this comparison:

One of the more worrisome trends in Putin speeches, especially in the last six or seven months, has been how amorphous, almost existential they’ve been. The Ukrainian war has been framed in existential terms — it’s a war to save Russian civilization. In the speech when he signed the treaties that annexed the four territories, he said Western culture is nothing less than satanism and this is the new threat against Russia. It was kind of scary and quite apocalyptic in the way his speeches had ever been. And in that speech, Putin actually referenced Goebbels. He said what the West has done is create a culture of lies about Russia that’s reminiscent of Goebbels.

[…]

In a speech in May of 1943, Goebbels said weirdly similar things. This was after Nazi Germany had lost at Stalingrad after the Soviet Union was turning the tide of the war. Goebbels gave a speech that turned the seeming defeat into victory and into a more existential question, saying the allies are trying to eliminate German culture, German history, the German people.

“Free Speed Extremist” Tesla CEO Demands All Brakes Removed

The Twitter CEO has a speed/speech problem. He repeatedly crashes things that other people made, pleads for public help, and leaves others paying dearly for his failures.

Peter Thiel and Elon Musk after moving to America and nearly dying in a car that Musk couldn’t figure out how to drive.

Lack of simple regulations hurts everyone as he bounces around like a malicious Tesla driver who thinks freedom means slamming passengers into every obvious tree while claiming forests are a liberal myth.

Of course he refers to himself as a “free speech extremist”, but really how different is that from extreme thinking that vehicles shouldn’t be regulated (shouldn’t have any suspension or brakes) and allowed to repeatedly stupidly crash instead?

Chinese authorities are investigating a new deadly accident involving another speeding Tesla Model Y that ran through a traffic light crashing into two vehicles resulting in the deaths of two people. This latest incident comes just weeks after a different Model Y was filmed accelerating out of control before crashing, killing two people and injuring three more.

Tesla safety is a joke and yet sadly it’s been allowed to become reality.

There’s even a site tracking the huge number of “sudden acceleration” incidents related to “free speed extremism” of the Tesla CEO.

Recent reports suggest the latest Tesla engineering by design may ignore speed laws, lights or guidelines (reject regulation) and stupidly crash into anyone and everyone around them.

Tesla lawyers have tried to defend their design flaws by arguing the company doesn’t understand basic science.

Nepal’s Maoist Guerrilla War Leader Appointed Prime Minister

On a sunny and clear cold day in December 1990 (as I’ve mentioned before), I stood on a narrow path in the foothills northwest of Pokhara, Nepal.

A young self-described Maoist revolutionary fighter with a little book tried to explain to me in broken sentences and hand gestures why his village of comrades were in opposition to their King.

Militant opposition.

The conversation will never be forgotten because I can still vividly recall his blank stares when I probed for details, such as Russian influence. Lenin? Never heard of the man. Marx? Nope. Stalin who? Communist what?

He said he and his buddies just were into Mao 24/7 like it was the coolest thing possible.

This presented an interesting dilemma for me then, and even to this day.

Generally I find news reports saying the armed Maoist insurrection began in Nepal a decade after it really started.

The timing shift in public eyes probably has a lot to do with who was allowed to say what under a King; who was allowed any political voice, when and how.

In the case above, I was in the ground in rural Nepal specifically during a small window of time that the King had “abdicated” power. As the country dipped its toes into parliamentary rule and open speech, rural pull of young militant Maoist doctrine was underestimated if not ignored by (what seemed to be) Indian-dominated political processes.

I assure you Maoist guerilla doctrine was being settled far earlier than you will be told.

From where I humbly stood that day, teenagers developing heated political aspirations five or so years later should have not “surprised” Nepal’s government, along with a unique brand of militant troubles. Classic signs of Chinese competitive foreign policy had been rumbling for anyone willing to watch and listen.

With that in mind, here’s today’s big news out of Nepal.

The leader of Nepal’s former communist rebels was named the country’s new prime minister on Sunday…. Known by his nom de guerre Prachanda or “the fierce one,” Dahal led the Maoist communists’ violent insurgency from 1996 to 2006. The 10 years of strife left over 17,000 dead and eventually led to the abolition of the country’s monarchy.

There’s even an important political detail that caught my eye.

Dahal’s Maoist party has formed an alliance with the Communist Party of Nepal (UML), a party it has already aligned with in the past, alongside six others. The Maoist party and the UML used to be one party before splitting.

Do you see how he is framed as a former leader of Communist insurgency, before noting his Maoist party had to form an alliance with the Communists after they had split apart? I would argue these two were split far apart before forming an alliance, which failed.

Seeing the earlier and deeper roots of Maoists, the distance they have long perceived from Communism, and their persistence in opposition to social democratic monarchism… should help anyone today trying to do a regional analysis of influence.

This is Dahal’s third run at the PM role, incidentally, so maybe it’s time to start calling him the establishment instead of a rebel.