Friday, February 20, 2026

‘Wisconsin Is a Warning Sign’

 

Elections have consequences.  Electoral systems do, too.

After the 2024 presidential contest, we wrote the following about Trump’s victory in Wisconsin:  ‘In Wisconsin, Trump squeaked by Harris in the popular vote, 49.6% vs 48.8%.  But he trounced her in the county vote, winning 59 to Harris’s 13, making Trump’s county victory in this State 81.9% with Harris taking only 18.1%.’

The point we were making in that essay was that conservatives/revivalists need to make structural changes to election systems, like requiring candidates to win a majority of counties/parishes in order to be declared the winner of an election, not simply look for ways to maximize turnout.  If they did, they would empower the rural areas of the States, which are generally more conservative, and thus have a better chance of consistently winning Statewide elections.

Wisconsin in 2025 shows how ephemeral victories for the Right will continue to be until some major structural reforms like the county/parish majority rule are implemented.  For in the Wisconsin Supreme Court election, the Democrat candidate Susan Crawford handily beat the Republican Brad Schimel 55% to 45% in an election held only five months after President Trump’s victory in the State over VP Harris.

As in 2024, the results in 2025 are misleading.  Crawford’s victory wasn’t very broad.  Like Harris, she won only a minority of counties in Wisconsin despite winning the majority of votes:  23 out of 72 went for Crawford; 49 were won by Schimel (results via Milwaukee Journal Sentinel).  Schimel thus beat Crawford in the county total 68% to 32%.

Republican reliance on voter turnout alone to win in critical States like Wisconsin isn’t a wise strategy.  Even modest declines in voter participation can lead to stinging defeats for those who hold to that strategy.  A report from NBC News about the Wisconsin Supreme Court election confirms this:

 . . .

The rest is at https://thehayride.com/2025/04/garlington-wisconsin-is-a-warning-sign/.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

‘Who Will Silence the Lord?’

 

‘The heavens declare the Glory of God’ –

            And the devil hates the words they speak.

‘The earth is the Lord’s and the fulness thereof’ –

            But the demons want it for themselves.

 

No generation is safe from the scheming

            Of the evil ones to silence You,

To expel You from Your own creation –

            First by nailing You upon the Tree,

 

Then burying Your life-creating Cross

            And death-destroying grave underneath

A temple of a heathen goddess.

            They cut out the tongues of your confessors,

And break the icons bearing Your Precious Face.

            The relics of Your saints they burn,

 

The verdant surface of the earth they deface

            With the grey ugliness of cities

That obscure Your beauty, and with machines

            That prod us on toward sin and death.

 

But the Lord, the Mighty Lord, will never

            Be vanquished!  Crucify Him, and He

Resurrects.  Bury His Cross, and It appears

            In the sky.  Remove a Christian’s tongue,

 

And he will speak miraculously withal.

 . . .

The rest is at https://www.newenglishreview.org/articles/who-will-silence-the-lord/.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Friday, February 13, 2026

‘The Federal Supreme Court Is not Infallible’

 

We got a good reminder of that with DC’s Supreme Court ruling, Bondi v Vanderstok, decided 26 March 2025.  The issue in controversy was whether the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) could lawfully ban kits used to assemble untraceable ghost guns.  The ruling stumbles right out of the gate, basing its decision on the federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA).  According to the Court’s reasoning, the ATF’s ban was not in violation of the GCA (we’ll spare you the protracted legalese of the ruling itself), so they held it to be a proper act of executive rule-making.

But there is a significant problem with this decision:  The Supreme Court used an illegal law, the GCA, as the yardstick against which to measure the propriety of the ATF’s rule.  The proper measuring rod that the justices should have used is the federal constitution’s 2nd Amendment, not a congressional act that violates it.

The 2nd Amendment is quite clear, ‘ . . . the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.’  The GCA of 1968, by the standard of the 2nd Amendment, is unlawful.  Therefore, any regulations that spring from it – like the ghost gun ban in question – are also null and void.

This brings to mind a quote by the well-known 19th-century Yankee libertarian, Lysander Spooner:  ‘An unconstitutional judicial decision is no more binding than an unconstitutional legislative act’ (Michael Boldin, ‘Lysander Spooner’s Case Against Judicial Supremacy,’ tenthamendmentcenter.com).

What a State or local government does with regard to gun regulation is up to them, in accordance with their respective constitutions, laws, and traditions (the 14th Amendment does not apply the federal Bill of Rights, including the 2nd Amendment, to the States, as we have pointed out before).  Whether they want to allow ghost guns is a question for each State and locality to decide for herself.

The problem we often run into, though, is that in those States where a proper understanding of the 2nd Amendment is prevalent (i.e., it is a prohibition upon the federal government’s restricting of firearm ownership in any way), instead of effective action to nullify unlawful federal restrictions, there is merely a lot despicable grandstanding by State and local officials.  Wyoming is a case-in-point:

 . . .

The rest is at https://thehayride.com/2025/04/garlington-the-federal-supreme-court-is-not-infallible/.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

‘Lawfare for Me but not for Thee’

 

Conservatives have been complaining loudly about rulings by federal district court judges that are obstructing the Trump administration’s objectives.  However, during the Clinton, Obama, and Biden years, they happily used the same tactics to gum up the operations of those administrations.  CNN captures some of the irony:

‘President Donald Trump and top allies who have questioned the constitutionality of recent court orders blocking the administration’s agenda touted similar rulings by federal courts as “great news” and “brilliant” when they paused President Joe Biden’s policies.

‘When a federal judge in Texas halted a Biden administration pause on deportations six days after Trump was inaugurated, presidential aide Stephen Miller took to social media to describe the temporary restraining order as “great news.” When a judge in Louisiana blocked Biden aides from asking social media platforms to remove content, Trump called the decision “amazing.”

‘“Just last week, in a historic ruling, a brilliant federal judge ordered the Biden administration to cease and desist from their illegal and unconstitutional censorship in collusion with social media,” Trump told an audience in Florida in 2023. (The Supreme Court months later would decide in Biden’s favor.)

‘ . . . Republicans have increasingly complained about outside groups choosing courts they believe will rule in their favor – a practice known as judge shopping. Democrats loudly protested that same practice during the Biden and Obama administrations, when Republican-aligned groups frequently sued in Texas or Louisiana where they could bring appeals to the especially conservative 5th Circuit.

‘ . . . Sebastian Gorka, who worked in Trump’s first White House and who the president has named senior director for counterterrorism this time around, reposted a message on X last month describing US District Judge Paul Engelmayer, an Obama appointee, as a “rogue judge.” But he celebrated a nationwide injunction against Biden’s vaccine mandate for federal workers in 2021 in a social media repost, suggesting that a “Federal Judge” had stepped in to block Biden’s “abuse of power.”

‘Trump himself repeatedly touted or commented on temporary restraining orders and preliminary injunctions that blocked the Biden administration’s policies.

‘When a federal judge in Louisiana in 2022 issued a preliminary injunction halting the administration from ending the Title 42 program, which allowed the administration to speed the removal of certain migrants, Trump reposted a supporter on his Truth Social platform thanking US District Judge Robert Summerhays for the ruling. Trump appointed Summerhays to the bench during his first term’ (John Fritze, ‘Trump and allies celebrated court orders against Biden they now claim are ‘tyrannical’,’ cnn.com).

The Revivalists on the Right have their answer for the charge of inconsistency:

‘White House spokesperson Harrison Fields dismissed the comparison between the Biden-era orders and those issued in the early weeks of the Trump administration.

‘“It’s simple: Biden abused his executive power to implement policies not within the scope of his presidential powers, while President Trump is appropriately using his executive authority to implement his America First agenda,” Fields told CNN. “These court orders from left-wing judges are a continuation of judicial weaponization that Americans voted against at the ballot box on November 5”’ (Ibid.).

Therein lies the problem:  a fundamental disagreement amongst the peoples of the States over the nature of government and the legitimate ends it is meant to accomplish.  Thomas Sowell in his book A Conflict of Visions located the source of the disagreement in two opposing views of human nature – one utopian and unconstrained, leading to a centralized, all-powerful government, the other experiential/pragmatic and constrained, tending toward a smaller, decentralized, weaker government.  An older version of this dichotomy is the Alexander Hamilton (the US as a centralized empire) and Thomas Jefferson (the US as a decentralized confederation) difference of views.

But even these are oversimplifications of the problem.  Many people – whether on talk radio or in academia or in government or etc. – speak of the US as though we were one people with one common culture.  This is a false notion.  There are several different cultures spread out over the States, and, owing to the dominant ethnic groups that settled them, they all have their particular ways of viewing the world, man, government, etc.  The Scandinavian-Germanic Great Plains States are not the same as Dixie with her folkways formed largely in southwestern England, the Celtic lands (Ireland, Scotland, Wales), and sub-Saharan Africa, with some Spanish and French mixed in as well.  New England and their offspring in Utah are from the coastal counties of southeastern England.  And so forth and so on.

Now then, folks on the Right have been rightly reiterating the point that transgenderism is a denial of reality, that no matter how much a man may pretend he is a woman (or vice versa), it doesn’t alter the fact that he is really a man.  The same argument may be applied to the United States:  No matter how deeply one believes that the States are all one homogenous people, it does not change the underlying reality that we are in truth several peoples.  There are plenty of essays and books about this; one of the most recent we have read is Grady McWhiney’s Cracker Culture:  Celtic Ways in the Old South.

Denying this reality is leading us down a dangerous road, one that could end in another terrible war if we aren’t careful.  Rod Dreher, the far-seeing Louisiana writer living in Hungary, has been warning his readers that the political climate in the US today resemble the heated ideological turmoil of Spain prior to the civil war there (1936-9).  The documentary video about the prelude to the Spanish Civil War that he included recently at the end of one of his essays is worth a look by all serious-minded political observers.  As he put it in the essay:

‘Last night, I was talking with a retired military officer. He was telling me how happy he is that Trump is righting so many woke wrongs. Yet, he said, “This is all happening so fast and so powerfully that I can’t help wondering what’s going to happen when the other side gets back into power. Are they going to come at us like this?”

‘I invite you to watch this first episode of the Granada TV documentary from the 1980s, about the Spanish Civil War. That dynamic is exactly what happened in Spain prior to the outbreak of fighting’ (‘I'd Salute Trump Too,’ roddreher.substack.com).

Despite claims to the contrary, Trump’s victory in 2024 wasn’t a landslide.  Yes, he won a lot of States and counties/parishes, but the overall margins in many of those States was very narrow.  The current configuration of the federal House and Senate confirm the large ideological divide that persists across the US.  If we continue down the road of insisting on the ‘one people’ fallacy and, following from that, use the power of the federal government to force an ideology (whether Leftist or Rightist) on all the States, we’re going to find ourselves in the middle of another violent clash at some point.  That is lesson of the War between the States of 1861-5, the lesson of the Spanish Civil War, the French Revolution, etc.

However, if we are going to live in Realville, to use Rush Limbaugh’s words, we will notice that there are other, better, options:  radical decentralization of the powers now held in DC as well as a separation of the States into more culturally coherent federations.  The first constitution of the States after their secession from the British Empire, the Articles of Confederation, is a good model of decentralized governance.  It had some defects, but it also protected the States from what has come to be under the current constitution:  consolidation into a centralized empire that is ‘aggressive abroad and despotic at home,’ to quote the perceptive Robert E. Lee’s letter to Lord Acton (15 Dec 1866, leefamilyarchive.org).

But there is some hope in this regard, as even Left-leaning States like California are speaking about the virtues of federalism/decentralization/States’ rights:

‘The governor of California for example, upon hearing of Trump’s success, very quickly announced on social media (on X) that “California is ready to fight”, and federalism, as he added, “is the cornerstone of our democracy. It’s the United STATES of America”. Unbelievable! Paradoxically, one must admit that there is something satisfying in observing how the Left that governs or dominates in some states, in trying to defend itself against the administration of Donald Trump, reaches for the instruments of resistance to federal power that it has hated so far and so much’ (Karol Mazur, ‘Progressive States’ Rights,’ abbevilleinstitute.org).

The Trump era won’t last forever; Leftist Democrats will assume the powers of the federal government at some point in the future.  The peoples of the States, if they indeed remain together in one federation, ought to retool their coordinating government in DC such that changes at the federal level are not viewed as existential dangers to their well-being that necessitate all-out legal warfare in the judiciary – or worse.  Allow each State and culture to largely direct their own affairs; it is the only way peaceful relations between them will be established and maintained.

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Originally posted at https://identitydixie.com/2025/03/30/lawfare-for-me-but-not-for-thee/.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!