Category Archives: Law

The Election

Well, as we feared, it’s looking like another 2000. But despite Fox’s calling it for Biden, Arizona appears to be still in play. It’s unclear what this means for the Senate race there with the gun-grabbing astronaut. And with the Republicans keeping the Senate, Biden is screwed, regardless, and Schumer’s dreams (and our nightmares) of court and Senate packing are dead.

[Thursday-morning update]

Massive voter fraud in Wisconsin?

[Update a few minutes later]

Yes, the Democrats are trying to steal the election in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.

[Update Friday morning]

Milwaukee officials have some explaining to do.

The likely large-scale fraud of 2020 calls way too much attention to itself. If the data I am looking at are correct, there are people on the hard left who may want to get caught. For them, a Biden win overturned by the Supreme Court would offer a whole lot more opportunity for mayhem than they could hope to find with a faltering old liberal as president.

Sadly, he may be right.

[Noon update]

Larry Correia is…upset. To say the least.

[Sunday-morning update]

Some good news may be coming.

[Bumped]

[Update late afternoon]

[Monday-morning update]

Some…interesting…data analysis. I’m adding “Mathematics” to the categories of this post.

[Bumped again]

A Never Trumper

…is feeling pushed toward Trump. Even though I’m not religious, I agree with much of this.

[Update a few minutes later]

A momentous election:

Donald Trump may be an odd ambassador of freedom. His motley may not pass muster in the salons and drawing rooms of our lords and masters. But Joe Biden is but a gibbering front for a vanguard that would destroy America as traditionally conceived—America, I mean, as a crucible of ordered liberty, limited government, and individual freedom.

Yes.

My Deposition

Well, I survived it. I’m not going to discuss it, but the most amusing thing that happened was a screw up by his lawyer. He asked me if Michael Mann had ever done anything to me personally. I sat there for a minute, unable to believe that he’d actually asked me that, but then responded, “Counselor, I am sitting here today because your client filed a lawsuit against me eight years ago. It had my name on it. I’m pretty sure it was personal.” It cracked everyone up, including him, because he knew he’d screwed up. He then asked the question he meant to ask, modifying it with “…before you wrote the article?”