The Daily Chart: Stagnating Regulation

As you may know, the supposed slow-growth of wages since the early 1970s has long been a cause-celebre among the left’s equity crowd. It is usually attributed to lower income tax rates, or the demonic powers of “neoliberalism.” One factor that is seldom considered, at least by the mainstream media and the celebrated egalitarian academics like Thomas Piketty, is the role the sharp rise of economy-wide government regulation that began at precisely the moment that wage growth flat-lined. Environmental regulations in particular have been highly effective at saying No to new projects of all kinds.

The trouble with Columbia

Columbia University presents an extreme case of the rot infesting our major institutions — elite organs of higher education, corporate America, the mainstream media, the entertainment business, the legal profession, the teachers’ unions, and so on. We can learn from Columbia’s extremity. It highlights elements of the phenomenon that otherwise remain beyond our view.

The rot at Columbia runs through the students, the administration, and the faculty of the university. Yesterday a group of Columbia professors held a rally Monday to express solidarity with the pro-Hamas/anti-Semitic students suspended for holding unauthorized protests on campus and to lambaste university president Minouche Shafik for cracking down on them. They called for Shafik’s resignation. In an ideal world, they would all resign and the students would be expelled.

The Washington Free Beacon’s Jessica Costescu was on the scene to cover the professors’ rally. She reports on it here. The Beacon also compiled the video below to accompany Costescu’s story. As usual: “Columbia did not respond to a request for comment.”

The New York Post makes the fallout from Columbia President Minouche Shafik’s continuing nonfeasance the subject of its cover story (cover below). The victims of Shafik’s nonfeasance aren’t happy with her either.

In today’s Wall Street Journal MEMRI executive director Steven Stalinsky looks at “Who’s Behind the Anti_Israe Protests.” He gets around to Columbia toward the bottom of his column:

On March 25, the Columbia University Apartheid Divest student group hosted an event called “Resistance 101” on campus. It featured leaders of the PFLP-affiliated Samidoun, Within Our Lifetime and other extremist organizations. At the event, former PFLP official Khaled Barakat referred to his “friends and brothers in Hamas, Islamic Jihad [and] the PFLP in Gaza,” saying that particularly after Oct. 7, “when they see students organizing outside Palestine, they really feel that they are being backed as a resistance and they’re being supported.” On March 30 on Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV, Mr. Barakat said “the vast majority” of young Americans and Canadians now “support armed resistance” because of “the introduction of colonialism, racism, and slavery studies into history curricula.”

Stalinsky concludes on a portentous note:

The collaboration between senior terrorists and their growing list of friends in the U.S. and the West has real-world consequences. These groups are designated terrorist for a reason. They don’t plan marches and rallies—they carry out terrorist attacks. And when the U.S. and Western activists, including college students, see that their marches and protests aren’t achieving their goals, they may consider their next steps—which will be influenced by the company they have been keeping.

Whole thing here (behind the Journal’s paywall).

Quotations from Chairman Joe

The silence of President Biden on the eruption of anti-Semitic “protests” on elite college campuses constitutes a disgusting sidebar to the unfolding story. He was asked about them yesterday as he shambled down a sylvan path in Triangle, Virginia. “I condemn the antisemitic protests,” Biden told reporters. “I also condemn those who don’t understand what’s going on with the Palestinians.”

“Palestinians” widely support Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and the terrorist forces that swim among them. The kill the Jews campus hatefests accord with that support. Those who understand what’s going on with the “Palestinians” might condemn them, but that’s not what Biden means. Biden means what he asserts that President Trump meant in his comments on Charlottesville. Years later, Biden continues to condemn Trump for it. When it comes to the eruption of anti-Semitism in “protests” inside Democratic strongholds, we hear the silence of the clams.

Biden also fielded a question asking whether the president of Columbia should resign. He responded: “I didn’t know that.” Where are the pan flutes when you need them? Some observers may reflect that Biden is in no position to call for anyone’s resignation based on the simple refusal to perform the basic requirements of his or her job.

Did Biden Revoke Title IX?

On Friday, Joe Biden’s Department of Education released its final rule amending the regulations that implement Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. What is it all about? This is how the Department of Education described the changes:

The Department therefore issues these final regulations to provide greater clarity regarding: the definition of “sex-based harassment”; the scope of sex discrimination, including recipients’ obligations not to discriminate based on sex stereotypes, sex characteristics, pregnancy or related conditions, sexual orientation, and gender identity;

Many conservatives have denounced the new rules. Betsy DeVos, who served as Secretary of Education in the Trump administration, said:

The Biden administration’s radical rewrite of Title IX guts the half-century of protections and opportunities for women and callously replaces them with radical gender theory, as Biden’s far-Left political base demanded. The American people reject this approach, and I fully expect that both the Congress and the courts will do the same in the weeks and months ahead.

Riley Gaines, who has done more to stand up for women’s sports than anyone else, tweeted this:


Is it true that Biden’s regulations effectively dismantle Title IX? I don’t know. I tracked down the regulations themselves, thinking that I could read them and answer that question for our readers. But it turns out that the regulations are 1,505 pages long. And every elementary school in America is supposed to follow them. I don’t have time to read them all, and neither does anyone else.

Do the regulations say that men must be allowed to compete in women’s sports? That is what Riley Gaines thinks, and she may be right. Title IX prohibits sex discrimination, while the new regulations prohibit discrimination on the basis of “gender identity,” which is precisely the opposite. “Gender identity” means a boy pretending to be a girl. So that provision could mean that boys must be allowed to shower with girls if that is their “gender identity,” a fraudulent concept.

On the other hand, the Department says that another set of regulations dealing specifically with athletics will be forthcoming before long:

The Department’s rulemaking process is still ongoing for a Title IX regulation related to athletics.

So maybe it is premature to attribute too much significance on that issue to the regulations that were released last week.

In all likelihood, leftists will seize on the “gender identity” language of the regulations and sue school districts, alleging that their 15-year-old boy must be allowed to shower with the girls on those days when he feels like one. That is the insane point to which our current “culture wars,” launched by the far left, have brought us. Betsy DeVos expresses confidence that our courts will not allow Title IX to be gutted by far-left interpretation (or, rather, rewriting). I hope she is right.

But, finally getting to my real point, I think this instance illustrates the peril of passing feel-good legislation with broad language and no clear object. This is what Title IX says:

No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance…

Certainly no one who voted for Title IX intended that this one-sentence provision would be interpreted to mean that boys must be admitted to the girls’ locker room (the converse never happens), or that mediocre male athletes must be permitted to compete as girls and win medals. The people who adopted Title IX would have been horrified by any such suggestion, if they could even have imagined it.

And were girls actually being discriminated against in education as of 1972? Not that I recall. In fact, Title IX didn’t cause the explosion in women’s participation in every aspect of academia, including but not at all limited to sports. Rather, it reflected what was already happening. Congress was getting on board the bandwagon. If Title IX didn’t exist, would things have fallen out much differently? I doubt it.

But the broad language of that provision, amenable to endless interpretation and re-interpretation by bureaucratic leftists, has been a launching pad for left-wing attacks on our culture. The same could be said of many other pieces of feel-good legislation, but that is a topic for another day.

Lesser Of Two Evils

Am I a fan of Alec Baldwin? No. I am not sure how he got famous, and I don’t think I have ever seen him on screen or on television. And I harshly criticized his careless handling of a firearm that resulted in a death on the set of a movie in which he starred.

However. There are worse people. And in this video, you see one of them, as someone accosts Baldwin in a public place and demands that he say “Free Palestine” and “Fuck Israel” so that she will leave him alone:


One can only wish that he had hit her harder.

The Daily Chart: A Family Affair?

One of the most interesting aspects of the current political scene is the polling evidence showing Donald Trump gaining strength among minority voters, which is causing panic among Democrats. Why is this happening? Explanations run the full spectrum, from inflation to wokery, but here’s some curious evidence (from an Economist/YouGov survey) that it may be as simple as having children:

Chaser—while we’re looking at Trump-Biden surveys, this one is fun (and adds to a hypothesis I have about why Trump is going to win):

And then the darkness fell

Today is the anniversary of Glen Campbell’s birth. Campbell established himself as a brilliant session guitarist with the Wrecking Crew and then proceeded to record some 65 solo albums in the course of a long career that greatly contributed to the beauty of the world. It’s hard to get a handle on his vast body of work, but perhaps most notable was his partnership with songwriter Jimmy Webb. Below is the original hit version of Webb’s “By the Time I Get To Phoenix” (1967).

Webb also wrote a follow-up for Campbell. Even if you weren’t listening to the radio in 1968, you probably know “Wichita Lineman.” That’s Wrecking Crew bassist Carol Kaye on the lead-in politely inviting your attention to this knockout song. That’s Mr. Campbell himself on lead guitar. Glen said that he and producer Al DeLory filled in the place of a third verse with a guitar solo that he played on a DanElectro six-string bass guitar or baritone guitar belonging to Kaye. According to American Songwriter, this was Campbell’s favorite of all his songs.

Their partnership remained fruitful in the ’70s and ’80s (work documented on the bountiful Raven compilation Glen Campbell Reunited With Jimmy Webb: 1974-1988), although without the chart success of their earlier hits. Among the peaks of their later work is Webb’s haunting “The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress,” also covered by Joe Cocker, Judy Collins, Linda Ronstadt, Nanci Griffith and others.

I don’t think any performance of this moving song surpasses Campbell’s emotional reading of it (video above, in concert with the South Dakota Symphony in 2001). Although female performers have gravitated to it, the song is preeminently a man’s lament over a fickle lover. Webb’s old flame Susan Ronstadt inspired much of his most intriguing work, and my guess is that she was the inspiration for Webb’s lyrical exploration of the metaphor in the song’s title. She must have been the inspiration for the song in the video below as well.

Campbell was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2011. He went public with the diagnosis and embarked on the farewell tour featured in the documentary Glen Campbell…I’ll Be Me. The 2011 disc Ghost On the Canvas was to be his final recording, but he revisited a few of the highlights of his career during the recording. His producers added a spare backing to the tracks and released See You There in 2013. Five of the album’s 12 songs are written by Webb, including the lesser known “Postcard From Paris.”

Webb annotated one of his discs featuring updated versions of his songs with several of his favorite performers, including Campbell. When it came to Campbell, he wrote that he had been a fan since he first heard “Turn Around and Look At Me” when he was 14. He said that he considered Campbell “the greatest natural entertainer and performer that America has ever produced.” He added: “I used to literally pray that God would let me grow up and be a songwriter and be lucky enough to have Glen Campbell record one of my songs.” He didn’t leave it there. He concluded: “I rest my case for the existence of God.” I wanted to recall Webb’s striking testimony in the context of Campbell’s birthday today.