| ◼ The International Longshoremen’s Association wants to ban automation technology at the ports it controls, which means every major port on the East and Gulf Coasts, to protect monopoly wages for its roughly 20,000 working members, at the expense of the millions of Americans who bear the costs of inefficient ports. Trump has in the past supported the ILA, and he has reiterated that support after winning the election, even though a dockworkers’ strike could cause him headaches in his new term. The Taft-Hartley Act gives the president the power to enjoin that strike, yet he appears to be embracing unilateral disarmament.
◼ How Canadian to stab someone in the front, not the back, and after a provocation. Justin Trudeau had told Chrystia Freeland, the country’s finance minister, that he no longer wanted her in that job, but he offered her something else. After some reflection, Freeland, who was also deputy prime minister, wrote to Trudeau, resigning from his government. The timing was awkward, coming shortly ahead of the government’s fall economic statement. (Also awkward: The numbers revealed that Canada was running higher deficits than planned.) The reason Freeland gave for resigning was the need to avoid “costly political gimmicks” (some giveaways), given the need to “keep our fiscal powder dry” ahead of a battle with the incoming Trump administration over tariffs (“aggressive economic nationalism”). While Freeland’s discovery of fiscal virtue, however belated, is admirable, she is almost certainly trying to position herself for a leadership challenge. Trudeau, meanwhile, wants to lead his Liberals at an election, which is due no later than October 2025. Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, far ahead in the polls, wants an earlier vote. Canadians should at least thank Freeland, a key figure in a catastrophic government, if her resignation brings that about.
◼ Israel has long known that the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which operates in Gaza, employs Hamas fighters. Hamas documents recently seized by the Israeli military and shared with the New York Times show that at least 24 people UNRWA employed in the schools it runs were members of terrorist organizations. Although the cozy relationship between Hamas and UNRWA—so cozy as to admit no daylight, literally, in tunnels beneath UNRWA buildings—is not news, it is new to see the facts laid out in the Times: “Almost all of the Hamas-linked educators, according to the records, were fighters in the Qassam Brigades” in possession of weapons including Kalashnikovs and grenades. Meanwhile, a Hamas terrorist who took part in the October 7 attacks, killed in an Israeli air strike in November, turned out to be an employee of World Central Kitchen, the U.S.-based charity run by José Andrés. After Israel found that at least 62 WCK staffers “were linked to militant groups,” reports Reuters, WCK “fired dozens of Palestinians working for the charity in the Gaza Strip” while maintaining it has seen no proof of those links. Perhaps it should look in its pudding.
◼ Either as a trial balloon or as a troll of the game’s fans, Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred floated the idea of a “golden at-bat” wherein any batter could be plugged into any spot in the lineup during a game. Baseball has always changed, or fearsome sluggers would still hit more triples than home runs, as Home Run Baker did in the 1910s. The pitch clock has been a big success, ending the outrageous dilatory tactics that altered the culture of the game and ridiculously inflated game times; last season, games averaged about two and a half hours, the same as in the mid 1980s. But trashing the integrity of the lineup in pursuit of manufactured late-inning drama would be a mistake. On this one, Manfred has swung from his heels, and missed.
◼ Lily Phillips, a 23-year-old British woman, is said in one news account to have made an “unconventional career choice.” She calls herself a “porn star, escort, OnlyFans girl, I don’t really care.” (OnlyFans is a popular site on which young women—often described euphemistically as models and influencers—upload pornographic videos of themselves and virtually interact with their “fans” in exchange for money.) The nature of Phillips’s career was the subject of a recent documentary titled I Slept with 100 Men in One Day, in which she, with the logistical assistance of her nine employees, did just that as a sort of social media stunt. The film makes for grim rather than titillating viewing. She starts out seemingly nonchalant and upbeat, telling the filmmaker that she enjoys her work. After the completion of her feat, she emerges shaken and teary-eyed. “It’s not for the weak girls, if I’m honest,” she says. “It was hard. I don’t know if I’d recommend it.” Nevertheless, Phillips has announced that she plans to break a world record by bedding 1,000 men in a single day. Medical experts quoted in the media have expressed concerns for her physical health. The rest of us might spare a prayer for her soul.
◼ Maximilian Lerner died in 2022, at 98. Guy Stern died in 2023, at 101. Now Victor Brombert has died, also at 101. All of these men were “Ritchie Boys,” refugees from Europe to America who were trained at Camp Ritchie, in Maryland, to go back to their native continent and gather intelligence for their new country during World War II. Brombert was born in Berlin in 1923. He was Jewish (as were many of the Ritchie Boys). In the war, he was at D-Day, the Liberation of Paris, and the Battle of the Bulge. After the war—which he was amazed to have survived—he went to Yale, both for college and for graduate school. He would become a professor of comparative literature, first at his alma mater, then at Princeton. Not until late in his life did he talk about the war. The hundreds of students he had taught over the years were shocked to find out, and deeply impressed. God bless the Ritchie Boys. R.I.P. |