[U: Hinderaker pops off!] What Will Scott Johnson / John Hinderaker Say? Chauvin Shanked In Prison In Arizona Tonight..

Here is the AP, on it:

Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer convicted of murdering George Floyd, was stabbed by another inmate and seriously injured Friday at a federal prison in Arizona, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press….

A person with knowledge of the incident said that Mr. Chauvin survived the attack….

Updated — Hinderaker saw the news first, from across the pond in Paris while Scott was sleeping (since it was morning coffee time, in France). John thinks Chauvin was innocent, and railroaded. What a putz.

Now — on Sat. Morning, in MN, Scott believes Mr. Chauvin, who killed George Floyd, should go free. Though he has quite justifiably criticized Candace Owens of late, he believes much of the same false narrative she spews about Mr. Floyd [in a supposed “documentary” that was never aired, not even on Shapiro’s media properties.]

In any event, it goes without saying that the former officer shouldn’t have been shanked in gen pop in Arizona, likely at FCI Tucson, a federal medium security unit (he’s been transferred there, from Minnesota).

But… he should still do all his bid, after leaving the hospital.

That’s… justice. He will live on, after prison. He took every version of Mr. Floyd’s future, that there ever could have been.

In 20 years, Mr. Chauvin will still likely have around 30 good years left… while Mr. Floyd’s now almost ten year old daughter will never see him again.

So — Chauvin should stay in jail; 20 years is justice. That’s my take.

Out.

Just Like Bill Otis (Last Night), Hinderaker Thinks MORE Terrorism Is The Answer In Gaza. Yawn.

He writes tonight that “our president… should have told Hamas long ago that if all Americans were not freed within 12 hours, Gaza would be reduced to rubble….”

Spoken like a doddering embittered old man, with no skin in the game left — sitting on the opposite side of the globe.

Being the second or third terrorist power into a skirmish like this… won’t solve Hamas terrorism, ever, you senile old coot. This is obvious — this, based on the 2,300 years of history in that sand. And he well knows it.

Damn. [It is also wrong, for all the reasons we mentioned last night re Bill Otis.]

Out.

A Look Ahead: Year End 2023 Results, At Merck… May Be Guiding Too Low(?)

As we finish the annual “day after” dim sum feast on Cermak… I’ll take this moment to note that by December 31, 2023, Rahway will undoubtedly be able to truthfully say it sells the world’s most lucrative single therapeutic agent, vastly eclipsing Humira — at over $23 billion a year. [We should note, of course, that since the below projections come from a company known to Wall Street as a public company for nearly as long as there have been US public companies — the executives likely shade the guidance to be a little conservative… understanding that “missing” by being overly optimistic will be harshly punishing to the stock price, while missing on the low side simply causes a bump up on the NYSE. In sum, Merck’s management is unlikely to be too far out over its skis — all as Elon Musk so often is, as a mere baby in public company land. A big baby, but still… a baby.] So, Rahway’s year end might be slightly better than the below, when the dust settles.

True, it will have expensed the $5.5 billion, previously disclosed, on the Daiichi Sankyo deal — and about $100 million on the Caraway M&A deal in the quarter, but no one will even notice, given the hoards of cash being trucked in on pembrolizumab, thus (from the Q3 2023 guidance):

…Merck now expects its full-year non-GAAP EPS to be between $1.33 and $1.38, including a negative impact of foreign exchange of approximately 6 percentage points, at mid-October 2023 exchange rates. This revised non-GAAP EPS range reflects the following, which were not previously included in the outlook:

Additional strength in the business of approximately $0.15 per share.

A pretax charge of $5.5 billion, or $1.70 per share, for the collaboration agreement with Daiichi Sankyo.

Estimated expense in the fourth quarter of 2023 of approximately $0.04 per share to advance the ADC assets and finance the transaction with Daiichi Sankyo.

A 1%, or approximately $0.05 per share, incremental negative impact of foreign exchange.

The non-GAAP EPS range excludes acquisition- and divestiture-related costs, costs related to restructuring programs, income and losses from investments in equity securities, and a previously disclosed charge related to settlements with certain plaintiffs in the Zetia antitrust litigation….

Now you know — do go enjoy the piping hot green tea by the kettle, and the flat noodles, with steamed barbequed pork buns and curry chicken stuffed turnover pastries!

नमस्ते

Bill Otis Thinks… BECOMING A Terrorist Is The Answer… To Terrorism. Charming.

As we let our sweet potato pie and lemon squares settle (the former with whipped cream and the latter with some hot coffee)… we note that Bill Otis (a former prosecutor, no less)… thinks that becoming terrorists, to combat terror… somehow will ennoble a nation — and achieve peace.

Damn. That’s just sad. Here it is — in context:

Mindful that there are American as well as Israeli hostages, Biden and Netanyahu would deliver the following message to the mullahs in Iran, who are certainly behind this, and to the leadership of Hamas: For every day starting tomorrow that the hostages are not released, every single one of them, one of you is going to be killed. There will be no warning. Whether by bombing, poisoning by one of your staff we’ve compromised, by drone, by sniper — that’s for us to know….

I need not say much else — when a former prosecutor advocates for a return to the law of the wild.

Indeed, no Rhodes Scholar, he.

Out.

I Guess The “Spilled Toothpicks” Of Ionized Hydrogen… Are The Oddest Things, In This Image.

Just closing this out now. Welp. Exactly… why would ionized hydrogen (illustrated by dotted pink lines, here) — at the center of our Milky Way, at least, be aligned in randomly oriented long “needles“, something like toothpicks spilled from a box, onto the floor — where each toothpick is perhaps dozens of light years long?! That’s a mystery cosmologists will ponder in the next decades.

I’ll also… marvel that this bit of space science has an UNDERGRAD, at the University of Virginia, as its principal investigator. Well done, Samuel Crowe! [He is being advised and supervised by a full professor, to be fair.] But that’s one whale of a resume builder, for a 20 year old:

“➢ Discovered an entirely new form of ionized hydrogen structures — many light years across — at the center of the Milky Way, in Sag C…”

Wow.

नमस्ते

DWAC’s Single Biggest Expense Item, In 2023? Legal Fees, To Manage Fallout From Alleged Securities Law Violations.

Overnight, DWAC — Tangerine’s public company vehicle for monetizing his (now declining) Truth social platform — filed its SEC Form 10-Q after several delays.

In it, we learn that $20,639,030 has been spent this year alone, and an additional $18 million reserved, all in, for legal expenses related to statements made about (and trading in) securities of DWAC.

Moreover, certain law firms will be paid the greater of $8 million, or 130% of their actual billed hours, if the merger is completed by September ‘24. [Q.: How is that even allowable, by state bar authorities and disciplinary commissions, as an ethics matter?! Such contingent fees (I thought) were only ethical in personal injury cases, and capped at… 30% in some states.]

And… DWAC now has an extension (from existing investors) — to September 2024 — to get the combination with Truth completed.

Hard to imagine “Truth” will be worth much if by September ‘24, Tangerine has only one hour a day in the relevant federal BoP prison library to get online and post things, via the Tru-Links monitored email system, to execs at DWAC(?!)… or Melania.

But it’s all regular operating procedures, and “pig butchering” schemes — for the cult members.

Yikes.

Yep — when we sit to eat turkey later this afternoon, I’ll be thankful — to be a million miles away from any influence emanating from that particular reality distortion bubble.

Me? I’m Still Waiting For A “St. Elmo’s Fire” Generating Flight On Mars… Heh.

NASA is learning lots of new low pressure atmosphere / chopper flying tricks, out 41 million miles into the night sky.

Below is the latest, but simple physics in that low pressure environment would suggest that if the copter is flown at high RPMs, at sunset — we ought to see a very noticeable blue green glow — St. Elmo’s Fire.

That image is at right, with my old story on that possibility here, from February 2022.

But here is NASA’s latest on chopper flying — off world, on Barsoom:

…Over the past nine months, we have doubled our max airspeed and altitude, increased our rate of vertical and horizontal acceleration, and even learned to land slower,” said Travis Brown, Ingenuity’s chief engineer at JPL. “The envelope expansion provides invaluable data that can be used by mission designers for future Mars helicopters.”

Limited by available energy and motor-temperature considerations, Ingenuity flights usually last around two to three minutes. Although the helicopter can cover more ground in a single flight by flying faster, flying too fast can confuse the onboard navigation system. The system uses a camera that recognizes rocks and other surface features as they move through its field of view. If those features whiz by too fast, the system can lose its way.

So, to achieve a higher maximum ground speed, the team sends commands for Ingenuity to fly at higher altitudes (instructions are sent to the helicopter before each flight), which keeps features in view longer. Flight 61 established a new altitude record of 78.7 feet (24 meters) as it checked out Martian wind patterns. With Flight 62 Ingenuity set a speed record of 22.3 mph (10 meters per second) — and scouted a location for the Perseverance rover’s science team.

The team has also been experimenting with Ingenuity’s landing speed. The helicopter was designed to contact the surface at a relatively brisk 2.2 mph (1 mps) so its onboard sensors could easily confirm touchdown and shut down the rotors before it could bounce back into the air. A helicopter that lands more slowly could be designed with lighter landing gear. So, on Flights 57, 58, and 59 they gave it a whirl, demonstrating Ingenuity could land at speeds 25% slower than the helicopter was originally designed to land at.

All this Martian Chuck Yeager-ing is not over. [Ed. Note: Glad to hear it! We have some… suggestions (see first paragraph)!] In December, after solar conjunction, Ingenuity is expected to perform two high-speed flights during which it will execute a special set of pitch-and-roll angles designed to measure its performance.

“The data will be extremely useful in fine-tuning our aero-mechanical models of how rotorcraft behave on Mars,” said Brown….

The footage would be… amazing!

Okay — likely falling silent now, until Friday — with so many pots boilin’ all at once here through late afternoon tomorrow… smile.

नमस्ते

With Any Luck — She Will Fade Away Now, Like A Skid Mark… On Old, Broken Pavement…

Tapson is right: Candace Owen’s is… a fraud.

She’s a fake.

Not an intellectual at all, on the hard right frontier.

I don’t care for Ben Shapiro either — on viewpoints.

But no one ever threaten Ms. Owens’ right to quote scripture. She used it as a… hat trick, to distract from the fact that she was losing an argument with her boss.

Hilarious. They can have at it:

“…for every garbage can, there is always a lid… out there.”

Onward. Go have your third baby, Candace. Maybe we will hear less of, and from — you, from now on. That would be… wonderful.

Out.

Mr. Steven John Mulroy Gets No Traction… In The Sixth Cir., Here.

The local Memphis, Tennessee prosecutor… has filed a reply brief tonight, in the Sixth Circuit, in a vain attempt to remove the injunction stopping the anti-drag law down there… in its tracks.

It will fail.

That’s all that need be said… about that. Onward. Grinning.

It is here, just for a complete record, as we whip up delights for tomorrow.

Be excellent to one another.

Just A Brief Memo Of Law, On The “Substance” Of Why Judge Moses Would Be Wrong To Grant Texas What It Wants…

Ahem. Congress has put certain specific matters pertaining to immigration enforcement beyond the reach of state court review (and it did so, by statutes signed by the President, ones unchallenged as to their validity, for at least two decades).

These same statutes put 8 USC § 1252(f)(1) even beyond the reach of lower federal courts, when the claim is a violation of the Administrative Procedures Act (that would try to change the way the feds either apprehend or release certain migrants). In sum, the state is not allowed to tell the CBP agents how to do their jobs.

The State of Texas, and USDC Judge Alia Moses… cannot escape that fact. It is… a fact. And so, there can be no injunction against CBP removing razor wire to the extent it endangers either CBP officers and agents, or the migrants themselves. This point is made quite cogently, and forcefully — by CBP, in a 27 page memo of law to supplement Judge Moses’ record down in Del Rio, Texas this afternoon, thus:

…Congress has withdrawn lower courts’ authority to grant the relief Texas seeks, even if Texas’s APA claims were meritorious, which they are not. Specifically, except in circumstances inapplicable here, Congress has specified that “[r]egardless of the nature of the action or claim or of the identity of the party or parties bringing the action,” no lower federal courts “shall have jurisdiction or authority to enjoin or restrain the operation of [8 U.S.C. § 1225],” among other INA provisions. 8 U.S.C. § 1252(f)(1). The Supreme Court has held that this bar applies even when the challenged “operation” of the INA is alleged to be “illegal” or “improper,” as long as “in the Government’s view [the actions] are allowed by § [1225].” Garland v. Aleman Gonzalez, 596 U.S. 543, 551 (2022) (parentheses omitted). Texas cannot rely on the APA to circumvent this express bar on the relief it seeks; were it otherwise, the bar would be rendered a nullity….

Even if Texas could overcome these threshold hurdles, its APA claims have no merit. First, its claims that Border Patrol exceeded its statutory authorities or acted ultra vires are unlikely to succeed because Border Patrol undoubtedly has the authority to remove impediments to its execution of federal immigration laws. Congress has charged the Department of Homeland Security, including its subagency U.S. Customs and Border Protection, with protecting the border and apprehending and inspecting unlawful entrants. Border Patrol has authority to interrogate and arrest noncitizens entering between ports of entry and to enter land near the border to carry out that mission. As Texas’s own witness acknowledged, that authority includes the ability to break through barriers, such as gates or locks, when agents judge it necessary. Concertina wire belonging to Texas (or anyone else) is no different….

So — when we get right down to it, Judge Moses cannot grant an injunction in favor of the State of Texas, as to a matter Texas is not even allowed to bring before her bench in the first place.

Onward, to next Monday. Be excellent to one another! Out, for airport runs!

नमस्ते