Sunday, January 23, 2022

Changing my Mind on the Electoral College

I have previously expressed the opinion that we don't need to abolish the Electoral College. Because of recent developments, I have now concluded it should be abolished.

As relentlessly reported by Rachel Maddow on her nightly show, there was a concerted attempt to present phony slates of electors from seven states. What Rachel did was to show every night on the screen the documents sent in from the seven states, all of which had the same wording, spacing, and fonts. Her point was that there was obviously a nationally-coordinated attempt to subvert the election results. And now, as of this past week, we know that the attempt was engineered by Trump campaign operatives, coordinated by Rudy Guiliani. Kudos to Maddow for shining a light on this issue.

This chicanery is properly the subject of criminal charges on the national level, since it was planned and coordinated on the national level. Several Attorneys General have weighed in saying that state laws were clearly violated by the attempted forgeries, but that they will defer to the Dept. of Justice for federal charges. Unfortunately, Merrick Garland seems too timid to pursue this. We definitely need an AG who has some energy.

What the Electoral College does is to insert an additional, and unnecessary, step in the process, a step which is ripe for abuse by corrupt actors. We just don't need it anymore, in an era in which personal character no longer seems to matter.

We live in exciting times. Rarely does one get to be on hand to witness the demise of a 250-year-old democracy. I can't help but think of the great foreign correspondent, William Shirer, who was on hand in Germany in the 1930s to witness first-hand the rise of Naziism in Germany, and who wrote so informatively about it. His books are among my favorites.

I am fascinated by the famous study which concluded that the average age of great nations is 250 years, given that the U.S. reaches the 250-year mark in just four years. Actually, the study uses the term "empire", rather than "great nations". But when I use the term empire, someone will inevitably object to calling the U.S. an empire. I think the term can be defended; after all, what was the Monroe Doctrine other than a statement of empire? Nevertheless, this gets us off into an annoying tangent, distracting from the issue at hand. So, I choose to use the term "great nation" instead.

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

A King's Indian

Here is a 10-minute game I played yesterday on chessbase as white against a higher-rated player. The game illustrates my tendency to avoid complicated middlegames, in favor of steering the game into an endgame which I can better understand.

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 Bg7 4. e4 d6 5. f3 O-O 6. Be3 e5 7. d5 Nbd7 8. Qd2 Ne8 9. Bd3 f5 10. exf5 My pet move. White will inevitably push his f-pawn to f4, after which I will have a great square at e4 to operate from with my pieces. The remarkable thing about this game is that this advantage extends to a king-and-pawn endgame, in which it is my king which gets to e4 with strong effectiveness.

10...gxf5 11. Bg5 Ndf6 12. Nge2 Qe7 13. O-O-O Qf7 14. Qc2 Qg6 15. Bd2 Nh5? 16. g4 Nf4 17. Nxf4 exf4 18. gxf5 Bxf5 19. Bxf5 Qxf5 20. Qxf5 Rxf5 21. Rhg1 Kh8 22. Rg4 Be5 23. Rdg1 Nf6 24. Rg5 Rxg5 25. Rxg5 Rg8 26. Rxg8+ Kxg8 27. Ne2 Nh5 28. b3 Kf7 29. Kc2 Kf6 30. Kd3 Kf5 31. Nd4+ An odd choice for me, as I usually prefer the knight side of the B vs. N ending. Stockfish now has it even.

31...Bxd4 32. Kxd4 Nf6 33. Bc3 Nd7 34. Kd3 Ne5+ 35. Bxe5 Kxe5 Going into a pawn ending. My goal is obviously to get my king to e4.

36. b4 b6 37. a4 a6 38. Kc3 h5? This move gives me some winning chances, as I will win his pawn on f4.

39. h4! a5 40. bxa5 bxa5 41. Kd3 Kf5 42. Kd4 Kf6 43. Ke4 Kg6 44. Kxf4 Kf6 45. Ke4 Kg6 46. f4 Kf6 47. f5 Kf7 48. Kf3 Kf6?? Now I can get the opposition, which gives me the win. There seems to be no way for white to make progress if black keeps his king off f6 (unless and until I play my own king to f4).

49. Kf4 Kf7 50. Kg5 Kg7 51. Kxh5 And now the win is easy. 1-0 in 62 moves.

Friday, January 7, 2022

The English Opening

A game played today on chessbase.

1. c4 Nf6 2. Nc3 c5 3. g3 d5 4. cxd5 Nxd5 5. Bg2 Nc7 Initiating my pet line against the English. 5...Nxc3 would give white too strong of a center.

6. Nf3 Nc6 7. e3? This gives black a healthy half-point advantage. Normal is 7 d3.

7...e5 8. O-O Be7 9. a3 O-O 10. Ne2 Rb8 11. b3 b6 12. Bb2 f6 13. d4 exd4 14. exd4 cxd4 15. Nfxd4 Nxd4 16. Nxd4 Bb7 17. Bxb7 Rxb7 18. Qf3 Qd5 19. Qe2 Bc5 20. Rad1 Re8 21. Qc4 Qxc4 22. bxc4 Ne6 23. Nf3 Rbe7 24. Rfe1 Kf7 25. a4 Nc7 (Bb4) 26. Rxe7+ Rxe7 27. Re1 Rxe1+ 28. Nxe1 Ke6 29. Nd3 Kf5 30. Nxc5 bxc5 31. f3 Ne6 32. Kf2 Nd8 33. Ke3 Ke6 34. f4 g6 35. g4 f5 36. h3 fxg4 37. hxg4 h5? My idea here was to get the outside passed pawn. However, as we shall see, black has a good counter to this plan.

38. gxh5? Here white could have played 38 f5+, gaining a healthy advantage.

38...gxh5 39. Bc3 Kf5 40. Kf3 h4 41. Be5 Nc6 42. Bd6 Nd4+ 43. Kg2 Ne6 44. Kh3 Nxf4+ 45. Kxh4 Nd3 46. a5 a6 47. Kg3 Ke4 48. Kg4 Kd4 49. Kf3 Kxc4 50. Ke4 Nb4 51. Be7 Nc6 52. Bd8 Nxd8 0-1