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Things that make you swear and curse

As Eric Idle wrote:

Some things in life are bad
They can really make you mad
Other things just make you swear and curse

This is one of those swear and curse things.

We all know that the New York Times sends its reporters into diners in the hinterlands to scout out unrepentant Trump voters and present them as salt of the earth bellwethers for our political future. We also know, deep down in our hearts, that non-Trump voters are studiously ignored by the intrepid reporters as they sip their cups of Joe and interview their brain dead favorites. This is already enough to make one swear and curse, but now we find that they have their favorite “swing voters”, all die hard Trumpies, on speed dial, so when, for example, the Democrats move toward impeachment, we can hear that swing voters are not pleased.

The article in question asserts that swing voters, as the reporter alleges in a tweet, are repelled by the thought of impeachment. She scientifically sampled six such voters. One of the “swing voters” (all of whom have been featured in past NY Times articles) has gone to 23 Trump rallies. One has a portrait of Robert E. Lee hanging in his living room. All of them are die hard Trumpers. See the article to which I’ve linked for full details.

This sort of journalistic malpractice has never been practiced in the Times to throw shade on Republicans.

All we can do is swear and curse, though I’m contemplating ending my subscription to the Times.

It’s easy to see when they’re afraid

It’s easy to see when the right wing is afraid of someone. They start engaging in hysterical attacks. We saw it with AOC, we’ve seen it with Elizabeth Warren, and we haven’t seen it with Joe Biden. I’m not talking about digging up dirt, I’m talking about crazy. 

So all hail Greta Thunberg, who has managed to attract the ire of trump apologist Michael Knowles, (who referred to her as mentally ill), Laura Ingraham,(who compared her to characters in a Stephen King film, earning Laura the twittered wrath of her own brother), and Dinesh D’Souza (who compared her to a Nazi because he found a Nazi poster with a braided girl on it).

They don’t fear them because they disagree with her and their other targets merely because they disagree with them. They fear them because they recognize what the Democratic establishment doesn’t: that they present a clear and present danger to the right.

A bit off the topic, but I can’t wait until Greta gets her peace prize. The Trump tweets will be hugely entertaining.

Time for some Democratic pushback

The New York Times is trying to both sides the whistleblower thing with Trump, attempting to breathe life into the Biden allegations, which were apparently originated by the same guy who wrote Clinton Cash, to whom the Times gave credence back in 2016. Yet another example of the need for the Democrats to learn to work the refs. They should be pounding on the Times, since the Biden story has been debunked by multiple media outlets, and there’s no additional evidence warranting the attempt to reinvigorate it. The only purpose reopening it serves is to water down the allegations against Trump. You know, the treason. 

Actually, they’re not allegations, they are now admissions.

I’m no Biden fan, but his response to the son of Doocy was right on, and in my humble opinion, the other candidates should pile on the media as well, as should the other Democrats in Washington. There is no equivalency between an oft debunked claim (debunked even by the Wall Street Journal) and an almost outright admission that the person sworn to perform the duties of the president of the United States (including protecting the constitution) sought to use a foreign government to influence an American election. The Times can only get away with this stuff because the Democrats protest too little. It’s really about time they took a page from the Republican playbook and started criticizing the media. In their case, they’d just be telling the truth.

Must watch TV

This year marks the 400th anniversary of slavery in English North America. (The Spanish beat us to the punch) Purely because I believe that everyone should be aware of the impact of slavery on this nation, I am suggesting that absolutely everyone should watch this video, which previously aired on CSPAN.

The fact that one of the presenters shares my last name and 50% of my genes has nothing to do with it.

How to get rid of Kavanaugh (A fantasy)

Kavanaugh’s perjury is back in the news, and there’s some interesting speculation hereabout a way to get rid of Kavanaugh if and when we get a presidential administration that will back such an effort, not a sure thing even if the Democrat wins. (Squinting at you, Joe)

Apparently, a few years ago, some right-wing law professors wrote a law review article in which they expressed the opinion that you need not impeach a judge to get rid of him (I’ll stick with masculine pronouns, since we’re talking about Kavanaugh). The constitution, they point out, states that a judge serves “during good behavior”, meaning, they state, that a judge can be removed by the judicial department itself upon a showing of bad behavior, such as, those newly interested in the article point out, lying at one’s confirmation hearing about one’s sexual escapades, etc.

Now, since the original proponents of this theory are right wingers, they will no doubt patiently explain that their theory only applies to liberal judges, but let us put that caveat aside for the moment.

Since Kavanaugh was approved by the Senate, I’ve cherished an iota of hope that a Democratic administration would play hardball and bring perjury charges against him. Were he convicted, his status as a judge would be somewhat confused, I suppose. If, indeed, he had to be impeached to be removed, then we would end up with the anomalous situation of a sitting Supreme Court judge in prison. Whether he could continue his work as a judge from that venue would be an open question, unless he could in fact, be removed as the professors suggested. Congress could, perhaps, merely pass a law providing that conviction of certain crimes would be prima facie evidence of a lack of good behavior. In fact, as the linked article points out, the 1790 Congress did just that.

Of course, even if he could not be removed from his office, were he breaking rocks in prison, he might resign “voluntarily” were it made clear to him that he could, upon submission of said resignation, leave the hoosegow.

My guess is that this is all speculation, as charges will never be brought, and if they are, the judges hearing the case will find a way to let him off the hook. We have entered an era in which we can expect judicial decisions that are hyper-partisan (in a Republican direction) for years to come. The present Supreme Court, for instance, can’t seem to find its way clear to stopping the genius’s unconstitutional exploits, but it will have no trouble distinguishing its own cases to trim the sails of his potential Democratic successor. 

I beg to differ

Lawrence O’Donnell thinks that John Bolton’s inevitable book could have a significant impact on the 2020 election. I beg to differ.

I certainly agree that Bolton’s book will be timed to have an impact, because that timing will maximize sales and free pundit plugs, but the question is: how many votes will he sway from the R column to the D? How precisely do the complaints of an ultra right wing warmonger move a significant number of individuals to the left

Sure, the book could well expose stuff other than policy differences. It will very likely document the genius’s stupidity, obtuseness, general indifference to acquiring knowledge and ongoing mental illness. But these are already well known. They have already taken their toll, and those still with the man will likely never hear (Fox will ignore him) what Bolton has to say, and won’t believe it if they do.

Driftglass comes through again.

As a rule, I don’t read David Brooks. I prefer to read him through Driftglass’s filter, but this morning I glanced at the first few paragraphs (I refuse to link to him). I stopped after getting to this, in which he purports to speak in the voice of an internet “fanatic”:

“I am one of those fanatics on the alt-right and the alt-left, the ones who make online forums so vicious, the ones who cancel and call out, the minority of online posters who fill the air with hate…”

What, I wondered, is this “alt-left” of which you speak? Has the both siderist disease seated itself so firmly in your brain that you now feel licensed to make up terms and movements that don’t exist?

I decided then and there to await the Driftglass treatment, and he didn’t disappoint. It really would be a pleasure to watch Brooks wilt if he were ever exposed to a skillful cross examination, rather than the fawning treatment he gets on teevee.

Another book report

I just finished reading a book.

Actually, I am always reading at least one book, but I’m going to write about this one, as it involves current events, something I usually avoid in books. The book is called A Lot of People are Saying; the New Conspiracism and the Assault on Democracy, written by Russell Muirhead and Nancy Rosenblum. I hesitated about buying it, as I thought there was a better than even chance that it wouldn’t tell me anything I didn’t already know. My mind harkened back to Dog Whistle Politics, by Ian Haney Lopez, a book that exhaustively documents the racist basis of the present day Republican Party, which I put aside since, despite it’s merits, as it told me nothing I didn’t already know.

People are Sayingis different, if only that it illuminates some corners of the Republican/conspiratorial mind into which I have not glanced heretofore. I should state up front that so far there is no phony both siderism here, though they come near to it once, oddly enough when discussing the same or a similar poll that led me to direct my umbrage at Steven Pinker.

They make the not so obvious (though it seems obvious, once they make it) point that today’s conspiracists are not like yesterday’s. Today’s conspiracists feel no need to prove their conspiracy theories, it is good enough that they are theoretically possible, even if astoundingly improbable. Those who believed Kennedy was not shot by Oswald alone went to great lengths to marshal their evidence. Today’s conspiracists do nothing of the sort. It is sufficient, for example, if it is possiblethat Hillary Clinton and John Podesta ran a child sex ring out of a pizza joint. Actual truth is wholly optional and the fabricators are mostly upfront about that.

They also point out that unlike the classic conspiracists, today’s conspiracists seek only to delegitimate:

The new conspiracists are not talking about legitimacy in the philosophic sense. they have neither a theory of government nor of justice that would tell us what kind of regime is worthy of support. The new conspiracism drains the sense that democratic government is legitimate without supplying any alternative standard.

Which is true, though, at the hazard of engaging in conspiracist thought, I’d suggest that the people who originate these conspiracy theories, or at least some of them, know precisely what they want, they are just careful not to be upfront about it.

Also at the hazard of engaging in conspiracist thought, I’d suggest that some of the conspiracies they cite are in fact happening, except it’s the accusers that are engaging in them. They cite Trump’s oft repeated claim that there were three million illegal votes in 2016 (all of whom voted for Hillary) as an example, and it is, of an evidence free conspiratorial assertion. But this claim of electoral rigging by Democrats, often made by Republicans, may also be a case, as is so often the case when Trump accuses others of misdeeds, of one side accusing the other of what it is doing itself. Stacey Abrams might have a thing or two to say about rigged elections, as might the people of North Carolina. This doesn’t undermine the book’s basic thesis, but I do think that it’s part of the motivation behind the creation of these memes. If their charge of X is baseless and evidence free, that automatically renders a similar charge from the other side baseless and evidence free, even when that’s not the case.

I’m not sure their proposed solution is feasible, as, at least in part, it would require the existence of principled Republicans, which are in extremely short supply. Anyway, I recommend the book, as it certainly casts a good deal of light on what is a new variant of an old phenomenon. There have, after all, always been conspiracy theories and scapegoats.

I do take issue with one point they make. They rightfully point out that “[t]he new conspiracism feeds off and in turn fuels a tribal mode of politics”, but lose their way when they allege that it is “akin to Boston Red Sox fans’ belief that ‘Yankees suck’. Such an assertion is not an affirmation of a proposition that is meant to correspond to facts in the real world.” It absolutely isan assertion about facts in the real world. The Yankees do suck. There are no two ways about it. A lot of people agree with me about that.

Joe Biden tends to remember things that never happened

Back in the days of yore, before I retired, most of my legal practice was in the area of Social Security Disability. Mental impairments are graded (so to speak) on a continuum: Mild, Moderate, Marked, Extreme. 

Before he was even inaugurated I diagnosed Trump’s impairment as extreme, and I think (too lazy to find the numerous links) most professionals who have ventured an opinion agree with me. Not only is he seriously ill, the nature of his mental illness is probably the worst imaginable for a national leader. A bit of depression (e.g., Abraham Lincoln) wouldn’t be disqualifying, but raging narcissism combined with his other symptoms (inveterate lying, total lack of empathy, etc.) are disqualifying in the extreme.

But this post is not about Trump’s extreme mental illness, it’s about Joe Biden’s mild to moderate problem. Recently Joe made it clear that he has no reason to run except to stop Trump, which might be fine if he weren’t the most vulnerable of the possible candidates to Trump’s schoolyard bullying tactics. He might still win, but his is not an attitude designed to rally the base, or anyone else.

But Biden’s problems run deeper. He is a liar. His problem is mild to moderate compared to Trump, but lets face it, we can expect from the press exactly what we’ve seen in the past. Hearken back to those days of yesteryear, in this case the year 2000, when Gore’s alleged untruths (and most of them weren’t even untruths) got endless press while Bush got a free pass. It will happen again in 2020 if Biden is nominated, for after all, we’ve already processed the fact that Trump lies about everything so there’s no reason to write about that, but every stretcher Biden tells will be endlessly magnified. It has been an uneven playing field for years, and that will continue in 2020. Individual members of the press may loathe Trump, but they can’t break free of the unwritten rules that give greater leeway to Republicans than Democrats.

Which brings us to the latest.

Biden has claimed that, although he voted for the Iraq war, he quickly turned against it. Read the entire linked article, but this caught my attention:

“[Bush] looked me in the eye in the Oval Office. He said he needed the vote to be able to get inspectors into Iraq to determine whether or not Saddam Hussein was engaged in dealing with a nuclear program,” Biden told NPR. “He got them in and before you know it, we had ‘shock and awe.’”

Bush spokesperson Freddy Ford denied Biden’s chain of events, telling NPR, “While I’m sure it’s just an innocent mistake of memory, but this recollection is flat wrong.”

As the linked article demonstrates, this statement conflicts with the historical record, since long after shock and awe (July of 2003) Biden said: “Nine months ago, I voted with my colleagues to give the president of the United States of America the authority to use force, and I would vote that way again today.”

The story about looking Bush in the eye is reminiscent of Biden’s lie about pinning a medal on a Navy captain. Charitably speaking, it was an amalgam of stories, in none of which Biden played a prominent part. In reality, it was either a lie or the product of a deteriorating mind. This is not a new thing with Biden, he has a history of fabrications, nothing like Trump’s, but see above.

Of all the possible nominees, Biden gives Democratic leaning voters the most reason to stay home in 2020. If he beats Trump, which is a big if, we are guaranteed to lose both houses in 2022 and the presidency in 2024, and the winner that year may be worse than Trump. After all, we all thought no one could possibly be worse than W.

Vermont sightseeing

We are on vacation here in Vermont and for that reason I have not been gifting my insights to the world this week, though I have been following the fairly rapid mental decline of that fellow in the White House, as well as the determined efforts of the national Democrats to do what they can to lose the next election.

But this post is not about politics. I am simply passing along an observation.

If we New Englanders are familiar with nothing else, we are familiar with stone walls. We have one on our own property and they are fairly ubiquitous in our town, as they are here in Vermont.

Yesterday, as we traversed the road from Weston Vermont (having loaded up with licorice and other goodies) toward Landgrove, a trip we have made hundreds of times in the past, we noticed, for the first time, the most unusual stone wall any of us had ever seen. On our way back we stopped to take a picture.

Here’s the wall from a bit of a distance.

Here’s a closer view.

 

I’ve never seen one like it. The work involved in making it must have far exceeded that normally involved in building a stone wall, which in any event would be an arduous task. Getting those stones to stand on their ends like that must have been a real difficult feat. It all makes for one of the most beautiful stone walls I’ve every seen.

Anyway, that’s how I spent my summer vacation.